Notes: Some of the data still needs updating, as have found
much information via census records and from newly contacted cousins. Most
recent (June 2006) discovery = birth record for John Pender as son of William
Pender, soldier of HM 99th/100th Regiment (Thanks to Olive Cotton)
Year |
Mo |
Day |
Person(s) |
Place(s) |
Event |
Reference |
|
|
|
Pender |
|
Old Family
traditions or rumors:
|
Notes: We have
established with a fair amount of certainty that John Pender was son of
William Pender, a soldier in British army (99th – 100th
Regiment). (AS June 2006) Note: there is also a Drumsallagh near Hall’s Mill
(Lawrencetown) in County Down. |
|
|
|
Prendergast |
|
The name Prendergast is said to be the name of Flemish
settlers in Normandy, France, who took their name from a lost place,
Brontegeest (Prentagast) in Flanders near Ghent. Flanders was under the
control of France in the 11th century, Flanders is on the coast and is now
part of Northern Belgium. In the 9th & 10th century Flanders was troubled
by incursions of the Vikings. The name Brontegeest still exists in Holland
and Belgium and seems to be the Dutch or Low German expression for
Prendergast. |
http://maurie.customer.netspace.net.au/de%20prend.html |
1066 |
|
|
Prendergast |
Wales |
IN WALES The Prendergast name is said to
have been brought to England during the Norman Conquest by one Prenliregast,
(also given as Preudirlegast in The Battle Abbey Roll) a follower of William
the Conqueror. The son of Prenliregast, Phillip, was given land in the
district of Ros in Pembrokeshire, South Wales.
The name of Prendergast was given
to a parish (village) forming part of the Borough of Haverfordshire near
Pembroke, in Wales, which continued in their possession until Maurice De
Prendergast sailed as part of Earl Strongbow’s force to Ireland in the spring
of 1170. |
http://maurie.customer.netspace.net.au/de%20prend.html |
1169 |
05 |
1 |
Prendergast, Maurice de |
Wales, Ireland |
The Anglo - Norman Invasion Of
Ireland. On 1 May 1169... Robert
FitzStephen, a kinsman of Strongbow, landed at Bannow Bay in County Wexford
in three ships with 30 men-at-arms (knights), 60 in half-armour, 300 archers
and footmen (Normans, Flemings and Welsh), he was followed later on 11 May
1169 by Maurice de Prendergast who after embarking at the port of Milford
arrived in two boats and landed at Bannow Bay with 10 knights and 200 archers
(given as 600 men in other places) and foot soldiers as part of the vanguard
of Strongbow’s force (who didn’t arrive until 23 August 1170). Though small
in number they were experienced fighting men and met with early success.
There are variations in the accounts regarding landing dates, site and
numbers of men. ...after a short time in Ireland Maurice de Prendergast
returned to Wales and later returned with Strongbow and the main force.
Strongbow landed near Waterford with 200 knights and a 1000 soldiers. |
http://maurie.customer.netspace.net.au/de%20prend.html http://www.rootsweb.com/~irlkik/ihm/invasion.htm |
1171 |
10 |
17 |
Prendergast |
Wales & Ireland |
On 17 October 1171 King Henry II
landed at Waterford with 500 knights and 4,000 men at arms and archers. In
the face of these forces by 1250 (80 years later) three quarters of Ireland
was under Norman rule. The Settlement Period In Ireland.
|
http://maurie.customer.netspace.net.au/de%20prend.html |
1173 |
|
|
|
Powerscourt |
The coming of the
Normans under Strongbow marks the real beginnings of recorded history about
our parish. Henry II, when he granted the kingdom of Leinster to Strongbow,
kept in his own hands most of the lands in the neighbourhood of Dublin,
including Donald Macgiollamocolmog's principality. In 1173 he gave to one of
Strongbow's barons, Walter de Ridelesford, what amounted to a speculative
grant of lands south of Dublin. It included our district in these terms --
"Brien and the lands of the sons of Turchil, so that he may have the fee
of five knights; and what may be wanting there, I shall provide him on one
side and the other of the water of Brien." About fifteen years
later, when the conquest was complete, de Ridelesford got a fresh charter
which defined this land of " Ui Briuin in the honor of Bray ". It
shows that his possessions had, by then, been limited in the interests of two
parties, the Church and the Crown. The Church was too influential to be
disturbed in its pre-conquest possessions at Stagonil, at Killegar and at
Kilmacanogue. The Crown seems to have taken back into its own hands the
Glencree valley, out of which a royal forest was formed, and those lands in
the upper Dargle valley on either side of the vill of Stagonil, which did not
belong to the Church. This royal manor of Obrun frequently appears in the
State Papers of the thirteenth century. For instance in 1204 we find Matthew
Juvenis being confirmed in possession of his farm at Balicuritl'd, which was
almost certainly Curtlestown. |
Extracts from Rev. A.E. Stokes' Lecture, Our Parish of
Powerscourt |
1200 |
|
|
Richard le pendere |
|
FILE - Grant with
quitclaim, in pure and perpetual alms - ref. CCA-DCc-ChAnt/C/173 - date:
nodate [early 13th century] 1 document - Parchment, 1m, seal. Contents From:
Thomas Akard To: Canterbury
Cathedral Priory Of half a load, half a quarter, and 2 parts of a toll-vat ('tolvatum') of barley. For lighting St Dunstan's shrine. He and his ancestors used to receive this barley at the priory barton for a watercourse flowing through their land joining the priory's waterpond ('vivarium') with another. No date. [Date: handwriting.] Witnesses: Henry de cobbeham; William of Ashford ('essettesford'); Thomas de Dene; John de cruce; Henry de turold; Andrew son of Godwin; Andrew de petra; Richard de horsfold; Richard le pendere; William crul; Richard bissop'; Gilbert the tiler ('teglator'); Baldwin ferbraz; Bartholomew de chele Endorsed with description in contemporary hand. Quantity of barley described as 5 bushels and 2 parts of a toll-vat. |
www.a2a.org.uk |
1200 |
|
|
Wulmer pendere |
Shelford in
Hackington |
FILE - Grant - ref.
CCA-DCc-ChAnt/C/812 - date: nd [early 13th century] - 1 document Parchment,
1m, seal, slightly dirty. Contents: From: Wulmer pendere son of Ordgar ACake
To: Rayner the miller ('Reinerius molendinarius') son of Suetmeus; Beatrix,
wife of Rayner the miller ('Reinerius molendinarius') son of Suetmeus - ¾ of
an acre of land lying at the end of 'Nunnelande' against the land of Alfred
of Shelford ('suliford') [in Hackington] and 1¼ acres of land lying in
('binne') 'suthtune' under the hedge ('sepis') with 'Ethelburcheker' to
north, which are of his enclosure ('parcatium'). For annual payments of 30d
to the treasury of Canterbury Cathedral Priory, 2d to William son of Drogo, and
1d to Wulmer, all payable as specified. Made and recorded at the priory's
court. For this Rayner and Beatrix have paid 40s as a gersum fine. No date.
[Date: handwriting and witnesses to other Canterbury charters.] Witnesses:
Thomas de dene; Alfred of Shelford ('suliford') [in Hackington]; Jordan the
saucer ('salsarius'); Nicholas son of Baldwin; Andrew son of Godwin; Simon
son of Godwin; Michael de fuleburne; Walter de fuleburne; William, brother of
Walter de fuleburne; Robert the palmer ('palmerus); Solomon de horsfalde;
Walter de horsfalde. Endorsed with description, describing the land as next
to Shelford [in Hackington] and stating that the grant relates to Barton
manor [Canterbury], in late 13th cent hand. |
www.a2a.org.uk |
1205 |
|
|
Prendergast,
Maurice de |
Wales, Ireland |
Maurice was one of the English
lords chosen to witness the signature of Henry II to the deed whereby he gave
the city and lands of Cork to Robert Fitzgerald and Milo de Cogan in 1170. In
1177, Maurice made over the Castle de Prendergast in Wales, Pembrokeshire, to
the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, joined the order, and died in 1205 at Kilmainham
(near Dublin), the chief seat of the brotherhood in Ireland, being then Prior
of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. |
http://maurie.customer.netspace.net.au/de%20prend.html |
1225 |
|
|
Prendergast |
Enniscorthy, Co.
Wexford, Ireland |
Wexford County
Museum in Enniscorthy, County Wexford, is now housed in a 13th c.
Norman castle built by the Prendergast family. |
|
Betw 1307 and 1327 |
|
|
Prendergast |
Lehinch, near
Hollymount |
Lawsuit in the
reign of Edward II (crowned in 1307 and died 1327), when a Prendergast sued
the Roches for recovery of the lands of the manor in the parish of Kilcommon
and site within the Hollymount demesne. Site destroyed long ago, before manor
of Hollymount House was built. (County Clare) |
http://www.shrule.com/_shrule/_display.php?fid=1&pid=1005 |
1300 |
|
|
|
Powerscourt |
The reason why our
parish is called Powerscourt is because for over twenty years at the
beginning of the fourteenth century, before the coming of the O'Tooles,
Eustace le Poer, (an ancestor of the Marquis of Waterford), and his heir,
Geoffrey le Poer, were the last effective Anglo-Norman governors of the
king's castle of Balytenyth, which stood at the end of the granite ridge
where Powerscourt House now stands, high above the fields of gorse which
still run down to the Dargle below. |
Extracts from Rev.
A.E. Stokes' Lecture, Our Parish of Powerscourt |
1450 |
04 |
|
Prendergast |
Ross town, Co.
Wexford |
William Walshe and
wife Margaret Prendergast grant a messuage (to whom?) |
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~walsh/history/timeline.html |
1465 |
04 |
|
Prendergast |
Ross, Co. Wexford |
Margaret
Prendergast (widow of William Walshe) grants a messuage in town of Ross to
Thomas Don alias Walsch. |
http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~walsh/history/timeline.html |
1569 |
|
|
Prendergast |
Clonmel, County
Tipperary, Ireland |
Church of Old St.
Mary’s in Mary Street, Clonmel.
Catholic vicar, William Prendergast, conformed to Protestantism.
Several graves here with Prendergast names. |
Family chart notes
from web |
1674 |
|
|
Hall |
Lawrencetown County Down,
Ireland |
Francis Hall of
Tullylish leased Lawrencetown from the Lawrence family in 1674 for 99 years.
Thus the name Hall’s Mill. Reference
PNN1 v6 p. 351 = Place Names of Northern Ireland, K. Muhr et al, Queens
University Belfast 1996. |
Freepages.genealogy.rootseb.com/~rosdavies/surnames/Hab-Han.htm#hal |
1766 |
8 |
8 |
Pender, F. Captain |
|
Records of the
Admiralty, Naval Forces, Royal Marines, Coastguard and related bodies.
Records of HM Ships. ADM 51 Admiralty: Captains’ Logs; ADM 51/4543 Captains’
logs: details of ships are given at item level. Item: Explorations: Dolphin (ship); F. Pender, captain. 1766
Aug 8 – 1767 Oct 31. |
The “F” is
probably Francis Pender |
1772 |
10 |
8 |
Pender, Captain |
|
Colonial records
project, Raleigh NC; NC office of Archives & History; Dept. of Cultural
Resources. Newspapers: shipwrecks: Virginia Gazette, October 8, 1772, violent
gale of wind; Captain Pender from Newbern, lost; cargo saved. |
|
1780 |
7 |
21 |
Pindar, John,
Captain |
New York |
New York Court of
Vice Admiralty 21 July 1780 – John Pindar et al vs the Evening Star. This folder (number 8) dated 1780 contains
10 numbered documents, 3 court papers and 7 ships’ papers, relating to the
capture of the ship, “Evening Star”, Hinson Gilbert master, by 5 privateers
in Chesapeake Bay, colony of Virginia. John Pindar was commander of the
ship, “Resolution” which is listed as one of the “privateers.” |
http://www.rootsweb.com/~bmuwgw/eveningstar.html |
1781 |
|
|
Pindar, John |
Near the Leeward
Islands |
John Paul Jones in
American ship, “Ariel,” fools John Pindar, commander of British privateer,
“Triumph,” and wins a small fight in which Pindar & ship subsequently
escapes |
http://www.history.navy.mil/danfs/a/ariel.htm |
1781 |
|
|
Pender, William |
County Wicklow,
Ireland |
William Pender’s
approximate birth year. Notes: Data came
from William’s discharge papers, which show he was recruited at Roundwood and
that he had been born “in the Parish of Powerscourt, in or near the town of
Wicklow.” However, Wicklow Town is not in the parish of Powerscourt. So - was
William born in or near the town of Wicklow, or was he born in the parish of
Powerscourt? See Griffiths Valuation 1845 |
99th-100th
Regiment records (see below) |
1782 |
|
|
Pender, Lawrence |
Tullow, Carlow,
Ireland |
Lawrence
Pender born 1782
Tullow, Carlow |
WO 97/456/109 26th Regiment Foot |
1782 |
5 |
11 |
Pender, Captain |
|
Letters to Lord
Rodney from Captain Pender and others. |
Item details for
PRO 30/20/21/3 |
1789 |
|
|
Pendergast, Pender |
Borris, Carlow, Ireland |
Does anyone have any information about a Mathew Pendergast married to Margaret Byrne, born 1789 in Borris, Co. Carlow. Two sons, John and Patrick, born 1832 and 1834 respectively. The name Pendergast was changed to Pender in 1834. John and Patrick emigrated to Canada (Quebec City) along with their mother Margaret. Would appreciate any help. |
Board posting on-line Peter Pender rachelle1@sympatico.ca |
1791 |
|
|
|
Hesse District,
Upper Canada |
Quebec formerly
covered the current area of Ontario and Quebec. In 1791 Quebec was divided
into Upper and Lower Canada at the current Ontario-Quebec border |
|
1792 |
|
|
|
Western District,
Upper Canada |
1792 Hesse District
was renamed Western District. Norfolk County encompassed the current county
plus parts of the current counties of Elgin, Middlesex, Oxford, Brant, and
Haldimand |
|
1792 |
|
|
Pender, James |
Kilquade, Wicklow,
Ireland |
James
Pender born 1792 Kilquade, Wicklow |
WO 97/870/31 75th Regiment of Foot |
1792 |
11 |
23 |
Pender |
Saint George,
Sydney, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia |
A marriage between
a John Pender and Mary Brookman. LDS Batch M510121 Source Call no. 0814172;
Film, Printout Call No. 1205004. |
FamilySearch |
1793 |
|
|
Pender |
|
Ship, “Glory” –
Capt. F. Pender |
Probably Francis Pender |
1795 |
5 |
|
Pender, Captain |
Bermuda |
Rear Admiral George
Murray flagship HMS Resolution; Captain Pender of same ship wrote reports
regarding the facilities Bermuda could offer as a base for winter patrols. |
http://www.bermuda-online.org/canada.htm |
1796 |
|
|
Parks, John |
Ireland |
Approximate year of
birth – John Parks |
Canada Census 1861 |
1798-1800 |
|
|
Wallace Fencibles |
Wicklow |
William was part of
the “Wallace Fencibles” between 1798 and 1800. WO 13/3961 -
Wallace FENCIBLE INFANTRY: Militia and Volunteers Muster Books and Pay Lists
The National Archives, Kew. Date range: 1798 - 1800. Source: The Catalogue of The National
Archives Some pages received
from Archives – have requested full set. Data at hand shows placenames
Knutsford and Andover – I believe these are in England. I’m guessing
fencibles sent there to protect English coast against Napoleonic forces. |
|
1798 |
05 |
24 |
Prendergast |
County Wicklow,
Dunlavin |
1798 Rebellion -
Killed at Dunlavin: David Prendergast, yeoman, Saundersgrove Corps |
www.interment.net/data/ireland/wicklow/nicholas/nicholas.htm |
1798 |
05 |
26 |
Prendergast |
County Wicklow |
Stories from the
1798 rebellion. Captain Saunders tricks some Corps members into revealing
themselves as United Irishmen and puts them under arrest at the markethouse
in Dunlavin. But later they were shot in revenge for a military casualty. One
of those shot was a Peter Prendergast who was left for dead. Bodies were
buried in large pit at cemetery of Tournant, where Prendergast was discovered
to still be alive & so was rescued & lived to an advanced age. From same source:
killed: Andrew Prendergast of Ballinacrow; Peter Prendergast of Bumbohall. |
http://indigo.ie/~kfinlay/shamsquire/rebellionwicklow.htm also: www.chapters.eiretek.org/books/shamsquire/rebellionwicklow.htm |
1798 |
10 |
|
|
|
(From the trial of
Hugh Wollaghan). Richard Byrne was a witness. Richard was a member of the
Wallace Fencibles. Placenames: Bray,
Killencarrig, Delgany, Newtown-Mount-Kennedy, Rathdum (Rathdrum?), Roundwood,
a barracks in Dublin, and a “rendevous” on Kevin Street (the latter is where
Byrne lived since enlisting. Is it in Dublin?). Captain Armstrong
commanded the district and gave orders that rebels should be shot or hung,
not captured. These orders came after the attack on Arklow. Q. Was it not the
practice of the corps to go out on scouring parties, without orders, to
protect their own property and that of their neighbours? A. I always looked
upon it as an order and practice of the corps, particularly after what
Captain Armstrong had mentioned. |
http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/IRL-WICKLOW/2004-12 |
1801 |
|
|
|
|
Act of Union |
|
1803 |
|
|
Talbot Settlement |
Ireland, Canada |
Col. Thomas Talbot
settles west of Kettle Creek at Port Talbot. Notes: Talbot’s
ancestral home was Castle Malahide near Dublin. Talbot was personal
secretary to Simcoe in 1791. Received land grant of 5,000 acres. Talbot Settlement
grew to over 65,000 acres in current counties Elgin, Kent, Essex, Haldinand,
Norfolk and Middlesex. Notes: Ireland
place names: Parish of Swords “Town Parks” Malahide Road, Brookdale. Similar
sounds to “Parkdale” which is the placename my mother was given for Parks
birthplace. |
Elgin County Museum |
1803 |
|
|
Talbot Settlement |
History of Elgin
County |
Between
1803 thru 1851: The
Talbot Settlement When John
Graves Simcoe toured Upper Canada as its first Lieutenant-Governor, his young
aide-de-camp, Lieutenant Thomas Talbot, first met and fell in love with the
Ontario wilds. Having resigned from the army, Talbot wanted enough land at
the mouth of the Kettle Creek to establish a small agricultural community.
Unable to secure enough land at that location Talbot was able to secure 5,000
acres at Port Talbot. Much of Southwestern Ontario had been surveyed by 1803. Most of
the land was owned by speculators, the Crown and the Anglican Church. Talbot
was faced with the problem of settling immigrants in spite of the difficulty
caused by these large tracts of forests which blocked communication and
hindered travel. Talbot was to receive two hundred acres for each of the
settlers he located on his original grant. Talbot, however, settled the
immigrants on land in Aldborough and Dunwich Townships, as well as taking his
200 acres in those townships. |
http://home.ican.net/~bedmonds/ElginOGS/ Elgin County genealogical
society site |
ca 1804 |
|
|
100th Regiment of
Foot |
Dublin, Ireland |
Regiment raised.
This is also the year of enlistment for William Pender of same reg’t. Notes: The PRO has
the Regimental Description Book for the 99th (late 100th) Regiment in War
Office - WO 25 volume 550 which is also available on microfilm from the LDS. Notes: Series 1
British Military Records. “C” Series
NAC National Archives of Canada 1757-1899; Series 1-B Records of the Canadian
Command 1785-1883. Series 1-D – Miscellaneous Loyalist Muster Rolls &
Militia 1812. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm and notes from
another website with article on War of 1812 |
1804 |
5 |
24 |
Pender, William |
Roundwood, Wicklow, Ireland |
William Pender enlisted in 100th
Regiment of Foot |
99th-100th
Regiment records (see below) |
1805 |
|
|
100th Regiment of
Foot |
|
The regiment left for Canada in the
fall of 1805, apparently in a convoy of troop transports bound for North
America. Caught in a severe gale off the coast of Nova Scotia, several of the
transports were sunk and others managed to reach local fishing ports in a
distressed condition. There was heavy loss of life among the troops. The
survivors were eventually carried in other ships to Quebec
City. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm |
1807 |
10 |
6 |
Pender, John |
Quebec |
John, son of William Pender,
private soldier in His Majesty’s Hundredth Regiment of Foot, and of Elizabeth
his Wife, was born October the sixth, and baptized October the fifteenth in
the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and seven. By me (signed)
Salter Jehosaphat Mountain Deputy Chaplain to the Garrison of Quebec. Present (signed) Elizabeth Pender
mother her mark x proxy for Margaret Agan. John McGuire
Godfather his mark x James Reynolds
Godfather his mark x |
Transcript register
Anglican Cathedral,
Quebec City, Quebec National Archives Folio 51 microfilm M-138.2 Census 1851 and
1871 (see) |
1807 |
|
|
100th Regiment of Foot |
|
In 1807 the
regiment was transferred [from Quebec City] to Lower Canada (now Quebec
Province) and formed the garrison at several points guarding the approaches
to Montreal (Quebec). |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm |
1808 |
|
|
|
Upper Canada |
Militia Act
requiring all males between 16 and 60 to be part of militia. |
An Index of the Land Claim
Certificates of Upper Canada Militamen who Served in the War of 1812-1814.
Compiled by Wilfred R. Lauber, Toronto 1995. ISBN 0-7779-0190-0 |
ca 1810 |
|
|
Hall, Sarah |
Ireland |
Sarah Hall born in
Ireland |
Census 1851 and
1871 (see) |
1810 |
|
|
|
Malahide, (London
District), Canada |
Town surveyed. |
Malahide website |
1812 |
3 |
3 |
Pender, William (99th/100th
Reg’t) |
Fort William Henry
(Sorel) |
Extract
comes from the registers of the Christ Anglican Church serving Fort William
Henry (now called Sorel) register for the year 1812 on the back of folio 6,
Quebec National Archives microfilm #M-128.41: Helen
[Ellen] Daughter of William Pender a private in the hundredth Regiment and of
Elizabeth his Wife was born on the third of March one thousand eight hundred
and twelve, and baptized on the twenty second day of the same month. The
Sponsors were John Murray, Esther Noone & Rose Cole. (signed) x The Mark
of William Pender The Father E. Noone X The Mark
of Elizabeth Pender proxy for Rose Cole (signed) John Jackson
Officiating Chaplain to the Troops |
Marlene Simmons
letter/transcript |
1812 |
5 |
2 |
100th Regiment of Foot - HRH The
Prince Regent’s County of Dublin Regiment |
|
When news of the outbreak of
hostilities with the United States reached the British Army command in 1812,
a scheduled transfer of the 100th Foot to Bermuda was cancelled. Units were
involved in raids in northern New York State until the regiment was moved [from Lower
Canada/Quebec] to the Niagara Frontier to bolster defences there,
where the main American invasion was expected. Headquartered at
Fort George, Niagara-on-the-Lake, various Companies were stationed from there
to the Lake Erie shore as forward detachments. In acknowledgement of the
largely Irish composition of the regiment, it was granted the title of ‘HRH The Prince Regent’s
County of Dublin Regiment’ on 2 May 1812. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm |
1812 |
6 |
28 |
War of 1812. Talbot
settlement |
London district |
British
intelligence confirms declaration of War. Col. Talbot receives dispatch
appointing him head of London District militia. Excepts from an essay on
"The War of 1812 and the Talbot Settlement." by M. Wayne Neal. |
Elgin Military
Museum site |
1812 |
|
|
100th/99th
Regiment |
|
A company was stationed at Turkey
Point (Charlotteville, Norfolk), a fort in the area south of Malahide, during
the War of 1812, until just after Proctor’s defeat. (page 82) |
Book, “The Talbot Regime, or the
First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement” by C.O. Ermatinger, K.C.;
canadiana Reprint Series No. 05, Global Heritage Press. ISBN 1-894378-11-3 |
1812 |
7 |
24 |
Aury, John Skelly, Daniel |
Lincoln County,
Upper Canada (Niagara District) |
War of 1812 Muster Roll of Captain Jonathan
Moore, 4th Lincoln [Militia], from 25th July to 24th of August 1812, both
days inclusive. Privates include: John Aury Daniel Skelly |
http://olivetreegenealogy.com/mil/1812/data_jnmoore.shtml |
1812 |
|
|
Aurey, John |
Lincoln County,
Upper Canada (Niagara District) |
John Aurey - 2nd
Flank Company, 4th Regiment, Lincoln Militia. NAC RG9, IB4, Vol 18, File 5,
pages 388-389 |
An Index of the Land Claim
Certificates of Upper Canada Militamen who Served in the War of 1812-1814.
Compile by Wilfred R. Lauber, Toronto 1995. ISBN 0-7779-0190-0 |
1812 |
|
|
Parks, James |
Lincoln County,
Upper Canada (Niagara District) |
James Parks, 1st
Flank Co, 2nd Regiment, Lincoln Militia. NAC RG9, IB4, Vol 22, File 67, pages
2060-2061. |
An Index of the Land Claim
Certificates of Upper Canada Militamen who Served in the War of 1812-1814.
Compile by Wilfred R. Lauber, Toronto 1995. ISBN 0-7779-0190-0 |
1812 |
|
|
Brooks |
|
NAC RG9, IB4,
Volume 18, File 13: William Brooks,
Flank Co 1st Regt Middlesex Militia. pages 1338-1339 Thomas Brooks,
Flank Co, 2nd Regt Lincoln Militia pp 1336-1337 Robert Brooks, 2nd
Regt, Lincoln Militia. pp 1333-1335 Jacob Brooks 1st
Regiment York Militia. pp. 1331-1332 Wiliam D. Brooks
Incorporated Militia pp. 1328-1329 |
An Index of the Land Claim
Certificates of Upper Canada Militamen who Served in the War of 1812-1814.
Compile by Wilfred R. Lauber, Toronto 1995. ISBN 0-7779-0190-0 |
1813 |
12 |
|
100th Regiment of Foot - HRH The Prince
Regent’s County of Dublin Regiment |
|
The Regiment took a
leading role in the capture of Fort Niagara in December 1813. A unit led by
Sergeant Andrew Spearman (who settled in Richmond) approached the fort by
stealth and Spearman captured the forward sentry and forced him to give up
the password. They then reached the gates of the fort and, using the
password, gained entry just as a warning was sounded. Nevertheless, the main
body of troops stormed in and the fort was taken with very few British casualties. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm
|
1813 |
12 |
26 |
Pender, William (100th-99th Regt) |
Christ Church
Anglican Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec |
Extract comes from
the registers of Christ Church Anglican Cathedral in Montreal, register for
the year 1813 on the back of folio 27, Quebec National Archives microfilm
#M-128.1. On the Twenty sixth
day of December, one thousand eight hundred and thirteen, Elizabeth, Daughter
of William Pender, private in the Hundredth Regiment and Elizabeth Pepper his
Wife was Born and baptized on the following day. The sponsors are Barney
Gaulley, Fanny Jenneson and Mary Porter who have hereunto signed their Names
– By me (signed) Jt. Mountain Chaplain (signed) Barney Gauly Fanny Jenneson Mary Porter Wm Pender Father The Mother absent |
Marlene Simmons letter/transcript |
1814 |
7 |
16 |
Pender, William (99th/100th
Reg’t) |
Christ Church
Anglican Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec |
Extract comes from
the registers of Christ Church Anglican Cathedral in Montreal, register for
the year 1814 on the front of folio 16, Quebec National Archives microfilm
#M-128.1: On the Sixteenth
day of July, one thousand eight hundred and fourteen, Ellen [Helen], daughter
of William Pender private in the Hundred Regiment and Elizabeth his wife Died
and was buried on the following day – The Witnefses are William Walker and
William Kane who have hereunto signed their Names – By me (signed) Jt.
Mountain Chaplain (signed) x Will’m
Walker Mark Will’m Kane |
Marlene Simmons letter/transcript |
1814 |
7 |
31 |
Pender, William (99th/100th
Reg’t) |
Christ Church
Anglican Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec |
Extract comes from
the registers of Christ Church Anglican Cathedral in Montreal, register for
the year 1814 on the back of folio 16, Quebec National Archives microfilm
#M-128.1: On the Thirty first
day of July, one thousand eight hundred and fourteen Elizabeth, Daughter of
William Pender private in the Hundred Regiment and Elizabeth his wife Died
and was buried on the first of August following – The Witnefses are James
Lang and William Kane, who have hereunto signed their Names By me (signed) Jt.
Mountain Chaplain (signed) James Lang Will’m Kane |
Marlene Simmons letter/transcript |
1814 |
12 |
24 |
War of 1812 |
|
Treaty of Ghent signed Christmas
Eve |
|
1815 |
2 |
6 |
Brooks, Benjamin |
St. Andrews,
Argenteuil, Quebec |
Benjamin Brooks’
marriage to Nancy Olive Harris. St. Andre
d’Argenteuil on the Riviere des Outaouais – on the banks of the Ottawa River
between Montreal and Hull. Site of Lachute
protestant cemetery. Other placenames Grenville, Harrington, carillon. First
papermill; Quebec Gazette newspaper. St. Andrews Presbyterian church. |
Brooks/Corliss genealogy &
general web searches; Also LDS website for marriage data. |
1815 |
3 |
24 |
Brooks, John |
|
Nominal List of
Officers, Noncommissioned Officers, Drummers and Privates of the Incorporated
Militia of Upper Canada, who are entitled to a Gratuity of Land for their
Services during the late war. Privates page 347 Brooks, John |
An Index of the Land Claim
Certificates of Upper Canada Militamen who Served in the War of 1812-1814.
Compile by Wilfred R. Lauber, Toronto 1995. ISBN 0-7779-0190-0 |
1815 |
4 |
6 |
Francis Pender,
esq., Admiral of H.M. Fleet |
Cornwall? Helford
Passage; Helford harbour |
R Rogers and Son,
Helston, solicitors RECORDS OF GRYLLS
OF HELSTON LEASES.
Constantine. FILE - [no title] - ref. RO/6419 - date: 6 April 1815. Contents: Lease for 21 years
(if estate of (1) lasts so long); rent £46. (1) Fras. Pender, esq. Admiral of
H. M. Fleet. (2) Jas. Veale of constantine, yeo. Helford Passage tenement
(dwellinghouse, outhouse and 6a.) late occ. Wm. Old and ferry with one large
passing boat, anchors, cables (excepting dues and rights of anchorage in
Helford harbour); no prohibited goods to be carried which endanger seizure of
ferry. |
www.a2a.org.uk |
1816 |
|
|
100th Regiment / 99th Regiment |
|
100th Regiment renamed 99th Regiment. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm |
1816 |
10 |
10 |
Pender, infant |
Niagara |
Note for death of an infant, Margaret Pender, 99th
Regiment. Buried at Niagara. This information
was originally published by: ONTARIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY Papers and Records
Volume 3, Published in Toronto in 1901 Pages 7-73. Notes: FHL book
call number 971.3 K2rd US/CAN. birth & bap records from early Niagara
compiled by Douglas A. Robbins |
http://www.tbaytel.net/bmartin/niag-bur.htm |
1816 - 1818 |
|
|
Talbot Settlement |
|
As time passed, Talbot placed
settlers on lands in Southwold, Yarmouth, Malahide and Bayham townships in
Elgin County. In the years between 1816 and 1818, Scottish settlers came to
the Talbot Settlement; many of these were given land in Col. Talbot's
reserved area of Aldborough and Dunwich townships. Other Highlanders were
given land in South Dorchester and North Yarmouth. In Malahide and Bayham
townships the southerly part was settled by people from Nova Scotia. |
http://home.ican.net/~bedmonds/ElginOGS/ Elgin County genealogical
society site |
1818 |
07 |
12 |
99th Regiment |
Quebec |
His Majesty’s 99th Prince
Regents Regt. of Foot Whereof Major General Sir Edward Baines [V.C.B.?] is Colonel. These Are to Certify, 1st. Certificate of Age
and Enlistment. That Private William Pender born in the Parish of Powerscourt
in or near the Town of Wicklow in the County of Wicklow was enlisted for the
aforesaid Regiment at Roundwood in the county of Wicklow on the 24th
day of May 1804 at the age of twenty three for unlimited service. 2nd Certificate of Service. That he hath served in
the Army for the space of Sixteen Years and sixty One Days, after the Age of
Eighteen, according to the subjoined. Statement of Service. In What Corps:;
From 24 May 1804 to 24 July 1818. 14 years 61 days as a Private. Total
Service 14 years 61 days. Walace Fencibles from [not noted – just the “ mark.
Appears he may have been in this Fencibles unit prior to service with 99th
Regt]. 2 years as private; 2 years total service. Total years 16 days 61. 3rd certificate of the
cause of Discharge. That in consequence of the Reduction of the Regiment he
is hereby discharged in consequence of his length of service he is hereby
recommended 4th Certificate of being disqualified for Pension
(not filled out – so it looks like he got his Pension); 5th Certificate of Character &c. &c. &c.
That his General Conduct as a Soldier has been Very Good. 6th Certificate of the
Settlement of all Demands. That he has received all just Demands of Pay,
Clothing, &c. from his Entry into the Service to the date of this
Discharge, as appears by his Receipt underneath. 7th Acknowledgement of the Receipt of all Demands. I
William Pender do hereby acknowledge that I have received all my Clothing,
Pay, Arrears of Pay, and all just Demands whatsoever, from the time of my
Entry into the Service to the date of this Discharge with the [allowances?]
of full pay to 24th September 1818. Witnessed by [S.J. Hingth?]
Signature of the Soldier William Pender. 8th Certificate of Description. To prevent any
improper use being made of this discharge, by its falling into other Hands,
the following is a Description of the said Private William Pender. He is
about thirty seven years of Age, is Five Feet Five Inches in height, Brown
Hair, Blue Eyes, Dark Complexion; and by Trade or Occupation a Labourer. Given under my Hand, and the Seal of
the Regiment at Quebec this 12th Day of July 1818. Signature of
the Commanding Officer. John [Matthew?] [Grassigg?] |
photocopy of microfilm of certificate
of discharge. Film 861768 item 1066 FHL British Film. |
1818 |
|
|
99th Regiment |
Goulbourn Twp &
Richmond Twp, near Ottawa |
In 1818, following the success of the
Military Settlement scheme at Perth, the British government offered the
[100th] Regiment, which had been re-numbered as the 99th during an Army
reorganisation two years earlier, similar benefits if they would take land in
the newly surveyed Township of Goulbourn. The majority of the men and many of
the officers (who would continue on half pay) accepted the offer and were
transported with their families by bateaux (river-boat) up the Ottawa River
to a point below the Chaudiere Falls. There, after an encampment was set up
under canvas, the men were engaged in blazing and clearing a road through to
Bell’s Corners and then south to Chapman’s Ranch on the Jock River where a
store house was built. Note: Goulbourn Twp Museum HIstory Centre has
file H-166 with reference to 100th reg’t. e-m request for
lookup/copies sent Jan 2, 2002. |
Connie Fitzpatrick http://www.the-dicksons.org/Leinster_Regiment/soldiers/leinster_soldiers2.htm |
1818 |
7 |
29 |
Talbot settlers |
Ireland to Quebec
City |
3 or 4 ships
arrived at Quebec City from Ireland. Newspapers
publishing arrival of ships: Quebec Mercury and Montreal Gazette. The “George
Ponsonby” out of Dublin with 63 settlers. The HMS Iphigenia
from Portsmouth (Cornwall). Lt. Gov’r Maitland & others – to York The Brunswick, out
of Cork with 230 Settlers (Talbot researcher mentions 180 of these of Richard
Talbot’s party & the rest presumed to be disbanded soldiers). Richard Talbot was
of Cloghjordan, Modreeny parish, Co. Tipperary. Most of the original
petitioners were from 6-7 mile radius of his home. Speculation that some of
the ship arrivals were disbanded soldiers. The Talbot group
split up in Montreal, Quebec. Some took the
Schooner “Caledonia” to York/Toronto. Arrived 9 Sep 1818 and by October some
of these were in vicinity of London. Some went to the
area of the new settlement at Perth (see below entry on Goulbourn 1820). |
|
1818 |
09 |
23 |
Pender, William |
Bytown, Ontario |
23 Sep 1818 William
was awarded a pension (WO 120 Volume 35 page 269, Index
#1945). On the same day, John McGuire was also awarded his pension (John
McGuire was one of John Pender's godfathers). John's residence
was listed as "Bytown, Ontario." (WO
120 Vol 70, page 187, Index 6600), John McGuire was also listed as residing
in Bytown. Note that a Thomas McGuire
was listed as a pensioner and his residence was in
London, Ontario. Related? Possible
migration connection? |
Crowder, British Army Pensioners
Abroad, pages 66, 228 |
1819 |
|
|
Brooks |
|
Approximate year
Jonathan Brooks family came to province (of Ontario or Upper Canada) |
1842 census (see) |
1819 |
|
|
Brooks, possible
related family |
Burgess Twp, Lanark |
Brooks, William
(Thomas, Elizabeth) |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2/burgess1819.html |
1820 |
|
|
Brooks |
Burgess Twp, Lanark |
1820 census: Brooks, Ann
(Widow): 1 son, 1 daughter. Brooks, William:
wife, 1 son |
Granny’s gen garden |
1820 |
|
|
Pender, William Hall, John |
Goulbourn Twp, Carleton County, Upper Canada (near Ottawa) |
Census indexes for
1820 and 1821 show William
Pender and John Hall. 1821 shows Wm
Pender with wife and one each boy and girl.
John would be about 14 years old in 1820, 15 in 1822. So he had a sister. John Hall by
himself (Compare Hall note for 1833). Note that 1822
census does not show William Pender or John Hall. Where did they go?
Bytown? Move to Niagara area? Pender names in
later census: North Gower
Concession 3, Lots 6 and 7 Osgoode Concession
4, Lot 1 Montague Concession
9, Lot 24 |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2 |
1821 |
5 |
21 |
Pender, Lawrence |
Halifax, Nova
Scotia |
Acadian Recorder,
weekly newspaper published out of Halifax, Nova Scotia. Deaths – “On Tuesday
evening in the 40th year of his age, Mr. Lawrence Pender, a worthy
inhabitant of this town.” |
Website |
ca 1822 |
|
|
(Pender) Jennings |
London, Ontario |
page 138 John Jennings was a traveling merchant and
Irishman based in London. He and other merchants formed the nucleus of the
new township of London (Ontario). (reference Jennings as bondsman to Pender
wedding) |
Book, “The Talbot Regime, or the
First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement”, Ermatinger, Canadiana Global
Heritage Press. ISBN 1-894378-11-3 |
1822 |
|
|
Hall |
Oxford Co. |
Hall, Joshua,
listed in an 1822 assessment roll for East Nissouri Twp with 100 acres. |
http://www.oocities.org/Heartland/Acres/7990 |
1824 |
09 |
19 |
Pender |
Quebec |
LDS record.
Christening for Jean Pender, male, at Saints-Gervais-Et-Protais, Bellechasse,
Quebec. Batch 8829407 Sheet 44, Source Call number 1553287, Type: Film |
FamilySearch |
1824 |
|
|
Brooks, Jesse |
Malahide, London
District, Upper Canada |
Jesse Brooks born |
|
1825 |
|
|
|
|
Erie Canal
completed |
|
1828 |
|
|
Brooks |
Malahide, London
District, Upper Canada |
Militia men in 2nd
Regiment, Middlesex Militia in the year 1828: Brooks Benjamin,
born ca 1791, no origin noted. Wife Olive. Brooks, John D.
born ca 1809 Lower Canada [Quebec]. Wife Polly Corless. |
http://www.ptbruce.kanservu.ca/genealogy/militia.htm |
1828 |
|
|
Pendergrass,
Lawrence & Skelley, Robert |
Clinton Twp,
Lincoln County, Niagara District, Upper Canada |
Transcribed in the
order that they appear on the original microfilm (film MS 181,
Ontario Archives). There were 253
households, and only the head of the household is named. The numbers following the names represent
the number of members in the family Transcribed by Mary
Crandall. NAME, MALE < 16, FEMALE < 16, MALE > 16, FEMALE > 16, TOTAL Lawrence
PENDERGRASS 0, 0,
0, 1, 2 Also SKELLEY,
Robert (with a large family of 11) (Skelly was the surname of one of the
bondsmen at the marriage of Pender/Hall in 1833) |
http://www.tbaytel.net/bmartin/clintont.htm 1828
census of Clinton twp., Lincoln Co. |
1831 |
|
|
Hall |
Ireland or Quebec
or Nova Scotia? to Ontario |
Approximate year
John and William Hall came to Ontario province, either directly from Ireland
or from another province. |
1842 census,
Malahide |
1832 |
|
|
|
proximity of
Malahide, Ontario |
page 140: In the
summer of 1832, large numbers of discharged soldiers were sent out by the
British government to settle in Canada. A considerable body of these was
placed in the township of Adelaide. At or about the same time came a number
of retired officers, clergymen and other gentlemen with their families from
Ireland who settled in the same locality.
(Adelaide northwest of Malahide) [Note: also in
proximity was barracks at St. Thomas and barracks in London. 32nd
Regiment Foot stationed these places. John Hull alias Hall. parish of
Clanfickle (Clonfeacle), Ireland. Service 1811-1832 WO 97/506/181] Another note: there is a village called
Hall’s Mills in the Township of Westminster, which is adjacent to Dorchester
and north of Malahide. (page 264) |
Book, “The Talbot Regime, or the
First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement”, Ermatinger, Canadiana Global
Heritage Press. ISBN 1-894378-11-3 |
1833 |
7 |
15 |
Parks, John C.
& Awry, Elizabeth |
Erin Twp,
Wellington, Upper Canada |
Index of Reverend
Black Marriage Records involving Erin Twp Residents 1828-1842 -- FHC fiche
6100642 Gore District - Book One. Awry, Elizabeth,
Residence Erin, married 15 Jul 1833 to John C. Parks of Erin. Reverend James
Black. Witnesses: John Bott, John Awry and Jonathan Palmer See also: family
history of John Awrey & family at Wellington Co. compiled by R. Barry Reed, 160 Clearview
Ave, Ottawa, ON K1Z6S5. His source Walker & Stratford-Devai, Marriage
Registers of Upper Canada/Canada West, Volume 9 Wellington District |
http://people.ne.mediaone.net/priestner/Erin/marriage/Black_marr.htm |
1833 |
8 |
28 |
Pender, John & Hall, Sarah |
Grimsby, Co.
Lincoln, Upper Canada |
Marriage Bond: Province of Upper
Canada. Know all Men by these Presents, that we, William Skelley (or Skelly
or Skilly) of Grimsby, Merchant, and J.E. Jennings, Tailor of Clinton, Are
jointly and severally held and firmly bound unto our Sovereign Lord the King
in the Sum of Two Hundred Pounds, lawful Currency of the Province aforesaid,
to be paid unto our said Lord the King, or His Heirs and Successors; for
which payment; well and truly to be made, We bind ourselves, our and each of
our Heirs, Executors, and Administrators, jointly and severally, firmly by
these Presents, Sealed with our Seals, at Grimsby in the Niagara District and
Province aforesaid, the twenty eighth day of August, in the year of our Lord
one thousand eight hundred and thirty three. The Condition of this Obligation
is such, that whereas a License of Marriage has this day issued from the
Office of the Lieutenant Governor of the said Province of Upper Canada, for
the purpose of joining together in Holy matrimony John Pender of Clinton, Labourer, and Sarah Hall
of same place, Spinster. Now if it shall appear that there is no
affinity, consanguinity, pre-contract, or any other lawful cause or
impediment, to hinder their being so joined together, as aforesaid, then this
obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.
Signed, Sealed, and Delivered in presence of William Skelley & J.E.
Jennings. |
Ontario Marriage
Bonds by Thomas Wilson; photocopy of marriage bond |
1834 |
|
|
|
London Ontario |
A John Wilson came
to area 1834. was born Scotland 1809, came with parents to Canada & spent
early days on farm in Lanark county before moving to London area. (Reference
William Pender of Goulbourn Twp and soldiers of Lanark settlement). Noted here to show possible
migration pattern. |
Book, “The Talbot
Regime, or the First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement”, Ermatinger,
Canadiana Global Heritage Press. ISBN 1-894378-11-3 |
1834 |
6 |
29 |
Pender, William |
(possibly Malahide, Canada) |
William born to John & Sarah Pender.
Source for date: Bruce C. Johnson, Jr. response to Olive Cotton 1999: “In the St. Thomas Anglican
Church which covers the Malahide area, William Pender was born 29 June 1834 and was
baptised by Rev. Burnham of the St. Thomas Anglican Church on 15 Sept. 1835
son of John and Sarah Pender.” |
census 1851;
gravestone, St. James cemetary, Vancouver, WA; Olive Cotton |
1835 |
06 |
16 |
Pender |
Quebec |
LDS record: Jean
Pender (male) marriage to Marguerite Goulet at Saint Charles, Bellechasse,
Quebec. Batch 8922801, Sheet 27, Source Call no. 1553479, Type: Film Listed here to show
name Pender in Quebec. No connection established yet. |
FamilySearch |
1837 |
|
|
|
Elgin County |
Elgin County was
part of Middlesex county from 1837 to 1851. Prior to that, Elgin county was
part of the London District. |
|
1838 |
5 |
30 |
Brooks, Benjamin |
Malahide, Middlesex
(now Elgin) |
Received patent for land in Malahide: Lot 17,
Concession 9, S.E., 100 acres |
Brooks/Corliss
genealogy |
1838 |
10 |
22 |
Pender, Edward |
Malahide, Middlesex
(now County Elgin), Upper Canada |
Edward Pender born
to John & Sarah (Hall). |
census 1851; MVH
family sheet |
1840 |
|
|
Pender, John |
Upper Canada |
John Pender born to
John & Sarah |
Census 1851 |
1841 |
|
|
|
|
Upper Canada
becomes Canada West |
|
1841 |
|
|
Pender, possible
related family |
Montague Twp,
Lanark Co., Canada West |
1841 census has a
William Pender in Montague (near Goulbourn). See entry for 1820. Also entry for 1851 census Montague Twp. |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2/mont1841.html |
ca 1842 |
|
|
Anglican church |
St. Thomas |
Page 273 Anglican
reverend Mark Burnham at St. Thomas (south of Malahide. see entry for 1834). |
Book, “The Talbot
Regime, or the First Half Century of the Talbot Settlement”, Ermatinger,
Canadiana Global Heritage Press. ISBN 1-894378-11-3 |
1842 |
|
|
Pender, Sarah Ann |
Canada |
Birth year per 1851
census. place not yet established. |
1851 census |
1842 |
|
|
Hall, Brooks |
Malahide Twp,
Middlesex (now Elgin), Canada West |
On-line census
index for Malahide Twp. William Hall, stone
mason, born Ireland. Concession 9, Lot 15 South. 11 years in province. 6
family members. John Hall, farmer,
born Ireland. Concession 9, Lot 15 North. 11 years in province (1831). 4
family members. Jonathan Brooks,
farmer, born Canada/USA. Concession 9, Lot 19N. 23 years in province. (1819)
4 family members. John D. Brooks,
farmer, born Canada. Concession 9, Lot 21N. 6 in family. Daniel Brooks,
farmer, born Canada. Concession 9, Lot 22S. 8 in family. |
http://www.elginogs.ca/onlinepubs/census1842.htm |
1845 |
|
|
|
Ireland |
Griffith’s
Valuation shows the following with Pender surnames, Townland, Parish and
County: Pender, Charles -
Grangecon Parks, Ballynure, Wicklow Pender, Charles -
The Grange, Ballynure, Wicklow Pender, John -
Boystown or Baltyboys, Upper Boystown, Wicklow Penders, Sarah –
Kilmalin, Powerscourt, Wicklow Penders, John - Enniskerry, Powerscourt, Wicklow Prendergast, Ellen
- Baltinglass Belan Street, Baltinglass, Wicklow Prendergast, Thomas
- Baltinglass Belan Street, Baltinglass, Wicklow Prendergast, Peter
- Carnew Coolattin Row, Carnew, Wicklow Prendergast, Andrew
– Ballinacrow, Lower Rathbran, Wicklow Prendergast, George
– Ballinacrow, Lower Rathbran, Wicklow Prendergast,
Christr. - Tuckmill Hill, Rathbran, Wicklow Prendergast, George
– Rathdrum Brewery Lane, Rathdrum, Wicklow Prendergast, Andrew
- Corporation Murragh Wicklow Bond St., Rathnew, Wicklow Notes: Enniskerry
was created in the 1800s sometime after William had gone from Ireland. |
Griffith’s
Valuation online index at |
1846 |
|
|
Pender, John Junior
& Missouri Dawson |
|
Missouri Dawson
born Ohio April 1846 Daughter of John,
born VA and Mary, born Ohio. She later married
John Pender (junior) |
Name source:
"M. Doson" from Marianne's family sheet. Census for Green,
Hamilton County, Ohio, 1850 and 1860. |
1846 |
09 |
24 |
Appleford, Charles
Wesley |
Dorchester, London
District |
Birthdate. Son of
Isaac and Sarah Appleford. Baptized 24 Mar 1848. Rev. S.C. Philp at Dorchester. Other children of
Isaac & Sarah: Darius b 12 May
1843 Malahide Joseph Shipley b 30
Apr 1849 Dorchester William James b. 27
Mar 1845 Dorchester |
Wesleyan Methodist
register on-line |
1847 |
|
|
Pender, Caroline |
Dorchester or
Lyons, Middlesex (now Elgin) |
1851 census shows
this year as Caroline’s birth year. Family sheet shows Dorchester or Lyons as
birthplace. South Dorchester is in Elgin County not far from Malahide. North
Dorchester is in Middlesex County. Caroline married
“Wesley Appleford”. See 1901 census and above 1846 for Charles Wesley
Appleford. |
Census 1851;
Marianne Van House family sheet Notes: Lyons is
where Caroline Pender Appleford lived in 1922 |
1850 |
|
|
Brooks |
Fayette County,
Iowa |
(Fairfield census
1852 has Jesse listed in index) 1850 brother Chauncey: |
|
1850 |
|
|
|
Dereham Twp |
Dereham Twp
Collector’s Roll of 1850 can be found FHL US/CAN film 855009 Item 3 |
|
1851 |
|
|
Pender, John &
family |
Malahide, Middlesex
(now Elgin), Canada West |
John Pender,
labourer, born Canada, age next birthday 32 (That is wrong. Should be 45.
Compare 1871 census age and place); Sara Pender, born Ireland, age 40.
Children all born Canada: William 16, Edward 13, John 11, Sara 9, Caroline 4.
Religion Church of England. |
photocopy 1851
census |
1851 |
|
|
Pender |
Wellington County,
Twp 373 |
Pender,
Christipher, Eliza, Jane, Nancy, Ritchard. Page 21 for Township 373 |
Microfilm reel C-11756 NAC Transcripts at ingeneas.com |
1851 |
|
|
Pender |
Montague Twp,
Lanark County, Canada West |
William Pender, age
45 (born 1806) Ireland, CE, concession 9, Lot 24. Wife Mary, 40, Ireland.
Children: Catherine 20, Eliza 18, Margaret 16, Mary 14, William 10, Sarah 8. |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2 |
1851 |
|
|
Hall |
Malahide, Middlesex
(now Elgin) |
William Hall, 70, born Ireland
(1781), mason, church of England, wife Alitia 68 Ireland. Charles 30, William
Jr 39 widower with children Ann 15 and Sarah 10. Notes: Bruce C. Johnson also has the
following children: John b. 1813, Benjamin b 1828, Edmund or Edward b. 1831
all in Ireland. Note John is the John Hall who appears in 1842 census. I think this might be Sarah Hall’s family. |
Bruce Connor
Johnson transcription |
1851 |
|
|
McClelland |
Oxford County |
McClelland, Robert, listed as
operator of general store & pot & ash factory in Thamesford (Nissouri
Twp), Canada Directory 1851, page 407 |
http://www.oocities.org/Heartland/Acres/7990 |
1851 |
|
|
McClellan |
Westminster twp,
Middlesex |
McClellan, Donald (by self), born
Nova Scotia, age 22 |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2/westminster5.html |
1851 |
|
|
McClelland |
Middlesex
(Adelaide, Lobo Twp) |
Jannet McClelland (by self) born
Scotland, age 24 |
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~granny2/adelaide3.html |
1851 |
|
|
Hall |
West Nissouri Twp,
Middlesex |
Hall, George, 72, born Ireland, Jane
62 Ire, Peter 28 Ire (Con 2 Lot 18); George, 23 Ire – McGillivray Twp
“Absent”; Thomas, 20, Ire McGillivray Twp, “absent.” |
Granny’s gen garden |
1851 |
|
|
Dawson |
West Nissouri Twp,
Middlesex |
Dawson, James, 36, Ireland, Con 2,
Lot 13; Margaret, 32, Ire; William, UC, 9; Joseph UC 7; Mary UC, 5; Jane UC,
4; Margaret UC, 2. |
Granny’s gen garden |
1851 |
|
|
Pendergast |
North Dorchester
Twp, Middlesex |
Pendergast family, all born USA: female age 50 died of ague fever; John 24,
Concession 1, Lot 1; Eliza 21, James 20, Martha 18, Margaret Ann 15 |
Granny’s gen garden |
ca 1852 |
|
|
Hall |
Oxford County |
Hall, William, an assessor for
Dereham Twp, 1850 and 1852. Ref. Shenston 1852 p. 139, 140 |
http://www.oocities.org/Heartland/Acres/7990 |
1853 |
11 |
14 |
Hall, John Hall, William |
Malahide Township, Elgin County |
Part 1: Lists of first people to
patent land frm the Crown. Copied from the Elgin County Crown Patent
Register. Page 50: John Hall - Lot 15, Concession 9, North half, 72 acres.
Patented 14 Nov 1853. Page 51: William Hall – Lot 15, Concession
9, South half, 72 acres. Patented 14 Nov 1853. |
Documents relative
to Landholdings in Malahide Township. Crown Grants, etc. believed published
by Elgin County Genealogical Society. Lookup by Marjean Workman |
1855 |
10 |
25 |
Pender, John |
Malahide Township,
Elgin county |
Part II: From Ontario Archives called
“Township Papers” contains copies of orders-in-council, settlement duties,
etc. Page 74 Lot 23, Concession 8, North half.
Assignment from John Pender to Elijah Sheldon Ganson 25 Oct 1855. Witnessed
by John Chalmers of London Township. Patented by Elisha Ganson on 5 July
1856. |
Documents relative
to Landholdings in Malahide Township. Lookup by Marjean Workman |
1856 |
|
|
Brooks, Jesse |
Iowa |
Pernine Howe Brooks died before 1856. |
A Family Study,
Descendants of Corliss & Brooks with connected Families, by Lee & Mae
Corliss |
1857 |
03 |
|
Pender |
Australia |
Ship Columbian to Victoria Australia
from British Ports. Captain William Pender. (probably Pender from Cornwall –
packetship agent family) |
ship index |
1860 |
|
|
Brooks, Jesse (and
Sarah Ann Pender, daughter of John & Sarah) |
Fairfield Twp,
Fayette, Iowa |
"Jesse Brooks entered land in
Fairfield Twp, Fayette Co., IA. not far from his older brother Chauncey and
to this farm he took his bride (Pernine). She died before 1856 leaving two
small children who were cared for by Benjamin and Olive (Brooks) on and off
through the years. The 1860 census showed them in their father's house with
Sarah." Jesse was in the Civil War. He is buried in
Brush Creek cemetary, Vancouver, Clark County, WA |
A Family Study,
Descendants of Corliss & Brooks with connected Families, by Lee & Mae
Corliss |
1861 |
|
|
Parks |
Erin |
Matthew Parks in
Erin Township. Age 20 |
|
1861 |
|
|
Pender, Edward
& Parks, Eliza |
Huron County,
Canada West |
Marriage, Edward
Pender to Eliza Parks |
Marianne Van House
family sheet |
1861 |
|
|
Parks, John &
family |
Turnberry Twp,
Huron, Canada West |
John, farmer,
Ireland, EC, 65, cannot r/w. Eliza, Upper Canada, EC, 44, cannot r/w. Children all born Upper Canada: George 16,
Phebe 15, Peter 13, Manda 11, Thomas 10, Benjamin 8, Charles 5, David 4,
Gideon 1. Log house, one story, one family. |
1861 census index
reel C1037 NAC. District 164, Division 2, . (transcript) |
1861 |
11 |
20 |
Awrey, John |
|
John Awrey died
aged 71 years, 10 months (on gravestone). Mimosa Union cemetery, Erin Twp,
Wellington County, Ontario. |
Wellington County
Archives Ada Currie Reading Room: family history of John Awrey and wife Sarah
Ann Bunn. |
1863 |
|
|
Pender, John Junior
(& Missouri Dawson) |
|
1900 census for
Vancouver, WA shows that John emigrated 1863. Did he go with Jesse Brooks? I
wonder if he was involved in Civil War? Did he meet Missouri in Ohio? |
|
1863 |
11 |
10 |
Pender |
place? |
Gravestone in Old
City cemetery in Vancouver WA has Benjamin Pender, born Nov 10, 1863 died 8
Sep 1890. Also buried in Old City Cemetery is Elizabeth McClelland Pender,
wife of William. Note William Pender buried in St. James Catholic Cemetery in
Vancouver dates 1835-1916. A John Pender also in St. James Acres cemetery,
dates 1862-1955. Benjamin and John are sons of William and Elizabeth. |
Confirmed Benjamin,
son of William & Elizabeth McClelland Pender. Confirmed William’s remains
buried in Catholic cemetary. Confirmed John as son of Wm. |
1867 |
|
|
|
|
Canada West becomes
Ontario |
|
1867 |
|
|
Aurey |
Erin, Wellington Co |
Aurey, John B -
Concession 2, Lot 21 Aurey, Gideon –
Concession 2, Lot 21 Aurey, George –
Concession 2, Lot 23 Aurey, David –
Concession fl 2, Lot 22 Aurey, Peter –
Concession 3, Lot 17 Hall, Robert –
Concession fl 1 Lot 7 |
Directory of
Wellington County |
1869 |
|
|
Pender |
Oregon |
Year of birth of
George Pender in Oregon, see 1880 census for Vancouver, Clark County. Mother
Missouri, Father John |
|
1870 |
|
|
Parks, John |
Wroxeter, Huron,
ONTs |
Death year on
memorial stone. |
Wroxeter Cemetery
Books, lookup by (Goderich Library)
for Olive Cotton |
1870 |
|
|
Pender, Edward |
Tillsonburg or
Tilsonburg Ontario |
Article has Jesse
Pender, son of Edward, as born in 1870 in Tillsonburg, Ontario. Note that
there used to be a township called Tilsonburg (with one “L”) which was part of Dereham Twp. (see 1871 census for Edward). Tillsonburg
(with 2 “L’s”) is another town not far away, in Middlesex county. |
Clark County
Pioneers |
1871 |
|
|
Pender, John &
family |
Dorchester South
Twp, Elgin, Ontario |
Pender, John, age 64, born Quebec,
Ethnicity: Irish, occupation: labourer, C England. Sarah, 61, Ireland,
Weaver, C England. Carrie, 18, Ontario, Irish, W. Methodist. (Sarah may have
died between here and 1879 when John died – see below) |
photocopy census
1871 number 108 family 110 |
1871 |
|
|
Pender, William |
Dereham Twp,
Oxford, Ontario |
index shows William
as head of household, age 38, born Ontario, Ethnicity Irish, occupation
carpenter, religion CE. Note Dereham
is adjacent east of South Dorchester.
Microfilm reel: C-9910 Reference: RG31 Statistics Canada. District
013, South Oxford Sub-district A,
Division 1, page 39 |
census index 1871.
Need image. Does Olive have? |
1871 |
|
|
Pender, Edward |
Dereham Twp,
Oxford, Ontario |
Edward, 32,
Birthplace Ontario, Ethnicity Irish, Religion CE, occupation carpenter. Eliza
E. 27, Ontario, CE, Irish. Children all born Ontario, ethnicity shown as
Irish. Sarah Ann 7, Britess (Beatrice) 4, Susanna 5, Alberta 2, Lussy F.
(Jesse Franklin) 1. |
census index 1871
and transcript reel C9910 NAC, District 013, South Oxford Sub-district A,
Division 1, Dereham Township, number 59 |
1871 |
|
|
Pender |
North Gower,
Carleton Co |
Another Pender in
1871 census (index) Pender, Thomas, 50,
b. Ontario, residing North Gower, Carleton Co. Irish ethnicity. Church of
England, Anglican. Farmer. RG31 Reel C-10, 015, Division 2 District 078,
Sub-district B, page 6 |
1871 online census
index for Ontario. ArchiviaNet |
1871 |
|
|
Pender, possible
source of family legend “Sea Captain” |
Camden East, Lennox
& Addington County, Ont |
1871 census index shows
another John Pender age 32 born England; Occupation Sailor. Ontario Cemetery
Finding Aid has a listing for Pender, John H., Captain. buried in Camden V,
Camden East. This may be the source of the family rumor about John Pender
being a sea captain from England (a census mixup) |
online index and
OCFA |
1871 |
|
|
Hall |
Malahide |
John Hall age 60 in
1871 census. Born in Ireland. Church of England, anglican. RG31, Reel C-9899,
District 006, Subdistrict C, Division 4, page 28. |
1871 online census
for Ontario. ArchiviaNet |
1871 |
|
|
McClellan |
various |
Hugh McClellan, 62,
Ireland, Town of Nissouri West, County Middlesex East. Scottish origins.
Presbyterian. McClellan, Andrew,
76, Nova Scotia, Nissouri East, Oxford North. Scottish origins. Episcopal
Methodist, blacksmith. McClellan,
Catherine age 53, Scotland, Dorchester North, Middlesex East County.
Presbyterian. |
|
1871 |
|
|
Parks, Eliza
(Awrey) & family |
Turnberry Twp,
Huron, ONTs |
Census shows Eliza
as head of family. Eliza 55, E. Methodist, English; William 33, George 26,
Peter 23, Thomas 20, Benjamin 17, Charles 15, David 14, Gideon 11, Sarah 37,
Amanda 21. |
transcript 1871
census reel C9933 NAC, District 26 North Huron Sub-district K Division 1
Turnberry Township |
1872 |
03 |
07 |
Pender, Edward |
Tillsonburg |
Birth – son of Edward
Pender March 7, 1872. (this is Albert Pender) Lookup source –
Dave Cooper, dave.cooper2@sympatico.ca |
Tillsonburg
newspapers, Liberal, Observer, Tillsonburg News; 1870-1955 |
1875 |
|
|
Pender family |
USA |
Approximate year of Pender migration to United States |
Seattle Post-Intelligencer article 3 Dec 1910 |
1877 |
|
|
|
Erin Twp |
Land records (1877) Concession 1 Awrey, D. Lot 22,
east ½ Concession 2 Awrey, J.B., Lot
21, all Awrey, D. Lot 22
west ½ Awrey, G., Lot 22
east ½ Awrey, G., Lot 23,
N.E. ¼ Awrey, G., Lot 23,
S.E. ¼. School on south portion of this lot. Grasley, J. Lot 27,
south ½ Grasley, C. Lot 27,
north ½ Concession 3 Awrey, Geo, Lot 23,
west ½ Awrey, T. Lot 24,
west 3/8 Edwards, J. Lot 30,
west ½ |
1877
Atlas of Waterloo Wellington counties, Erin Township |
1877 |
8 |
9 |
|
Vancouver, Clark
County, Washington territory |
Vancouver
Independent newspaper, Thursday, August 9, 1877, Advertised Letters – list of
letters remaining in the Post Office, Vancouver, W.T. – included in the
Ladies’ List: Pender, Mrs. Marourie.
In the Gentlemen’s List, Burke, B. and Cawley, Pat. The “Marourie” listed here may be same as
“Missouri” from the census below. Not
sure if it is same Pender family as “ours” but if it is, it could be John’s
family (John, brother to Edward and son of John & Sarah). |
Trail Breakers
Volume 30 No. 1 Fall 2003 – Clark County Genealogical Society newsletter Confirmed, “ours” |
1879 |
4 |
20 |
Pender, John |
Southwold Township,
Elgin County, Ontario |
John Pender dies, age 73. “House of Industry and Refuge” Burying Ground
– Registry #1, Entry #25, Tier-Grave #3-2 Place was a house
for the aged and infirm, insane, etc. |
Elgin County
Archives |
1880 |
|
|
Pender, Edward
& family |
Vancouver, Clark
County, Washington |
Census of 1880 has
Edward & Eliza and family in Vancouver. page 60. Found: Dwelling 87,
Family 109, Precinct 3, Enumeration District 24: “Seventh Street - Houses are
not numbered.” Line 33 Pender, Edward, 41,
carpenter, b. Canada, fa. Canada, mo.
Ireland Eliza, 36, b.
Canada, fa Ireland, mo Canada Children born
Canada: Sarah 16, Susan 14, Alberta 12, Jesse 10, Albert 8, Minnie 6. Children born
Washington: Laura 5, John 4, Clara 2, Cora 1 |
Census 1880 on-line
index Ancestry.com. Also images On-line |
1880 |
|
|
Another Pender
family |
Vancouver, Clark
County, WA |
Dwelling 136,
Precinct 3 Enumeration District 24. “Main Street, houses not numbered.” 2 families in same
Dwelling: Family 162 Young, Edward, 35,
boot/shoe maker, Canada Young, Nellie, 1
(daughter), WA Family 163 Pender, John, 38
[1842], carpenter, Canada, Ireland, Ireland (both parents born Ireland?) Pender, Missouri,
35, wife, Ohio, fa not noted, mo VA.;Pender, George, 11, son, Oregon |
Census images
on-line. 1880 Vancouver Confirmed John P as
“ours” |
1881 |
|
|
Pender |
Lobo, Middlesex
North |
1881 census: Laurance
Pender, age 70, born in Ireland, Catholic. Mary 60, Ireland; John, 24
Ontario. Elisibeth Mithan, 52, Ireland |
LDS family search
on-line Canadian census 1881 |
ca 1884 |
|
|
Pender |
Vancouver, Clark,
WA |
Index shows Map 2.
Penders on their land. Also Brooks. Need to view map to see relation. Map viewed. Edward
and William lived near Jessie Brooks. Brush Prairie. |
Pat Hanning index |
1889 |
|
|
Pender |
Seattle, King, WA
and Tacoma, Pierce, WA |
There is a William
C. Pender, carpenter, for years 1888, 1889 at 13th and Howell
Streets, N.W. corner, and in 1890 at west side of Rose, south of Madison. Also in Seattle
around same time Maggie Pender, tailoress and Patrick Pender, section
foreman. In Tacoma, Pierce, WA 1890-1891 there is a Thomas H. Pender, clerk. |
Online directories
for Seattle & Tacoma Ancestry.com |
1893 |
10 |
11 |
Pendreigh |
South Dorchester
Elgin, Ontario |
There is a
Pendreigh family (Scottish name) residing in South Dorchester around this
time. Isabella, wife of William Pendreigh and niece of John Dickson). Pendreigh
shows up also in cemetery for Aylmer, Elgin, Malahide |
OCFA and Elgin
County Library site online |
1894 |
1 |
6 |
Parks, Eliza Awrey
(Aurey) |
Wroxeter, Huron,
ONT |
death date on
memorial stone. |
Wroxeter Cemetery
Books, lookup by (Goderich Library)
for Olive Cotton |
1890 |
|
|
Pender |
Portland,
Multnomah, Oregon |
Thomas H. Pender,
clerk at E. Meyer & Co. Rooms Knickerbocker House, Portland, OR. |
Ancestry.com
Portland, Oregon City directories 1890-1891 |
1895 |
|
|
Pender |
Multnomah County,
Oregon |
Census 1895
Multnomah County – W.H. Pender |
online Oregon info |
1899 |
08 |
20 |
Pender, Jesse |
“Rockwell” NE of
Brush Prairie, WA |
Jesse Franklin
Pender, son of Edward Pender and Eliza Ellen Parks, married to Kathleen
LeCroix Harrison. page 367 |
book Clark County
Pioneers |
1899 |
11 |
09 |
Pender, Alberta
Proebstel |
Clark County, WA |
page 508 Henry
Oscar Proebstel: b. 1866, WA, m. Alberta Pender 9 Nov. 1889, d. 1932, bur.
Sifton Cemetery, Clark Co., WA |
book Clark County
Pioneers |
1901 |
|
|
Appleford (Caroline
Pender) |
South Dorchester,
Elgin, Ontario |
Census
transcription: Appleford, “Carles”
W. b. 24 Sep 1847 Ontario and wife “Carline” b. 17 Dec 1850 Ontario. Note there is a
Charles Wesley Appleford buried in Mapleton cemetery, Dorchester South,
Section A, in the Ontario Cemetery Finding Aid Reference EL-604 |
Ontario census
on-line 1901 microfilm T-6480, Division 2, page 9, entries 20 & 21 That’s our man. |
1906 |
10 |
22 |
Pender, Edward |
Brush Prairie,
Clark, WA |
Edward Pender dies |
Marianne Van House
family sheet |
1907 |
|
|
Pender, Betsey
McClellan |
Old City Cemetery,
Vancouver, WA |
Death date on stone
of William Pender’s wife |
gravestone |
1908 |
06 |
19 |
Pender, Wesley S. |
Brush Prairie,
Clark, WA |
Birth date for
Wesley S. Pender Obit follows: Lifelong Clark
County resident Wesley S. Pender, 89, died in Vancouver Thursday, Aug. 7,
1997. He worked as a steward at Alcoa. Mr. Pender, who loved to fix things,
was born June 19, 1908, in Brush Prairie. Survivors include one son, James of
Vancouver. There will be no service. Memorial Gardens Funeral Chapel is in charge
of arrangements. Clark County
Pioneers page 176 has Wesley S. Pender married Elizabeth Stein (1909-1982;
buried Evergreen). |
Obituary Columbian
Aug 12, 1997 and Clark County Pioneers book |
1910 |
12 |
3 |
Pender girls |
various |
Sarah = Frank
Marble, Salmon Creek Caroline omitted
from article (typo), but picture present Alberta = Elmer
Burns, Portland Minnie = William
Vaughn [Vaughan], Troutdale Laura = Harry
Auldridge, Vancouver Clara = Henry
Hostettler [Hostetler], Portland Cora = William
Tenney, Vancouver Belle = James Grey
[Gray], Portland Alice was unmarried
at the time. Christelle = Joseph
Burke, The Dalles |
Seattle Post
Intelligencer article |
1915 |
12 |
20 |
Haines, Mary Parks |
Wroxeter, Huron,
ONT |
death date for
daughter of John & Eliza Parks. wife of James Haines. Aged 75 yrs 8 mo. |
Wroxeter Cemetery |
1920 |
|
|
Pender, Eliza E.
(Parks) |
Vancouver, Clark
Co, WA |
102/102 Census
image shows Eliza age 76, born Canada, father born Ireland, mother born
Canada, in household of Sarah Marble (head), 56, born Canada, parents born
Canada. Also in HH: Marble, Albert G., 26, WA, business clerk with railroad;
Harry E., 17, WA, clerk, grocery store; Clyde A., 13, WA |
online census
images Ancestry.com |
1920 |
|
|
Pender, Jesse F. |
Vancouver, Clark
Co., WA |
40/46 Jesse age 49,
born Canada, parents Canada, real estate agent; Katherine 39 England, parents
England; Sidney J., 19, son, WA, engineer; Jessie, 17, daughter, WA, cannery
laborer; Vera 12, WA; Katherine 3 WA |
online census
images Ancestry.com |
1920 |
|
|
Pender, John |
Vancouver, Clark,
WA |
154/174 John
Pender, 52 (= 1868. could be 57 = 1863, which would fit with John Pender
buried in St. James cemetery. born Canada, father
Canada, mother Ireland, motorman? electric ry. wife illegible (Lita? Lola?
Julia? Lydia? Ida?) 42, Michigan, fa NY, mo Michigan; daughter illegible
(Glydas?), 18, WA, laundress; Edna 16, WA; Frankie (son), 12, WA; Donald 8,
WA; Dorothy, 5 WA |
online census
images, Ancestry.com |
1920 |
|
|
Pender, Arthur |
Clark County, WA |
73/77 Pender,
Arthur, 38, WA, parents Canada, garage; wife Ada, 34, WA, fa IL, mo WA |
online census
images, Ancestry.com |
1920 |
|
|
Pender, Albert E. |
Manor Twp, Clark,
WA |
127/131 Pender,
Albert E., 48, Canada, parents Canada, general merchant; wife Georgia 41, WA,
father England, mo Illinois; Earl A., 19, OR, radio operator USN; daughter
Jessie May 16, OR; Anna 13 OR. |
online census
images, Ancestry.com |
1920 |
|
|
(Pender) Tenney |
Vancouver, clark,
WA |
(father of William
Tenney who married Cora Pender) Horace D. Tenney, 81, Vermont, parents VT;
wife Louisa 65, Iowa, parents IA |
online census
images Ancestry.com |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1920 |
03 |
26 |
Pender, Eliza E.
(Parks) |
Multnomah co, OR |
Date of death for
Eliza E. Pender. Death cert 1034. |
online Oregon info |
1944 |
09 |
01 |
Pender, Alice
Bodell |
Marion County, OR |
Date of death for
Alice Bodell. Husband’s name not noted. |
online Oregon info |
1945 |
06 |
15 |
Pender, Clara E.
(Hostetler) |
Lincoln County, OR |
Date of death for
Clara E. Hostetler. Cert 3875 |
online Oregon info |
1952 |
05 |
07 |
Pender, Minnie E.
(Vaughan) |
Clackamas County,
OR |
Date of death for
Minnie E. Vaughan. Cert 5048. Spouse William |
online Oregon info |
1955 |
01 |
30 |
(Pender) Hostetler,
Henry A. |
Lincoln Co, OR |
Date of death for
Henry A. Hostetler (husband of Clara E. Pender). Spouse on noted on death
cert is Osa. |
online Oregon info |
1967 |
02 |
26 |
(Pender) William O.
Vaughan |
Clackamas County,
OR |
Date of death for
William O. Vaughan. Might have been spouse of Minnie E. Pender. Spouse noted
on death cert is Dorothy. |
online Oregon info |
1968 |
10 |
|
Pender, Sidney |
San Francisco, SF,
CA |
SSDI 565-26-7926.
Born 8 Jan 1901 |
online SSDI info |
1972 |
10 |
04 |
Pender, Christel
Ruby (Burke) |
Multnomah County,
OR |
Date of death for
Christel Ruby Burke. Cert 72-15916. Spouse Joseph. Birth March 1886. |
online Oregon info |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|