Arthur J MERCIER

Arthur J MERCIER

Male 1885 -

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Arthur J MERCIER was born on 16 Oct 1885 in Ontario, Canada (son of Charles Augustus MERCIER and Mary Jane SHERMAN).

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 45D3F2E28F5F1D49AFD4002FB2EBF425A8A4


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Charles Augustus MERCIER was born on 14 Apr 1851 in Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 5AA8C7C54DB37344965AC2B167B043AAAC8D

    Charles married Mary Jane SHERMAN on 29 Sep 1880 in Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. Mary (daughter of Joseph Henry SHERMAN and Matilda Jane FICK) was born on 10 Aug 1861 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 28 Aug 1928. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Jane SHERMAN was born on 10 Aug 1861 in Houghton, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada (daughter of Joseph Henry SHERMAN and Matilda Jane FICK); died on 28 Aug 1928.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 9288798D8652F04BAE8D088FB9CB24BF6C42

    Notes:

    Mary Jane and Charlie Mercier had 5 children.
    1901 Census of Canada
    Name: Charles Mercer
    Gender: Male
    Marital Status: Married
    Age: 49
    Birth Date: 14 Apr 1851
    Birthplace: Ontario
    Relation to Head of House: Head
    Spouse's name: Mary J
    Racial or Tribal Origin: English
    Nationality: Canadian
    Religion: Baptist
    Occupation: Carpenter
    Province: Ontario
    District: Norfolk (South/Sud)
    District Number: 94
    Sub-District: Houghton
    Sub-District Number: B-1
    Family Number: 66
    Page: 6
    Neighbors:
    Household Members: Name Age
    Charles Mercer 49
    Charles R Mercer 9
    Mabel M Mercer 12
    Mary J Mercer 39
    Medora D Mercer 18
    Walter A Mercer 20
    ( Arthur J Mercer age 15 was in the actual census image)

    Notes:

    Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1801-1928 about Mary J Sherman
    Name: Mary J Sherman
    Birth Place: Houghton
    Age: 18
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1862
    Father Name: Joseph Sherman
    Mother Name: Matilda J Sherman
    Spouse Name: Charles A Mercer
    Spouse's Age: 27
    Spouse Birth Place: Houghton
    Spouse Father Name: Robert Mercer
    Spouse Mother Name: Rebecca Mercer
    Marriage Date: 29 Sep 1880
    Marriage County or District: Norfolk

    Children:
    1. Walter A MERCIER was born on 30 Dec 1880 in Ontario, Canada.
    2. Medora K MERCIER was born on 20 Oct 1882.
    3. 1. Arthur J MERCIER was born on 16 Oct 1885 in Ontario, Canada.
    4. Mabel M MERCIER was born on 16 Sep 1888.
    5. Charles R MERCIER was born on 24 Oct 1891 in Ontario, Canada.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  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. 7.  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. 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. 3. 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.


Generation: 4

  1. 12.  Andrew SHERMAN was born on 2 May 1797 in Connecticut, United States (son of Daniel SHERMAN, Jr. and Elizabeth MITCHELL); died in 1867 in Tilsonburg, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: *
    • _UID: 106C18E4B444C14DACB77DA1AF3E65106197

    Notes:

    One source states that he was born 2 May 1797 in New York andHe married Hannah Nelson in New York and moved to Ontario Canada.

    !NOTE: (from Vernon Sherman's transcripts)
    Andrew Sherman was born 2 may 1797. He moved to Ohio with his father, Daniel, a farmer from the east, about 1800. The family is believed to have originally settled in the general vicinity of Mansfield. They may have later moved toward Toledo, possibly into Ottowa County. Insofar as we knew, their work was farming in the main and possibly canal work or work in the woods in the off season.

    Andrew married Hannah Nelson in Ohio in1823. Andrew was 25 and Hannah 14 at the time. Her birthday was 19 November1808. In the "horse and buggy" era, it is quite certain that Andrew was living in the same rural community as the Nelsons when he met Hannah.

    Hannah's father, Rodney Nelson, was said to have been born in England. Hannah's family, or a branch of it, appear to have settled later in and about Fairground, Ontario. 56 years later (1880), "Uncle Ruben" Nelson was the doctor who delivered Milton Kellum Sherman at Kings Mill just a few miles from Fairground. Milton recalls that his father, James, who was born and raised near Fairground, Ontario, had an "Uncle Rodney" Nelson. Uncle Rodney, born about 1810, was quite possibly Hannah's brother and his own father's name sake. He would know family history. In any case there was so much bitter animosity between James Sherman and his Uncle Rodney Nelson that the children were forbidden to call him "Uncle". Milton recalled that his great-uncle Rodney Nelson died a very old man about 1890, and that even after the old man was buried, Milton's father declared he "ought to go down and stomp in the old so and so's grave."

    1825. Andrew and Hannah moved the Michigan Territory, had a farm near Berlin MI in Ottawa Co, about 15 miles northwest of Grand Rapids MI. He built a log house and barn with rail fences. Berlin MI named changed in the 1940s to Marne MI (mc/mp; mc/sp).

    Hannah was not quite fifteen at the time her first baby, Adney, was born, 25 Aug 1823. Then Unas Ann was born 2 May 1825. Their five other children were born in Michigan. All of the children were raised in Ottawa County, Michigan.
    Andrew and Hannah moved to the Michigan territory about 1825. There were several possible reasons for this move north and west. Times were not good, they were in fact deteriorating toward the great depression of 1837 when credit collapsed, trade became paralyzed and banks reneged on their circulating bank notes. By 1825, Andrew, married with a two year old son and baby daughter, needed a place of his own. This nearby Michigan Territory, (or Michillimackinac as it was also called), was top conversation among his friends and family.

    John Sherman (U.S. Secretary of Treasury) speaking of his boyhood in Ohio said, "nearly every able-bodied man served in the Indian Wars or in the War of 1812". He mentions Shermans who fought at Detroit. Andrew or another of his family might well have been there. In any case, by the time he was 29, (1825), he'd heard a great deal about Michigan including the call for men to work on the new road from Detroit to Chicago.

    Andrew and Hannah had a farm near Berlin, in Ottawa County, Michigan. It was a cross-roads rural center, about fifteen miles northwest of Grand Rapids. He built a log house and barn with rail fences. In later years (1860), the old Detroit and Milwaukee Railroad ran through Berlin, which was on the line from Grand Rapids to Grand Haven. Berlin was renamed Barne sometime aroung 1917 when the anti-German feeling of World War II was intense. Cooperville, the county seat, is the next town west along the rail line. Andrew's son, William (born 1841) is known to have lived in or near Cooperville around 1875.

    Andrew's son Adney, became a physician of note and the Principal of a Medical College somewhere in Southwest Michigan. Andrew's daughter, Unas Ann is believed to have married a Dr. Harvey and to have lived in Chicago. Joseph Henry was the only one known to have gone to Southern Ontario, Canada, about 1848. This explains why so few Shermans appear in Ontario records. I found not one Sherman in the 100 year records (1850 to 1950) of Oxford County Coal at Woodstock, Ontario. The Sheriff at Woodstock in the old days served both Oxford and Norfolk Counties. I found only three in the records (prior to 1900) of the Norfolk County Home at Simicoe, Ontario, Canada.

    During Andrew's first years in Michigan, He cleared his land and built a log house and barn. Split rail fences, stump fences and pole fences were built. Wire fence was unknown in the 1820's. His farm was noted for an exceptionally fine sugar bush. His neighbor and very good friend was a Frenchman, Andrew Chappella. Andrew Sherman reminisced frequently during his last years on the experiences they had shared. When Andrew and Hannah went to Michigani it was known as the Michigan Territory. On maps of the day it was frequently referred to as Michillimackinac, the original Indian name. As recently as 1813 the territory had been recovered from the British. Andrew and Hannah were there in 1837 when Michigan was admitted to the Union. They were truly pioneers.

    Andrew and Hannah's Michigan was the nation's lumber pile. The people and its settlements followed the saw mills in their endless attack on the virgin forests. Birth and death records did not exist. Things were happening too fast, everything was too new. people were too unsettled to bother with records. The planned only against the deep snow of the coming winter. Strong green tea, heavy Mackinaw clothing, a barrel of flour, a side of beef, a sack of beans, yellow corn meal, and rolled oats were much more important. You would probably be snowed in and if you were not self-sufficient, you would certainly suffer the consequence. Michigan winters were long and cold. Water in the tea kettle would freeze before morning, when the match would be put to cedar shavings under a new pine fire. Every log house and rough lumber shack had its outdoor root cellar, dug well below the four foot frost line, for vegetables and canned goods. Everyone who could walk, went "berrying" when mother gave the word, for come winter, her jars had to be filled.

    In his last years (around 1865) Andrew went to Canada to live with Joseph for a time. It is probable that both Andrew and Hannah had previously stayed with other children in Michigan at or near Cooperville, Lumberton, Hungerford or Big Rapids. By 1850, Grand Rapids was joined to Tilsonburg (some 300 miles away) by the Michigan Central railroad. Sherman families visited back and forth. For example, Joseph Henry's daughter, Mary Jane, had visited his brother William's family at Cooperville, Michigan, about 1879 when she was 18. There she met Charlie Mercier. He visited her in Ontario next year at which time they were married (1880). They raised their family of five children in Ontario near Fairground. Also about 1875 William's boy from Cooperville, Michigan, had visited his Uncle Joseph at Fairground, Ontario.

    Andrew is said to have died at Tilsonburg, Ontario, Michigan about 1867. The exact date and place of burial has not been found. Hannah had died before him but again the date and place are unknown. She might be buried in the Baptist Cemetary on Lake Road less than a mile east of Hemlock, Ontario. A daughter-in-law, matilda Jane, and five infant great-grandsons of Hannah's are buried there. It is more likely, however, thet Hannah lies buried in a now forgotten grave near one of the Michigan towns mentioned above.

    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.

    http://www.sherman-roots.com/sherman/pioneers/sp'ott.doc
    1797. May 2d, Andrew born in CT (mc/mp; not in SD).
    1800. About, Andrew moved with parents from CT to OH, probably in the vicinity of Marshfield OH, later moved towards Toledo OH possibly Ottawa Co. (mc/mp).
    1808. Nov 18th, Hannah Nelson born, father Rodney Nelson (mc/mp).
    1822. About, Andrew married Hannah Nelson in OH (mc/mp).
    1825. Andrew and Hannah moved the Michigan Territory, had a farm near Berlin MI in Ottawa Co, about 15 miles northwest of Grand Rapids MI. He built a log house and barn with rail fences. Berlin MI named changed in the 1940s to Marne MI (mc/mp; mc/sp).
    1863/64. Possible: A Sherman a harness maker of Lamont MI (MI Gazetteer & Business Directory p374).
    1865. Andrew went to Canada to live with his son Joseph
    1867. Andrew Sherman died Tilsonburg, Ontario Canada (mc/mp). 7 Children:

    Andrew married Hannah NELSON on 28 Oct 1822 in Ohio, United States. Hannah (daughter of William NELSON and Eunice Young) was born on 18 Mar 1804 in Saltfleet, Lincoln, Ontario, Canada; died on 18 Dec 1864 in Lamont, Ottawa, Michigan, United States; was buried in Maplewood Cemetery, Lamont, Ottawa, Michigan. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 13.  Hannah NELSON was born on 18 Mar 1804 in Saltfleet, Lincoln, Ontario, Canada (daughter of William NELSON and Eunice Young); died on 18 Dec 1864 in Lamont, Ottawa, Michigan, United States; was buried in Maplewood Cemetery, Lamont, Ottawa, Michigan.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: *
    • _MARNM: Sherman
    • _UID: 99C92829898DBA448072D33741AA7E002CE0

    Notes:

    findagrave.com
    Hannah Nelson Sherman
    Birth: Mar. 18, 1804 Ontario, Canada
    Death: Dec. 18, 1864 Lamont Ottawa County Michigan, USA
    Married Oct 28, 1822 to Andrew Sherman 1797-1867 Ontario, Canada, mother of Adna Sherman 1823-1895 Oneida, Idaho.
    Burial: Maplewood Cemetery Lamont Ottawa County Michigan, USA Plot: Lot 66
    Created by: Dennis Allen Record added: Jul 09, 2012 Find A Grave Memorial# 93347080

    Notes:

    One source states he married Hannah Nelson in New York and moved to Canada

    Children:
    1. Doctor Adney SHERMAN was born on 25 Aug 1823 in Michigan, United States.
    2. Unas Ann SHERMAN was born on 2 May 1825 in Michigan, United States.
    3. 6. Joseph Henry SHERMAN was born on 13 Jul 1827 in Berlin, Ionia, Michigan, United States; died on 3 Jun 1906 in Simcoe, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Simcoe, Ontario, Canada.
    4. Sarah Jane SHERMAN was born on 18 Nov 1828 in Canada; died on 5 Feb 1889 in Lamont, Ottawa, Michigan, USA.
    5. Lavina SHERMAN
    6. Susan SHERMAN
    7. William E. SHERMAN was born on 1 Sep 1841 in Michigan, United States; died on 17 Sep 1906 in Coopersville, Ottawa, Michigan; was buried in Maplewood (Old Lamont) Cemetery, Tallmadge Twp, Ottawa, MIchigan.

  3. 14.  Peter Henry FICK was born in 1803 in United States (son of Frederick FICK and Elizabeth Becker); died on 23 Sep 1892 in Houghton Twp, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 2998DCFE50249C4494C38A9275A34432F0B0

    Notes:

    Time line for Peter H Fick:
    1803 Peter H Fick born United States
    ? Married Mary
    1831 daughter, Matilda Jane Fick born Canada
    1833 daughter, Elizabeth, born
    1842 son, Gilbert, born
    1851 Census, living in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1853 daughter, Nancy, born
    1861 daughter, Martha, born
    1861 Census, living in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1871 Census, living in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    ? wife, Mary, died
    1881 Census, widow, listed as father, living with son, Gilbert, in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1891 Census, widow, llsted as father, iving with daughter, Matilda & her husband Joseph Sherman, in Houghton,
    Norfolk, Ontario, Canada
    1892 Peter died in Norfolk, Ontario, Canada

    Canadian Genealogy Index, 1600s-1900s about Peter Fick
    Name: Peter Fick
    Event: Living
    Province: Ontario
    Place: Norfolk County
    Source: Illustrated Historical Atlas of the Norfolk County, 1877, Mika Silk Screening Limited, Belleville, 1972.
    Volume/Page: 8
    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.

    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 (frame house, one story, one family in home)
    Household Members:
    Name Age
    Peter C Fick 59 f
    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

    Ontario, Canada Voter Lists, 1867-1900 about Peter H Fick
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Year: 1874
    Locality: Walsingham Township Concession A Lot 3
    Province: Ontario
    Country: Canada

    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 ?, Mother born USA

    Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1936 and Deaths Overseas, 1939-1947 about Peter H Fick
    Name: Peter H Fick
    Death Date: 23 Sep 1892 Cause of death: old age
    Death Location: Norfolk County Division of Houghton
    Age: 89
    Gender: Male
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1803
    Birth Location: United States
    Informant: J Sherman
    Archives of Ontario Microfilm: MS935_65

    Could this be a daughter?
    Ontario, Canada Marriages, 1801-1928 about Anne M Fick
    Name: Anne M Fick
    Birth Place: Canagnea Germany
    Age: 18
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1853
    Father Name: Peter H Fick
    Mother Name: Mary Fick
    Spouse Name: Thomas Overbaugh
    Spouse's Age: 24
    Spouse Birth Place: Walsingham
    Spouse Father Name: Philip Overbaugh
    Spouse Mother Name: Jane Overbaugh
    Marriage Date: 26 May 1871
    Marriage County or District: Norfolk

    Peter married Mary Fick on 22 Sep 1830 in Woodhouse Twp, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. Mary was born in 1810 in Port Royal, Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 15 Feb 1881 in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 15.  Mary Fick was born in 1810 in Port Royal, Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 15 Feb 1881 in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 67190144F507884095E23357DDD0BFBCB29B

    Notes:

    Ontario, Canada, Deaths, 1869-1938 and Deaths Overseas, 1939-1947 about Mary Fick
    Name: Mary Fick wife of P H Fick
    Death Date: 15 Feb 1881
    Death County or District: Norfolk
    Age: 70 yrs
    Gender: Female
    Estimated Birth Year: abt 1810
    Birth Location: Port Royal, Ontario
    Informant: Gilbert Fick of Walsingham
    Religion: B

    Children:
    1. 7. Matilda Jane 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.
    2. Elizabeth FICK was born in 1833.
    3. Gilbert FICK was born in 1840 in Walsingham, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada; died on 1 Apr 1923 in Simcoe, Norfolk, Ontario, Canada.
    4. Anne Nancy FICK was born on 15 Nov 1852 in Canagnea, Germany.
    5. Martha FICK was born in 1861.