Clan Munro USA
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Christiana Munro

Christiana Munro

Female Abt 1706 -

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Christiana MunroChristiana Munro was born about 1706 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in in , , , Scotland.

    Notes:

    Christiana (or Christian) married her kinsman, Hugh Munro of Milnton of Katewell family. See history of their son, Capt. Hon. John Munro, "birth brieve."

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    (2) "History of the Munros of Fowlis" by A. Mackenzie - Inverness (1898) - p.
    459

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Christiana married Hugh Munro about 1725 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland. Hugh (son of William Munro and Janet Munro, of Milntown of Katewell) was born est 1678 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in in , , , Scotland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1726 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; and died.
    2. 3. Capt. Hon. John Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1728 in Dingwall, , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; was christened in in Alness, Highlands, Scotland, United Kingdom; died on 27 Oct 1800 in Matilda, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in 1968 in Riverside Heights, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.
    3. 4. Margaret Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1730 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in in Gaspe, Quebec, Canada.
    4. 5. Donald Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1720-1746 in , , , Scotland; died before 1770.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  MunroMunro Descendancy chart to this point (1.Christiana1) was born about 1726 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIO:In the "Birth Brief" stating the pedigree of John Munro it is stated "he is the youngest but only surviving son", so therefore had at least one older brother.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  2. 3.  Capt. Hon. John MunroCapt. Hon. John Munro Descendancy chart to this point (1.Christiana1) was born in 1728 in Dingwall, , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; was christened in in Alness, Highlands, Scotland, United Kingdom; died on 27 Oct 1800 in Matilda, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in 1968 in Riverside Heights, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Notes:

    John was born near Foulis Castle, on an adjacent Munro estate in Ross-shire, Scotland, and spent his childhood there. His birth date is accepted as 1728, although sources have stated 1731.

    When war broke out between the French and British in the American Colonies in 1755, a call was put out for soldiers to expand the 48th foot, and John joined this regiment where Munro's had served before with distinction. Some sources have stated that he was a "Subaltern", but in documentation by his own hand, he states he was a Sergeant in the 48th. Some references list him as a Major in the 48th, but this is an error which probably originated from the fact that he later was a Captain in the King's Royal Regiment of New York during the American Revolution.

    He was posted with the 48th to the American Colonies in 1756 for the French-Indian wars, and arrived in America on 8 Jun 1756. He was stationed at the fort in Albany.

    John was well educated and had moved in the upper levels of the social circles in Scotland. He was soon well acquainted and became a confederate and military companion of Sir William Johnson, kin of the DeLancey family, and became a member of the aristocratic level of the English and Dutch social community.

    On 12 Apr 1758, he may have married Jane Caldwell, of the socially prominent Caldwell and Van Courtlandt families. Although no marriage record has been found, there exists a marriage bond for a couple with these names bearing a signature comparable to the same John Munro. However, on his subsequent marriage to Mary Brouwer in 1760, John is not listed as a widower, so it is doubtful that the marriage actually took place.

    John was active throughout the French-Indian campaigns and served with Sir William Johnson in some campaigns. He was present with his Regiment at the capitulation of Quebec. He obtained an early discharge from the Army in 1760, and settled on Crown land grants on the Hudson River in New York Province. His grants and purchases totaled almost 15,000 acres.

    On 5 Apr 1760, he married Mary (or Maria) Brower (also called Maritje Talbot Gilbert Bruere). She was the daughter of Cornelius and Cornelia (Barlieyt) Brower (or Brouwer) of Schenectady, New York. At this time, John was engaged in the mercantile business in Schenectady and became rather affluent. Before the American Revolutionary War, he moved to Albany and went into business there. While he lived in Albany, he was an elder and trustee in the Scottish Presbyterian Church.

    In 1767, he built a home on the east side of the Hudson River in Shaftsbury and named his estate Fowlis. His business continued to expand until it included grain and lumber mills, a nail factory and other enterprises. He was active in political and social circles and was appointed Magistrate and Justice of the Peace of the New Hampshire holdings, a controversial area claimed by both New York and New Hampshire. Intolerant of raids conducted by The Green Mountain Boys, John became embroiled in a protracted struggle with Ethan Allen and his New Hampshire supporters for ownership of the same land.

    Tensions grew as the American Revolutionary War drew closer, and John, who was known for his unswerving loyalty to the crown, was soon marked by the local Patriots. When the New Hampshire contingent seized the opportunity to discredit him, he went to New York to meet with General McLean, his old military commander, who enrolled him as a Captain in the new Royal Highland Emigrants 84th Regiment, which was being raised from Loyalists in New York, many of them previous British troops. Later McLean cited him as being the first to report for duty.

    McLean commissioned him to return to Vermont and raise a company of Loyalist recruits and to provide intelligence and information on rebel troops, supplies, provisions, arms etc. He used his own money to finance his operations, depleting his farm stores to equip and support the troops he raised. He had several adventures while delivering dispatches and escorting British dignitaries through the rebel lines between New York and the British forts around Quebec and Montreal.

    Eventually John was seized and imprisoned for 18 months for his Loyalist acts. He was offered freedom if he would accept a commission as Lieutenant Colonel in the American Army, but he refused. He was one of the first Loyalists imprisoned at the Fleet Prison at Esopus. Eventually he was rescued from captivity by his compatriots. Once free, he resumed his Loyalist activities meeting with General Tryon on board the British warship Dutchess of Gordon, where he received 100 pounds with which to pay his recruits and a dispatch to take to the Bishop of Quebec.

    On his return from Canada, he was recaptured. This time he was sentenced to be hung and narrowly escaped that fate by rescue and flight to the British lines.

    John joined General Burgoyne in the New York campaign, but realizing that he is about to be defeated, Burgoyne sent John and other well known Loyalists to Canada to avert their being captured by the Americans.

    Reporting to the British Army at Quebec, he found that the Royal Highland Emigrant commissions were all filled. Instead, he received a commission as Captain in Sir John Johnson's new King's Royal Regiment of New York. Now wearing his red British Uniform as a captain of the first battalion, he officially joined the American Revolutionary War. Eventually he enlisted his oldest son, Hugh, and an Ensign, then Lieutenant in his battalion, and his three other sons as privates.

    During John's imprisonment and flight Mary remained at the Bennington estate and she and her children became prisoners or hostages of the Patriot Cause. They were allowed to stay in the house and keep two milk cows to provide for the children, but they soon found themselves in dire straights as the Munro estate was picked clean by vindictive neighbors. In desperation, Mary wrote the following letter to John in Montreal:

    Mr dear John

    I hope when you receive these few lines they may find you in good health. Your Dear Children are all well, as for myself I am in a poor state of health and very much distresst. I must leave my house in a very short time, and God knows where I shall get a place to put my head on, for my own relations are my greatest enemys, the mills they have had a long time in their possession -- likewaise all your tenants houses and lands -- They have distressed me beyond expression. I have scarcly a mouthful of bread for myself or Childer for heavens sake my dear Mr. Munro send me some relief by the first safe hand. Is there no possibility of your sending for us, if their is no method fallen upon we shall perish, for you can have no idea of our sufferings here, let me once more entreat you to try every method to save your family - my heart is so full it is ready to break -- Adew my Dearest John May God Almighty bless and preserve and protect you, that we may live to see each other is the constant prayers of Your affectionate tho afflicted wife
    Mary Munro P.S. The Childer send their love to you

    [Public Archives of Canada
    MG 21, Vol B214, Pg 35]

    In 1778, after receiving this letter, Captain Munro wrote to British authorities and Governor Clinton pleading with them to intervene with the American Generals to allow his wife and children to move to Canada as she and their seven children hadn't enough to eat. His plea was successful and Mary left Shaftsbury using money she got from selling some silver plate that she had hidden from her persecutes. She went first to Schenectady but relatives there refused to shelter or help her. She was finally aided by a friend or relative and made her way to Lake Champlain over the roads and Indian trails. There she was provided transportation by boat to Crown point and Fort St. John. John met her there and took her to Montreal where he obtained quarters for the family. In 1784, at the close of hostilities, she was established at L'Assumption.

    Although the seven children seemed to survive this adventure with little effect, Mary became very ill. She eventually recovered, but she suffered from the debilitating effects of these years for the remainder of her life.

    Mary was widowed in 1800 and died in Upper Canada, at another manor house and estate called Fowlis, on 12 Apr 1815, aged 76 years, 6 months and 3 days.

    John was mustered out of the military at half pay in 1781, but John Johnson requested that he help with Land Claims for displaced Loyalists, and he spent three years in England lobbying for settlements for these claimants as well as for himself before returning to Ontario with no success and virtually penniless.

    In 1784 he accepted Land Grants in the Lunenburg, Upper Canada area, settled by his compatriots from the First Battalion, and was instrumental in settling the Matilda township (later Dundas County). He built a home and established mills and other enterprises.

    LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF THE HONORABLE JOHN MUNRO, ESQUIRE Filed 16 Dec 1800 (Surrogate Court Records of Stormont, Dundas & Glengarry, Wills 1800-1821, Microfilm Reel 862340, Ontario Archives)

    "I give and bequeath to my loving wife MARY MUNRO during her natural life my dwelling house with so much of the furniture as will be necessary for her comfort and support, together with so much of the live cattle as she might have question for, that in any case any of my sons should marry, and that she might wish to remove that then and in that case the other house on the farm shall be repaired and made comfortable and warm, that she shall be supported from the income of the property under the direction of the Executors as shall be hereafter named in this my will, that in case it should so happen that either of my sons or daughters should leave her under this protection, she is to have the same allowance from the estate as if she were living by herself, in order to compensate them for their support, I further will, that twelve hundred acres that I have located in her own name shall be within her own right to will to whom she pleases at her death. It is also my will that each of my children shall enjoy twelve hundred acres to each, that is to say, to HARRY 1200 acres, to JOHN 1200 acres, to WILLIAM 1200 acres, to CHRISTINA 1200 acres, to CHARLOTTE 1200 acres, to CORNELIA 1200 acres, which I have located for them, and shall do my duty to have the same granted in their own names, with respect to my Military Lands. It is my will that no part should be disposed of, unless necessity requires it to pay my debts, until such time as land will become of full value.

    To my three grandchildren I give and bequeath the twelve hundred acres granted to me by the Government for giving up my claim to the township, that is to say, to Hugh's SON four hundred acres, to JOHN MOUNT four hundred acres, and to Cornelius' Son JOHN four hundred acres, to be equally divided between them. The remaining rest of my property to be divided between my three sons HENRY,WILLIAM and JOHN, reserving to my son HENRY the money he has advanced for the payment of land purchased from his brother HUGH. That in case I shall not be able to obtain some lands for my son Hugh's children, HENRY, JOHN and WILLIAM will give a fourth part of the undivided remains to his children, when the property is divided, but in case I shall be able to get lands for himself or his children and in that case the remainder of any property is vested in Henry, John and William and to their heirs and assigns forever.

    I beg and pray that my children shall agree amongst themselves and it is my will in case of any dispute in settling among themselves it shall be finally settled by my Executors and not be any mean go to court and that the settlement made by the Executors shall be binding and finally settled.

    I further will and authorize my Executors to make sale and dispose of so much of my property as will be necessary to pay my debts which may be honestly due upon the Estate after my decease if it cannot be otherwise discharged. I struggle hard and shall so long as God is pleased to spare me in this life to clear my Estate of incumbrance that whatever remains may be of service to my dear family.

    I bequeath to my son CORNELIUS my sword and I hope he will think I have done by him as well as the rest of his brothers, they are all equally beloved by their poor old father, and if I should err in any way in this my will its not with a design to favor one more than the other, that they will be friendly and kind to one another and that they will never see one another in distress without giving relief to each other, and they will be prudent, careful, and industrious to make the best use of what may remain of the Estate after all debts is paid. I do appoint my loving Nephew HUGH MUNRO, ESQ., Doctor PHILLIP MOUNT, Malcolm McMartin, Esq., my Cousin HUGH MUNRO, Esq., THOMAS FRASER, Esq., and my son HENRY MUNRO or any three of them, to be my Executors, giving these full power and authority and anything to do all lawful deeds and acts, the same as I would do in my lifetime.

    For the use and benefit of my poor family I further will that my son HENRY, DR. PHILIP MOUNT shall be trustees to oversee and regulate all and everything belonging to my Estate to prevent waste or mismanagement in carrying this my will on to Execution and last of all I give all my loving family my blessing, praying that God may bless and prosper them in this life and in the life to come.

    In witness whereof I hereunder set my hand seal at the fourteenth day of April in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred.
    (s) John Munro
    Signed, sealed and published and delivered by the Testator JOHN MUNRO as and for his last will and testament in presence of each other have hereto subscribed our names respectively as witnesses: (s) Rev. F.C.L.Broeffle, br T. Fraser, CORNs Munro"

    LETTER FROM JOHN MUNRO TO CHILDREN (Accompanies Will) "My dear children and friends, my Executors in which I have every confidence to do all for the best. I request that you will bear all your Mother's unfortunate temper with patience as I have done and that she might have what will be sufficient to keep her comfortable during her lifetime. I should have appointed her Executrix, but being sensible of her disposition, I conceived it dangerous to the interest of all the family as her rashness of temper might lead her to what she afterwards would be sorry for, injurious to herself or her children.

    I request that my silver watch will be delivered to my son WILLIAM, and my miniature picture be given to my son HUGH, being my oldest ... any clothing I may have to my son JOHN. I further request of all my children to let John have the best part in making the decision in consideration of him staying with his father and mother to carry on the business, and be good to him, for he is little acquainted with the world and the nature of mankind to guard against every advantage which may be taken of him, which is indeed my reason for not giving him more power.

    Be kind and friendly to one another upon all occasions and should it so happen that the one is more successful than another let him give his assistance to him who may be in want, resoluting that all blessings is from the Hand of Providence.

    I shall leave a list of what I may be indebted at the time of making this my last will and testament as near as I can recollect.

    God grant you his blessing which is the prayer and will be while.
    (s) John Munro"

    The family erected a stone at his original burial site which was later flooded by the St. Lawrence Seaway Project. It stated "The Honorable John Munro, Esq. one of his Majesty's Legislative Council of Upper Canada, Formerly Captain in the King's late Royal Regiment of New York who died 27th of October, 1800 age 72 years."

    The Munro burial marker stones were relocated at the Riverside Heights U.E.L. Memorial Cemetery with Honors in 1968. Also included in the new burial plot, surrounded with an ornate wrought iron fence, was the grave site of his wife Mary with the following inscription: "Here lies the remains of Mary Brewer (sic) relict of the late Hon. John Munro who departed this life the 12 April AD 1815 age 76 years. This humble monument is erected to her revered memory by her affectionate daughter Charlotte Munro de Lotbinere." The spelling of her name varies in references, however, the error in spelling here occurred when the old original markers were refaced and a copy of the old inscription was engraved on the new marble back in preparation for the UEL Memorial.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald
    Stroud, Anna Margaret

    References:

    (1) "The Munro Beacon" - Spring/Summer 1996 - Vol. 22, No. 2 - p. 5

    (3) "The Munro Eagle" - number 27 - summer 1997-1998 - p. 29-30

    Ref: "The Monroe Book" by Dr. Joan S. Guilford - New York Unconnected Monroes

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    John died at Dickinson's Landind.

    Buried:
    John's original burial site was flooded by the St. Lawrence Seaway Project. In 1968, the marker stones were moved to the Riverside Heights U.E.L. Memorial Cemetery.

    John married Mary Brower on 5 Apr 1760 in Schenectady, Schenectady Co., New York, USA. Mary was born on 9 Oct 1738 in Schenectady, Schenectady Co., New York, USA; was christened on 14 Oct 1738 in Schenectady, Schenectady Co., New York, USA; died on 12 Apr 1815 in Morrisburg, , Ontario, Canada; was buried in 1968 in Riverside Heights, , Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 6. Christiana Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1761 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; died on 7 Dec 1836 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Dec 1836.
    2. 7. Cornelia Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1763 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; died in in , , Upper Canada, Canada.
    3. 8. Hugh Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Oct 1764 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; was christened in in New York, New York Co., New York, USA; died on 22 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; was buried on 25 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada.
    4. 9. Cornelius Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Oct 1768 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; was christened in Oct 1768 in Schenectady, Schenectady Co., New York, USA; died about 1806 in Cornwall, Stormont Co., Ontario, Canada.
    5. 10. Henry Munro, M.D.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1770 in , Albany Co., New York Colony, American Colonies; died on 28 Aug 1854 in La Chenaise, , Quebec, Canada; was buried in Aug 1854 in Mascouche, , Quebec, Canada.
    6. 11. John Munro, Jr.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1773 in , , New York Territory, American Colonies; died after 1852 in , , Ontario, Upper Canada.
    7. 12. Marie Charlotte Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1776 in Shaftsbury, Bennington Co., Vermont, USA; died in 1833 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in 1833 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada.
    8. 13. William Johnson Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Dec 1781 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; died on 27 May 1820 in Bas-Caraquet, Glouchester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried on 28 Jul 1996 in Morrisburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.

  3. 4.  Margaret MunroMargaret Munro Descendancy chart to this point (1.Christiana1) was born about 1730 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in in Gaspe, Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Mrs. Munro was married first in Britain to Donald Munro, a British officer. After she was widowed, she and her son were brought to America under the charge of a second Donald Munro who was also a British officer in the same regiment as her first husband. She and this second Donald Munro were later married.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    !In the Memoir of Sarah Harriet Munro Fitton a note is made of John Munro's

    "brother" (actually brother-in-law) Donald, who came to America with the 60th Regiment for the Revolutionary War and married a sister of John Munro "who had come to America in his protection" (1774 ) accompanied by her young son, Hugh Munro and a daughter. She was then a widow; her previous husband having been a "brother officer" of Donald's.

    "Donald Munro born c. 1740; married 27 July 1774 at New York City 1st Presbyterian Church Margaret Munro, widow of another Donald who died in England, a British officer. She was brought to America with a son Hugh by this Donald who married her. He was of the same Regt. as her deceased husband. Son Hugh became Judge Munro of Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada." THE MONROE BOOK by Joan Guilford, 1993 Genealogy Pub.;Franklin, NC; Pg 574.

    In the passenger listing of the Brig St. Peter, on transporting Loyalist settlers to Paspebiac, Qaspe' Peninsula, Quebec in 1784 were listed:"Donald Munro with wife and 1 daughter (age 13); Hugh Munro, single."

    When Donald Munro signed his will (written 1814, shortly before death) he designated as his "sole surviving heir" Hugh Munro, his "step-son". There is no mention of either wife or daughter, so they must have preceeded him in death.

    Although "the sister of John Munro" is mentioned in several references pertaining to Loyalists and the Revolutionary War, none of them list her by christian name.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Family/Spouse: Donald Munro. Donald (son of Hugh Munro and Christiana Munro) was born in 1720-1746 in , , , Scotland; died before 1770. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Judge Hugh Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Aug 1764 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died on 25 Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    2. 15. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1770 in , , , Scotland; and died.

    Margaret married Donald Munro about 1768 in , , New York, USA. Donald was born about 1725 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died about 1814 in St. Peters, Glouchester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 5.  Donald MunroDonald Munro Descendancy chart to this point (1.Christiana1) was born in 1720-1746 in , , , Scotland; died before 1770.

    Notes:

    Donald Munro was a British officer. After his death, his wife and son were taken to America under the charge of another British officer from her husband's regiment who was also named Donald Munro. She later married this second Donald Munro.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    This unidentified Munro was an officer in the British Army; married to the "sister of John Munro"; a "fellow officer of John and Donald Munro"; he was the father of the child, Hugh Munro, who came to America with his mother who married Donald Munro. He died prior to 1770 or the French and Indian War.

    Donald Munro was a British officer. After his death, his wife and son were taken to America under the charge of another British officer from her husband's regiment who was also named Donald Munro. She later married this second Donald Munro.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Family/Spouse: Margaret Munro. Margaret (daughter of Hugh Munro and Christiana Munro) was born about 1730 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died in in Gaspe, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 14. Judge Hugh Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Aug 1764 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died on 25 Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    2. 15. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1770 in , , , Scotland; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Christiana MunroChristiana Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1761 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; died on 7 Dec 1836 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Dec 1836.

    Notes:

    In the will of the Hon. John Munro (her father), dated April 12, 1800, Christina is named to inherit 1200 acres of land. Her son JOHN MOUNT is also named to inherit 400 acres as a "grandchild".

    Her husband "Doctor Philip Mount" is named as an executor of John's will and estate. Philip Mount received Lots 6 and 7 in 3rd con. by Crown Patent in Sept 1797. This was probably land that Christiana was entitled to as the daughter of a United Empire Loyalist when she married as it adjoins other land the Hon. John Munro claimed for his children.

    Christiana died in 1836, being a widow since her husband, Philip died in 1816. In deeds dated May 1837 and July 1839 these lots were sold with the following list of inheritors and owners:Francis Mount, John Mount, Philip Mount, Christina Mount, Joseph Mount, Henry Mount, Mary Mount, Helene Mount and William Mount. In the 1839 sale the six Mount sons are listed (Francis, John, Philip, Henry, Joseph and William) as well as the following: Mary Davert, Helen Davert, Francis C. Davert, Louis C. Davert, Christina McDougall and Christina Mount.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Christiana married Philippe Magante Mount on 29 Aug 1786 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Philippe was born about 1753; died on 31 Dec 1815 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was buried on 2 Jan 1816 in Lachenaie, , Lower Canada, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 16. Francois Philippe Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Aug 1787 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 5 Aug 1847 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada.
    2. 17. Joseph Hugh Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Feb 1790 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 29 Dec 1856 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was buried on 31 Dec 1856 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada.
    3. 18. Mary Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1792; died on 6 Aug 1843; was buried on 9 Aug 1843.
    4. 19. Veronique Helene Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Mar 1794 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 14 Apr 1858; was buried on 17 Apr 1858.
    5. 20. Philippe Henry Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Jul 1795 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    6. 21. Edward Henry Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 May 1797 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    7. 22. Philip Auguste Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1798; and died.
    8. 23. Seraphim William Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Apr 1799 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    9. 24. Catherine Marie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Apr 1800 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    10. 25. Christine Marie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Jun 1802 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

  2. 7.  Cornelia MunroCornelia Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1763 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; died in in , , Upper Canada, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Cornelia Munro had no children by either her marriage to Alan Patterson or her later marriage to Thomas Fraser. The Alexander Patterson and Jannet Patterson who sold Crown lots 4 and 5 in Matilda and the E 1/2 of Lot 9 Con 4 in 1853 1nd 1854 were children of Allen Patterson's brother Robert.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Cornelia married Allen Paterson on 7 Feb 1784 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Allen was born in 1752; died in 1809 in Morrisburg, Matilda, Ontario, Upper Canada; was buried in 1809 in Morrisburg, Matilda, Ontario, Riverside Uel ME. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Cornelia married Thomas Fraser about 1815 in , , Ontario, Canada. Thomas was born in 1748 in Strathrich, Inverness, Scotland; died in 1821 in , , Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 8.  Hugh MunroHugh Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 15 Oct 1764 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; was christened in in New York, New York Co., New York, USA; died on 22 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; was buried on 25 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Hugh was the oldest son of John and Maria, but their third child as he was preceeded by two sisters. He was born in Albany City, New York, where his father was a merchant. He would have been nearly five years old when they moved to their new home in the Albany County wilderness - later to become part of the state of Vermont. These would have been busy times for his parents as his father continued to build his new estate and oversee the clearing and planting of the fields, the workings of the new mills, and the settlement of numerous small tenant farmers.

    According to the old Scottish practice, as the oldest son, Hugh would be expected to eventually manage and inherit the main property at the Fowlis estate upon his father's death, and he would be educated and trained for that occupation.

    Hugh had a very busy childhood. He was probably schooled at home or with a tutor until there was an appropriate school available. He would ride out with his father to visit the tenant farmers, and oversee the workings at the mills, potash works and forges. In addition he would be a silent witness to the many casual meetings and conferences where John helped his many friends and neighbors with their problems.

    Hugh witnessed the distress of his father's tenants and settlers who were accosted and attacked by Ethan Allen and his "Green Mountain Boys," who thought they had a prior right to the land through their adjoining New Hampshire grants. Allen was determined to drive John Munro, "The Yorker," from his lands, or discredit him to break his influence with the settlers. The conflict escalated, and Hugh was home when the Allen cohorts burst into the manorhouse at Fowlis and bullied his mother and frightened his brothers and sisters before his father finally managed to eject them from the house, and then drive them from the yard where they had tried to set fire to the porch and house. He also helped to carry water in the vain attempt to control the fire at the potash works also set by the same unruly mob.

    By 1775 Hugh was 11 years old, and wise beyond his years with the knowledge that political conflict was spreading through the land like wildfire. As expected, he and his mother bore the responsibility for the estate on the ever more frequent occasions when his father was absent on some mysterious errand about the countryside, or to Albany, Schenectady, or even Boston or New York. He was firmly bound with his father in his unswerving loyalty to King George, and heard many heated discussions about local "loyalists" and "rebels." He overheard enough to know that his father was secretly encouraging veterans of the old regiments to sign up for service in Captain John's new loyalist company in the Scottish Royal Highland Emigrant Regiment newly formed by British General Alan McLean.

    Then, the summer before Hugh had his 12th birthday, the whole secure world at Fowlis suddenly was blown apart for the Munros. John was arrested and taken to Albany to appear before the rebel Committee of Safety to ascertain his political leanings and to prove he was not spying for the Crown. He testified and was parolled, then arrested and required to appear again. During his absence light-fingered cohorts of the Allen gang and fellow patriots visited Mary to bully and frighten her and the tenants, and also to liberate usable items from the Munro estate.

    The family's worst fears are confirmed when they recieve word that John had been thrown into the Albany prison as a Loyalist Tory and traitor to the American cause. Eventually John's name appeared on the list of landowners whose estates were to be confiscated for activity against the new independant American Colonies, and a committee arrived to strip the estate of all remaining supplies, stock, horses, and even to ransack the house for any useful plunder that may have been overlooked on previous occasions. At first a fairly sympathetic rebel allowed Mary to retain one riding horse and saddle for their use, but he later reconsidered this generosity and sent it away with the others. After he heard her plea in the name of her seven children, he allowed her to keep one milk cow - but only as a loan until it may also be called for. Hugh struggled to help Mary find enough for the family to eat from day to day.

    John was identified as being too influencial to be risked, so he was sentenced to be hung. He was put in irons and is sent to a prison ship on the Hudson River near Esopus. Mary was desperate when she heard he was not at Albany. She was told that he was hung. John was told that his wife and family were all murdered.

    After 18 months in prison, John escaped with a group of prisoners and found his way to the British lines near Fort Ticonderoga where he joined "Gentleman Johnny" Burgoyne. Old friends told him his family was alive and he sent word to Mary to find a way to join him in Canada. Mary's reply pleads for him to help her get away from their home where she is constantly harrassed by American rebels.

    Hugh helped Mary and the girls make packs to carry the extra clothing and the few remaining valuable items that they had sucessfully hidden from the looters, and they started off on the long walk to Schenectady to seek help from family or friends. His youngest brother, John Jr. is hardly four years old and Hugh assumed the responsibility of carrying him or encouraging him along. Hugh also scouted the roadway, looked for food, found the evening stopping place, looked after Cornelius and Harry, and worried about their safety - a long list of responsibilities for a 12 year old boy. The older girls, Christine and Cornelia, were fully occupied in helping their mother with the bundles and in taking turns carrying baby Charlotte, a toddler not yet two years old.

    How discouraged and angry Hugh must have been when they finally reached Schenectady and the Brouwer relatives refused to help them. Selling a piece of silver to a merchant at least gave them good Dutch food to fill their stomachs for a short while. They were finally rescued and hidden away by old merchant friends of John for a few months of rest, but all of them were aware of the rebel hatred of "Tory traitors" and were determined to find some way to get to Canada. The last few pieces of hidden silver plate and all of the salvaged best dresses and finery of Mary and the girls were sold to help provide the needed bribes to get a pass and make the journey to Canada possible. Ten years later Capt. John, ever the honorable Scot, listed as debts the expenses owed to John Glen of Schenectady and Richard Duncan of Albany for the feeding and care of his family and expenses for their escape to Canada.

    Outfitted in their sturdiest shoes and warmest clothing Hugh finally headed the group of women and straggling children on the trail north from Albany to Fort Ticonderoga, a trail fought over by both Loyalist and Rebel troops in the two years previous, and also frequented by Indians of unknown sympathies. It was early Autumn with warm days for walking, but nights that could be bone chilling in the open without adequate shelter or blankets. They ate sparingly of the food they carryied for they knew it might be hard to find sympathetic farmers along the road. The early days on the trail are again a trial for Mary in her poor health.

    When they had traveled beyond the area where Hugh had visited farmers and friends with his father, it became a daily trial to attempt to identify the political sympathies of settlers along the way so they would know if it would be safe to ask for food or shelter because they were constantly at risk of being reported to the local Militia. Hugh was especially at risk because he was nearly 14 years old and it was common practice for the Americans to conscript into the rebel army, the male children of Tories over 12 years old.

    The sore-footed, bedraggled family finally passed the front lines of the Americans and arrived at the forested shore of Lake George only to find no escort waiting to take them across the bay and up the river to Canada. There were no boats available of any kind, and they were in a no man's land frequented by hostile Indians. For six long days, shivering with cold and with little to eat, they lay hidden in the dense undergrowth, so near, and yet so far, from sanctuary in Canada. To their immense relief, late on the seventh day they were joined by another party of escaping Tory women and children, and found an escort who was able to provide transportation for all of them. Even then they did not escape without one last fright, for as they were taken by canoe across Lake George to the British boats they were discovered and closely pursued by a canoe manned by a war party of Indians.

    One can only imagine their joy when they at last reached Fort St. John and were met on the landing by John. It must have been with immense relief that Hugh lay down his burden of responsibility for his mother and siblings. And when the story of their trials was related in detail, Hugh must have felt great reward in the praise and approval from his father. Indeed, it was probably at that moment that John acceded to Hugh's request to join the army, finding him matured way beyond his tender years from the past three year ordeal. Hugh signed the enlistment roll of the First Battalion of the King's Royal Regiment of New York on 10 Oct 1778, just five days short of his 14th birthday.

    Hugh would have been warmly welcomed into his father's First Battalion Company of the King's Royal Regiment of New York as it was made up almost entirely of the old Scottish friends, neighbors, and tenants of the Munros - many of them disbanded veterans of the Seven Years War. They would welcome this eldest son of their Captain, and would be kind in teaching him the necessary Army drills and Manual of Arms, as well as the unpublished "Manual of Skills" so necessary for rank and file survival.

    Complete records were not preserved of the enlisted men in the King's Royal Regiment, but some muster and provision rolls were saved that list Hugh in Captain John Munro's Company. His early duties would probably have been at Fort St. John on the Richelieu River. With the onset of winter in 1778, Captain John was ordered to Montreal to find and supervise housing for some of the New York Loyalists. He moved Mary and his children there for their protection and care.

    In Oct 1780 Captain John was detailed to take fifty men and a party of Indians and Rangers down to Albany where he was to join Colonel Sir John Johnson who was raiding through the Mohawk Valley. Together they were to sweep north through the settlements burning and destroying the field crops and forage of the rebels, encourage able bodied Loyalists to join up, and, hopefully, capture a few important officers and rebels for the exchange of imprisoned Loyalists. It is likely that Hugh was among the soldiers on this excursion, traveling over the same route on which he had shepherded the family two years before.

    Hugh must have fared well with the men of Captain Munro's Company as he rose to the rank of Ensign on 13 Nov 1781, and, at the age of 19, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant on 24 Oct 1783. Along with the rest of the officers of the First Battalion he was reduced to half pay at the end of 1784 and subject to recall if the Army had need of him.

    By 1785 Hugh wass residing at L'Assumption, an old french village on the horse-shoe bend of the L'Assumption River. It was long known as "la Portage" by both the French and the Coureurs de Bois of the Fur Trade, as canoes were beached at the north side of the river bend, carried down the main street, Rue Portage, and launched again on the south side, thus avoiding the intervening falls. L'Assumption became an important hub for fur trading and commerce for the area east of Montreal. Hugh's mother, Mary, and the rest of the family had been settled here before his father sailed to England to hopefully gain reparation for the lands and fortune he lost to the American rebels in New York and Vermont. Once again, as the oldest son, Hugh feelt the responsibility for the family.

    As a commissioned officer and the son of Captain John Munro, Hugh was a desirable single guest to grace the dinner tables and evening socials of the well placed families in village. Under British rule it was a political necessity for the French to make friends and trade connections with influencial English Loyalists. The business and social elite at L'Assumption included the Leroux d'Esneval and LaRocque families, now united by the marriage of Angelique to Francois Antoine LaRocque. LaRocque soon found Hugh a most desireable employee, and an amiable dinner companion and guest. The Larocque Company was building a prosperous trade in lumber and wheat, and Hugh, as its English representative, was a great asset when dealing with the British merchants in Montreal. By the time his father returned to L'Assumption in 1787 and prepared to move his growing family to promised land grants on the upper reaches of the St. Lawrence River, Hugh was firmly established with the LaRocque firm.

    Hugh had been educated and trained to manage the family estates and a tremenous task awaited the Munros in Upper Canada where they would be starting over in unsettled lands. Already disappointed in his claims to the British government, John could not have been happy when Hugh announced that he was staying at L'Assumption with the LaRocque firm. Indeed, he must have felt it a real betrayal of his duty to him, his father, and to the family. John was nearly 60 years old, had limited funds, and needed the help of his sons in this new endeavor. More than that, he had counted on Hugh to set the pace for his brother, Cornelius was 20 but not overly ambitious, Harry was totally immersed in his books and studies to be a doctor, and John Jr., at 14, was just too easy going and indecisive to train for any leadership.

    It is not hard to imagine the argument that must have raged between this war-weary, army-hardened, tough old Scot and his equally stubborn, independant eldest son. At 23, Hugh was two years past his legal majority. Was he to be expected to give up the job he valued, the friends who respected him as an individual, and the life he had built for himself, to return to living in a virtual wilderness, clearing land and grubbing in the dirt to plant a crop ? He acknowledged his duty to the family, but, in return, had he not paid full measure ? What of the lost years of his youth spent carrying the burden of an abandoned family in New York ? This was a new country. He had given it nearly seven years of military service - did he not then deserve, at last, to make a decision to lead his own life as he saw fit ? How could his father criticize his work as a merchant when he, himself, had built his fortune in America beginning as a merchant in Albany ? Perhaps his father was too old to see the opportunities and genteel life he enjoyed in Montreal and L'Assumption. He was now fluent in French and he enjoyed their life style. He had no need to live in an all English community.

    In the end, John and the family left for the new lands in Upper Canada, and Hugh continued his life in L'Assumption. An uneasy, unsettled silence continued between father and son.

    As the LaRocque business grew and prospered, Francois felt the need to widen his influence, and was soon involved in the political scene, leaving more of the merchant duties to Hugh. At last, in 1792, he was elected to represent the L'Assumption district at the first Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada. Alas, before he was able to attend even one session he fell ill and died on 2 Nov 1792 at the age of forty-one. He left his young widow with two young sons age six and eight, and a thriving business managed by Hugh.

    With Francois only a short six months in his grave, the widow LaRocque and Hugh journeyed down the L'Assumption River to Montreal to plight their troth before the Reverend Delisle in the Anglican Church on 4 May 1793. On 12 Oct of the same year Angelique gave birth to their first child, a daughter who died just after her birth. She was buried in the family plot beside the four little LaRocque infants.

    At the age of 28 Hugh took over the LaRocque business and ran it successfully for twenty years before selling it to Angelique's brother, Laurent Laroux. Called back for army duty at erratic intervals, Hugh served during the war with the United States in 1812 as a Captain. Having sold the business, he moved his family to the village of Saint-Esprit, northwest of L'Assumption, where, as a retired officer living on half pay, he became the local Magistrate and Justice of the Peace.

    Except for the death of their daughter Lucie at the age of 13, these were tranquil years for Hugh and Angelique. Their five surviving children found their places in the world. Hugh, Jr. left on his great adventure to the Far West. Horatio was married and established as a farmer. The daughters, Marie Angelique and Charlotte, were married and gone. Only the youngest child, Emilie, lives at home with her parents.

    Hugh became almost totally immersed in the French community and culture. He maintained a close relationship with his older sister Christine, and his brother Doctor Henry, who both married French spouses and lived in Montreal with growing families. They served as god-parents for each other's children, and attended the many festive family Catholic christening and marriage ceremonies. He maintained a more distant relationship with his youngest sister Charlotte and her famous French husband, Chartier Alain de Lotbiniere, who dropped his French title as Marquis in deference to the new British ownership of Canada.

    Sharing as they did a pride as prickly as a Scottish thistle, it is doubtful that Hugh and his father comletely resolved their long-standing dispute before John's death in Oct 1800. Hugh had already divorced himself from the Upper Canada location by selling his Crown land grants there to his brother, Henry. John, however, could not carry his anger beyond the grave, and willed a share of land to Hugh's son equal in size to that willed to each of his other grandchildren. He also directed Hugh, as the eldest son, to be given his valued minature portrait. Finally humbling himself in a letter enclosed with his will, he stated his children were "all equally loved by their poor old father," and begged them all to be "friendly and kind with one another."

    Hugh had gone to Upper Canada to bury his father in 1800, and returned to bury his mother in 1815. His brother Cornelius was prematurely taken in death in 1806, his sister Cornelia widowed in 1809 with the death of the seemingly indestructable fur trapper Allen Patterson. Dr. Philip Mount left the eldest sister, Christine, a bereaved widow in 1816, and out in far Bas-Caraquet, New Brunswick, even the baby of the family, William Johnson, was not spared by the grim reaper from an untimely death in 1820. Also Charlotte was to find that neither wealth nor advantages could buy health and longer life for the great de Lotbiniere, who died in 1822. By 1825 only Hugh, Henry, and John Jr. were left of the five brothers, and the three sisters were all widows.

    Now it was Hugh's turn to mentally review the many adventures of his sixty one years as he lay seriously ill with an "inflamation of the breast." He must have derived the most comfort from his bride of thirty-two years as they had comforted each other during tragic periods in their life together, the deaths of parents and other family members, but most of all the early deaths of five of their own ten children. Although attended by local physicians his condition only continued to worsen, and he sliped away from the family gathered about his bed on 22 Sep 1825. Having converted to the Roman Catholic faith, he was attended by Father Arsenault and was buried in the Catholic cemetery at St. Ours du St. Esprit. Signing his death notice in the parish register were his brother, Dr. Henry Munro; his brother-in-law, Laurent Laroux; and his step-son, Francois Antoine LaRocque, Jr.

    Because there were two or three other Hugh Munros listed in Captain John Munro's Company, there has been some errors made in other references. This Hugh is not the same person as Hugh Munro [4778], born 1744 in Scotland, Enlisted in the British army 19 Jun 1776, served in Watt's Company 1776-1777, in McDonnell's Company 1781, in Munro's company 1781-1783, married Catherine Campbell and had two sons and two daughters in 1784.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Hugh was buried at Saint-Ours-du-Saint-Esprit Catholic Church in Saint-Esprit, Quebec, Canada.

    Hugh married Angelique Leroux on 4 May 1793 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Canada. Angelique was born on 6 Nov 1865 in Montreal/L'assum, Quebec; died on 22 Nov 1837 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 24 Nov 1837 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 26. Marie Olympe Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; died in 1793.
    2. 27. Marie Charlotte Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 15 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic.
    3. 28. Marie-Angelique Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 11 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 9 Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, St. Hyasinthe, Hotel D Churchyd.
    4. 29. Marie-Charlotte Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1830.
    5. 30. Marie Lucie Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 12 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was buried on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Ch.
    6. 31. Hugh Munro, Jr.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1896 in Browning, Glacier Co., MT Blackfoot, Indian Res; was buried in 1896 in Holy Family Ceme, MT, Blackfoot Indian, Reservation.
    7. 32. Anonymous Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec.
    8. 33. Marie Lucille Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 13 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec; was buried on 14 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec, St. Jacque Cath.
    9. 34. Patrice Horace Raphael Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 23 Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, L'hotel-Dieu, Churchyd.
    10. 35. Marie-Emilie Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Mar 1809 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 14 Mar 1809 in L'assumption Cat, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; and died.

  4. 9.  Cornelius MunroCornelius Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 16 Oct 1768 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; was christened in Oct 1768 in Schenectady, Schenectady Co., New York, USA; died about 1806 in Cornwall, Stormont Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Cornelius enlisted in his father's company in the British forces on 10 Oct 1778 to fight in the American Revolutionary War. In 1784, after the war ended, he went to L'Assumption.

    Cornelius Munro was serving as Sheriff of Cornwall in 1800 when his father's will was probated. He lived in the Cornwall vicinity most of his adult life. He hand wrote his own will in 1801 and had it witnessed by Thomas Fraser. He probably died in 1806 (at age of 38 ?) as there is a petition on file for 21 Jan 1807 for bond in the inventory of his Estate by his wife Frances Delisle Munro with co-signer Frederick Delisle of Cornwall (her brother ?).

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Christened:
    Cornelius was christened at the Dutch Reformed Church in Schenectady, New York.

    Cornelius married Frances Delisle on 5 Oct 1794 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Frances was born about 1770; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 36. David Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1796; and died.
    2. 37. Allen Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1796 in Cornwall, Stormont Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.
    3. 38. John Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1798; and died.
    4. 39. Henriette Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1800; and died.
    5. 40. Cornelius Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1804; and died.

  5. 10.  Henry Munro, M.D.Henry Munro, M.D. Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1770 in , Albany Co., New York Colony, American Colonies; died on 28 Aug 1854 in La Chenaise, , Quebec, Canada; was buried in Aug 1854 in Mascouche, , Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    On 1 Feb 1780, Henry Munro enlisted in his father's company in the British forces to fight for the British in the American Revolutionary War. In 1784, after the war was over, he went to L'Assumption.

    Henry became a surgeon in the service of the North West Company in 1796. For several years, he was stationed at, or near, Grand Portage. In 1805, he was sent to succeed J. B. Perrault at the Pic on Lake Superior, and in 1812, he was appointed surgeon's mate in the Corps of Canadian Voyagers raised by the North West Company.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Henry was buried at the Old Protestant Cemetery in Maschouche, Quebec, Canada.

    Henry married Marie Josephette Serindac in 1809 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Marie was born on 29 Aug 1780 in , , Québec, Canada; was christened in in , , Québec, Canada; died on 4 Mar 1860 in La Chenaire, Quebec, Canada; was buried in Mar 1860 in Lachenaie, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 41. John Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Sep 1809 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 23 Sep 1809 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    2. 42. Pierre Antoine Confroy Munro, M.D.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Sep 1811 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 22 Oct 1811 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    3. 43. Marie Josephte Aliene Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Mar 1814 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 21 Mar 1814 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    4. 44. Marie Helene Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Jan 1818 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 6 Jan 1818 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    5. 45. Marie Charlotte Henriette Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Oct 1821 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 24 Oct 1821 in Notre Dame Cath, Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    6. 46. Marie Anne Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Feb 1825 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 13 Feb 1825 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

  6. 11.  John Munro, Jr.John Munro, Jr. Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1773 in , , New York Territory, American Colonies; died after 1852 in , , Ontario, Upper Canada.

    Notes:

    On 1 Feb 1780, John Munro, Jr. enlisted in his father's company to fight for the British in the American Revolutionary War. In 1784, after the war ended, he went to L'Assumption.

    An Agriculture census shows that John owned 50 acres with 25 acres under cultivation (8 to 10 acres in crops such as wheat, barley, etc.; and 15 to 17 acres of pasture). One acre used for home garden and orchard and the remainder listed as "woods and wild".

    John does not appear on the 1861 census for Williamsburg Township.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    John married Kathryn Rosenberger about 1810 in , , Ontario, Upper Canada. Kathryn was born about 1795 in , , , USA; died about 1851 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 47. Mary Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1810 in Williamsburg Twp, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.
    2. 48. Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1813 in , , , Canada; and died.
    3. 49. John Melburn Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Dec 1813 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada; died on 16 Aug 1884 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Aug 1884 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada.
    4. 50. Cornelie Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1822; and died.
    5. 51. Charles Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1828; and died.

  7. 12.  Marie Charlotte MunroMarie Charlotte Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1776 in Shaftsbury, Bennington Co., Vermont, USA; died in 1833 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in 1833 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Charlotte was buried at St. Michael Catholic Church in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada.

    Marie married Michael E.G. Alain Chartier De Lotbiniere, Marquis on 15 Nov 1802 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath. Michael was born on 31 Aug 1748 in Québec, , Québec, Canada; died on 1 Jan 1822 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in Jan 1822 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 52. Louise Josette Chartier De Lotbiniere, Seigss Vaudreuil  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Dec 1803 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was christened in in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath; died on 7 Oct 1869 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in Oct 1869 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath.
    2. 53. Marie Charlotte De Lotbiniere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1805; and died.
    3. 54. Julie Christine De Lotbiniere, Seig D Lotbinier  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1807; and died.
    4. 55. Michel Georges De Lotbiniere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1809; died in in Died Young.
    5. 56. Michel Frances Xavier De Lotbiniere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1811; died in in Died Young.
    6. 57. Marie Angelique De Lotbiniere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1813; died in in Died Young.
    7. 58. De Lotbiniere  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1815; died in in Died Young.

    Marie married Paul Dennis about 1893. Paul was born about 1774; died in in Couteau-Du-Lac, , Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  8. 13.  William Johnson MunroWilliam Johnson Munro Descendancy chart to this point (3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 10 Dec 1781 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; died on 27 May 1820 in Bas-Caraquet, Glouchester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried on 28 Jul 1996 in Morrisburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.

    Notes:

    The birth and christening records of William Johnson Munro has not yet been located. History directs that he was born in the city of Montreal due to the following proven facts: (1) William's mother, Mary Brower, with her other seven children, escaped to Fort St. John via Lake Champlain and Crown Point in 1778. (2) Her husband, Captain John Munro, met her at Fort St. John. (3) John was dispatched to Montreal to find housing there for Loyalist families and also took Mary and the children with him. (4) Mary and the children stayed in Montreal until 1783 when John went to England to help plead for compensation for lands lost by Loyalists in New York. (5) William was probably christened by the Regimental Chaplain as he was a personal friend, although some of these records have been lost.

    William was named after the celebrated General Johnson of the British Army, a much esteemed comrade in arms of his father, John Munro. He grew up on the Munro land grants at Matilda, near Morrisburg, Ontario. He signed on with the North West Fur Company and eventually settled in Bas-caraquet, New Brunswick in 1807, where he received a land grant as a Loyalist son.

    William spent eight years in the service of the Northwest Fur Company, enlisting in about 1798 for an eight year indenture. He spent most of this time in the Grand Portage, Fort William Area, but mad voyages to other outposts from time to time.

    In 1808 William completed his indenture to the North West Company. Disappointed at the inadequate wages offered for a "factor" or permanent post with The Company, he left western Canada to take up a merchandising offer made by his cousin, Hugh Munro, of St. Peter (Bathurst) New Brunswick. Eventually he settled on a site at Bas Caraquett on the Bay of Chaleur, opposite the Colony of New Carlisle-Paspebiac. He built a Trading Post-Store where he dealt in furs and provisioned the French fisherman and bought their salted fish for shipping by Hugh Munro and Sherar ships. His long experience in the western lands stood him in good stead and certainly provided him with the language skills to deal also with the French speaking fishermen who populated the area. William may have become an agent for the Hudson Bay Company both on the New Carlisle side of the bay and on the New Brunswick side at Carequete. Hudson Bay Company agents held positions of considerable importance and the agent occupied a central influence in many respects in the community.

    Although he died early and in debt, if he had been able to maintain his business until it began to show a profit he would undoubtedly have established a very lucerative post.

    Munro Island in the Shippigan area still bears William Munro's name although title went out of the family when his son Thomas Brock Munro sold the property.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald
    Stroud, Anna Margaret

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro library - "The Munro Beacon" - Spring/Summer 1996 - Vol. 22, No.
    2 - p. 5

    (2) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    (3) "The Munro Eagle" - number 27 - summer 1997-1998 - p. 33-38

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    William died at his home in 1820 at the age of 39 and was buried on his farm because the Catholic Church refused to bury a Presbyterian in their cemetery. In the fall of 1993, a homeowner on the old Munro property discovered human bones while doing an excavation. An Investigation identified the remains as being those of William Johnson Munro and his son. In 1995, after considerable paperwork, the remains were released to William's descendant, Henry Munro for re-interment in the cemetery of Trinity Anglican Church in Riverside Heights alongside W.J.'s father, Captain John Munro.

    William married Sarah Sherar on 15 Sep 1808 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. Sarah (daughter of Thomas Sherar) was born on 26 Aug 1786 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died in 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was buried in 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 59. Sarah Harriet Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Jul 1809 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 11 Jul 1902 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jul 1902 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    2. 60. William Thomas Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Aug 1811 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 22 Aug 1886 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Aug 1886 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada.
    3. 61. Thomas Brock Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Aug 1811 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened in in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 12 May 1894 in Portland, Cumberland Co., Maine, USA.
    4. 62. John Provost Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 7 Mar 1813 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 23 May 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in May 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    5. 63. Mary Charlotte Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Dec 1815 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 4 Jun 1880.
    6. 64. Jane Eleanor Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Mar 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 15 Sep 1822 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 11 Oct 1840 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Oct 1840 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada.
    7. 65. George Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Jul 1820 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 22 Apr 1902.

  9. 14.  Judge Hugh MunroJudge Hugh Munro Descendancy chart to this point (4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 24 Aug 1764 in , , Ross and Cromarty, Scotland; died on 25 Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Sep 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Hugh became Judge Munro of Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.

    His wife lived for a long time at Somerset Vale as Mrs. Judge Munro.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    Hugh Munro was the Nephew of Capt Hon. John Munro as his Mother was Capt. John Munro's sister. Born a Munro, she married a Munro kin who was in the British Army in England and was Hugh's Father. When she was widowed early, she came to America to marry Donald Munro (bringing her son, Hugh, with her).Donald had been commissioned in Scotland in the 60th Regiment and was also posted to Colonial America during the French-Indian wars. He settled in New York Territory on land bought from John's Land Grants. Hugh also fought for the Crown during the Revolutionary War, and took United Empire Loyalist (UEL) Land Grants in St Peter (since known as Bathurst) New Brunswick. He first came with the other UEL settlers to Paspebiac on the Bay of Chaleur in 1784 on the Brig "St. Peter". (See Settlers on the Bay of Chaleur by AD Flowers.)

    Obituary from the New Brunswick "Gleaner" October 3, 1846

    DIED: At Somerset Vale, Bathurst, Friday 25th September, after a protracted illness in the 82nd year of his life, Hugh Munro, Esq.

    Mr. Munro was a native of Ross-shire, Scotland, whence he emigrated to one of the British North American Colonies in the United States. At the Revolutionary of 1783 he accompanied his parents and many other loyalists, and found a home in Canada and New Brunswick. He resided for upwards of forty years in this province and represented the County of Northumberland in the Provincial General Assembly for Many years.

    As a Magistrate and Judge of the Common Please, and in every public capacity, his character was marked by the strictest integrity. During the last years of his life, Mr. Munro received much benefit in attending upon the ordinances of Christianity in connection with the Church of Scotland, to which, upon principle, he was much attached, and towards the maintenance of which, in his neighborhood, he assisted with great cordiality and zeal.

    Hugh was appointed to the Inferior Court of Common Pleas on 29 Jan 1792.

    Letter from John Munro (Capt. Hon. John Munro) to Hugh Munro. Copy obtained from Duncan Young of Bathurst, New Brunswick by Fidele Theriault, Fredrickson, New Brunswick. Copy to Vallena Munro January, 1993: Note: M. Theriault states letter he transcribed was "very poor copy and hard to read - some words I could not make out".

    Matilda, 30 March 1800 My dear Hugh,
    Its true that I write you but seldom because you are silent and because I have nothing to say that can give you pleasure, only merely that I am in being much in truth is of little consequence to one from whose conversation I am cut off by such accidents or engagements as separates us. I continue and ever shall to wish you all good and happiness. I wish that some lucky event might set you in a state of ease and independance and that I might live to see you as happy as this world _ _ can make you and are never to live near each other as we once did. I find my life ebbing a pace and my affections strengthening as my age increases. I find my companions small in number and my friends few and _ _ and anxious of the world for me to keep pace with.

    I informed you in my letter of Wm J. engagement in the NorthWest (fur) Company. I expect Harry will be down this fall, but can not say whether to his entering as a partner. However, the returns this season will answer whether it will be an object.

    The family in general are in health.

    I mentioned to you before that I made a purchase of Hugh's property in this province which will keep me and your poor Aunt upon small allowance to pay the money I borrowed to pay him. Dr. Mount and Mrs. Paterson are doing well.

    We have got a new Governor and I have every reason to hope we shall be happy in the choice. Immigration increases very fast. Upwards of a thousand came into his district this winter, and the number by Oswego, Niagara and Detroit are ten to one by every information we have in this quarter. The inhabitants of Montreal are afraid of the alarming disorder which the troops brought from Ireland last Fall which carried off the greater part of a regiment and part of the inhabitants.

    Is friend Donald living, and how does he make out and are you good friends. Has he been attentive to you in your sickness. It's time to turn good as we grow old.

    No satisfaction is to be had for my debts or property in the American State. They have lost their King and it will not be long before they will differ among themselves.

    Have you applied for a grant of your lands at L'Assumption ? You should not neglect applying. We expect a cargo of immigrants from Scotland this season. Those we have made good progress. They are saving and industrious which will always gain ground. Hugh has got his sawmill going which will be more profit to him than his shop. His potash will also turn out to his advantage. Dr. Mount is erecting a house, but always complaining of poverty. He has eight children. His second boy is at school and in a year time will make a young clerk for you. Cornelius has five boys but I am sorry to say not careful nor industrious. This shall be forwarded to your friend Dr. Langmore who no doubt will forward it by first opportunity. Adieu my dear Hugh and may God preserve your life easy and make your death happy where I trust we shall rest in the arms of our blessed Saviour, which it shall be the prayer of your affectionate uncle John Munro

    P.S. My cousin Hugh is well. His son was married last week to Captain Fraser's daughter.

    Hugh was born in Scotland and went to America with his widowed mother and sister in 1774 when he was about 10 years old. The family remained loyal to the crown during the American Revolution and in 1778 they moved to Canada.

    Hugh was educated in Quebec City. In 1784, he sailed to New Carlisle Loyalist Colona at Gaspe', Quebec aboard the brig St. Peter. He settled in New Carlisle and later at St. Peter (Bathurst) New Brunswick.

    He served as judge on Gaspe' Court of Common Pleas and was a member of the House of Assembly for Northumberland County. He made his living as a lumberman, general and ship's merchant, and ship builder.

    He was frequently styled Judge Hugh Munro of Bathurst.

    References:

    (2) "The Munro Eagle" - number 27 - summer 1997-1998 - p. 28

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    Hugh died at Somerset Vale in Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.

    Hugh married Martha Sherar on 19 Nov 1800 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada. Martha was born on 22 Nov 1784 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 13 Jan 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jan 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 66. James Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Aug 1805 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 12 Aug 1828 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    2. 67. William Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Oct 1807 in St Peter, , New Brunswick, Canada; died on 25 Jul 1887 in Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts, USA.
    3. 68. Jane Maria Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Sep 1809 in St Peter, , New Brunswick, Canada; died on 13 Jul 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jul 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    4. 69. Anne Elizabeth Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Sep 1811 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 8 Feb 1913.
    5. 70. George Augustus Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Jun 1814 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; and died.
    6. 71. Alexander Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Jun 1816 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Feb 1837 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Feb 1837 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    7. 72. John Johnson Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Dec 1818 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Feb 1842 in Fredericton, York Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    8. 73. Elizabeth Lydia Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Sep 1821 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Aug 1839 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Aug 1839 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    9. 74. Mary Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 31 Dec 1823 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 20 Nov 1918 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    10. 75. Wallace Robert Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Jul 1828 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 4 Feb 1834 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    11. 76. Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Sep 1830 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 27 Jul 1870 in Barbados, , , West Indies.

  10. 15.  MunroMunro Descendancy chart to this point (4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1770 in , , , Scotland; and died.

    Notes:

    A female child under 12 years, daughter of Donald Munro, is listed as a dependant on the passenger list in 1784, on the settlement to New Carlisle.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996



Generation: 4

  1. 16.  Francois Philippe MountFrancois Philippe Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 13 Aug 1787 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 5 Aug 1847 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    WRIGHT, "Families de St Charles-sur-Richelieu T3 Comte St Hyacinthe 1741-1987" p. 496-7

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Francois married Celcote Lareau about 1825. Celcote was born about 1789; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 77. Louis Francois Edmond Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Feb 1826 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 28 Feb 1826 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    2. 78. Charlotte Celeste Celina Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Sep 1827 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    3. 79. Virginia Lucille Christie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Oct 1830 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 31 Oct 1830 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    4. 80. Jean Philippe Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Oct 1832 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 21 Oct 1832 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    5. 81. Francois Eugene Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Oct 1834 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 14 Oct 1834 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    6. 82. Emilie Octavie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Apr 1838 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 13 Apr 1838 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    7. 83. Elvire Leonie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Nov 1840 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 29 Nov 1840 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.
    8. 84. Pierre Auguste Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Sep 1845 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 Sep 1845 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

  2. 17.  Joseph Hugh MountJoseph Hugh Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 17 Feb 1790 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 29 Dec 1856 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; was buried on 31 Dec 1856 in St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  3. 18.  Mary MountMary Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1792; died on 6 Aug 1843; was buried on 9 Aug 1843.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Mary married Louis Duvert about 1810 in , , Québec, Canada. Louis was born in 1787; died on 19 Dec 1840. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 19.  Veronique Helene MountVeronique Helene Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 6 Mar 1794 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; died on 14 Apr 1858; was buried on 17 Apr 1858.

    Notes:

    !"Families de St-Charles-Sur-Richelieu, Comte St. Hyacinthe 1741-1987":
    Francois-Philippe Mount b. 13 Aug 1787 m. Angelique Gariepy
    Catherine Mount (ve) Louis-Francis-Jacques Genevay m 2nd:29 Sept 1835 Louis LaCoste (vf. Catherine de la Bruere of Boucherville.
    Mary Mount b. 1792 d. 6 Aug 1843 m. Louis Duvert b. 1787 d. 16 Dec 1840.
    Helene Mount b. 1793 d. 14 Apr 1858 m. Francois Chicou-Duvert b. 1789 d. 9 Aug 1841. Baptism, Marriage and Burial Records of Rev. John Bethune, Anglican Church: 1786 (pg. 113) "Philip Mount Surgeon was married to Christian Munro daughter of Capt John Munro of the late Royal Regiment of New York on the 29th Day of August" (1786).

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Veronique married Francis Chicou Duvert about 1815 in , , Québec, Canada. Francis was born in 1787; died on 9 Aug 1841. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  5. 20.  Philippe Henry MountPhilippe Henry Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 28 Jul 1795 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  6. 21.  Edward Henry MountEdward Henry Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 26 May 1797 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  7. 22.  Philip Auguste MountPhilip Auguste Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1798; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Philip married Angelique Gariepy in 1820. Angelique was born about 1800; died in 1878. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 85. Philippe Auguste Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Feb 1823 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened in in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; died on 28 Aug 1823 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada.
    2. 86. Marie Angelique Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 23 Feb 1823 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened in in St. Henri, Maschouche, L'assumption, Quebec; died in in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada.
    3. 87. Marie Josephine Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 May 1824 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 17 May 1824 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    4. 88. Adile Marie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Jun 1825 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 2 Jun 1825 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    5. 89. George Henry Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Dec 1826 in Mascouche, , Quebec, Canada; was christened on 20 Dec 1826 in St Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    6. 90. Caroline Marie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Mar 1828 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 4 Mar 1828 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; died on 6 Apr 1828 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried in Apr 1828 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec.
    7. 91. John William Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Aug 1829 in Mascouche, , Quebec, Canada; was christened on 6 Aug 1829 in St Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; died in 1899.
    8. 92. Theodore Wilfred Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 30 Jul 1830 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 30 Jul 1830 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    9. 93. Marguerite Virginia Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Jul 1832 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 8 Jul 1832 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    10. 94. Andre Etienne Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 24 Nov 1833 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 24 Nov 1833 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    11. 95. Helene Marie Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 13 Dec 1835 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 13 Dec 1835 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; and died.
    12. 96. Philippe Hector Mount  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Jun 1838 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 28 Jun 1838 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec; died on 2 Jul 1838 in Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 2 Jul 1838 in St. Henri, Mascouche, L'assumption, Quebec.

  8. 23.  Seraphim William MountSeraphim William Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 28 Apr 1799 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  9. 24.  Catherine Marie MountCatherine Marie Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 8 Apr 1800 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Catherine married Louis Francis Jacques Genevoy about 1810. Louis was born about 1798; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Catherine married Louis La Coste on 29 Sep 1835 in , , Québec, Canada. Louis was born about 1798; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  10. 25.  Christine Marie MountChristine Marie Mount Descendancy chart to this point (6.Christiana3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 19 Jun 1802 in St-Denis-sur-Richelieu, St. Hyacinthe Co., Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  11. 26.  Marie Olympe MunroMarie Olympe Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; died in 1793.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  12. 27.  Marie Charlotte MunroMarie Charlotte Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 13 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 15 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic.

    Notes:

    BIO:Charlotte died at age two.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996


  13. 28.  Marie-Angelique MunroMarie-Angelique Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 10 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 11 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 9 Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, St. Hyasinthe, Hotel D Churchyd.

    Notes:

    BIO:Notes from Vaudreul-Soulanges Museum:

    TBL: HUGH MUNRO b. 15 Oct 1764 m. to Angelique Leroux (widow of LaRocque) on 4 May 1893 by Hougenaut Minister, Delisle. Children: MARIA ANGELIQUE - b. Jan 1796, m. in Montreal to Capt Rodolphe Amere'die' de May, d'Uzistorf-Canton de Bein (Switzerland) Capt in Meirons. He died in Berne, Switzerland on 18 Feb 1848.

    TBL:DIED: 1861 on 9 March, at L'Hotel Dieu of St. Hyasinthe at 1:15 PM, Saturday 9 March, 1861 Maria Angelique Munro, widow of Capt Rudolphe Amedie'de May, d'Uzsitorf (Switzerland) of this city and was buried at the graveyard of the church at L'Hotel Dieu St. Hyasinthe. Age was 65 years.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Marie-Angelique married Rudolphe Amerede' De May in , , Montreal, Quebec. Rudolphe was born about 1794; died on 18 Feb 1848 in Berne, Switzerland. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  14. 29.  Marie-Charlotte MunroMarie-Charlotte Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1830.

    Notes:

    BIO:Note from French-Canadian Journal:

    TBL:........"his brother, much younger, Dr. Joseph LeDuc (1793-1829) graduated medicine in 18--, practiced at St. Roch L'Achigan, Montreal and finally at St. Polycarp where he died. He had married well, in 1819 in Montreal, Charlotte Munro (1798-1830), neice of her namesake the seigneuresse of Vaudreuil .... and daughter of Hugh Munro of St Esprit de Montcalm, Merchant, and of Angelique LeRoux (They married Montreal 1793). She had previously married in 1781 Francois Antoine Larocque (1753-92) who was elected deputy for L'Assumption in 1792 but dies prior to taking his seat."

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Marie-Charlotte married Joseph Leduc, M.D. on 15 Feb 1819 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Joseph was born on 3 Aug 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; died in 1829 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 97. Hermine Leduc  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1827; and died.

    Marie-Charlotte married Michel Borne on 22 Feb 1830 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Michel was born about 1795; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  15. 30.  Marie Lucie MunroMarie Lucie Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 11 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 12 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was buried on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Ch.

    Notes:

    BIO:Marie Lucie died at age of one month.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996


  16. 31.  Hugh Munro, Jr.Hugh Munro, Jr. Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 25 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1896 in Browning, Glacier Co., MT Blackfoot, Indian Res; was buried in 1896 in Holy Family Ceme, MT, Blackfoot Indian, Reservation.

    Notes:

    !An interesting addition to the preceding family group is the documentation of the life of Hugh Munro or "Rising Wolf" of the Blackfeet indians in the Centennial Canadian Issue (No. 10. 1967) of the Clan Munro Magazine from Scotland. J. W. Schultz wrote two books* on the life experiences of Rising Wolf (Hugh Munro) from direct acqauintace with him in his later years. Hugh states he spent his early years roaming the outdoors near his Quebec home, spending only enough time at his studies to learn to read and write. At 15 years of age he joined the Hudson Bay Company as an engage' and journeyed west. He never returned to eastern Canada or saw his family again.
    There are a number of his descendants among the Blackfeet Indians; a grandson, William Jackson, was a scout for Custer, later becoming a partner of the author Schultz.

    Schultz states in his narrative of Hugh Munro's second year with the Blackfeet (RED CROW'S BROTHER, James Willard Schultz, Houton Mifflin Co, 1927) the following about the Glacier Park area: ...We came to a beautiful lake, the second one of the lakes of Two Medicine Lodges River. At its head was a pine-clad, steep mountain which Red Crow said was named Rising Bull. It did have the appearance of the sharp back of a buffalo getting up onto its feet. (1) And just to the north of us was another and still higher mountain, of reddish rock, which was I-kot-ei Is-tuki (Red Mountain), one of the great peaks of the range. (2)

    (1) Later named Sin-o-pah-ki Is-tuk-i (Fox Woman Mountain). Fox Woman was the faithful wife of Rising Wolf (Hugh Munro) (2) In 1896, after our old friend died, and we buried him in the Two Medicine Valley and in sight of this mountain that he loved so well, we named it for him: Rising Wolf Mountain.

    George Bird Grinnell, who wrote many articles and books about his experiences with the Indians, also was also a friend of Hugh Munro. In his book PAWNEE,

    BLACKFOOT AND CHEYENNE (Scribner's 1913) he related the following about lakes in the Montana mountains (Glacier Park):
    This region is known throughout northern Montana as the St. Mary's Lake country. In a narrow valley running back into the mountains lie two great lakes, the upper about 12 miles long, and the lower seven. These are enlargements of the St Mary's River, a branch of the Saskatchewan. Here, forty-eight years ago (about 1837), Hugh Monroe [sic], a devout Catholic, assisted by a party of Kootenai Indians, set up on the shores of the lower lake a great cross made of two pine trees, and called the lakes St. Mary's.

    BIO:HUGH MUNRO, JR - HIS EARLY YEARS IN L'ASSUMPTION

    BIO:LA PAROISE DE L'ASSUMPTION - REPERTOIRE DES BAPTISMES 1724-1800 Publication # 17 (1981) LaCentre de Genealogie S.C. Ottawa, Canada Children of Hugh and Angelique Munro:

    TBL:#6318 MUNRO, HUGH Born: 25 Aug 1799 Baptised: 26 Aug 1799

    BIO:BAPTISMS, MARRIAGES AND SEPULCURES of PAROISE St. Surplise, L'Assumption de la Vierge Marie, de Montcalm, Quebec; diocese of Montreal, Quebec. (1724-1876) Mf # 1018241, SLC, UT 1994 VBM

    TBL:BAPTISM: de Hugues Munro: Le vingt Six Aout mil Sept Cent quatre vingt dix neuf par moi Fretere Soussigne a ete Baptiste hughes ne' hier de legitime Mariage de Monsieur hughes Munro, Merchand et da Dame Angelique Leroux les fere et Mere de cette Paroisse. Le Larein a ete' Monsieur Charles Dorion et la Mareine Marguerite Dorion. Les quels out Signe avec vour ainvique le Fere present. deap mot interlique's et deux ralure valable. [Signed] Hugh Munro Charles Dorion Marguerite Dorion

    *James Willard Schultz, "Rising Wolf, The White Blackfoot: Hugh Munroe's Story of His First Year On The Plains", "Red Crow's Brother: Hugh Munroe's Story of His Second Year On The Plains", Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston, N.Y., 1919 & 1927. In 1951 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer released part of his story adapted as the Western "Across The Wide Missouri" with John Hodiak as Hugh Munro.

    BIO:Biographical information of Hugh Munro is mainly contained in the volumes on the Blackfeet Indians written by James Willard Schultz who was a contemporary of Hugh in the last two decades of his life. Schultz describes Hugh as: "slender, but not tall with brown hair and blue eyes." (The blue eyes are a legacy still seen in various present descendants!) He records the following from his conversations with Hugh "Rising Wolf":

    TBL:NOTE:Biographical data provided by J.W.Schultz has proved grossly inacurate in some areas. It must be kept in mind that Schultz was a "story-teller" and consigned his recollections to paper long after Hugh Munro had died. Some of his narrations are "composites" of experiences written in a manner to provide a a free flowing story.

    TBL:Hugh was born in the Three Rivers area of Quebec where his father, Capt. Hugh Munro of the British Army was associated with his mother's family in business.
    His mother was of a noted family of French emegres' and her father owned a fine mansion in Montreal as well as a large estate in the Three Rivers area where they lived. His childhood days were quiet enough as he played with the peasant children. A Jesuit Father, residing with the Leroux household, taught Hugh a smattering of reading and writing in both French and English. The gift of a light smooth-bore gun was a turning point in his young life. From that time on he spent most of his time hunting in the forest surrounding the settlement. At age 12 he killed his first deer; at 13 he shot two black bears. An old pensioner of his mother, a half-breed Montagnais Indian, too old and feeble to do much for himself, taught him to trap beaver, otter, fox, fisher, martin and mink. Every spring his grandfather sold the pelts for him in Montreal for a good price.
    In the autumn of 1812, during the months of the War, his grandfather sent for them to live with him in Montreal. Hugh disliked city life as he could neither hunt nor trap, and he did not understand the "town boys" whose interests were so unlike his own. Mornings he had to attend the parish school, but afternoons he escaped to row on the river or visit in the warehouses of the Hudson Bay Company with which his grandfather was affiliated. There he met voyageurs and trappers from far places. They presented a exotic picture with their buckskin clothes, fur caps and colorful beaded moccasins. He became fast friends of both the French and English factions and spent many happy hours listening to their tales of wild adventures, of fights with Indians, encounters with fierce bears of the Far West, and of the perils of canoe trips on madly running rivers. He began to beg his family to let him join "The Company" and go West.

    BIO:Young Hugh would have been living in a "family of women" at L'Assumption. He was preceeded in birth by five sisters [two surviving] and followed by another two sisters and only one brother - five years his junior. He would have had every opportunity to taste the excitement of the voyageurs, fur trappers and traders from even his own front doorstep. L'Assumption lies in a noted horeshoe bend of the l'Assumption River and the canoes were all beached at one end of l'Assumption's main street - Rue la portage'-, carried up the street and launched again at the other end. Fronting on the upper portage landing were all the commercial establishments of this important trading town: the Custom House, the North West Fur Offices, and all the merchant establishments serving the area. Little wonder that this first son of Hugh and Angelique, who was a notorious "truant" from the classroon - by his own admission "not a scholar" - begged early and long until he finally convinced his parents to let him join the furtrading adventure !

    BIO:His father finally agreed saying: "He is obviously born for the adventurous life, and nothing else, so we may as well let him begin now and grow up to a responsible position with the company." His mother shed many tears but finally agreed to let him go after securing a promise from him that he would return for a visit at the end of his 5 year indenture. Angelique spent many tearful hours sewing and packing his clothing, and assembling a kit that included a razor for a lad too young yet to need to shave ! She slipped a Missal between his shirts and prayed for his safe return. Hugh, ever the practical Scot, handed his son a pair of dependable flint-lock pistols, and followed them up with a few basic rules from the " Army rank and file" to help keep him out of the worst troubles and temptations. "Just remember your heritage and depend on it," he admonished. "You are a Scot and a MUNRO. For centuries Munros have been courageous adventurers and Highland warriors. You have that courage - you will do well."

    BIO:FROM MONTREAL TO ROCKY MOUNTAIN FORT WITH THE HUDSON BAY COMPANY
    BIO:Very early on the morning of May 3rd, 1814, almost four months short of his sixteenth birthday, he signed his Articles of Appreticeship to the Hudson Bay Company for five years at 20 pounds per year. As the heavily loaded canoes bobbed beside the quay Hugh endured the tearful kisses of his mother and her admonitions to remember his prayers. The proud Scottish father could only gaze into the bright blue eyes so like his own, grip the hand of his young son and mutter, "Keep your nose clean and your hair on !" before Hugh scrambled aboard the wallowing canoe. As they turned out into the river and the voyageurs sang and dug in their paddles Hugh waved and watched until the little knot of figures on the quay faded from view, little knowing that he would never see Montreal or his family again.

    BIO:There were five boats in the flotilla, each one loaded with 4 to 5 tons of goods for the Indian trade. Everything was done up in waterproof packages of 100 pounds each. The heavy goods were mostly guns, powder and balls, and flints, tobacco, beads, beaver traps, brass and copper wire, axes, copper and brass kettles of various sizes, and small hand mirrors. The lighter goods were blankets, woolen cloth, needles, awls, thread, and trinkets to strike the Red Man's fancy. It was not a very valuable cargo in Montreal but at Mountain Fort in the Rocky Mountains it was of enormous value. There a gun was worth sixty beaver pelts, and even a twist of tobacco sold for two beaver skins !

    BIO:The voyageurs paddled up the St. Lawrence River and turned into the Ottawa River which they ascended as far as it was navigable. They then portaged the boats from lake to lake until, early in September, they arrived at York Factory on the Saskatchewan River close to Hudson Bay. There they wintered and set out again as soon as the ice went out in the spring. At last, on the 10th of July, 1815, after many weary days of rowing and cordelling up the swift Saskatchewan River, they arrived at Mountain Fort. The fort biuldings, built of logs and roofed with poles and earth, were in a heavily timbered bottom above the high-water mark of the river. It was enclosed in a high, log stockade with a bastion on one corner in which there were two small cannon. It was later to be known as BOW FORT as the stream it was on was a main tributary of the Saskatchewan River known as the Bow River. [This location is now near Calgary, Alberta, Canada.]

    BIO:Camped in the vicinity and milling about the grounds of the Fort were thousands of Indians awaiting the annual arrival of the company's flotilla of boats loaded with trade goods. There were three tribes of the Blackfoot Confederacy as well as Gros-Ventures and Saksikas making over 30,000 Indians at the fort. Hugh saw the smoke curling from countless numbers of tall tan tipis through the roiling dust created by the mounted Indian riders yiping around the camp area, and the children racing about in play. He was speachless with excitement and fascination as he viewed the exotic scene - even more wonderful than any of his wildest imaginations !

    BIO:Hugh was acknowledged by James Hardesty and immediately put to work inside the Trading Post. First the cargo had to be unloaded and inventoried into the proper books, bundles, barrels and bins. Then the long days of trading began. From dawn to dark Hugh fetched, weighed, counted and carried. The factor and clerks took the furs, examined them for condition and grade and tallied them. Then the bargaining and trade began with the Indian through the interpreter. As items were chosen they were piled upon the counter after many comments and examination and fingering of the available goods. With silent wives and eager children looking on, the transaction is finally completed and the brave packs up and leaves as another takes his place.

    BIO:To Hugh the days seem endless. He toils away in the dimly lit back rooms preparing stock and delivering items to the counter. Hardesty and the clerks leave little opportunity for him to watch the bargaining and trade, or interact with the Indians waiting in the store. After dark there are still furs to stack and bundle for the long voyage to Montreal. He thinks about the thousands of tipis camped along the river and wonders if he will ever get out into the day light again ! This was not what he had bargained for ! He thought he would be outdoors among the trappers and Indians, and able to live and hunt in the wild. How could he possibly spend the next five long years of his life doing this ?

    BIO:In desperation he finally manages to find time between duties to escape outside occasionally and talk with the post interpreters and employees. In hunting and trapping they soon found he was not the "greenhorn" they had expected, and recognized his keen interest in the Indians. Hugh had a good ear for languages and was quick to pick up the universally used sign language of the Indians and traders. They quickly began to take him on their evening "visiting rounds" among the Indians at the camp. Soon Hugh was able to go alone and found several Indian youths near his age that he could "talk" to. He began to spend most of his free time with Red Crow, a member of the Small Robes band. Hugh envied Red Crow's freedom to hunt and trap and his nomadic life, as well as his large hospitable family.

    The Hudson's Bay Company was eager to expand fur trading with these tribes, but suffered by a lack of interpreters of the Blackfoot tongue. The Blackfoot Confederation did not allow encroachment on their traditional hunting and trapping areas by white trappers or other tribes. They "discouraged" tresspassing by hunting down and killing any outsiders found in their territory.

    BIO:Factor James Hardesty was quick to note Hugh's interest in the Indians as well as his eagerness to be out doors. He also watched the growing friendship with Red Crow and saw an opportunity that would be of benefit to both "The Company" and the Blackfoot. Hardesty had often thought that the ideal way to stabilize his fur trading relationship with the elusive Blackfeet would be to send a white trapper or agent to live and travel with them and learn their language. So far he had not been able to suggest this possibility to any of his agents or employees for two reasons. First, he had noone who would be willing to embark on what they would consider a virtual death sentance as a tresspasser into Blackfoot country ! And second, the Blackfoot were so aloof that a suggestion of this kind could be mistaken in it's intent, and he would break his tenous trading hold on them and lose them to the North West Company.

    BIO:Despite his proclivity to join the Indians Hugh was bound by his contract with the Hudson Bay Company, and soon settled into the annual acivities and routines of the forts. He thrived on the expeditions and trips into the wilds and endured his time within the company forts. The following summarizes his experiences during his sojourn with Hudson's Bay.

    TBL:Hugh Munro entered the service of the Hudson's Bay company and was appointed apprentice in the Edmonton District. His "parish" was entered in the company books as "Canada."
    During the summer of 1816 he was at Carlton House under John Peter Pruden. In the fall of 1818 he traveled with Francis Heron from Carlton House to Edmonton House and apparently spent the winter of 1818-19 there. In May 1819 Heron left William Flett in charge of Edmonton House with Munroe as one of his assistants. At the end of outfit 1818-19 Heron reported Munro as being "not of much use at present, but may be of some service hereafter." Munro remained at Edmonton except for short excursions to the Beaver River and Acton House (the post in opposition to Rocky Mountain House of the North West Company), until January 19, 1820 when he was sent to Summer Berry (Pembina) River to remain there until spring. On May 4, 1820 he arrived at Edmonton House having been directed to abandon the post at Pembina River since the Indians were leaving that quarter. From the middle of May until nearly the end of November Munro was stationed at Acton House; on his return he remained at Edmonton House until February 19, 1821 when he was sent to Carlton House for supplies, returning March 30.
    Later in the spring he was at Moose Lake where he remained until June 4. He spent the summer in various short expeditions from Edmonton House to Pembina River and Moose Lake. On September 8 he started from Edmonton for Moose Lake, but this post was abandoned shortly afterwards in favor of Dog Rump Creek House, situated about three miles above old Buckingham House. Munro apparently served at Dog Rump Creek House under Patrick Small, returning to Edmonton House on April 28, 1822 with letters "from several parts of the country."
    On June 5, 1822 Munro arrived at Carlton House from Edmonton. From there he was sent to Cumberland House on July 28 in order to join the Bow River expedition. He was recorded in Bow River accounts 1822-23 as a clerk with a family of one. In the spring of 1823 he was sent with the Piegans to learn thei language and began his long sojourn with the Piegans.

    BIO:Between the Saskatchewan and the Missouri Rivers Hugh camped and hunted over a great stretch of country that no white man had ever seen. At the Falls of the Missouri River he crossed the trail of Lewis and Clark; between the Missouri an Yellowstone River traveled country not yet seen by whites. Through his efforts
    the Piegans made peace with the Crows and persuaded them to go north to Mountain Fort to trade their winter furs. Hugh and the Piegans returned to the fort in the New Grass Moon - April, 1824. During Hugh's second year with the Piegans they hunted and trapped in the area now included in Glacier National Park. There he saw the "Lakes Inside" and mountains held sacred to the Blackfeet. And so Hugh fulfilled his contract with Hudson Bay and then became a "free trapper," returning to the post during the trading season as interpreter and occasional employee.

    BIO: George Bird Grinnell relates the following story told by Hugh:

    TBL:"I was often detailed by the Hudson's Bay Company to go out in charge of a number of men, to kill meat for the fort. When the ground was full of holes and wash-outs, so that running was dangerous, I used to put on a big timber wolf"s skin, which I carried for the purpose, tying it at my neck and waist, and then to sneak up on the buffalo. I used a bow and arrows, and generally shot a number without alarming them. If one looked suspiciously at me, I would howel like a wolf. Sometimes the smell of the blood from the wounded and dying would set the bulls crazy. They would run up and lick the blood, and sometimes toss the dead ones clear from the ground. Then they would bellow and fight each other, sometimes goring one another so badly that they died. The great bulls, their tongues covered with blood, their eyes flashing, and tails sticking out straight, roaring and fighting, were terrible to see; and it was a little dangerous for me, because the commotion would attract buffalo from all directions to see what was going on. At such times I would signal to my men, and they would ride up and scare the buffalo away."

    Bio:No record has been found of the origin of Hugh's Pikuni name "Rising Wolf." Among the animals especially respected among the Blackfeet and supposed to have great power, are the buffalo, the bear, the raven, the wolf, the beaver and the kit-fox. The wolves were the people's great friends; they traveled with the people.If a person was hungry and sang a wolf song, he was likely to find food. Men going on a hunting trip sang these songs, which would bring them good luck. The Blackfeet had great belief in visions and dreams, and an animal coming to a man in his dream with a message important to his life, was then regarded as his special protector.

    BIO:In 1922 Schultz recorded this narrative by Frank Munroe, son of Rising Wolf:

    TBL:My father was "iksatosim." ("Of the sun." Or, "great medicine.") Soon after he took my mother for his woman, before any of us children were born, he one night had a powerful vision. A wolf came to him and said, "I am chief of these great plains, and I have taken a liking to you; therefore I am going to tell you how to make something that will preserve you in times of danger. Go and get the tail feathers of an owl, skins of weasels and minks, and make a war bonnet." In his dream he collected the feathers and skins and made the bonnet, but it did not please the wolf; he took it apart, rearranged the materials, singing all the time as he put it together. When he was satisfied with his work, he put the bonnet on my father and walked around and around him, looking at it, still singing, and at last said, "There, it is as I wanted it. This will preserve you from the enemy; you and any relative or friend to whom you may lend it. And do not forget this, my song that goes with it, and which you are to sing when you put the bonnet on and face danger. However, your possession of the bonnet, just your having it near you, in your lodge, on your person or your horse when travelling, will itself protect you from the enemy." My father's shadow came back into his body. He awoke and thought about his wonderful vision and then woke Fox Woman and told her about it and she was glad. "Sun is kind! He has pitied you; he has caused his child, Chief Wolf, to give you the one thing you need to become a warrior of our tribe ! Make the bonnet at once, so that I may no longer fear for your safety when you go out to hunt and trap."
    My father made the bonnet, just as his vision had directed, and kept singing the song over and over until he knew he would not forget it. He carried that bonnet in a painted and fringed rawhide cylinder that he made, and as Chief Wolf had predicted, it helped him safely through many a place where his life was in danger. Time and again he lent it to my grandfather, Lone Walker, and Three Suns, my uncle, and they wore it on raids against the enemy, and with great success. In his old age he gave it to Three Suns; it is now in Three Suns' grave, down below here on the Two Medicine River.

    BIO:Frank also related how the sign of Rising Wolf protected them from attack by friendly Indians in many campsites during their trapping and traveling days. Once when Frank was only eight or nine years old Rising Wolf left the Pikuni camp on the Bear River and came north to the Two Medicine Lodge country to trap beaver. They had set up camp in a grove of cottonwoods and his brother, Little Wolf (John), was driving the horses to the ridge to graze for the night. Suddenly, a gun boomed, and a bullet struck a tree in front of him. As soon as he called for help the shooter called out in good Pikuni that he was a friend. They embraced his brother and came down to the lodge where they were welcomed by his father. The friendly Kooteni Indians apologized for mistaking their camp for that of some Cree Indians. After eating and smoking they suggested that Rising Wolf mark the trail to his camp and surrounding trees with his sign to prevent friendly indians from mistaking him for an enemy. The following morning his father blazed trees along the trail and around the camp, and on the white surface painted in black the sign for his name: a man and a wolf rising. And thereafter he did that at every camp that they made, and so more than once saved them from attack from war parties of tribes that were friendly to them.

    BIO:"When we had grown a little older, my brother and I made the name signs for him. My brother was angry because I could make the best signs. They were like this":

    PICTURE:20F*Drawing by Heavy Eyes of Rising Wolf's Name Painting

    BIO:Although documentation is scarce and scattered, various records for Hugh and his family show that for the next fifty years he roamed the western wilderness with the Piegans, ranging from below the Yellowstone to the far north of present Edmonton, Canada. Sometime in the 1820's he married - according to Indian custom - Sinopah (Kit Fox Woman) daughter of Lone Walker, Chief of the Piegans and Small Robes Band. Together they raised at least seven children in the Indian community and were successful in living through the epidemics of smallpox, scarlet fever, "coughing fever," starvation winters and intertribal warfare that decimated the tribes. The lack of documentation of Hugh's life depended a great deal on the seclusion of the Blackfeet from white intervention until the 1855 "Lame Bull Treaty" which first opened their living area and hunting grounds to white men and the Army.

    BIO:Early records of the Blackfeet Nation did not include a census or name list until 1888 when all United States Blackfeet were confined to the designated reservation in Montana, and the Northern Piegans were required to live north of "The Line" (49th parallel) in Canada. Even those early records of the Indian Agency are sketchy and incomplete with no birth and death documentation. The Jesuits kept records for the Missions and schools but most early records of the Jesuits were destroyed in at least two disasters: once when lost in the sinking of a boat, and secondly when the Mission Church at St. Mary's Mission in the Okanogan valley burned. Other records were inadvertantly destroyed with some obsolete notes and papers. While some of his children were eventually listed on the Blackfoot Rolls, Hugh (as a white man) was not enrolled or named on the Indian census.

    BIO:Occassional glimpses of Hugh occur in writings of western adventurers and U.S. Government records. He meets Sacajawea, guide to Lewis & Clark, in the late 1820's. He befriends and trades with James Kipp in the 1830's and knew George Catlin, Prince Maxmilian and the artist, Karl Bodmer. Among others his friends among the Mountain Men were Jin Bridger, Kit Carson, Johnson, and Peter Ogden. He guided the Jesuits, Father Lacombe and Father DeSmet, in their travels among the Blackfeet in the 1840's and 1850's.

    BIO:At one time or another he is associated with the Hudson's Bay Company, the North West Company, the Missouri Fur Company and the American Fur Company as well as trapping as a "free trapper." He is a friend of Alexander Culbertson, James Dawson, Kenneth Mackenzie and other Factors, as well as a succession of Indian Agents. He was known and respected at Forts Rocky Mountain House, Bow, Union, Lewis, Benton, Belnap, Shaw, MacKenzie, McLeod and Carson. He also eventually made and maintained a friendship with tribesmen of the Blood, Gros Venture, Siksika, Crow, Cree, Sarsi, Kootenai, Pen d'Orille, and Flathead Indians, and shared their hunting and trapping grounds.

    BIO:As a Christian and devout Catholic he erected a cross at St. Mary's Lakes with Father Lacombe, and yet is known for his respect of the Blackfoot religion. His children and descendants were known as "some of the more Christian of the mixed-blood families of the Reservation." He acknowledges that he believes in "dreams" that are warnings of events, and carried a "war bonnet" that he was convinced had protected him on several occassions.

    BIO:In 1865 he is the "Post Hunter" at Fort Benton, and in 1887 is reported as living in Canada and at Fort McLeod. Late in his life he relates his life experiences to George Bird Grinnell and James Willard Schultz.

    BIO:By 1880 the buffalo had virtually disappeared from the Great Plains, and the Blackfeet became dependant on beef rations and U.S. Government supplies. Hugh makes the difficult transition to reservation living, spending time with his children and grandchildren in areas on the Two Medicine River, the Marias and areas included in the present Glacier National Park.

    BIO:Hugh always intended to keep his promise to return to Montreal to visit his parents, but somehow it was just never a good time to be gone so far away. He procrastinated from year to year. Then word arrived that his father had died, and his brothers said he should come East to help settle the estate and his inheritance. Once again Hugh just could not leave - now it was because of his wife and new baby. Across the long miles finally came the papers for him to sign to provide directions in administrating the land he had inherited.

    BIO:After living with the Pikuni Hugh had his own ideas about the land, who owned it - or even IF it should be owned ! He signed the papers to accommodate his brothers, Horatio Munro and Francois LaRocque, and told them to do as they liked with the land as he had no use for it. After all, he freely roamed over hundreds of square miles, he had no need to "own" a few square feet in Ontario!

    BIO:Again Hugh felt guilty about his promise to his now widowed mother. Still he procrastinated - it was the wrong time of year - Fox Woman needed him - there was another new baby to look after - they had to have the income from this season of trapping - he couldn't leave the Fort without an interpreter.... Then, long months after the actual occurance, word arrived at Fort Benton that his mother was already gone - at rest these many months in her d'Esneval tomb. He sighed, and yet was relieved. Now he had no reason to go East, and he need never again have to consider taking that long trip back to Montreal.

    BIO:RETIREMENT ON THE BLACKFOOT RESERVATION

    BIO:Glimpses of Hugh's life were recorded in the Hudson Bay records. After several years as a free trapper Hugh again enlisted as an "interpreter" at Bow Fort and Rocky Mountain House in 1832-34; his family now consisting of 1 woman, 3 boys and 1 girl. From 1837-1844 he is again engaged at Edmonton House, and later it is reported he was again in Edmonton but left in 1870 and returned to Montana. In 1888 he was at Fort McLeod where he was the subject of letters from Father Lacomb to HBC discussing his "infermity and destitution." Family recods show that Hugh spent most oif his last years in Montana, often living with his grandson, William Jackson. With his advancing rhumatism the last years are quiet ones for Hugh as he spends the long summers in the sun within sight of his beloved mountains, and the winters before the cabin fire. Finally, in 1896, in his 97th year, Hugh is also delivered of his earthly cares and laid to rest in the fields beside the Holy Family Mission Church and overlooking the Two Medicine River, only a short distance from the great "buffalo jump" where he and the Pikuni so often drove the buffalo. Although no stome marks his grave, no visitor to this lonely spot would deny that his spirit lingers on in the soft moaning of the prairie wind.

    BIO:The best marker and memorial of his long life among his beloved Piegans in the western wilderness is the tall, red wedge of mountain towering over Two Medicine Lodges Lake and valley bearing the name "Rising Wolf." Nearby to the south lies the mountain named "Sinopahki Istuki" - Kit Fox Woman Mountain - for his faithful Piegan wife.

    TBL:[NOTE: In the forward to Warren Hanna's JAMES WILLARD SHULTZ, RECENTLY DISCOVERED TALES OF LIFE AMONG THE INDIANS (Mountain Press Pub, Missoula MT, 1988) Hanna relates that most of Schultz's works were written and published AFTER 1904 (when he fled from Montana to avoid a poaching charge)and eventually relocated in Southern California. Of MY LIFE AS AN INDIAN, Shultz's most popular work, Hanna states: "The title suggests an autobiography, but it was in fact a romatic novel centered upon his wife and their life together." Shultz was nearly 50 when his first book was published in 1907 and did not take up "full-time" writing until about 1912 - long after the death of Rising Wolf and his grandson William Jackson. Research in legal records has proved that dates and other details in Shultz's biographical narratives may be in error, although the general substance of these works is truthfully protrayed. VBM]

    BIO: TIME LINE HISTORY OF THE BLACKFOOT INDIAN CONFEDERACY

    TBL:1730 First horses seen by Blackfeet, being ridden by Shoshoni warriors.
    First guns also seen, used by Crees and Assiniboines. Arrival of first
    trade goods such as glass beads and metal arrowheads. 1780 HUDSON BAY COMPANY builds Buckingham House along the Saskatchewan River;
    first trading post close to Blackfoot country. 1781 Smallpox epidemic strikes Blackfoot camps for first time; over half the
    population dies. The disease was picked up when Blackfoot warriors raided
    a very sick Shoshoni camp in the Bow River country. 1784 The NORTH WEST COMPANY of independant fur traders and trappers moves into
    Blackfoot country to compete with Hudson Bay Company. Guns, knives, axes
    and arrowheads began replacing primitive weapons. Blankets, materials,
    pots and awls helped to make Blackfoot tribal household life easier.
    Tobacco, beads and paints became first luxury items. 1787 David Thompson, of the Hudson Bay Company, becomes the first trader to
    winter with the Blackfoot (Piegans) along the Bow River. All these early
    trade encounters took place in Canada. 1794 Economy: 14 Beaver pelts = 1 trade gun
    1 Beaver pelt = 20 rounds of shot with powder
    30 Beaver pelts = 1 large keg of "Blackfoot Rum," made by
    mixing 4 or 5 quarts of pure alcohol with
    about 7 gallons of water. 1799 Rocky Mountain House built by North West Company, west of Edmonton,
    Alberta, becoming main Blackfoot trading center for some years. 1806 Piegans meet part of Lewis & Clark expedition in their territory, now in
    Montana. Fight breaks out and one Piegan is killed, starting bad
    relationship between Blackfeet and American white men. 1809 Economy: 1 common horse = 1 gal. "Blackfoot Rum," 2 fathoms of twist
    tobacco, 20 balls with powder, 1 awl, 1 scalper, 1
    fleshing knife, 1 gun worm, 1 P.C. glass, 1 fire
    steel, and 1 flint.
    Richest Piegan in that year said to own 300 horses.
    Population estimate: Lodges Warriors Persons
    Piegan ......... 350 700 2,800
    Siksika ........ 200 520 1,600
    Kainah ......... 100 200 800 1815 A 17 year old boy from Montreal named Hugh Munro becomes the first "white
    Blackfoot" marrying SINOPAH, the daughter of Piegan Chief LONE WALKER, of
    the Small Robes Band and learning the life
    of her people. He remained with the Blackfeet near Browning, Montana,
    until his death in 1896, being survived by many descendants. 1819 "Coughing" epidemic - one third die. 1821 Missouri Fur Company sends American trappers into Blackfoot country for
    furs. Piegans resent their intrusion, saying they stole the furs and
    traded guns to enemies, besides. A large war party annihilates most of
    the trappers in an ambush before the first year is through. 1823 Population estimate: Siksika...500 lodges Blood...300 lodges
    Piegans...550 lodges Total...10,800 persons 1831 James Kipp, of the American Fur Company, befriends the Blackfeet and
    offers to trade for their furs, rather than sending trappers out after
    it. They agree to let him build Fort Piegan on the Missouri River in
    their territory. The first few days of trade brought in 6,450 pounds of
    beaver, which his company sold for $46,000. The Bloods did not like
    this, so they burned the post down after the trading season was finished. 1832 Blood head Chief Bull's-Back-Fat brings the first delegation of his
    people to Fort Union in Assiniboin country, where they make peace with
    that tribe. George Catlin becomes the first white man to paint Blackfeet,
    calling them "perhaps the most powerful tribe of Indians on the
    continent." Catlin estimated 500 lodges of Piegans, with the Small Robes
    Band as the largest with 250 lodges. 1833 German Prince Maxmilian spends late summer with the Blackfeet. Estimates
    Confederacy population at 18,000 to 20,000. The Prince and artist, Karl
    Bodmer , witness an immense battle between Piegans and Cree and
    Assiniboin warriors, ending peace. Piegans eventually win fight although
    with heavy losses. 1835 Blackfeet bring 9,000 Buffalo robes to trade at new Fort McKenzie, 32
    days travel by boat, upriver, from Fort Union, at the junction of the
    Missouri and Marias River. 1837 Smallpox again strikes the Blackfeet, arriving with infected people and
    clothing aboard a steamboat. Two thirds of the Confederacy is said to
    have died. Over 10,000 buffalo robes were brought in for trade the next
    winter. A frontier journal from that year notes that 40 to 50
    independant trappers were being killed in Blackfoot country each year. 1841 Blackfeet brought in 21,000 robes for trade. Some Indian hunters became
    eager for trade goods start killing buffalo for hides. Professional
    white hunters kill even greater numbers of buffalo, mainly for tongues and
    hides. Father DeSmet baptized first Blackfeet to Christianity. 1844 Good relations between Blackfeet and traders break off after troubles lead
    one trader to fire a cannon into an innocent group of Piegans, killing 10
    and wounding others. 1845 Another smallpox epidemic strikes the Blackfeet. 1846 Fifty families of Small Robes band of Piegans wiped out by Crow attack,
    ending this group's often independant journeys, sometimes in company of
    the Flathead tribe. Blackfeet bring another 21,000 buffalo robes to trade
    to the new Fort Lewis, near the later Fort Benton. Head trader is
    Alexander Culbertson who is married to Medicine Snake Woman, daughter of
    Blood head chief. 1847 Culbertson moves Fort Lewis 3 miles down and across the Missouri River,
    renaming it Fort Benton. This becomes the most important trading center
    in Montana. Supplies travel 2,415 miles upriver by steamboat from St.
    Louis. Economy: 1 Buffalo robe = 25 loads ammunition, a gallon kettle,
    three knives, or 1 1/2 yds. of calico.
    3 Buffalo robes = 2 1/2 point wool blanket
    10 Buffalo robes = 1 trade gun (cost $4. back East) 1853 Observers wrote that the "quantity of buffalo is almost unbelievable,"
    and that "the entire country of the Blackfeet perhaps the best Buffalo
    Country in the N.W." Gov. I.I. Stevens meets head men of the Blackfoot
    Confederacy on behalf of the U.S. Government and proposes a great peace
    council to end war between the tribes, and to guarantee peace between the
    Blackfeet and the whites. Chiefs agree to council.
    Population estimates: Lodges Persons Warriors
    Blood.............. 270 2,430 810
    Siksika ........... 290 2,600 870
    South Piegan ...... 200 1,800 600
    North Piegan ...... 90 800 270 1855 "Lame Bull Treaty" signed by 26 principle chiefs of the Blackfoot
    Confederacy defines tribal territories and proclaims peace between the
    tribes and the U.S. Government. "Major" Edwin Hatch becomes first
    Blackfoot Indian agent, with an office at Fort Benton. 1856 Major Hatch writes first annual report; reports he gave out treaty
    annuities to about 8,000 Indians. 1857 "Major" Vaughn becomes second Blackfoot agent - the only one for many
    years with good relationship with people. 1858 Agent Vaughn recommends government prohibition of trade in Buffalo robes
    to prevent senseless slaughter of the animals. The suggestion is ignored
    by everyone. 1859 Jesuits build first mission in American Blackfoot country, St. Peter's,
    near Choteau, Montana. Indians show some interest in these unuaual
    spiritual ways, but are still 100 percent devoted to their own faith.
    Missionaries plan to wipe out old Indian ways, while Indians only want
    Christian prayers as added blessings to what they already have. Father
    Lacombe is first missionary among Canadian Blackfeet, having arrived in
    1855. Agent Vaughn supervises first Blackfoot "farm," with limited
    success. 1861 Long-time alliance between Blackfeet and Gros Ventures ends when an enemy
    group steals horses from Gros Ventures and leaves some at Piegan camp,
    leading Gros Ventures to believe the Piegans stole them. 1862 Montana Gold Rush brings illegal miners to foothills of Rockies, well
    within hunting grounds reserved for Blackfeet by 1855 Treaty. Small,
    bloody encounters become frequent. 1863 Blackfeet see neither Agent nor annuities promised by 1855 Treaty. New
    Agent arrives at very end of year, describes Blackfeet as "degraded
    savages." Things get worse and liquor flows more freely. 1864 Scarlet Fever kills an estimated 1,000 Blackfeet. 1865 U.S. Government persuades a small group of leaders from Blackfoot
    Confederacy to sign a later unratified Treaty reducing official Blackfoot
    country by well over 2,000 square miles, in return for about one million
    dollars. Blackfeet and whites murder each other, even within Fort Benton.
    Governor of Montana fears war is imminent and helps plan military action
    against the Blackfeet, who avoid conflict by moving North into Canada. 1866 American whiskey traders driven out of Montana into lawlwss Alberta area,
    where they build Fort Stand Off and other liquor posts, increasing
    problems. North Piegan war party burns down Blackfoot agency farm on Sun
    River. Nearby Jesuit mission is abandoned. Head Chief Little Dog, and
    son, murdered by drunken Piegans near Fort Benton for being too friendly
    with whites. Economy: 1 buffalo robe = 2 tin cups whiskey
    1 fast horse = 4 gallons of whiskey 1867 Fort Shaw on Sun River becomes first U.S. Army post in Blackfoot country,
    near new Blackfoot agency. 1869 Smallpox epidemic kills 2,000 Blackfeet. Popular Montana rancher Matcolm
    Clarke is killed by relatives of his Blackfoot wife, leading to cries for
    revenge. 1870 Major Baker leads large cavalry force from Fort Shaw to arrest killers of
    Clarke. In the depths of winter they attack the wrong Piegan camp and
    kill 173 people, mostly women and children. This only armed conflict
    between Blackfeet and U.S. troops becomes known as the "Baker Massacre."
    The last large intertribal battle takes place near Lethbridge, Alberta,
    when Cree and Assiniboin forces attack a Blood camp on the Belly River,
    not realizing that angry and well-armed Piegan "reugees" from the Montana
    troubles are camped nearby. Attackers lose between 200 and 300 men. 1871 U.S. Congress declares end of treaty-making with Indian tribes and
    nations. Ranchers begin raising cattle along the Sun River, claiming the
    Blackfeet have too much land. 1873 U.S. Government arbitrarily moves southern boundary of Blackfoot country
    north by 200 miles, thowing open a huge piece of territory for
    settlement. Blackfeet are neither consulted nor paid. 1874 Mounted Police detachment brings law and order to Canadian Blackfoot
    country and builds Fort Macleod. Northern buffalo herd estimated at four
    million head, roaming Blackfoot country and centering around Sweet Grass
    Hills. 1876 New Blackfoot agency built on Badger Creek, within new reduced
    reservation in Montana. Blackfeet reject tobacco sent by Souix, asking
    them to join in battle against whites, after Custer's defeat. I.G.Baker of
    Fort Benton ships 75,000 buffalo robes to the East. Ranchers and settlers
    begin to arrive in Canadian Blackfoot territory. 1877 Treaty Seven is signed at Blackfoot Crossing in Canada. Siksika, Bloods
    and North Piegans separate from South Piegans and the U.S.Government,
    although members from all divisions continue to go back and forth across
    the border for some years, to collect treaty goods and payments. 1879 Buffalo virtually disappear from Canadian prairies, forcing government to
    issue beef rations to Canadian Blackfeet for first time. South Piegans
    make last great buffalo hunt in Judith Basin country of Montana. 1881 Mange epidemic said to have killed about half of Piegan horses, making
    younger warriors eager to raid enemy camps, in spite of peace treaties
    signed by older chiefs. Winter buffalo hunt in Montana not very
    successful. 1882 Large buffalo herd discovered on reservation, south of Sweet Grass Hills.
    Blackfeet make final tribal hunt. Each year more Indians depend on
    government agency for food as buffalo disappear. 1883 Only a few buffalo killed. About 3,000 Indians living by agency when
    rations start to run out in late winter. Government red tape holds up
    additional food; people start starving. Agency gardens a complete failure 1884 Last wild buffalo killed by Blackfeet; four lone animals near Sweet Grass
    Hills. "Starvation Winter" kills several hundred South Piegans
    (one-fourth to one-sixth of tribe) before sufficient rations arrive. About
    2,000 surviving South Piegans settle within 15 miles of their agency. 1889 Last Blackfoot war party to take enemy scalps - combined group of Bloods
    and Piegans. So-called "old days" are now over.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9

    Hugh married Sinopah Kit Fox Woman about 1820 in Northwest Terr. Sinopah was born in 1796-1798 in Dakota Territory; died about 1880 in , , , Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 98. John William Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1823 in Fort Benton, Montana; died on 12 Aug 1908 in Blackfoot Res, , Montana.
    2. 99. Felix Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1828; died before 1908.
    3. 100. Elizabeth Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1833 in Maria's Creek, Glacier Co., Dakota Territory, USA; and died.
    4. 101. Amelia Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1830-1840; died after 1920.
    5. 102. Margaret Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1842; died before 1908.
    6. 103. Francis Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1846 in Dakota Territory, USA; died about 1922.
    7. 104. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1848; and died.

  17. 32.  Anonymous Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec.

    Notes:

    BIO:This child is listed merely as "Anonymous Munro infant" on the parish baptismal records of St. Surplice Catholic Church in L'Assumption, Quebec. Probably an early "miscarriage" and not a viable infant.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  18. 33.  Marie Lucille MunroMarie Lucille Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 13 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec; was buried on 14 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec, St. Jacque Cath.

    Notes:

    BIO:Lucille died at age 13 in village of St. Jacque.

    Charlotte Munro (#211) is listed in the same Archives under Rural Catholic Marriages in the Parish of Notre Dame in Montreal, Quebec for the following: (1) Charlotte Munro and Joseph LeDuc Married 15 February 1819 @ Notre Dame (2) Charlotte Munro (widow of Joseph LeDuc) and Michel Borne Married 22 February 1830 @ Notre Dame, Montreal.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996


  19. 34.  Patrice Horace Raphael MunroPatrice Horace Raphael Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 23 Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, L'hotel-Dieu, Churchyd.

    Notes:

    BIO:HORACE MUNRO OF ST. ESPRIT AND MONTREAL

    BIO:Horatio (as he was commonly known) also had a brief career with the Hudson Bay Company. The Hudson Bay Archives lists him as an apprentice clerk, age 20 with 3 years service and a contract that expires in 1825 (dated 1823 ?) which would indicate that he had initially signed a five or seven year indenture in or before 1820. (He would have been 16 years old in 1820.) He is listed as having been at Lac-la-Pluie in 1821-22 and at Rocky Mountain House in 1822-23. (Saskatchewan River) (B/60/d/12, P83)

    BIO:In the 1822-23 Carlton House Journal by Peter Pruden are the following enties pertaining to Horatio Munro: (HBC Arch B27/1/12)

    TBL:June 5 "...In the evening Mr. Munro arrived with horses from Edmonton..." June 11 "Mr. Pruden, Mr. Herriott & Munro went hunting up the river, with a
    boat, & a party on hoseback." June 25 "..Mr. Munro returned with the four men from the Pines having finished
    the work they were required to execute." July 28 "Sent Mr. Munro with 4 men in a boat down to Cumberland House with
    provisions." Sept 10 Entry from Bow River "Mr. Munro arrived with letters from the S
    Branch." Oct 3 "..Colin Robertson Esq and Mr. Horatio Munro from Fort William arrived
    this morning in a boat with 6 men from York.." Oct 5 "Mr. Munro from Fort William started for Edmonton with a boat and 6
    men..." (Arrived at Norway House Sept 4 & left Norway House Sept 8 -
    HBC Arch B154/a/10) 1823 May 27 "The craft arrived from Edmonton on board which was Mr Herron Weekes
    Mason & Munro & Dechambault.."

    TBL:EDMONTON HOUSE JOURNAL 1822-23 BY Richard Grant (HBC Arch B 60/a/21) Oct 15 Arrival of Colin Robertson to take charge of the Department Nov 7 "..About 3 POM Messrs Ranald McDonald & Munro with 2 men and 4 horses
    took their departure for the Rocky Mountain House where it is intended
    they will pass the winter." Dec 21 "...About 4 PM Messrs Manson, Douglas and Munro accompanied by one
    european and 8 Canadians & 2 Blackfeet Indians arrived from the South
    Branch (or Bow River) with letters from the Gentlemen in charge of
    that place." Dec 25 Mr. Robinson gave a dance and again on Jan 1st. 1823 Jan 6 "Sent Mr. Munro & 2 men with meat to be left at the white mud for Mr.
    Robinson's Men and dogs that are to go to the Mountain House - in a
    very short time, Mr. Munro and one of the men are to wait there until
    Mr. R goes up as they are to go with him also." Jan 7 Mr. Robinson left for R.M. House. Jan 21 Colin Robertson and his party returned from Mountain House. May 8 Messrs LaRocque* & Munro arrived from Rocky Mountain House May 19 ".. At 4 PM Messrs Herron, Munro, Deshambault and Grant took their
    departure on board of two of the company's boats going to the York
    Factory with part of the returns of this place & the Mountain House.."
    *Possibly Joseph LaRocque - older half-brother of Hugh and Horatio Munro.

    BIO:Horace was the only full brother of Hugh Jr., and was born when Hugh was five years old. Horace was the ninth of the ten children born to Angelique and Hugh Munro. From Hudson Bay Records it is apparent that he followed Hugh into Company service before 1820. Since he appears to be a farmer with a family in the St. Esprit area at the time of his father's death in 1825, one would conclude that he left the service at the end of his indenture that year. The last church entry for his family in the St. Esprit Parish are dated 1827-8. Later his family records appear in the Catholic church recordings of Montreal.

    BIO:Only his older brother, Hugh Jr. is mentioned in the will of Capt. Hon. John Munro, his grandfather, dated April 1800, as Horace was not born until 1804. However, when the estate of his grandfather was finally settled, and the land was to be distributed, Hugh Jr, in the far off Blackfoot country, signed a Power of Attorney and the land was awarded to Horace.

    BIO:BIRTHDATE: Baptismal records of St. Surplice Catholic Church, L'Assumption de Montcalm, Quebec. Mf #1018241

    BIO:Notes from Museum of Soulanges- Vaudreil, Quebec:

    TBL:"DIED at L'Hotel Dieu at St. Hyasinthe on 23 August 1870, Horatio Munro Esq. at the age of 66 years after an illness of 6 months."

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Patrice married Henriette Berthelot on 26 Jan 1825 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Henriette was born about 1805; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 105. Marie Anne Henriette Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Dec 1825 in L'esprit, , Quebec; was christened on 15 Dec 1825 in L'esprit, , Quebec; and died.
    2. 106. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Mar 1827 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; was christened on 14 Mar 1827 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; died on 14 Mar 1827 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; was buried on 14 Mar 1827 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada.
    3. 107. Antoine Osmond Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Sep 1845 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 4 Sep 1845 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

  20. 35.  Marie-Emilie MunroMarie-Emilie Munro Descendancy chart to this point (8.Hugh3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 13 Mar 1809 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 14 Mar 1809 in L'assumption Cat, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; and died.

    Notes:

    BIO:"Emilie Munro" The following listing is from "Loiselle Marriage Index" (Film # 543:797): Munro, Emilie, daughter of Hugh MUNRO and Angelique LeRouix-Denoval, Married 12 May 1834 to BOUCHER, Francis Xavier Olivier, vf. Marie Lucy Deligny; (Maskinonge') at Notre-Dame, Montreal.

    BIO:Notes from the French-Canadian Genealogy Journal concerning Joseph Leduc and Charlotte Munro states the following:

    TBL: ............"We knew of one sister, Emilie Munro, who married at Montreal in 1834 to Dr. Francois Xavier Olivier Boucher, son of Col. Boucher (1728-1816) co-seigneur of Maskinonge, whose estate was the subject of a legal process which lasted four years."

    BIO:Notes from Vaudreil-Soulanges Museum, Quebec:

    TBL:MARRIAGE: Of this city on Thursday, the widower of Marie Deligney, Francis X.O. Boucher Esq., Doctor of Medicine at Maskinonge' (son of Lt. Col. Boucher), Miss Emelie, daughter of the late Hugh Munro also of this city on 12 May, 1834.

    BIO:LaParoise of L'Assumption Repertoire des Baptisms 1724-1876:

    TBL:14 March 1809 baptised Maria Emmelia born yesterday, daughter of Hughes Munro and Dame Maria des Angeles Leroux. [Signed] Hugh Munro Maria Madeline lete'tes Amable Archambeault

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Marie-Emilie married Frances Xavier Olivier Boucher, M.D. on 12 May 1834 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Frances was born about 1807; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  21. 36.  David MunroDavid Munro Descendancy chart to this point (9.Cornelius3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1796; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  22. 37.  Allen MunroAllen Munro Descendancy chart to this point (9.Cornelius3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in 1796 in Cornwall, Stormont Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    1861 Canadian Census:Hichinbrook Twp, Huntington Co. ED 3, P173, Line 42
    Reel # 517377 Mesa, AZ LDS Library- 1994 MUNRO, ALLAN age 65 (Gentleman) b. U.C. Church of E.
    Sarah (wife) 41 b. Ireland
    Harriet 16
    Frances 14 All children b. Lower Canada
    Elizabeth 11
    Margaret 7 Live in one story frame dwelling
    Anna 5
    Charlotte 3

    1871 Canada Census: Hichenbrook Twp, East Huntington, ED 113, P 54, DW 75
    Reel # 0493457 Mesa, Az LDS Library 1994 MUNRO, ALLEN age 76 b. Ontario Church of E. Scotch Farmer
    Sarah (wife) 54 b. Ireland Irish
    Harriet 24
    Frances 22
    Elizabeth 20
    Margaret 18
    Anna 16
    Charlotte 14 In school

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Allen married Sarah about 1840. Sarah was born about 1798; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 108. Harriet Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1844; and died.
    2. 109. Frances Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1846; and died.
    3. 110. Elizabeth Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1849; and died.
    4. 111. Margaret Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1852; and died.
    5. 112. Anna Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1854; and died.
    6. 113. Henrietta Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1856; and died.

  23. 38.  John MunroJohn Munro Descendancy chart to this point (9.Cornelius3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1798; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  24. 39.  Henriette MunroHenriette Munro Descendancy chart to this point (9.Cornelius3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1800; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Henriette married Dominique Mondelet on 18 Feb 1822 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Dominique was born on 23 Jan 1799 in Richelieu River, Quebec, Lower Canada; was christened on 23 Jan 1799 in Saint Marc, Quebec, Lower Canada, Saint-Marc Cath; died on 19 Feb 1863 in Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada East; was buried on 19 Feb 1863 in Saint Marc, Trois-Rivieres, Lower Canada, St Marc Cathedra. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  25. 40.  Cornelius MunroCornelius Munro Descendancy chart to this point (9.Cornelius3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1804; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996


  26. 41.  John Henry MunroJohn Henry Munro Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 23 Sep 1809 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 23 Sep 1809 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    John married Elisa McCarty on 29 Oct 1839 in Boucherville, Quebec, Canada. Elisa was born in 1820; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 114. Marie Alice Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Jan 1844 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; and died.
    2. 115. Henri Joseph Edgar Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Apr 1845 in , , Québec, Canada; was christened on 5 Apr 1845 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; and died.

  27. 42.  Pierre Antoine Confroy Munro, M.D.Pierre Antoine Confroy Munro, M.D. Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 14 Sep 1811 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 22 Oct 1811 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Pierre "Peter" Antoine Confroy Munro.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Pierre married Marie Sophie Trudeau on 5 Jul 1837 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Marie was born about 1812; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 116. Marie Anne Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born est 1838; and died.
    2. 117. Marie Cordelia Adeline Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Sep 1839 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 20 Sep 1839 in Notre Dame, Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    3. 118. Edwin Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 3 Mar 1841 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 3 Mar 1841 in Notre Dame, Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    4. 119. George Lawrence Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Mar 1843 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 10 Mar 1843 in Notre Dame, Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    5. 120. Henry Allen Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Dec 1844 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 21 Dec 1844 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    6. 121. Marie Emma Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Mar 1846 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 10 Mar 1846 in Notre Dame, Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    7. 122. Marie Alfred Pierre Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 25 Aug 1848 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 25 Aug 1848 in Notre Dame, DE Montreal, Quebec; and died.
    8. 123. Marie Laura Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Dec 1851 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 14 Dec 1851 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    9. 124. Marie Sophie Isabelle Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Jul 1854 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 9 Jul 1854 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    10. 125. Marie-Josette Isabelle Hermine Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Mar 1856 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 9 Mar 1856 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

  28. 43.  Marie Josephte Aliene MunroMarie Josephte Aliene Munro Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in Mar 1814 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 21 Mar 1814 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  29. 44.  Marie Helene MunroMarie Helene Munro Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in Jan 1818 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 6 Jan 1818 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  30. 45.  Marie Charlotte Henriette MunroMarie Charlotte Henriette Munro Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 24 Oct 1821 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 24 Oct 1821 in Notre Dame Cath, Montreal, Quebec; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  31. 46.  Marie Anne MunroMarie Anne Munro Descendancy chart to this point (10.Henry3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born in Feb 1825 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 13 Feb 1825 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Marie married Francis Antoine Pillet, M.D. on 30 Sep 1850 in Le Chenaine, Quebec, Canada. Francis was born about 1825; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  32. 47.  Mary MunroMary Munro Descendancy chart to this point (11.John3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1810 in Williamsburg Twp, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Mary married David Becksted about 1835 in , , Ontario, Canada. David was born on 15 Jul 1806 in Schoharie, Schoharie Co., New York, USA; died on 3 Apr 1884 in Williamsburg, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Williamsburg Cem. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 126. Catherine Elizabeth Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Apr 1836 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; died on 21 May 1914 in Winchester, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.
    2. 127. David Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1838; died on 19 Jul 1843.
    3. 128. Sarah Ann Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1840; died in 1928.
    4. 129. George David Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Dec 1842 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; died on 2 Apr 1922; was buried in Mt. Pleasant Cem, Mariatown, Ontario.
    5. 130. Reuben Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1845; died on 21 Aug 1847.
    6. 131. Mary Elizabeth Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Jan 1848 in Williamsburg Twp, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; died on 27 Apr 1925 in Williamsburg Twp, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in St. Lawrence Val.
    7. 132. Ira Soloman Beckstead  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1850; died on 4 Nov 1865.

  33. 48.  Henry MunroHenry Munro Descendancy chart to this point (11.John3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1813 in , , , Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Henry and Sophia's marriage was witnessed by Jacob and Jane Willman, Sophia's parents.

    In 1852, Henry was farming 50 acres and living with his family in Williamsburg, Canada. He was a Presbyterian and his wife, Sophia, belonged to the Church of England. They were married in the Luthern Church.

    An Agriculture census shows that Henry owned 50 acres with 25 acres under cultivation (8 to 10 acres in crops such as wheat, barley, etc.; and 15 to 17 acres of pasture). One acre used for home garden and orchard and the remainder listed as "woods and wild".

    Henry does not appear on the 1861 census of Williamsburg Township.

    References:

    (2) Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Henry married Sophia Willman on 17 Jun 1835 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada. Sophia was born about 1816 in , , , Canada; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 133. Cornelius Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1833 in , , Ontario, Canada; and died.
    2. 134. William Harvey Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1836 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was christened on 16 Jul 1837 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; died in in , , Texas, USA.
    3. 135. Elzina Christy Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Apr 1839 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was christened on 7 Jan 1840 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.
    4. 136. Lucius Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Feb 1841 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was christened on 24 Mar 1841 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.
    5. 137. Sophia Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1845 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.
    6. 138. Elizabeth Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1850 in Williamsburg, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; and died.

  34. 49.  John Melburn MunroJohn Melburn Munro Descendancy chart to this point (11.John3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 21 Dec 1813 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada; died on 16 Aug 1884 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Aug 1884 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    The 1861 census shows John and his family still living in Williamsburg Township. This census gives his wife's name as Mira.

    The Stroud reference says Mariah Beckstead (or Bedstead) was born in Canada.

    On the 1861 census of the same area, both Henry Munro and his wife and family as well as their parents are gone. John is listed as:
    John Munrow (Munro) farmer, 49 yrs old
    Mira Munrow, age 36
    Alvey Munrow, age 15
    Fanny Munrow, age 13
    John Munrow, age 10
    Luther Munrow, age 8
    Calvin Munrow, age 6
    Enus Munrow, age 4

    Living on one side of them are the Durant's with an "Athelie Rose" (14 yrs?) On the other side are the Fotterby's (?):Henry and his wife Ellen with 7 children, and Gorden and his wife Mariah and several children (all members of the Lutheran church)

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Family/Spouse: Maria Beckstead. Maria was born on 7 Aug 1817-1823 in , , , USA; died on 5 Nov 1895 in Winchester, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in Nov 1895 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Upper Canada, Maple Rdg Cemet. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 139. Lucinda Munroe  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 7 Mar 1843 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Upper Canada; died on 12 Mar 1843 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Upper Canada.
    2. 140. James Alva Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Sep 1844 in Williamsburg Twp, Ontario, Upper Canada; died on 2 Jan 1923 in Winchester, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in Jan 1923 in Maple Ridge, Ontario, Upper Canada.
    3. 141. Frances Margaret Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 May 1846 in Winchester, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; died on 11 Dec 1931 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; was buried in Dec 1991 in Chesterville, Dundas, Ontario, Maple Ridge Cem.
    4. 142. John Melburn Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Jun 1849 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; died on 24 Mar 1913 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; was buried in Mar 1913 in Chesterville, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada.
    5. 143. Susan Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1851 in Of, Williamsburg Twp, Dundas Co., Ontario; and died.
    6. 144. Lutheria Susan Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1853 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; and died.
    7. 145. Calvin Malachi Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Jul 1855 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; died on 14 Jul 1925 in , Ontario, Upper Canada; was buried in Jul 1925 in Chesterville, Dundas, Ontario, Maple Ridge Cem.
    8. 146. Enos Thomas Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Aug 1857 in Williamsburg Twp, Ontario, Upper Canada; died on 5 Dec 1944 in Winchester, Dundas Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried in Dec 1944 in Chesterville, Dundas, Ontario, Maple Ridge Cem.
    9. 147. Mary D. Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born est 1859; and died.

  35. 50.  Cornelie MunroCornelie Munro Descendancy chart to this point (11.John3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1822; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Cornelie married Antoine Gauthier on 5 Nov 1842 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada. Antoine was born about 1820; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  36. 51.  Charles MunroCharles Munro Descendancy chart to this point (11.John3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1828; and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Charles married Sarah about 1856. Sarah was born about 1836; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 148. Mary Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1858; and died.
    2. 149. Albert Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1860; and died.
    3. 150. Ida Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1865; and died.
    4. 151. Arthur Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1875; and died.

  37. 52.  Louise Josette Chartier De Lotbiniere, Seigss VaudreuilLouise Josette Chartier De Lotbiniere, Seigss Vaudreuil Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 14 Dec 1803 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was christened in in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath; died on 7 Oct 1869 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in Oct 1869 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, Canada, St Michael Cath.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Louise married Robert Unwin Harwood on 15 Sep 1823 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Robert was born on 22 Jul 1798 in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, , England; died on 12 Apr 1863 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; was buried in Apr 1863 in Mount Royal Cem., Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 152. Antoine Chartier De Lotbiniere Harwood, Lt Col.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1825; died in 1891.
    2. 153. Robert William De Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Oct 1826 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada; died on 29 Jun 1897 in Vaudreuil, Quebec, , Canada.
    3. 154. Elizabeth Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1828; died in 1879.
    4. 155. Marie Louise Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1830; died in May 1904; was buried in May 1904 in Rigaud, Quebec, Canada.
    5. 156. Marie Antoinette Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1832; died in 1896.
    6. 157. William Bingham Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1834; died in 1873.
    7. 158. Alain Chartier De Lotbinere Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1836; died in 1912.
    8. 159. Henry Stanislas Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1840; died in 1911.
    9. 160. Henrietta Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1841; died in 1878.
    10. 161. Charles Ladislas Harwood  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1844; died in 1887.

  38. 53.  Marie Charlotte De LotbiniereMarie Charlotte De Lotbiniere Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1805; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Marie married William Bingham in 1821. William was born about 1797; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 162. Louise Bingham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1822; and died.
    2. 163. Charlotte Bingham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1824; and died.
    3. 164. Georgiana Bingham  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1826; and died.

  39. 54.  Julie Christine De Lotbiniere, Seig D LotbinierJulie Christine De Lotbiniere, Seig D Lotbinier Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1807; and died.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Julie married Gaspard Pierre Gustave Joly, Seig Lotbiniere about 1820. Gaspard was born about 1805; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 165. Henri Gustave Joly-De Lotbinie  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Dec 1829 in Epernay, France; died on 15 Nov 1908.

  40. 55.  Michel Georges De LotbiniereMichel Georges De Lotbiniere Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1809; died in in Died Young.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.


  41. 56.  Michel Frances Xavier De LotbiniereMichel Frances Xavier De Lotbiniere Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1811; died in in Died Young.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.


  42. 57.  Marie Angelique De LotbiniereMarie Angelique De Lotbiniere Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1813; died in in Died Young.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.


  43. 58.  De LotbiniereDe Lotbiniere Descendancy chart to this point (12.Marie3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born about 1815; died in in Died Young.

    Notes:

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.


  44. 59.  Sarah Harriet MunroSarah Harriet Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 15 Jul 1809 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 11 Jul 1902 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jul 1902 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Sarah's father died when she was quite young, so her mother returned to live with her father Mr. Sherar. Sarah married Dr. R. W. Fitton and lived in New Carlisle, Canada.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    Documentation has not been found for the marriage of Sarah Harriet Munro and Jeremiah Hidden Brown in church registers. According to the family Memoir she was married about 1823 at the age of 13 or 14. Jeremiah Brown was first a clerk in her Father's (William J. Munro) store in Caraquet. Her mother Sarah Sherar Munro refers to him as "my good friend" in papers relating to the Estate settlement of Wm J. Munro.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Sarah married Jeremiah Hidden Brown about 1823 in , , Québec, Canada. Jeremiah was born about 1807 in , , , USA; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 166. William Hidden Brown  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Aug 1824 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 24 Jan 1825 in New Carlisle, Cox Township, Gaspe' Quebec, At Andrew Anglic; and died.

    Sarah married Robert Wiley Fitton, M.D. on 26 Sep 1834 in New Carlisle, Cox Township, Quebec, St Andrew Anglic. Robert was born about 1807; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 167. Henrietta Caroline Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Jul 1835 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; and died.
    2. 168. Walter Hussey Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Jun 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 3 Oct 1837 in New Carlisle, Cox Township, Quebec, St Andrew Anglic; and died.
    3. 169. Ellen Jane Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 Nov 1840 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 12 May 1844 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Quebec, St Andrew Anglic; and died.
    4. 170. Robert George Munro Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Nov 1842 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 12 May 1844 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; and died.
    5. 171. William Hamilton Bruce Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 Nov 1845 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 2 Dec 1846 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Quebec, At Andrew Anglic; and died.
    6. 172. Sarah Susan Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 31 Jan 1848 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 19 Jun 1848 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Quebec, St Andrew Anglic; and died.
    7. 173. Henry Goodman Fitton  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 15 Nov 1849 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 29 Dec 1850 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Quebec, Anglican; died on 29 Dec 1850 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 31 Dec 1850 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Quebec, Church.
    8. 174. Sarah Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born est 1851; and died.

  45. 60.  William Thomas MunroWilliam Thomas Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 24 Aug 1811 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 22 Aug 1886 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Aug 1886 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada.

    Notes:

    William owned property south of the Anglican Church at New Carlisle. The street west of the church was the west boundary of the property. Later he traded with Mr. Edward Caldwell for the property in Paspebiac where he made his home. It was here that he started to clear his farm in a thick wooded country of maple, birch, spruce, pine and cedar which was of little value in those days.

    The lumber for the buildings were sawed with a whip saw at the old saw pit. Shingles were split from cedar logs and shaved with the draw knife.

    He later gave the eastern part of the property to his son William.

    While on a visit to the Carr Harris home at Bathurst, William became seriously ill. The doctor was summoned, but he pronounced the case hopeless, and William died shortly after. He was 75 years old.

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald
    Munro, Francis Elaine

    St Andrew Anglican Church Records, New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada. 1837 - MARRIED - On March 9, 1837, William Munro of Cox Township, farmer, bachelor of major age, twin son of William Johnson Munro, formerly of Caroquette, N.B., merchant, now deceased and of Sarah Sherar his widow; to Margaret Gallais, spinster, 2nd daughter of John Gallais of Cox Township, farmer, and of Ann Marie his wife (Scott), in the presence of and with the consent of her parents and the young man's mother, brother and aunt. William Munro and Margaret Gallie Witnesses: John Gallie and Thomas B. Munro. ---Andrew Balfour, Minister.

    New Carlisle Presbyterian Church Records 1833-1987 1886 - DIED - William Munro, farmer of Paspebiac, died at Bathurst, N.B. on August 22, 1886. Buried in New Carlisle.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    William and his twin brother, Thomas, were born at their home near Caraquet, New Brunswick, Canada.

    William married Margaret Gallie on 9 Mar 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada. Margaret was born on 1 Apr 1819 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 30 Sep 1821 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 8 Jun 1903 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Jun 1903 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 175. Philip Johnston Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 17 Jun 1837 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 Aug 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 9 Oct 1918 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Oct 1918 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada.
    2. 176. William George Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 19 Mar 1838 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 27 Mar 1914 in Hudson, St. Croix Co., Wisconsin, USA; was buried in Mar 1914 in Stillwater, Washington Co., Minnesota, USA.
    3. 177. Mary Ann Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 3 Jun 1841 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 19 Sep 1841 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 7 Aug 1874 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 9 Aug 1874 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada.
    4. 178. Charles Elias Albert Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Jun 1843 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 6 Aug 1843 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 24 May 1867 in , , Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried on 24 May 1867 in At Sea.
    5. 179. Ann Maria Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Jul 1845 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 5 Oct 1845 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; and died.
    6. 180. Robert Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 29 Jan 1848 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 3 Mar 1848 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 26 Apr 1897 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Apr 1897 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada.
    7. 181. Frederick Agustus Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Jul 1850 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 1 Sep 1850 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 2 May 1912 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried in May 1912 in Hope, Bonaventure, Quebec, Canada.
    8. 182. James Gallie Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Jan 1854 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 9 Apr 1854 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died about 1860.
    9. 183. John Gallie Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Aug 1861 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 Oct 1861 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 18 Oct 1947 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 20 Oct 1947 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada.

  46. 61.  Thomas Brock MunroThomas Brock Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 24 Aug 1811 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened in in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 12 May 1894 in Portland, Cumberland Co., Maine, USA.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    Thomas Brock Munro, who was named for the General Brock in Ontario contemporary to his time, and his twin brother, William Thomas Munro, were born at the home and "Trading Post" of their parents near Caraquet, New Brunswick. Records of their birth and baptism exist as affidavits in New Carlisle.

    Services of Clergy were limited to occasional itinerant or circuit-riding protestant ministers at this time. Children were frequently baptized at home by parents or others, especially if life was precarious or health was poor, or delayed until travel to distant churches was arranged. If available, any Priest or Minister was acceptable for services, regardless of religious denomination. Registration of births was not required by the Government, and common practice was recording by the officiating clergyman of births, marriages and burials. Eventually these records found their way to Provincial or County listing if not lost in some catastrophe. Documentation by the Catholic Clergy and Churches was meticulously maintained and forwarded to the Bishop of the area's archives. That both Thomas and William had been baptized is quite certain, as they were faithful and stalwart members of the protestant church in their communities of Paspebiac, New Carlisle and Port Daniel.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Thomas and his twin brother, William, were born at their home near Caraquet, New Brunswick, Canada.

    Thomas married Joanna Gallie about 1835 in , Bonaventure Co., Quebec, Canada. Joanna was born on 24 Aug 1816 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 30 Sep 1821 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 31 Jan 1901 in Portland, Cumberland Co., Maine, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 184. Alonzo Johnson Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Nov 1835 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 1 Jan 1836 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 4 Sep 1882.
    2. 185. Ann Minerva Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Sep 1837 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 1 Oct 1837 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; died on 2 Jun 1868 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 4 Jun 1868 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada.
    3. 186. Sarah Susanna Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 6 Mar 1839 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 31 Mar 1839 in Paspebiac, Cox Twp, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    4. 187. John Fredrick Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Feb 1841 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; died on 19 Apr 1843 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 21 Apr 1843 in Paspebiac, Cox Twp, Quebec, Canada.
    5. 188. John Francis Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 8 Sep 1843 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 24 Sep 1843 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; and died.
    6. 189. Mary Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Sep 1845 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 3 Aug 1846 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; died on 25 Dec 1927.
    7. 190. Jane Elizabeth Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 3 Jun 1847 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 Sep 1847 in Port Daniel, Port Daniel Twp, Quebec, Canada; died on 9 Nov 1930.
    8. 191. Thomas Augustus Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Nov 1850; died on 18 May 1928.
    9. 192. Julia Theresa Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 May 1855; died on 28 Jul 1935.

  47. 62.  John Provost MunroJohn Provost Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 7 Mar 1813 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 23 May 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in May 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    In the Thomas Brock Munro petition in 1832 to the Government for title to his father's Crown Grant in Caraquet he states: "this is the homesite where my father and brother are buried." Microfilm copy from Archives of New Brunswick.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  48. 63.  Mary Charlotte MunroMary Charlotte Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 23 Dec 1815 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 4 Jun 1880.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    William Day died suddenly at home on April 15, 1847; seventeen days after his death Charlotte delivered his posthumous son, Johnston Bingham Day.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Mary married William N. Day on 5 Oct 1837 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada. William was born about 1814; died on 15 Apr 1847 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 17 Apr 1847 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 193. Mary Angelique Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1838 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 Jul 1840 in New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada, Anglican Church; and died.
    2. 194. William James Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Feb 1840 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 Jul 1840 in New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada, Anglican Church; died after 1920.
    3. 195. Sarah Jane Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 21 Mar 1842 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 26 Jul 1843 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; and died.
    4. 196. Sophia Maria Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 9 Jan 1845 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 5 Sep 1847 in New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada, Anglican; and died.
    5. 197. Johnston Bingham Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 May 1847 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 5 Sep 1847 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; and died.

  49. 64.  Jane Eleanor MunroJane Eleanor Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 15 Mar 1818 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 15 Sep 1822 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; died on 11 Oct 1840 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Oct 1840 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    St Andrew Anglican Church Register, New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada "1822 - Baptized on September 15, 1822, Jane Eleanor, daughter of Sarah MUNRO, widow of late William Johnson MUNRO of Caracat (Caraquet, N.B.), born March 15, 1818. Sponsors: James Sherar, Mother (Sarah Munro) and Mary Sherar. -by Richard KNAGG, Minister.

    "Gleaner", Item dated October 27, 1840: DIED: Suddenly at Paspebiac.. on Sunday the 11 inst., at 22 years 6 months, Jane, wife of John Day, Esq., daughter of the late William Johnston Munro Esq. of Caraquet. (Clipping from the collection of Dr. Manny, Newcastle, N.B.)

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Christened:
    Jane was christened at St. Andrew Angilican Church in New Carlisle, Quebec, Canada.

    Jane married John Day on 6 Jun 1833 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada. John was born about 1810; died on 22 Oct 1852 in Paspebiac, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 24 Oct 1852 in New Carlisle, Cox Township, Quebec, St Peter Anglica. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 198. Druscilla Sophia Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Aug 1834 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 12 Oct 1834 in New Carlisle, Cox Twp, Gaspe' Quebec, At Andew Anglica; died in in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    2. 199. John George Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Feb 1837 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 May 1838 in Hopetown, Bonaventure Co, Quebec, Anglican Church; and died.
    3. 200. Oswald Day  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 27 Apr 1839 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was christened on 27 Jul 1840 in New Carlisle, Cox Township, Gaspe' Quebec, Anglican Church; died in Feb 1914 in New Carlisle, , Québec, Canada; was buried in New Carlisle, St. Andrew's.

  50. 65.  George Henry MunroGeorge Henry Munro Descendancy chart to this point (13.William3, 3.John2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 5 Jul 1820 in Caraquet, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 22 Apr 1902.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    George was born 6 weeks after his father's death (William Johnson Munro d. 27 May, 1820).

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    George married Modeste Prevost about 1849. Modeste was born in 1825; died on 2 Oct 1862. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 201. Jane Matilda Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Jul 1850; died on 6 Apr 1938.
    2. 202. George Francis Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 28 Sep 1854; died on 18 Feb 1856.
    3. 203. Amelia Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Feb 1857; died on 1 Sep 1936.
    4. 204. Clara Madison Provost Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Apr 1860; died on 29 Sep 1927.

    George married Henrietta Martha Spayd on 1 Apr 1867 in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne Co., Pennsylvania, USA. Henrietta was born in 1831; died on 1 Apr 1885. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 205. George Henry Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Jul 1870; died in in , , California, USA.
    2. 206. Charles William Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Nov 1872 in Prob., Trenton, New Jersey, USA; and died.

  51. 66.  James MunroJames Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 27 Aug 1805 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 12 Aug 1828 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    James died at Somerset Vale in Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.


  52. 67.  William Henry MunroWilliam Henry Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 1 Oct 1807 in St Peter, , New Brunswick, Canada; died on 25 Jul 1887 in Boston, Suffolk Co., Massachusetts, USA.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    William married Ann Catherine Marshall on 17 Nov 1833. Ann was born about 1809; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  53. 68.  Jane Maria MunroJane Maria Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 29 Sep 1809 in St Peter, , New Brunswick, Canada; died on 13 Jul 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jul 1846 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    !New Brunswick "Gleaner": Dated July 18, 1846

    DIED - Mrs. Jane Gordon - Died at Bathurst on the 15th inst., aged 38 years, after a protracted illness, which she bore with the most exemplary patience and cheerful resignation to the Divine Will, Jane, wife of Robert Gordon, esq., M.D., and eldest daughter of Hugh Munro, Esq.

    In all the endeared relations of life, especially those of a wife and mother, Mrs. Gordon's removal has left a void in the heart which this world cannot supply. The consolation of those who sorrow for her removal is that their loss is her gain. Her mortal remains were followed to the "house appointed for all living" by a large concourse of persons of all religious denominations, in testimony of their respect.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    Jane died at her home in Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.

    Jane married Robert Gordon, M.D. on 8 Sep 1833 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. Robert was born about 1807; died on 4 Apr 1863. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 207. Andrew Gordon  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1832; and died.
    2. 208. Alexander Gordon, M.D.  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1834; and died.
    3. 209. William Gordon, M.D.  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1836; and died.
    4. 210. Martha Gordon  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1852; and died.

  54. 69.  Anne Elizabeth MunroAnne Elizabeth Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 28 Sep 1811 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 8 Feb 1913.

    Notes:

    Memo in Hugh & Martha Munro Collection:

    2nd September 1827 Sunday evening were baptised by the Rev. John MacLean: Anne, George A., Alexander, John Johnson, Elizabeth Lydia and Mary Munro. There was no Presbyterian church or clergyman in Bathurst until 1840 and they were all baptised when the opportunity arose.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Anne married Francis Ferguson on 14 Dec 1836 in Somerset Vale, Bathurst, New Brunswick. Francis was born on 18 Feb 1808 in Dunlop, Ayreshire, Scotland; died on 15 Sep 1875 in St John, , New Brunswick, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 211. Elizabeth Lydia Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1838 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; and died.
    2. 212. Helen Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1841; died on 6 Feb 1843 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    3. 213. John Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1842; and died.
    4. 214. Robert Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in Nov 1842 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 12 Jan 1843 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Jan 1843 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.
    5. 215. Edith Elizabeth Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1843; and died.
    6. 216. Alexander Rankin Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1844; and died.
    7. 217. Anne Elizabeth Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1846; and died.
    8. 218. Agnes Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1848; and died.
    9. 219. Katheryn Helen Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1850; died in 1854.
    10. 220. Edith Mary Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1852; and died.
    11. 221. Marion Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born about 1854; and died.

  55. 70.  George Augustus MunroGeorge Augustus Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 8 Jun 1814 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    George married Jane Dorothy Falkland in May 1842. Jane was born on 19 Jun 1811-1812; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 222. Jessie Faulkland Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 1 Mar 1843; and died.
    2. 223. Jane Irene Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 12 Mar 1847; and died.
    3. 224. Margaret Mary Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 22 Mar 1849; and died.
    4. 225. Anne Gertrude Munro  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 14 Aug 1851; and died.

  56. 71.  Alexander MunroAlexander Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 18 Jun 1816 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Feb 1837 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Feb 1837 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    !New Brunswick "Gleaner", February 13, 1838

    DIED - At Somersetvale, Bathurst, on the 3rd inst., Alexander, fourth son of Hugh Munro, aged 20.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    Alexander died at Somersetvale in Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.


  57. 72.  John Johnson MunroJohn Johnson Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 19 Dec 1818 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Feb 1842 in Fredericton, York Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  58. 73.  Elizabeth Lydia MunroElizabeth Lydia Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 18 Sep 1821 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 3 Aug 1839 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Aug 1839 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    !New Brunswick "Gleaner", August 20, 1839 -

    DIED - At Somerset Vale, Bathurst, on the 3rd Inst., Elizabeth Lydia, 3rd daughter of Hugh Munro, Esq., in her 18th year. (Died at home of Mr. Ferguson.)

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Died:
    Elizabeth died at Somerset Vale (the home of Mr. Ferguson) in Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada.


  59. 74.  Mary MunroMary Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 31 Dec 1823 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was christened on 2 Sep 1827 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 20 Nov 1918 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, James Donald

    Notes from Hugh Munro papers:

    Memorandum 1827 Sept 2nd Sunday Evening Were baptized by the Reverend John MacLean Ann, George Augusts, Alexander, John Johnston, Elizabeth Lydia and Mary There was no Presbyterian church or clergyman in Bathurst until 1840 and we were all baptized when the opportunity offered and a very rare thing it was at that time of a minister preaching in this place. [Note by Mary Munro Ferguson]

    Campbellton Graphic News: Dated November 21, 1918 -

    DIED - Bathurst, N.B. November 20 - On Monday Mrs. John Ferguson in her 90's. The former Mary Munro, daughter of Hugh Munro of Sumerset Vale Farm. Married in 1847, her husband, who has been dead for many years, was of the firm of Ferguson and Rankine, prominent lumberman and shipbuilder of that time. He also held a seat in the Senate of Canada.

    Leaves children: Mary and Mrs. James Ferguson of Bathurst, Dr. Gilmour Ferguson of Dalhousie, N.B., Charles of Vancouver B.C., and Frank of B.C.; Mrs. Marion Gilbert of St. John N.B. and Mrs. Annie Ouffus of Halifax N.S. are neices; Dr. R. Gordon Duncan of Bathurst is a grand nephew.

    John Ferguson was the brother of Francis Ferguson who married Anne E. Munro.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Mary married John Ferguson on 22 Dec 1847 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. John was born on 20 Nov 1813 in Dunlop, Ayr-Shire, Scotland; died on 21 Aug 1888 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 226. John Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 5 Apr 1849; and died.
    2. 227. Alexander R. Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1850; and died.
    3. 228. Roberts Charles Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1859; and died.
    4. 229. Mary Munro Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1859; and died.
    5. 230. Francis Percy Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Oct 1860; and died.
    6. 231. Munro Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Oct 1860; and died.
    7. 232. Dr. Allen Gilmour Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1862; and died.
    8. 233. Arthur Clyde Ferguson  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 2 Mar 1865 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 5 Sep 1865 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; was buried in Sep 1865 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

  60. 75.  Wallace Robert MunroWallace Robert Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 18 Jul 1828 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 4 Feb 1834 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada.

    Notes:

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA


  61. 76.  Henry MunroHenry Munro Descendancy chart to this point (14.Hugh3, 4.Margaret2, 1.Christiana1) was born on 14 Sep 1830 in Bathurst, Gloucester Co., New Brunswick, Canada; died on 27 Jul 1870 in Barbados, , , West Indies.

    Notes:

    Mirimichi "Gleaner": Dated September 21, 1830:

    BIRTH: At Bathurst on Tuesday last, the Lady of Hugh Munro, Esq., late representative of the County of Gloucester, of a son (Henry)

    Mary (Munro) Ferguson in 1903 wrote the following: "Henry, who was a dentist, went south and married into a Kentucky family; had no children by first wife; then went to Barbados and married a second wife, a Miss Leach, who had four brothers, all druggists.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Family/Spouse: Leach. was born about 1832; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Henry married Josephine Walker on 28 Oct 1858 in , , Ohio, USA. Josephine was born est 1832; died on 25 Jan 1859. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]