Robert Stoddard
Idyllwild, California, United States
- Documents
- 60
- Member since
- Aug 2020
About
The nearby Donald and Christena MacKenzie farm is still owned and occupied today by relative descendant Robert and Elizabeth MacKenzie. My maternal great-grandparents are the son of James and Nancy Fraser, Simon Roderick Fraser, and the daughter of Donald and Christena MacKenzie, Jessie Ann MacKenzie, who were both born and later married at Toney River.
In addition, I have Irish ancestry through John and Eleanor Mockler. Information on the Mockler family has been uploaded to this website. John Mockler started building sailing ships at River John circa 1836, the last being the barque “Banshee” launched in 1854. He then left River John in 1855 and built ships at Pugwash and Brule. He built a total of 22 ships in all - making him one of the largest ship builders in Nova Scotia in his time. All five of his sons were ship captains and master mariners. His son, Patrick Mockler, a beautiful photograph of whom is uploaded to this website, also built ships at Port Phillip and Brule. He retired from sailing in the mid-1890s and built a spectacular house at Brule Corner circa 1900. It was restored by John and Connie McNutt and is currently owned and occupied by their son, John Daniel McNutt and his wife Terri Lynn McNutt and family. John and Eleanor Mockler's daughter, Margaret Jane Mockler, the younger sister of the aforesaid Patrick Mockler, married an Irishman from Memramcook, N.B. by the name of Patrick H. McGowan. Patrick and Margaret McGowan are my paternal great-grandparents. Patrick was a successful merchant and later built ships on the Memramcook River, one ship, the “Eleanor,” named after his mother-in-law, being built for his father-in-law John Mockler. Patrick ran into financial problems completing the “Eleanor.” He then took a job at the Dorchester Penitentiary the year it opened (1880). The family removed to Manitoba in 1886 where Patrick worked at Stony Mountain Penitentiary. Patrick died in a tragic carriage accident in downtown Winnipeg in 1894 while on prison business. Margaret (Mockler) McGowan died at New Westminster, B.C. in 1936. Margaret’s parents, John and Eleanor Mockler, removed to San Francisco cica 1870 and lived there for over 25 years. The both died at San Francisco on the same day, just hours apart, on May 11, 1897. Margaret’s brother, Capt. Patrick Mockler, died at his home in Brule on February 18, 1930. Besides donating a considerable sum of money to build a dormitory at the Catholic St. Francis Xavier College in 1903, Patrick Mockler was extremely generous to his surviving siblings and nephews and nieces in his Will at the time of his death. The executor of his Will was his childhood friend and traveling companion, Daniel Sutherland, a former mayor of Pictou.
Documents by Robert
60 documents
The Old McRae Mill along the Toney River, Toney Mills, Pictou County
Photos of the old mills on the Toney River at Toney Mills, Pictou County circa 1930. A gristmill and sawmill were built by Alexander McRae circa 1855. His sons, John and Roderick McRae, operated the mills until the early to mid-1880s.
Photograph: Isabella Fraser 1852-1899
Isabella Fraser was residing in Providence RI in Febraury 1893 at the time of he mother's passing. She must have decided to return to Toney River because she purchased a parcel of land from her siblings as part of the settlement of her mother's estate.
Photograph: Margaret Catherine (Fraser) MacKenzie of Toney River and later of Pictou
This is the second photograph Margaret Catherine (Fraser) MacKenzie had taken at the Morton Photography Studio on Westminster Street in Providence, R.I.. The other photo, taken an estimated 20 years ealier, when she was 18, is uploaded to HAGGIS.
Ship Arival Record: John Mockler, Hannah Mockler and Mary Ross as passengers on the Bark Banshee
This appears to be the maiden voyage of the barque "Banshee" built by John Mockler in 1854. How exciting for John Mockler's eldest child and daughter, Hannah, age 18, to join him on this trip to Boston! Capt. Ross' daughter Mary is also aboard.
Book Excerpt: Ships, Shipbuilders and Seamen of Pictou County by James Cameron
An excerpt from the book, Ships, Shipbuilders and Seamen of Pictou County by James Cameron, regarding John Mockler and the Mockler family of River John, Pictou County
Photograph: Simon Roderick Fraser of Toney River, circa 1876
Photograph of Simon Roderick Fraser, son of James and Nancy (McRae) Fraser of Toney River. The photo comes from the archives of Ethel Drummond. Ethel identified this photo as being Simon Fraser, the cousin of her mother Christine Fraser (McRae) Lawrence.
Photograph: Simon Roderick Fraser of Toney River, seated, with unidentified young man, circa 1880
Tintype photograph of Simon Roderick Fraser, seated, with an unidentified young man. the photograph was probably taken around the year 1880 when Simon was 20 years old. It was also around the time his father, James Fraser, passed.
Photograph: Captain Patrick Mockler 1838-1930
Captain Patrick Mockler, born at River John in 1838, was the son of John and Eleanor Mockler of River John. He was the oldest son of thirteen children - ten of whom lived to adulthood. All five sons were master mariners who sailed the world.
Photograph: Margaret Barbara MacKenzie of Toney River, 1869-1893
Photograph of Margaret Barbara MacKenzie of Toney River. The photograph was taken at Boston. Margaret died not long after she returned from her trip to Boston. She died in 1893 and is buried at Riverwalk Cemetery at Toney Mills.
Photograph: Simon Roderick Fraser of Toney River, seated, with Al McKay of Toney River, circa 1905
This photo was taken by Colin S. MacKenzie of MacKenzie Photo Co. at Aberdeen around the time Al McKay, at age 21, emigrated to Aberdeen from Toney River, N.S. in March 1904. Al's uncle, Simon Fraser, is about 45 years old in this photograph.
Photograph: Simon Fraser, Margaret Matilda Fraser and Jessie Ann MacKenzie Fraser, 1898
Simon Roderick Fraser and Jessie Ann (MacKenzie) Fraser and their daughter Margaret Matilda Fraser (4 years old) prior to their emigration to Aberdeen, Grays Harbor County, Washington, U.S.A. in July 1898
Photograph: Christina "Christy" (McRae) MacMillan
Christy (McRae) MacMillan is the youngest of ten children born to Alexander and Isabella McRae of Toney River. She died in 1944 at Winnipeg at the age of 102. She never remarried after the loss of her husband William MacMillan in December 1915.
Photograph: Roderick and Catherine Ann (McQuarrie) McRae, circa 1925
Roderick and Catherine Anne (McQuarrie) McRae of Roscanville, Saskatchewan and formerly of Toney River. Roderick is the son of Alexander and Isabella McRae of Toney River. Catherine is the daughter of Donald and Catherine McQuarrie of Toney River.
Photograph: Isabella (McRae) McQuarrie of Toney River
Isabella (McRae) McQuarrie, daughter of Alexander and Isabella McRae of Toney River. Isabella married Daniel Lauchlin McQuarrie, son of Lauchlin and Nancy McQuarrie of Scotch Hill. I am interested in more information on Daniel and Isabella McQuarrie.
Image of Allan and Catherine (McRae) McQuarrie
Allan and Catherine (McRae) McQuarrie of Carnoustie, Saskatchewan and formerly of Toney River.
Photograph Portrait: Alexander Hugh McQuarrie
Photograph of Alexander Hugh McQuarrie, son of Allan and Catherine (McRae) McQuarrie of Saskatchewan and formerly of Toney River. Alex used the initials "A.H. McQuarrie" for his name. He left us many poems and information on his uncle, John McRae.
Article: "A man among men: Capt. Patrick Mockler"
Article about Capt. Patrick Mockler of Brule published in the "Shore" by Paul MacKinnon of the North Shore Archives - date unknown.
Death Notice: Donald MacKenzie of Toney River, December 25, 1879
Notice in the Eastern Chronicle, December 25, 1879, of the death of Donald MacKenzie of Toney River, on December 4, 1879. He was from Sutherlandshire, Scotland and 86 years six months. The notice fails to list any surviving family members.
Photograph by Colin Seaforth MacKenzie, 1907. Shipping Scene at Aberdeen Washington
After Colin MacKenzie emigrated to Aberdeen, Grays Harbor County, Washington in 1899, he started work as a logger. He was severely injured in the "Great Aberdeen Fire of 1903." He then started a career as a photographer. This is one of his photographs.
Photograph: Roderick Fairburn "Roddie" MacKenzie 1876-1956 of Rogers Hill, Pictou County.
Son of John Roderick and Annie MacKenzie of Rodgers Hill, Pictou County, Nova Scotia. Brother of Colin Seaforth MacKenzie among others. Photo taken 1899 (age 23).
Colin Seaforth MacKenzie 1879-1912 of Rogers Hill, Pictou County. Photo taken at Aberdeen, Washington circa 1900
Colin Seaforth MacKenzie, of Rogers Hill, Pictou County, emigrated to Aberdeen, Grays Harbor County, Washington in 1899. This photograph of him (far right, with glasses) was taken circa 1900. He died as a deputy sheriff while tracking an outlaw in 1912.
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