Eddy Surname Genealogy

Family Tree for those who have the last name of Eddy, Eddye, Eddi, and other variants. This website is for information only. We are not adding any additional genealogical information. If you want to update your tree go to www.eddyfamilyassociation.com

Edey, C.L.

Edey, C.L.



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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Edey, C.L.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Edey, V.M.

    V.M. married Mulvay, S.L. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mulvay, S.L.
    Children:
    1. Edey, T.M.R.
    2. 1. Edey, C.L.
    3. Edey, B.A.
    4. Edey, M.B.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Edey, Morley Mose Watson was born on 22 Sep 1915 in Wellwood, Manitoba (son of Edey, Alexander Moses and Watson, Fanny); died in 2002 in Grande Prairie, Alberta.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Reference Number: 84562

    Notes:

    [Edey.FTW]

    This is the story of the Alexander Mose Edey family.

    It was in March of 1892 that a girl, baby daughter, was born into the
    Watson family, a large family of about 12 or 13. She was of the younger
    ones who lived in Ireland. Shortly after she was born, about 2 years old,
    her parents died leaving her orphaned. She was raised in an orphanage. At
    the age of 16 she was to set sail on the Titanic for Canada, where a
    sister-in-law had moved after losing her first husband, and married again
    to one named George Kilgore. She had intended to visit and then go back to
    Ireland. But for some reason her passage was cancelled, so she took a
    small boat which took two weeks to come across to Canada. She later heard
    that the Titanic had sunk. Her name was Fanny Watson.

    Now in the year of 1892 a baby boy was born to the Mose Edey family, the
    first born, Alexander Mose. He grew up and attended school only in the
    winter months as he had to help his parents with the farm work. While yet
    a young man his mother took very sick. His father got specialists to help
    her. It took thousands of dollars but of no avail and she passed away.

    Meanwhile, Fanny was working for a Scottish couple named Jack MacCrae. She
    had been warned not to have anything to do with the Edeys so she tried to
    avoid them and her mistress told her that was not right. "The Edey's are a
    fine people and respectable, you should get to know them." One day Alex
    Edey came over to visit the MacCraes and they asked him in for dinner.
    That was the start of a courtship and finally marriage of my mother and
    dad, on Dec. 3, 1914.

    My mother was Anglican and believed she was saved at her confirmation. My
    dad was Presbyterian and I am told took a stand for the Lord at an early
    age but because they had no fellowship, did not grow in the Lord.

    Then in Sept. 22, 1915, I Morley Edey, was born. This is where my life
    started.

    My mother had a high respect for God and the Bible but did not know how
    to pass on the good news of salvation. She did implant in our lives the
    respect for God and His Word, the Bible. We lived too far away from Sunday
    School to attend until 1925 or 1926. We left our home and moved to a
    place near our Grandpa and near a small school. There the Salvation Army
    had Sunday School and church service. WE enjoyed the Sunday School and I
    remember and I got a book from my Sunday School teacher for, I believe,
    good attendance. All the while, I believed God and prayed to Him. But
    never really knew Him.

    Then in the spring of 1928, in a hurry, my uncle John and Dad moved to the
    Peace River Country to the town of Spirit River.

    There we went to the United Church of Canada where I learned the Ten
    Commandments and the Apostles Creed which I soon forgot.

    Then in 1931 we moved to the homestead in the Bridgeview area, just one
    and one half miles south of the peak of White Mountain. We were there
    twelve days when a forest fire came and burned everything we owned. My
    mother was home alone when it came up with one toddler and a baby in her
    arms. She went to a neighbours for help. This was at the beginning of
    the 1930 depression. We had to start from scratch.

    Dad and we boys used to work at the saw mill just two miles from our home
    and finally we started and got established again. Dad used to work out
    whenever possible and we boys used to work in the harvest field for extra
    or only money of any amount. In these years before radio, we boys and my
    sister Agnes, used to play the violins, guitar, banjo, uke and we finally
    started to play for dances and sometimes made a few dollars that way.

    We often trapped a little for spending money from the time we were sixteen
    years old, we boys hunted for our meat supply. We helped in this way.

    There was no incentive for a young person in those days, nothing but lots
    of time and nothing to show for it. I took up a homestead when I became
    of age but never had any ambition to develop it.

    In the winter of 1938 my brother Clarence and I had a close encounter with
    a grizzly bear which made me think on spiritual things. If he made one
    more jump, where would I be? In heaven or hell? I knew not where.

    In the spring of 1939, PRBI team, with a tent, came to the area, Mr.
    Ruark, four PRBI students came and Mr. Ruark one night led me to the Lord
    with Lena, then Brummond, and Edith Brownley, came to know Jesus. Edith's
    dad had forbidden her to continue at church and a year or two later, she
    was dragged to death, under a jeep, while her and a friend was out for an
    evening walk. Of course, Lena is my sister-in-law, Clare's wife.

    My life had a drastic change that fall, I left home to work at Brownvale,
    and then to PRBI for the winter, and next summer to Brownvale to work for
    the summer, then to PRBI next fall. The next year I worked for PRBI in
    improving and Maintenance work and gospel team work, the best time of my
    life.

    Then the army caught up with me.

    About the same time a young PRBI student and I were engaged to be married
    which took place that fall in Nanaimo, B.C. November 14, 1942 in a
    Pentecostal Church. Barbara Bresnahan was this young lady that I married.


    I worked away from her during the week but was able to be with her on the
    weekends only because I was with the B.C. forestry as a C.O. or
    conscientious objecter. She could not get work and she had a rough time
    making ends meet with my wages of 75 cents per day. We lived like that
    one winter and then in the spring, I was able to get into the army. Then
    life was much easier. She was paid wages as well as my own wages. That
    fall I was shipped to Eastern Canada where I took my basic and advanced
    training and also a course in shoemakeing, graduating with a B trades pay
    which was a lot more money. As time went on I was shipped overseas to
    England. I became a full corporal with trades pay. I was as much as a
    staff sergeant.

    Before I went overseas we had our first son born an hour and one half
    before my birthday, on September 21, 1943 Donovon Mose.

    I went over to England, it must have been in the fall of 1944, the last of
    August or the first of September. The war was still pretty hot but there
    were still buzz bombs and rockets that fell within sounding distance.

    Then in the fall of 1944, I attended a Bible School in England hoping that
    it would help me with my studies here at home, but it did not help much so
    I never got the chance to graduate from Bible School.

    On returning home we settled in the Watino and helped Barbara's mother
    with her farm. She, Mrs. Bresnahan, worked out . She was a very
    independent lady. We got along very well. She was a fine Christian lady.
    We farmed in Watino from 1946 - 1960. We bought a farm right next to my
    mother-in-law's farm so could look after both.

    In 1959, I had to borrow money in order to overhaul my tractor. I said to
    Barbara, "It would be better if we were to work out instead of working the
    farm with long hours and nothing to show for it." So in the spring of
    1960 April, at Easter holidays, Donovan and I went out to Vanderhoof, B.C.
    looking for work. We found work in a planer mill, Parks Brothers Lumber
    Company Incorporated, where I worked until 1968.

    Then we moved out to Vancover Island for a year with the Nootka Mission
    where we worked with the native people and lumberjacks. I worked with Dr.
    McLean at his mission hospital. I worked as a handiman or maintenance
    man. Dr. McLean was a man who was a go go man, and I was one who took my
    time and tried to do a good job. So we clashed a little but I enjoyed the
    work.

    I used to fly out to camp and villages and go from house to house, telling
    people Dr. McLean was set up at a certain place and many times I had
    opportunities to testify of my faith in the Lord Jesus Christ my Saviour.

    Then in the fall of 1969 I came back home to Vanderhoof and started
    carpentering with Toby Millard. Then that winter I went to work in the
    bush with Corney Giesbrecht as a buckerman on the landing. This job I
    thoroughly enjoyed and worked all winter and then the next summer. The
    next fall I went to work for a sawmill but it was a long way from home,
    over icy roads. When I got a chance to come back to Vanderhoof again, I
    went to work with a planer mill but this one burned down and before it was
    built up again, they transferred us to another small planer mill. This
    boss I did not get along with because of his shady deals, so I got a job
    back with Toby Millard and carpentered for three or four more years. Then
    work slowed down so I went back to the planer mill and worked until I was
    71 years old, grading lumber again.

    In 1984 or 1985, started building a log house after hours. I put in 3 1/2
    to 4 hours every day on Saturdays and holidays for five years. I started
    out, we had about $1800 in the bank. Then in the September I was 65, I
    got my old age pension so was able to keep on the building. I built the
    whole house by myself. I needed some help putting up the rafters and part
    of the metal. I did my own electrical wiring and plumbing. Tim helped
    me whenever he had time but on the whole I built it most of it. Barbara
    and I moved in about 1986 or the spring of 1987 into our new home. Oh,
    the joy it was to have much room. It was 32' X 44' with a full upstairs
    and partial basement for furnace and wood room.

    Barbara was getting bad with arthritis by this time so we bought
    mechanized power wheel chair. And finally in the fall of 1987, I believe,
    or thereabouts, she went to hospital in Prince George. She wanted them to
    give her a new hip, but they wouldn't. So in the next fall, 1988 I
    believe it was, she wanted to go to Grande Prairie, where she heard they
    did the job. So we had her moved to Grande Prairie where they did the job
    in about three weeks after she was here. So I spent that winter between
    Grande Prairie and Vanderhoof.

    So in the early winter, some people wanted our place, in Vanderhoof, so we
    sold and I moved out here.

    Then, my youngest son, Victor, and family, bought a large acreage, raw
    land, and asked me if I would help them build a house. I could live with
    them, so that is what I did. This house is the same size as our
    Vanderhoof house, only it is frame. It's double 2" X 4" walls on the
    outside frame . I did a lot or work on it but also I missed a lot of time
    because of surgery and sickness but I think I can say did 50 percent of
    the building or more maybe. Now I have the master bedroom of the house
    and live with Vic and Sandy, his wife, and four grandchildren.

    I am still quite active and have a shop 28 X 40 feet long where I can
    spend a lot of my time doing things on my wood lathe and many other tools
    and enjoy every bit of it.

    My children's names are Donovan, killed in an auto accident, Charlotte in
    Washington, U.S.A., Alexander, Valley View, Alberta, Eileen, Vernon, B.C.,
    Thelma, Terrace, B.C., Anne, Beaverlodge, Alberta, Tim, Vanderhoof, B.C.
    and Victor, Grande Prairie, Alberta.

    I could tell you many other stories but they will have to wait until next
    time. I am still active and love to hunt a little but my eyes aren't as
    good as they used to be but when I get my eyes on game, I can still give
    them a tough time.

    I am a member of Grace Bible Fellowship, Evangelical Free affiliated. I
    am also a committee member for the Shantymen Christian Association. I am
    also a committee member of the Bear Lake Bible Camp. I love my Saviour,
    my precious Saviour, He died on Calvary's cross for me, but now He is
    risen, gone back to heaven, some day He's coming back for me. I praise
    His name.

    Barbara has gone to meet the Lord, Jan. 5, 1994, about ten minutes to two
    and was buried in the Bridgeview Cemetery a week later and now I am come
    to the end of my story and I hope that this will give you an idea of my
    life story. May God Bless You all, Thank you.

    Well, Norma and Les, I hope this will help. There is some tape so I will
    try to give you some news. Vic works on the City of Grande Prairie buses,
    he is a bus driver. He has about six horses here and he has fixed up a
    sleigh and goes sleigh riding and things like that. He is quite active,
    him and his wife are quite active, Sandy, is quite active in the Alliance
    church here, the children attend Sunday School. Today, Vic is working,
    and Sandy and the kids are away at her mothers place for supper so I am on
    my own.

    Ann is lives at Beaverlodge, and she has five children and she does some
    sub teaching, she has her teacher's certificate and she is sub teaching
    some times. Dennis has had trouble finding a job but he does look after
    the home . He looks after the cooking and just about everything in the
    house when Anne is not around.

    Alex and his family are living in Valley View. But Alex himself is out in
    the bush running a faller buncher. He gets home about once every two
    weeks or there abouts and otherwise he is working steady. Alex likes to
    run big machinery. This Faller Buncher is quite a big machine and he
    likes it and seems to be doing okay.

    The weather here has been very cold for about a week and now we have more
    snow again. We have about 3 or 4 inches last night and we have about 3
    feet or more at the present time. We like to go ski-dooing some times,
    Vic has a couple of ski-doos here but most of all he likes his horses. He
    likes to ride horse back, he goes up into the mountains in the summertime,
    for a week, and just rides and then in the wintertime he's got a sleigh
    that he uses for sleigh rides and then in the summer time he takes people
    riding with a rubber tired machine, wagon. I don't seem to be able to keep
    up with my thoughts here so we'll call it just about quits. I hope this
    is going to be good for you and that all these things will help. I know
    there are other stories you would like me to tell but right off hand I
    don't seem to be up on storytelling so I think I will close for now. I am
    78 years old, I will be 79 this September. I trust you all that this will
    help in the writing of the history of the Edey family so may God bless
    you richly and may the Lord lead and direct you in every way, we pray, in
    Jesus name.

    Morley married Bresnahan, Barbara Constance in 1942. Barbara was born on 15 May 1919; died in Jan 1994 in Grande Prairie, Alberta. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  Bresnahan, Barbara Constance was born on 15 May 1919; died in Jan 1994 in Grande Prairie, Alberta.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Reference Number: 84408

    Children:
    1. Edey, Donavon Moses was born on 21 Sep 1943; died in Jul 1975.
    2. Edey, C.A.
    3. Edey, A.J.
    4. Edey, E.B.
    5. Edey, T.B.
    6. Edey, E.A.
    7. Edey, T.B.
    8. 2. Edey, V.M.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Edey, Alexander Moses was born on 9 Sep 1891 in Wellwood, Manitoba (son of Edey, Moses Samuel and Kilgore, Jessie Rebecca); died on 5 Aug 1972 in Grande Prairie, Alberta; was buried on 9 Aug 1972 in Bridgeview, Alberta.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Reference Number: 84561

    Notes:

    [Edey.FTW]

    This is the story of the Alexander Mose Edey family. This is written by Morley Edey

    It was in March of 1892 that a girl, baby daughter, was born into the Watson family, a
    large family of about 12 or 13. She was of the younger ones who lived in Ireland. Shortly
    after she was born, about 2 years old, her parents died leaving her orphaned. She was
    raised in an orphanage. At the age of 16 she was to set sail on the Titanic for Canada,
    where a sister-in-law had moved after losing her first husband, and married again to one
    named George Kilgore. She had intended to visit and then go back to Ireland. But for some
    reason her passage was cancelled, so she took a small boat which took two weeks to come
    across to Canada. She later heard that the Titanic had sunk. Her name was Fanny
    Watson.

    Now in the year of 1892 a baby boy was born to the Mose Edey family, the first born,
    Alexander Mose. He grew up and attended school only in the winter months as he had to
    help his parents with the farm work. While yet a young man his mother took very sick. His
    father got specialists to help her. It took thousands of dollars but of no avail and she
    passed away.

    Meanwhile, Fanny was working for a Scottish couple named Jack MacCrae. She had been
    warned not to have anything to do with the Edeys so she tried to avoid them and her
    mistress told her that was not right. "The Edey's are a fine people and respectable, you
    should get to know them." One day Alex Edey came over to visit the MacCraes and they
    asked him in for dinner. That was the start of a courtship and finally marriage of my
    mother and dad, on Dec. 3, 1914.

    My mother was Anglican and believed she was saved at her confirmation. My dad was
    Presbyterian and I am told took a stand for the Lord at an early age but because they had
    no fellowship, did not grow in the Lord.

    Then in Sept. 22, 1915, I Morley Edey, was born. This is where my life started.

    My mother had a high respect for God and the Bible but did not know how to pass on the
    good news of salvation. She did implant in our lives the respect for God and His Word, the
    Bible. We lived too far away from Sunday School to attend until 1925 or 1926. We left
    our home and moved to a place near our Grandpa and near a small school. There the
    Salvation Army had Sunday School and church service. WE enjoyed the Sunday School and
    I remember and I got a book from my Sunday School teacher for, I believe, good
    attendance. All the while, I believed God and prayed to Him. But never really knew Him.

    Then in the spring of 1928, in a hurry, my uncle John and Dad moved to the Peace River
    Country to the town of Spirit River.

    There we went to the United Church of Canada where I learned the Ten Commandments
    and the Apostles Creed which I soon forgot.

    Then in 1931 we moved to the homestead in the Bridgeview area, just one and one half
    miles south of the peak of White Mountain. We were there twelve days when a forest fire
    came and burned everything we owned. My mother was home alone when it came up with
    one toddler and a baby in her arms. She went to a neighbours for help. This was at the
    beginning of the 1930 depression. We had to start from scratch.

    Dad and we boys used to work at the saw mill just two miles from our home and finally we
    started and got established again. Dad used to work out whenever possible and we boys
    used to work in the harvest field for extra or only money of any amount. In these years
    before radio, we boys and my sister Agnes, used to play the violins, guitar, banjo, uke and
    we finally started to play for dances and sometimes made a few dollars that way.

    We often trapped a little for spending money from the time we were sixteen years old, we
    boys hunted for our meat supply. We helped in this way.

    There was no incentive for a young person in those days, nothing but lots of time and
    nothing to show for it. I took up a homestead when I became of age but never had any
    ambition to develop it.

    I was glad to get your letter and Questionair. I think that is the best way to jog our
    memory. If you sent me one I don't remember it but I will try to answer them one by one.
    We were a very priveleged family. We had Parents who even before they made their last
    commitment to the Lord were People of High standard. I think I can truthfully say Mom
    was the keel and rudder of the Family ship. I used to hear many conversations while Mum
    and Dad were in their bedroom. That I wasn't supposed to hear. Dad loved to read and of
    course he read something on evolution one time and made mention to Mum. How could we
    be sure there was a God & that evolution could be true. Mum came right back with "Dad
    How could you ever believe such a thing."

    Dad was always a hard working person and always very energetic. We'd go visiting
    relatives on a Sunday and he'd end up play 'anti-I-over' or ball or horse shoes with us kids.
    Dad while in Manitoba was not always well. He would take sick with high fever quite
    suddenly. He used to drive the school van with a team of horses. One day he took sick I
    was very young. Probably 7 years old and didn't know how to drive. He tied the horses
    lines on the front of the box and lay down on the floor of the sleigh (winter time) and they
    went home on their own. His fever would get so high he would go delirious. He would say
    all kinds of crazy things that made no sense at all.

    When He & Mother were married they went into debt to buy a farm & build a house. It
    was right begining of the 1st world war. He had a very hard time making his mortgage
    Payment. There was a hired man working for the neighbors. Who used to come to our
    house to visit as a friend and made out he was a friend. But He went & bought our home
    right out from under us. This hurt Dad very much when a professing friend pulled such a
    dirty trick. But I believe God was at work. He quickly rented a place near GrandDads
    place less than 1/2 a mile. He & Grand Dad worked together farming. Dad used to cut oak
    Posts and hauled wood for sale as well as a few cattle & pigs. I should have told you
    something more about Mother & Dad when they were married 1st they wanted to have a
    Christian home. Dad apparently made a stand for the Lord when He was a Young Man &
    Mother was confirmed in the Anglican (Church of England) when she was quite young. They
    didn't want to have cards (games) in their home. But their family were quite worldly and
    soon had them involved in worldly games, etc. My Dad was born & raised in the Wellwood
    area untill he move to the Peace River Country. In the winter of 1928. Dad & Uncle John
    went together sometime in that winter then Mum & us kids came April 28, 1928. I
    remember Dad left a horse for Mum to sell so she could buy our tickets to Spirit River,
    Alberta. I remember her having a very hard time trying to get some one who would buy it
    but when she did She got right on the train with us 6 little kids. Kathleen was only about
    4 or 5 months old I believe. So she had her hands full. we packed a big lunch to last I
    think 3 or 4 days worth. But in Edmonton she took us all to a restraunt. When we got to
    Spirit River it had snowed the day before about 12 - 16 in. And it was mud to the axels
    for 2 1/2 miles to the place Dad had rented. When we got there Uncle John & another
    fellow were living their & they moved out that afternoon. What mud what a reception.
    Dad got a Job with the next door neighbor. His Bosse's name was Jim McGillvary. I
    should have said Something about My Mother before now. You'll have to forgive my
    disjointedness of tho't. My Mother was the 2nd. youngest of a family I think of 12
    children very large family. I'm not sure of how many. Her Father died when she was
    quite young her mother died a year or so later. She was raised in an ophanage which she
    didn't make public. She love her Matron appently she was a fine woman of high Christian
    Principals of the Anglican Church. They learned many skills of house keeping & knitting.
    She could knitt very fast and didn't have to watch her needles. When she became 16 Her
    sister-in-law who had imigrated to Canada after her husband died (Mum's Brother). She
    married again to My Dad's Uncle George Kilgore. Mother was going to Canada to this
    Sister-in-law for a visit. She book a passage on the Titanic but for some reason (God's
    hand) her passage was cancelled and booked on a smaller ship. It took her 2 weeks to
    cross on it. They also encountered ice bergs. When she arrived at Geo. Kilgore after a
    while she got a job working as a house keeper for a family in the Wellwood area where
    My Dads parents live. I believe their Names where Jack?? or Dave?? Mackey? I'm not
    sure if this is the right spelling of their name. Mackey's were good friend to the Edey
    family. Now there was a fued bettween Grandad & Geo. Kilgore. Grandad was married to
    Kilgores sister. Kilgore caried a grudge most of his life. And wouldn't even go to my
    Grandmother's funeral. But my Mother was warned not to have anything to do with the
    Edey family. But Mrs. Mackay soon put her wise to this and one day Dad came to visit the
    Mackay's and Mum didn't want to meet him. But Mrs. Mackay told her what a fine family
    they were and soon there was a couple pretty friendly and finaly marrage Mother came
    from Ireland in 1912 and in 1914 Dec 3 I believe the were married & I arrived in 1915
    Sept. 22.

    Now we are in Spirit River in the fall of 1928 we moved to a house 1/2 mile south of Spirit
    river. Dads new Boss Is now a Bachlor named Mark A. Roycroft a very well to do man. He
    used to go to Hiwai nearly every winter & Dad look after his horses & place etc. In the
    mean time Dad had homesteaded in the Bridgeview area. And used to go out whenever he
    had some spare time and Built a small log cabin. The 1st 2 summers or maybe 3 He work all
    summer with Mark A. Then the 30's came along and one spring Mark A told Dad he
    couldn't keep him on steady anymore. He advised Dad to go to his Homestead and come
    back when Mark A had work which would be harvest time. Which Dad did. We moved out
    to the homestead I believe April 28 I believe 1931 and on the 12th. of May we burned out.

    There was about 6" of snow on the ground. Clare had a toothache and Dad figured it would
    be safe to take him to the Dr & have it pulled when he got home everything was gone. I
    Believe this was the Protecting hand of God on Him again. If Dad had been at home he
    may have died in that fire. We stayed at the neighbors that night the next day we went
    to a house near where our old house was it had one ply of ship lap on it & it had dried out
    and the wind and cold air came thru every crack and it snowed again that night & we were
    all cold but lived thru it. Dad said if he had some place to go he would have left but he had
    no place to go. One of our 1st visitors was a cantancorous old Batchelor who drove in with
    his team & Buggy and he had gathered some money & a list of things such as chickes &
    clothes and many of our needs were temporarily supplied many neighbours far & near came
    & helped us build a house which still stands. But in bad need of repair. We've had to
    change & repair roofs since then. Mr. George Pring gave us lumber we could work off later.
    Which we did & worked there for lumber as wages then traded to lumber for Horses
    cows pigs and almost anything we needed. My 1st. cow Dad told me I could go & make my
    own deal. I went in fear & trembling to Esher where I made the deal. Later Dad traded
    me a young heifer for this cow that is where I got started my herd. I had also along with
    Mother homesteaded. But there was no goal to work for and I didn't get very far proving
    mine up then One spring We had a picnic at Burnt River (school picninc I believe). the
    Chairman of the Board ask Mr. Pring to bring in a Bible School student who were working
    in the Spirit River area to come out and have a service at the Picnic. Which they did and
    after that a P.B.I. student. A little Irishman by the name of Wilfred Watson who worked
    at a dairy farm in Spirit River. Many a day he walked 12 miles there abouts on Sunday to
    hold services in our school. Then when he was to go back to school he got some one from
    PRBI to take over the services in our school the next spring they brought a big tent to
    the district and held evangelistic messages for 2 wk which lasted 2 months. Now, Before I
    go into this part of our story we work in the Mill for Mr. Pring and could by many things
    even Pork or whole pig we'd buy for $5.00 worth of lumber. We use to hunt for our meat
    moose & Dear and sometimes bear meat if we were real hungary. When Clare and I
    became of age to hunt on our own we kept the place in meat summer & winter. Mother
    canned the meat in summer in winter we froze it. we used to salt it away too sometime;
    we let very little of it go to waist. We used to trap for weasels & coyotes to buy shells.
    and sometimes clothes. We always brought our wage home to Mum & Dad untill we left
    home or went to Bible school. The only spending money we had would be a couple of dollars
    from weasel hides. And that we tried to buy everyone of the family a small gift for
    Christmas. One day we were looking at our traps. Agnes wanted to come with me for the
    walk. On the way we seen these big track in the snow I said it must be some ones horse
    wandering around but as I walked in his steps I said to Agnes this horse sure steps short
    as it had snowed during the night & partly covered the track so we couldn't see clearly the
    imprint but where we came back home we walked along a fence and the track went right
    thru the fence & never broke it Then it come to me It's a bear I told Agnes I went
    home told Clare & we both took after it with only One rifle. Now this was Sunday we
    never, never hunted on Sunday. But Grandad Edey had just come up from Man. and he said
    he'd like to have a Bear steak. And Uncle John said Alex boys are the only place you will
    get it for you. Of course me & Clare where those boys. so we were bent on getting this
    for Grandad Sunday or No Sunday So the hunt was on We had a good Dog with us the
    best hunting dog we ever had. He stayed within our sight at all times & never left us
    unless we told him too. Now this area there were only black bear and we were quite green
    about the fact that this was only a big black Bear we followed his tracts untill we jumped
    him & of course we set the Dog on him to tree him but the dog made a few excited barks &
    came back to us. he left and we went to get help & more guns we found Dad & Reg at
    Frank Brownlees & he gave us his gun & we went back & tried to chase him out of about 5
    or 6 acres of heavy willows so we could see him to shoot him but he had different ideas
    It went around & around this bush and us trying to get him to leave. We were just about
    played out & I had just told Clare that I had to quit when all of a sudden the bush came
    alive with a hair raising roar like a male bull & the old bear up on its hind feet coming
    toward us & parting the brush with it fore Paws. He was about 12 ft. from us and we both
    started shooting. I had six shells in my gun Clare had 7 in his because he was in the lead
    with a loaded gun. I shot all my six and said to Clare I'm empty. he said I have one left.
    I'll hold him off till you reload. I didn't know I was rattled untill I tried to put the shells
    in my rifle. I didn't know which end to put them in at, but finally made it then Clare shot
    him behind the ear & finished him off. When that old Bear was 12 ft and coming the tho't
    went thru my mind if that bear make one more jump would I end up in Heaven or Hell I
    didn't know. We estimated he weighed while alive at around 1000 lbs. He had many bullet
    hole (old ones) in him. When we skinned him out we found 11 bullet holes and lead down
    both sides of his teeth so all 13 shots must have found there mark. We were big heros for
    some time to come. When my Dad & Reg came to where we downed the bear Dad said
    That's a Grizzly After we had it out our trapper freind told us it was a grizzly. Now that
    winter While PRBI students came to the school to hold services Agnes was the 1st to
    accept the Lord then it was I believe Reg & Mum. I'm not sure of the rest but I know
    within the year each member had accepted Christ as Saviour & Lord.

    The following information is taken from the book, "Memories and Moments" about Willowvale, White
    Mountain & Bridgeview.

    I do not know the date of publication but I believe it could be in the early 1980's. Apparently this
    information was submitted by Clarence Edey.

    Alex Edey was born in Wellwood, Manitoba, in 1891, and lived there until his move to the Peace River
    area in 1928. Fanny Edey (Watson) was born in Middleton, County Cork, Ireland, in 1891 and came to
    Canada in 1912. She tried to get passage on the Titanic but was not able to, so her coming was put off
    until August of that year. She came to Wellwood with the intention of going back to Ireland in a year's
    time. However, in the meantime, she met Alex and things turned out differently. There were married on
    December 2, 1914, making their home in the Wellwood district for the next 14 years.

    The family grew to six, Morley, Clarence, Agnes, Reg, George and Kathleen. Then Alex and his brother
    John came to the Spirit River district with their families and a box car of settler's effects. Alex arrived in
    Spirit River on Tuesday, April 3. Bob Inglis was on the same train but they didn't know each other at that
    time. John came a few days later with the box car of effects.

    Fanny and children arrived on Tuesday, April 24. There were two trains that came into Spirit River each
    week - Tuesdays and Fridays.

    We lived in Spirit River until 1931, when we moved to the homestead. The years that followed brought
    many exciting times, some pleasant and some not so pleasant, such as fire two weeks after arriving on
    May 12. Making roads, clearing the first pieces of land for gardens and crops for feed and the logging
    and mill work. Trying to make ends meet in the 1930's was not easy for the parent with a large family.

    Hunting and trapping was a part of our life when we came to the homestead, so it had its exciting times
    too. In November 1938 was no exception when a grizzly bear came into the district, walking in a foot of
    snow, and causing a little excitement for brother Morley and I. We had Dad and Reg on the road east of
    the Martin home hoping to chase Mr. Bear out across the road but that didn't work. So after a couple of
    hours standing, Dad and Reg became cold and were about to go home when we suggested to them to go up
    a little field of Martin's just behind their buildings and we would try and chase him that way. So after a
    little more tracking Mr. Bear, he decided he had gone far enough. He sat down twice and tried to make
    up his mind as what to do, then the third time he decided to do the chasing. The bush was thick alders
    and willows so he came charging on his hind legs and breaking brush with his fore legs. Mouth wide
    open and white teeth showing, he was about 12 feet away from us. We fired and he fell to the ground
    making a very loud bellowing noise. he did not stay down long, so on his feet again, although very dazed,
    he stood up and took 9 more shots through the shoulders and from the chest to the tail end. Then
    weakened, he started to stagger back against a clump of willows and with a shot in the neck sank to the
    ground where another shot was placed to the head. We had two 32 Winchester Special rifles.

    He was hung up at our farm for a month with the insides taken out. We had him weighed on McArthurs'
    platform scale and he weighed 595 lbs. The hide was tanned and given to mother.


    FIRE

    Then there was the fire two weeks after we had arrived on the homestead. It was a nice warm spring
    morning on May 12, 1931, very clear with a few curls of smoke coming up in a distance from land
    clearing.

    Dad and I left for Spirit River to get my tooth pulled as it ached all night. Little did we know when we
    left home that morning that it would not be there when we returned. When we arrived in Spirit River
    around noon, the sky became very smokey, sometimes covering the sun. There were fires between Spirit
    River and White Mountain.

    Mother, with two small children at home, decided to lie down with them after dinner, but before she did,
    she went out and saw the country becoming very smokey. So she decided to take the children and go to
    the neighbour's, who were the Brownlees, just a mile down the road. (They had more clearing around
    their house.) So, taking Francis, who was one year old, in her arms, and Kathleen, who was three years
    old, she headed down the trail, which was just that, with dense bush on both sides. Mother gave Kathleen
    a ball and by throwing it ahead of her and getting her to chase it kept her moving. After arriving at Mrs.
    Brownlees, she asked if there were any men around as she had left a horse in the barn which she was
    unable to turn loose. Mrs. Brownlee was nervous, too, and said there wasn't anyone around. Mother met
    the other children coming home from school and Morley, who was 15 years old, was not with them. So
    she sent one of them back for him and his cousin Walter Varnals, who later homesteaded the quarter the
    school was on. When they arrived at our farmstead, shortly after 4 PM, everything was on fire. The barn
    was burned with the horse inside, and a sow with 9 little ones, was in a log enclosure behind the barn.
    The sow managed to get out of the pen but her lungs were so burned that she had to be killed. Four little
    pigs were saved with two of them having very badly burnt feet. Hens and turkeys were also burned with
    the exception of five hens and one turkey. One cow was loose so she managed to go ahead of the fire and
    escape injury.

    Dad and I came through all the timber south of McArthurs. We had a disc trailing behind our wagon
    which started to squeal, so thinking it was lacking grease, Dad took an oil can and ran back to squirt some
    oil on the bearing but just found a root stuck in the disc. While we were stopped we could hear the roar of
    the fire west of us. Had we been a few minutes later we wouldn't have made it through. Mother met us at
    the corner of our road and told us not to go up to the farmstead as everything was on fire and burnt up.

    Mrs. McGovern also had two small children, Lillian and Alex, and she came through two or more miles
    of winding trail, which was alive with wild life, till she got to McArthurs. Mr. McGovern stayed to fight
    fire at Pring's Sawmill along with several other men. They would have been overcome by heat and smoke
    except for a hole dug in the sawdust pile.

    The day after the fire Mr. Pring stopped by to chat with Dad and he said he hadn't seen any sign of his
    cow. After he left and walked a couple hundred yards up the road, dad heard a bell. The cow had almost
    made it out but was overtaken.

    The frame house that Jolleys had built across from our farmstead was where our family were to move into
    but it too was on fire. Ed Deener happened to pass by and noticed so he took his smock off, dipped it in
    the creek and managed to put it out. Then again that evening Dad, Jim Jolley and Walter Varnals went to
    check on the fire and found it had started burning again, so they poured water on it and spent the night
    there.

    After the fire, came the job of rebuilding and getting started again. People were very good, Mrs. Jolley
    sent out dishes for us to use and much clothing and other needs were met by neighbours, even to
    supplying many chickens. Mr. Pring supplied lumber to help build a new home, which would be worked
    out later in regards to payment.

    The landscape looked pretty bleak, everything black, the green spruce was a mass of standing black
    stumps and stripped trees.

    A new house had to be built so a work bee was organized to help with the building which served as the
    family home for many years and which still stands today. The roof had been changed some from the
    original one.

    Bill Moss was a young bachelor at that time and he also lost his little house.

    Since these past events, Dad - Alex Edey - passed away in Grade Prairie on August 5, 1972, at the age of
    81 years and Mom - Fanny Edey - now 91 years old, resides in the Auxiliary Hospital in Grande Prairie.

    The other members of our family are:

    Morley - married Barbara Bresnahan - live in Vanderhoof, B.C. and had 8 children - Donovan(killed in a
    car accident), Charlotte, Alexander, Eileen, Thelma, Timothy, Ann and Victor.

    Clarence - married Lena Brummond - live in Grande Prairie, Alta, and have 5 children - Catherine,
    Margaret, Gordon, Darlene and James.

    Agnes - married Hieni Germann - live in Nashville, Tenn. have 6 children, Priscilla, Heini-Peter, Calvin,
    Luke, Samuel and Daniel.

    Reg - married Jean McKenzie - live in Regina, Sask., have 5 children - Norma, Allen, Stewart, Kenneth
    and Gwendolyn.

    George - lives in Grande Prairie

    Kathleen - married Albert Hannah, - live in Halfmoon Bay, B.C. - have 4 children - Lorne, Audrey,
    Rodney and Florence.

    Francis - married Emma Weme - live in Creston, B.C.

    Roy - married Judith Botsford - live in Grande Prairie, Alta, have 3 children - Kerry, Wanda and Douglas.


    Additional notes by Clarence Edey, received Sept. 8, 1995

    BLACKSMITHING IN BRIDGEVIEW

    In the early years on the homestead, things like plows, wagons, sleighs, whippletrees and chains, etc.,
    wore out, broke, and needed repair. Alex Edey was the answer to many of these problems. He brought
    with him, to the homestead, a blacksmith outfit, forge and anvil, which was used to repair and help the
    neighbourhood keep their machinery going. On one occasion, when a casting on a breaking plow broke
    and had to be ordered, it took several days to come. Alex was asked if he could make a piece to help them
    keep going until the part arrived, which he did. The new part was never used as the piece he made was
    much stronger and stood up to the stumps better.

    Many mornings in the hot weather, if you passed by the Edey's at four-thirty or five A.M., you would have
    heard the sound of the hammer on the anvil pounding out shears for some neighbour.

    Blacksmithing was a livelihood for the family also, money was not always received but butter, eggs,
    lumber, meat or other items were given in trade. It was a place where his six sons found a retreat on a
    rainy day and also learned from watching and helping Dad. Many happy memories are still in their
    minds as they remember turning the blower and watching the iron heat in the fire. Then to see the red hot
    iron shaped into some useful item on the anvil under the weight of the hammer and the know how of the
    one doing it.

    Written by Clarence Edey (I believe - {note by Kathleen Hannah}) for submission in "Memories and
    Moments of White Mountain, Willowvale, Bridgeview".

    Alexander married Watson, Fanny on 3 Dec 1914 in Wellwood, Manitoba. Fanny was born on 20 Mar 1891 in Ballycranna, Co. Cork, Ireland; died on 27 Sep 1983 in Grande Prairie, Alberta; was buried in Bridgeview, Alberta. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Watson, Fanny was born on 20 Mar 1891 in Ballycranna, Co. Cork, Ireland; died on 27 Sep 1983 in Grande Prairie, Alberta; was buried in Bridgeview, Alberta.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Reference Number: 84560

    Children:
    1. 4. Edey, Morley Mose Watson was born on 22 Sep 1915 in Wellwood, Manitoba; died in 2002 in Grande Prairie, Alberta.
    2. Edey, C.E.
    3. Edey, A.A.
    4. Edey, R.J.
    5. Edey, George Alexander was born on 25 Jul 1924 in Wellwood, Manitoba; died on 21 Aug 1997 in Grande Prairie, Alberta; was buried on 25 Aug 1997 in Bridgeview, Alberta.
    6. Edey, K.V.
    7. Edey, F.L.
    8. Edey, R.A.



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