Category: Mills Family

  • Photo Post #14 | Happy Heavenly Birthday, Mom

    Photo Post #14 | Happy Heavenly Birthday, Mom

    Today is my Mom’s birthday. She would have turned 74. I love this photo of her and Nan about to share what looks to be a delicious birthday cake. Growing up, birthdays were a big deal. Mom would always make a cake for us – often from scratch. And, we got to choose which flavour we wanted! Happy Birthday, Mom. Hope you and Nan are enjoying your day.

    My Mom Doris Elaine (Mills) Finch was born on August 26, 1949 in Oyster Pond, Halifax County, Nova Scotia. Her mother/my Nan Rose Margaret (Power) Mills was born on August 12, 1919 in East Jeddore, NS.

  • Obituary – Doris Elaine (Mills) Finch

    Surrounded by the love of her family, Doris passed away peacefully on Thursday, July 20, 2023 in her 74th year. Loving wife to Carl for nearly 52 years. Devoted mother to Carl (Donna), Robert (Monika), and Amanda. Beloved Nanny to Alessa. Doris will be dearly missed by her sister Beulah (Murray Philip), several nieces and nephews, cousins, and friends. She is predeceased by her parents Alan and Rose (Power) Mills, and her siblings Rose Andrews (the late Edward), Bertha Marshall, and Gladys Mills.

    Doris was born and raised in Oyster Pond Jeddore, Nova Scotia. She moved to Ontario in the early 1970s and lived most of her adult life in Hamilton, residing on the Beach Strip. Doris was able to visit places she long dreamed of, including the Grand Canyon, Hoover Dam, and the Grand Ole Opry. She even met Queen Elizabeth II. Doris enjoyed reading, puzzles, baking, watching TV, and most of all, pampering her cats.

    Special thanks to the medical care staff at Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital who showed determination and compassion.

    Visitation at SMITH’S FUNERAL HOME, 485 Brant Street, (one block north of City Hall), BURLINGTON (905-632-3333), on Friday, July 28, 2023 from 12-1 p.m. Funeral Service will be held in the Chapel at 1 p.m. with interment to follow at White Chapel Cemetery. For those wishing to participate virtually, a livestream link will be available on the funeral home’s website. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions to The Kidney FoundationDiabetes Canada, or Canadian Sepsis Foundation would be sincerely appreciated by the family.

    The above obituary – along with the Memory Wall and Photos – can be found on the Smith’s Funeral Home website: https://www.smithsfh.com/memorials/doris-finch/5237565/

    It was also published in the Hamilton Spectator: https://obituaries.thespec.com/obituary/doris-elaine-finch-nee-mills-1088587061

  • Doris Elaine (Mills) Finch, 1949-2023

    Doris Elaine (Mills) Finch, 1949-2023

    My dear Mom passed away on July 20th. She was one of my biggest fans (and sources!) when it came to genealogy. She really loved reading and hearing what I researched. Since August also happens to be her birth month I will spend some time posting about her all month long. Miss you, Mom.


    Doris Elaine Finch, our Mom! She was a devoted wife; a loving mother and grandmother – or nanny; a sister and sister-in-law; an aunt, cousin, neighbour, and friend. But, before any of these she was a daughter. She was the youngest daughter born to Rose Power and Alan Mills, our Nan and Grandad.

    Mom was born and raised in the small community of Oyster Pond Jeddore, Nova Scotia. The family lived in the former home of Mom’s great-grandfather Colin Mitchell on the East Jeddore Road. Childhood days were spent playing on the shore of the Atlantic Ocean, picking berries in the woods, or relaxing on the big rock behind the house – a rock we too enjoyed when visiting Grandad. We
    know many people here today have fond memories of that rock.

    Mom’s childhood was not without challenges. She became sick with tuberculosis and spent months at the TB Hospital in Halifax away from her mom and dad. The loneliness was somewhat relieved when she received visits from her Aunt Florence and Aunt Belle. While in the hospital, she befriended an African Canadian girl despite racial tensions of the time. Mom didn’t care, though. She just wanted a friend.

    One by one, her sisters left the family home – leaving Mom as the last one at home. But, Mom got to enjoy something the others didn’t: the modern conveniences of indoor plumbing, as Grandad finally installed a functioning bathroom, meaning no more trips to the outhouse.

    On a visit to Ontario to visit her sister, Mom met her future husband, our father, Carl. They were married in the Oyster Pond church – a day that has its own fair share of stories – and set out on their honeymoon driving the Cabot Trail. Mom used to tell us how her sisters, instead of packing sandwiches for the journey, packed sweets, cookies, and cakes. They didn’t go hungry, but they suffered from heartburn.

    With poor job prospects in Nova Scotia, it was clear that our parents would need to settle in Ontario. They first lived in an apartment in Paris before settling in Hamilton. Ultimately, they bought a house on the Beach Strip, a place we all called home.

    While Dad worked at the Dofasco steel mill, Mom took to jobs such as selling Avon and cleaning houses. First and foremost, though, she was the homemaker. She made sure we had a clean house and meals to eat.

    Three words that describe Mom are loyal, kind, and caring. She displayed these attributes throughout her life. This was especially evident in the final years of her mother, our Nan. Mom spent a lot of time helping to take care of Nan, allowing her to live somewhat independently. Long before then, Mom would go the extra mile to ensure we kids were on the right path whether it was helping with homework or working tirelessly during speech therapy sessions. Mom was always there for us.

    You can’t talk about Mom without thinking of Christmas. Christmas was her favourite holiday. The house would literally be transformed. Her regular knickknacks and ornaments were wrapped up and put away, replaced by Christmas decorations. It felt like being in a movie. She’d spend the holiday season in her chair admiring the lights on the Christmas tree. Christmas Eve was a time for family and friends to come over and a chance for everyone to enjoy her Christmas baking.

    For a girl from Oyster Pond, Mom sure was able to go places and enjoy big world experiences. She was able to travel to Las Vegas, visit the Grand Canyon, and see the Hoover Dam. And, she fulfilled a life long dream of attending the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville not just once but two years in a row. In 2010, Mom was a guest at a State Dinner for Queen Elizabeth II, where she met the former monarch and Prince Philip. Never did she imagine she would one day meet the Queen, she said. But, she did.

    The one thing we will all remember about Mom is her loving smile. As you saw in many photographs today, Mom’s smile was everywhere. She was genuinely a happy person who tried to see good in everyone and every circumstance. Even the ICU doctor at Oakville Trafalgar Memorial Hospital remarked how Mom smiled at him as he told her she would need to go on life support. The nurses loved Mom’s smile. We think it helped make their day just a bit better.

    In closing, let’s celebrate a life well lived. Let’s celebrate a remarkable woman who until the very end gave it her all. Let’s celebrate her legacy that lives on forever. And, when things aren’t seeming to be going according to plan, take a deep breath and just remember to smile.

    This is the eulogy I wrote for Mom on behalf of my brother and sister. It was one of the hardest pieces I have ever written, but I think she would’ve been proud of it.

  • My Grandparents in the 1931 Canada Census

    The 1931 Canada Census was released last week. It’s not indexed, yet, so you need search through lots of images to find your ancestors. I’ve been able to find three of my four grandparents in this census so far.

    Let’s start in East Jeddore, Nova Scotia. My Nan Rose Margaret Power was 12 years old the time of the census. Here she is in the household of her father Earl Wilson Power along with her mother Alice and six siblings.

    Some interesting tidbits from the census…Earl Power was a fisherman, their house had eight rooms, was of wood construction, and was valued at a whopping $200. And, the family did not have a radio.

    Source: 1931 Canada Census, Jeddore, Nova Scotia, population schedule, district 10 (Halifax), subdistrict 25, page 8, dwelling 77, family 77, Earl Wilson Power household ; digital images, Library and Archives Canada, Census of Canada, 1931 (https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/Census/Index1931 : accessed 17 September 2023).

    Next, up the road in Oyster Pond, there is my grandad Alan Mills and his family. My grandad was 15 years old here living in the household of his widowed mother Arabella Jane Mills. Also living in the house were his old brother Harland, Harland’s wife Ivy, Harland and Ivy’s daughter Elvie. and two other siblings Albert and Florence.

    This house also had eight rooms and was of wood construction. Looks like it was worth a bit more, though. No radio in the Mills household, either. I wrote a previous post about this house.

    Source: 1931 Canada Census, Jeddore, Nova Scotia, population schedule, district 10 (Halifax), subdistrict 25, pages 4-5, dwelling 44, family 44, Arabella Jane Mills household ; digital images, Library and Archives Canada, Census of Canada, 1931 (https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/Census/Index1931 : accessed 17 September 2023).

    Now, we come up to Ontario to Glanford Township. Here, my Grandpa Clifford Finch, is living in the household of his widowed father Jonathan Finch, a farmer, along with his brother George and sister Catherine (Cassie).

    Real estate is certainly worth more in Ontario. Their house is valued at $2,000. And, this family has a radio. It’s cut off from the snapshot below, but their neighbour was a man named James Marr, who also happened to be the best man at Jonathan Finch’s wedding.

    Source: 1931 Canada Census, Glanford Township, Ontario, population schedule, district 169, subdistrict 33, page 1, dwelling 6, family 7, Jonathan Finch household ; digital images, Library and Archives Canada, 1931 Census of Canada (https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census2/index1931 : accessed 14 June 2023).

    So far, I haven’t been able to find my Grandma’s family. I’ll keep browsing or might have to wait until the census is indexed in the months ahead.

    UPDATE. I found my Grandma Hazel Vansickle’s family. She was 15 years old at the time of the census living in the household of her father Allan Vansickle. They rented a farm in Beverly Township, Wentworth County, paying $10 per month.

    Source: 1931 Canada Census, Beverly Township, Ontario, population schedule, district 169, subdistrict 13, page 12, dwelling 147, family 147, Allan Vansickle household ; digital images, Library and Archives Canada, 1931 Census of Canada (https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census2/index1931 : accessed 14 June 2023).
  • Remembering my Nan | Rose Margaret (Power) Mills (1919-2008)

    Remembering my Nan | Rose Margaret (Power) Mills (1919-2008)

    Today marks fifteen years since the passing of my Nan. Born Rose Margaret Power on August 12, 1919 she was the oldest daughter of Earl Power and Alice Baker. She was born and raised in East Jeddore, Nova Scotia, a small rural fishing community about an hour’s drive from Halifax.

    Of my four grandparents (I was lucky to know all of them!), I was no doubt closest to my Nan. The fact she lived up the road from us on the Hamilton Beach Strip obviously cemented that relationship. From my earliest memories, Nan was always a part of our lives.

    She often talked about life growing up in a historically impoverished area of Nova Scotia. Her family had little money, but they managed. Her father was a fisherman like most men in East Jeddore, and her mother a housewife. Because they were largely self-sustainable, their lives were not greatly impacted by the Great Depression. Their diet centred around fish, of course – something she despised in her later adult life.

    She talked about going to school and her reputation for beating up the boys on occasion. She was known as “Earl Power’s Wildcat,” a badge of honour. And she told me how they would get in the “bateau” (a small rowing boat) and row up the shoreline or over to West Jeddore.

    In 1938, she married my grandfather Alan Mills. Together, they raised a family of five girls. There was also a stillborn son (Alan). My grandparents eventually moved into my Great Grandmother Arabella (Mitchell) Mills’ house in Oyster Pond where Nan took care of her mother-in-law until she died. That must not have been easy, and my Nan recalled to me many a story of living with “Grandmother Mills” (that’s a post for another day).

    Unfortunately, the marriage broke down and my grandparents separated in the 1970s before getting divorced a decade later. Ironically, this twist of fate is what enabled me to have the special relationship with Nan. Had they remained together she never would have moved to Ontario, and I would have seen her once a year at most.

    I have so many wonderful memories of Nan: Christmases, family BBQs, drives out to the country, etc. One that sticks out, as well, was a tendency for my brother and I to take her shoes when she was visiting and hide them in the field behind our house so she couldn’t go home.

    A couple others…

    Finding her sprawled out underneath her Christmas tree that fell on top of her listening to her grumble about Christmas and swear that “this was the last year she was dressing up a tree.”

    On a trip to Nova Scotia at the Halifax airport picking up our car rental, we didn’t have a valid credit card, so she offered cash as a security deposit. The worker (who happened to be bald) literally took all her cash on hand. After finally getting into our car, I asked her where she wanted to go first? “To the bank to get some damn money because that bald bastard took it all,” she snapped.

    My grandparents reconciled the year before he died. One of my favourite photos is of them outside the old Oyster Pond home. She was fortunate to be able to live somewhat independently as she aged. I helped look after Nan in her later years, and we strived to do as much as we could together.

    Nan died in 2008 after a brief illness. She is buried in the East Jeddore Cemetery, overlooking the harbour that is synonymous with her younger days. Her legacy lives on through numerous grandchildren and great-grandchildren who have been named after her, including my own daughter whose middle name is Rose.

  • My Grandad’s House in Oyster Pond

    My Grandad’s House in Oyster Pond

    Here is a photo of my grandad Alan Mills’ house on East Jeddore Road in Oyster Pond, Nova Scotia. The land where this house once stood was originally part of a parcel purchased in 1885 by Colin Mitchell (my 2nd great grandfather), Henry Mitchell, and Provost Jennex.

    The house remained in the Mitchell family after Colin’s death in 1896. I believe this was Colin’s homestead that he left to his youngest son James. James died young with no children, and there is then a break in the chain of title.

    My great grandmother Arabella (Mitchell) Mills (Colin’s daughter) resided in the house following the death of her husband Thomas Edward Mills in the First World War. They had been living in Gays River.

    My grandparents Alan Mills and Rose Power moved in with Arabella in the late 1930s. Arabella died in 1942. In 1948, Alan Mills (Arabella’s son) is listed as the owner of the property.

    My mother was born in this house in 1949. Three of the five girls in the family were born here.

    When I was a child, we visited my grandad every summer and stayed at this house. I remember the pitch darkness at night and either the sound of frogs or of dead silence. Much different than our home in Hamilton.

    Other memories include hiking in the woods with my grandad’s dog Duke; hanging out on “the rock” by the house; watching VHS wrestling tapes with my grandad; playing with my brother and sister while my parents played crib with Grandad and his companion Mabel Myers; visiting the chickens, pigs, goats, or pony (Lady) in the barn; foraging for wild blue berries; and, of course, seeing the many peculiar individuals (and, believe me, there were many!) who would pop in for a visit.

    After my grandad died in 1995, the house was sold and eventually torn down. Some years later, I went back to the property and walked around a bit – reminiscing of years gone by. I picked up a piece of siding off the ground, the last evidence of the old house that stood many years.

  • Photo Post #7 | Arabella (Mills) Jennex, Colin Mitchell Greenough, and Florence (Mills) Titus

    Photo Post #7 | Arabella (Mills) Jennex, Colin Mitchell Greenough, and Florence (Mills) Titus

    Pictured here are sisters Arabella (Mills) Jennex (on the left) and Florence (Mills) Titus with their half-brother Colin Mitchell Greenough. Colin was my great-grandmother Arabella Mitchell’s son from her first marriage to Isaac Gaetz Greenough. Isaac died in 1896 when Colin was only six months old.

    Arabella aka Belle (in the picture) was born in 1910 and died in 1969. Her husband was Roy Jennex. Florence was born in 1908 and died in 2002. Her husband was Herbert Titus. Colin was born in 1895 and died in 1952. He married Sadie Power.

    This photo was taken in 1950 outside the Camp Hill Hospital in Halifax.

  • A Letter from Bramshott

    Last night I saw a post on a Facebook Group I am a member of looking to connect with any descendants of Thomas Edward Mills. The poster had a letter he wrote to her great-grandfather, a man named Thomas Carroll. Of course, Thomas Edward Mills is my great-grandfather. I wrote a previous post outlining his life.

    Below is the letter he wrote to his friend Thomas Carroll. He wrote the letter on December 5, 1915 from the Bramshott Military Camp in England, where thousands of Canadian troops were stationed during the First World War. He includes a Christmas card and a photograph.

    Reading this letter written by my great-grandfather gave me goosebumps. The letter provides a fascinating first hand perspective of a soldier arriving in England, adjusting to life in the camp, and readying to go to the frontlines in Europe. Eerily, he foreshadows his own death early in the letter. He was killed in action September 5, 1916.

    Thomas was originally from Liverpool, and he mentions visiting his sister (perhaps he stayed with her family over Christmas), having left Liverpool 21 years previous. It makes me happy to know that he at least got to see his sister again before he eventually lost his own life.

    I’m very grateful to the lady who shared this with me.

  • Photo Post #3: Arabella Jane (Mitchell) Mills

    Photo Post #3: Arabella Jane (Mitchell) Mills

    This week’s photo is a picture of my great-grandmother Arabella Jane (Mitchell) Mills. She was born October 4, 1871 in Oyster Pond, Halifax County, Nova Scotia – the daughter of Colin Mitchell and Nancy Hurley.

    In 1892, she married Isaac Gaetz Greenough. They had two children, including a daughter who died in childhood. Isaac died in 1896 at the age of 24. In 1902, she married Thomas Edward Mills (my great grandfather). The family lived in Gays River, Colchester County.

    Thomas was killed in the First World War, and she moved the family back to her home in Oyster Pond. She died on Christmas Day, 1942.

    I don’t know who the baby is in this picture. I’m assuming it is a grandchild.

  • Alice Mills and Hallett Beach

    Hallett and Alice (Mills) Beach with their son Leeland. Alice was my Grandad’s sister.

    Sometimes, I really enjoy researching periphery families in the family tree. After all, you can only get so far with direct ancestors. Plus, the ancestors (and their descendants) on the periphery often provide you with clues to knock down a brick wall and go further back with your direct line.

    Delving into the periphery families introduces you to newfound cousins who have their own stories to tell and old photographs to share. Likewise, you can share what you have with them. Win-win.

    So, who are Alice Mills and Hallett Beach? Alice is an older sister of my grandad (Alan Mills). I didn’t know much about her other than the fact she lived in the Kentville area of Nova Scotia and eventually moved to Ontario. She died before I was born so I never met her. In fact, my mom had only met her Aunt Alice a few times (they had no car back in the day so no way to get to Kentville from Oyster Pond).

    Alice Alexandra Mills was born on April 5, 1906 in Gays River, Colchester County, Nova Scotia, the second child of Thomas Mills and Arabella Mitchell. She was named after her paternal grandmother Alice from Liverpool, England. I suspect her middle name was given as a tribute to her uncle (Arabella’s brother) Alexander Mitchell, who died in an accident only a week before she was born.

    Alice was just ten years old when her father was killed in the First World War. No doubt this would have had a big impact on her life. Not only did she lose her father, but as the oldest daughter she would have been burdened with the added responsibility of helping to raise her younger siblings – even though she was but a child herself.

    Eventually, she married Hallett Beach, a farmer and lumberman, from South Alton, Nova Scotia. They raised six children: Maxine, Christina, Florence, Gertrude, Etta, and Leland. There was also a stillborn girl. Christina was the only one I met as she lived in Hamilton.

    After Hallett died in 1961, Alice sold the family home in Nova Scotia and moved to Ontario, where she worked as a housekeeper. She died in 1972 in Barrie and is buried with her husband at Elm Grove Cemetery in Kings County, NS.

    When I first got back into genealogy a couple years ago I made contact with Alice’s daughter-in-law (Leland’s wife) Helen. She has been a wealth of information and has shared pictures of the Beach family; she’s also helped me to identify photos I had of the family.

    I have also connected with some of Alice and Hallett’s grandchildren – my second cousins. So, I’ve made a few new friends, too.

    For anybody working on their family tree, I strongly recommend spending time on your grandparents’ (and great-grandparents’ and great-great-grandparents’….