THE terminal year of our
farm lease at last had come, and the question of renewal which, for
years, had been, with our household, an anxious matter for discussion,
now demanded immediate settlement. Some six years previously, my father
had purchased in Canada a hundred acre bush farm, and the thought of
being able to make our home in such a possession, free from rent and
expiring leases, had appealed strongly to the imagination of every one
of our household. Now rumour had it that our proprietor, with the
consent of his interested heirs, had succeeded in releasing from entail,
or as Burns would have it: "Riving his father's auld entails," in
respect of that portion of his estate situated in Cromar, and that our
farm, together with all those in that district, was to be sold.
WE DECIDE TO EMIGRATE
In regard to a change of
proprietor such as that would involve, the general experience amongst
tenants had been that the new lairds were less considerate of their
tenants than had been the old hereditary aristocracy, who were reputed
to have retained a sort of fatherly interest in their tenantry from
generation to generation. The Cromar estate was soon purchased by an
English lawyer of the name of Coltman, an estimable gentleman, I
believe, who probably knew little of the conditions of his new tenants
or their peculiar needs. For him, it must be said that he purchased the
estate with a statement in his hand, prepared by expert valuators
employed by the vendor, making their appraisal of the amount of yearly
rental which might be reasonably expected from the several farms on the
estate. That valuation may have been high, but most likely the purchaser
had depended upon it in making the purchase. My father, at least, had
the offer of renewal in terms of the appraised valuation, and I am not
aware that in any case was demand made for rental in excess of the
amount thereby indicated. If, therefore the rents were excessive, the
responsibility therefor would seem to rest not less upon the former
proprietor than upon his successor. Indeed it may well be that, to the
former, through the increased price realized, may have accrued most, if
not all of the benefit arising from the increased rental.
Mother was very unwiIling
to cut herself off from touch with her sole surviving sister and the
scenes and surroundings of her youth, and father therefore did his best
to find another farm in the county that would suit. One such appeared to
be the farm of "The Knock" on which stood the remains of an old castle
of that name already referred to. The owner of this farm was The Prince
of Wales, the future Edward the Seventh. Dr. Robertson, the Prince's
Factor, would fain have favoured my father, whom he well knew, but a
wealthy competitor had offered a higher rent than had my father, which,
when both were submitted to the Prince, was by him naturally accepted.
Another farm in the Buchan District became available at a rental that
seemed reasonable, but, on second thought it was declined.
At that time, land hunger
in Scotland was exceedingly acute, and the acquirement of a suitable
farm extremely difficult, and generally called for a lengthened period
of waiting, such as none of us was disposed to put in exercise. So, at
once arrangements were made for a displenish sale of goods and chattels,
and our passages were booked for the Port of Quebec and the town of
Chatham in Upper Canada.
MEMORIES AND ECHOES
Some of childhood's
pleasing memories are associated with Samuel Innes, the elder, who in
his earlier days had been tenant and operator of the oat-meal-mill at
Logie, but by the time that I remember him, had retired to the farm
known as as "The Moston o' Blelack" which is still occupied by his
grandson George Innes. I can remember and still appreciate his kindness
to the three oldest of our family in inviting us yearly to a feast of
apples from his garden, apples trees being then rather rare in that
locality.
A FORE-NICHT
In Mr. Innes' early days,
there was residing on the farm of Tamoolachie, across the burn from
Newkirk, a man whose name I have forgotten, but who, having been in his
earlier days a coppersmith, bore the cognomen of "Copra." For some time
Copra had been insistently inviting Mr. Innes and another young friend
to make him a fore-nicht visit. At length, the two friends made their
call and, probably, as a joke, prolonged their stay beyond what their
host, at least, deemed reasonable. By and by Copra began to make signs
of impatience to which his visitors seemingly paid no attention.
Patience, at last exhausted. Copra determined to give them such a hint
that, dull, as they seemed to be, they could not fail to understand.
Taking down his Bible for family worship, he selected as appropriate to
the occasion the 25th chapter of the Book of Proverbs, in reading which,
he put special and unmistakable emphasis on the 17th verse, which, in
the authorized version, then alone in use, reads, "Remove thy foot from
thy neighbour's house, lest he weary of thee and so hate thee." No doubt
the visitors had immediately left, nor need it be doubted that host and
visitors had parted in terms of good-will and with feelings,
respectively that the forenicht, from its commencement to its
spectacular conclusion, had been, in all respects, most satisfactory.
In his own pawky way, Mr.
Innes was famed for pithy expressions, some of which, such as "Tak nae
reproof for sids," were reminiscent of his former occupation, "sids"
being the Scotch or local technical term for the coarse outer oat shell
which was removed from the previously roasted grain in its initial
passage through the mill, the narrow space between the upper and nether
mill-stones, being, for that passage, specially adjusted to prevent the
crushing of the kernel. Two of Mr. Innes' sons remained with him on the
farm, John, ultimately becoming the tenant, while the father and Samuel
junior remained with him till each, in turn, was removed by death.
The younger Samuel was
bright and intellectual, and was an excellent singer. He held the office
of Poor Inspector for the parish for many years, and died while in that
office in 1865. In early life, he had by some means, come in contact
with Sir Isaac Pitman's system of short-hand writing and perfected
himself in that art. To him, I owe my introduction to short-hand and
still possess in his hand-writing several exercises which he had written
out for me. His brother John who succeeded him in the office of Poor
Inspector did not long survive him. He was a splendid specimen of
manhood, physically, but fell a victim to pneumonia two years after our
leaving for Canada.
John's wife was a Miss
Davidson. She survived her husband over thirty years and welcomed us on
our visit to Scotland in 1.908. Her father had been a soldier who had
gone through the Peninsular war, and escaped Waterloo so narrowly that
he was on the field next day assisting in the interment of the slain. He
used to tell that in those days of slow-firing weapons, when formed to
receive cavalry, he had had the plumes of his headgear cut by the
horsemen's sabres, but that they had never been able to reach his scalp.
Another military
pensioner, who lived in the same locality, whose name I have forgotten,
was wont to relate with great enthusiasm, one stirring experience in
that fateful struggle which I imagine had reference to the final charge
which culminated in the rout of the enemy and the down-fall of the first
Napoleon. That veteran I never saw, but his description, as reported by
my father, was somewhat as follows:—"As the French Came up in imposing
array and in overwhelming numbers, the order came to charge. Well, I
thought, we may charge aince but it will be the last. Just then, the
Scotch Greys galloped up from behind with a tremendous cheer, 'Hurrah,
Scotland forever yet boys!' That put courage into every heart and in a
minute there was a Frenchman on every 'begnot' " (bayonet).
With the fall of Napoleon
passed from the fields of Continental Europe at least for a time, the
tread of armed men and the shouting of the Captains, but, over Cromar as
over the rest of the Kingdom, stalked ingloriously the ravaging stride
of intemperance. True it is that many earnestly desired and valiantly
struggled for freedom from the devastating yoke, but the chosen ground
of defence, at the best, was that of moderation which meant only
neutrality and frequent defeat.
A little before my day,
on a farm to the south of, and immediately' adjoining our own, was an
oat-meal-mill, of which the miller-tenant was James Robertson. Though
steady and temperate in the main, Robertson had yielded to the enemy so
far as to sometimes overstep the bounds of moderation and to become
intoxicated. Of him the story is told that on one occasion, at a Tarland
market, he had been drinking with a number of his cronies, as was the
custom, and towards night found himself in a crowd of his own class, who
for the time had cast off all pretence of prudence and self-restraint.
By and bye the fun became fast and furious, when one still retaining
some semblance of sobriety, ventured to express the wonder as to what
their wives would think of them should they see them now! One brave man
said that if his wife should show herself here he would thrash her.
Newton was man enough to say that if his wife should come in, he would
go right home with her, though she was but a little body. Poor woman I
knew her well. During a great part of her widowhood she suffered grief
of heart over the intemperate habits of her son, who, however was always
kind to her and who, eventually, though after his mother's death,
abandoned his intemperate habits.
Mrs. Robertson lived by
thy side of the road and we, as children, were allowed the run of the
house as we passed on the way to and from school. Proceeding playfully
and loiteringly along the short distance to her home, we would become
doubtful as to what trick Father Time might have played upon us, and
therefore must needs check him up by Mrs. Robertson's clock which stood
in the ben or parlour end of the house, into which we nevertheless would
enter with all the freedom and assurance that pertains to ownership. But
whether our wanton intrusion was into the ben end to ascertain the time
or consult the barometer as to weather risks and probabilities, or into
the but end whence we would filch from its nail the drinking mug to
quench our thirst at the pump by•the door, never, by word or look was
manifested by Mrs. Robertson or her daughter the slightest indication of
either irritation or disapproval.
The atmosphere is full of
voices from the near and far—sometimes recognizable and sometimes not.
An unknown man, anxious to maintain a reputation for valour which he did
not merit, was, to all appearance, "spoiling" for a fight. Some women
tried to hold him back, but as he struggled to enter the fray one of
them said "If he wants to fight let him try it." Then the poor man
realizing his situation ceased his struggling and proffered to his lady
friends the humble request "Haud me an' I winna be ill to baud."
A domestic in grandfather
Farquharson's house, whose efficiency as a cook would sometimes be
called in question, would justify her inefficiency in words which my
father would sometimes playfully use as a proverb "Little meat an' ill
made ready ser's a lot o' folk."
Tradition had it that
some generations back from mine, the Marquis of Huntly invited the
Presbytery of Kincardine O'Neil to dinner with the deliberate purpose of
making them drunk. To accomplish his design he put a quantity of strong
but well mellowed spirits into the beer that was served on the table.
Thus deceived, all but one are said to have fallen into the trap and to
have become drunk. On the way home two of them had an altercation so hot
that one, the minister of Birse, threw off his coat and addressing it
said: "Lie ye there diveenity till Geordie Smith defen' himsel'."
Current in my day, though
originating at a much earlier date, was an unlocalized story of a
minister who, from the pulpit, on a Sunday morning had given out so many
verses of a psalm to be sung. The precentor raised the tune and led the
congregation till the appointed portion was completed and then sat down.
Soon noticing that the minister was not proceeding with the service, he
resumed his duty and led the congregation to the end of the psalm. When
that had been accomplished and still no word from the pulpit, he turned
to the minister and said "It's deen sir." From the pulpit then came the
drowsy response: "If it's a' deen that's i' the bottle, here's plenty
mair i' the black pig" (jug).
It is to he hoped that no
such thing ever took place in reality, but, in the 18th century and even
later there were ministers capable of acting such a part. Indeed my
father used to tell of an experience of his own early in the 19th
century, in which a minister acted a part not less unbecoming the
sanctity of his calling. My father had occasion to put up for the night
at an inn where, as was usual, intoxicating liquors were sold. About
midnight, he was aroused by a wordy altercation at the door in which
angry voices were heard. A number of drunk men were demanding entrance,
with threats of tearing down the license sign should entrance be
refused. In reply to his question in the morning as to who the
disturbers had been, the girl waiting at the table replied "Wha but oor
minister and some o's elders."
From the Parish of Birse
across the Dee, conics another story that would seem to be illustrative
of the existence of conditions there not unlike those referred to by the
Apostle Paul in his letter to the Church at Corinth. The minister is
represented as reproving his people for partaking with unseemly
copiousness of ;he wine at the Communion Table, using in his indictment
the words "And you Communicants i' the west laft are clean cal oot."
From that originated one of the peculiar expressions of Cromar: "Clean
cap oot like the communicants o' Birse."
If such things were
possible in both pulpit and pew, we may reserve some pity for poor
Geordie Pirie, a carpenter whose business had been suffering from his
unsteady drunken habits. Unexpected encouragement had come to him
through his being employed to make a coffin for a deceased neighbour,
which good fortune he must celebrate by having a dram. To be satisfied
with one glass was for him impossible, and the result was that his
engagement was, for the time, forgotten. Wakening up at last to
consciousness, he set to work with a will and hastily finishing his job,
immediately set about delivering the goods. On the way he was met by the
funeral procession. His inward thoughts may be imagined, but with all
the brazen assurance of the drink addict, he declared his consciousness
of at least one rag of remaining virture, by exclaiming "Here comes
drunken Geordie Pirie slow but sure." Thence originated another Cromar
expression by which the name of poor Geordie is unworthily commemorated:
"Like drunken Geordie Pirie, slow but sure."
Over the field of life
flauntingly rise and bloom the weeds, unneighbourly, aggressive, noxious
and useless whose seeming glory holds for :a time, the vision, but soon,
by evil fruitage, the vileness of their character is disclosed, and the
falsity of their spring-time beauty and promise thenceforth bring but
loathing and contempt. Then is made the discovery that all over the
field, unnoticed by the careless beholder, the ground had all the time,
been covered by the mode4st daisy and the sweet forgetmenot. To the ear
attuned to the celestial harmony, other song: than those of the
drunkard, are ever rising heavenward. At the worst are found
representatives of the seven thousand who have not lowed the knee to
Baal and whose mouths have not kissed him. Such was the Cromar of the
past. Intemperance and other immoralities abounding to the eye and the
ear that watched for their manifestation, while to those whose tastes
and inclination were towards the good, would be revealed a community
that in large measure, sought after and walked in the way of
righteousness. Faults and blemishes there were, but, with all its
faults, I love it still.
PARTINGS
The long anticipated hour
of parting was just at hand. At Mr. Michie's residence (closing for us a
series of sociable gatherings which had gladened hearts and cemented
friendships during recent years) was held a farewell meeting which broke
up as early morn was opening her doors for the out-marching of the Lord
of day. With my brother James and me, came home our good boyhood friend
David Stewart, of Newkirk, fresh home from his studies in Aberdeen, to
share with us for a couple of hours, our hay-loft-bed accommodation,
bereft as it had become since the recent sale, of the familiar sounds
and signals of our former brute companions below. We talked much but did
not sleep, and about five o'clock in the morning got up to join, by
appointment, the Newkirk contingent, in a farewell visit to the top of
Morven. The morning was bright and warm, but, as we ascended the
temperature gradually decreased, till, near the top, we unexpectedly
found ourselves in a field of snow which had not been visible till our
near approach. In the forenoon we returned to go our several ways to the
duties of the day. Already were waiting for James and me some of the
patrons of our recent sale expecting delivery of their respective
purchases. To these I struggled hard to give the needed attention,
conscious that as I walked and talked, overmastering sleep was holding
fast the longer spaces of my blinking rationality.
The rest is soon told.
Our aunt Mary, formerly of Knock-soul, had hospitably opened for us her
new home at Pittentaggart, where we made our headquarters, pending our
departure for our home across the sea. From there a few of us went to
bid farewell to our relatives and friends, the Gordons of Aucholzie.
After a brief visit, the fervent adieus had been spoken, and, in
softened mood, we had just reached the highway on our homeward journey,
when we were met by our uncle David Fletcher accompanied by a younger
man whom we did not recognize. Soon we found that the stranger was no
other than our uncle Rev. Wm. Fletcher, of whom we had heard much from
our mother. He had come from Canada to redeem an old promise made to
her,—which she did not seem to have taken seriously at the time,—that
when she was ready to come to Canada, he would return to see her safely
across the ocean. He appeared younger than I had expected and seemed
glad to be home again and to be reunited for even one short week, with
the surviving members of his family from whom he had been separated for
a quarter of it century.
Our passage had been
taken on board the S. S. St. Andrews of the Allan Line which was to sail
from Glasgow on the 6th of June (1866). Aunt Mary had invited a party to
meet us about the first of that month, at which a large number of our
friends were present, and at it many other "Good-byes" were spoken. On
Saturday the second, I was sent on to Glasgow ahead of the others, to
look after the luggage. On my way to the railway station at Aboyne, I
called, by previous arrangement at Newkirk for my good friend David
Stewart who had offered to accompany me to the station on foot. His
mother greeted me with her usual heartiness, saying, "I'm glad to see
your bonny face again." That was our last meeting. Before my return in
1873 to form a closer alliance with her family, she had gone to the land
%where sorrow and partings never come.
Having seen me safe on
board the train, David took his eight miles homeward tramp alone, while
I in due time reached Aberdeen and received as usual a most hearty
welcome from aunts Margaret and Jane and cousin Annie, with whom I spent
a pleasant Sunday and left on Monday morning for Glasgow. In Glasgow I
was hospitably entertained by cousin John Watson. On Wednesday I was
joined by the rest of our party, consisting of our neighbour John
McCombie and family, uncle David and family, two Edmonston boys from the
farm of Auchnerran, the rest of the Farguharsons and along with them
uncle William, who must have been sorry to leave so soon, the haunts and
scenes of youth and so many friends so fondly remembered. We numbered,
in all, twenty-six.
ANCHOR WEIGHED
The sixth of June dawned
bright and beautiful, and on the afternoon of a perfect day, anchor was
weighed and we steamed down the Clyde in radiant sunshine, between banks
attired in their summer best--the perfection of beauty. The tail of the
bank was soon reached, and while supplies of coal and water were being
taken aboard, our apartments were assigned to us, and our first steerage
supper served. The latter consisted of an unpalatable variety of tea,
and dry sea-biscuit, which tasted for the first time, seemed to me much
superior to their ordinary reputation. Our vessel, as I remember it, was
of 1500 tons burden and was propelled by both steam and sails. The
weather was favourable all the way, and during the voyage very little
occurred to make it in any way remarkable or different from any other
voyage of a similar nature, save that to us was given the opportunity of
making a call at the island of Newfoundland.
On the sixteenth of June
we sighted that island, which, as we drew near, presented a most
forbidding appearance. No cultivated field or human habitation met our
gaze. For a day or two before, an unverified rumour had been floating
that we were to make a call at St. John's, the capital of the island,
but, look as we would along all the bleak and rugged coast no place
could we see on which a city could find repose. On still nearer
approach, however, an opening in the frowning hills began to manifest
itself as a possible inlet. At one side of this opening we could, by and
by plainly see the remains of a stranded iceberg, and soon it became
evident that into this opening, our vessel was being guided. It was
indeed the gate-way into the passage known as "The Narrows" which
connects the ocean with the easterly end of the beautiful and spacious
harbour of St. John's. This harbour is sheltered from ocean storms by
the intervening rocky ridge which to the north of the Narrows rises to
the height of 620 feet, and to the south thereof to a height of 520
feet. The Narrows at the entrance are 1400 feet, and at the narrowest
point, only 600 feet in width, but both Narrows and harbour are of
sufficient depth at lowest tides, to accommodate the largest ocean
vessels.
Under the protection of
the guns by which the heights on either side are surmounted, we found
ourselves, at noon of a bright sunny Saturday safely moored in the
harbour above described. Around us, in the sunshine were plying pleasure
crafts of all descriptions, while, along the quay were crowds of
sightseers attired in holiday garb which to our eyes seemed suitable
only for the tropics. Assured that our stay would exceed an hour, a few
of us ventured a little distance beyond the city limits and from
observation concluded that agriculture had little opportunity, and was
receiving less attention, around St. John's, although, it is said there
are large fertile areas inland. Our brief visit was very much enjoyed by
us all, and, contrary to our expectations, it was extended to two
o'clock on Sunday morning. As night came on, our impressions of
peacefulness were rather rudely dispelled. Around us in the steerage had
been slumbering, all unsuspected, elements that needed only the touch of
opportunity to waken them into unbridled manifestations of evil. Late at
night, we could hear numbers of our fellows coming in under the
influence of liquor, and giving expression to abominable obscenity. It
would seem that in St. John's, as elsewhere, both good and bad can find
what they respectively seek.
The object of our call at
St. John's was to take on board fifty men of the Hundredth Canadian
Regiment, who, probably in view of the Fenian trouble then at its
height, were being moved to Canada. Whatever may have been the occasion
for the order given for that I~.~rticular transfer, we were, immediately
on land tog. met by a street rumour that Montreal had already been taken
and that the Fenians were pressing onward toward Toronto. This was too
much for credence, and soon we set ourselves right by procuring a
newspaper, from which we learned that a Fenian force had indeed made a
landing in Canada, but that it had been repelled by the Canadian
volunteers, at the cost of several valuable lives. Early on Sunday
morning anchor again was weighed, and once more we pursued our westward
voyage.
Nothing of special interest occurred until we reached the Gulf of St.
Lawrence, when, somewhere off Cape Gaspe, we ran into a fog. For hours
the horn sounded intermittently while the movement of the vessel almost
entirely ceased. Encircled as we were by this impenetrable mist a
cheerless gloom settled on both crew and passengers. At last with
dramatic suddenness our fears were dispelled. From his eyrie on the
crow's nest the watchman saw above the mists the signals that marked the
channel. With the words, "All clear," full steam ahead was ordered and
in a few minutes we too had left the fog behind and swept into the
cheering sunlight. As we sailed up the river we watched with interest,
sometime, the operations of the farm and at other times the process of
burning the brush and logs from recent clearings.
In the afternoon of
Thursday the 21st of June, we landed at Point Levis, which at that time
was the port of landing for all ocean passengers. We did not enter into
the city of Quebec, and thus saw only from a distance the field on which
the heroic Wolfe and his gallant antagonist Montcalm gave their lives.
Our stay at Point Levis was brief, for as soon as we got our baggage
checked and food provided for the journey we were ready for a start.
Soon we found ourselves
on board a car composing part of a train longer than any I had ever seen
before. Our car was of the same construction, as to seating, as the
ordinary passenger car in Canada today but the seats had no cushions and
the car throughout was void of any pretence of adornment. We left Point
Levis about six o'clock in the afternoon. Sometimes we seemed to get
along fairly well, but, ever and anon we would be held up at a station,
or depot, as such were then called in Canada, and once stopped, there
was no saving when we would get off again. Occasionally we would find
ourselves going backwards for what seemed an interminable distance, and
soon we became convinced that, as to distance carried and time term of
house accommodation provided, we were likely to get the full value of
our money.
As Friday morning dawned,
we found ourselves at a country station where we were glad to hear for
the first time the singing of Canadian birds. Glad, indeed was I, for I
had heard that the birds of Canada had little or no song. To be sure,
the pibroch melody of the Scottish lark was missing, but the notes rung
out were manifold and pleasing.
Looking round, we noticed
that in our train were a large number of foreigners. These had left
their cars and were washing hands and faces in a little stream near by.
In peeping into one of their cars, I noticed to my surprise, that it was
an ordinary freight car, in which some rude pretence of seating
accommodation had been improvised but no sanitary arrangements had been
provided. I felt sorry for the poor people, and yet not sorry enough, I
am afraid, to evoke any real regret that, on the previous evening, I had
felt glad when our conductor had forbidden some of them entry into our
car though it was not more than comfortably filled.
Our company, young and
old, had wakened bright and early to their dry breakfast of bread and
butter or cheese when Geordie Edmondston quick to take in the situation,
hurriedly left the car, as it stood on a siding, and pail in hand,
approached a girl who was in a nearby field milking a cow, and
negotiated with her for a liberal supply of milk so precious to the
little ones. That supply gladdened the hearts of all, and the kind and
thoughtful act has lived in my memory, as a green spot, ever since. That
long day dragged itself to its close, and the wearied travellers
composed themselves for the uncertain slumbers of the night, on the
softest board that might offer support therefor. The older ones kept
their seats, but the little ones instinctively sought the floor, all
unswept and dust-laden as it was. Through the night, poor Geordie
Fletcher, then a little boy, was missing, and his mother, aunt Becky,
wakened tip in great alarm. She feared, and not without reason, that he
might have wandered out in his sleep and fallen off the train. For a few
minutes there was consternation, but, soon Geordie was found at he rear
end of the car, stretched at full length on the floor, and fast asleep.
TORONTO
On Saturday night, about
dark, we reached Toronto, even then a considerable city. Our special
train was not further available, and we were inconsiderately left to
shift for ourselves, as best we could, over Sunday. Our family was most
hospitably entertained by our good friends Mr. and Mrs. Thomson, the
latter being a niece of grandfather Stewart with whom we attended church
and heard Dr. Topp preach.
On Monday morning, we
bade our generous hosts "Goodbye," and found, on reaching the station,
that there was no special train available for our use, and that it would
therefore be necessary to content ourselves with an ordinary first-class
car! In it we found soft-cushioned seats, and luxury, such as we had
never before indulged in. It seemed to us that journeying in such
luxuriance, might be carried on indefinitely. Without weariness or
discomfort. Such is life. Some limitation binds us and we feel sure that
if relieved from its restraint and made possessor of some such liberty
or potency as is possessed by some one else, our cup of happiness would
be full. Vain delusion! Happiness and contentment are a condition of
mind rather than of circumstance, and will not be induced by the voice
of any superficial charmer, charming never so wisely. Our happy
experience, though a most welcome change, was short-lived. At Hamilton
we were put off to wait for an immigrant train and had to subject
ourselves once more to its uncushioned seats, together with the shunting
and other delays incident to its lowly class and status as a passenger
carrier.
About nine o'clock in the
evening, of the same day, we reached Chatham which, by the road then
travelled, was 15 miles short of our destination. We put up at what was
then known as "Lark's Tavern" and later as "The Park House." In the
morning; we were surprised to find that uncle John Fletcher, with his
light wagon was waiting to receive us. A little later, his son William
Charles, with two or more of their neighbours, arrived with lumber
wagons to bring to their destination, both passengers and baggage. Most
of the ladies of our contingent, with the children, were accommodated in
the light wagon which was put in charge of Uncle William, while the
elder men waited to come later, with the lumber wagons. My brothers
James and Charlie, the latter then a sturdy boy of 14, together with the
two Edmondston boys and myself, determined to foot it, and so
accompanied the light wagon, with which, loaded as it was, and further
retarded by the heavy condition of the roads resulting from a
thunderstorm of the previous night, we were easily able to keep up. We
landed at uncle John's place in the afternoon and were kindly welcomed
by cousins Charlotte, John, Helen, and David, and had with them a
sumptuous supper on the spacious verandah, getting there our first
introduction to corn bread or Johnny cake, done up in its holiday best,
which, along with the other good things provided for us, we heartily
enjoyed. Later in the evening, the remainder of our crowd, with the
lumber wagons, arrived and we spent an enjoyable evening together. |