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Map 70

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This section of the map includes the original grantees for Upper Middleboro, North Middleboro and Middleboro and Street Ridge and Hartford and environs.  Following each name is the number of acres that were granted and, if known, the year of the grant.

Akerley, Isaac 500

Angevine, George 103

Angevine, George 125

Angevine, John 500 1785

Betts, Abraham P. 100

Betts, Abraham P. 145

Betts, Amasa P. 200

Bland, Samuel 210

Brown, Isaac 200

Coulten, Archibald 200

Crawford, William 250

Fanning, Col. Edmund 1000 1792

Fisher, Charles 20

Forshner, A. R. 13.5

Forshner, Knap 131

Fountain, Aron 175

Glebe 600

Hart, Tucker 300 1803

Hustis, J 200

McKenzie, Roderick 300

McKimm, Andrew 473

McLellan, Jacob 200

Montross, Benjamin 300

Montross, David 200

O’Brien, George 20

O’Brien, William 100

O’Brien, William 200

O’Brien, William M. 100

Peers, Ezekiel 300 1785

Piers, John H. 270 1785

Pugsley, John 1000 1787

Reed, B. AA P. Nue in trust 100

Reed, Samuel 100

Rogers, Robert 200

Webb, Ebenezer 250

Wilson, John 200

Wilson, John 200

Woodberry, L. 50

This section of the map includes the original grantees for Leroy and environs.  Following each name is the number of acres that were granted and, if known, the year of the grant.

Bigney, Albert 50 + 56

Brown, Abraham 200

Brown, David & Patriquin, Robert 100

Brown, Edward 100

Brown, John H. 86 + 205 + 100 + 140 + 234

Chisholm, William 146

Crowley, Cornelius 100

Crowley, John 50

Drennan, William 182

Eaton, LW 100 + 100

Flemming, Thomas 100

Geehan, Catherine 200

Geehan, J. 200 + 58

Giles, James 100

Giles, Thomas 100 + 100 + 200 + 250 + 175

Henderson, David 210

Henderson, John 200 + 110

Henderson, Robert 100

Henderson, William R. 184

Henderson, William R. 50 + 63

Henderson, Robert 100

Henderson, William R. 184

Henderson, William R. 50 + 63

Kerr, Joseph 200

Kerr, Joseph N. B. 100

Mc Curd, Alex 100

McArthur, Alexander 103

McArthur, John 170

Miney, B. 100

Ogelby, Peter 142

Ogilvie, James et. al. 106

Ogilvie, Peter 118

Pears, Ezekiel 200

Pineo, Henry G. 300

Purdy, Amos J G 150 + 100 + 158

Ross, Alexander 100

Rushton, Robert M. 200

Teed, David 100

Treen, Elizabeth 180

Webb, Josiah 168

Whidden, David 81

Whidden, John 102

This section of the map includes the original grantees for Wentworth Station and Lower Greenville and environs.  Following each name is the number of acres that were granted and, if known, the year of the grant.

 

Acadian Charcoal Iron Mining Co. Ltd. 5747

Bacon, Andrew 100

Baker or Bacon, Andrew 100

Barclay, Angus 64 + 75

Barclay, James 103 + 109 = 91

Beebe, Adam 200

Beebe, Adin 110

Beebe, Caldwell and Beebe, Robert H. 100

Beebe, James 100

Beebe, James B. J. 180 + 100 + 33

Beebe, Joshua 250 1815

Betts, Benjamin 500

Betts, Gilbert 112

Betts, Henry 85

Betts, M. B. 50

Blair, Milton 50

Blair, Oliver 150 + 75

Blair, Roscoe 100

Burbidge, Samuel 100

Carter, Richard 250

Delaney, D. Philip 250

Dickey, Robert B.  400

Dotten, John 250

Dotten, Joshua B. 100

Dotten, Robert 100

Doyle, Philip 122

Drinnan, William 100 + 250

Embree, Benjamin 50 + 100 + 100

Embree, Joseph 100 + 500

Embree, Mary E. 53

English, Robert E. 100

Fage, Samuel 32

Foote, Robert 100

Giles, James 100 + 120

Giles, Thomas 100 +  250 + 75

Gruber, Robert 100

Hewson, James 86

Higgins, A. S. 100

Higgins, Amos and Robertson, Donkin 100

Higgins, James 100

Higgins, Samuel 50

Hingley, Jacob 125

Job, Thomas 100

Kerr, Joseph N. B. 600 + 200 + 160

Kirby, Lewis R. 500

Lamy, James P. 270

Layton, Francis 500

Lynds, Henry 50

Mahoney, Wm. E. 51

McAuley, John et. al. 300

McE. . ., Howard 100

McElmon, Albert W. et al 100

McElmon, Elledge H. et al 162

McLellan, Hon. Archibald 255 + 585

McLellan, Robert N. B. 223

McLennan, Alexander 50

McMullen, Thomas G. 130 + 242 + 37 + 24 + 285 + 234 + 30 + 83 + 276 + 34 + 138

McNab, James 500 1803

McNamara, Lawrence 100

McPherson, James 80

Miers, Edward 100

Miers, Joshua 100

Mires, John 100

Morse, James S. 130

Munroe, Fred and Munroe, Alec 50

Myers, Jacob 124

Nichol, Richard 200

O'Connor, Garrett 100

Page, Samuel P. 92

Pineo, Hon. Henry G. et al 200 + 504 + 300

Poole, William J. 250

Purdy, Amos 174 + 111

Purdy, David 147

Purdy, Henry 125 + 120

Ralston, John 100

Ralston, Joseph 100

Slack, Henry H. 50 + 50

Slack, Solomon 50 +100 + 100

Sloan, William 200

Smith, Charles 50

Smith, John 100

Smith, Joshua 50

Stevens, Andrew and Stevens, Lemuel 100 1803

Stevens, Benjamin 100 1803

Stevens, James B. 100

Stevens, Levi and Stevens, Ryne 102

Swan, William 68 + 235 + 480

Teed, Walt 100

Townsend, J. M. 120

Tuttle, James 100

Tuttle, John 500 1803

Tuttle, Marcus and Tuttle, William 150

Tuttle, Stephen 260

Waugh, Wellwood and Waugh, William 1000 (now Wentworth Provincial Park)

Webb, Josiah 100 + 100 + 168

Wilson, James 100

This section of the map includes the original grantees for Henderson Settlement and Wentworth Centre and environs.  Following each name is the number of acres that were granted and, if known, the year of the grant.

Allen, John 500 1787

Anderson, William 300

Angevine, Peter 500 + 100

Angevine, Priscilla 100

Baillie, John 100

Beatty, R. D. 100

Bebe, Sicord 500 1803

Beebe, Adin 100

Betts, Ichabad 200 + 100

Bigney, Lemuel 100

Bigney, Levi 100 1803

Bigney, Mark 100 1803

Bigney, Mary and Bigney, Ann 100 1803

Bigney, Peter 100 + 200 1803

Brown, Edward et. al 80

Brown, Thomas 15 1784

Burbidge, Samuel F. 100

Chatterton, Samuel 500 1803

Chisholm, Daniel 250

Chisholm, John W. P. 100 + 100

Chisholm, Malcolm 100

Cumberland Railway and Coal Company 194

Dotten, John 250

Doyle, Garret 100

Doyle, John 100 + 100

Filmore, William A. 350

Forsyth, George E. 100

Fulton, J. 100

Fulton, James 100

Henderson, William 100

Henderson, William R.

Higgins, Amos 100

Howard, W. et al 92.5

Job, Thomas 200

Lightbody, James 300

Livingston, Joshua H 509

McFarlane, Alex 122 + 66

McIvor, Angus 128

McIvor, Morton 50

McKeand, Ellen 200

McLane, Samuel 300

McLane, Francis 300

McLane, James 300

McNab, James 500 1803

McNab, John 220 + 500 1803

McNab, Peter 250

McNab, Peter 500 1803 ? spellling

Miller, B. F. 50

Miller, J. 150

Myers, Arthur 153

O'Brien, William 100

Palmer, John 100

Palmer, John A. 65

Patriquin, John E. 50

Patriquin, R. Henry 200

Peppard, Lawrence 200

Pineo, Henry G. 200

Pineo, Hon. Henry G. 205

Pineo, Hon. Henry G. 205

Pudsey, Robert 100

Purdy, David 200

Rae, William 200

Read, Samuel 110

Reid, John R. et.al 101

Rolston, Joseph 100

Scott, James 200

Steele, David 100

Stevens, Levi 150 1803

Stevens, Oliver and Stevens, Apian 200 1803

Sullivan, John 50

Swallow, D. 100

Swallow, D. 100

Swallow, Thomas 100

Teed, David 120

Teed, Henry 100

Teed, Henry 500 + 100

Treen, Elizabeth 100

Treen, Samuel 100 + 76

Tully, Joseph 150

Tuttle, John

Tuttle, Peter 500 1803

Tuttle, Stephen 450 + 500 1787 +1803

Woodberry, L. 50

Woodberry, William 50

PUGWASH

 

70 Water Street: The Clarke House

 

The Clarke House is on lot 103 of the original Black plan of Pugwash. A deed, signed by John and Sarah Black, shows that the land was purchased on Jan. 19, 1847 for 30 pounds by Dr. Joseph Clarke, a physician. The lot was on Water Street starting at Victoria Street and running east 85 feet and south 85 feet.

 

Joseph built a house which he named Napoleon’s Cottage. It also served as his office and his dispensary. In 1854, he also bought lot 106 for 80 pounds. That was on the corner of Water and Durham Street. He sold that land in 1873 to William Henry Brown for $364.00, and it eventually became the war memorial.

 

Dr. Joseph Clarke was born in Kilkenny, Ireland. He emigrated as a young physician and dentist to Nova Scotia. This was unusual as many Irish immigrants were coming to the area, but few were educated. He married Olivia King (Mar. 30, 1827 – Feb. 28, 1910), daughter of Lavina Pineo and Oliver King in about 1850. In 1853, their first child, Cyrilla Clarke (1853 – 1938) was born. She was followed three years later by brother William (1856 – 1882). Child 3, Joseph Holmes Clarke (1860 – 1938) followed soon after being born in 1860. Their newly built house was on Water Street, and Joseph was a successful physician with three children. He practiced out of his house, and it served also as his dispensary.

 

In the 1861 census, he was in a household of 8 in Pugwash, 5 males and 3 females. That same year, Dr. Joseph had a schooner built in Wallace, The Janet. Unfortunately, it sank in the Gulf of St. Lawrence in 1862. In the 1864 Hutchinson’s Directory, Joseph is listed as a physician and dentist. In the 1871 census, the family of 5 are in Pugwash and living with them are Hiram and Clara Huston. Hiram was an engineer at a steam mill. Servant Maggie Satoris is with them as was a sailor, Joseph Akerly.

 

Daughter Cyrilla married Edgar Augustus Elliott in 1874 in Amherst. Dr. Joseph Clarke was obviously a man of some influence and service to the village. On August 27, 1857, he was appointed coroner for Cumberland County. He held other offices for the village. In 1858, he was an assessor. In 1858 - 60, he served as commissioner of streets. In 1870 and 1875, he was one of three school trustees. In 1871, he was an overseer of the poor. In 1872, he and Dr. Creed participated in the examination of Mr. Macaulay’s 103 students. In 1877, he had a meeting with the premier to change the route of the Northern Light which went to PEI through Pictou. He successfully pressed for it to be changed to going from Pugwash to Victoria instead.

 

The Christian Messenger reported that on Jan. 25, 1880, Dr. Clarke, just before retiring, went into his surgery to get some medicine and made a mistake, taking carbolic acid instead of the preparation he intended to take. Before he had drank the whole dose he discovered his mistake and told his wife that he was poisoned and had only a few minutes to live. Dr. Dakin, who lived just across the street, was at once called and used all possible remedies, but Clarke died in half an hour. The Miramichi Advance added that he had not been well for some time. Dr. Creed and Dr. Mackintosh also arrived but Dr. Clarke was speechless and could only wave his hand to indicate that there was nothing to be done. Reports of his death showed that the deceased had been in practice for a great number of years and had been particularly successful in the treatment of diphtheria. He practiced out of his house, but he also was said to travel into the countryside regardless of weather. He was buried in Palmerston Cemetery.

 

The appraisal of Joseph’s estate showed 3 pieces of real estate – 17 acres of land on Irishtown Road, 1 lot in Pugwash of 80 feet x 80 feet with a house and a barn, and a farm of 150 acres where Thomas Sarson was residing. The lot in Pugwash and the furniture was deeded to Augusta and Cyrilla including the portion owned by son Joseph Holmes. JH relinquished all right to his portion of that land and deeded it to his mother and sister. By the 1881 census, Olivia was a widow. She was living with her daughter Cyrilla Elliott, also a widow, sons William and Joseph Clarke and Cyrilla’s children Daisy and Pearl. In 1891, she was still in her house in Pugwash with Cyrilla, Daisy and Edmund as well as lodgers John Seaman and William Morgan.

 

Olivia was burned out twice. On July 25, 1898, a raging fire struck the Durham Street area. Winds fanned the flames and without a fire department, eighteen families were rendered homeless. Olivia’s house was completely lost along with 17 other properties, including the house and barn of her son, Joseph Holmes Clarke. In 1899, Olivia was rebuilding on the site of her former residence at 70 Water Street. In 1899, Joseph’s daughter Cyrilla married again to Clarence Edward Reed a sea captain in Pictou. Cyrilla’s son Edmund Pearl married Hattie M. Hay that same year in Truro. Her daughter Daisy Elliott married Stephen Percival Wilson also in 1899. Joseph’s brother William had died without having children. In the 1901 census, Olivia is living alone. On Sept. 10, 1901, the Clark house was again damaged by fire resulting from thieves blowing up the safe in Brown’s store which was adjacent. The house caught on fire several times, but was saved by the people. The town had no fire department. Finally, on Nov. 11, 1901, was a large fire that almost wiped out the town of Pugwash. Olivia’s damage was recorded as $1500 for loss of house and furniture. As the winter coal and vegetables had been laid in, the damage was even greater.

 

Olivia had to build again. By January of 1902, they had decided to also build a meat market on the property. This structure was right next door to the house she was also building, the house that is there now. Olivia died on Feb. 28, 1910, of softening of the brain and exhaustion. She is buried in Willow Grove Cemetery. She was C of E. This is interesting because son, Joseph Holmes Clarke and family were RC.

 

In 1911, according to the census, Cyrilla and Edward Reed were living alone in the house.

 

Cyrilla’s brother, Joseph Holmes Clarke (April 8, 1860 – Jan. 13, 1938) was initially employed as a bookkeeper and auctioneer. In 1879, Joseph was a surveyor of lumber. He married Agustia (Gussie) Adilea Walsh (Mar. 17, 1866 -   ) on July 16, 1886 in Pugwash. In 1898, when he was a general merchant, they lived in Pugwash. Their house was burned in 1898, with the loss being assessed at $800 and insurance at $300. In 1901 they were in Pugwash with children Adilea, Joseph and Alexander. They were Roman Catholic. He was a general merchant and also a surveyor of lumber. In 1915, a poem of his was published in Moncton called “Home is home where ere it be”. In 1920 he was a fence viewer. This was a municipal post. He became very active in municipal government, receiving appointment as stripendiary magistrate at Pugwash, acting periodically as returning officer for municipal elections and even running as an unsuccessful Liberal candidate for a seat on County Council in 1922. In 1927, he was a Customs Collector. He also worked for a time as a conductor for the railway out west and as the station agent and telegrapher in Pugwash Junction.

 

In 1911, Joseph, Gussie and the children are all in Pugwash. In 1916, Joseph Holmes is living in a hotel in Cochrane, Ontario working for the railway according to his son’s attestation papers. In 1921 Joseph and Gussie are in Pugwash with son Joseph V. In 1931, they are in Pugwash with Daisy Wilson who is listed as their boarder. She was Joseph’s niece. Joseph was a judge by then. Joseph Holmes and Gussie’s eldest daughter, Adilea Mary Clarke (May 6, 1888 - ) became a teacher. When she retired, she moved into the Clarke house. After Adelia died, the house was empty for some time.

 

JH’s second child, Joseph Valentine Clarke (Feb. 14, 1890 [1901 Census] - ) joined up for WWI in March 1916 from Winnipeg where he was a switchman. He was hit by a bullet on Vimy Ridge, and his right arm was amputated. After his return to Canada, he married Jean Elizabeth Thompson on Sept. 14, 1921. She died, and he married Christina Williams in May of 1928. Chrissy renovated the family house and she and Joseph moved in.

 

He was an insurance agent for 40 years and sold his business in 1969. Jophie and Chrissie’s second child was Joseph. Another child was Marion Clarke who won a beauty contest and from that was offered a contract by the CBC in 1953 to work in television. She gave up her career as host of The Saturday Show in 1957 to marry Darroch MacGillivray. Their third child, Alexander Bernard Clarke (Jan. 31, 1892 – June 13, 1953) also enlisted in 1914. At Ypres, he was wounded and taken prisoner. His leg was amputated. He was returned to Canada in 1917. He married Marie Clarisse Cantin in Calgary and moved to BC. Joseph and Chrissy’s fourth child was James David Clarke. They had grandson Darren Clarke who wrote an article about spending his summers in Pugwash in the Clarke house. According to him, Joseph V. smoked and loved pipes and had a room in his house dedicated to pipes. When Joseph and Chrissie became older, they moved to a smaller house down Water Street. 

Darren Clarke was a grandson of Joseph and Gussy and son of James David Clarke..  He wrote excerpts from reminiscences for “The Left Field Lark” June 18, 2018 Travel section.

 

Sitting on my grandparents’ sun porch in a rain storm – Pugwash is a tiny little town of 784 that sits on the Northumberland Strait at the mouth of the Pugwash River. My grandparents’ house sat on the corner of the town’s main streets, Water Street and Victoria Street. The sunporch overlooked Water Street and wrapped around half of the length of the house that ran parallel to Victoria. The windows were weathered, vaguely distorting the outside world. If you were sitting in the front of the house, you could look across Water Street and see Pugwash bay, its clay-coloured beach just steps away.

 

Memories of visiting my Grandfather - . . . lounging in lawn chairs beneath the tree in my grandparents’ back yard listening to my grandfather regale me, indeed educate me, with war stories and tales of his time as a magistrate – good decisions, bad decisions, funny decisions, in his endeavour to provide justice, the people he met, the ones that surprised him, the ones he respected, the ones that let him down and beyond that his stories of long lost World War I battlefields, former boxing champions (Tommy Burns) and so much more.

 

My grandfather’s pipes – My dad’s dad had tons of smoking pipes varying from simple corn cob pipes to straightforward wood pipes with plastic ends to crazy cool wood ones, some with improbably intricate metal ends. We loved them. He had an entire room dedicated to his pipes.

 

On the porch -The guns I remember really, rifles which appeared to be circa World War One. There was tons of random stuff there: almanacs, nicnacks, magazines, pins, old metal lighters that didn’t work.

 

The village – memories of collecting bottle caps out front of the same corner store in Pugwash where you bought the little packages of seaweed to eat.

 

70 Water Street was bought by John Caraberis and Bonnie Wood in 1996. They rented it to Dale O’Hara and Erin Horton who turned it into a restaurant known as Walden Pond, named after the book which Dale had been reading. It was a successful business. The current kitchen was the kitchen of the restaurant; there were two rooms which are now the dining room and living room and an outdoor deck on the Victoria Street side. Reception was from Water Street and Dale and Erin lived upstairs. It was next sold to Peter Sietel who used it as a storehouse for antiques.

 

In 2025, it was again bought by John Caraberis and Bonnie Wood. They renovated: municipal water was connected, the foundation was fixed, there was some new wiring and plastering, new heat pumps and a new roof were installed, the sun porch was repaired and a new entrance from Victoria Street was built. , and it is currently being occupied by a family who are new to the area.

 

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