Allen County Lines


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Cemetery Transcriptions


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Crossing the Border


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How formerly enslaved people found freedom and built community in Ontario In 1849, the Reverend William King and fifteen once-enslaved people he had inherited founded the Canadian settlement of Buxton on Ontario land set aside for sale to Blacks. Though initially opposed by some neighboring whites, Buxton grew into a 700-person agricultural community that supported three schools, four churches, a hotel, a lumber mill, and a post office. Sharon A. Roger Hepburn tells the story of the settlers from Buxton’s founding of through its first decades of existence. Buxton welcomed Black men, woman, and children from all backgrounds to live in a rural setting that offered benefits of urban life like social contact and collective security. Hepburn’s focus on social history takes readers inside the lives of the people who built Buxton and the hundreds of settlers drawn to the community by the chance to shape new lives in a country that had long represented freedom from enslavement.




Peter McGeachy & Jenet McMillan and Their Descendants


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Peter McGeachy was born in about 1725 in Scotland. He married Jenet McMillan in about 1750. They had five known children. Two of their sons, John and Alexander, immigrated to North Carolina and settled in Robeson County. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in North Carolina, Arkansas, Ontario and Scotland.










Bulletin


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Magazine


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Canadiana


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