Valerie Young

Female


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Valerie Young (daughter of Delbert W. Young and Irene Garrat).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 537FBEFD1F164C8F80FF0653EC0D38D47A1A


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Delbert W. Young (son of Daniel Tully "Neil" Young and Emily Carr Crossman).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 4C8ACF87911F4BB68A42F1203051DA7287B5

    Delbert married Irene Garrat. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Irene Garrat

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 7CF013F0797F4558B66101C3795B401306A9

    Children:
    1. Richard Young
    2. 1. Valerie Young
    3. Scott Young


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Daniel Tully "Neil" Young (son of Daniel Thomas Young and Mary Jane Aunger).

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: FBD6EF76DD7D45928447C008C843F97977E6

    Daniel married Emily Carr Crossman. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Emily Carr Crossman

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • _UID: 3C56361FF0744561B0AE7CC4AD8285F235DC

    Children:
    1. Blanche Young died about Dec 1990.
    2. 2. Delbert W. Young


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Daniel Thomas Young was born on 14 Dec 1855 in Marmora Twp, Hastings County, Ontario, Canada (son of William Edward Young and Maria Campion); died on 5 Feb 1919; was buried in Moose Jaw City Cemetery, Moose Jaw Census Division, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 94299162
    • _UID: DD9AE5439D994CCF9957315620E79C7781D2
    • Residence: 1883, Belmont Twp, Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada; Con 8 Lot 14, 300 acres

    Notes:

    ?i?From the History of the County of Peterborough

    ?/i?William Edward Young, deceased, was born in Perth County (actually Perth, Lanark County), Ontario in 1824. He was of Scotch and English parentage, his people living for some time in Ireland before coming to this country. They came to Canada at an early day and settled in Perth County (actually Perth, Lanark County, Ontario). Mr. Young started in life as a shoemaker, but afterwards carried on a general store and mill at Marmora Village, which he gave up and came to Belmont Township in 1856, settling on lot 17, concession 2, where the family still live. He owned at his death about 1,000 acres of land, his original amount being about 500 acres. He married in 1851, Maria Campion, of Marmora Township, who, with three sons and seven daughters survive him. Mr. Young was proinent in the municipal affairs of the township, and was about nine years in the Council. He was a faithful and consistent member of the Canada Methodist Church. He died in 1878.

    (handwritten note: Son of Daniel Young and Mary Ann who moved from Perth to Stirling about 1835. Daniel had a shoe making store at Perth. Mary Ann's father, Wm. Edward Tully may live somewhere there although Mrs. Robert Sargeant mentioned he may have gone to Newcastle or Bowmanville. He died in 1845).

    Daniel T. Young, son of the above, was born in Hastings County, Ontario, in 1853, and at the age of eighteen months his people settled in this township. He lived with the family at the homestead till the spring of 1883, When he exchanged his right in the old place for 300 acres on lot 14, concession 8, to which he soon after moved, and where he now resides. He married, in 1882, Mary J. Aunger, of Blairton, daughter of John L. Aunger, of Blairton, an Englishman by birth.


    (Research):5 sons and two daughters

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/94299162

    Residence:
    He exchange his right in the homestead for this property.

    Daniel married Mary Jane Aunger on 1 May 1882 in Blairton, Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada. Mary (daughter of John Laskey Aunger and Catherine Stanbury) was born on 18 Apr 1860 in Ontonagon County, Michigan, United States; died on 24 Apr 1921 in Kirksville, Adair County, Missouri, United States; was buried in Moose Jaw City Cemetery, Moose Jaw Census Division, Saskatchewan, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Mary Jane Aunger was born on 18 Apr 1860 in Ontonagon County, Michigan, United States (daughter of John Laskey Aunger and Catherine Stanbury); died on 24 Apr 1921 in Kirksville, Adair County, Missouri, United States; was buried in Moose Jaw City Cemetery, Moose Jaw Census Division, Saskatchewan, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • FindaGrave Memorial ID: 94299167
    • _UID: E6A0A62C9106434F898C004CDBA6B4465D27

    Notes:

    (Research):http://www.marmorahistory.ca/aunger

    Birth:
    BLAIRTON -BOOM TO BUST

    Heading 8 kilometers west out of Marmora, and two kilometers north on Blairton Road will take you to the west shores of Crowe Lake, and the remains of the thriving iron mining town of Blairton. Beside the Blairton trailer park are the old iron ore pits, completely grown over, hardly traceable, yet a reminder of the booming dreams of long gone iron masters and railway entrepreneurs. The area now is cottage country with a few permanent homes, with not a trace of its former glory.

    In 1907, John L. Aunger, manager of the mine wrote of the 1870's in Blairton:
    "Apart from the hucksters, the Town presented an idyllic image. Blairton was beautifully and skilfully laid out by the late John Damble, on high ground of hard sandy soil, the streets descending in all directions. Mud is never seen here, hence one can walk out in slippers after the heaviest rain and never get their feet wet. The scenery of Crowe Lake with its islands, coves and points, is, to say the least, picturesque in the highest degree."
    It was not just nature and Town design that marked Blairton. For it was, says Aunger, "a place of harmony and concord," and certainly most respectable. Indeed the former site manager claimed, "there was a quiet vying as to the claim of rank with the "upper crust" of society." The Town was declared as a prolific spot for "match-making" and matrimony.

    Ruth Tierney writes in her 1986 book, " Echoes from the Past":

    "The settlement of Blairton (after 1867) had grown into a bustling little community. Named after a Scottish settler it boasted a railroad station, telegraph office, three general stores, two hotels and sundry blacksmith shops. No fewer than eleven streets had been laid and the population had increased rapidly to a total of five hundred. This was considered to be a sufficient number of people to warrant the expense of establishing a post office. Permission was granted by the Crown and the Blairton Post Office was opened on August 19, 1867 by local resident Roger Bates. The very existence of Blairton was due to the discovery of iron ore, resulting in a mine that became the largest producer of iron in Ontario (called Canada West from 1841 until 1867).

    FindaGrave Memorial ID:
    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/94299167

    Children:
    1. William John "Stanley" Young
    2. George Douglas Aunger Young
    3. Harry Arnold Young
    4. 4. Daniel Tully "Neil" Young
    5. Lilly Young was born about 1881; died about 1881; was buried in Rockdale Cemetery, Belmont, Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada.
    6. Edward Young was born about 1882; died about 1882; was buried in Rockdale Cemetery, Belmont, Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada.
    7. Tully Young was born about 1888; died about 1888; was buried in Rockdale Cemetery, Belmont, Peterborough County, Ontario, Canada.
    8. Mayme Maria Cecelia Young was born about 1890; died about 1962.
    9. Annie Young was born about 1900; died about 1900.
    10. Albert Edward Carlton "Carl" Young was born on 9 Aug 1901 in Lennox and Addington County, Ontario, Canada; died on 15 Sep 1912; was buried in Moose Jaw City Cemetery, Moose Jaw Census Division, Saskatchewan, Canada.




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