Genealogy
Thursday, July 16, 2015
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Stevenson, John (Sheriff, Barkerville)
John Stevenson, the brother of my great-great grandfather Robert Stevenson. Not to be confused with John Edson Stevenson, my great-grandfather.
Cheryl, thanks for taking these pictures at the BC Archives.
Cheryl also mentioned reading that John had spent some time on Vancouver Island with "Cariboo" Cameron. I've found a lot of information that Robert was Cameron's partner in some ventures, so I guess that makes sense.
Cheryl, thanks for taking these pictures at the BC Archives.
Cheryl also mentioned reading that John had spent some time on Vancouver Island with "Cariboo" Cameron. I've found a lot of information that Robert was Cameron's partner in some ventures, so I guess that makes sense.
John Stevenson |
Ada Jane Bruce Mason Stevenson |
John Stevenson's Diary |
John Stevenson's Diary |
Ada Jane Bruce Mason Stevenson |
John Stevenson, third from left |
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Sunday, May 24, 2015
Robert Stevenson, b 1838
Robert Stevenson was my (Bradley Fulton's) great-great-grandfather and worked
with "Cariboo" Cameron at Barkerville. Robert's son John Edison Stevenson was my
paternal grandmother's father.
Robert also had a son named Robert R. Stevenson, which has lead to some
confusion.
This following is excerpted from "British Columbia from the earliest times to the present",
an OCR version at:
http://archive.org/stream/britishcolumbiaf00schouoft/britishcolumbiaf00schouoft_djvu.txt
ROBERT STEVENSON.
The life history of Robert Stevenson if written in detail would present some
interesting features of mining experience in the northwest. As a mine owner he
is well known, having made extensive investments in mining property. His home
is now at Sardis, British Columbia, and Williamstown, Glengarry, numbers him
among its native citizens, his birth having there occurred on the 28th of July,
1838. He is a son of Samuel and Susan Stevenson, both of whom are deceased.
They were farming people and under the parental roof their son Robert spent
his boyhood days, his education being acquired at the convent and grammar schools
of Vankleek Hill, in Prescott county, Ontario. When his younger days were over
he came, in early manhood, to British Columbia, arriving here in the month of
May, 1859, during the time of the gold excitement in the northwest. He found,
however, that reports had been much exaggerated and feeling that he could not
obtain a fortune in the mines he proceeded to what was in those days called Wash-
ington territory, now the state of Washington, in which he remained until he joined
the celebrated Collins expedition bound for the Similkameen country and led by
Captain Collins, a noted Indian fighter. The western country in those days was
one vast, trackless forest, hence the difficulties to be encountered can in a measure
be understood. The party had to make trails through unknown woods, had to
cross rivers and climb mountains. This was the first white party to pass from the
salt water to the interior, going in by way of the famous Snocolomie Pass. They
crossed the pass on the 2d of June, at which time there was ten feet of snow, our
subject trying to touch bottom with a ten-foot pole, but failing. That the party
of thirty-four might proceed it was necessary to dig a ditch two and a half feet
wide and two and a half feet deep and fill it in with brush to form a footing. The
party proceeded down the Yakima river and crossed where the town of Parker is
now located. During all the journey they were harrassed by unfriendly Indians
who objected to the white men's intrusion into their possessions or hunting
grounds. As Mr. Stevenson recalled this trip and in retrospect saw the country
of those days he marvelled at the progress made. At that time between the Cas-
cades and the present town of Midway, a distance of two hundred and fifty miles,
there was not a white settler. The party reached Fort Okanagan, the fort of the
Hudson's Bay Company, on the i6th of June, 1860. Two days later this fort was
abandoned and Mr. Stevenson is today the only living man who was present at
its abandonment. The Indians were on the warpath and had Mr. Stevenson and
his party rounded up for five hours, but they fought their way out without losing
a man. They reached Rock Creek mines on the 22d of June, 1860, and there
Captain Collins made a speech and left the party.
Mr. Stevenson engaged in prospecting for some time and then occurred the
Rock Creek war, the miners refusing to comply with the law by taking out a license
or recording claims. Governor Douglas went to the locality to settle the trouble
and in recognition of the part which Mr. Stevenson had taken all through the
difficulty Governor Douglas appointed him customs officer at a salary of two hun-
dred and fifty dollars a month. Then came the great Cariboo gold excitement.
Mr. Stevenson sent in his resignation as customs officer and started at once for the
Cariboo. He had received information that horses were in great demand there, so
he bought a large number, drove them into the country and disposed of them at a
handsome profit. He was one of ten men who took any money into the Cariboo. He
bought into the Jordan claim in the fall of 1861 and on the 3d of November of
that year left for Victoria, traveling with the party of the later Governor Dewd-
ney, now a resident of Victoria, reaching Yale on the 5th of December, and Vic-
toria on the 1 5th of that month. While in Victoria Mr. Stevenson met the famous
"Cariboo Cameron," who had just landed in Victoria with his family. This was
on the 2d of March, 1862. Mr. Stevenson intrpduced Cameron to Mr. Wark, the
chief factor of the Hudson's Bay Company, and was instrumental in his getting
credit for goods to the amount of two thousand dollars. Mr. Stevenson went back
to the Cariboo on the 23d of April, 1862, Cameron following in July. The former
had heard of unclaimed ground and was forced almost to drive Cameron to assist
in staking this. However, on the 22d of August, 1862, the Cameron mine, one of
the richest mines of the Cariboo, was staked by Mr. Cameron and Mr. Stevenson.
Mr. Cameron wished to name it for Mr. Stevenson but the latter had his way
and it was called the Cameron claim. On the 2d of December, 1862, there were
seven shareholders in the mine: John A. and Sophia Cameron, Robert Steven-
son, Richard Rivers, Allan McDonald and Charles and James Clendening, all now
deceased except Mr. Stevenson. Mrs. Cameron died on the 23d of October and her
body was placed in a cabin outside of Richfield to await a chance to take her home
for burial. On January 3ist, at a temperature of fifty degrees below zero, Mr.
Cameron had the body removed to Victoria, where a provisional burial was made
until later in the year when the remains were taken to Cornwall, New Brunswick,
Mr. Cameron almost spending a fortune in accomplishing his end. He was
notably successful as a miner for a considerable period but eventually lost all
he had, and drifted back to Cariboo, where he died poor and was buried in the
old mining camp. It was on the 2d of December, 1862, that the rich gold strike
was made on the Cameron claim, Mr. Stevenson rocking out one hundred and
fifty-five dollars from thirty-five gallons of gravel. It was after this that Mr.
Cameron took his wife's remains to Victoria, Mr. Stevenson accompanying him,
and the burial there took place on the 8th of March. Mr. Cameron offered twelve
dollars a day in addition to a sum of two thousand dollars to any of the men who
would accompany him but all were afraid of smallpox. Mr. Stevenson, however,
went and paid his own expenses. When they were on their way out of the country
the -cold was intense and everywhere along the road they found many dying of
smallpox. While en route they lost their food supplies and their matches and
suffered untold hardships but at length reached Victoria on the 7th of March.
On November 7th, the body of Mrs. Cameron was started for the east via Panama
for final burial.
After the funeral services at Cornwall Mr. Stevenson returned to the Cariboo
in 1864 and took active part in mining affairs. During the stirring days from
1861 until 1864 and even up to 1877 he held interests in various famous claims
including the Cameron, Prince of Wales, Moffat, the Bruce and many others,
and is so thoroughly familiar with the history of mining development in that sec-
tion of the country that Sir Mathew Bigbee said of him that he was the best posted
man in the Cariboo country.
Mr. Stevenson went to Chilliwack and there married Miss Caroline E. Wil-
liams on the 26th of July, 1877, since which time he has been engaged in farming
and mining. He is the largest individual mine owner in the Similkameen country
and has large holdings at Leadville, two groups of claims at the Great Nickel
Plate and is an extensive owner at Copper Mountain, his claims amounting alto-
gether to more than forty.
Unto Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson have been born four children : Clarinda Eliza-
beth, a teacher of Chilliwack ; John Edison, living on a farm at Chilliwack ; Roberta
E. L., the wife of James Watson, B. A., principal of a school at North Vancouver;
and Robert Bryant.
Mr. Stevenson is among the very few now living who are entitled to be num-
bered among the real pioneers of British Columbia, for he has endured innumerable
hardships and gathered wide experience when the resources of the province came
to the attention of the world. There is nothing which characterizes him better
than the way the Indians called him, the "Man Afraid of Nothing." He climbed
the most rugged crags and would enter the wildest canyons. He swam horses
across the Similkumeen river hundreds of times and also across the Thompson and
the Okanagan when there were dangers on every hand. Mr. and Mrs. Stevenson
now occupy a beautiful home on a farm of two hundred and fifty acres at Sardis,
the large and commodious house being one of the landmarks of the region and
the property- a show place famed as a model establishment of its kind. The history
of both of them links the present with the pioneer days, and though both are
advanced in age, they are still strong and robust, clear of brain and active bodily
and mentally. Both are great workers in the Methodist Episcopal church. When
a young man out among the hills, alone with his God and nature, Mr. Stevenson
made a study of religious matters and has ever adhered to those deep-rooted con-
clusions which resulted from his meditations. He has never dissipated, never
used tobacco, and to these things and his life in the open air may be attributed
his present splendid state of health. A man five feet seven or eight inches tall,
he weighs over two hundred pounds and at the age of seventy-five has an energy
and business acumen which many a successful man of half his age might well
envy. In his political views he is a conservative. He belongs to Princess Lodge
of Masons at Montreal and is a charter member of the Royal Order of Orangemen
of Princeton. He also belongs to the Vancouver Mining Club. He is one of the
few men remaining of the early days, a picturesque character because of his many
and varied experiences in connection with the mining development of the north-
west. He can relate most interesting incidents of the early days, of the life lived
by the miners, and he is one of those who have prospered by labor and judicious
investments, his mining and other properties being extensive and valuable.
The Fultons: Scotland then Ireland then North America
I've always been puzzled that our patrilineal ancestor John Fulton coming from Ireland in 1760. It turns out that a bunch of Fultons came to Ireland from Scotland in the 1600/1700's, and their surname was actually taken to connote from where they came -- the Fulton Land (west of Glasgow). Then many of them emigrated to North America. One family tree in the article below does show a John Fulton in Nova Scotia as a descendant of the Fultons in Ireland, and possibly does link us very remotely to Robert Fulton the inventor.
http://neuronresearch.net/genealogy/Fulton_North_America.pdf
Figure 1.3.1-1 The distribution of Scottish settlers emigrating to northern Ireland during the colonial period.
The Land of Fulton was just to the west of Glasgow. As the people moved into Paisley, Beith and other
communities, they adopted the descriptor, de or of Foulton, with various spellings. With time, this became
just the surname Fulton. Modified from Gillespie, 1985.
Figure 1.3.2-8 Immigrants to North America from Lisburn using a simplified tree. The shading indicates
the time spent by the individual in North America. This figure omits the immigration of Rev. Robert Fulton
(1654–1720) to Jamaica and the circuitous migration of William Fulton (1810–1889).
Note from Brad Fulton: This tree is rooted on the left side of the previous diagram. So our relationship to
Robert Fulton is quite remote.
http://neuronresearch.net/genealogy/Fulton_North_America.pdf
Figure 1.3.1-1 The distribution of Scottish settlers emigrating to northern Ireland during the colonial period.
The Land of Fulton was just to the west of Glasgow. As the people moved into Paisley, Beith and other
communities, they adopted the descriptor, de or of Foulton, with various spellings. With time, this became
just the surname Fulton. Modified from Gillespie, 1985.
Figure 1.3.2-8 Immigrants to North America from Lisburn using a simplified tree. The shading indicates
the time spent by the individual in North America. This figure omits the immigration of Rev. Robert Fulton
(1654–1720) to Jamaica and the circuitous migration of William Fulton (1810–1889).
Note from Brad Fulton: This tree is rooted on the left side of the previous diagram. So our relationship to
Robert Fulton is quite remote.
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