Category: Birth Registrations

  • Helen Greenough: Budded on Earth to Bloom in Heaven

    A few years ago while researching my great grandmother Arabella Mitchell, I discovered that she and her first husband Isaac Gaetz Greenough had a daughter while they were living in Chelsea, Massachusetts.

    According to the birth registrations for the City of Chelsea, this baby girl was born on September 29th, 1893. No first name was given to the child at the time of the birth registration. However, I eventually learned that her name was Helen. According to the book Eastern Shore Families: Genealogical Notes on Petpeswick by Kim Stevens, her middle name was Gertrude, but I can’t find any documentation confirming this.

    Birth Registration of Helen Greenough. Source: “Massachusetts Births, 1841-1915,” database, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/search/collection/1536925: accessed 3 October 2022), imaged birth registration 646, reference ID #341, Greenough, 29 Sep 1893, Chelsea, Suffolk, Massachusetts; citing Secretary of the Commonwealth. Massachusetts Archives, Boston.)

    There is a photograph of an unidentified baby in my great grandmother’s photo album. The photo was taken in Boston (across the Mystic River from Chelsea). It makes me wonder. Is this a picture of Helen Greenough?

    Is this a picture of Helen Greenough?

    I did know that Helen Greenough died as a child. That was pretty much all I knew, though. There is a passing reference to her in my great grandmother’s obituary but nothing in way of any details. Unfortunately, there is a thirty year gap in death registrations for the Province of Nova Scotia from 1878 to 1907. So, you often need to rely on obituaries or grave markers for information during this period. No obituary exists as far I can tell, but my late mother told me that she was “pretty sure” that she was buried at the Riverside Cemetery in Musquodoboit Harbour beside her father.

    Grave marker of Helen Greenough at Riverside Cemetery, Musquodoboit Harbour, Nova Scotia. Photo courtesy of Eastern Shore Archives.

    Recently, the good folks at Eastern Shore Archives sent me a photograph of Helen’s grave marker at the Riverside Cemetery. I always find it heartbreaking seeing the grave marker of a child. My mind travels back in time imagining what the circumstances were surrounding their untimely death. According to her grave marker, Helen Greenough died on May 16, 1900. The inscription reads, “Helen Greenough. Died May 16, 1900. Aged 6 years 8 months. Budded on Earth to Bloom in Heaven.”

    Additonal Links:
    Find A Grave Memorial for Helen Greenough
    Wikitree Profile for Helen Greenough

  • Thomas (Albert) Edward Mills, 1872-1916

    Thomas (Albert) Edward Mills, 1872-1916

    By the time I was born there were only a few people alive that had any memory of my great-grandfather Thomas Mills. Even my own grandfather never met his father. So, he’s always been a bit of a mystery. I knew he was from Liverpool, England and that he died in the First World War. But that was about it. Over the years, though, I’ve been able to learn more about this man. I’m not sure if he is more or less of a mystery now, though.

    His story begins in England. He was born on August 1, 1872 in Summer Seat in Liverpool – the son of Frederick and Alice Mills. You will not find a birth record for a Thomas Mills born in Summer Seat to Frederick and Alice, though. It turns out that Thomas was actually born Albert Edward Mills.

    The family lived at 17 Summer Seat. There were other siblings, as well as Alice’s mother and brother, living in the household as recorded in the 1871 England Census. Albert appears in the 1881 England Census as a “9 year old scholar” (which is how school aged children were typically enumerated). By this time, the family lived at 85 Arkwright Street. And, mother Alice has died as Frederick the father is listed as a widow.

    In 1890, Albert served briefly in Liverpool’s King’s Regiment. He disclosed this military service years later on his First World War attestation. (Again, you will not find any records of a Thomas Mills serving in the King’s Regiment; he is listed under his birthname Albert Mills.)

    After being discharged from the British army, Albert left Liverpool for a new life in Nova Scotia. It’s unclear when or why he changed his name, but by the time he was living in Nova Scotia he most certainly went by Thomas. He appears as Thomas Mills in the 1901 Canada Census in Meagher’s Grant – where he is listed as 28 year old “helper” from England – living in the household of James Kerr. His future wife, Arabella, was also living in the Meagher’s Grant area at the time.

    Thomas and Arabella were married on July 21, 1902 in Halifax. She was a widowed teacher and had a son (Colin Greenough) with her first husband. Colin’s father had died when he was only a year old so his stepfather Thomas was the only father he knew.

    Thomas and Arabella raised their family on a farm in Gays River. He was also a cook in the lumberwood. They had six children in addition to Colin: Harland, Alice, Florence, Belle, Albert, and Alan.

    In 1915, Thomas and Colin joined the war effort and enlisted with the 40th Battalion (Nova Scotia) Canadian Expeditionary Force. He was training at the Valcartier military base in Quebec when his youngest child Alan (my grandfather) was born in September of that year.

    Thomas arrived in England aboard the S.S. Saxonia on October 28, 2015. He was eventually transferred to the 13th Battalion. On September 5, 1916, Thomas Edward Mills was killed in action in Courcelette, France. He is buried at the Courcelette British Cemetery.

    My brother, sister, and I visited our great-grandfather’s grave marker at the Courcelette British Cemetery in 2004. Despite its name, the cemetery is dominated by Canadian soldiers who fell in the Battle of Courcelette. It’s a very well-kept cemetery in a peaceful rural setting. His name is also included on the war memorials in Gays River and Oyster Pond.

    Alan Mills (my grandad) and the war memorial at Gays River

    Thanks to the Internet, I have been able to connect with third cousins on the Mills side of the family (great grandsons of Thomas’ sister Elizabeth Mills) who still live in or near Liverpool. Ironically, one of these men was an officer for Canadian Pacific Steamships and had been to Halifax many times throughout his career but hadn’t known about the Nova Scotia connection with his family.

    Canadian Virtual War Memorial for Private Thomas Edward Mills

  • Birth Registration of Hazel Aileen Vansickle

    Moving on to my paternal grandparents, here is the birth registration of my Grandma Hazel Aileen Vansickle. She was born in Jerseyville, Ontario – daughter of Allan Vansickle and Ella May Young.

    Source: “Ontario, Canada Births, 1832-1916,” database, Ancestry (https://www.ancestry.ca/search/collections/8838/: accessed 25 April 2022), birth registration 067905, Hazel Aileen Van Sickle, born Wentworth County, 29 June 1915; citing Archives of Ontario, Toronto.

  • Birth Registration of Alan Victor Mills

    Next up is the birth registration of my Grandad (Alan Victor Mills). He was born 11 September 1915 in Gays River, Nova Scotia – son of Thomas Edward Mills and Arabella Jane Mitchell.

    My Grandad never met his father, Thomas Edward Mills. At the time of his birth Thomas was training at the Valcartier base in Quebec as part of the Canadian Expeditionary Force at the onset of the First World War. Thomas was killed in action the following year.

    Source: Nova Scotia, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, birth registration 46900973, Allen [Alan] Victor Moreash Mills, born at Gays River, Colchester County, 11 September 1915; database with images, Province of Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Archives (https://archives.novascotia.ca/vital-statistics/ : accessed 29 March 2022).

  • Birth Registration of Rose Margaret Power

    Today, I am going to share the birth registrations of my grandparents – starting with my Nan. Rose Margaret Power was born on August 12, 1919 in East Jeddore, Nova Scotia. She was the daughter of Earl Power and Alice Baker.

    Source: Nova Scotia, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, birth registration 45000192, Rose Margaret Power, born at East Jeddore, Halifax County, 12 August 1919; database with images, Province of Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Archives (https://archives.novascotia.ca/vital-statistics/ : accessed 29 March 2022).

  • Birth Registration of Erick Clifford Finch

    My Grandpa was born in Birtle, Manitoba. Manitoba’s birth registrations are not available online; rather you need to order a print copy of them from the Manitoba Vital Statistics Branch.

    His name is registered as Erick Clifford Finch although he went by Clifford or Cliff.

    The family had moved to the Prairies from Glanbrook, Ontario around 1910. Unfortunatelly, Grandpa’s mother Nancy Ellen Reed died a week after he was born. Soon after, the family returned to Ontario.