Category: Greenough Family

  • Colin Mitchell Greenough, 1895-1952

    Colin Mitchell Greenough in his CEF uniform during the First World War.

    Long before my great grandmother Arabella Mitchell married my great grandfather Thomas Edward Mills from Liverpool, England, she was married to a man named Isaac Gaetz Greenough from Petpeswick, Halifax County, Nova Scotia. Sadly, Isaac Gaetz died in 1896; he was only 24 years old.

    Together, Arabella and Isaac had two children: a daughter named Helen and a son named Colin. Colin was only six months old when his father died.

    Birth Registration of Colin Mitchell Greenough. Source: Nova Scotia, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, birth registration 71502201, Colin M. Greenough, born at Halifax County, 29 July 1895; database with images, Province of Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Archives (https://archives.novascotia.ca/vital-statistics/ : accessed 2 January 2023)

    In 1901, Arabella and her son Colin were living in the Meagher’s Grant area, where Arabella was a teacher. Arabella’s mother Nancy Hurley was from this area, so she would’ve been amongst familiar people. And it was here where she met Thomas Mills.

    In the 1911 Canada Census, the Thomas Mills household was composed of him, wife Arabella, son Harland, daughters Alice, Florence, and Arabella, and stepson Colin. The family lived on a farm in Gays River, Colchester County, NS. Colin was 15 at this time. Curiously, this census lists Colin as being born in the United States instead of Nova Scotia.

    During the First World War, Colin joined the Canadian Expeditionary Forces in October 1915. He was assigned to the Composite Battalion and sailed to England in February 1916. See below for a link to Colin’s military records.

    From March 1916 to May 1917, Colin served as a Pioneer with the 2nd Canadian Pioneers in France. The pioneers were an engineering unit who would tunnel under the battlefield and place explosives in enemy territory. Unfortunately, he became ill and was transferred back to England.

    In May 1917, Colin had an appendectomy in England and required several weeks of bedrest. He later developed a hernia that pretty much ended any return to the front lines. He spent the next year in various support roles in England before embarking at Liverpool in January 1919 to return to Canada.

    In February 1919, Colin was discharged from the CEF, deemed medically unfit. His contribution to the war effort was complete.

    Marriage Registration of Colin Greenough and Sadie Power. Source: Nova Scotia, Births, Marriages, and Deaths, marriage registration 7899, Colin M. Greenough and Sadie I. Powers, married at Halifax County, 24 July 1919; database with images, Province of Nova Scotia, Nova Scotia Archives (https://archives.novascotia.ca/vital-statistics/ : accessed 2 January 2023)

    Shortly after returning to Canada, Colin married Sadie Power (daughter of Leason Power and Idella Day). The couple had several children: Helen, Lillian, Douglas, Ida, Buddy, Colin, Florence, and Melita. Colin later worked as a naval watchman in Halifax.

    Colin Mitchell Greenough with his half sisters Arabella (Mills) Jennex (left) and Florence (Mills) Titus (right).

    Colin Mitchell Greenough died in 1952. He would have been one of the last people who had any memory of my great grandfather Thomas Mills. I know my Grandad Alan Mills really looked up to his half brother Colin. He referred to him as “Uncle Col” when talking about him to my Mom. Colin was likely more of a father figure than a half sibling to my Grandad given the age gap (20 years) between the two. Sadly, they both shared the common misfortune of neither one of them knowing their father.

  • 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

  • Photo Post #16 | David Greenough

    Photo Post #16 | David Greenough

    The above photograph of David Greenough was published in the Halifax Evening Mail on September 30, 1922. He was my great grandmother Arabella Mitchell’s brother-in-law from her first marriage to Isaac Gaetz Greenough. David and Isaac’s parents were George Greenough and Annie Baker (so they are blood relations to me through Annie’s line).

    The Greenough family are Acadian, and I believe the original surname was Grenon. Some of them ended up in the Petpeswick area along Nova Scotia’s Eastern Shore.

    After Arabella Mitchell and Isaac Gaetz Greenough were married, the couple moved to Chelsea, Massachusetts. David Greenough and his wife Martha Christy lived here, as well. Both David and Isaac were lathers (workers who installed the framework systems on ceilings and walls for plastering).

    David and Martha had several children including an actress known as Peggy Marsh (you can read all about her here: https://www.jazzageclub.com/the-curious-tale-of-peggy-marsh/499/)

    I don’t know what became of their marriage, but they appear in separate households in the 1930 United States census. She is buried in Malden, Massachusetts whereas he is buried in Musquodoboit Harbour, NS. David Greenough sadly spent the final six months of his life at the Halifax County Home and Mental Hospital and died in 1941.