ITS PEOPLE: Zenas Waterman

WATERMANZENAS, farmer, lumberman, justice of the peace, and politician; b. 1 Dec. 1789 at Liverpool, N.S., second child of Zenas Waterman and Eunice Dean; m. first on 20 Nov. 1811 Experience Freeman (1790–1853) and they had nine children, and secondly, on 1 Sept. 1853, Patience Freeman, who survived him without issue; d. 3 Aug. 1869 at Pleasant River, N.S.
Zenas Waterman spent his youth in Liverpool where his father kept a blacksmith shop and taught music. In 1802 his mother, not wanting her sons to join the privateers fighting against France and Spain or to be “pressed” into the Royal Navy, persuaded her husband to pioneer a farm in the newly opened northern district of Queens County. At Pleasant River the Waterman family chopped their home out of the wilderness, sowed their crops, and planted an orchard, doing some of the first grafting in that district.
Shortly after his first marriage Zenas Waterman moved to the Twelve Mile (Middlefield), where, in partnership with James Morton, his wife’s brother-in-law, he established an inn and built up a considerable lumbering business, owning and operating a mill at Bangs Falls on the Medway River. He is said to have shipped lumber to England, largely, if not entirely, in ships owned and commanded by Captain George Allen of Yarmouth. After 1840, in well-to-do middle age, Waterman returned to Pleasant River and the life of a farmer. His impressive residence, Brighton Farm, boasted 17 windows facing the road. In 1846 Waterman was instrumental in establishing a new Congregational Church in his community and held offices in it.
Throughout his life Zenas Waterman had a keen interest in public affairs. An 1837 by-election chose him to represent Queens County in the assembly, and on 25 Jan. 1838 he took his seat. He quickly proved his reputation as an exponent of reform principles, supporting Joseph Howe* on several contentious issues. In 1840 he was defeated, according to the Novascotian, by a “combination of the two parties in the town of Liverpool, who, though they have no love for each other, would rather divide power between them, than share it with the farmers in the northern district.” Waterman remained a loyal Reformer, often taking to the hustings in support of his party’s candidate. In 1848, following the advent of responsible government, Waterman was appointed a justice of the peace, a commission he held until his death.
In or out of public office, Zenas Waterman was best known for his efforts in the building of roads. A writer to the Liverpool Transcript of 10 Jan. 1861 lauds him as “the father of nearly all the improved lines of road,” especially those connecting his northern district with the markets of Liverpool and other large centres.
Zenas Waterman, a stern, strong-willed man, was no doubt well beloved by his friends and equally disliked by those who opposed him. An advocate of temperance and reform, he forced his points home not by fluent speeches but by the sheer force of his personality.

http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/waterman_zenas_9E.html

THOUSANDS BY THOUSANDS (810 – 1944)


Winter warriors

From the witches pyre of Kleinheubach
Through Pilgrim stocks of Plymouth Rock
County Antrim’s blood and curse

Canterbury
 to Louisbourg. Swisse to
South Carolina. Pilgrims. Loyalists.
Traitors to Deutschland

They come. Carriers
of pain and glory

Break apart centuries
Carve open oceans
Slog through bog
Barrens and slate rock

Until with one wild
cry I become
flesh from their bones

Put your ear to this
earth and listen
Voices shiver
through the stones

We are many
Ancestral myriad of might

Yet here in this dark
Pleasant River hemlock
I stand alone drenched
by wild encompassing light

Their beauty. Such fierce
beauty melts my bones
“I am the voice of one crying
 in the wilderness”



NOTES: Many ancestral lines beyond the 17th century tend to enter the land of maybe and myth.  However ancestral grandmother Alice Freeman's line appears to have been researched by a seasoned genealogist with primary sources.
In the 9th century alone, we have almost three-quarter trillion 36xgreat-grandparents.

Osburh (810 - 855)
36th great-grandmother
Alfred the Great
King of Wessex (849 - 899)
son of Osburh
Edward the Elder
King of Wessex (870 - 924)
son of Alfred the Great
Edmund l
King of England (921 - 946)
son of Edward the Elder
Edgar the Peaceful
King of England (943 - 975)
son of Edmund
Aethelred ll
King of England (967 - 1016)
son of Edgar the Peaceful
Aelfgifu of England
daughter of Aethelred ll
Ealdgyth of Northumberland
daughter of Aelfgifu
Gospatric
Earl of Northumberland and Dunbar (1040 - )
son of Ealdgyth of Northumberland
Gospatric II
 2nd Earl of Dunbar
son of Gospatric
Juliana Of Dunbar
daughter of Gospatric II
Roger de Merlay ( - 1188)
son of Juliana Of Dunbar
Agnes de Merlay
daughter of Roger de Merlay
Sir Hugh Gobion ( - 1275)
son of Agnes de Merlay
Joan Gobion
daughter of Sir Hugh Gobion
Sir John de Morteyn
son of Joan Gobion
Lucy de Morteyn
daughter of Sir John de Morteyn
Thomas Giffard Sir (1345 - )
son of Lucy de Morteyn
Roger Giffard Esq (1367 - )
son of Thomas Giffard Sir
Thomas Giffard
son of Roger Giffard Esq
John Giffard Esq.
son of Thomas Giffard
Thomas Giffard Esq.
son of John Giffard Esq.
Amy Giffard
daughter of Thomas Giffard Esq.
Susan Samwell (1510 - )
daughter of Amy Giffard
Edward Edwards (1537 - 1591)
son of Susan Samwell
Margaret Edwards
daughter of Edward Edwards
Alice Freeman (1605 - 1664)
daughter of Margaret Edwards
Dorothy Thompson (1624 - 1709)
daughter of Alice Freeman
Robert Parke (1651 - 1707)
son of Dorothy Thompson
Keziah Parke (1700 - 1753)
daughter of Robert Parke
Keziah Davison (1721 - 1785)
daughter of Keziah Parke
Sarah Randall (1746 - )
daughter of Keziah Davison
Eddy Randall Newcomb (1769 - 1854)
son of Sarah Randall
Deacon William North Newcomb (1795 - 1876)
son of Eddy Randall Newcomb
William Henry Newcomb (1830 - 1914)
son of Deacon William North Newcomb
Ida Druscilla Newcomb (1858 - 1922)
daughter of William Henry Newcomb
Archibald Stanley Colp (1881 - 1938)
son of Ida Druscilla Newcomb
Elsie Etta Colp (1918 - 2014)
daughter of Archibald Stanley Colp
Betty Anne Colp
You are the daughter of Elsie Etta Colp

2010

March 15


ALLEN, Winnifred P.
The Chronicle Herald, March 24, 2010

Known to her friends and family as "Winnie", passed away peacefully on March 15, 2010, at the age of 77, in Queens County. She was born in Port aux Basques, NL on November 6, 1932, to her parents, Rose and Leslie Carter. She lived her adult life in Pleasant River and will be very much missed by her children, Vicki, Rick, Alan, Nicki and Troy; grandchildren, Alex, Patrick, Chantel, Kyle, Terra Jean, Ben, Carter and Braydon; and great-grandchildren, Sabrina, Chloe, Charlie, and Parker. She is survived by her brothers and sisters, Ilene, Albert, Bob, Winston, Charlie and Linda and predeceased by her granddaughter, Sherra Lee; brothers, Cecil and Leslie. A service will be held in Pleasant River Trinity United Church at 1 p.m. on Saturday, April 10, with Pastor Tom Watson officiating. The service will be followed by a gathering at Pleasant River Community Hall. Donations in memory may be made to the Nova Scotia Lupus Society or United Church Mission Service Fund.

1963

March 7
Seventy-year-old Ernest Wilfred Scott, husband of Winnifred Demone Scott, suffers a heart attack at home in Pleasant River and dies one-half hour later. He was been experiencing heart problems for the past year and is under the care of Dr. H.S. Smith of Caledonia.

A native of England, he has been in Canada for 50 years. He is the son of Ernest Scott and Alice Wiggan of England. His son Bud, of Toronto, signs the death certificate.

March 10
Ernest is buried in Pleasant River Cemetery. Bruce Chandler of Liverpool is undertaker.

https://www.novascotiagenealogy.com/ItemView.aspx?ImageFile=1963-2145&Event=death&ID=442718

September 28
Student minister Eddie Collins dies in a two-car collision on the Irishtown Road, New Brunswick. He was returning home to Pleasant River from his pastoral charge in Boiestown.
http://archives.gnb.ca/search/VISSE/141C5.aspx?culture=en-CA&guid=a5bb6c66-3dac-4afc-89f0-f26d219f3421

2017

JANUARY 28
Philip Lewis Spurr, 75, of Pleasant River, Queens County, passed away peacefully in North Queens Nursing Home, Caledonia on Saturday, January 28, 2017.

Born in Middleton, Philip was a son of the late Lewis and Audrey (Maclean) Spurr.
Philip worked as a truck driver for Maritime Steel in Dartmouth then for Canadian National Railway in various locations throughout Nova Scotia until his retirement. He enjoyed hunting, fishing and woodworking. He was owner/operator of Spurr’s Salvage. He will be fondly remembered as a friend to all and who would lend a hand to anyone in need.

Philip is survived by his wife of 53 years, Marilyn (MacQuarrie); his sons Philip “Phil” (Heidi) of New Glasgow, Neil (Lori Smith) of Pleasant River, grandchildren Madison and Tanner. His sisters Patricia (Wayne) Allen of Bridgewater and Sandra Spurr of Brickton, NS, his brother Irvin (Debbie) of Mount Hanley, NS
Cremation has taken place under the direction of Chandlers’ Funeral Home, Liverpool. A graveside memorial service will be held Tuesday, January 31, 2017 at 11:00 a.m. in Lakeview Cemetery, Pleasant River. Reception to follow in the Pleasant River Community Hall. No flowers by request, donations may be made to the Canadian Cancer Society, the Alzheimer’s Association of Nova Scotia or to a charity of your choice. 

1921

Birth - A son, Leslie is born to Will Mailman and Zoe Davis. [1]

March 29 - Bessie Patterson, wife of Arthur James Fancy,dies at age 73.

March 31 - Bessie's funeral service is held from Pleasant River Church.


April 19 - Joseph Claude Herman, the 21-year-old son of Joseph Herman, dies in Pleasant River.

April 21 - Joseph Claude is buried in Pleasant River Cemetery.

May 18 - Funeral service for 80-year-old Jacob W. Waterman, North Brookfield, is held at Pleasant River Church.  He is buried at North Brookfield.

June 20 -  Funeral service for 84-year-old Isaiah Hebb of Middlefield is held in Pleasant River.  He has died the previous day.

Aug. 22 - Four-month-old Royden Edward Selig is baptized by Rev. G.W. Ball.  Born on April 23, he is the son of Rufus Selig and Alma MacKay, East Clifford.

Sept 2 – Six-year-old Eldon Colp and four-year-old Mildred Colp die of cholera infantum. (An often fatal form of gastroenteritis occurring in children; not true cholera but having similar symptoms.) The children of Archibald Colp and Violet Haines have been under the care of Dr. W.H. Cole of New Germany from Aug. 26 until the day of their death. Eldon is six years two months and 17 days old. Mildred is four years 11 months and two days. Information is filed by undertaker, Oran Woodworth of Hemford.

Sept. 4 - The children are buried in Pleasant River Cemetery, (not Brookfield as filed).[2]

Sept. 27 - Sixty-three-year-old Joseph Herman is killed in a barn accident in Pleasant River.

Sept. 29 -  Joseph is buried in Pleasant River Cemetery.

Sept. 30 - One of the first children born in Pleasant River Settlement - Amelia Gordon (Colp) Demmons dies in Melvern Square, Annapolis County, at the age of 74. She and her husband, Elijah, have been married almost 45 years. Cause of death is acute dilation of the heart, accompanied by asthma and hardening of the arteries. She has been ill for three years. The couple have been living in Melvern Square for 15 years.

Oct. 22 - Twenty-eight-year-old Parke Harry Smith of Pleasant River is married to Elaine Fisk Dailey, 18, of North Brookfield.  The ceremony takes place at the Baptist parsonage in Mahone Bay.





[1] Halifax Herald Obits http://listsearches.rootsweb.com/th/read/LUNEN-LINKS/2007-02/1170628054
[2] Province of Nova Scotia – Certificate of Registration of Death