Showing posts with label SCOTT WOOD Nottawa Ontario. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SCOTT WOOD Nottawa Ontario. Show all posts

Friday, November 29, 2019

Family puzzle or treasure? Scott - Wood family, Nottawa, Ontario, Canada

Just a fun reminder - 

No genealogist is too old to take another look at a family photo or record.


While working on a presentation this month to the Victoria (BC) Genealogical Society, I found myself drawn to one particular photograph of my Wood-Scott family taken in Nottawa, Ontario (about 1907?).

This is one of my favourites from my grandmother's collection and I've long ago decided on what the photo says to me :-)  I may write about that another time.



My great aunts, Ann and Harriet, with Mary Menzies, great uncle Sam, great grandmother Mary Janet Scott (born Wood), and her father, my great great Samuel Wood, at the dining table in their home in Nottawa, Ontario, Canada. At this time, Mary Janet's other son, James Walter, was living and working in Newdale, Manitoba, Canada. Irwin-Scott private collection.


What finally caught my attention was the tea set on the table. As many do, I've been turning out my closets and rediscovering many old things. I'd just a week or so before unwrapped a pretty sugar bowl and set it on my windowsill. 

Now I think it may be all that's left of the set on the table in the photograph. My mother always told me her dad Walter had sent his mother china home as gifts and I do have other similar era pieces, verified by my mum. Now I'll have treasure this one too. 





Never stop looking, puzzling, thinking about your family history. 

New information and new insights and ideas may appear! 




Friday, May 23, 2014

Memorial Day USA - Kenneth Scott Bates - 52 Ancestors

As this is US Memorial Day weekend, it's certainly a good time to research your USA military members and families for free. I'm thinking particularly of one of my US veteran cousins today, Kenneth Scott Bates (1919-1998), son of Edward Kimball Bates and Harriott(e) Alice Louise Scott. Kenneth was very interested in his family history and shared information and documents when he visited us in Vancouver, BC.

There are several offers for free access to selected military records.

To May 26 Ancestry: http://www.ancestry.com/cs/us/memorialday2014

And all May - Fold3: http://go.fold3.com/wwii/ The newest records at Fold3 are for US Medal of Honor recipients. For more about this collection, see this Fold3 blog article: http://blog.fold3.com/medal-of-honor-recipients

To May 26 My Heritage: http://pages.myheritage.com/memorialday

My Heritage is my current favourite of the BIG commercial websites. I made a somewhat surprising discovery there last night, in fact. So far, My Heritage seems to have a wide range of types and dates of US military records, millions they say, from the War Between the States through to World War II -  too long a list to post.

Don't forget that FamilySearch also has US military records.  I often find that it's helpful to go back and forth. If I can't find someone in one website's indexes, I may find it in another and the information included may be a bit different  - or there may be associated articles to explain certain aspects of the records, as there are at FamilySearch.

BATES, SCOTT family get together, in Montpelier, Vermont, at the Bates home, c. 1920. Kenneth Bates is the young one in the back row here.

Shown are - Front: Janet Muriel Scott, my mum, from Newdale, Manitoba, Canada; Edward Wallace Bates, my cousin.
Second row: Jeannette Bates, my cousin; May Janet (Wood) Scott from Nottawa, Ontario, Canada, born in Bean Hill, Connecticut, USA, my great grandmother; Amy Estella (Irwin) Scott from Newdale, my grandmother; Annie Pollock Scott, my great aunt, also from Nottawa.
Back: Hariott(e) Alice Louise, Hattie, (Scott) Bates, my great aunt, born in Nottawa, Ontario, Canada; and Edward Kimball Bates, Hattie's husband, with their younger son, Kenneth Scott Bates.

Postcard, Made in Canada, black & white, unmailed. I believe the photographer was my grandfather, James Walter Scott from Newdale, born in Nottawa. Individuals were identified by my grandmother, Amy Estella Scott, in the 1960s.