Note: this is the talk I gave on August 3, 2013 at the Clan MacLennan tent at this year's Glengarry Highland Games. Since the Clan MacLennan was the featured clan at this year's event, I was invited to give an informal talk on working my ongoing genealogical project. Photo of myself with Ruairidh MacLennan of MacLennan, Clan Chief (among others), taken by Ray McLennan.
As genealogists, predominantly amateur and
self-taught, we work to attempt to understand the depth and breadth of our own beginnings,
even as we come to terms with their limitations.
Glengarry County, the east half of
Stormont, the lands north to the Ottawa River and parts of Quebec were
originally founded as a semi-single unit of immigration from the Glengarry
Highlands of Scotland, the bulk of which occurred between 1770 and 1820. When
Glengarry was first surveyed in 1770, it extended as far north as the Ottawa
River. Prescott County wasn’t created until 1800, when those north of what is
now Highway 417 complained that it was impossible to travel through the swamp
to get their produce down to the rail at Alexandria.
Glengarry is the oldest county in the
province of Ontario, and yet, the last to get phone service. The county
pre-dates the United Empire Loyalists. My own household growing up, like so
many around us, contained numerous books on the area, including multiple works
by Ralph Connor, the Illustrated
historical atlas of the counties of Stormont, Dundas, and Glengarry, 1879 (1972),
A History of Glengarry (1979), by
Royce MacGillivray and Ewan Ross, Dorothy Dumbrille’s Up and Down the Glens: The Story of Glengarry (1954) and The Campbells, and Other Glengarry-Stormont
and Harrington Pioneers (1983). Through my paternal grandmother, a Campbell
from the former hamlet of Athol, just north of the village, we’re listed on
page 113, although with our name as “MacLennan” instead of “McLennan,” as well
as my sister’s name misspelled.
I originally started to think about working
on a genealogy for our McLennans around 1991, triggered by the publication of Maxville: Its Centennial Story: 1891-1991
(1991). An older cousin of my father’s had provided information on our family,
and had managed to get my birth year wrong. The most recent item she had in her
history was the arrival of my sister, in 1976. To this day, I’ve not managed to
acquire a copy of the portrait of my great grandparents, Findley John and Julia
McLennan, surrounded by their children, that she provided for the book. So far,
it’s the only picture I’ve seen of either of my great grandparents.
My daughter, born the year of Maxville’s
centennial, isn’t mentioned.
My great aunt Belle (1895-1978) originally
compiled a genealogy of our family in the 1970s. Once I started digging through
her genealogy some fifteen years after she’d died, I realized she had written
it in such a way that you had to know her directly to be able to comprehend it.
“Such and such lived with my grandmother,” she wrote, not specifying which
grandmother she might have been referring to. It took a few years to not only
decipher what she had recorded, but to realize a third of it was actually incorrect,
and that she had managed to miss out on an entire generation, buried in the
same plot as most of the other family members she discussed. It read like a
genealogy built on the presumption that she knew what she was talking about,
without much in terms of actual research.
History
moves in more than a single direction; we exist temporally, moving ahead, with
the option of either a single or both eyes behind us. As McLennans, we
historically shake our fists at the Frasers, who killed the Logan chief in the
15th century and left his pregnant wife, thus inadvertently creating
the MacLennans of Kintail, the point from which many of the McLennans in the
two counties originate. A McDonald friend from high school once attacked me,
drunk, with a wooden spoon when we were nineteen, upon hearing my paternal
grandmother’s lineage. You scurvy lowlanders, she scowled, you killed us in our
beds. It might just seem ridiculous to think about, but to some, these
connections still hold serious and dire meaning. As Kim Campbell ran for Prime
Minister, there was a sign in South Glengarry that read, “Remember Glencoe.”
Our
branch of the McLennans appeared on this side of the ocean as a couple with six
children from Kintail, Ross-Shire, Scotland, somewhere between 1820 and 1840. My
great-great-great grandfather, family patriarch John McLennan (1786-1857)
received a land grant of one hundred acres at Lot 3, Concession 7 Roxborough,
on what is now known as MacDonald’s Grove Road (between Dyer Road and
Sandringham) in 1845, and sold the property fifteen years later, to immediately
purchase the adjoining property, Lot 4. Given that they were in Lancaster
during the 1851 Census, I’ve theorized that they quite possibly never lived on
the first property, selling it for the sake of neighbouring land that had
already been cleared. It was at Lot 4 that two more generations of McLennans
were born, down to my grandfather, John Duncan. Not being the eldest of his
siblings, he ended up in the log house across the road from the two properties,
where my father was born in 1941. When my father was six months old, the three
of them returned to Lot 3, without knowing it was the original property, and my
father has lived and farmed there since. My sister now lives where our father
was born with her husband and their three children.
From the perspective of anyone who has
taken on this kind of work, genealogy isn’t hard, it just takes time and
attention, although some of that time could easily become years. I’ve spent
time in the National Archives in Ottawa, the Provincial Archives in Toronto,
and county archives in both Cornwall and Williamstown, and know that there is
an enormous amount of research I have yet to approach. We have access to
internet research, including Ancestry.ca,
something that barely existed twenty years ago.
One of the best sources of genealogical
information to connect relatives often come from obituaries, giving a whole
slew of family relation that are difficult to discover anywhere else.
Frustratingly, The Glengarry News is
a century younger than immigration to the area, losing an enormous amount of
potential information. And yet, this area is incredibly rich with local
histories, many of which are small or self-published, and I’ve amassed quite a
collection of titles over the years on the United Counties. A particular
favourite I’d recommend is Marianne McLean’s The People of Glengarry: Highlanders in Transition, 1745-1820
(1993), which explores not only the reasons behind the mass immigration to
Glengarry, but the complex decades of history in Scotland that led to the
exodus.
Through
the wide net I cast for the sake of researching my own family, I started
discovering connections between other branches, seeing what other histories had
been published, posted and compiled, and started to connect families together
that we weren’t related to. The names easily move into the hundreds, and I’ve so
far compiled a two-hundred-and-fifty-some page main document on forty-five families
who are most likely far less unrelated than I’ve so far managed to connect.
Throughout the two counties, McLennan concentrations exist around Lancaster,
Williamstown and Cornwall, with smaller family groupings in Maxville, Alexandria
and other locations.
Tales
tell of seventeen unrelated McLennan families that helped found Williamstown.
One of
the most visible McLennan families I’ve discovered lived near South Lancaster on
a two hundred acre estate that has entirely disappeared, and the McLennan name
along with it. John McLennan, Esquire (1821-1893), was known as John McLennan
(By the Lake), and was the grandson of Murdoch McLennan, who sailed on the
infamous Neptune in 1802, en route to Glengarry. As John wrote in The
Glengarrian, December 24, 1885:
My grandfather, Murdoch McLennan, gave up a valuable holding on the
Seaforth estate, in order to keep with his friends and neighbours who were
emigrating. They were 1100 souls in the vessel, and were four months at sea,
encountering wintry weather on the coast of Labrador, a rough introduction to
the New World.
John (By
the Lake) became president of the Montreal Board of Trade, was vice-president
of the Merchant Banks, and a director of other companies, as well as
Conservative M.P. for Glengarry from 1878 to1882. He built many of the fine
homes along the lake, including their own property, which became known as the
“Ridgewood” estate. The family couldn’t even turn around without The Glengarry News recording it, from
hosting garden parties on their estate on the St. Lawrence River to the fact of
his daughter spending a summer in Boston. They constructed a church on their
property, known as the Church in the Wildwood, the first Anglican Church in the
area, where their infant son was one of the first to be interred. Ewan Ross, in
the book LANCASTER TOWNSHIP AND VILLAGE
wrote:
The Anglican Church of St. John, the Evangelist, (Church in the
Wildwood) held its first service on July 21, 1899. This church was erected on
the McLennan (Ridgewood) property on the east front of Lancaster township by
Mrs. John McLennan in memory of her husband. Though Anglicans in the area at
the time were few in number and the church was almost a private chapel,
population change in the next three quarters of a century brought more Anglicans
to the community and the importance of St. John’s as a place of worship
increased with time. There is a small cemetery beside the church.
As the
name moved or married away, barely a trace of the family remains in the area,
but for the red wooden church tucked into the bush. When the 401 Highway came
through in the 1950s, it cut straight through their estate, and the last
remnants of the property was sold soon after to the Lancaster Campground. This
is a considerable absence from multiple generations of a storied family.
Dorothy Dumbrille’s Braggart In My Step,
More Stories of Glengarry (1956) includes not one but two rich and amazing
chapters on the lives of a number of members of this McLennan line.
From the
same branch, his nephew, John Stewart McLennan (1853-1939), was a native of
Sydney, Nova Scotia, where he built an estate he dubbed “Petersfield.” He was
appointed to the Canadian Senate in 1916 by Prime Minister Robert Borden. The
“McLennans of Petersfield” website (http://collections.ig.gc.ca/mclennan/project.htm)
writes:
Hugh McLennan, J.S.’s father, had been very involved in Montreal and
this involvement led him to be interested in McGill University. An endowment to
the university was funded by the McLennans and in 1969, the McLennan Library
was built to house research books for graduate students. The library was named
in honour of Isabella McLennan, daughter of Hugh, whose estate helped finance
the library. Much earlier, in 1881, Hugh McLennan had given financial aid to
McGill. In 1883, Hugh became a governor of the university. Hugh also financed
the McLennan Traveling Library of Montreal in 1901. This library was the first
of its kind in Canada.
So, for
those who might not have known, the McLennan Library at McGill University has
its origins in Glengarry. Given that John Stewart McLennan had few heirs, there
was little in the way of the Canadian government claiming the estate for its
strategic location during the Second World War. His unmarried daughter moved
into Halifax where she volunteered as a nurse, and Petersfield was all but
abandoned, with buildings that ended up in such ill-repair that they had to be
bulldozed.
At six
foot six and two hundred and fifty pounds, Roderick “Big Rory” MacLennan of Charlottenburg
(1842-1907) was legendary, as both an athlete and as a businessman, and was
fictionalized into a novel by local scribe Ralph Connor. A former MPP for
Glengarry, you can find him in the Glengarry Sports Hall of Fame for his
prowess in the hammer-throw, and in 1855 in Toronto, he won the hammer-throw
championship of the world. Another Williamstown inductee is Dr. Donald David
Randolph McLennan (1870-1935), who throughout his life managed to play
professional football and hockey, including twice for the Stanley Cup: first
for Queen’s in the 1893-94 season, and again in Dawson City, Yukon, in 1905.
McLennan,
Alberta is a small town in the northern part of the province, and was named as
a required stop during the construction of the rail. Named after the nice doctor
who worked for the rail company that everyone still remembered, he himself was
already in Vancouver by the time his namesake was christened, and now the town exists,
a century later, as a predominantly French-language town some five hours north
of Edmonton. To my knowledge, a McLennan might never have set foot on the land.
I’ve been attempting for years to discern Dr. McLennan’s genealogy, to possibly
connect him to some part of Glengarry, but so far, I haven’t managed to
discover the names of his parents, or where he might have been born. His
relatives scatter out across British Columbia, and down into Los Angeles,
California.
Genealogies
incorporating such a wide array of the population is tricky, in that very
little actually gets recorded of day-to-day life. Predominantly, the people
listed in my ongoing document lived and worked quietly, whether as farmers,
merchants or other working-class Scots just beneath the radar of recorded
history. Apart from knowing the requisite birth, marriage, offspring and death
of these people, there is little that might ever be discovered, losing out on
the essential details of who these people might have actually been. The closest
my own family gets into newspapers comes from my great-uncle John McLennan
(1853-1931). The first Canadian born of our family, he was first-born of the
first-born, both son and grandson of our original McLennan settlers. A
carpenter by trade, he built many buildings in the Maxville area including St.
Andrews Presbyterian Church in 1899, and in the winter of 1900-1901, he was one
of two carpenters for the new Bank of Montreal building in Ottawa. Now, barely
more than a century later, I know some of the things that he did, but still
know extremely little about him. Was he an active reader? Was he kind to his
children? Did he have an easy laugh?
He left Maxville
to settle in the Longlaketon District of Saskatchewan with his family in 1904.
When I finally met some of his descendants a decade back, they had no idea of
their grandfather’s history in construction, or that he had built a church in
Eastern Ontario. That would explain, they told me, why he didn’t go to church.
He claimed he’d spent enough time in churches.
Genealogy
really is akin to archaeology. I have yet to discover if anyone recorded the
name of my grandparents’ first child, “Baby girl McLennan,” as the newspaper
called her, who lived barely a day more than a year before my father was born.
Anyone who might have known her name died years before I started to ask. Information
can be buried in newspaper clippings, diary entries, letters, on tombstones, in
church archives, and obscure local histories that often feel impossible to hear
about, let alone find a copy of, all of which needs to be sorted, absorbed and understood.
One fact might impact immediately upon another fact, and change the direction
of everything you might have previously known. What if you didn’t know your
great-grandfather had an earlier marriage and family? Or the possibility of a
girl pulled from school for six months, to suddenly return with a new-born
“sibling.”
As they
say, some write to escape, and others write to discover. I would think, as
genealogists, our goals are two-fold, attempting to comprehend histories that
culminate in our immediate selves, and are far larger than we could ever hope
to imagine.
1 comment:
My great grandfather, Donald McLennan, who was married to my Great Grandmother Margaret (Maggie) McLennan, indicated that his will
Dr. Donald McLennan was his doctor and also the person that wrote his will. Maggie passed away in 1905.
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