Sunday, 20 March 2022

Springtime by Ethel (Culbert) Gras

Ethel Gertrude (Culbert) Gras (1886-1986), the granddaughter of John Culbert and Mary Ward, published a book of her poetry, Poems and Rhymes.

Ethel Culbert in the springtime of  her life. Photo courtesy of Ethel's granddaughter, Jane (Gras) Heigis.

Click here if you missed Ethel's love poem to her husband, Norman Scott Brien Gras.

Today, we welcome the first day of spring, 2022 with Ethel's poem, Springtime.


Ethel Gertrude (Culbert) Gras' Family Tree:

Ancestors:

John Culbert and Mary Ward (grandparents)

Richard Culbert and Jane Eleanor Fairhall (parents)

Ethel Gertrude (Culbert) Gras

Descendants (Children):

Edwin Culbert Gras

Ranulf Worcester Gras

Alfred Edward Gras

Jane London Gras

Thursday, 17 March 2022

Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Happy St. Patrick's Day to the descendants of John Culbert and Mary Ward!


Let's join John and Mary's 4x-great-grandson, Jason Poole (above) at the Jameson whiskey distillery in Dublin, Ireland. 

Jason, a resident of Woodstock, Ontario, Canada, visited the distillery in January 2020.

If you missed Jason's stories about his grandfather, Olin Stansell Culbert, you can click here for Part One, and here for Part Two. Stay tuned in the future for Part Three.

Sláinte!

Jason Poole's Family Tree:

Ancestors:

John Culbert & Mary Ward (4x-great-grandparents)

Henry Culbert & Margaret Wall (3x-great-grandparents)

Joseph Henry Culbert & Edith Swalwell (2x-great-grandparents)

Henry Joseph Culbert & Willena Josephine Stansell (great-grandparents)

Olin Stansell Culbert & Gladys Langdon (grandparents)

Sharron Ann Culbert & Peter William Poole (parents)

Jason William Joseph Poole 

Sunday, 6 March 2022

Culbert's Bakery: Any Chance of a Family Discount?

Culbert's Bakery at 49 West Street in Goderich, Ontario. The Home of Tasty Pastry. Photo by Mary Jane Culbert.

 If you're a descendant of John Culbert and Mary Ward, you may have driven through Goderich and stopped in front of Culbert's Bakery to take a selfie. 
 
One of the most frequently asked questions I'm asked is, "Are we related to the people who own Culbert's Bakery in Goderich, and are they descendants of John Culbert and Mary Ward?"

No, the Culbert's Bakery folks are not the descendants of John Culbert and Mary Ward. In fact, if they're related to us at all, it's a very distant relationship.

Terry Culbert, the great-great-grandson of John Culbert and Mary Ward, visited Culbert's Bakery in the early 1990s. Terry wanted to find out if they were related to us. Terry recalls that day and says, "Years ago I talked to one of the Culbert's at Culbert's Bakery in Goderich. He was not interested in the fact that his family came from Ireland or that he could be related to us."

Since the person who talked to Terry wasn't interested in family history, it was up to me to see if I could find any connections between the Culbert's Bakery people and the descendants of John Culbert and Mary Ward. 
 
I've compiled a brief description of the Culbert Bakery's family's lineage, as follows. Please be aware that I'm not an authority on this family and that my research may contain errors. 

Our ancestors, John Culbert and Mary Ward came to Canada from County Tipperary, Ireland in 1840 whereas the Culbert's Bakery ancestors, Thomas Culbert and Jane Martin came to Canada from County Antrim, Ireland in the late 1840s.

Our ancestors, John Culbert and Mary Ward settled near Lucan, Ontario while the Culbert's Bakery ancestors, Thomas Culbert and Jane Martin settled first in the Toronto and Pickering areas of Ontario, and then moved to Huron County in an area now known as the Township of Ashfield-Colborne-Wawanosh.

Culbert Bakery's Family Tree:

THOMAS CULBERT & JANE MARTIN
Thomas Culbert (born c1821 in County Antrim, Ireland) was the son of Thomas Culbert and Jane Neil. Thomas Culbert married Jane Martin, and in the late 1840s they came to Canada.Thomas and Jane had 11 children. Thomas died in 1913 in West Wawanosh Township and is buried in Dungannon Cemetery.

THOMAS CULBERT AND MARGARET ANN McMANUS
Thomas Culbert and Jane Martin's son, Thomas Culbert was born in 1855. He married his first wife, Margaret Ann McManus in 1880. When Margaret died in 1894, he remarried to Mary Elizabeth Wraith. Thomas Culbert died 1951 in West Wawanosh Township, Ontario, and is buried in Dungannon Cemetery. Here is his obituary...

Obituary for Thomas Culbert (1855-1951). Source: Lucknow Sentinel, 5 April 1951, page 8.

FREDERICK CULBERT AND ETHEL MYRA BARBOUR
Thomas Culbert and Margaret McManus's son, Frederick Culbert was born 1881 in Ashfield Township, Huron County, Ontario. Fred married Ethel Myra Barbour. Fred and Ethel had three children. Fred died in 1971 and is buried in Dungannon Cemetery.

MELBOURNE "Mel" CULBERT
Melbourne "Mel" Culbert was the founder of Culbert's Bakery. (This Mel Culbert is not to be confused with Milward Taylor "Mel" Culbert (1920-1958) of Lucan, Ontario who was a descendant of John Culbert and Mary Ward.) Mel Culbert (of Culbert's Bakery fame) was born 3 October 1915 in West Wawanosh Township, Huron County, Ontario. He married Lillian Ryan (1915-1996). Mel established Culbert's Bakery in 1942, taking over another bakery that had been around since the 1800s. Mel died in 1993. Mel and Lillian are buried in Maitland Cemetery in Goderich.

BARRY CULBERT
Mel Culbert's son, Barry Culbert (born c1938) took over Culbert's Bakery when his father retired. Mel's son, Mark Culbert also worked at the bakery. Barry Culbert died 22 July 2016, age 78.

DARIN CULBERT
Barry Culbert's son, Darin Culbert is the current owner of Culbert's Bakery.

Culbert's Bakery: Home of the Famous Cream Puff

So what about that family discount? Well, it appears that we're not closely related to the folk at Culbert's Bakery, if at all. So you'll have to pay full price for that cream puff. But it will be worth it.

Saturday, 5 March 2022

Ruth (Culbert) Thompson (1915-1984)

 Ruth (Culbert) Thompson, the great-granddaughter of John Culbert and Mary Ward was born on this day 107 years ago.

Ruth (Culbert) Thompson in 1957. Ruth’s niece, Carole (McLeod) Cox remembers Ruth as a tall, slim woman with a beautiful singing voice.

Eleanor Ruth Culbert (known as Ruth) was born on 5 March 1915 in Manitoba. Her parents were George Arthur Culbert and Jean McLeod Campbell.

Ruth’s father, Arthur Culbert, was born on Poplar Farm in 1882 near Lucan, Ontario, Canada to parents Richard Culbert and Jane Eleanor Fairhall.

Arthur Culbert with his parents and siblings. Front, seated, left to right: Jane (Fairhall) Culbert, Richard Culbert, and Ethel (Culbert) Gras. Back, left to right: Hulda May (Culbert) Carscallen, Myron Manford Culbert, Lela (Culbert) Beadle, G. Arthur Culbert, and Mary Elsie (Culbert) Hodgson.

As a young man, Arthur Culbert moved from Ontario to Manitoba where he had relatives on his mother’s Fairhall side of the family. Arthur made a living in the hardware business, and would return to Ontario from time to visit. Ruth Culbert was one of Arthur’s six children.

Ruth (Culbert) Thompson with her parents and siblings. Left to right: Ruth (Culbert) Thompson; her brother Douglas Culbert; sister Ferelith (Culbert) Shiach; mother Jean (Campbell) Culbert; father Arthur Culbert; sister Jean (Culbert) McLeod, and brother Milton Alexander Culbert. Missing from the photo is Ruth's brother, Flying Officer Frederick Campbell Culbert who was killed in action during World War Two.

I have no details about Ruth’s early years growing up in Manitoba so we pick up the trail when Ruth was in her late 20s. In July, 1943 at the age of 28, Ruth graduated as an officer with the Canadian Women’s Army Corps (CWAC). Ruth was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant in November of that same year.

Ruth Culbert in her CWAC uniform.

Ruth Culbert trained at Macdonald College, St. Anne de Bellevue in Quebec.

CWAC performed essential services that helped to bring about Allied victory in the Second World War. To learn more about the Canadian Women’s Army Corps, click here.

On 19 January 1946, Ruth Culbert, age 30, married 44-year-old, Belfast-born Samuel Lanktree Thompson (known as Lanktree.)

 

Ruth's husband, S. Lanktree Thompson, July 1947.

When Ruth married Lanktree, the ink had barely dried on Lanktree's divorce papers from his first wife, Eleanor Robson, the mother of his two children, Elaine Robson (Thompson) Olynyk and Bethoe Anne (Thompson) Shirkoff.

Lanktree made a name for himself in Winnipeg as a land developer and house builder. Unfortunately, his business partner ran off with all the company’s funds. Lanktree was left “holding the bag."

Ruth and Lanktree moved west to British Columbia to start over. Things were looking up for awhile. Lanktree developed the residential subdivision known as “Capilano Highlands” in North Vancouver as well as several other high-profile projects.

In 1948, a steady stream of visitors turned out to see one of his exhibition homes located at 3326 Edgemont Boulevard. He was on a roll.

Exhibtion home designed and built by S. Lanktree Thompson in the Capilano Highlands of North Vancouver, BC.

Ruth and Lanktree moved into the exhibition home in the late 1940s. Here is a photo of the house as it looks today, albeit partly concealed by shrubbery...

3326 Edgemont Boulevard as it looks today.

Around 1964, Ruth, Lanktree and their son moved into a house at 771 Montroyal Boulevard, North Vancouver, not far from Grouse Mountain. I don’t know whether or not this house was built by Lanktree’s company. 

777 Montroyal Blvd in North Vancouver.

At some point, Ruth and Lanktree’s fortunes took a turn for the worse. Ruth’s niece, Carole Ann Jean (McLeod) Cox said…

Ruth and Lanktree’s lives were an up and down road. Ruth contracted tuberculosis from their maid and had to be admitted to a sanitarium for quite a while to recuperate. Lanktree made, spent and lost several million dollars in bad financial ventures. When the money was rolling in, they lived the high life; parties, alcohol, etc. One night they were partying with others on a boat when the gas tank exploded. Lanktree was severely burned. Private nurses were expensive, so my mom [Jean Elsie (Culbert) McLeod] went from Manitoba to British Columbia to nurse Lanktree, which took several weeks.  From then on, I think that things went downhill. Ruth drank way too much. My parents went out to British Columbia every year to visit Ruth and Lanktree. My parents would fill the Thompsons’ bare cupboards with food. My mother sent Lanktree my father’s slightly worn suits, and she would buy clothes for Ruth. Lanktree died 24 February 1974, age 72. Ultimately, Ruth spent her last years in a wheelchair. Various family members lost contact with Ruth and Lanktree’s descendants and have no idea of their whereabouts today.

Ruth and Lanktree spent their final years in a high-rise apartment at 1275 Haro Street in Vancouver…

 


At some point during her life, Ruth must have done secretarial work because her death certificate lists her as a retired secretary.

Ruth (Culbert) Thompson died 24 July 1984, age 69 at the Shaughnessy Hospital in Vancouver, BC. She was cremated. The cause of death was listed as an intercranial hemorrhage although she also had cancer.

Eleanor Ruth (Culbert) Thompson’s Family Tree:

Ancestors:

John Culbert & Mary Ward (great-grandparents)

Richard Culbert & Jane Eleanor Fairhall (grandparents)

George Arthur Culbert & Jean McLeod Campbell (parents)

Eleanor (Ruth) Culbert Thompson

Descendants (Children):

Son [private]

Tuesday, 1 March 2022

Happy 65th Birthday, Judith Lynne (Luker) Massey!

Judith Lynne (Luker) Massey of Lake Joseph, Muskoka, Ontario, Canada celebrates her 65th birthday today. Judy is the 3x-great-granddaughter of John Culbert and Mary Ward. Judy is descended from John and Mary's daughter, Susan (Culbert) Crawley.


Let’s get to know a little about Judy and her family history through this piece she’s written for the Culbert Family History blog. Take it away, Judy!

I was born on 1 March 1957 in London, Ontario not far from Lucan where my Irish Hodgins ancestors settled when they first came to Canada in the early-mid 1800’s. The town of Lucan was originally called Maryville. The renaming of the town was the result of a large influx of Irish immigrants. This increase of Irish settlers to the area was spear-headed by Colonel James Robert Hodgins.   

Colonel Hodgins, also known as “Big Jim,” was born in Nenagh, Tipperary County, Ireland about 1785. He is acknowledged by some as the first white settler in Biddulph Township. He and a few close relatives made the decision to emigrate and left for Canada in 1832. The log home he built was finished in September of the same year on Lot 39, Concession 3 in Biddulph Township. In 1835, Colonel Hodgins became an agent for the Canada Company and in this capacity, he voyaged back to Ireland in order to encourage other families to emigrate.

Although Colonel Hodgins is not my direct descendent, he was instrumental in convincing a significant number of Irish families, including my own, to put down roots in Biddulph Township. The result was that a large number of Irish Protestants settled on the Huron Tract. Within 10 years of Colonel Hodgins’ arrival, close to 50 Hodgins families joined him and quickly established themselves in the township. Most of these families were from Northern Tipperary. Even today the name Hodgins is very common in Lucan and the surrounding area.

Many Irish families moved to Canada for a better life as conditions in Ireland made life very challenging. My Hodgins family were drawn to the area by the large tracts of rich agricultural land. They were not only interested in farming but also in breeding horses. Over the following years, they made many trips back to Ireland to obtain horses for their breeding program. 

Even though the trip by sea to Canada was arduous and often dangerous it did not deter the Irish travelers. My ancestors could not convince their mother/grandmother, 89-year-old Eleanor Revington (Atkinson) Hodgins, the widow of William “Longworth William" Hodgins, that she should not take the potentially life threatening trip to Canada with them. The good news is that Eleanor insisted on traveling with her family and she survived the journey. Eleanor (known as The Grand Old Lady of Biddulph) died peacefully in Biddulph Township at 103 years old, on her porch rocking chair.

The name Hodgins is an ancient name and variations such as Rodger, Hodge, Hodgson, Hodgens, Hodgkins, Hodgkinson, Hodgin, may have been derived from Hrodgar or Hruodger. By the 12th century, the name Hodge was very common in Lancashire, England and in 1545 Hodgins appears in the archives of the city of Norwich. However, even before then the name Hodgins appears in Warwickshire in a variety of alternative spellings. In the early 1600’s several Hodgins, including my ancestors, left for Ireland. I believe that my family Hodgins’ name appears in Ballyroom in about 1650, followed by Dublin, County Leix (then Queen’s County) and then emerges in some of the small villages such as Lucan, which is just outside Dublin. They later moved to Modreeny, County Tipperary, and settled in several small communities in Tipperary. I imagine that being so close to County Offaly (then King’s County) that it may have been there that they came into contact with the Wards and the Culberts.

My grandmother, Gladys Hodgins was very proud of her Anglican, Irish background. She was born in Lucan, Ontario and many of the families who settled there also lived near each other in Ireland. 

Judy's grandmother, Gladys (Hodgins) Luker.

Names like Hodgins, Hill, Culbert, Ward, Crawley, Armitage, Coursey, Brownlee and Atkinson are all plentiful in the local cemeteries in Lucan, Ontario and surrounding areas. Most of the names that I have mentioned do not sound very Irish but many families like the Hodgins may have come over from England as soldiers, mine in the early 1600’s. They also might have been sent to Ireland by King James 1st during the early 1700’s during the Plantations of Ireland.

I am the oldest daughter of Sam Luker and Melva Murphy and I have Irish roots on both my maternal and paternal lines.

Judy (Luker) Massey (right) with her parents, Melva (Murphy) Luker and Sam Luker.

I am very fortunate to still have both my parents, currently 89 and 91 years of age (good Irish genes). They have been amazing role models for both my sister, Jana and myself. 

Sisters, Judy (left) and Jana.
 

My parents have nurtured hope, a positive attitude in us, and taught my sister and me to always look for the silver lining despite the circumstance. My parents inspired us to be well-rounded and focus on many aspects of life. We learned to value and enjoy  academics, sports, and music but most importantly relationships. I have tried my best to follow their excellent example.

I have been fortunate to have travelled extensively with my parents and with my husband, Dave Massey, both professionally and for pleasure in countries such as China, Australia, Europe, the Caribbean, and Jordan. 

Sam Luker with his daughter, Judy (Luker) Massey in Dingle, Ireland.

Judy (Luker) Massey and husband, Dave Massey at Ashford Castle in Cong, County Mayo, Ireland.

Growing up, I participated in many sports such as competitive skiing, running and swimming where I achieved success at both the local and provincial levels. I also enjoyed many recreational sports, and I still do.

I received an Honours BA at the University of Guelph with a double major in psychology and English.  I then went on to get a Teaching Certificate and Bachelor of Education before completing a Masters in Sociology and Doctorate in Education at the University of Toronto.

Judy (Luker) Massey receives her Doctor of Education degree at the University of Toronto on 21 November 2001.

I thoroughly enjoyed teaching numerous elementary grades. Later, I became a consultant for kindergarten to grade 8 where I supported teachers with program development, shared resources, and modelled strategies. I then went on to be a Consultant for the Gifted and worked with students and teachers from kindergarten to grade 12 before becoming a vice principal and then a principal. I next became a Superintendent of Schools where I did my best to support students and their families as well as other academic and non-academic staff.

I have always felt that I was fortunate to do such stimulating and inspiring work with so many exceptional individuals. Even when mentoring others, I always learned something from them as well and felt great satisfaction in our shared successes.  My career experience provided me with many opportunities for leadership at the local, provincial and national levels. Five of the many, many highlights for me beyond my regular duties as teacher, consultant, principal and vice principal and superintendent of education were as follows:

The first was working with the Creative Education Foundation in Buffalo, USA out of the EPCOT Centre in Orlando, Florida. It was very exciting to support adults and grade 6 to 12 students using a creative problem-solving model to achieve their goals and solve problems.

The second was being the keynote speaker for a number of graduations and award assemblies such as for those graduating at the Master’s Level and above from Griffith University (Australia.)

Judy (Luker) Massey: keynote speaker at the Griffith University graduation for Master and Doctoral candidates.

The third was going back after retiring to do contract work such as principal evaluations.

The fourth was teaching Additional Qualification Courses for Faculties of Education. There, I taught courses such as the Principal and Superintendent Qualification programs, Primary Methods -Specialist and Special Education.

The fifth was speaking and giving workshops across North America on a wide range of topics such as Emotional Intelligence, Creativity, Problem Solving, Gifted Education, the Young More Able Learner, Creative Problem Solving, and Site Based Planning and Management.

I loved each role I undertook and felt a sense of purpose in supporting others when sharing ideas and knowledge.

Now that I am fully retired, I still have purposeful work in that I am able to be there to support my parents, particularly my mother who has dementia. I also feel great joy in having the flexibility and opportunity to be with my family and friends more frequently. In addition, I now have more time to do some of the things that I had not been able to do when I worked such long hours.

One hobby I now have more time for is Genealogy. Spending more time tracing my ancestors through research and DNA is both enjoyable and interesting for me. However, my one regret is that I wish I had asked more questions of my grandparents. Some things I may speculate on now about their life and history, I may never ever really fully understand or know definitively.  I wish I had thought to ask about their childhoods, their grandparents and family growing up, as well as what they might have remembered or have heard about the old country, Ireland.

I am very grateful to my ancestors for being courageous enough to take the risk of venturing from Ireland to a new and unknown country.  They must have left Ireland full of hope but also with some fear and uncertainty about what was ahead of them.  Their hard work, love of family, and faith in a better life has brought the generations that followed many opportunities and blessings. I am thankful to them and fascinated by the life they had in Ireland, which I am only able to glimpse and ponder from a distance.

I will always be proud to be of Irish heritage and of my wise and resourceful ancestors who leaped into the unknown to bring us to Canada and give me the life that I now value and love. However, Ireland will never be forgotten and it will always be in my heart and in my blood.


Judith Lynne (Luker) Massey's Family Tree:

Ancestors:

John Culbert & Mary Ward (3x-great-grandparents)

Susan Culbert & Philip Crawley (2x-great-grandparents)

Sarah Catherine Crawley & Samuel Hill Hodgins (great-grandparents)

Gladys Sarah Hodgins & Wilbert Luker (grandparents)

Samuel Robert Luker & Melva Moreen Murphy (parents)

Judith Lynne (Luker) Massey.

No descendants.