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Talbot Papers: Associates: Mahlon Burwell
https://heritagecollections.elgin.ca/link/archives175609
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Part Of
- Guy St-Denis Collection: Colonel Thomas Talbot Research Papers
- Description Level
- File
- GMD
- textual records
- Date Range
- ca. 1985-2003
- Accession Number
- 2017-42
- Storage Location
- R12 S1 Sh6 B3 F19
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Description Level
- File
- Accession Number
- 2017-42
- Storage Room
- Archives Storage Rm. 110
- Storage Location
- R12 S1 Sh6 B3 F19
- GMD
- textual records
- Date Range
- ca. 1985-2003
- Physical Description
- 1 cm of textual records
- Custodial History
- These papers were collected as part of a comprehensive study into the life and career of Colonel Thomas Talbot, the early nineteenth-century settlement agent whose authority extended over much of what is now southwestern Ontario. The research was conducted by Guy St-Denis in various archival repositories with the intention of publishing a new biography of Talbot. After the project was discontinued, the photocopied documents were preserved in hopes of being useful to future scholars of Talbot and his settlement. The files were compiled ca. 1985-2003.
- Scope and Content
- Photocopies of correspondence between Mahlon Burwell and Colonel Talbot, 1830-1836, as well as the following articles:
- -"Colonel Mahlon Burwell, Land Surveyor", by Archibald Blue, Director of the Bureau of Mines, Toronto. Published in the journal Proceedings of the Canadian Institute, September 1899.
- -"Mahlon Burwell, Deputy Surveyor, 1783-1846: An Address given by W.C. Miller, February 18, 1964".
- -An article regarding the Rondeau Harbour, 1845.
- -"The Diary of Mahlon Burwell, January 24 to August 1, 1827, transcribed and annotated by Rundall M. Lewis.
- -Claims for Damages sustained during the late War (War of 1812), 1815-1824.
- Name Access
- Talbot, Thomas
- Subject Access
- Burwell, Mahlon
Mammals of Elgin County, Ontario
https://heritagecollections.elgin.ca/link/archives47039
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Part Of
- St. Thomas Field Naturalist Club fonds
- Description Level
- Item
- GMD
- textual records
- Date Range
- 1982
- Accession Number
- 2010-09
- Storage Location
- R2 S5 Sh2 B2 F16
t y
was James Fleming who settled on the river front or LOt 6, Aldborough
Township in 1796 ())p . )6. Seven years later, on May 21 , 180), Colonel
Thomas Talbot landed at (the now) Talbot Creek and be an settl m nt of
Dunwich Township in earnest. Ennatinger, in his classic history "The
Talbot Regime"
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Archives
- Creator
- Author: William G. Stewart
- Description Level
- Item
- Accession Number
- 2010-09
- Storage Room
- Archives Storage Rm. 107
- Storage Location
- R2 S5 Sh2 B2 F16
- GMD
- textual records
- Date Range
- 1982
- Publication
- St. Thomas, Ont. : St. Thomas Field Naturalist Club, 1982
- Physical Description
- 1 volume
- Custodial History
- Accession #100A. Acquired by the St. Thomas Field Naturalist Club on February 27, 1984.
- Scope and Content
- "A provisional annotated list of the mammals of Elgin County , Ontario, reported from the beginning of European Settlement until the present time".
- Name Access
- St. Thomas Field Naturalist Club
- Subject Access
- Conservation
- Environment
Documents
Commemorative Ribbon
https://heritagecollections.elgin.ca/link/museum89266
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Museum
- Artifact Type
- ribbon, commemorative
- Description
- Bicentenial Reunion (in honour of the landing of Patterson, Pearce, Storey and Backus at the Talbot Settlement) commemorative ribbon. White ribbon with gilted text. At the top, a white label; the label is designed to be peeled off (there is an adhesive underneath) so that the ribbon may be attached to clothing, hats, etc. The ribbon reads "1809-2009 - Patterson - Pearce - Storey - Backus - Bicentennial - Reunion - July 11th - Tyrconnel - In honour of - the landing - souvenir".
- Category
- Communication Artifact
- Sub-category
- Documentary Artifact
- Accession Number
- 021.001.027
- File Number
- 021.001
- Date Range
- 2009
- Item History
- Colonel Thomas Talbot's first settlers arrived at Tyrconnel in 1809. These settlers were the close relatives of Leslie Patterson, an Irishman from County Fermanagh. The bicentennial celebration of their landing was held on July 11th, 2009. On July 14, 1809, 13 family members returned in a flat bottomed boat with all their earthly possessions, driving their few cattle on land bordering the water and landed on the beach of Lake Erie behind the site of St. Peter’s Anglican Church cemetery to claim their land that they had purchased from Colonel Talbot in 1808. These families had faced many hardships as they slowly traveled along the lake shore. A storm wrecked their raft, forcing the tired travelers to search for nails to repair it; despite these adversities, they persisted and made good hardy pioneers. Leslie Patterson and his wife Lydia Backus Patterson with their sons Joseph and Walter aged 2 and 1 were among the 13 settlers. This group also included Mary Patterson Storey (Leslie Patterson's sister), age 51, a widow, her adult son Walter Storey and her 2 daughters, Sarah and Anne Storey. John Pearce (originally from Rhode Island) and his wife, Frances Patterson Pearce (sister to Mary Storey and Leslie Patterson) with their children William age 4, Leslie age 2, and infant Catherine came as part of the 13 as well.
Commemorative Ribbon
https://heritagecollections.elgin.ca/link/museum89267
- Museum / Archive
- Elgin County Museum
- Artifact Type
- ribbon, commemorative
- Description
- Bicentenial Reunion (in honour of the landing of Patterson, Pearce, Storey and Backus family at the Talbot Settlement) commemorative ribbon. White ribbon with gilted text. At the top, a white label; the label is designed to be peeled off (there is an adhesive underneath) so that the ribbon may be attached to clothing, hats, etc. The ribbon reads "1809-2009 - Patterson - Pearce - Storey - Backus - Bicentennial - Reunion - July 11th - Tyrconnel - In honour of - the landing - souvenir".
- Category
- Communication Artifact
- Sub-category
- Documentary Artifact
- Accession Number
- 021.001.028
- File Number
- 021.001
- Date Range
- 2009
- Item History
- Colonel Thomas Talbot's first settlers arrived at Tyrconnel in 1809. These settlers were the close relatives of Leslie Patterson, an Irishman from County Fermanagh. The bicentennial celebration of their landing was held on July 11th, 2009. On July 14, 1809, 13 family members returned in a flat bottomed boat with all their earthly possessions, driving their few cattle on land bordering the water and landed on the beach of Lake Erie behind the site of St. Peter’s Anglican Church cemetery to claim their land that they had purchased from Colonel Talbot in 1808. These families had faced many hardships as they slowly traveled along the lake shore. A storm wrecked their raft, forcing the tired travelers to search for nails to repair it; despite these adversities, they persisted and made good hardy pioneers. Leslie Patterson and his wife Lydia Backus Patterson with their sons Joseph and Walter aged 2 and 1 were among the 13 settlers. This group also included Mary Patterson Storey (Leslie Patterson's sister), age 51, a widow, her adult son Walter Storey and her 2 daughters, Sarah and Anne Storey. John Pearce (originally from Rhode Island) and his wife, Frances Patterson Pearce (sister to Mary Storey and Leslie Patterson) with their children William age 4, Leslie age 2, and infant Catherine came as part of the 13 as well.