Welcome!

I reunite identified family photos that I find in antique shops and second hand stores with genealogists and family historians. If you see one of your ancestors here and would like to obtain the original, feel free to contact me at familyphotoreunion [ at ] yahoo [ dot ] com. I also accept donations of pre-1927 images to be reunited. I hope you enjoy your visit!
~The Archivist


Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Mr. Charles Estlin is Invited to the Beattie / Campbell Wedding, Melita, Manitoba, 1897




Beattie/Campbell Wedding Invitation found in an antique shop, Victoria, BC.


"Mr. & Mrs. A. Trerice
invite you to be present at the marriage of
their daughter
Mary Grace Beattie
to
Mr. Joseph Campbell,
on Wednesday evening, January the
twenty-seventh,
eighteen hundred and ninety-seven,
at half after eight o'clock,
Melita, Manitoba

I love working on old wedding invitations.  They're a nice break from the trying to solve a photographic mystery since they usually contain something I cherish:  Cold. Hard. Facts.
The bride and groom are usually fully named in a wedding invitation.  Parents are commonly named as well.  There is also a wedding date and place since guests need to know where the ceremony will take place.  We know this invitation was given to Mr. Charles Estlin because his name is written on the accompanying envelope.  This invitation is a bit unusual since there isn't a specific location provided for the wedding.  It simply gives the town: Melita, Manitoba, which is located in the south-western part of the province.  Perhaps one was to assume the wedding would take place at the bride's parent's home.  Maybe the only building in Melita at the time was a church. 

Today Melita is a small farming community of just over 1000 people.  Alexander Trerice was an early settler to the Melita-Arthur area, and built the first framed house there in 1882.1   He was (Mary) Grace's step-father; Alex married Graces' mother, Hannah Beattie, on the 12th of February 1889 in Dresden, Ontario2

Before her marriage in 1897, Grace was a music teacher in Dresden.  The couple's first child, (Dorothy) Louise, was born in Winnipeg in 19003.

While I haven't found Graces' birth record, I believe her father to be William C. Beattie who died in Dresden, Ontario in 1887.4,5  If you can any further family details, I'd very much like to hear from you.

UPDATE April 23/14 :  Most genealogists have experienced serendipitous events in relation to their research and I can say I certainly have had my share.  Last month I attended my local family history society meeting where the featured speaker for the night discussed her recent  history book.  Her family emigrated from England to Manitoba and as she launched into her presentation one of her surnames stuck in my brain....Estlin.  Hmmm...where have I heard that name before?  
When it came to the portion of the talk about the family's life in Canada, she mentioned the town:  Melita, Manitoba.  That really got me wondering and so, after a discreet search on my smartphone, I realized that I had blogged about the above-mentioned wedding invitation which had belonged to this woman's relative.  All I could say was "Wow."  The invitation is now back home with family.




1 Melita-Arthur History Committee. Our First Century: Town of Melita and Municipality of Arthur, 1983; p. 2
2 "Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1801-1928," online database, Ancestry.ca (http://www.ancestry.ca: accessed 27 Oct 2013), Alexander Trerice and Hannah Beattie, Registration No.005852, Dresden, Kent, Ontario, 12 Feb 1889, citing original data at Archives of Ontario; citing microfilm MS932, reel 64.
3 Manitoba. Vital Statistics Agency. Manitoba Consumer and Corporate Affairs.( http://vitalstats.gov.mb.ca : accessed 26 Oct 2013), entry for Dorothy Louise Campbell, 15 Oct 1889, Winnipeg, registration #1899-007783.
4 “1881 Census of Canada,” digital image, Ancestry.ca (http://www.ancestry.ca: accessed 25 Oct 2013), entry for William Beattie, Ontario, Bothwell, Dresden, District 178, p. 37 (penned); citing LAC microfilm C-13277.
5 William C. Beattie, Death Registration 008010 (8 Nov 1887); “Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1938 and Deaths Overseas, 1939-1947,” digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 27 Oct 2013), citing microfilm MS935, reel 47, Archives of Ontario, Toronto.

Sunday, October 13, 2013

A Great Find in Coombs, BC, Canada -- The Hardy - Spooner Family Album

 

My most recent antique shop find has been taking up a good portion of my free research time these days, which unfortunately, hasn't amounted to much lately as I work on my genealogical certificate courses and my own family history mysteries.  My newest treasure is an album of carte de visite and cabinet card photographs dating from roughly 1860 to the 1920s that I found at an antique shop in Coombs, BC, Canada.  Of the seventy photographs, less than a dozen are identified at all, and of that dozen only a handful have names, some with only given names.  Yet, I am happy to report that a history of the family who owned this album is slowly emerging.

Many of the early photographs were taken in London or Blandford, England; Belfast and Carlisle, Ireland, with more recent images originating from San Francisco, California.    Some of the surnames inscribed on the photos are Hardy, Spooner, Terrell, Humhal, Balean, and Baker.

My starting point for the search was a portrait of an infant with his unidentified grandmother.  I began there because I thought it best to work backwards in time.  The reverse reads, "Gerald Craig Hardy (3 1/2 months old) and his great grandmother (aged ninety years)."  The pair had their portrait taken at the Stanford Studio, 731 Market Street, San Francisco. Judging by the style of photograph, I would estimate that it dates to about 1900.



A search on Ancestry for "Gerald Craig Hardy" produced only one hit, and while there were a number of matches for "Gerald Hardy" the first seems to be the most probable.  The funeral home records for Gerald Craig Hardy, who was born 22 June 1900 in California to Lillian and Douglas Hardy1 provided a wealth of information, including his State of California Death Certificate.  According to the certificate, Gerald died on the 30th August 1983 in San Francisco.  His father, Douglas Hardy, was originally from England and his wife Lillian, was a California native.  Gerald Craig Hardy was the owner and manager of "Hardy Theatres."  One of his "Hardy Theatres" still stands in Fresno, and it appears he operated in San Mateo as well.  Gerald grew up in San Rafael2, and as an adult lived in Carmel-By-the-Sea3, Fresno4, and at the time of his death, in the Russian Hill district of San Francisco.  He and his wife, Vera Sellner, do not appear to have had any children.

The 1910 census shows that Gerald had one brother, Kenneth, born about 1903.

A little digging into Douglas Hardy's family reveals a connection to the Spooner family, which I will go into more fully in a future post.  Stay tuned!


1 California, San Francisco Area Funeral Home Records, 1895-1985. Entry for Gerald Craig Hardy; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed Oct 9, 2013), citing San Francisco Area Funeral Home Records, 1895-1985. Microfilm publication, 1129 rolls. Researchity. San Francisco, California.
2 "United States Census, 1910," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/MVL6-QSR : accessed 13 Oct 2013), Gerald Hardy in household of Douglas Hardy, San Rafael, Marin, California, United States; citing sheet , family 266, NARA microfilm publication T624, FHL microfilm 1374101.
3 "United States Census, 1930," index and images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.1.1/XCDX-XR9 : accessed 13 Oct 2013), Gerald Hardy, Carmel by the Sea, Monterey, California, United States; citing enumeration district (ED) 0021, sheet , family 152, NARA microfilm publication .
4 1940 U.S. census, Fresno County, California, Fresno, Enumeration District 10-34A, sheet 63-B (penned), dwelling 326, Gerald C Hardy household; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 11 Oct 2012), citing National Archives microfilm publication T627, roll 201