Jaye ROBINSON

 
 Joseph Robinson
 
 Arthur Robinson 
   
  Mary
 
 Alden Jeffrey Robinson 
   
   Jeffery Hilton
   
  Ellen Hilton 
   
  Mary Hankin
 
 Jaye ROBINSON 
birt:
deat:
 
  Thomas P. Ovenell
  
  George Thomas Ovenell 
    
   Caroline Crane
  
 Hazel Juanita Ovenell 
 
  Peter Gunderson
  
 Martha Gunderson 
 
 Brynhild

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Mary Jane GILL|(Polly)

 
 William GILL
 
 William GILL 
   
  Elizabeth
 
 Henry Gill 
   
   John CHARLES
   
  Sarah CHARLES 
   
  Martha FORMAN
 
 Mary Jane GILL|(Polly) 
birt: 28 FEB 1861
plac: Burton on Trent
deat: 6 MAR 1906
plac: Trenton, Canada
 
  William BIDDLES 
  
 Clara Biddles 
 
 Maria FOREMAN 

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Jeanne ROWE

 
 Jeanne ROWE 
birt:
deat:


William Somerville Boulton
marr:
birt:
deat:

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D'Arcy Edward BOULTON


John Andrew BOULTON


Beverley Robert BOULTON


< Mary Sayre BOULTON


< Emma Robinson BOULTON


< Sarah Ann BOULTON


< John Boulton BOULTON


< William Henry BOULTON


< D'Arcy Edward BOULTON|Lt. Colonel

 
 Henry BOULTON|of Stixwold
 
 Henry BOULTON|of Moulton 
   
  Alice BOLTON|of Moulton
 
 D'arcy BOULTON|Judge 
   
   Darcy PRESTON|of Askham, Bryan Co., York
   
  Mary PRESTON|of York 
   
  Mary Mawde
 
 D'Arcy Edward BOULTON 
birt: 3 JUN 1785
plac: Melton, Mowbray, England
deat: 20 APR 1846
plac: Toronto, Ontario|Died of heart disease at The Grange in Toronto.


Sarah Anne ROBINSON
marr: 13 JAN 1808
plac: Toronto
birt: 1789
deat: 1 AUG 1863
 
  Sergeant James FORSTER|Barrister 
  
 Elizabeth FORSTER 
 
  Sir John STRANGE
  
 Susannah STRANGE 

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Notes:

The Grange, which was built by D'Arcy Boulton Jr. in 1817, is one of th e four oldest buildings now standing in Toronto, He named it for the Boul ton ancestral home. He was born in England in 1785, and, trained as a lawye r; but rather than pursuing a law career, he became a successful merchant i n the dry goods and grocery business. His wife, Sarah Ann Robinson, was a sister of John Beverly Robinson and another member of York's elite. The Boultons and their social circle formed the core of the Family Compact, the province's governing elite. Boulton designed the two-storey brick house himself. Like other Georgia n homes of its day, the Grange was a surprisingly elegant residence, especially if one remembers that York was a backwoods outpost. The wilderness was very close. It is said that Boulton horses once drove of f a bear that wandered into the pasture. The Grange has the typical balance and grace of Georgian design with a grand entry, centre hall, and fine interior panelling. Inside, a graceful freestanding stairway curved up t o the second floor from the spacious entrance hail. The drawing rooms and dining area were finished in black walnut. Around 1843, the Boultons added a grapery, a two-storey west wing with a library, a Regency style orangery on the east, and a spacious second-fl oor music room for large social gatherings. There were lacrosse and cricket fields and a racetrack on the property. They disappeared as the estate w as subdivided and sold off. The northern half, fifty-one acres above Colle ge, went to King's College to make up part of the campus. After Boulton died, his wife continued to lived on in the house. She willed it to her daughter-in-law, Harriette, who after being widowed, married Professor Goldwin Smith, an essayist, historian, and political commentator. The Smiths replaced the original wooden portico with the stone one that survives and converted the grapery into a library. Harriette left the Grange to the fledgling Art Museum of Toronto. From 1911 to 1918, the house was used for exhibitions, and then for a number o f other administrative functions as the Art Gallery of Ontario grew up around it. During the early 1970s, the building was carefully restored t o its original grandeur as a gentleman's house of the late 1830s. Neighbouring streets that still bear Boulton names are Grange Road, D'A rcy St., and Henry St. The original Grange house, erected in 1820 with additions added later, was built by D'Arcy Boulton and is still standin g today. In the book "A Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto", it mentions th at the Hon. William Cayley designed the hall addition of the Grange reside nce and planted trees in front of the house. The Grange is one of the 4 oldest building in Toronto, having been restored to its original condition at a cost of $500,000 and is now a National Monument.


Marion Phoebe Cummings


< Mary Frances Jane Ferrier Boulton


< William Somerville Boulton


< Edward Cummings Boulton

 
 Samuel CUMMINGS
 
 Jonathan Wyman Cummings 
   
  Joanna WYMAN
 
 Edward Wyman Cummings 
   
   Levi HUTCHINSON|M.D.
   
  Frances Maria Hutchinson 
   
  Maria Antoinette Payne MATTOON
 
 Marion Phoebe Cummings 
birt: 29 NOV 1899
plac: Seattle, WA
deat: 10 OCT 1973
plac: Tacoma, WA


Henry Graham Boulton
marr: 16 JUL 1921
plac: Montesano, WA
birt: 15 FEB 1893
plac: Russell, Manitoba, Canada
deat: 22 DEC 1975
plac: Tacoma, WA
 
  Richard BABCOCK
  
  Alfred Babcock 
    
   Sarah Welles WOLCOTT
  
 Martha Ida Babcock 
 
 Ellen Elizabeth Wilson 

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Audrey F. Dahlquist


Henry Graham BOULTON


Elizabeth Gill Boulton


< Gail Grace MASSEY

 
 Al Dahlquist 
 
 Audrey F. Dahlquist 
birt: 19 NOV 1913
deat: JUN 1994
plac: Spokane, WA


Frank MASSEY
marr:
birt:
deat:


William Somerville Boulton
marr:
birt:
deat:
 
 Elsie Gepford 

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Henry Graham BOULTON

 
 John Graham Boulton
 
 Henry Graham Boulton 
   
  Elizabeth Gill
 
 William Somerville Boulton 
   
   Edward Wyman Cummings
   
  Marion Phoebe Cummings 
   
  Martha Ida Babcock
 
 Henry Graham BOULTON 
birt:
deat:
 
  Al Dahlquist 
  
 Audrey F. Dahlquist 
 
 Elsie Gepford 

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Elizabeth Gill Boulton

 
 John Graham Boulton
 
 Henry Graham Boulton 
   
  Elizabeth Gill
 
 William Somerville Boulton 
   
   Edward Wyman Cummings
   
  Marion Phoebe Cummings 
   
  Martha Ida Babcock
 
 Elizabeth Gill Boulton 
birt:
deat:
 
  Al Dahlquist 
  
 Audrey F. Dahlquist 
 
 Elsie Gepford 

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Edward Wyman Cummings


< Marion Phoebe Cummings


< Mildred CUMMINGS

 
 Ebenezer CUMMINGS
 
 Samuel CUMMINGS 
   
  Sarah STEVENS
 
 Jonathan Wyman Cummings 
   
   William WYMAN
   
  Joanna WYMAN 
   
  Phoebe GAGE
 
 Edward Wyman Cummings 
birt: 28 SEP 1862
plac: Bunker Hill, Ill.
deat: 28 FEB 1913
plac: Seattle, Wash.|Another source says died 9 Feb 1913


Martha Ida Babcock
marr: 16 SEP 1896
plac: Spokane, WA
birt: 10 DEC 1871
plac: Walla Walla, WA
deat: 1955
plac: Portland, OR
 
  Samuel HUTCHINSON
  
  Levi HUTCHINSON|M.D. 
  
 Frances Maria Hutchinson 
 
  Ebenezer MATTOON|Jr.
  
 Maria Antoinette Payne MATTOON 
 
 Lucina MAYO

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Notes:

EDWARD WYMAN CUMMINGS Motherless at the age of fourteen and starting out at that time to earn his own living, Edward Wyman Cummings advanced steadily from the humble position of a grocery clerk until he became one of the foremost enginee rs of the northwest. The position which he attained in the field of his chosen profession is indicated by the fact that he was assistant engine er of Seattle at the time of the construction of the Cedar river waterwork s. He was born at Bunker Hill, fllinois, September 20, 1862, a son of Jonathan Wyman Cummings and a descendant of Hannah Cummings, who in 181 4 married General Isaac Stevens, a former governor of Washington territor y and superintendent of Indian affairs. Jonathan Wyman Cummings was born i n Antrim, New Hampshire, in 1814 and at the time of the Civil war served with the Army of the Mississippi. He was one of the seven hundred and eighty-eight who lost their lives when the steamer Runyon sank in the Mississippi. The ancestral history of Edward W. Cummings can be traced back to General Ebenezer Waltron, who saw much active service during th e first years of the Revolutionary war, taking an active part in winning independence for the nation. During the succeeding twenty years of his life he was a very active figure in political circles. It was during th e infancy of Edward W. Cummings that the father lost his life and the mot her afterward married again. She died when her son was but fourteen years o f age, at which time he began earning his own living, first as a grocery clerk in his stepfather’s store and afterward in connection with the engineering department of the city of St. Paul. He was a member of a surveying party engaged on the construction of the Northern Pacific Railroad and remained a resident of the west, being continuously engage d in the engineering and contracting business to the time of his death. There are now in active operation more than forty electric light plants and waterworks systems that were designed and built by him in Washingto n, Oregon, Idaho and Montana. As assistant engineer of Seattle he was actively engaged in the construction of the Cedar river waterworks and i t is due in no small measure to his efforts that the city has such an efficient and adequate plant. At the time of his death he was engaged i n the execution of a contract for the Great Northern Railroad Company at Vancouver, British Columbia. He had advanced far in his profession, developing his powers through practical experience and at the same time h e was very particular to broaden his knowledge through the reading of scientific journals. In 1897, at Walla Walla, Washington, Mr. Cummings was married to Miss I da Babcock. Her parents were Alfred and Ellen (Wilson) Babcock. Her father came to Washington by wagon in 1859 and was the first merchant of Walla Walla. He also owned a farm that covered what is now the center of the city and he filled the office of state grain inspector there. He was bo rn in Maine and died in Walla Walla, Washington, in 1912, at the age of sixty-eight years. His wife was a native of Missouri and from that stat e came to the northwest. The paternal grandfather of Mrs. Cummings was Richard Babcock, who also settled in Walla Walla in the early days and lived to the advanced age of ninety-two years, being the oldest man in t he state at the time of his death. He was considered a remarkable speller a nd would carry off all the honors in that line. Mr. and Mrs. Cummings beca me the parents of two children, Marion and Mildred. In his political views Mr. Cummings was a republican and his religious faith found expression in his membership in the Prospect Congregational church. He belonged to the Arctic Club, to the Sons of the American Revolution and to the Engineers’ Society. None of the duties and responsibilities of life were by him neglected, yet his attention was chiefly devoted to his profession, and his close application in his cho sen life work placed him in a most enviable and creditable position. - History of Seattle, S. J. Clarke Publishing Co., Chicago, 1916


Martha Ida Babcock


< Marion Phoebe Cummings


< Mildred CUMMINGS

 
 Richard BABCOCK 
 
 Alfred Babcock 
   
   Nathaniel WOLCOTT
   
  Sarah Welles WOLCOTT 
   
  UNKNOWN
 
 Martha Ida Babcock 
birt: 10 DEC 1871
plac: Walla Walla, WA
deat: 1955
plac: Portland, OR


Edward Wyman Cummings
marr: 16 SEP 1896
plac: Spokane, WA
birt: 28 SEP 1862
plac: Bunker Hill, Ill.
deat: 28 FEB 1913
plac: Seattle, Wash.|Another source says died 9 Feb 1913
 
 Ellen Elizabeth Wilson 

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Notes:

Moved to Waitsburg, WA when 14 yrs of age, taught school in Waitsburg, Dayton and Huntsville, Washington.