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Andrew Leamy

Andrew Leamy (1816, Drom, County Tipperary, Ireland - April 21, 1868 in Hull, Quebec) was a pioneer industrialist and community leader in Wright's Town, Lower Canada, which became Hull, Quebec and is now incorporated into the City of Gatineau in the National Capital Region of Canada.

Andrew Leamy, pioneer industrialist.

Andrew Leamy was the son of Michael Leamy and Margaret Marshall, who emigrated to Bytown with Andrew, his two brothers James (Bytown Council 1851, Centre Ward) and Michael and his two sisters Catherine and Anne in the 1820-1830 time frame.

His Life

The name Andrew Leamy is as commonly associated with the commercial and industrial development of the City of Hull as is the name of Philemon Wright. Like most of the other illustrious names of that pioneer-era - names like Nicholas Sparks and J.R. Booth - Andrew Leamy began his business life as an employee of the Old Squire Wright, in 1834, living and working on Wright's Columbia Farm and learning his future trade as a lumber baron. For a brief period of time before this, Andrew worked for Peter Aylen, taking his rafts to Quebec City.

On May 31, 1835, his close ties with the Wright family - and Nicholas Sparks no doubt - led to his eventual marriage to Philemon Wright Jr.'s daughter, Erexina, who had become Nicholas Spark's adopted daughter after Wright Jr.'s death.

After a few years of frugality and good economy in Wright's employ, Leamy had saved enough to purchase 200 hectares of land from Philemon Wright - land that included Wright's original 'Gateno Farm' (sic). In 1853, Leamy began his own enterprise as a lumberman by building a mill on the south shore of Columbia Pond, as it was first named, and the lake became known as Leamy Lake thereafter. Leamy's mill was built by none other than John Rudolphus Booth, who would go on to be a lumber Baron in his own right and the richest man in North America, as a result.[3]

Leamy dug a canal to connect the lake to the Gatineau River to facilitate the transportation of logs to his sawmill. The mill, which was the second steam-powered mill in the region - one of only two - was entirely destroyed when a boiler exploded, killing Leamy's eldest son, Louis-Napoleon. He did not rebuild the mill himself but instead sold the location to another who rebuilt the mill. After the second explosion in 1883, the mill was never rebuilt.

Andrew Leamy was a devout Catholic and, in the tradition of the Wright family, gave much of his time to the social and cultural development of the small developing village of Wright's Town. Andrew Leamy donated the family burial ground opened in 1809, to the Oblate Fathers after they purchased the land to create the Notre-Dame Cemetery. According to the Drouin records of Notre-Dame Parish, he was a popular best man at weddings of his workers and godfather for many families. He worked hand-in-hand with Père Reboul to achieve the emancipation of school governance for the county. The result was the creation of the county's first independent School Commission in 1866, of which he was elected the first President.

Leamy Lake, Leamy Road, and the Leamy Farm

 
An aerial image of the Leamy Farm in 1930

Leamy's farm was the original 'Gateno' Farm, the first farm Philemon Wright created when he arrived in the area in 1800. Leamy's farm contained several buildings of which one, right in front of his large home, was a stable for his prized racehorses. The farm, located on the north side of Leamy's lake between the lake and the Gatineau River had a long road that led from the river all the way to the intersection of Columbia Road (now St. Joseph Blvd.) and Brigham's Road (now St. Raymond Blvd.). The road exists to this day even though a good part is blocked to traffic, but it now ends at Carrière Blvd. At some unknown time, when people no longer were living on it, the Leamy Road's name became listed by the city as Chemin du Lac-Leamy and then was changed, once again in 2010 to rue Atawe, despite many objections from citizens. The Leamy road was identified in all city directories up until the middle 1950s when the Leamy home itself was moved from its foundation to parts unknown in Hull. Today the lake, the park and the very popular Casino du Lac-Leamy still carry his name.

The foundations of his home became buried over time and were the subject of an archaeological dig in 2006, commissioned by the National Capital Commission. What was found was a significant structure, quite remarkable in its construction because of the substantial width of the stone walls.

A log building that was still standing in 1884 on Leamy's farm was probably the first home Philemon Wright built on the banks of the Gatineau River when he first arrived in the area in 1800. The Wright family called that home "The Wigwam".[1] It was the conclusion of another archeological dig at that site that the foundations of that house dated from the early 19th century. Leamy family oral history describes the Leamy home as occupying the spot where Philemon's home was situated, presumably Wright's 2nd home on the "Gateno" Farm.The location was reburied for preservation and protection and the NCC has plans for future commemoration of the site.[2]

His Character

From Andrew Leamy's obituary in the Citizen, April 1868:

"There were few men better known in Ottawa and the surrounding country in the sixties than Andrew Leamy of Gatineau Point, sawmill owner and lumberman. Mr. Leamy came of the pioneer family after whom Leamy's Lake, back of Hull, was named. Andrew Leamy was a large and powerful man and was noted for his strength and aggressiveness. He was essentially a man of the great outdoors. As a lumberman, his name was known far and wide. He had thousands of friends."

Anson A. Gard, author and historian, wrote this about Andrew Leamy:

"It is told of him, as showing his strength and endurance, that when repairs were needed for the mill, that he would mount a horse and carry the part – often of heavy iron – to Montreal, get it mended and without stopping to rest, would ride back to Hull, making a journey of 240 miles through a wild country, under the most tiring conditions."
"I recently met an old resident of the Township, who remembered many of the pioneers. He was one of those rare beings who seemed to remember only the good qualities of the men he had known. "Another kind hearted man" said he "was Andy Leamy. I've known him to be driving along the road with a load of supplies for his lumber camp, and passing the hovel of a family in need, throw off a barrel of flour and pass on as though he thought nothing of it. Andy didn't make much pretense of being a saint, but he did a whole lot of good all the same."[3]

John Lowrey Gourlay wrote this passage about an incident of a religious nature that occurred in 1835 in Wright's Town, when Leamy was 19 years-old:

"A man of fervor, (Reverend) Burwell, declared to his people from the pulpit, and in the parlor, shop and store, his newly-found views that struck most people with the force of all new ideas. His success in Hull seemed considerable, several influential people becoming obedient to the new faith. … Nevertheless the mob in Hull undertook to dictate to those who took up the new opinions, or at least to greatly disturb their meetings. … The late Andrew Leamy, a famous old warrior, took sometimes an active hand in these troubles. Often from sharp and angry words they went to blows, marking each others face's very picturesquely. ... Rev. Adam Hood Burwell eloquently and ably propagated these notions, and one or two Presbyterian families or heads of families were pleased with the views he advanced and for a time joined the party. Mr. Ruggles Wright opposed these views and refused his hall for their propagation. Mr. Alonzo Wright did not join them, but fiercely opposed the mobs, sometimes led by his uncle, Mr. Andrew Leamy who handled them roughly."[4]

In 1874, William Pittman Lett, Ottawa's first City Clerk, in his epic poem "Recollections of Bytown and Its Old Inhabitants" writes:

"And Andrew Leamy in his time.
Was head of many a stirring "shine;"
A man of mark he might be singled,
In whom the good and bad commingled,
In equal balance in such a way,
That each in turn had its sway.
He's gone! The grass grows o'er his head,
The Muse deals gently with the dead."[5]

William Lett's poem makes reference to Leamy's participation in one event where Leamy participated in a brawl in 1837, when 21 yr.-old Andrew and others were charged with creating a disturbance at a lumbermen's meeting in Bytown. The meeting was disrupted by Catholics who were protesting the "disrespect offered by the Protestants to a statue of the Virgin Mary" in the procession of the day before. Once again, Leamy was thus involved in a conflict of a religious nature, a disturbance cited by Dr. Michael S. Cross, historian, as an example of how the many disturbances during the Shiners' War not only had little to do with logging, but may also have had nothing to do with the Shiners (One disputed allegation recorded in the testimony of the case indicates that the men were associated with Peter Aylen).[6] Andrew was only accused of breaking a window to enter the room and was acquitted of the charge of creating a disturbance.[7][8]

There is little doubt that Andrew Leamy learned to use his fists in his early days in the timber camps and like so many other fights involving lumbermen, the result could lead to tragedy. In 1845, in an incident in Wright's Town, reported in both the Kingston Chronicle & Gazette (March 3) and then in the Bytown Gazette (May 16), it is reported that as a result of fight with Andrew Leamy over a paddle, a "fine, young Highlander" by the name of Donald McCrae loses his life on February 23. Andrew Leamy pleaded self-defense to the charge of murder in the trial of the death of Donald McRea on August 5, 1846 in Montreal and was acquitted.[9][10]

His Death

 
Andrew & Erexina Leamy's headstone at Notre Dame Cemetery in Hull

On the dark & stormy night of April 21, 1868, one year after Canada was born, Andrew Leamy was last seen heading home on the old Leamy Road. But he never made it home alive. He was mortally injured in what appeared to be a nasty carriage accident. He was found the next morning, bleeding heavily from his head and with severely bruised ribs. To his family, and everyone else, it appeared that Leamy had suffered the same tragic fate that his late father-in-law, Philemon Wright Jr. had, when he also was thrown from his carriage when it overturned, and died some 47 years earlier.

Leamy had a whole stable full of spirited racehorses and days after, it was said by a friend that Leamy had hitched up one of the most spirited among them, that very afternoon.

Leamy did not linger long. He died that day. The family mourned & then, the community moved on. Only, it appears that long after anyone still wondered what happened that night, a "falling out" between a husband & his wife made the mystery about Leamy's death finally solved, 10 years later. In an article that first appeared in the Toronto Globe on August 15, 1878 and reprinted in the New York Times four days later, it was learned that a Henry Maxwell, a labourer who had been in Leamy's employ, and his unnamed brother-in-law were arrested for the murder and robbery of Andrew Leamy.[11]

Leamy's murder occurred exactly two weeks to the day after the assassination of his good friend and fellow Irishman, Thomas D'Arcy McGee. Andrew Leamy's grandson, Andrew D'Arcy McReady, was named after his godfather, Thomas D'Arcy McGee.

Andrew Leamy is buried in a piece of land that he had donated to the Church for the purpose of creating Notre Dame Cemetery in Gatineau, Quebec. His resting place can be found in a rear portion that overlooks the lake that today still bears his name. At his feet lie the remains of a young man named George Smyth. The stone that marks his grave is inscribed with the words:

Here
Lies the
Boddy of George Smyth
son to Thomas Smyth esq. of Eli
zabeth Town, DE of
Jonstown, Upr. Provence
dround at the three roks
upon the River Reado
6 May 1809
Aged 20 years & 6 months(sic)

Philemon Wright's lumbermen happened to be on the banks of the Ottawa River opposite the Rideau Falls, when the young man's body was found. He had the young man's remains buried in a beautiful, quiet corner of his property. Wright must have either known who he was or found out later. In any event, a stone was engraved with the above inscription. Today, we know that George Smyth was the youngest son of Lieutenant Thomas Smyth, esq, the man who gave his name to Smiths Falls on the Rideau River.[12]

References and External Links

  1. ^ Wright Carr-Harris, Bertha: The White Chief of the Ottawa, page 28. William Briggs, Toronto 1903.
  2. ^ Archaeological Excavations and Collections on NCC Lands: [1] 2011-06-10 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Gard, Anson A.: Pioneers of the Upper Ottawa Valley and Humors of the Valley, section "Genealogy of the Valley" page 34. The Emerson Press, Ottawa 1906.
  4. ^ Gourlay, J.L.: History of the Ottawa Valley, pages 215 and 217. Publisher unknown 1896.
  5. ^ Lett, William Pittman: Recollections of Bytown and its Old Inhabitants, pages 55 and 56. Ottawa "Citizen" Printing and Publishing Company; Sparks Street, 1874.
  6. ^ The Dark Druidical Groves: The Lumber Community and the Commercial Frontier in British North America to 1854, Dr. Michael S. Cross, University of Toronto, 1968
  7. ^ The Upper Ottawa Valley to 1855, Richard M. Reid.pg. 59
  8. ^ Proceedings of Police Magistrates, Bytown, January 12 and 13, 1837, AO MacKenxie-Lindsey Papers, MU2366
  9. ^ BAnQ-CAM, Court of King's/Queen's Bench files (TL19, S1, SS11)
  10. ^ The Upper Ottawa Valley to 1855, Richard M. Reid, McGill-Queen's University Press, 1990, ISBN 9780886291006
  11. ^ The New York Times, August 15, 1878: [2].
  12. ^ Martin, Jean Carol Craig: "IN MEMORY OF CHELSEA'S HISTORIC CEMETERIES: COMMUNITY INSTITUTIONS FROM PIONEER TIMES TO THE PRESENT" Thesis submitted to the School of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the M. A. degree in History. Université d'Ottawa, University of Ottawa, 1999.

Other sources

  1. Walking in the Footsteps of Philemon Wright. Henderson, Rick (2016), Gatineau, Quebec: Dadson Lane Productions, ISBN 978-1-365-57649-2
  2. Family Search
  3. The Family of John and Priscilla Wright [5]
  4. "The Wrights", Patrick M. O. Evans, (National Capital Commission, 1978), Table 35, Page 57
  5. "The Wrights", Patrick M. O. Evans, (National Capital Commission, 1978), Table 100, Page 149

andrew, leamy, 1816, drom, county, tipperary, ireland, april, 1868, hull, quebec, pioneer, industrialist, community, leader, wright, town, lower, canada, which, became, hull, quebec, incorporated, into, city, gatineau, national, capital, region, canada, pionee. Andrew Leamy 1816 Drom County Tipperary Ireland April 21 1868 in Hull Quebec was a pioneer industrialist and community leader in Wright s Town Lower Canada which became Hull Quebec and is now incorporated into the City of Gatineau in the National Capital Region of Canada Andrew Leamy pioneer industrialist Andrew Leamy was the son of Michael Leamy and Margaret Marshall who emigrated to Bytown with Andrew his two brothers James Bytown Council 1851 Centre Ward and Michael and his two sisters Catherine and Anne in the 1820 1830 time frame Contents 1 His Life 2 Leamy Lake Leamy Road and the Leamy Farm 3 His Character 4 His Death 5 References and External Links 6 Other sourcesHis Life EditThe name Andrew Leamy is as commonly associated with the commercial and industrial development of the City of Hull as is the name of Philemon Wright Like most of the other illustrious names of that pioneer era names like Nicholas Sparks and J R Booth Andrew Leamy began his business life as an employee of the Old Squire Wright in 1834 living and working on Wright s Columbia Farm and learning his future trade as a lumber baron For a brief period of time before this Andrew worked for Peter Aylen taking his rafts to Quebec City On May 31 1835 his close ties with the Wright family and Nicholas Sparks no doubt led to his eventual marriage to Philemon Wright Jr s daughter Erexina who had become Nicholas Spark s adopted daughter after Wright Jr s death After a few years of frugality and good economy in Wright s employ Leamy had saved enough to purchase 200 hectares of land from Philemon Wright land that included Wright s original Gateno Farm sic In 1853 Leamy began his own enterprise as a lumberman by building a mill on the south shore of Columbia Pond as it was first named and the lake became known as Leamy Lake thereafter Leamy s mill was built by none other than John Rudolphus Booth who would go on to be a lumber Baron in his own right and the richest man in North America as a result 3 Leamy dug a canal to connect the lake to the Gatineau River to facilitate the transportation of logs to his sawmill The mill which was the second steam powered mill in the region one of only two was entirely destroyed when a boiler exploded killing Leamy s eldest son Louis Napoleon He did not rebuild the mill himself but instead sold the location to another who rebuilt the mill After the second explosion in 1883 the mill was never rebuilt Andrew Leamy was a devout Catholic and in the tradition of the Wright family gave much of his time to the social and cultural development of the small developing village of Wright s Town Andrew Leamy donated the family burial ground opened in 1809 to the Oblate Fathers after they purchased the land to create the Notre Dame Cemetery According to the Drouin records of Notre Dame Parish he was a popular best man at weddings of his workers and godfather for many families He worked hand in hand with Pere Reboul to achieve the emancipation of school governance for the county The result was the creation of the county s first independent School Commission in 1866 of which he was elected the first President Leamy Lake Leamy Road and the Leamy Farm Edit An aerial image of the Leamy Farm in 1930Leamy s farm was the original Gateno Farm the first farm Philemon Wright created when he arrived in the area in 1800 Leamy s farm contained several buildings of which one right in front of his large home was a stable for his prized racehorses The farm located on the north side of Leamy s lake between the lake and the Gatineau River had a long road that led from the river all the way to the intersection of Columbia Road now St Joseph Blvd and Brigham s Road now St Raymond Blvd The road exists to this day even though a good part is blocked to traffic but it now ends at Carriere Blvd At some unknown time when people no longer were living on it the Leamy Road s name became listed by the city as Chemin du Lac Leamy and then was changed once again in 2010 to rue Atawe despite many objections from citizens The Leamy road was identified in all city directories up until the middle 1950s when the Leamy home itself was moved from its foundation to parts unknown in Hull Today the lake the park and the very popular Casino du Lac Leamy still carry his name The foundations of his home became buried over time and were the subject of an archaeological dig in 2006 commissioned by the National Capital Commission What was found was a significant structure quite remarkable in its construction because of the substantial width of the stone walls A log building that was still standing in 1884 on Leamy s farm was probably the first home Philemon Wright built on the banks of the Gatineau River when he first arrived in the area in 1800 The Wright family called that home The Wigwam 1 It was the conclusion of another archeological dig at that site that the foundations of that house dated from the early 19th century Leamy family oral history describes the Leamy home as occupying the spot where Philemon s home was situated presumably Wright s 2nd home on the Gateno Farm The location was reburied for preservation and protection and the NCC has plans for future commemoration of the site 2 His Character EditFrom Andrew Leamy s obituary in the Citizen April 1868 There were few men better known in Ottawa and the surrounding country in the sixties than Andrew Leamy of Gatineau Point sawmill owner and lumberman Mr Leamy came of the pioneer family after whom Leamy s Lake back of Hull was named Andrew Leamy was a large and powerful man and was noted for his strength and aggressiveness He was essentially a man of the great outdoors As a lumberman his name was known far and wide He had thousands of friends Anson A Gard author and historian wrote this about Andrew Leamy It is told of him as showing his strength and endurance that when repairs were needed for the mill that he would mount a horse and carry the part often of heavy iron to Montreal get it mended and without stopping to rest would ride back to Hull making a journey of 240 miles through a wild country under the most tiring conditions I recently met an old resident of the Township who remembered many of the pioneers He was one of those rare beings who seemed to remember only the good qualities of the men he had known Another kind hearted man said he was Andy Leamy I ve known him to be driving along the road with a load of supplies for his lumber camp and passing the hovel of a family in need throw off a barrel of flour and pass on as though he thought nothing of it Andy didn t make much pretense of being a saint but he did a whole lot of good all the same 3 John Lowrey Gourlay wrote this passage about an incident of a religious nature that occurred in 1835 in Wright s Town when Leamy was 19 years old A man of fervor Reverend Burwell declared to his people from the pulpit and in the parlor shop and store his newly found views that struck most people with the force of all new ideas His success in Hull seemed considerable several influential people becoming obedient to the new faith Nevertheless the mob in Hull undertook to dictate to those who took up the new opinions or at least to greatly disturb their meetings The late Andrew Leamy a famous old warrior took sometimes an active hand in these troubles Often from sharp and angry words they went to blows marking each others face s very picturesquely Rev Adam Hood Burwell eloquently and ably propagated these notions and one or two Presbyterian families or heads of families were pleased with the views he advanced and for a time joined the party Mr Ruggles Wright opposed these views and refused his hall for their propagation Mr Alonzo Wright did not join them but fiercely opposed the mobs sometimes led by his uncle Mr Andrew Leamy who handled them roughly 4 In 1874 William Pittman Lett Ottawa s first City Clerk in his epic poem Recollections of Bytown and Its Old Inhabitants writes And Andrew Leamy in his time Was head of many a stirring shine A man of mark he might be singled In whom the good and bad commingled In equal balance in such a way That each in turn had its sway He s gone The grass grows o er his head The Muse deals gently with the dead 5 William Lett s poem makes reference to Leamy s participation in one event where Leamy participated in a brawl in 1837 when 21 yr old Andrew and others were charged with creating a disturbance at a lumbermen s meeting in Bytown The meeting was disrupted by Catholics who were protesting the disrespect offered by the Protestants to a statue of the Virgin Mary in the procession of the day before Once again Leamy was thus involved in a conflict of a religious nature a disturbance cited by Dr Michael S Cross historian as an example of how the many disturbances during the Shiners War not only had little to do with logging but may also have had nothing to do with the Shiners One disputed allegation recorded in the testimony of the case indicates that the men were associated with Peter Aylen 6 Andrew was only accused of breaking a window to enter the room and was acquitted of the charge of creating a disturbance 7 8 There is little doubt that Andrew Leamy learned to use his fists in his early days in the timber camps and like so many other fights involving lumbermen the result could lead to tragedy In 1845 in an incident in Wright s Town reported in both the Kingston Chronicle amp Gazette March 3 and then in the Bytown Gazette May 16 it is reported that as a result of fight with Andrew Leamy over a paddle a fine young Highlander by the name of Donald McCrae loses his life on February 23 Andrew Leamy pleaded self defense to the charge of murder in the trial of the death of Donald McRea on August 5 1846 in Montreal and was acquitted 9 10 His Death Edit Andrew amp Erexina Leamy s headstone at Notre Dame Cemetery in HullOn the dark amp stormy night of April 21 1868 one year after Canada was born Andrew Leamy was last seen heading home on the old Leamy Road But he never made it home alive He was mortally injured in what appeared to be a nasty carriage accident He was found the next morning bleeding heavily from his head and with severely bruised ribs To his family and everyone else it appeared that Leamy had suffered the same tragic fate that his late father in law Philemon Wright Jr had when he also was thrown from his carriage when it overturned and died some 47 years earlier Leamy had a whole stable full of spirited racehorses and days after it was said by a friend that Leamy had hitched up one of the most spirited among them that very afternoon Leamy did not linger long He died that day The family mourned amp then the community moved on Only it appears that long after anyone still wondered what happened that night a falling out between a husband amp his wife made the mystery about Leamy s death finally solved 10 years later In an article that first appeared in the Toronto Globe on August 15 1878 and reprinted in the New York Times four days later it was learned that a Henry Maxwell a labourer who had been in Leamy s employ and his unnamed brother in law were arrested for the murder and robbery of Andrew Leamy 11 Leamy s murder occurred exactly two weeks to the day after the assassination of his good friend and fellow Irishman Thomas D Arcy McGee Andrew Leamy s grandson Andrew D Arcy McReady was named after his godfather Thomas D Arcy McGee Andrew Leamy is buried in a piece of land that he had donated to the Church for the purpose of creating Notre Dame Cemetery in Gatineau Quebec His resting place can be found in a rear portion that overlooks the lake that today still bears his name At his feet lie the remains of a young man named George Smyth The stone that marks his grave is inscribed with the words Here Lies the Boddy of George Smyth son to Thomas Smyth esq of Eli zabeth Town DE of Jonstown Upr Provence dround at the three roks upon the River Reado 6 May 1809 Aged 20 years amp 6 months sic Philemon Wright s lumbermen happened to be on the banks of the Ottawa River opposite the Rideau Falls when the young man s body was found He had the young man s remains buried in a beautiful quiet corner of his property Wright must have either known who he was or found out later In any event a stone was engraved with the above inscription Today we know that George Smyth was the youngest son of Lieutenant Thomas Smyth esq the man who gave his name to Smiths Falls on the Rideau River 12 References and External Links Edit Wright Carr Harris Bertha The White Chief of the Ottawa page 28 William Briggs Toronto 1903 Archaeological Excavations and Collections on NCC Lands 1 Archived 2011 06 10 at the Wayback Machine Gard Anson A Pioneers of the Upper Ottawa Valley and Humors of the Valley section Genealogy of the Valley page 34 The Emerson Press Ottawa 1906 Gourlay J L History of the Ottawa Valley pages 215 and 217 Publisher unknown 1896 Lett William Pittman Recollections of Bytown and its Old Inhabitants pages 55 and 56 Ottawa Citizen Printing and Publishing Company Sparks Street 1874 The Dark Druidical Groves The Lumber Community and the Commercial Frontier in British North America to 1854 Dr Michael S Cross University of Toronto 1968 The Upper Ottawa Valley to 1855 Richard M Reid pg 59 Proceedings of Police Magistrates Bytown January 12 and 13 1837 AO MacKenxie Lindsey Papers MU2366 BAnQ CAM Court of King s Queen s Bench files TL19 S1 SS11 The Upper Ottawa Valley to 1855 Richard M Reid McGill Queen s University Press 1990 ISBN 9780886291006 The New York Times August 15 1878 2 Martin Jean Carol Craig IN MEMORY OF CHELSEA S HISTORIC CEMETERIES COMMUNITY INSTITUTIONS FROM PIONEER TIMES TO THE PRESENT Thesis submitted to the School of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the M A degree in History Universite d Ottawa University of Ottawa 1999 Other sources EditWalking in the Footsteps of Philemon Wright Henderson Rick 2016 Gatineau Quebec Dadson Lane Productions ISBN 978 1 365 57649 2 Family Search 4 The Family of John and Priscilla Wright 5 The Wrights Patrick M O Evans National Capital Commission 1978 Table 35 Page 57 The Wrights Patrick M O Evans National Capital Commission 1978 Table 100 Page 149 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Andrew Leamy amp oldid 1126455596, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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