Gordon BAIN

Gordon BAIN

Male Abt 1906 -

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Gordon BAIN was born about 1906 in Michigan, United States (son of William Henry BAIN and Alma Rolettie SHERMAN).

    Other Events:

    • _UID: C840E652B498A24293C3D19281C59C5A652E


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  William Henry BAIN was born about 1881 in Canada; died before 1924 in Canada.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 8EC12B8D5B0FA045BC9F3D9CCE1E57D9A614

    Notes:

    Possibility ?
    Social Security Death Index:
    Name: William Bain SSN: 374-01-2863 Last Residence: 48180 Taylor, Wayne, Michigan, United States of America Born: 10 May 1884 Died: Mar 1967 State (Year) SSN issued: Michigan (Before 1951 )

    1891 Census of Canada
    Name: William Henry Bain
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Single
    Age: 6
    Birth Year: abt 1885
    Birthplace: British Columbia
    Relation to Head of House: Son
    Religion: Roman Catholic
    French Canadian: No
    Father's Birth Place: British Columbia
    Mother's Birth Place: British Columbia
    Province: British Columbia
    District Number: 1
    District: Cariboo
    Subdistrict: Alkali Lake
    Archive Roll #: T-6290
    Household Members: Name Age
    Herry Otto Bain 26
    Teresa Bain 23
    William Henry Bain 6
    Anne Issa Bain 5
    John Frederick Bain 4
    Cristine Teresa Bain 3
    Herman Otto Bain 3/12

    William married Alma Rolettie SHERMAN on 28 Oct 1901 in Michigan, United States. Alma (daughter of James Milton SHERMAN and Martha Madora SMITH) was born on 15 Jul 1882 in Lumberton, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States; died in 1951. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Alma Rolettie SHERMAN was born on 15 Jul 1882 in Lumberton, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States (daughter of James Milton SHERMAN and Martha Madora SMITH); died in 1951.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: F722B50BA0175246A38539E0D04BAD91C287

    Notes:

    1910 United States Federal Census
    Name: Alma L Bain
    Age in 1910: 27
    Estimated birth year: abt 1883
    Birthplace: Michigan
    Relation to Head of House: Wife
    Father's Birth Place: Canada English
    Mother's Birth Place: Canada English
    Spouse's name: William (Blacksmith at lumber mill)
    Home in 1910: Oscoda, Iosco, Michigan
    Marital Status: Married
    Race: White
    Gender: Female
    Neighbors:
    Household Members: Name Age
    William Bain 28 (born Canada English)
    Alma L Bain 27
    Gordon Bain 4
    Medora Bain 2


    http://www.sherman-roots.com/sherman/pioneers/sp'ott.doc
    2. Alma Rolettie9 "Letty" Sherman (Bain) born 1882 in Lumberton MI (mc/mp; mc/sp); indicated as Henry's eldest sister (mc/mp; GVWS p2); in 1901 or a little later Alma lived in StThomas Ontario (GVWS p3; mc/mp).
    1901. Letty of Oscoda married William Bain born 1881, his parents Jas Bain and Martha Smith, witnesses M K Sherman and Mary Sherman [probably his brother & sister] of Oscoda MI (IOS/MR 3-104).
    1951. Alma Bain died (mc/sp). 1 Child:
    1. Mary Evelyn10 Bain 1910 in Oscoda Twp Iosco Co, parents Alma R Sherman born 1881 in Grand Rapids MI; William Bain born 1881 in Canada, he was a laborer (Oscoda Twp Birth Records).

    Children:
    1. 1. Gordon BAIN was born about 1906 in Michigan, United States.
    2. Medora BAIN was born about 1908 in Michigan, United States.
    3. Mary Ellen BAIN was born in 1910 in Oscoda, Iosco, Michigan, United States.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  James Milton SHERMAN was born on 28 Nov 1857 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada (son of Joseph Henry SHERMAN and Matilda Jane FICK); died on 14 Sep 1934 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States; was buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: farmer
    • Reference Number: *
    • _UID: E2885283A697E74DB28725F9ECFD6BA0FB54

    Notes:

    Things to do:
    1. Newspapers in Houghton
    2. border crossings
    3. reread letters and info from Clayton Sherman
    4. Letters from Matilda for her records
    5. tombstone in Lot 31, Section 10, Forest Lawn Cemetary, Detroit, Michigan,

    Timeline for James Milton Sherman:

    1857 Nov 26, James Milton born in Houghton, Ontario, Canada
    1861 Census, James living in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada, with parents Joseph & Matilda Sherman
    1871 Canada Census, HoughtonNorfolk South, Ontario, Canada with parents
    1879 Dec 24 James married Martha Madora Smith at Glenmyer, Ontario, Canada
    1880 Nov 26, first son, Milton Kellum, born in Kingsmill, Cockran Dist., Ontario
    1881 spring, moved to Lumberton, Michigan (may have missed 1880 US census & 1881 Canada census)
    1882 Jul 15, daughter Alma Rolettie, born in Lumberton, Michigan
    1883 bought 50 acres and old farm in Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1883 Oct 28, son, Arthur Lewellyn born in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1885 Jan 7, son Henry Clayton born in Houghton (James Milton was in Oscoda, Iosco, MI at the time)
    1886 Apr 18, daughter, Mary Elizabeth born in Houghton
    1887 May 1, son, Joseph Bernard born in Houghton
    1888 May 29, son Frank Wesley born in Houghton\
    1889 Sep 10, son Ira Hamilton born in Houghton
    1891 Census of Canada, Houghton, Norfolk, Canada
    1893 Jan 21, son William Austin born in Houghton
    1894 Sep 14, son Lawrence Edmond born in Houghton
    1895 Oct 20, son Earl Romain born in Houghton
    1897 Jul 14, son Clarence Clifton born in Houghton
    1899 Feb 5, daughter, Matilda Sepperal born in Houghton
    1901 Census, living with family in Houghton
    1910 Census, living with family in Oscoda, iosco, Michigan
    1913 divorced Martha Madora.
    1913 17 April, married Anna Reaume, in Harrisville, both of Greenbush, MI, both married 1 time before,
    1916 moved to Detroit to work in car industry.
    1921 quit working in Detroit
    1930 Census living in Shelby, Macomb, Michigan with son, Milton K Sherman and Milton's family
    1934 Sep 14, James Milton, age 76, died in Eloise, Michigan, poorhouse, buried in Detroit, Wayne, MI 1934. . Buried in Forrest Lawn Cemetery Detroit MI, arrangements were made by the widow of his son Henry Clayton Sherman

    Joseph's grown son, James Milton, lived at Lumberton, Michigan, (1881-1883) then moved back to Fairground, Ontario, and lived there until he finally moved to Oscoda, Michigan (1900). It follows that family data for the period 1827-1900 may exist at either end of this Ontario-Michigan axis, particularly near the towns mentioned or along logical travel routes between them.

    James Milton was the father of Milton Sherman who was the father of Bertha Sherman (Collis).
    The following story was taken from the family genealogy by Vernon Sherman:

    " James Milton was born November 26, 1857 at Houghton, Ontario, Canada. His wife was Martha Madora Smith whom he called "Dorie". She called him "Milt". They were married at Glenmyer, Ontario, Canada, Christmas Eve, 24 December 1879. Their first child was born eleven months later. Their thirteenth child was born twenty years later.
    Martha's father was a Methodist minister for fifty years, and was sixty-one years old when Martha was born. He came from London, England and his wife from the vicinity of Glasgow, Scotland. He died at age 83. They lived on a farm east of Glenmyer at the time of Martha's marriage, having moved there from Walsingham Township.
    During the period 1879-81, James Milton and Madora lived at Kingsmill, Ontario, 3 or4 miles northwest of Aylmer and about 30 miles northwest of Fairground. Their first child, Milton Kellum was born at Kingsmill. In the spring of 1881 they moved to Lumberton, Michigan, near Big Rapids, and here their second child, a daughter, Alma, was born. They moved back to Houghton, Ontario in the fall of 1883 and here the rest of their 13 children were born, none of them in the same house.
    The town of Hemlock, Ontario consisted of three stores, a school, a church and a blacksmith shop. The gristmill was at Vienna, nine miles away. Fairground, Ontario, was the nearby location of the annual tounship fair and reunion. James Milton soon found need for additional money to support a growing family. He heard great talk of high wages in the Michigan woods and decided to work there during the winter months. About 1884, he left the winter management of the farm to his wife and children and went to the Michigan woods near Oscoda. He is known to have been in Oscoda during the winter of 1885, when his son, Henry Clayton, was born (7 January 1885).

    In a letter (dated 13 Oct 1946) to his nephew, Vernon Sherman, Milton Kellum Sherman wrote concerning his father, James Milton Sherman.
    "In 1883 he bought the north 50 acres of the old farm in Houghton Township, and built a 3 room house on it. While the plaster was drying, we went down to Uncle Charles Mercer, and there Arthur was born. We were there for about two weeks. In 1884, J. M. Sherman bought the south 50 acres of the farm, making his 100 acres of land. He had 30 sheep, 10 milch cows, and a good team of mares, also hogs and chickens, and farm tools. The land was swampy, wet and uncleared. Father worked very hard to clear and ditch that land, 'til he got rheumatism and was laid up for three years and six months. After the doctors got his farm, stock, and tools, they cured him of his rheumatism. He tried hard to recover the farm by working out. But he had a large family to feed, a lot of sickness and five deaths. He worked for 50 cents a day around our neighborhood. It was in Cleveland's administration and times were hard. He finally lost the farm and moved off. After Matilda (the last child) was born, father went back to Oscoda to work. He had worked there some before. We had one old mare left to do our work with. Clayton, Arthur and myself worked hoeing corn for Charlie Beech. We got 25 cents a day. We moved from the Sprag house to a house on the third concession across the road from Moris Fultons. From there we moved to the Pridle house, on the third concession just north of the third side road. While there, we traded the old mare for a little gray mare. She was a good horse. Art and I came to Oscoda and a year and a half later the rest of the family came over and brought the little gray mare with them. From that mare, father raised a mare colt, from that colt he raised three colts, one for your father (Henry Clayton), one for Art, and one for myself.
    J.M. Sherman bought 80 acres of timber land at Handy, Michigan, near Mikado, on Pine River. Father, Art, Clayton, and Frank, cut the cedar off the land and sold the land, and bought 180 acres on the west side of Cedar Lake, 5 miles south of Greenbush and 6 miles north of Oscoda. About 1907 he bought a barn of Vern Sharky, of the Woods estate. He tore it down and moved it up to Cedar Lake to build a home there for himself and mother. But there was too much interference from A and F, 'til father had no home in Oscoda. And finally mother was persuaded to move back to Canada in 1911, just before the Oscoda fire. She was there only a short time, and moved to Detroit with Clarence and Matilda. Also A and F.
    In 1913 father applied for a divorce and got it. I think he married Widow Reeves in the spring of 1914. He was living on her farm when World War I started. Her farm was 4 miles north and 1 mile west of father's farm. In 1916 father went to Detroit to work. In late fall of 1917 we both went to work for the Fisher Co. at Detroit plant # 7. He was a sweeper. He worked till the strike in 1921. Then he went back to the farm and moved his (then) wife to Detroit, and with the lumber that he had bought from Sharky, he built the two family flat in Detroit.
    His second wife made him sleep in the attic. He got up in sleep one night and fell down the stair well to the basement, about 25 feet, and broke his hip. Several days later the police found him laying a short distance from the sidewalk in the grass and tall weeds near Mack Avenue on Conners Creek Road. He was taken to the hospital and the rest I think you know. The doctor in the hospital told me that father was not crazy, but worn out in mind and body."


    James Milton is believed to have applied for his first U. S. papers in 1884 at Tawas City, Michigan. The declaration of intention is on file but bears no date. However, the order admitting him to citizenship shows 17 November 1900 as the date of application for the final papers. Final citizenship papers were signed 19 September 1904 by Judge J. Kennine at Tawas City, Iosco County, Michigan.
    Those Michigan days were of tarpaper, sawdust and forest fires. Lumber Barons came into being overnight by the simple expedient of stealing timber from the boundless state forests. Later, fires set in the "slashings" removed all evidence of theft. What a forest fire did to Oscoda in 1911 is part of the Henry Clayton chapter in this story. Oscoda was a lumbering town and one of the most active lake ports. Sandy streets were surfaced with Cedar and Tamrack bark. The fresh smell of tar paper and of rough sawed new boards filled the air.
    In the spring the Au Sable River ice broke and the "run" was on. The river was choked with logs. A system of river Bayous above the town stored the overflow of timber until the mills could handle it. Floating necklaces of chained logs, known as log-booms lashed timber shipments to river banks and lay in mill ponds. Other shipments of timber came down Lake Huron as huge rafts bound with chain were towed by tugs to mills at the lake shore. Still a third flow of timber arrived via the narrow-gage logging trains creaking and groaning out of the woods. The ringing whine of the great saws continued 24 hours a day. At 6 hour intervals the blasts of mill whistles told the change of shift.
    Michigan was the Nation's lumber pile in those years. It was the country of Paul Bunyon, his famous "talking boots"; the Winter of the blue snow; and his mighty ox, Babe, whose eyes were as big as cartwheels and measured two ax-handles between centers.
    In 1910, James milton Sherman took up farming on a place near Greenbush, Michigan, some 20 miles N.W. of Oscoda. His family remained by choice in Oscoda where Arthur and Frank headed it up. Most of the children were self supporting and when the family moved back to Fairground, Ontario, that same year, Henry Clayton and Milton Kellum remained in Michigan.
    In 1914, James Milton married the widow Reeves. She was a small dark woman with eleven children, many of whom were at that time well grown boys. She was Catholic. They lived first on her farm but later moved to Detroit In 1934, when a Police Ambulance took James Milton to Detroit Receiving Hospital, all he would tell them was his name and that he was the father of 13 children. When advised that her husband was critically ill at the hospital, the ex-widow Reeves consulted with her sons (all now able to support themselves) and announced that they were not interested. She refused the hospital's repeated requests that she talk to them and so in a few days her husband was transferred to the County Poor House at Eloise, Michigan where he died 14 September 1934 in his 77th year.
    When a person dies in the Poor House and the body is not claimed, the county's procedure is set by law. The cadaver is clothed in a suit of long underwear, put in a rough box, and buried in "Potter's Field" However, James Milton Sherman is buried in Lot 31, Section 10, Forest Lawn Cemetary, Detroit, Michigan, along with his son Henry Clayton. Arrangements were carried out by Henry Clayton's widow and son acting for Henry Clayton. James Milton's headstone reads, "Grandfather"

    1861 Census of Canada about James M Sherman
    Name: James M Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Age: 5
    Birth Year: 1856
    Birthplace: Canada West
    Marital Status: Single
    Home in 1861: Houghton, Norfolk, Canada West
    Religion: Methodist
    Film Number: C-1052
    Page Number: 7
    Household Members: Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 34 farmer, born Canada
    Matilda J Sherman 30 born Canada
    William L Sherman 10 born Canada
    James M Sherman 5 born Canada
    Sarah E Sherman 2 born Canada

    1871 Census of Canada
    Name: James Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Age: 14
    Birth Year: abt 1857
    Birth Place: Ontario
    Religion: Baptist
    Origin: German
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk South
    District Number: 11
    Division: 02
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Subdistrict Number: a
    Neighbors:
    Household Members: Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 43
    Matilda Sherman 39
    William Sherman 19
    James Sherman 14
    Sarah Sherman 12
    Mary Sherman 9
    Louisa Sherman 7
    Lambert Sherman 3

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about James M Sherman
    Name: James M Sherman
    Year: 1885
    Locality: Houghton Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    1891 Census of Canada
    Name: James M Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 34
    Birth Year: abt 1857
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Religion: Baptist
    French Canadian: No
    Spouse's Name: Martha M Sherman
    Father's Birth Place: Ontario
    Mother's Birth Place: Ontario
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 97
    District: Norfolk South
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Neighbors:
    Household Members: Name Age
    James M Sherman 34
    Martha M Sherman 30
    Millon K Sherman 10
    angelell L Sherman 8
    Aurthur L Sherman 7
    Henry C Sherman 6
    Mary E Sherman 5
    Frank W Sherman 3

    1901 Census of Canada
    Name: Milton Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 44
    Birth Date: 28 Nov 1856
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Spouse's Name: Martha M
    Racial or Tribal Origin: English
    Nationality: Canadain
    Religion: Methodist
    Occupation: W E
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk (South/Sud)
    District Number: 94
    Sub-District: Houghton
    Sub-District Number: B-2
    Family Number: 53
    Page: 6
    Household Members: Name Age
    Milton Sherman 44
    Martha M Sherman 40
    Milton K Sherman 20
    Alma R Sherman 18
    Arther L Sherman 17
    Claryton Sherman 16
    Mary E Sherman 14
    Frank W Sherman 12
    Clarance C Sherman 3
    Matilda S Sherman 2

    *1910 United States Federal Census
    Name: James M Sherman
    Age in 1910: 52
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1858
    Birthplace: Canada English
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Father's Birth Place: Canada English
    Mother's Birth Place: Canada English
    Spouse's name: Martha M
    Home in 1910: Oscoda, Iosco, Michigan
    Marital Status: Married
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Year of Immigration: 1902
    Household Members: Name Age
    James M Sherman 52
    Martha M Sherman 49
    Frank Sherman 21
    Clarence Sherman 12
    Matilda Sherman 11

    1920 United States Federal Census
    Name: James M Sherman
    Age: 63
    Birth Year: abt 1857
    Birthplace: Canada
    Home in 1920: Greenbush, Alcona, Michigan
    Race: White
    Gender: Male
    Immigration Year: 1881
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Marital Status: Married
    Spouse's Name: Anna Sherman
    Father's Birthplace: Canada
    Mother's Birthplace: Canada
    Home Owned: Own, farm
    Able to Read: Yes
    Able to Write: Yes
    Neighbors:
    Household Members: Name Age
    James M Sherman 63 [43] immigrated 1881, naturalized 1900
    Anna Sherman 45 [43]
    Vernice A Reaume 15
    Marie Reaume 14
    Dennis H Reaume 12
    Aloysious C Reaume 10
    Elbert Reaume 8


    1930 United States Federal Census
    Name: James M Sherman
    Home in 1930: Shelby, Macomb, Michigan
    Age: 73
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1857
    Relation to Head of House: Father
    Occupation: Education: Military service: Rent/home value: Age at first marriage: Parents' birthplace:
    Household Members: Name Age
    Milton K Sherman 49
    Zoey Sherman 39
    Joseph Sherman 17
    Henry C Sherman 14
    Basil B Sherman 12
    James M Sherman 73 father, came to US 1883, naturalized

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about James M Sherman
    Name: James M Sherman
    Year: 1885
    #484, Juror, yes lot W 1/2 5 conc 1 owner PO7
    Locality: Houghton Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about James M Sherman
    Name: James M Sherman
    Year: 1886
    #489, Juror, yes lot W 1/2 conc 1 owner PO7
    Locality: Houghton Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    Forest Lawn Cem. He died in Eloise
    History of Eloise Westland, Michigan

    http://www.sherman-roots.com/sherman/pioneers/sp'ott.doc
    3. James Milton8 Sherman born Nov 28 1857 in Houghton [Twp] Norfolk Co Ontario Canada (mc/mp; GVWS p0). (Gen Refs: not in DPS, NES, SD, LDS/AF, LDS/IGI).
    1871.
    1879. James married at Glenmyer Ontario Canada to Martha Madora "Dorie" Smith, who was born c1860 [born 1861] (mc/mp), she and parents born in Canada (1910 Census; GVWS p1).
    1879/81. James lived in Kingsmill Ontario (mc/mp).
    1881/83. James lived at Lubmerton MI, near Grand Rapids MI (mc/mp).
    1883/84. James moved to Fairground Ontario, and purchased 50 acres of land. He added another 50 acres in 1884 and built a 3 room house. He had 30 sheep, 10 milch cows, a good team of mares, hogs, chickens and farm tools. The land was swampy and uncleared; he worked hard to clear and drain the land. He got rheumatism and was laid up for 3 year and half years; the doctors took the farm for medical bills.
    1884/85. James a farmer, left his family in Houghton Center Ontario, and worked the winter in the lumber mills in Oscoda MI Iosco Co (GVWS p1).
    1893. James' son Henry, was kicked by a horse. James was so angry with the horse that he rushed into the house, got his Yankee musket, and shot the horse dead. He tanned "old Charlie's" hide and it was a rug on the floor in front of his bed all the rest of his life (GHCS p1).
    1900. James move to Oscoda MI Iosco Co (mc/mp).
    1901. James and family immigrated to Oscoda MI Iosco Co (GVWS p2).
    1904. September 19th, James became a citizen at Tawas City MI Iosco Co (mc/mp).
    xxxx. James purchased 80 acres on the Pine River at Handy MI Alcona Co, and cut the cedar and then sold the land (mc/mp).
    1906. James's father Joseph died in Ontario, James lived in Oscoda MI (mc/mp).
    1910. Census of Oscoda MI Iosco Co indicated: James age 52, carpenter working at odd jobs; Martha M Sherman, age 49 born 1861, married 31 years, 13 children 8 alive; children Frank, Clarence, Matilda; they lived on Lake Street (p278/d139/f140; nb/7.46).
    1910. James purchased 180 acres, located on the West side of Cedar Lake about 5 miles South of Greenbush MI and about 6 miles North of Oscoda [this would be near the Alcona and Iosco county line (mc/mp, from GVMS).
    1911. James and family experienced the great fire of 1911 (GVWS p5), Martha had moved back just before the fire (mc/mp from GVWS).
    1913. James divorced Martha (mc/mp).
    1913. James M age 56, a farmer of Greenbush MI Alcona Co, born in Canada; married in Harrisville MI Alcona Co to widow Anna Reeves/Reemes (uc) age 40 born 1873; 2d marriage for both; his parents Joseph Sherman and Jane Fick (ALC/MR 2-68).
    xxxx. James was living on Anna's farm when WW-1 started, located 4 miles North and 1 mile West of his farm.
    1914/16. James worked for the Fisher Co Plant #7 in Detroit MI as a sweeper, until the 1921 strike (mc/mp; GVWS).
    1917. James built a two family flat in Detroit, and brought his wife there to live.
    1920. Census of Alcona Co indicated: James M age 63, immigrated 1881 and naturalized in 1900; Anna Sherman age 45 born 1875 in MI, wife; five step-children named Resume (Soundex e3/p8).
    1920. Census of Flint MI Genesee Co indicated: Martha age 59 born 1861 in Canada, mother-in-law, immigrated 1901; enumerated with Earnest Rathburn (Soundex e38/p14).
    1921. James move to Detroit MI (mc/mp).
    xxxx. Martha Sherman died in Dearborn MI Wayne Co (GVWS p0).
    1934. Anna made him sleep in the attic, one night he fell down the stairway 25 feet to the basement and broke his hip and was taken to Detroit Receiving Hospital. Anna refused to accept James from the hospital, so he was transferred to the County Poor Farm at Eloise MI (mc/mp).
    1934. Sep 13th, James Sherman died at the poor house at Eloise MI Wayne Co (GVWS p0; mc/mp; mc/tb). Buried in Forrest Lawn Cemetery Detroit MI, arrangements were made by the widow of his son Henry Clayton Sherman (mc/mp).

    The history of Eloise actually begins in Detroit were a vote of the people on March 8, 1832, under the name of Wayne County Poor House, named the institution County House Infirmary, it was then located on Gratiot and Mt Elliott Avenues. After the county purchased The Black Horse Tavern, a Detroit-Chicago Stagecoach stop, in 1839 this became the location of the second County Poor House. Of the 146 people living in the original Poor House, only 35 transferred to the new location. The other 111, refused to go into what was than mostly wilderness. Eloise is often referred to as Eloise Sanatorium, Eloise Hospital or even, The Crazy Hospital. The Sanatorium was applied when the hospital opened a out-door treatment center for tubercular patients. The name, Eloise Hospital was adopted by the Board of Superintendents of the Poor on August 18, 1911. It would later become, again The Wayne County Asylum. The term, Eloise, was originally used, because the United States Government, set the Post Office located here in the general office building, it was named Eloise. Later the name, Eloise was applied to the Michigan Central Railroad depot here, the American Express Company located here, and the Detroit, Ypsilanti & Ann Arbor road, all became known with the name Eloise attached.
    But why Eloise ?
    Prior to the year 1894, there were no post offices, express offices, or railroad offices, located at any institutions. This slowed deliveries in the Wayne, Westland and Detroit areas and the Superintendent motioned for a post office located at the County House May 1, 1894. The Postmaster General at that time, approved for the location, however to avoid any annoyance to his Department, he established the order that all newly established post offices, would have only short names, or names of one word, and none, could resemble closely to any other within the State. Freeman B. Dickerson, recent postmaster of Detroit, was then President of the Board. He was largely responsible for getting the new County House Center, built, and was very interested in the establishment of the post office. His only living child, a daughter, who was four years old, was called, Eloise. Members of the Board, submitted the name, Eloise, which was than sent to Washington, and approved. On July 20, 1894, the post office was established, under the name Eloise. (Eloise Dickerson, later married and became the wife of Harlow N. Davock, of Detroit. She died in 1982 at the age of 93.) Eloise evolved over time, and expanded and by the 1930's there were 78 building on almost 1,000 acres of land. It was a self-sufficent community, within Westland Township. It had it's own dairy farm, piggery (or pig farm), greenhouses, a fire department, power plants, bakeries, and its own Post Office. The main building, called "N Building" was over 380,000 square feet and housed 7,000 indigent persons. Over 3,000 of them, working throughout the large complex.
    What Else did Eloise Have ?
    Eloise was not only a General Hospital, and housing unit for the poor of Wayne County, but it is commonly referred to as the "Crazy Hospital." Eloise was a facility for mentally disturbed patients. In the small Eloise Museum located inside of the Kay Beard Building still standing on Michigan Avenue, are artifacts including leather arm restraints. Eloise also had a section for a morgue. There is said to be 7,145 former Eloise residents buried in the old Eloise Cemetery, which is located on the South side of Michigan Avenue, just across from the Kay Beard Building. The last burial is said to have occured in January 1948. ( SEE BELOW for VIEW of Eloise Cemetery and Markers) The Keeper's residence had originally been located in the west end of the main building, however in 1865, it was approved a new structure be built, for the keeper and his family. The building was drawn up by James Anderson, and built by Henry Metz, by contract. The building had a frontage of 46 feet and was 37 feet wide, and also two stories high. The first keeper to live here was A.L. Chase. This building was also used by the Board for meetings and office space, located on the second floor. The previous portion of the main building, that had been used by the keeper and his family, was turned into bedrooms, a dispensary, and nursery. By 1876, there were buildings for the Insane Asylum. The name used for these buildings was the Third County House. In 1839, there was also a school district with a school house located on the property. There were several children in the County House at the time it was first opened in Detroit, who's parents had died from cholera, and the County House was their only home. In Section 52 of Chapter 2 of the Laws of 1838, it stated that the Superintendent of the Poor, in every county, were obligated to look after the education of all children between the ages of five and sixteen. Therefore a room was set aside and apart where the children would assemble for school. In 1859, an old building, that had been used during a small pox epidemic, was made into a schoolhouse. The next year the Board erected a schoolhoues along Plank Road. Legislature later passed a bill stating that the Wayne County Farm, used for the benefit of the poor, would be named a school district, and should be numbered by the School Inspector of Nankin. This would later be named, School District No 10 of Nankin, and entitled to the school money provided to all the other school districts. The first teacher here was Chloe Walker, she was replaced in October of 1862 by Harriet Chase. The building however was destroyed in a fire, and the school had to be run , again from the main building. The Board elected to not erect a new schoolhouse located on the property, as another was being built in the area. The children on Eloise property began to attend the State Public School in May of 1874. The number of children inside the community here, outnumbered the limit to be excepted by the Public School, and by 1880, they had to erect a separate school building . The last recorded money recieved for school purposed was in 1887. There were at times, after 1887, that the State School could not take in the extra number of children from Eloise, and the Superintendent was in charge of educating those children that could not be placed, or adopted out. The Board approved a $5,000 appropration for a seperate "cottage" to be used for the children. They were to be completely seperated from any of the inhabitants of the main hospital area. The cottage was never built, because , massive and quick steps were taken to place every child in other institutions. The State Public School and State Institutions were from then, established to take care of these existing children and those that would become orphaned, or outcast. The schoolhouse built in 1880, was later used for special cases of male patients in the County House, and later as a laundry for the Asylum. The building was located on the north side of Michigan Aveaue, at Merriman Road. In 1825, the grounds in and around the Wayne County Poor House (or Eloise) were almost completely covered by trees of all types. Many of the older white oak trees stood over 130 feet high. These woods of course housed many wild animals such as fox, lynx, deer, bear, and wolves, as well as other smaller animals and birds. Joseph Moss surveyed this property for the Government, for the laying of Military Road. It would extent from Detroit to Chicago, and was then an old Indian trail. The Torbert family built a log house along this "road", cleared the land, and cultivated a small farm. In 1839, the County purchased the Torbert cabin, which Torbert had named and used as the Black Horse Tavern. They also purchased the 280 acres, four cows, a yoke of oxen, and vegetables seeds from Torbert, to run a farm for the County. In June of 1840, 2 horses and a harness were added, and that August, 3 plows, a fanning mill, and other farm tools were purchased. The first farm report to the County Commissioners produced the following:
    600 bushels of corn, 35 bushels of beets, 180 bushels of rutabagas, 28 bushels of peas, 55 bushels of oats, 14 bushels of onions, and 2 bushels of pickles.
    At the time the County purchased this property there is said to have been 2 log buildings, located north of the log house (or Black Horse Tavern). One was a barn and stable, and the other was a shed for teams of animals. There is some indication that the shed would later become mental health institution, and the barn remained standing until 1886, then was sold for its lumber and hay. In 1875 a grain barn was built south of the Michigan Central RailRoad, which was 56 feet long and 46 feet wide. Another barn was built in 1886 for hay, grain, stock, and other tools, it also had a horse and cow stable, and a wagon shed. This structure was 144 feet long and 36 feel wide. In 1886 an addition was added for a dairy, and a solo was added in 1904. In 1896, the County built another barn northwest of the County House originally intended for use by the Asylum farm. In 1884, a new root cellar was constructed and was built between the bakery building, and the gas house. It was 52 feet long and 20 feet wide and divided into seperate bins for vegetables and fruit. Another root cellar was built to house tubers in 1895, it stood on a small hill. It was tore down in 1922, to make room for a small street. In 1935, an underground root cellar was completed east of the farmhouse , and South of Michigan Avenue. This was 40 feet wide and 100 feet long, housing almost 5,000 bushels of produce. A second underground root cellar was built in 1942. At the beginning of the County House's existence, the farmers were the keepers. In 1842 T.T. Lyon was offered the position as keeper and farmer, but claimed he would starve to death on the salary of $300 a year. An investigative committee was form during the Civil War period, to establish the need, and importance of the County House. The farm embraced 280 acres of land, of which 180 were good for cultivation. Another 60 acres were cleared , well-fenced, and useful for pasturage, and 40 acres in timber land. They reported it to be a good arrangement for farming with a house, and out buildings situated in the center, on the south side of the Rouge River. The River was reported to be a valuable supply of water to the stock and water to the house and washrooms. They also found, however, that the population of the paupers was not sufficent to run the entire farm, and that renting or leasing out work on shares of the land, would be adventageous. In short, the committee felt to take away any of the farm would injure the value of the surrounded community. In 1872, they purchased 157 acres adjacent to the land, which was owned by the Cady family, for use of the Asylum. There were at this time, two seperate keepers, one was the Keeper of the Asylum, and one was the Keeper of the County House. There was a competitive feeling between the two Institutions and the Keeper of the Asylum felt there would be a more leveling of administration if this farm was placed under their direction. In 1893, Dr. E.O. Bennett, took charge of the Asylum and the Cady Farmland was placed under his jurisdiciton. In 1897 a new wire fence was built around both farms and all fields, and a deep well was sunk as well as a windmill and large tank. The two farms remained seperate and distinct from one another for several years. It wasn't until 1908 when they discontinued this, and both became a single unit, and remained so until the function of farmkeeper was discontinued in 1955. Other additions and enlargements were made after the purchase of the Cady farmland. 2 henneries were constructed; a blacksmith shop was installed in 1915; and several piggeries were built. In 1889 a County piggery was built north of the County House barn , but had to be removed in 1913, to make room for a railroad trestle. In 1895 an Asylum piggery was built north of the Keepers residence, but was dismantled in 1917. Cement piggeries with also constructed in 1917, a half of a mile south of Michigan Avenue.
    When Did This Become the Wayne County Psychiatric Hospital ? There was no distinction between the rational and the insane inmates in the County House until March 22, 1841. It was this date, that the first of five patients were registered as insane, her name was Bridget Hughes, an Irish immigrant, she remained a patient here until her death on March 8, 1895 it is likely that she is buired among the indigent in Eloise Cemetery. During these first years there was at least one and possibly two building located northeast of building "C". They were constructed to house the psychiatrically distrubed. The County House was at this time, the home of the criminally insane who were sent from the Detroit House of Corrections. For several years, the County House was the only place for an asylum in the State of Michigan. The only division of patients in the County House, was by sex. Other than that, babies, old men, the blind, as well as the insane, were all housed together. Finally with the assitance of the Wayne County Board of Supervisors, insistant on legislation regarding the insane, in 1848, an act was passed creating a State Asylum. The first asylum was planned on ten acres of land, in Kalamazoo, Michigan, the County House never showed an interest in having a seperate psychiatric Asylum on the property. However, they did continue to care for the insane and house them as best they could. In 1859, the Michigan Asylum in Kalamazoo, was ready to receive a limited number of female patients, however, they indicated that only the "curable" patients would be housed here. Over the years the number of insane people housed at the County Poor Farm, increased, until it was so intolerable, that the Hospital Board, determined to make an effort to provide a seperate building for the insane patients, approved the establishment in 1867 of a seperate building. In 1868, a two-story brick building was erected which was 42 feet long, 35 feet deep, with 57 feet of frontage. It was located 290 feet west of the Main County House. East and West wings were added in 1876 and in 1881 the management of the Asylum was transferred to a professional physician. Dr. E.O. Bennett, and his wife were employed as Medical Superintendent and Matron. After serving 19 years Dr. Bennett retired, and was replaced by Dr. John J. Marker. Marker's first act, was to erect a second Asylum Building, it was the year 1900. In 1882, the population of the Asylum was 307 patients, 224 of them resident patients. In 1887, a special building was contructed which combined the insane wards, the adminstrative headquarters, and the chapel. In 1885, the State of Michigan, passed a law for the insane, which basically stated any insane person continuously housed by the county of two years or more, would became a State charged patients, thereafter. This law was amended in 1891, stating that any insane person committed by a judge could be commit directly to the Wayne County Asylym, however, none would be confined there, if there was room in the State Asylum, but the State Asylum, could return patients to the County, when their beds were full. There was a devasting fire in 1892 at the Eastern Michigan Asylum located in Ypsilanti, and a large number of patients were moved to Eloise. The following year was the purchase of the Cady farmland and a "Women's Building" was erected west of the first Asylum building. Over the years there were additions, undates, and more buildings added to the main Asylum area. By 1907, alcoholics and drug addicts were maintained in State and County Hospitals. The population in 1913 was 576, with an employment of 22 males and 44 female attendents. By 1923, the population had grown to 1,700 patients, and additional buildings were erected. The first in 1921, another in 1923 with a new dairy barn and enlargment of the power plant, one in 1925, one in 1928 and one in 1929. The last psychiatric patient to leave Eloise was in 1979. Inside of the Kay Beard Building, still standing on Eloise property is a small museum run by Frank Rembisz, the director of the Wayne County Office on Aging.
    Eloise Cemetery in the News
    An article published in the Observer in October 1999, located also in the historical reference file at the Public Library of Westland at 6123 Central City Parkway Westland, MI 48185, tells of Eloise's "ghostly activities." L. Keas who chases ghosts .. for fun, moved to Westland from Chicago in 1998, and now resides in Canton, where she works as a website builder, and also runs, The Michigan Ghost Hunters Society, founded by Keas. (http://www.tmghs.com) Keas seeks out locations throughout all of Michigan, that are known to have interesting histories, like the old Wayne County Infirmary, Psychiatric and General Hospital Complex, also known as Eloise. The complex itself, now houses the Wayne County Office on Aging, as well as some social programs such as "Meals on Wheels." It is located on Michigan Avenue, just east of Merriman Road. Keas is said to believe that she captured ghosts hovering over an Observer photographer while taking photos for the article done at Eloise. Below are two photos that I took this September (2000) of the area known as Eloise Cemetery. At the time, the grass had just been cut and volunteers from, The Friends of Eloise(734-727-7377 Frank Rembisz), had come in, and started uncovering the markers located here. There are apparently 593 markers in the cemetery itself, marked only by number. The Friends of Eloise is working on complying death records, Eloise records, and death indexes to try and determine who might be matched with these 593 stones.

    Looking across the entire field where the Eloise Cemetery is located. You can not see that there are any markers here at all, unless you enter the field. There is no gate, and are no signs.
    Here is a picture showing 3 of the 593 numbered markers. The area had recently been cut and cleared, or locating any of the stones may have been near impossible 1900 Census of Wayne County House & Insane Asylum Elijah McCoy, resident of Eloise Inventor and Ex-slave. Return to Wayne County Cemetery List Return to Wayne County MALHN Main Page

    James married Martha Madora SMITH on 24 Dec 1879 in Clear Creek, Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada, and was divorced. Martha (daughter of Ephraim Kellum SMITH and Mary STEWART) was born on 15 Feb 1861 in Bayham, Elgin, Ontario, Canada; died on 5 May 1928 in Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Martha Madora SMITH was born on 15 Feb 1861 in Bayham, Elgin, Ontario, Canada (daughter of Ephraim Kellum SMITH and Mary STEWART); died on 5 May 1928 in Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan.

    Other Events:

    • Also Known As: Dorie
    • Reference Number: *
    • _MARNM: Sherman
    • _UID: 1083749A7DD50E4F98202241BB3DF78CE6FB

    Notes:

    Martha M Sherman
    Michigan Death Certificates, 1921-1952
    Name: Martha M Sherman
    Event Type: Death
    Event Date: 05 May 1928
    Event Place: Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan, United States
    Gender: Female
    Age: 67
    Marital Status: Married
    Birth Date: 15 Feb 1861
    Birthplace: Ontario Canada
    Father's Name: Ephram Smith
    Mother's Name: Mary Stewart

    Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1857-1922 ancestry.com about James Milton Sherman
    Name: James Milton Sherman
    Birth Place: Houghton
    Age: 23 residence: Houghton
    Father Name: Joseph Sherman
    Mother Name: Matilda Sherman
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1856
    Spouse Name: Martha M Smith
    Spouse's Age: 18 residence: Middleton
    Spouse Birth Place: Bayham
    Spouse Father Name: Ephraim Smith
    Spouse Mother Name : Mary Smith
    Marriage Date: 24 Dec 1879
    Marriage Place: Clear Creek, Norfolk (Methodist)
    Marriage County: Norfolk , District of Houghton

    1910 United States Federal Census Martha M Sherman
    Name: Martha M Sherman
    Age in 1910: 49
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1861
    Birthplace: Canada English
    Relation to Head of House: Wife
    Father's Birth Place: Canada English
    Mother's Birth Place: Canada English
    Spouse's name: James M
    Home in 1910: Oscoda, Iosco, Michigan
    Marital Status: Married 31 years 13 children, 8 living
    Race: White
    Gender: Female
    Year of Immigration: 1902
    Household Members: Name Age
    James M Sherman 52
    Martha M Sherman 49
    Frank Sherman 21
    Clarence Sherman 12
    Matilda Sherman 11

    Martha Sherman
    United States Census, 1920
    Name Martha Sherman
    Event Type Census
    Event Date 1920
    Event Place Flint Ward 3, Genesee, Michigan, United States
    Gender Female
    Age 59
    Marital Status Widowed
    Race White
    Race (Original) White
    Can Read Yes
    Can Write Yes
    Relationship to Head of Household Mother-in-law
    Birth Year (Estimated) 1861
    Birthplace Canada
    Father's Birthplace New York
    Mother's Birthplace Canada
    Sheet Letter A
    Sheet Number 14
    Household
    Role
    Gender
    Age
    Birthplace
    Ernest Rathbun Head M 32 Michigan
    Matilda Rathbun Wife F 20 Canada
    Norman Rathbun Son M 1 Michigan
    Martha Sherman Mother-in-law F 59 Canada
    Thomas T Hackett Lodger M 34 Michigan
    Citing this Record
    "United States Census, 1920," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MZS1-MGR : 14 December 2015), Martha Sherman in household of Ernest Rathbun, Flint Ward 3, Genesee, Michigan, United States; citing sheet 14A, NARA microfilm publication T625 (Washington D.C.: National Archives and Records Administration, n.d.); FHL microfilm 1,820,765.


    Martha M Sherman
    Michigan Death Certificates
    Name Martha M Sherman
    Event Type Death
    Event Date 05 May 1928
    Event Place Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan, United States
    Gender Female
    Age 67
    Marital Status Married
    Birth Date 15 Feb 1861
    Birthplace Ontario Canada
    Birth Year (Estimated) 1861
    Father's Name Ephram Smith
    Mother's Name Mary Stewart
    Citing this Record
    "Michigan Death Certificates, 1921-1952," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KF7K-5HY : 12 December 2014), Martha M Sherman, 05 May 1928; citing Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan, United States, Division for Vital Records and Health Statistics, Lansing; FHL microfilm 1,973,123.

    Notes:

    Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1857-1922 ancestry.com about James Milton Sherman
    Name: James Milton Sherman
    Birth Place: Houghton
    Age: 23 residence: Houghton
    Father Name: Joseph Sherman
    Mother Name: Matilda Sherman
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1856
    Spouse Name: Martha M Smith
    Spouse's Age: 18 residence: Middleton
    Spouse Birth Place: Bayham
    Spouse Father Name: Ephraim Smith
    Spouse Mother Name : Mary Smith
    Marriage Date: 24 Dec 1879
    Marriage Place: Clear Creek, Norfolk (Methodist)
    Marriage County: Norfolk , District of Houghton

    Divorced
    He filed for divorse on account of desertion Sep 25, 1912
    Circut Courd, Alcona, Michigan

    Children:
    1. Milton Kellum SHERMAN was born on 26 Nov 1880 in Malahide, Elgin, Ontario, Canada; died on 25 Feb 1953 in Manton, Wexford, Michigan, United States; was buried in Caldwell Twp Cemetery Missaukee Co,Michigan, USA.
    2. 3. Alma Rolettie SHERMAN was born on 15 Jul 1882 in Lumberton, Grand Rapids, Michigan, United States; died in 1951.
    3. Arthur Lewellyn SHERMAN was born on 27 Oct 1883 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 29 Jun 1951 in Macomb, Michigan.
    4. Henry Clayton SHERMAN was born on 7 Jan 1885 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died in 1929 in Michigan, United States.
    5. Mary Elizabeth SHERMAN was born on 18 Apr 1886 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    6. Joseph Bernard SHERMAN was born on 1 May 1887 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 5 Nov 1887 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Methodist Cemetary, Fairground, Ontario, Canada.
    7. Frank Wesley SHERMAN was born on 29 May 1888 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    8. Ira Hamilton SHERMAN was born on 10 Sep 1889 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 30 Oct 1889 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Methodist Cemetary, Fairground, Ontario, Canada.
    9. William Austin SHERMAN was born on 21 Jan 1893 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 18 Sep 1893 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Methodist Cemetary, Fairground, Ontario, Canada.
    10. Lawrence Edmond SHERMAN was born on 14 Sep 1894 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 25 Mar 1897 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Methodist Cemetary, Fairground, Ontario, Canada.
    11. Earl Romain SHERMAN was born on 20 Oct 1895 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 28 Mar 1897 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Methodist Cemetary, Fairground, Ontario, Canada.
    12. Clarence Clifton SHERMAN was born on 14 Jul 1897 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 13 Oct 1978 in Battle Creek, Calhoun, Michigan, USA.
    13. Matilda Sepperal SHERMAN was born on 5 Feb 1899 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 21 Jan 1979 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Joseph Henry SHERMAN was born on 13 Jul 1827 in Berlin, Ionia, Michigan, United States (son of Andrew SHERMAN and Hannah NELSON); died on 3 Jun 1906 in Simcoe, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Simcoe, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: Farmer, Carpenter, Mason
    • Reference Number: *
    • _UID: 0006918D81A6D34684DF2699A8D9784AC9D2

    Notes:

    Timeline for Joseph Henry Sherman:

    1827 Jul 13, Joseph born in Berlin, Ionia, Mi
    1845 Joseph went to Ontario Canada where his mother's relatives lived.
    1850 Feb 4, Joseph married Matilda Jane Fick in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1851 May 28, son, William Lewis, born Houghton
    1854 May 6, son, Joseph Henry, born Houghton
    1854 Sep, son Joseph Henry died Houghton
    1857 Nov 28, son, James Milton, born Houghton
    1859 Feb 12, daughter, Sarah Elizabeth,born Houghton
    1861 Aug 10, daughter, Mary Jane,born Houghton
    1863 Sep 13, Angeletta Louisa, born Houghton
    1868 son, Lambert Lincoln, born Houghton
    1871 Census canada, Houghton, Norfolk, Canada with family
    1895 Dec 15, wife, Matilda Jane, died in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1901 Canada census, Joseph is a widow living as a lodger in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1906 Jun 3, Joseph died in Simcoe, Ontario, Canada, at age 79, from old age.

    Is this right?
    1851 Census of Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Age: 21
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831
    Birthplace: N Brunswick
    Province: Canada West (Ontario)
    District: Wentworth County
    District Number: 41
    Sub-District: Saltfleet
    Sub-District Number: 398
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 21

    1861 Census of Canada about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Age: 34
    Birth Year: 1827
    Birthplace: Canada West
    Marital Status: Married
    Home in 1861: Houghton, Norfolk, Canada West
    Religion: Methodist
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 34 farmer
    Matilda J Sherman 30 born Canada West
    William L Sherman 10 born Canada West
    James M Sherman 5 born Canada West
    Sarah E Sherman 2 born Canada West

    1871 Census of Canada about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Age: 43
    Birth Year: abt 1828
    Birth Place: Ontario
    Marital Status: Married
    Religion: Baptist
    Origin: German
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk South
    District Number: 11
    Division: 02
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Subdistrict Number: a
    Neighbors: Jeremiah Fick age 23, Abagail Fick age 23, William age 7, Charles age 3, John age 6/12
    all Presbyterian, born Ontario, German origin
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 43 farmer
    Matilda Sherman 39 german origin
    William Sherman 19
    James Sherman 14
    Sarah Sherman 12
    Mary Sherman 9
    Louisa Sherman 7
    Lambert Sherman 3

    1881 Census of Canada about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 53
    Birth Year: 1828
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Religion: Ch. of the Mesiah
    Nationality: New Brunswick
    Occupation: Farmer
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 157
    District: Norfolk South
    Sub-District Number: A
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Division: 1
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 53
    Matelda J. Sherman 49
    Lueza Sherman 17
    Lambert L. Sherman 13
    Elizabeth Burgar 21

    1891 Census of Canada about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 63
    Birth Year: abt 1828
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Religion: messiah
    French Canadian: No
    Father's Birth Place: New Brunswick
    Mother's Birth Place: Ontario
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 97
    District: Norfolk South
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 63 Carpenter, father born New Brunswick, Mother born ontario
    Matilda Sherman 60 born Ontario, father born USA, Mother born Ontario
    Sarah E Sherman 32 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Louise Sherman 27 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Lambert L Sherman 23 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Peter H Fick 88 father, born USA, his father born NS, Mother born USA

    1901 Census of Canada
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Widowed
    Age: 73
    Birth Date: 13 Jul 1827
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Relation to Head of House: Lodger
    Racial or Tribal Origin: German
    Nationality: Canadian
    Religion: Baptist
    Occupation: R Far
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk (South/Sud)
    District Number: 94
    Sub-District: Houghton
    Sub-District Number: B-1
    Family Number: 66
    Page: 6
    Household Members: Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 73

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Year: 1881
    #387, Juror, yes lot wp14 conc 6 owner PO2
    Locality: Charlotteville Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Year: 1885
    #462 Juror no lot secor2 conc 2 owner PO7
    Locality: Houghton Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Year: 1886
    #473, Juror, no lot NE cor 2 conc 2 owner PO9
    Locality: Houghton Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about Joseph Sherman
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Year: 1890
    #677, Juror, yes lot NE pt 3 conc 13 tenant mf PO18
    Locality: Rear of Leeds and Landsdowne Township
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    One source states that Joseph Henry was born at Houghton Center, BAltfleet Tnship, Walsingham Co.

    He was a carpenter and mason. Matilda Fick was a school teacher at Houghton Center, Ontario. Early home of JHs, according to his neighbor, Minnie Patterson, was at Wainfleet near Hamilton, Ontario.

    !NOTE: Berlin (now Marne) is near Coopersville, Michigan. Joseph was a farmer and also did carpenter and mason work. Tree grafting and bees were his hobbies. He also tamed bulls. As a boy, he lived in Berlin, Michigan. After 1845, he went to Houghton Township, Norfolk Co, Ontario, Canada to his mother's relatives. He was said to have great strength and was quite agile. He was 6 feet, 6 inches tall. He was a second cousin to Gen Wm. Tecumseh Sherman, General in chief of the US Army 1869-1883 and also to General W. T. Sherman's brother, John Sherman, Secretary of State (1897). Their father's fathers were brothers, 5th and 6th sons of Daniel Sherman I.

    (The following was taken from notes of Vernon Sherman, great grandson of Joseph Henry Sherman: Vernon lived at "Apple Acres", M-42, Manton R2, Michigan 49663)
    "Joseph Henry Sherman was the third child of Andrew and Hannah Sherman, born 13 July 1827 on a farm near Berlin, (now Marne), Michigan. He left Michigan as a boy of 17 or 18 about 1845, and went to Southern Ontario where he had relatives on his mother's side.
    He married Matilda Jane Fick, 4 February 1850, probably at Houghton Center. Matilda was small, She weighed about 95 pounds. She could stand upright beneath her husband's outstretched arm. For three years after their marriage, Matilda continued to teach school at Houghton Center. Shortly after his marriage, Joseph bought a 10 acre piece of land two miles from Houghton Center and on the 3rd Concession Road. He built one of the first frame houses in that section of the Country. He became a carpenter and mason by trade, and many of the original frame buildings in that part of the country were the result, either wholly or in part, of his handicraft. During winter months when building was slack, Joseph did repair work and clock "tinkering".

    He set out a 200 tree apple and peach orchard on his 10 acres. He was very successful in grafting of fruit trees. He had an apiary in the orchard to insure fertilization of his trees. His daughter, Sarah Elizabeth recalled that certain trees were regarded as the special property of each of the children. There was Lizzie's tree, Lew's tree, etc. Sarah Elizabeth related that in addition to the orchard, her father had four trees of sweet black cherries and three of the large red English cherry. Southward from the house was a garden plot with three rows of currant bushes, one red, one black and one of the white currants. Between the rows, sod had reformed and under it a swarm of bumble bees had built their nest at one particular spot.

    Sarah Elizabeth and her brother James Milton delighted in tormenting this nest of bees. They would prepare for the escapade by pumping several buckets of water. Then one of the youngsters would rap sharply on the ground with a stick to arouse the bees and as they swarmed out, the other would douse them with water to wet their wings and prevent them from flying. Needless to say, this was a highly exciting sport, yet very painful when the bees scored.

    Sarah Elizabeth's closest childhood friend was the neighbor girl, Eutachia Lutz. The little girls grew up agile as squirrels. Sarah told of bare foot races along the top of rail fences. Since every other top rail was free to roll, it was necessary to run such sections on the second rail down. That must have been quite a trick. Not all their time was spent in running rail fences. The women of those days had the house and garden to manage, blankets to weave, straw hats to make, etc.

    Rye straw was used for hats because of its great strength. After cutting off the grain heads, the straws were soaked in water and bleached dry in the hot sun. They were then soakeed again to make them plyable and were braided into a long continuous cord. The straw cord was then coiled round and round and each coil sewed to the preceding one until the hat brim was reached and the job finished. It took a full day to make a man's hat for use in the fields, and Sarah Elizabeth said they sold for ten cents. To make milady's hat more time was required, since it was necessary to first slit the rye straw into three parts by pulling them over staggered pin points whech projected up through a little trough-like board made for that purpose. These finer straws were then woven into a continuous cord, carefully coiled and sewed to the shape desired. On the Ontario farm of 1865, making your own straw hat was not a hobby, it was necessary if you wanted a hat.

    Sarah Elizabeth recalled that when she was 15 (about 1875), a cousin of about her age named William Sherman came from Coopersville, Michigan to help her father on their farm. This lad was a son of her father's brother William.
    About 1872 a severe drought made it necessary for Joseph and all of his neighbors to haul water from Clear Creek, a half mile from his farm. The water was put into barrels at the Creek and dragged on a stone=boat to the house throughout the latter part of that summer.

    Many stories are told regarding Joseph's great strength and agility. It is related that he could stand in a 1/2 bushel measure and from this position jump through a forward sommersalt and land with his feet back in the measure. He is also said to have fought and "broke" bulls for others. The procedure of "breaking" a bull is to hang onto the bull by his tail with one hand and to punish him mercilessly with a club, hay fork, hand saw or other convenient weapon until his spirit is broken and he evidences his fear of man by bellowing. This treatment though brutal was considered necessary to insure the future safety of people near the animal.

    On one occasion, Joseph decided to "break" a neighbor's bull on a holiday morning in the late summer. People from nearby farms were on hand to see the show. Joseph Henry climbed over a fence into a small field with the bull, and began circling him so as to catch him by the tail. Neighbors yelled advice and caution as the man and the animal maneubered. Suddenly, during an attempt to seize the animal's tail, Joseph lost his footing, fell, and was promptly gored by the bull. Several ribs were broken and only the quick aid of his eldest son, William, and neighbors armed with pitchforks saved his life. His good wife accused him of "not having calf brains". In his own home, Joseph Henry is reputed to have been stern to the point of harshness in matters of family discipline.

    Close friends and neighbors of the family at Houghton Center were the Pattisons. They had children, Minnie, Howard, Roland and Grace. According to Minnie Pattison, Joseph Henry's "old Home" was in Wainfleet Township, of Oxford County.

    Joseph Henry entered the County Home at Simcoe, Ontario, Canada, on 4 December 1905 and died there on 3 June 1905, age 79. He was buried in Farm No. 7.

    Because Joseph had died at Simcoe, I visited the County Home looking for facts. They were there. A handful of words scattered to the columns of an old record book, the original entries, the significant corrections. A surprising, pathetic, single line. The main building was unchanged, a two-story red brick, high off the ground and far back from the road. Its narrow dirt drive circled it then shot straight from the front door to the highway like the shortest possible escape. A hundred feet to either side of the long drive, and straight as guides in a copy book, ran two rows of Pine. It was August. The mowed strips were dusty and turning brown. The place looked deserted. No one was in sight as I drove slowly up, circled the building, and stopped below a long porch at the East end. But here were slow moving rockers and old eyes. Some looked toward the road. Some stared away at the fields of the Burial Farm. There seemed no interest in the visitor. Their worn mills of memory groun at the chafe of yesterday.

    The old building was depressing, a thing set apart and muffled in time. Small sounds were distant. I climbed the steps to the main entrance. The screen door was large. There was no sing, no arrow, no bell. I went into a narrow, dark hall. It smelled of cabbage, urine, insinfectant. Here was a world behind doors. An inmate brought the nurse, white-starched and busy, busy. An efficient little red-head, helpful, but cocking one eye at the idea of anyone wasting a day on the one-line record of the long dead.

    The books were various, old and misused. They'd been kept in several "hands". Someone had begun an index. I was lefyt with them and a story began. December 4, 1905. An old man sat on the edge of a hard chair, nervous, shakey. He was 78. Sixty of those years had known the cold and snow of Ontario's winters. Seemed they were a lot colder lately! Now he was "on the County". They'd brought him here "where he'd be taken care of". The sleigh ride had chilled him. The hot bricks were cold to the feet long before he and the County man had got here. Slowly the warmth of the room began to steal thru his pant legs. He still had his coat on. His big awkward hands fumbled with a heavy cap. His watery eyes sought the sky thru the high narrow windows. Still snowing. He shifted to better see the cluttered office, the "boughten" furniture, the wainscotting of mill lumber all smooth and shellaced like he'd always wanted for his place.

    Three weeks to Christmas. Three weeks to excited kids. Their great day would be dead to him. Old wounds ached and loneliness weighed more at Christman. That was all. Christmas for him was buried under the snows of many years, gone with the days when he could do, when he and Matilda had their own place, when his kids were around him, and he had strength in his hands. He minded the time Milt and Dorie were married on a Christmas eve! And the belling. He thought of Matilda Jane and of their seven, and of their first house as he built it, and the planting of the orchard, and the bees. All gone! The kids grown and married and gone, all but Lambert, and the baby that died before the year was up.

    He'd always managed, 'till now, and he'd always hoped to "go" with dignit - not here - not like this. He hated being at the mercy of a petty official, hated the lookk that said, 'you're an unwanted nothing". He had no illusions; the once "strongest man in the county, 6 foot 6 inches, was a shakey wreck, helpless, burdensome, and now, gotten-rid-of. He saw himself as they did, and old hulk being herded to the stall he'd die in, and he hated it in his helplessness. He was master of nothing but the trivial details they might want for the record they must keep in the big book just opened across the table from him. A book of a place he wanted no part of, a hated place, a hated book, and he was alone. He had nothing but loneness now and he decided to keep it that way. There was a satisfaction in choice, even as barren as that one was.

    "Your name is?" "Leonard" (Leonard, indeed!). "Your age?" "60" (78) "Married?" "Single", "Religion?" "Baptist" And so his one line record began, "Leonard Sherman Age 60 Baptist Single Admitted Dec. 4, 1905. Six months later it was completed with "Died June 3, 1906 Buried Farm No. 07. Then later a correction in sharp hard strokes striking out "Leonard" and "60" to write "Joseph" and "75" And still not correct; because who ever came for what ever reason, after his death and burial by the County (Charles Mercier?), did not know he'd died exactly 39 days before his 79th birthday.

    When Joseph died alone in the poor-house, 5 of his 7 children were alive. Of these 5 there were 3 living in Ontario: Sarah, wife of Washington Burger; Mary, wife of Charles Mercier; and Lambert, bachelor. According to Calvin Wilson, who lived there and knew all these people, Joseph had last lived with Mary and Charles Mercier before commitment to the County Home. William Lewis and family lived near Tawas City, Michigan: James Milton and family lived at Oscoda, Michigan. Joseph and I, a great grandson, had never met. I was conceived one month after his death and so commenced a new life-cycle derived from Joseph Henry by the mystery of the gene. And at 63 I'm typing this about him on this page.

    The County Home at Simcoe is a two story, twenty-room, plain box-like structure set in the remote center of a flat forty acre piece. The road in is narrow and straight as a bullet aimed at the front door. Architectural beauty it has not. Landscaping it has not. It is at best an awful example of the necessary someplace, as out-of-sight, as out-of-mind, and as remote as can possibly be arranged by any fine Christian community. It hasn't changed since Joseph first saw it. Only the scrub pine along the straight road in has been added, like camouflage too sparingly applied to be effective.

    I was glad that I'd come to search and learn and to imagine. I got a new feeling for Joseph that was warm and strangely real. He had become more than the frozen faced old man on a tin-type photograph, more than a big olld man in a heavy coat, wearing an old fashioned cap-hat with a peak over whispy white hair and straggly beard, and staring directly at you with his watery blue eyes and straight Sherman nose, and clutching a heavy cane with both hands for support. Yes, I see alot more; and feel it too. As I walked out into the bright sunshine it felt good. I turned my car around at the highway for a long look back at the building at the end of the long dirt road and the flat fields of 'Farm No. 07' ".

    http://www.sherman-roots.com/sherman/pioneers/sp'ott.doc
    3. Joseph Henry7 Sherman born Jul 13 1827 in Berlin MI Ottawa Co (mc/mp). Berlin MI named changed in the 1940s to Marne MI (mc/mp; mc/sp).
    1831. Aug 24th, Matilda Jane Fick born in Houghton Twp Norfolk Co Ontario Canada (mc/mp; mc/sp).
    1845. Joseph left MI went to Houghton Twp Norfolk Co Ontario Canada, where his mothers relatives lived.
    1850. Feb 4th, Joseph married Matilda Jane Fick at probably at Houghton Center Houghton Twp Norfolk Co Ontario Canada (mc/mp); or in 1879 Joseph married Matilda Jane Fick at Glenmeyer Ontario (mc/sp).
    . Shortly after marriage he purchased 10 acres near Houghton Center; he set out 200 trees, apple and peach, also 8 cherry trees
    Joseph was a farmer, also did carpenter and mason work; tree grafting and bees were his hobby; he did clock "tinkering"; he also tamed bulls; he was 6ft 6in tall, had great strength and was very agile (mc/mp).
    1895. Dec 15th, Matilda Sherman died at Houghton Twp Norfolk Co Ontario Canada; buried in the
    Baptist Cemetery at Houghton Ontario Canada (mc/mp).
    1904. Dec 4th, Joseph entered the County Home (farm #7) (mc/mp)
    1906. Jun 3rd, Joseph Sherman died at the County Home (farm #7) Simcoe Ontario Canada; also
    buried there (mc/mp). 7 Children:

    Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1936
    Name: Joseph Sherman
    Death Date: 3 Jun 1906 c
    Death Location: Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    Age: 75 widower
    Gender: Male
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831
    Birth Location: American
    Residence: County Home
    Occupation: Resident - County Home
    Single, Widower
    Cause of Death: Nephritis 10 days
    Religion: Babtist
    Name of Person making return: JCC Grasett
    Archives of Ontario Microfilm: MS935_126

    Joseph married Matilda Jane FICK on 4 Feb 1850 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. Matilda (daughter of Peter Henry FICK and Mary Fick) was born on 24 Aug 1831 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 15 Dec 1895 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Baptist Cem, Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Matilda Jane FICK was born on 24 Aug 1831 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada (daughter of Peter Henry FICK and Mary Fick); died on 15 Dec 1895 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Baptist Cem, Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: *
    • _MARNM: Sherman
    • _UID: DF69B03A49A85A42B3006C9EB79977BF02AD

    Notes:

    July 1, thirty-four million people will celebrate Canada Day. 145 years ago, in 1867, the British North America Act went into effect, united the provinces of Canada (East and West), New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia into a single country called Canada. Canada East and Canada West became the provinces of Québec and Ontario respectively. Although Canada had some autonomy, it was not until 1982 that the Constitution was patriated and they became fully autonomous, although they do remain a member of the Commonwealth of Nations.


    !NOTE: (following taken from paper written by Vernon Sherman, great grandson of Matilda)
    "Matilda Jane Fick weighed 95 lbs. and could stand upright under her husband's outstretched arm. She was a school teacher at Houghton Center Ontario for three years after her marriage. In her later years Matilda Jane had become far-sighted although she could still read without glasses. Her grand-daughter, Elizabeth recalled many times when she had seen Matilda jane, a little old woman, sitting hunched over a chair beside the box stove, during the long winter afternoons, reading from her Bible which was laying on the floor between her feet.
    Matilda died 15 December 1895, and was buried in the Baptist Cemetary on Lake Road less that a mile east of Hemlock near Houghton, Ontario. (5 infant great grandsons of Andrew Sherman are also buried there."

    Father of Matilda Jane Fick

    1851 Census of Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia about Peter H Fick
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Gender: Male
    Age: 49
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1803
    Birthplace: United States
    Province: Canada West (Ontario)
    District: Norfolk County
    District Number: 25
    Sub-District: Walsingham
    Sub-District Number: 240
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Peter H Fick 49 agriculture
    Mary Fick 42 baptist, born Canada
    Elizabeth Fick 19 baptist, born Canada
    Gilbert Fick 13 baptist, born Canada

    1861 Census of Canada about Peter C Fick
    Name: Peter C Fick
    [Peter H Fick]
    Gender: Male
    Age: 59
    Birth Year: 1802
    Birthplace: Green U S
    Marital Status: Married
    Home in 1861: Walsingham, Norfolk, Canada West
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Peter C Fick 59
    Mary Fick 50, born Norfolk, Canada West
    Nancy Fick 8, born Norfolk, Canada West
    Gilbert Fick 22, born Norfolk, Canada West, laborer

    1871 Census of Canada about Peter H Fick
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Gender: Male
    Age: 68
    Birth Year: abt 1803
    Birth Place: Ontario
    Marital Status: Married
    Religion: Baptist
    Origin: Dutch
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk South
    District Number: 11
    Division: 01
    Subdistrict: Walsingham
    Subdistrict Number: b
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Peter H Fick 68 farmer
    Mary Fick 61 born Ontario, Baptist
    Nancy Fick 18 born Ontario, Baptist
    Martha Fick 10 born Ontario, Baptist

    1881 Census of Canada
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Widowed
    Age: 78
    Birth Year: 1803
    Birthplace: USA
    Religion: Baptist
    Occupation: Farmer
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 157
    District: Norfolk South
    Sub-District Number: B
    Subdistrict: Walsingham
    Division: 2
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Gilbert Fisk 40 farmer
    Sarah Fisk 32
    James Fisk 13
    Mary Fisk 11
    Henry Fisk 9
    Calista Fisk 8
    Albert Fisk 5
    Clarence Fisk 3
    Laurie Fisk 2
    Peter H Fisk 78

    1891 Census of Canada about Peter H Fick
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Widowed
    Age: 88
    Birth Year: abt 1803
    Birthplace: United States
    Relation to Head of House: fath
    Religion: Baptist
    French Canadian: No
    Father's Birth Place: Nova Scotia
    Mother's Birth Place: United States
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 97
    District: Norfolk South
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Joseph Sherman 63 Carpenter, father born New Brunswick, Mother born ontario
    Matilda Sherman 60 born Ontario, father born USA, Mother born Ontario
    Sarah E Sherman 32 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Louise Sherman 27 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Lambert L Sherman 23 born Ontario, father born Ontario, Mother born Ontario
    Peter H Fick 88 father, born USA, his father born NS, Mother born USA

    Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1938 and Deaths Overseas, 1939-1947 about Matilda Jane Sherman
    Name: Matilda Jane Sherman mechanic's wife
    Death Date: 15 Dec 1895 Cause of death: paralysis
    Death County or District: Houghton, Norfolk
    Age: 64
    Gender: Female Mechanics wife baptist
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831
    Birth Location: Canada
    Informant: Ed Francis of Houghton

    Notes:

    Marriage Information
    Date
    02 APR 1850
    Location
    Ontario, Canada
    to Joseph Henry SHERMAN

    Children:
    1. William Lewis SHERMAN was born on 28 May 1851 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 30 Nov 1908 in Wauchula, Hardee, Florida, United States.
    2. Joseph Henry SHERMAN was born on 6 May 1854 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 29 Sep 1854 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    3. 6. James Milton SHERMAN was born on 28 Nov 1857 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 14 Sep 1934 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States; was buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, United States.
    4. Sarah Elizabeth SHERMAN was born on 12 Feb 1859 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 26 Jul 1941 in London, Ontario, Canada.
    5. Mary Jane SHERMAN was born on 10 Aug 1861 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 28 Aug 1928.
    6. Angeletta Louisa SHERMAN was born on 13 Sep 1863 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 18 Sep 1903 in York, Ontario, Canada.
    7. Lambert Lincoln SHERMAN was born on 3 Mar 1868 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 31 Mar 1938 in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada.

  3. 14.  Ephraim Kellum SMITH was born about 1800 in possibly Warrenburg, Washington, New York, United States (son of Asa SMITH and Hannah Kellam); died on 19 Sep 1884 in Haldimand, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Glenmeyer Baptist cemetery, http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~onnorfol/history.htm, Walsingham North township.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: *
    • _UID: 2CFA5357007F02409F6AB4D2D2FC241C2EF4

    Notes:

    According to Census records and death records, Ephraim was not born in England but was born in the United States in about 1800 (possibly Warren County, New York). He is listed as the father on my g grandmother, Martha M Smith's, marriage data. She was married at Clear Creek, Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada

    questions?
    1. Where was Ephraim born? There is an Asa Smith in !800 census in Thurman, Washington, Ny. Thurman is a town now in the western part of Warren County just north of Saratoga Springs. It lies entirely inside the Adirondack Park. Warrensburg is about 5 miles east of Thurman. (1800 Census Thurman, Washington, NY, Asa Smith - 1 - - 2 // 1 1 - - 2)
    (1800 Census Bolton, Washington, NY, Asa Smith - - 2 - 1 // - 2 - - 1 and Asa Jr. - - 1 - // 1 2 - - 1 There is also a
    Benjamin, Nathaniel, and David Smith on this page.)

    Timeline for Ephriam Kellum Smith:
    1800 Ephriam born in United States (possibly NY)
    1831-32 Minister, London District, Ontario, Canada
    1851 son, James, born
    1853 19 Nov first wife, Anna dies, buried at Hillcrest Cemetery
    1860 daughter, Martha Madora, born in Bayham, Ontario, Canada
    1865-66 directory, Baptist minister, village of Straffordville,Township of Bayham, county of Elgin
    1871 Census, Houghton, Ontario, Canada, Baptist minister
    1880 Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 Record for Ephraim Smith
    Middleton Township > 1880 > List of Persons entitled to Vote at Municipal Elections only -
    # on roll 542, Ephraim Smith Lot 1 sept consignment or street-18, owner PO 1
    1881 Census, Middleton, Norfolk North, Ontario, Canada, Baptist minister
    1882 Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 Record for Ephraim Smith (Ancestry.com)
    Middleton Township > 1882 > List of Persons entitled to Vote at Municipal Elections only -
    # on roll 586, Ephraim Smith Lot 1 ept consignment or street-18, owner PO Glenmeyer.
    1884 19 Sep Ephriam died in Haldimand, Ontario, Canada (Glenmeyer Baptist cemetery, Norfolk County, Walsingham North township)

    Note: I think that Ephraim was married before he married Mary Steward. (see 1851 Census) The son David in the 1851 census may be the D Smith in the 1861 census.

    Is this the right Ephraim?
    Ephraim Smith
    Ontario Marriages, 1800-1910
    marriage: 01 Dec 1848 ,​ Gore District,​ Ontario
    spouse: Mary Ann F. Lane
    groom's name: Ephraim Smith
    bride's name: Mary Ann F. Lane
    marriage date: 01 Dec 1848
    marriage place: , Gore District, Ontario
    indexing project (batch) number: M58551-1
    system origin: Ontario-ODM
    source film number: 1030051


    http://search.ancestry.com/
    Passenger and Immigration Lists Index, 1500s-1900s about Ephram Smith
    Name: Ephram Smith
    Year: 1829
    Age: 28
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1801
    Place: New York, New York
    Source Publication Code: 503.10.91
    Primary Immigrant: Smith, Ephram
    Annotation: Date and port of arrival. Gender, occupation, country of origin, name of ship, and final destination may also be provided. Extracted from Customs passenger lists which are among the holdings of the National Archives. When family relationships were unclear, editor arranged passengers and dependents in alphabetic sequence by given name.
    Source Bibliography: BENTLEY, ELIZABETH P. Passenger Arrivals at the Port of New York, 1820-1829. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 1999, pp. 655-1373 (Ju-Z).
    Page: 1173
    Questions?
    1 would this have anything to do with Ephraim Smith, minister,
    (London District Marriages?
    Index of some names of Elgin County residents - Not a transcription and not a complete list
    Researchers should refer to the following original source
    The London District marriage Register is available at the Archives of Ontario, Record Group 80 27 1, Volume 16. On MS 248 Reel number 3 and MS 201 Reel number 3. The LDS also holds the microfilms on GS 1030053)
    Marriages by Ephraim Smith, minister
    24 Apr 1831 to 14 March 1832.

    Canadian City and Area Directories, 1819-1906
    Return to Search Results Ontario > Elgin County, Norfolk County > OL Fullers Elgin and Norfolk Counties Directory, 1865-1866 > Straffordville - Ephraim Smith, baptist minister
    (Straffordville; A post village situated on the Ingersoll and Port Burwell Plank Road, at its junction with Talbot Street, in the Township of Bayham, and county of Elgin. Straffordville is situated in the midst of an excellent agricultural country, posesses a very fair local trade, and in its immediate vicinity are water privilegges capable of carrying on manufacturing to any extent. It is distant from St. Thomas, the County Town, 23 miles; Richmond, 4 miles; Vienna, 5 miles; Port Burwell, 8 miles; Aylmer, 11 miles; and Ingersoll, 24 miles. Its population is about 500.

    Canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s-1900s about Ephraim Smith
    Name: Ephraim Smith
    Event: Living 1832
    Province: Ontario
    Place: London District
    Comments: Minister.
    Source: Darryl Bonk, Marriages of the London District 1800-1833, Ontario Genealogical Society - Oxford County Branch, 1980.
    Volume/Page: 7
    Note: The province and county are associated with the location of the record source and in some cases may not be the same as the place where the event occured.
    Source Information:
    Genealogical Research Library, Ontario, Canada. Canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s-1900s [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2005.
    Original data: Compiled from various family history sources. See source information provided with each entry.
    Description:
    Containing more than two million records referencing individuals from all regions of Canada, this index helps locate an individual in a specific time and place. The vast majority of the records fall between 1600 and the mid-to-late 1900s, although some records date before the 1500s. Included are names, dates, places, and events about individuals gleaned from numerous types of sources such as city directories, marriage records, land records, and census records. The information found in this index can be used to locate your ancestor in the original record and gives you the title, volume/page number, and location of those records, which generally contain more information. Learn more...

    Ephriam Kellum Smith was a Baptist minister for fifty years. He was 61 years old when his daughter Martha Madora Smith was born in 1860. He came from London, District Ontario, Canada. He died at age 83. He lived on a farm east of Glenmyer, Ontario, Canada when daughter Martha was married. (coming from Walsingham township)

    Could this be Ephraim with 1st wife as the David may be the D in 1861 census
    1851 Census of Canada East, Canada West, New Brunswick,
    Name: Ephraim Smith (Is this our Ephraim? It may be with a first wife? )
    Gender: Male
    Age: 51
    Estimated birth year: abt 1801
    Birthplace: United States
    Province: Canada West (Ontario)
    DISTRICT: Oxford County
    District Number: 27
    Sub-District: Norwich
    Sub-District Number: 262
    Page: 148
    Line: 35
    Roll: C_11745
    Schedule: A
    Ephraim Smith, Carpenter, born United States, Baptist, age 51
    Anna 48 bn US,
    Thomas T 23 bn W Canada; cabinet maker
    Lydia S 20 bn W Canada:
    Wm H I 19 bn W Canada; laborer
    Margett E 14 bn W Canada;
    Anna I 11 bn W Canada;
    David 9 bn W Canada)

    From: Kate Ford
    To: marlparker
    Subject: Re: cemetery lookup
    Date: Sat, Jul 21, 2012 9:35 am
    Attachments: ONNRF15630-074-CanadaGenWeb-Cemetery-Ontario-Norfolk.jpg (121K)

    Hi Marilyn, Glen Meyer is already done and online here: The Ephraim K. there is 1858 - 1932 You may save that photo from there if you want it. They are my pics so I can give you that permission. The Rev. Ephraim at Hillcrest has no stone of his own but is more likely to be the one you want. He is listed as husband of Anna who died 19 Nov 1853 aged 49 I have attached a pic of that stone. Let me know if you need anything else. Kate On 21/07/2012 11:41 AM, marlparker@aol.com wrote:
    Hi Kate,
    I found your name on Gebweb. It mentioned you might be willing to take a picture of a headstone at The Glenmeyer Baptist Cemetery, in Norfok County.
    If this is so, my ancestor is Ephraim K Smith born about 1800. Following is the source for his death. Thank you for any help you can give me.
    Marilyn Parker

    1861 Census of Canada about E Smith
    Name: E Smith
    Gender: Male
    Age: 60
    Birth Year: 1801
    Birthplace: United S
    Marital Status: Married
    Home in 1861: Bayham, Elgin, Canada West
    Religion: Baptist
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    E Smith 60 Minister
    Mary Smith 40 born Upper Canada
    D Smith 18 " " "
    James Smith 11 " " "
    E C Smith 4 " " "
    Mary Smith 3 " " "

    1871 Census of Canada about Ephraim Smith
    Name: Ephraim Smith
    Gender: Male
    Age: 69
    Birth Year: abt 1802
    Birth Place: United States
    Marital Status: Married
    Religion: Baptist ( All children and wife are baptist)
    Origin: English
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk South
    District Number: 11
    Division: 01 pg 23 microfilm roll: C-9907
    Subdistrict: Houghton
    Subdistrict Number: a
    Neighbors: View others on page
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Ephraim Smith 69 Minister English Origin
    Mary Smith 49 Scotch origin
    James Smith 20 farmer
    Ephraim Smith 13
    Mary Smith 12
    Martha Smith 10

    1881 Census of Canada about Ephraim Smith
    Name: Ephraim Smith
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 79
    Birth Year: 1802
    Birthplace: USA
    Religion: Baptist minister
    Nationality: English
    Occupation: Farmer
    Province: Ontario
    District Number: 158
    District: Norfolk North
    Sub-District Number: D
    Subdistrict: Middleton
    Division: 2
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Ephraim Smith 79 farmer
    Mary Smith 59
    Ephraim C Smith 23 farmer

    Ontario, Canada Deaths, 1869-1932
    Name: Ephraim Smith
    Death Date: 19 Sep 1884 result of old age, ill 3 wks.
    Death Location: Haldimand Division of Rain(bow)
    Age: 83
    Gender: Male Baptist Minister
    Estimated birth year: abt 1801
    Birth Location: USA

    findagrave
    Rev Ephraim Smith
    Birth: unknown, USA
    Death: Sep. 19, 1884
    Rainham Centre, Haldimand County, Ontario, Canada
    Aged 83 yrs. Baptist minister.
    Family links:
    Spouse: Anna Otis Smith (1804 - 1853)*
    Children: Maryette Smith Burkholder (1838 - 1925)*
    Burial: Forestville, Forestville, Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada
    Created by: Don McArthur
    Record added: Dec 05, 2016
    Find A Grave Memorial# 173530262
    Cemetery records http://ocfa.islandnet.com/ocfa-search.php
    2 Ephraims found
    Smith, Ephraim K. Glenmeyer Baptist cemetery, Norfolk County, Walsingham North township, reference # NR-95-98
    Smith, Ephraim, Rev. (h/o Anna) Hillcrest-Forestville cemetery, Norfolk County, Charlottsville Twp, ref # NR-98-136
    Norfolk County Branch, OGS P.O. Box 145 Delhi, Ontario, Canada. N4B 2W9

    Ephraim married Mary STEWART about 1850 in Canada. Mary was born on 10 Jul 1822 in Ontario, Canada; died after 1901 in Middleton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mary STEWART was born on 10 Jul 1822 in Ontario, Canada; died after 1901 in Middleton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: *
    • _MARNM: Smith
    • _UID: 7B1BB520C8607F4CA29C442C86CC51742347

    Notes:




    Relly Smith
    Canada Census, 1901 Apr 7-9
    Name Relly Smith ( I read Kelly)
    Event Type Census
    Event Date 31 Mar 1901
    Event Place C, Norfolk (north/nord), Ontario, Canada
    Gender Male
    Marital Status Married
    Ethnicity English
    Nationality Canadian
    Religion Baptist
    Relationship to Head of Household Head
    Birthplace Ontario
    Birth Year (Estimated) 1859
    Page 4
    Household
    Role
    Gender
    Age
    Birthplace
    Relly Smith Head M 42 Ontario
    Mary Smith Mother F 78 Ontario
    Mary J Smith Wife F 32 Ontario
    Edna L Smith Daughter F 7 Ontario
    Sarah L Smith Daughter F 2 Ontario
    Citing this Record
    "Canada Census, 1901," database, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:KHLG-S8F : 13 November 2014), Relly Smith, C, Norfolk (north/nord), Ontario, Canada; citing p. 4, Library and Archives of Canada, Ottawa.

    Children:
    1. James SMITH was born about 1851 in Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    2. Ephraim Kellum SMITH was born on 17 Sep 1858 in Caboro, Haldimand, Ontario, Canada; died on 29 Apr 1932 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    3. Mary E SMITH was born about 1859 in Nelson, Ontario, Canada; died before 1888 in Michigan, USA.
    4. 7. Martha Madora SMITH was born on 15 Feb 1861 in Bayham, Elgin, Ontario, Canada; died on 5 May 1928 in Superior, Washtenaw, Michigan.