Elizabeth Connors (4 December 1815—between 1901 and 1915)
Elizabeth Connors1 has no recorded parents. She was born on 4 December 1815 at Nova Scotia, Canada. 2
She died between 1901 and 1915 in Ontario, Canada.
Alexander Blair Glennie was the son of
John Glennie and Mary Ann Dickson.
He was born about June 1811 at Nova Scotia, Canada. 3
He died on 2 April 1853 . 3
He was buried at Union United Church Cemetery, Yarmouth, Elgin, ON, CA. 3
Children of Elizabeth Connors and Alexander Blair Glennie:
Missing mandatory identifier parameter.
Person Not Found
Person is not publicly visible
Alexander Blair Glennie
born about June 1811
at Nova Scotia, Canadadied 2 April 1853
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
John Glennie
born 9 June 1755
at Leslie, Fife, Scotlanddied
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
Mary Ann Dickson
born about 25 March 1781
died 5 July 1865
at Southwold, Elgin, ON, CA
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
George Dixon Glennie
born 7 June 1842
at Nova Scotia, Canadadied 13 February 1920
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
Martha Glennie
born between 1842 and 1852
died 10 June 1852
at Yarmouth, Elgin, ON, CA
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
Alexander Glennie
born April 1853
at Ontario, Canadadied
born
at died
at
Marriage of .
Child of
Source: Dianne Sibley
Source: 1901 Census of Canada
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Type: Census/Tax
Source: Cemetery Transcription, Union Cemetery, Yarmouth,, Elgin, ON, CA
Type: Book
Nova Scotia, Canada
Province of Canada
Ontario, Canada
The Province of Upper Canada was separated from the Province of Quebec in 1791 to create a colony that was subject to English law and the protestant Church of England as opposed to the remainder, which became the Province of Lower Canada, subject to French civil law and with an established Roman Catholic church.
As a result of the revolts in 1837 against the established administrations in both Lower and Upper Canada the two colonies were merged in 1841 by the Act of Union (1840). Formally the western province was Canada West, although most people continued to refer to it as Upper Canada.
This entry is used retrospectively for events occuring in the colony of Upper Canada from its founding in 1791 to its merger into the Colony of Canada as Canada West in 1841, and for events occuring in Canada West from 1841 to Confederation in 1867 when it became the province of Ontario within the Dominion of Canada. This is consistent with the way that events are described in official documents such as censuses recorded after 1867.
Union United Church Cemetery, Yarmouth, Elgin, ON, CA
Click on this button to see a summary tree of the descendants of this
individual.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-D.
Click on this button to see a summary tree of the ancestors of this individual.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-A.
Click on this button to display a dialog to calculate the degree of
relationship between the current individual and another individual in the
family tree.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-R.
Click on this button to split the screen horizontally between the display
of the individual page and the results of a search of the Ancestry.ca
database for document records with a similar name, birth date, birth place,
and parents names.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-S.
Click on this button to see a graphical family tree centered on this
individual.
Click on this button to edit the information recorded for this individual.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-E.
This field is used to edit a message to be posted as a blog entry against
this individual.
If you are not signed in as a registered contributor to the web-site you
are required to supply an e-mail address to identify the source of any
blog messages you post.
Click on this button to post the message you have typed as a blog entry
against this individual.
The application also supports the keyboard shortcut Alt-B.
Click on this button to edit the text of the message immediately above
the button, which is a message that you posted.
Click on this button to delete the message immediately above
the button, which is a message that you posted.
Click on this button to request permission to update the current individual,
and the current individual's ancestors and descendants.
Click on this button to display a popup map of the location.
Click on this button to open a dialog to edit the information recorded about
a location. This can include changing the name of the location,
although this will not be y reflected in the description
of this individual until the page is refreshed.
Welcome
You can publish your family tree on this site in a style
which looks like a traditional book, but adds all of the dynamic
capabilities of the Web and protects your family from
identity theft by ensuring that only people you authorize can see
details about anyone less than 105 years old.