gunn_j_alexander
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| (27 Dec. 1862-8 Nov. 1938), farmer. (Alexander Gunn, Alex Gunn, perhaps also called Allie Gunn; the surname in this family was originally Fusée) (date of birth 1857 also found) Born in Township of Finch or Osnabruck, Stormont County. Parents: Alexander Gunn (Alexander Fusée), who was of French origins and died in the American Civil War, and his wife Eleanor or Ella Cook (1827-1911). Alexander Gunn the younger, the subject of the present entry, attended the Athol school, the school of //Glengarry School Days//, at the same time as the novelist “Ralph Connor” (C. W. Gordon) who was almost his exact contemporary. Young Alexander Gunn was almost certainly the same person as Alexander Fusee, aged 11, or John Fussie, aged 14, both Presbyterians of French descent living in Roxborough Township, Stormont County, who appear in the 1871 census. Alexander Gunn, the subject of the present entry, was for many years a farmer on Highway 43, south of Maxville. In 2002 an elderly lady told Gordon Winter of Maxville that she remembered driving to Apple Hill with her children and offering Gunn a ride, “as he was walking because he didn’t have a car. He told her that she was having the best years of her life with the children.” Alex Gunn, his son W. A., and two of the Carthers are named in William Alfred McIntosh’s verse sketch of his neighbours of 1923. Gunn was married to Margaret Fawcett (1875-1940). (four children) He died in Roxborough Township, and is buried in the Maxville Cemetery. | (27 Dec. 1862-8 Nov. 1938), farmer. (Alexander Gunn, Alex Gunn, perhaps also called Allie Gunn; the surname in this family was originally Fusée) (date of birth 1857 also found) Born in Township of Finch or Osnabruck, Stormont County. Parents: Alexander Gunn (Alexander Fusée), who was of French origins and died in the American Civil War, and his wife Eleanor or Ella Cook (1827-1911). Alexander Gunn the younger, the subject of the present entry, attended the Athol school, the school of //Glengarry School Days//, at the same time as the novelist “Ralph Connor” (C. W. Gordon) who was almost his exact contemporary. Young Alexander Gunn was almost certainly the same person as Alexander Fusee, aged 11, or John Fussie, aged 14, both Presbyterians of French descent living in Roxborough Township, Stormont County, who appear in the 1871 census. Alexander Gunn, the subject of the present entry, was for many years a farmer on Highway 43, south of Maxville. In 2002 an elderly lady told Gordon Winter of Maxville that she remembered driving to Apple Hill with her children and offering Gunn a ride, “as he was walking because he didn’t have a car. He told her that she was having the best years of her life with the children.” Alex Gunn, his son W. A., and two of the Carthers are named in William Alfred McIntosh’s verse sketch of his neighbours of 1923. Gunn was married to Margaret Fawcett (1875-1940). (four children) He died in Roxborough Township, and is buried in the Maxville Cemetery. | ||
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