| <tab>He got the patent for Lot 6, 9th Concession of Lochiel Township, in the Breadalbane area, on 18 June 1827 (for 200 acres), and he got the patent for the adjoining Lot 5 (another 200 acres) on 28 Feb. 1843. When a difficulty arose about his claim to the land on which he first settled at Breadalbane (probably Lot 5), he is said to have walked to Toronto to negotiate with the officials about the matter. | <tab>He got the patent for Lot 6, 9th Concession of Lochiel Township, in the Breadalbane area, on 18 June 1827 (for 200 acres), and he got the patent for the adjoining Lot 5 (another 200 acres) on 28 Feb. 1843. When a difficulty arose about his claim to the land on which he first settled at Breadalbane (probably Lot 5), he is said to have walked to Toronto to negotiate with the officials about the matter. |
| <tab>He was married, perhaps on 16 Jan. 1807, to Christian or Christina McNaughtan, the daughter of a merchant of Killin, Scotland. His death took place at his home at Breadalbane. (nine children) He and his wife, who survived him to die in 1858, are buried in the Breadalbane Cemetery. All the other McKillicans who have biographies in the present dictionary were their descendants (among these are their sons Daniel and Rev. John McKillican). See the entry for C. G. McKillican, this dictionary, for the family relationships. There is a fine, detailed life of the Rev. William McKillican and most interesting individual-by-individual biographies of his descendants in R. G. W. Mackilligin’s //The Followers of Saint Fillan**//. Mackilligin (53, also 7, 66) describes “virtually all” the information on this branch of the McKillican family as being supplied by C. Herbert McKillican. | <tab>He was married, perhaps on 16 Jan. 1807, to Christian or Christina McNaughtan, the daughter of a merchant of Killin, Scotland. His death took place at his home at Breadalbane. (nine children) He and his wife, who survived him to die in 1858, are buried in the Breadalbane Cemetery. All the other McKillicans who have biographies in the present dictionary were their descendants (among these are their sons Daniel and Rev. John McKillican). See the entry for [[mckillican_charles_gordon|C. G. McKillican]], this dictionary, for the family relationships. There is a fine, detailed life of the Rev. William McKillican and most interesting individual-by-individual biographies of his descendants in R. G. W. Mackilligin’s //The Followers of Saint Fillan**//. Mackilligin (53, also 7, 66) describes “virtually all” the information on this branch of the McKillican family as being supplied by C. Herbert McKillican. |