Family History Collection  -   Index



The Finlaysons

From eldest to youngest, they were John, William, Robert and Colin.

May Finlayson is not sure of any dates except 1931 which is when her father, William, died.  Her father did not know when he was born, but May thinks he was about ten years older than Colin.  The information in Scholfield was given by Colin’s second wife and is not altogether without bias.

They came from Bolsover, Ontario, to Manitoba.  The eldest, John, was born in Scotland.

Colin and Robert came to Turtle Mountain in 1881.  William came in 1882.  John and May’s grandmother came a little later (Wit thought that the first two had come to Manitoba earlier, perhaps ’79, and worked in Winnipeg).

John farmed or homesteaded on 18-1-17.  He married Elizabeth Archer.  They had no children.  He retired to Killarney about 1909.  He did not sell his farm to George Lawrence, whatever the tax rolls say.  (He left it to a niece).

William farmed 7-1-17.  He married Ann MacPherson.  They had three children – Catherine, May and William (Wit). William lived on his farm until he died in 1931.  He kept his homestead only a short time – had moved before he married.

Robert homesteaded 6-1-17.  He married Elressa Wood from North Dakota.  They had three children - Mary (Mrs. Robt. Baxter), Annie (Mrs. Jim Whalen), and James.  Robert retired to Killarney about 1918.

Colin homesteaded E. 12-1-18.  1.  He married Maria Shier, and they had two children – Maud (Mrs. Archie Currie) and Annie (Mrs. George B. Dennison).  Mrs. Dennison, whose husband was a minister, still lives in North Dakota.  (Mrs. Currie was the niece to whom John left his farm).  2.  He married Mary A. Garbie.  Their children were:  Charles (he was her child, but they brought him up as a Finlayson, to include him), Effie (Mrs. Chas. Ryan), Alex, Clarence, Oliver, Rhea, and Mary.  Mary died a few hours after she was born.  Colin also lived in Killarney for a few years before he died, in the ’40s).

Robert put up a shack and stable beside the Boundary Commission Trail, near Pancake Lake, and operated a stopping place.  He just squatted there.  He might well have had this place going some time before he filed for his homestead.  Wit thinks Robert and Colin were in Manitoba maybe as early a ’79.  Anyway, my grandfather never forgot the time he was storm-stayed there in March, 1882.  Mother drove to Pancake Lake with Aunt Birdie and Robert Finlayson, and he pointed out the spot where his stopping place had been.  Grandpa says it was near Wakopa.

You remember some of the promotional literature of the time described the Boundary Commission Trail as being well supplied with stopping houses.  I wonder if this was a typical one.  Grandpa says it was twenty below inside the hut.