Saturday, 17 February 2018

Families of Immigrants: Mid-Nineteenth Century




Harold Chambers was working in a bank in Craig, a small town in Saskatchewan at the time of the 1911 census. Like many British immigrants, he soon moved to a larger city. He chose Regina, at that time a rapidly growing centre. It was there that he met his wife-to-be, May Gilchrist. 
*

May’s family were recent incomers to Regina. Were the couple drawn to each other because they had this in common? Unlike Harold, May was not alone in Regina. She lived with her parents and brothers and sisters. It had been a long time since Harold was part of a family. Maybe that was part of the attraction.

The Gilchrists may have been new to Regina but they weren’t new to Canada. In fact, May Gilchrist and her brothers and sisters were third generation Canadians through their father, James Gilchrist. Of course, that was all a matter of timing. Many of James’ brothers and sisters were born back in Scotland. Helpfully, one of the questions on the 1901 census asked the year of immigration. The entry for Mary Gilchrist, James’ mother, gave the immigration year as 1853. Although I was unable to find a passenger list for the family, I was able to piece together parts of the story of how and why the Gilchrists immigrated. 

                                                             Islay Shore
 

The Gilchrists and Mary’s family, the Hunters, lived and farmed on Islay for hundreds of years. In common with many areas of Scotland, land on Islay was held by a few landowners and rented by tenants. Insecure land holding and increasing population added to a combination of causes that led to immigration starting in the late 18th century. It waxed and waned in response to outside forces such as official support and war. The potato famine which devastated Ireland in the 1840s also affected Islay. Was this the final spur that caused Mary Gilchrist and her husband, James (senior) to emigrate with their family in 1853? 


In doing so, they were following a well-worn path to Ontario from their island. But it would not have been an easy journey. Steamships had begun to ply the ocean in 1850 but ticket prices were still beyond the pocket of most immigrants, especially those like James and Mary with five or six children in tow. Like most of the immigrants, the family probably travelled in steerage; in the holds of the ship in a common area, battling for time to use the one stove supplied to cook the food they had brought on board. It was a voyage that usually lasted several weeks. 


Most immigrants heading to Ontario landed at Quebec, or more correctly, the quarantine station at Grosse Isle. Once cleared by medical personnel, they carried on their journey. This would have involved both land and water travel. Did they catch one of the steamboats that competed for passengers on the St. Lawrence run from Quebec to Montreal? These ships were competitive as to price and speed. The speed led to disaster in 1857. In 1853, the ships would still have been racing each other down the river. The route they took into Ontario was not clear but they would have taken advantage of water travel when practicable and there were ships on Lake Simcoe. A steamship would have deposited the family at Beaverton close to the land that was their final destination.
 

 
                                                                       **Grosse Iles

 
Their land was in Thorah, a place where settlers from Islay had been settling for decades. Did they meet people that they knew from back home? To my knowledge, no account of their journey survives. The 1851 census in Kildalton showed a son, Lachlan, who didn’t appear on the 1861 census in Thorah. Had his death been part of the reason they left Kildalton, did he die on the journey to the new world or was he lost in their first years in Ontario? No matter the price, their arrival started a new life in a new country for the Gilchrist family.

                                                                   Early Ontario Home

Sources:

* A photo of May Gilchrist in 1908.


**By Cephas - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=27336085 

Caldwell, David. Islay: The Land of the Lordship. Birlinn Limited, Edinburgh, 2008.
 
Campey, Lucille H. The Scottish Pioneers of Upper Canada, 1784-1855: Glengarry and Beyond. Natural Heritage Books, Toronto, 2005

Collard, Edgar Andrew. Passage to the Sea: The Story of Canada Steamship Lines. Doubleday Canada Limited, 1991.

History Committee of the Beaverton Thorah Eldon Historical Society, The Beaverton Story: Harvest of Dreams. Beaverton, Ontario, 1984. 

Hunter, James. A Dance Called America: The Scottish Highlands, the United States and Canada. Mainstream Publishing, Edinburgh, 1994.

Spalding, Simon. Food at Sea: Shipboard Cuisine from Ancient to Modern Times. Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, Maryland, 2015.




 



 

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