Edison family fonds
https://heritagecollections.elgin.ca/link/archives8731
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Part Of
- Edison family fonds
- Description Level
- Fonds
- GMD
- textual records
- objects
- graphic material
- Date Range
- 1812-1966
- Storage Location
- R6 S6 Sh5 B5
- R6 S6 Sh4 B2
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Part Of
- Edison family fonds
- Creator
- Edison (family)
- Description Level
- Fonds
- Storage Room
- Archives Storage Rm. 107
- Storage Location
- R6 S6 Sh5 B5
- R6 S6 Sh4 B2
- GMD
- textual records
- objects
- graphic material
- Date Range
- 1812-1966
- Physical Description
- 58 cm of textual records
- 3 locks of hair
- 1 photograph
- History / Biographical
- The Edisons were a prominent family in the village of Vienna in Elgin County. They were United Empire Loyalists who left the thirteen colonies for Nova Scotia. John Edison and his sons Samuel Sr., Thomas, and Marshalis eventually settled in Upper Canada. They were later joined by his other sons Moses and Adonijah. John died in 1814. His son Samuel Sr. distinguished himself in the war of 1812, serving as a captain in the Middlesex Militia. Samuel Sr.’s first wife, Nancy Simpson, passed away in 1824. He later remarried Elizabeth Yokum Cook. In 1834 Samuel Edison Sr. and Jessie Smith helped found the town of Vienna. The name of the town was chosen due to Samuel Sr.’s Austrian ancestry. It was during this period that the Edison family switched from being staunch supporters of the conservative party to reformers. Samuel Jr, Samuel Sr.’s son from his first marriage, openly joined William Lyon Mackenzie during the 1837 Upper Canada rebellion. Samuel Jr. was subsequently forced to leave Upper Canada for the United States after the rebellion was put down. It was Samuel Jr.’s son, Thomas Alva Edison, who would bring worldwide fame to the Edison name as a great inventor. It is suspected that Thomas Alva visited his grandfather and other relatives in Vienna during his childhood, and he certainly remained in contact with them during his later years. Samuel Sr. died in 1865, and much of his land was given to his son from his second marriage, Charles Oscar. Charles was a farmer in Vienna who married Mary Ann Finch. Together the two had six daughters and two sons. Charles died in 1922 leaving his land to his wife and daughters. Mary Ann Edison passed away five years later in 1927.
- Custodial History
- The papers of the Edison family were originally donated to the Elgin County Library and were later transferred to the Elgin County Archives.
- Scope and Content
- The Edison family fonds is composed primarily of land indentures, mortgages, wills, and correspondence on matters pertaining to the family’s day to day business in Vienna. There are also graduation certificates, locks of hair, and a photograph in the fonds. Fonds is arranged into the following series: Samuel Edison Sr. Land Indentures, 1812-1861 Thomas Edison Land Indentures, 1830-1857 Simeon O. Edison Land Indentures and Correspondence, 1862-1872 Charles O. Edison Papers, 1860-1942 Charles Edison Family Papers, 1873-1966 Finch Family Correspondence and Indentures, 1851-1923 Michael/Frank Edison- Correspondence and Agreements, 1866-1911 J. Carruthers Correspondence, 1903-1922
- Name Access
- Edison (family)
- Vienna (Ont.)
- Arrangement
- Due to the disorganized state of the records they have been reorganized using an artificial arrangement scheme.
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