Family History Collection  -   Index


   
The Nay Family

The Nay family emigrated to Canada from Ireland at a very early date, but none of them seemed to recall the exact time.  This branch of the family had five sons and four daughters, and lived at Gorrie, Ontario, in Huron County.
William Nay

Born 1843.  Died 1915.

In 1874 William Nay with his wife, the former Jane Bawks, and their three children, accompanied by his sister-in-law, Elizabeth Bawks, his sister and his brother-in-law, Henry Latimer and family, sailed up the lakes and rivers in flat boats.  They went ashore for the nights.
They finally arrived at Rat Portage (near where Kenora is today).  Here they prepared to follow the Dawson Route to Fort Garry.
They had covered wagons and horses, with all the necessary equipment and provisions.  I do not know how many others were in the party.

Needless to say it must have been a very arduous journey, fording rivers and through bush country which was known to be very stony.  The fear of Indians was always present.

They only travelled five days a week.  On the Sabbath they rested, and one day a week was taken for washing and the baking of bread.
They arrived early in June, because Robert, the eldest child, celebrated his sixth birthday, June 7, 1874, in Fort Garry.
They continued on their search for land until they reached the Portage Plains.  Here their party each laid claim to a homestead.
They broke some land and sowed a few acres to oats, which was broadcast by hand, but unfortunately the few acres were entirely eaten by grasshoppers.  My father told of a walk he and his mother had to borrow some yeast.  The grasshoppers were so thick, he had to get behind his mother and hang on to her skirt.  He could not face the horde of grasshoppers.

My grandmother was not well, and Grandfather had been offered a thousand dollars in gold for his horses, so he decided to return to Ontario.  They were afraid to take the gold with them, so they had it hidden in a tin trunk among some of their clothing.  They shipped the trunk before they left for home.  They returned home by boat down the Red River until they reached a train. The trunk had not arrived, and they had almost given up hope of it ever doing so, but after two years it turned up, everything intact.
In 1882 the urge to go west again possessed them, and in March 1882, they arrived back at Portage la Prairie with a family of six children.  Again Elizabeth Bawks accompanied them, but this time she came out to marry her fiancé, W. U. Wade.
They farmed here for one year, but land was scarce, so they moved west to Heaslip.  The nearest market was Brandon, and the grain was delivered in wagons with oxen or horses.

In the spring of 1885, they moved to their homestead on 20-3-18, near what is now called Ninga.

How a woman found strength to raise a large family, and do all the sewing, knitting, washing, baking, and the making of butter, is beyond comprehension.  They used to spin yarn and weave the yarn into cloth.  I believe one of the aunts used to do the weaving.  Candles were made from tallow, for I heard my father tell how he helped with that chore.
They walked to a school south of Ninga, called Fern’s Hollow.  In 1887 Bethel School was built, and they walked to Bertel, a distance of four miles.

Two children, Edgar and Myrtle, died in infancy.  Grandmother, in 1892, passed away at the age of forty-five years.  Will, a young man of twenty, died in 1895.

Robert had his own homestead.  Samuel moved to his farm on section 33-3-18, in 1903.  John, a medical doctor in Vancouver, and four daughters, Esther, Margaret, Elizabeth and Mary.  None are living today.
Later Grandfather married Miss Eliza Sparling.  Most of the family were married now, so he sold his farm to Mr. Boughner and retired to Ninga.

He was a great lover of horses and continued to drive them until his death in 1915 at the age of seventy-two years.  His wife died at the home of her step-son, Robert, in 1929.
During his lifetime, he was a conservative in politics and he was one of the first elders of the Presbyterian Church which was built in 1906.

Robert Nay

Born 1868 in Gorrie, Ontario.  Died 1953.

Robert, the elder son of William Nay, remembered travelling in the covered wagon over the Dawson Route in 1874, with his parents.
In 1885 he accompanied his family to Ninga and although only seventeen years of age, was advised to take squatters’ rights on section 26-3-18.

The railroad was being built in that year, so he walked three miles or more and worked on the building of the railroad between Killarney and Ninga.  He earned enough to buy a horse and an ox as well as a plow, a wagon and a few other essentials.  He slept under the wagon until he was able to erect a log shanty with a sod roof.  He said when it rained the only dry spot was under the table.

The next year, he was old enough to file on his homestead.  He bought a horse and this now gave him a team to drive to Turtle Mountain, a distance of twenty miles, to draw logs for his first barn.  This was a hazardous trip because days were short and there were no fences to guide a person, especially if a blizzard came up.  He often would stop at William Ryan’s to water and rest his team.
The original home was built in 1892 by William Hodgins.  Here my father brought his bride, the former Mary Dempsey, in November 1894.

It was in 1903 that the barn was built, the lower storey was made of stone and mortar, the stone-work being done by William Hossack of Killarney.  I think the timbers were prepared in Turtle Mountain by a Mr. Hopkins.  When everything was in readiness, a ‘bee’ or ‘barn-raising’ was held.  A barn-raising was a special event, and usually some of the wives would come and help with the meals.  The children all came as well.

My uncle and aunt lived in Deloraine.  Their cow had gone dry, and of course no milk could be bought.  Grandfather lent them a milk cow, and my father led it to Deloraine.  Can you imagine a boy Walking to Deloraine today?

Water was always a problem on our farm, and it wasn’t until Mr. Joe Macauley started drilling wells that we ever had a plentiful supply.
Father had his own shop and would sharpen his own plow shares and often his neighbours as well.  He also would shoe his own horses.
This was the day of horse-trading.  If you wanted a matched team, you would find someone who had a horse the colour of yours.  Sometimes it was an even trade, other times you would have to give something ‘to boot.’

I remember there always used to be two trails, side by side, leading from town.  If you were out of town first, you would hold your horses up until your neighbour would catch up to you, and then you were off.  Sometimes you would be the winner, other times you would lose the race.  Before long every town had its own race track.

Life was not all work. There was more visiting done them, then there is done today.  You would bundle your family up and drive several miles to visit your families or friends. The young people would gather up a load as they went along and surprise their friends.
Cousins at Devil’s Lake, North Dakota, would drive to Ninga, visit every one there, then go on to Souris or Treherne to visit other cousins.  There always seemed to be room and enough food for all.

I remember as a child, my parents driving to Neepawa, a distance of one hundred miles, to visit my great-grandfather.  If we became cold, my father would urge the horses to go faster.  I remember a very familiar saying of his, “Three years to make a horse and twenty years to make a man.”

My father had been a member of the Presbyterian Church at Ninga and was superintendent of the Bethel Sunday School for many years.  Later when the church was built at Rowland, he and his family joined the Methodist Church, now the United Church, where his place was rarely ever known to be vacant.  He was superintendent and adult Bible-class teacher from 1920 until his death in 1933.
Our family consisted of seven children.  One daughter died of smallpox in 1925.  Father passed away in 1933, and Mother on January 2nd, 1965, at the age of ninety-three, on the farmstead where she had come as a bride seventy years ago.  A son, Wilbert, lived on the old farmstead.

The pioneer spirit has disappeared with the advance of time and all the modern conveniences which today offers.  Let us not forget the sacrifices made by our parents to provide a good home and to give their children a good scholastic and musical education.
“They have left us a goodly heritage.”    
               

Written by Mrs. M. Arnott (Verly May) Dunrea, Manitoba