Differences
This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.
| Both sides previous revisionPrevious revisionNext revision | Previous revision |
| mcbain_andrew_richard [] – johnw41 | mcbain_andrew_richard [] (current) – external edit 127.0.0.1 |
|---|
| ====== McBain, Andrew Richard ====== | ====== McBain, Andrew Richard ====== |
| (1 Dec. 1855-11 May 1908), farmer. (Andrew McBain, A. R. McBain, Andrew R. McBain) Parents: James Cumming McBain and his wife Annabella Foulds. Andrew McBain had a farm and stone house about a mile and a half west of Williamstown, GC. He was married to Harriet McDougall or McDougald (31 May 1858-30 April 1895). (children surviving him: 3) Gertrude Wood remembered that Andrew was “said to have the cleverest brains in the whole county, but was an alcoholic,” and that the family was ravaged with TB (from which his wife died). He was a member of the SDG Council. His brother, Dr John McBain (father of Georgiana McBain) was living in Montreal at the time of Andrew’s death. Andrew McBain will be remembered for the collection of his papers in the Ontario Archives. The letters contained there written to Andrew in the 1870s and 1880s by the friends of his boyhood and youth give a splendid picture of the ideas and outlook of the young Glengarrians of the time. Sexual topics are treated with some freedom. The letters can be read with almost as much interest as a novel and would make a splendid published collection. See the entries in this dictionary for Archibald Fraser and [[purcell_patrick|Patrick Purcell]]. There is a good representation in the letters of the prominence Purcell had in his day, and one of Andrew’s correspondents was a Purcell employee. | (1 Dec. 1855-11 May 1908), farmer. (Andrew McBain, A. R. McBain, Andrew R. McBain) Parents: James Cumming McBain and his wife Annabella Foulds. Andrew McBain had a farm and stone house about a mile and a half west of Williamstown, GC. He was married to Harriet McDougall or McDougald (31 May 1858-30 April 1895). (children surviving him: 3) Gertrude Wood remembered that Andrew was “said to have the cleverest brains in the whole county, but was an alcoholic,” and that the family was ravaged with TB (from which his wife died). He was a member of the SDG Council. His brother, Dr John McBain (father of Georgiana McBain) was living in Montreal at the time of Andrew’s death. Andrew McBain will be remembered for the collection of his papers in the Ontario Archives. The letters contained there written to Andrew in the 1870s and 1880s by the friends of his boyhood and youth give a splendid picture of the ideas and outlook of the young Glengarrians of the time. Sexual topics are treated with some freedom. The letters can be read with almost as much interest as a novel and would make a splendid published collection. See the entries in this dictionary for [[fraser_archibald2|Archibald Fraser]] and [[purcell_patrick|Patrick Purcell]]. There is a good representation in the letters of the prominence Purcell had in his day, and one of Andrew’s correspondents was a Purcell employee. |
| |
| <tab>Andrew McBain’s son Alexander McDougall McBain (b. 24 Oct. 1890 at Williamstown; d. 29 Aug. 1981 in Toronto) was a WWI pilot with the Royal Flying Corps (the predecesssor of the RAF) and a Toronto businessman who made a career in the Bank of Nova Scotia and was a director of the CNR. | <tab>Andrew McBain’s son Alexander McDougall McBain (b. 24 Oct. 1890 at Williamstown; d. 29 Aug. 1981 in Toronto) was a WWI pilot with the Royal Flying Corps (the predecesssor of the RAF) and a Toronto businessman who made a career in the Bank of Nova Scotia and was a director of the CNR. |