Susana Butley (15 October 1823—30 April 1906)
Susana Butley1 has no recorded parents. She was born on 15 October 1823 at Québec, Canada. 2,3,4 She lived in 1891 at Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA. 5 She lived with son-in-law John Shotwell in 1901 at Strathroy, Middlesex, ON, CA. 3 She died on 30 April 1906 in Ontario, Canada. 6 The cause of death was general debility,6 .
She married James Thomson.
James Thomson4 has no recorded parents. He was born about 1817 in Ireland. 2,7,8 He worked as a Farmer in 1852 at lot 19 con 10, Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA. 9 He worked as a Farmer in 1881 at Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA. 4 He died between 1881 and 1891 at Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA.
Children of Susana Butley and James Thomson:
Footnotes:
born about 1817 at Ireland died between 1881 and 1891 at Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA
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born 11 February 1845 at Ontario, Canada died 2 September 1923 at Strathroy, Middlesex, ON, CA
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born about 1847 at Ontario, Canada died
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born 21 October 1851 at Caradoc, Middlesex, ON, CA died 1936
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born 28 June 1857 died
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Author: Ontario Registrar
Type: Vital
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Type: Census/Tax
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Type: Census/Tax
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Note: indexed at http://www.familysearch.org/
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Author: Dominion Bureau of Statistics
Type: Census/Tax
Caradoc township was surveyed in 1821 by Col. Mahlon Burwell.
Town on boundary between Adelaide and Caradoc.
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.
Cause: general debility,