John Dixon McLaren

Male 1912 - 1982  (70 years)


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  John Dixon McLaren was born on 13 Apr 1912 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States (son of Peter McLaren, Jr. and Mary Celia Dixon); died on 14 Dec 1982 in Redondo Beach, Los Angeles, California, United States; was buried in Green Hills Memorial Park, Rancho Palos Verdes, Los Angeles County, California, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39368346
    • _UID: 5192BCF9B1D14EEEA250E5EA03DA04C6BED4

    Notes:

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39368346

    Died:
    Born on the family farm in Vienna, South Dakota, on the same day as his future spouse. Moved with his family from South Dakota to Hollister, California in 1917. Moved to Wilmington, in the harbor of Los Angeles, in 1927. A graduate of Banning High School and Compton Junior College. John married Martha Elizabeth Winchester in July of 1935; two sons. He worked as a gauger for the Union Oil Company for a decade before being accepted as a fireman for the Los Angeles Fire Department. He took disability retirement from the LAFD as a Captain in 1969 after 27 years of service.

    John married Martha Elizabeth Winchester in 1935. Martha was born on 13 Apr 1912 in Wilmington, Los Angeles County, California, United States; died on 15 Dec 1999 in Los Alamitos, Orange County, California, United States; was buried in Green Hills Memorial Park, Rancho Palos Verdes, Los Angeles County, California, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Peter McLaren, Jr. was born on 27 May 1866 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada (son of Peter McLaren, Sr. and Elizabeth Walker); died on 20 Jun 1945 in Los Angeles County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39372133
    • _UID: 0368A80D41B54D6DA2FEA4444E49DF24F2EE

    Notes:

    In 1884 Peter emigrated from Canada with his parents to homestead in the Dakota Territory near what later became Vienna, South Dakota. He farmed with his father and later with his wife Mary Celia (Dixon) McLaren. Peter and Mary Celia married in 1896 and raised five children. In the early 1900's he became a rural mail delivery man. In 1917 the family moved to Hollister, California where Peter became an orchardist. He lost Mary Celia in 1924 and "lost the farm/orchard" in the Depression. He then moved with his two young sons to Wilmington, California, in the harbor of Los Angeles, and became a watchman on the docks. He worked well into his 70's before retiring to live with his oldest son, John.

    By 1910 Peter Jr. had abandoned the farming life to become a rural delivery postman. The family legends have him in a sleigh during the Dakota Winters, moving directly from farmhouse to farmhouse, with the roads invisible under the snow. He received a post card from a friend in California in 1909. The card planted a seed.

    ?b?Here are some Reasons to Move.?/b?

    There is every indication that Robert Arthur Dixon, Peter Jr.'s father-in-law, was not a well man for decades after the Civil War. His application for pension supports this belief. He was surrounded by his children throughout this period and I have assumed that Peter Jr.'s move to the Dixon lands around 1905 was to help with his care.

    Cousin Phyllis Goold has the post card, still part of the family archives, that supposedly opened Peter Jr.'s eyes to the possibility of life beyond the Dakotas. Here it is:

    Hollister, California - Postcard?tab?(see media)
    Postmarked January 14, 1909 and addressed to "P. McLaren Jr. Vienna Clark Co S. Dak.," the handwriting on the back asks: Note the concrete walks and asphalt trim pavement. We are getting a fine rain. Temperature 58 degrees. How does that strike you?

    Since Peter Jr. was up to his armpits in snow at the time, it probably struck him hard.

    Robert Dixon died in February of 1917 and his daughter, Peter Jr.'s wife Mary Celia, had just given birth to their fifth child. At age forty four, Mary Celia was not in the best of health.

    They had just endured another winter, and the weather in California has long been touted as a cure for anything that ails you. It was time to move west.

    Peter McLaren, Jr. arrived with his family in Hollister, California in 1917. Peter was 51 years old, his wife, Mary Celia, was 45. Their children were Marion (19 years old), Marjorie (17), Elsie (13), John (5), and Robert (1). They settled west of town in an area of fruit orchards. Peter became an orchardist.

    ?b?Here is a California Timeline.?/b?
    Cousin Phyllis Goold, daughter of Marjorie (McLaren) Butterfield, lived in and around Hollister all her life. Her father and her husband were both orchardists. So it is with some authority that she tells us the groves of fruit trees are orchards (not farms) and the folks who tend the orchards are orchardists (they don't like to be called farmers).

    That was Peter Jr.'s chosen profession when he settled on San Juan Road, west of town, in 1917.

    By 1920 Marion McLaren, the oldest child, had entered nursing school in San Francisco. In 1921 she graduated, married, and bore a son, William F. McLaughlin.

    In 1922 Marjorie, the second daughter, married Earle Butterfield and they started their family (a girl and two boys) in Hollister.

    In 1924 Peter Jr.'s wife, Mary Celia, died. She was 52 years old and had been in ill health for a number of years. Remember, she had born the last of their five children at age 44, which was rather unusual for the time. Her obituary stated she "has not been a very strong woman at any period of her life, and in recent years she has suffered much."

    Peter is now a fifty eight year old widower with a twenty year old daughter and two sons, twelve and eight. At some point in the late 1920's the wheels have come off the dream wagon.

    By 1930 Peter has moved to Wilmington, California, in the harbor of Los Angeles. He rents a home and finds a job as a watchman on the docks. His oldest son, John, now seventeen and a recent high school graduate, is working at a service station. This, remember, is the start of a horrific economic depression and they are fortunate to have any kind of work. Elsie, the youngest daughter, is now twenty five, single, boarding with a widowed woman in San Jose and working as a stenographer in a bank.

    In January of 1934 Elsie dies. We are reasonably certain her death was by her own hand. You will find a tribute to Elsie in the Vignettes portion of this site.

    This isn't good; but the story isn't over.

    As the country emerged from the depression in the late 1930s John and Martha had the first of two sons. By 1942 John had secured a job with the Los Angeles Fire Department and would remain there for three decades, the rest of his working life. Their sons graduated from college, became professionals, and raised their own families.

    So we can follow the arc of all these lives, from a sailing ship on the Atlantic, to a pine forest in Canada, to the plains of South Dakota, to the orchards of central California, and on . . . They dreamed, they struggled, they endured, and they made our lives possible. I borrowed the title "City of Dreams" from the song by the Talking Heads. Every time I hear it, think about it, I remember the gift they gave. We live in the cities they dreamed of. And every time I'm feeling down, getting a little cynical, I remember their graves, and their faces. I'm sitting with the sun streaming through the window, tapping on my computer, well fed and healthy. Can't you see them smile? We live their dreams!







    By 1930 John Dixon McLaren, Peter Jr.'s eldest son, was dating Martha Elizabeth "Tookie" Winchester. They married in 1935 and began the final chapter, as the McLarens enter the City of Dreams.

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39372133

    Died:
    In 1884 Peter emigrated from Canada with his parents to homestead in the Dakota Territory near what later became Vienna, South Dakota. He farmed with his father and later with his wife Mary Celia (Dixon) McLaren. Peter and Mary Celia married in 1896 and raised five children. In the early 1900's he became a rural mail delivery man. In 1917 the family moved to Hollister, California where Peter became an orchardist. He lost Mary Celia in 1924 and "lost the farm/orchard" in the Depression. He then moved with his two young sons to Wilmington, California, in the harbor of Los Angeles, and became a watchman on the docks. He worked well into his 70's before retiring to live with his oldest son, John.

    Peter married Mary Celia Dixon about 1896. Mary (daughter of Robert Arthur Dixon and Sarah Jane Rowland) was born on 14 Jan 1872 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States; died on 18 Jun 1924 in Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Celia Dixon was born on 14 Jan 1872 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States (daughter of Robert Arthur Dixon and Sarah Jane Rowland); died on 18 Jun 1924 in Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39372324
    • _UID: 2FC74E65C6E94C149CDDEF1513061F3DAABC

    Notes:

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39372324

    Children:
    1. Marion McLaren was born about 1898; and died.
    2. Marjorie McLaren was born on 14 Dec 1899 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; died on 10 Mar 1973 in Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.
    3. Elsie McLaren was born on 23 Jul 1904 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; died on 7 Jan 1934 in San Jose, Santa Clara County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.
    4. 1. John Dixon McLaren was born on 13 Apr 1912 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; died on 14 Dec 1982 in Redondo Beach, Los Angeles, California, United States; was buried in Green Hills Memorial Park, Rancho Palos Verdes, Los Angeles County, California, United States.
    5. Robert Charles McLaren was born on 16 Jun 1916 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; died on 29 Jul 1973 in San Gabriel, Los Angeles, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Peter McLaren, Sr. was born on 9 Jun 1839 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada (son of John McLaren and Marion McIlquham); died on 19 Dec 1913 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; was buried in Dixon New Hope Cemetery, Vienna, Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39256458
    • _UID: AA877D3E92A34745A9614B5FD2986C568D5B
    • Census-Household Member: 1851, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; Canada

    Notes:

    Peter McLaren, Sr. entered the United States at Port Huron, Michigan in March of 1884. From there he proceeded to the Dakota Territories with his wife and three children. He was forty five years old and his wife Elizabeth was forty three. In the Dakotas he would establish the Vienna Homestead.

    ?b?The Vienna Homestead?/b?
    The Homestead Act of 1862 allowed any person twenty one years of age and a citizen of the U.S., or who had filed a declaration of intention to become such, to file a claim on 160 acres of land in certain specified areas. By 1885 Peter had filed for a quarter section (160 acres) of land in the Dakota Territories, about a mile southwest of what would become the town of Vienna.

    Peter was among the first settlers in this area and since he was accompanied by his wife and three children they obviously had the resources to survive until their land could be converted into a productive farm. Peter's younger brother, James, had inherited their father's farm in Lanark and may have provided financial support. We will never know. When the family arrived in the Dakota Territories, Peter Jr., the oldest boy, was eighteen years old. His brother, John Walker, was sixteen. Daughter Marion, the oldest child, was twenty. She did not marry until she was twenty four.

    In 1887 fortune smiled, as the Duluth, Watertown and Pacific Railroad Company started to build a rail bed through the territory. The track would bisect their township from the southwest to the northeast, passing within a half mile of their farm. It was the railroad that created the town of Vienna, designated as one of its stops. In those days, the economic significance of having a rail station close to your farm can not be overstated.

    In November 1889 the Dakota Territories became North and South Dakota and Peter Sr.'s family started to grow.

    Once established and farming the land, Peter Sr.'s family began to experience the highs and lows typical of the times. The McLarens would spend more than three decades in and around Vienna. Here is a Family Timeline.
    ?b?
    A Family Timeline?/b?
    1889 - Daughter Marion ("Minnie") marries the local blacksmith, thirty year old James Sproat Henery. She soon delivers the first of eight children, only five of whom survive - not unusual numbers in that period of time.

    1896 - Peter Jr. marries Mary Celia ("Minnie") Dixon, daughter of one of the original settlers. He is thirty, she is twenty four. They will have five children.

    1897 - John Walker, Peter Sr.'s youngest son, died suddenly, at age twenty nine. John was a medical student in Minneapolis and the family legend was "a wrestling accident."

    1898 - Peter Sr. is elected chairman of the Township Officers. Vienna is part of Pleasant Township, the total population of which is less than 500.

    1899 - Peter Jr. and Mary Celia obtain 160 acres of land adjacent to Peter Sr.'s original farm.

    1900 - Federal Census shows Peter Sr. and Peter Jr. farming their respective lands.

    1905 - South Dakota Census shows Peter Sr. on his original farm. Peter Jr. has moved his family (now with three daughters) to the Dixon lands, just east of Vienna. He is still listed as "farmer" and is probably living in the house where my father will be born. He is next door to his father-in-law, Robert Arthur Dixon, and two brothers-in-law.

    1908 - Elizabeth (Walker) McLaren, Peter Sr.'s wife, dies.

    1910 - Federal Census shows Peter Sr., now widowed, living in Vienna with his granddaughter Pearl Irene Henery and a great grandson. Peter Jr. is still on the Dixon land and is now a "rural mail" delivery man for the U.S. Postal Service.

    1913 - Peter Sr. dies. He is buried next to his wife and son in the Dixon Cemetery, at the northeast corner of the Dixon lands.

    1917 - Peter Jr.'s father-in-law, Robert Arthur Dixon, dies.

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39256458

    Census-Household Member:
    Role: Household Member


    Buried:
    PETER
    McLAREN
    June 9, 1839
    Dec. 19, 1913
    In my fathers house are many mansions. [?i?John 14:2?/i?]

    Peter married Elizabeth Walker about 1863. Elizabeth was born on 31 May 1841 in Owen Sound, Grey County, Ontario, Canada; died on 22 Jun 1908 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; was buried in Dixon New Hope Cemetery, Vienna, Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Elizabeth Walker was born on 31 May 1841 in Owen Sound, Grey County, Ontario, Canada; died on 22 Jun 1908 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; was buried in Dixon New Hope Cemetery, Vienna, Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39256612
    • _UID: C7B6AFE35AD24949AA120A1023E1C029900E

    Notes:

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39256612

    Buried:
    Inscription:
    Elizabeth McLaren
    born May 31, 1941
    died June 22, 1908
    "She hath done what she could"
    Note: The encomium, or formal expression of praise, "she hath done what she could," is from Mark 14.8 and was bestowed upon a female disciple of the Savior for a special act of love and devotion.

    Children:
    1. Marion McLaren was born about 1864; and died.
    2. 2. Peter McLaren, Jr. was born on 27 May 1866 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; died on 20 Jun 1945 in Los Angeles County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.
    3. John Walker McLaren was born about 1868; died about 1897.

  3. 6.  Robert Arthur Dixon was born on 8 Nov 1834 in Ireland; died on 22 Feb 1917 in Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States; was buried in Dixon New Hope Cemetery, Vienna, Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 39251008
    • _UID: 9FD7BCE06E8D4A3AAFB7E0127D755633649B

    Notes:

    Robert Arthur Dixon was the son of Robert Dixon and Mary Elizabeth Wilson, born "on shipboard" in the harbor of Belfast, Northern Ireland. Raised in Illinois, he was a Captain in the 55th Illinois Infantry in the Civil War. He later became a pioneer settler of the Dakota Territory and this cemetery is on his homestead land. A more extensive biography is here: ?b??i?http://david.mclaren.name/robert_arthur_dixon.htm
    ?/b??/i?
    ?b?Biography
    ?/b?
    In 1834 Robert Dixon, freeholder of the Lislea estate in County Fermanagh, Northern Ireland, departed the family home with his pregnant wife and two young sons, intent on immigrating to Australia. Soon after their departure they were shipwrecked and returned to Ireland, where they filed suit against the ship owners in Liverpool. While the litigation was in progress Robert's third child, Robert Arthur Dixon, Jr. was born, "on shipboard" according to the family bible, at Belfast on November 8th.

    In August of 1837, now with a fourth child (their first daughter, Jane Caroline, born in January 1836) they resumed their journey. In the intervening years however, for reasons unknown, they had changed their destination to the United States. They boarded the ship Sheridan in Liverpool, sailed to New York City, and then took the Erie Canal to Chicago where they settled about 25 miles west of that city in the area now known as Downers Grove.

    Robert Dixon, Jr. was my great grandfather. He was two years old during the transit from Ireland to Chicago. He met and married his wife, Sarah Jane Rowland, in Downers Grove. Absent that shipwreck I wouldn't be here and you wouldn't be reading about this fascinating gentleman. Life is random.

    Robert Arthur's father was one of the earliest settlers of Illinois, taking up government land and starting a farm. As the settlement grew, he was elected Justice of the Peace for many years and was the first judge in Downers Grove. Four more children, two boys and two girls, were born to the family in Illinois, the last in 1847. Then Robert's father, Robert Sr., died suddenly in August of 1850, at the age of forty five. Robert Jr. was fifteen.

    No child expects to lose his father that young, but in those days a fifteen year old farmer's son was essentially an adult. With his two older brothers, ages seventeen and eighteen, they were quite capable of maintaining the farm and caring for their mother and the younger siblings. Robert's older brother James married in 1857 and then William married in 1859. In the 1860 Census Robert's mother Mary is "head" of the household and twenty five year old Robert is the man of the house, farming with his five younger siblings.

    In January of 1861 the southern states began to secede from the Union and in April the Civil War began. Robert Dixon Sr. had been a staunch Abolitionist and one of the leaders of the Underground Railroad at a time when those sentiments required great courage. A decade after his passing Robert Senior's children followed in his footsteps. His four oldest sons all volunteered and served in the Union Army. Robert Jr. and his older brother William both enlisted on 3 September 1861. They were assigned to Company "E" of the 55th Infantry Regiment, Illinois in October. William resigned, for unknown reasons, in March of 1862, but Robert continued his service. Older brother James enlisted in August of 1862 and younger brother Charles, who was too young at the start of the war, enlisted in October of 1864.

    During the war the 55th Infantry was part of General Sherman's march from Atlanta to the sea. They engaged in more than twenty pitched battles and dozens of other skirmishes. In the battle of Shiloh, in April of 1862, the 55th Infantry distinguished themselves against a vastly superior force, but they lost ten officers and 102 others killed or mortally wounded; probably one quarter of their total compliment. Overall, the most destructive of those battles was Kenesaw Mountain, in June of 1864, where Sherman lost nearly three thousand men.

    Captain Robert Arthur DixonAnother of their battles lets us revisit the thought that life is random: The battle of Missionary Ridge. General Sherman's forces drove the Confederate Army from the area around Chattanooga, Tennessee in October and November of 1863. Among the Confederate casualties of that battle was my maternal great grandfather Barney Burch. He received a wound that led to paralysis and eventually caused his death. However, Barney lived to be eighty two years old and sired twelve children, including my grandmother, so it's hard to hold a grudge. But please note that two of my great grandfathers stood on opposite sides of that ridge, one in Blue and one in Grey, and if one of the men in Blue had been a better shot I wouldn't be here.

    Robert served almost exactly four years, with only one thirty day furlough in the spring of 1864. His regiment re-enlisted after three years of service, with the understanding that they would elect their own officers, and Robert was elected Lieutenant. He mustered out as a Captain on 14 August 1865, one of only ten men in his company that had never been wounded.

    After the war Robert and his brothers returned to Downers Grove. Their mother, Mary Elizabeth (Wilson) Dixon, died in 1865, about the time of their return. She was fifty six years old. The older sons were apparently no longer interested in farming and the family farm passed to John, the youngest brother (then 22 years old). Robert entered the wood and coal business in Chicago. He then formed a partnership with his older brothers, William and James, to manufacture window sashes and blinds. Younger brother Charles was also in Chicago manufacturing mouldings.

    On Christmas day of 1869 Robert married Sarah Jane Rowland at the home of her father in Downers Grove. In the 1870 Census he and his wife are living in Chicago with his brother James and his family. Brother William and his family are next door.

    The Dixon brothers' business was later destroyed by the economic crisis of 1873 and Robert returned to Downers Grove. There he engaged in general merchandizing with his brother-in-law Peter Rowland.

    Between 1872 and 1878 Robert and Sarah had four children, two girls and two boys. They were active members of the Methodist Episcopal Church in Downers Grove and Robert was "an active and energetic Republican." By 1881 he had located in Lisle, Illinois, just West of Downers Grove, where he ran a general store doing good business. But Robert had decided to "move on." (The fact that Robert Sr. was the freeholder of the Lislea estate in Ireland and Robert Jr. is doing business in Lisle, Illinois is pure coincidence.)

    The Dakota Territories had been available for settlement for many years, but it was the discovery of gold in the Black Hills in 1874 that energized the migration. By 1877 the railroads decided it would be profitable to extend their lines into the Territory and thus began a land "boom" that lasted from 1878 to 1887. Robert Dixon decided he wanted some of that land and in October of 1882 he boarded a train for Howard, 600 miles west northwest of Lisle, in what is now South Dakota.

    He arrived in Howard on October 11th and began an odyssey involving 450 more miles of train travel, nine stops and countless miles of walking or riding horses or buggies. The details of his search and subsequent claim of land come from letters exchanged between Robert and his wife. The originals are in possession of an Illinois cousin, Dean Essig, and he was kind enough to send me copies. Follow the link Robert and Sarah's Letters (This is an Adobe PDF? file; use your back button to return to this page) to find transcripts of their letters and a map of the area Robert scoured.

    Robert started by looking for "free" land under the Homestead Act. The head of a household would be granted a quarter section of land (160 acres, ? mile square) if he would live on the property and improve it over a period of five years. He quickly concluded that "I am a year too late." All land within 10 to 15 miles of the railroads was taken and all the free claims within 20 miles, and he certainly wasn't the only one riding the rails in search of something suitable. "I have a thorough knowledge of the county and all I have to do is to locate. I find this a hard thing to do, my heart sometimes almost fails me . . . I am trying to trust in Him . . . with His help I will make no mistake." Since free claims were out of reach, he decided to "preempt" a claim by paying a small fixed price per acre. As a Civil War veteran, he was also entitled to claim a second quarter section with a "soldier's filing" and expressed great concern that Sarah forward his discharge papers to prove his eligibility.

    After searching for almost three weeks, on October 28, 1882 Robert finally filed a preemptive claim to one quarter section and a soldier's claim to a second quarter. The claims formed the south half of Section 6 in what would eventually become Dixon Township. (A township is a square plot of land containing 36 sections, and is, therefore, six miles on a side. Section 6 would be the northwest corner of that square.) This claim was twelve miles due south of the new railroad station in Henry, just west of Watertown. The story goes that the wheel of his buggy struck a grass covered stone, which proved to be the U.S. survey marker for the land. After filing his claim he returned to find a prairie fire had burned the area and it took him some time to locate his land.

    Preemption required Robert to move onto one claim immediately and "prove" he lived there for six months. He would then move to the second quarter, his soldier's filing, and repeat the process. So he proceeded to build a structure he eventually called "Big Shanty" on his preemption. Let's be clear: His claim is twelve miles from the railroad station, it's almost November and he's going to build a place to live alone through the Dakota winter. Robert will be forty eight years old in November; think about that.

    As he starts construction, each trip to the hardware store is a twelve mile hike, then hire a wagon to haul the supplies and return to the shanty. In one instance the store in Henry was out of nails, so he rode the train eighteen miles to Watertown. "I am now preparing to build a big shanty. The lumber will cost over $100.00. This lumber I will want for a stable when our house is built. I have spent up to the present time $80.00 leaving me $70.00 on hand. I bought me an overcoat for $8.00." He completed the shanty, 24 x 28 feet, in mid-November and prepared to hunker down for the winter. His nearest neighbor was 2 ? miles away and he was the only resident in Dixon Township during that winter. Sarah expressed legitimate concern over his plan: ". . . how in the world you are going to contrive to move into & live in that shanty up there without anything to move I cannot understand. Will you buy a stove & a blanket & try soldier's life again?" Indeed. Her letters also mention his purchase of a gun and some "fox traps," so he was obviously positioning himself as a "hunter/gatherer" in his new digs.

    It was winter, it was South Dakota. Sarah expressed her concern in early February: "Mr. McMillan tells me that all the R.R.'s up in Dakota & Minn. he thinks are blockaded, and have been so since Tuesday, so I suppose that will account for my receiving no letters this week ? If I only knew you had provided yourself with plenty of provisions & coal to last through the stormy season I think I would not worry but I fear you have not . . . We are having an exceptionally cold stormy winter here. Yesterday morning Mr. Fret Hatch's thermometer stood at 26 deg below zero."

    Robert survived the winter and in March of 1883 returned to Lisle to gather his family, his possessions and lumber for another house. He would soon "prove" his first claim by having lived in the shanty for six months. Now he needed to establish residence on the soldiers filing. His family would move into the shanty that spring while they built a new home on the second quarter during the summer. His daughters were four and eleven years old, his sons were seven and nine. Other settlers had moved into the area by then and in May a Sunday-school was organized and held in the Dixon shanty. By July of 1884 a public school was organized on Section 5, next door. The shanty was also used for services by the Free Methodist church.

    Not everyone claiming land in the Dakotas was as determined as Robert. Many claims were forfeited when the claimants couldn't or wouldn't make the sacrifices necessary to hold on. At some point during this process Robert purchased a relinquishment on a tree claim, another quarter section adjacent to his original claims, which brought his total holdings to 480 acres.

    In 1887 the Duluth, Watertown and Pacific Railroad Company began construction of a rail line that would eventually pass within 500 yards of the Dixon home. Progress was slow, as all the graders and scrapers were horse drawn, but the importance of a rail line this close to a farm can't be overstated. After the rails were down the railroad created a station which became the center of the town of Vienna (pronounced "v-eye-enna" in South Dakota). Vienna was less than a quarter of a mile west of the Dixon land. The Railroad became the Burlington Northern and Vienna grew to a town of almost 500 folks in the early 1900's. Robert had been convinced a rail line would be built somewhere in the area, but the exact location was anybody's guess and nothing is certain. There is no substitute for blind luck.

    Dixon Township was named for Robert in 1889, the last township organized in Hamlin County. Robert was a member of its first board of supervisors and was continuously part of township and school affairs. He served as a commissioner of Hamlin County for six years and, in 1891, he was chosen state senator for the 27th District, serving one term. (The Dakota Territory became North and South Dakota in November of 1889. State senators were originally appointed, rather than elected.) He was a Populist, an upholder of prohibition and equal suffrage.

    Senator Robert Arthur DixonThis photo was in the Biographical Directory of the South Dakota legislature, so it was taken around 1891, when Robert was 55 years old. If we apply today's grooming standards, the beard isn't particularly attractive. But then I remember my grandfather, Anthony Winchester, emerging from the bathroom after using his straight razor. (You remember straight razors - sharpened with the leather razor strap. And the cup of shaving soap, with the shaving brush.) His face would be dotted with scraps of toilet paper and blood; there were patches of long hair on his neck that he either hadn't seen or he chose not to risk slitting a major artery; and it was hours before the dots of paper came off. And Anthony had a sink with hot running water. Robert Dixon would have had to heat the water and then use a lamp or candle to provide light if he was shaving before sunrise. Suddenly the beard looks just fine.

    Robert was not a large man. His Civil War records describe him as 5 foot 3 ? inches tall and 135 pounds. He was the shortest of the four brothers with war records; but the tallest, William, was 5 foot 6 inches. His physical stature obviously didn't limit his status. He was elected to an officer's position during the Civil War; he was a successful businessman, literally a pioneer in the Dakota Territory, then was elected or appointed to several political offices.

    It had been a fascinating but strenuous life. In February of 1892, at age fifty six, Robert submitted a Declaration for Invalid Pension to the U.S. Government. The English language confuses me at times, and I couldn't imagine applying for a pension that wasn't valid. It took a while to realize that Robert was not asking for an in-va-lid pension, he was declaring that he was an in-va-lid. The details of his application and subsequent pension payments can be found here: Pension Synopsis. Suffice it to say he was not well and his condition worsened over time. By 1895 he declared himself "totally incapacitated for the performance of any manual labor," and his declaration was supported by doctors and other witnesses.

    One portion of the application struck me, as Robert listed his various physical ailments: "In the fall of 1884 he received an accidental gunshot wound on the right side of his head and in his right shoulder from which he is threatened with paralysis." Four years of Civil War combat, dozens of major battles, one of ten men in his company without a scratch, and he gets shot at home in South Dakota by accident.

    Robert Arthur DixonOf course, he only lived twenty five years after declaring himself an invalid, dying in his home in February of 1917 at the age of eighty two. There he was surrounded his wife, both of his sons, and one daughter with her husband (my grandparents), all living on the Dixon compound, the site of Robert's original homestead claim. He was buried in the Dixon "New Hope" Cemetery on the northeast corner of his land, joined later by his wife and son Robert Rowland Dixon.

    The Dixon land is still being farmed, though Vienna is a shadow of its former self. Robert's descendants have moved on and followed a variety of professions, just like Robert. He was a pioneer, and we owe him a tremendous debt. Calling his cemetery "New Hope" seems entirely fitting. Our good lives were born in Robert's hard work. We'll let Robert have the last word:

    "Dear wife our lives are short and are passing away fast, our work is not for ourselves but for the children that God has given us. The struggle is hard some times but with God's blessing to cheer us and our love for each other and our little ones we can be happy here in His sin wrenched world and finally gain that rest that remains for the people of God. [October 31, after claiming the land] You ask me about the land. I can say it is good, very good. It is strange how I came to get this land, I believe that God sent me here and I receive it as coming from Him. I thank God for His goodness to me in sending me to where I am so well pleased." [Nov 15th 1882]



    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/39251008

    Robert married Sarah Jane Rowland. Sarah was born about 1844; died about 1925. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Sarah Jane Rowland was born about 1844; died about 1925.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 5ADB2B6E3EFE475BB88209A706A5E33155F5

    Children:
    1. 3. Mary Celia Dixon was born on 14 Jan 1872 in Chicago, Cook County, Illinois, United States; died on 18 Jun 1924 in Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States; was buried in Odd Fellows Cemetery, Hollister, San Benito County, California, United States.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  John McLaren was born on 8 Oct 1808 in Balquhidder, Lochearnhead, Perthshire, Scotland (son of Peter McLaren and Janet Headrick); died on 13 Dec 1872 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 46921154
    • _UID: 7A2A92CC07264DE7AAD35D879590175F5FFC
    • Location-Witness: 1821, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; Lanark, Concession 4 Lot 2E
    • Immigration: 1821, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; on Earl of Buckinghamshire
    • Census: 1851, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; Canada
    • Census: 1871, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; Canada

    Notes:

    John McLaren, son of Peter McLaren and Janet Headrick, was born October 8, 1808 in Breadalbane, Perthshire, Scotland. In 1820 he emigrated with his parents to Lanark, Ontario, Canada. John's father died in 1827 and he became the man of the household. His mother died in 1836 and he married Marion McIlquham about 1838, continuing to run the family farm. John and Marion had ten children, one dying as an infant. Their oldest son, Peter, emigrated to the Dakota Territories with his wife and family and their second son, James, became the third generation on the farm after John's death.

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/46921154

    Location-Witness:
    Role: Witness


    Immigration:
    To Canada from Scotland on ship Earl of Buckinghamshire in 1821 and located on West Lot 1, Con 4, Lanark Township, Village of Lanark (Paisley Townhead Emigration Society) ( Ref: The Lanark Society settlers by Carol Bennet and The Lanark Society settlers Ships' Lists of the Glasgow Emigration Society 1821, by Gerald J. Neville)
    Earl of Buckinghamshire left Greenock, Scotland 29 Apr 1821 with 607 passengers, arrived Quebec 15 Jun 1821, aboard: MCLAREN, John; age 45, female 43, sons 23, 22, dau 6, 2.

    Died:
    John McLaren, son of Peter McLaren and Janet Headrick, was born October 8, 1808 in Breadalbane, Perthshire, Scotland. In 1820 he emigrated with his parents to Lanark, Ontario, Canada. John's father died in 1827 and he became the man of the household. His mother died in 1836 and he married Marion McIlquham about 1838, continuing to run the family farm. John and Marion had ten children, one dying as an infant. Their oldest son, Peter, emigrated to the Dakota Territories with his wife and family and their second son, James, became the third generation on the farm after John's death.

    John married Marion McIlquham about 1938. Marion (daughter of McIlquham, daughter of James W. McIlquham and Janet "Jane" Jarvie) was born on 31 Jul 1816 in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland; died on 15 Dec 1865 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Marion McIlquham was born on 31 Jul 1816 in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland (daughter of McIlquham, daughter of James W. McIlquham and Janet "Jane" Jarvie); died on 15 Dec 1865 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 46921084
    • _UID: 7A6E3E22EE1F442B94848D848D4C8F085D34
    • Census-Wife of Head: 1851, Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; Canada

    Notes:

    Marion McIlquham, daughter of James McIlquham and Janet Jarvie, was born July 31, 1816 in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland. In 1821 she emigrated with her family to Lanark, Ontario, Canada. She married John McLaren circa 1938 and they raised nine children (one child died in infancy) on John's family farm in Lanark.

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/46921084

    Census-Wife of Head:
    Role: Wife of Head


    Died:
    Marion McIlquham, daughter of James McIlquham and Janet Jarvie, was born July 31, 1816 in Glasgow, Lanarkshire, Scotland. In 1821 she emigrated with her family to Lanark, Ontario, Canada. She married John McLaren circa 1938 and they raised nine children (one child died in infancy) on John's family farm in Lanark.

    Children:
    1. 4. Peter McLaren, Sr. was born on 9 Jun 1839 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; died on 19 Dec 1913 in Vienna, Clark County, South Dakota, United States; was buried in Dixon New Hope Cemetery, Vienna, Hamlin County, South Dakota, United States.
    2. James McLaren was born on 11 Aug 1841 in Perth, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; died on 10 Nov 1907 in Perth, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.
    3. Janet McLaren was born on 22 Jul 1843 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; died on 17 Mar 1914 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.
    4. Isabella McLaren was born about 1845; and died.
    5. Margaret McLaren was born about 1847; died on 7 Apr 1910 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.
    6. John McIlquham McLaren was born about 1850; and died.
    7. Marion McLaren was born on 24 Jul 1852 in Perth, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; died on 17 Sep 1897 in Lanark Twp, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada; was buried in Lanark Village Cemetery, Lanark, Lanark County, Ontario, Canada.
    8. David McLaren was born about 1854; and died.
    9. Walter McLaren was born about 1857; and died.




Quick Links

Contact Us

Contact Us
Our Surnames
Our Stories

Webmaster Message

We make every effort to document our research. If you have something you would like to add, please contact us.

Existing Site