Lorana Wilkinson: Difference between revisions

From Curriepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Lorana Wilkinson was a Canadian woman.
[[File:LoranaWilkinson.jpg|thumb|Lorana Wilkinson]]
She was the daughter of J. J. Wilkinson, of Mersea township
'''Lorana Wilkinson''' (died 1918) was a Canadian woman, part the important family that was the original eponym of Leamington, Ontario.  She was the grandmother of [[Bruce Newman]] and [[Jack Newman]], among others.
 
She was the daughter of J. J. Wilkinson, of Mersea township.  It is possible (indeed, likely) that she is from the same family that was the eponym of "Wilkinson Corners", the original name of Leamington, Ontario.  [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leamington,_Ontario]


She married [[William Newman]] in 1891. They had 3 children:
She married [[William Newman]] in 1891. They had 3 children:

Latest revision as of 07:42, 8 February 2026

Lorana Wilkinson

Lorana Wilkinson (died 1918) was a Canadian woman, part the important family that was the original eponym of Leamington, Ontario. She was the grandmother of Bruce Newman and Jack Newman, among others.

She was the daughter of J. J. Wilkinson, of Mersea township. It is possible (indeed, likely) that she is from the same family that was the eponym of "Wilkinson Corners", the original name of Leamington, Ontario. [1]

She married William Newman in 1891. They had 3 children:


Sometime between 1914-1917, William and Lorana separated, and she was left destitute. By this point, her oldest son Clint and his father had become estranged (See Why_Clint_Newman_left_his_family). (Need information on what Clare with doing during this time; apparently she maintained a good relationship with her father.)

In 1917 and 1918, Lorana travelled with her young son Harold to visit family in Leamington, Ontario and Elmira, New York. They stayed with Clint and his wife Eugenia for a short time in New York. Clint paid for their fare back to Winnipeg in the summer of 1918. Schools were closed due to the Spanish Influenza epidemic, so Harold went to work with his father, William. Both William and Harold got sick with the Spanish Flu. While nursing them back to health, Lorana got sick and never recovered. She died in Winnipeg, Manitoba on November 14, 1918.