purcell_michael
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| ====== Purcell, Michael ====== | ====== Purcell, Michael ====== | ||
| - | (4 May 1835 or 4 May 1838-13 Aug. 1898), contractor, farmer. (M. Purcell) Brother of John and Patrick Purcell. Born Charlottenburgh Township, GC. Parents: Michael Purcell and his wife Catherine Grant. His education was in GC schools, and he remained at home on the family farm till he became a foreman for his brother Patrick in the construction of the Junction Canal at Cardinal, Ont. Also, he was manager for Patrick in the building of factory foundations in Cornwall, and construction foreman on waterworks in New York City, and worked with Patrick on the construction of St. Peter’s Canal, Cape Breton. Likewise, he was a contractor in building portions of the CPR, the Ontario and Quebec Railway, and the Northern Pacific Railway. See also D. H. McKenzie, an associate in contracting. Cochrane’s biographical dictionary in the 1890s said of Purcell that “Since 1887, he has given his full attention to farming. He is now the owner of four hundred acres, fronting the St. Lawrence.” Michael Purcell died instantly when a train hit a carriage he was driving over a railway crossing a few miles east of Cornwall. He had been a major beneficiary under the will of his brother Patrick, who died in 1891. | + | (4 May 1835 or 4 May 1838-13 Aug. 1898), contractor, farmer. (M. Purcell) Brother of John and Patrick Purcell. Born Charlottenburgh Township, GC. Parents: Michael Purcell and his wife Catherine Grant. His education was in GC schools, and he remained at home on the family farm till he became a foreman for his brother Patrick in the construction of the Junction Canal at Cardinal, Ont. Also, he was manager for Patrick in the building of factory foundations in Cornwall, and construction foreman on waterworks in New York City, and worked with Patrick on the construction of St. Peter’s Canal, Cape Breton. Likewise, he was a contractor in building portions of the CPR, the Ontario and Quebec Railway, and the Northern Pacific Railway. See also [[mckenzie_duncan_h|D. H. McKenzie]], an associate in contracting. Cochrane’s biographical dictionary in the 1890s said of Purcell that “Since 1887, he has given his full attention to farming. He is now the owner of four hundred acres, fronting the St. Lawrence.” Michael Purcell died instantly when a train hit a carriage he was driving over a railway crossing a few miles east of Cornwall. He had been a major beneficiary under the will of his brother Patrick, who died in 1891. |
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