Samuel Coulter: Difference between revisions

From Curriepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 26: Line 26:


Samuel died 28 August 1878.
Samuel died 28 August 1878.
===Milverton===
About Milverton, Ontario:
The village was originally called West's Corner, named after Andrew West who settled there in 1848. In 1871, Rev. P. Musgrove, a Presbyterian Minister from Milverton, England, suggested that the name be changed to Milverton. So the Ontario village itself was named after Milverton, Somerset in England.


==Sources==
==Sources==
[1] [[Stephanie Luet]]
[1] [[Stephanie Luet]]

Revision as of 07:23, 3 February 2026

Samuel Coulter and his wife Elizabeth

Samuel Coulter (1 November 1810 - 28 August 1878) was an Irish emigrant to Canada.

Samuel was born in Sligo, Ireland, on 1 November 1810.

He married fellow Irishman Elizabeth Moss on 2 February 1844.

At some point they moved to Canada, settling on a farm in Milverton, Ontario.

He had about 11 children with Elizabeth, including:

Frances and Ann married brothers Thomas and Charles. Thomas and Charles had a brother, Joseph Riley. That means Frances and Ann are connected to Ancestry.com user janet19616:

Everett's father's two sisters married my great-great uncles. Frances Letitia Coulter married Thomas Riley, and Ann Coulter married Charles Riley. These are the brothers of my great-grandfather, Joseph Riley. So we are only distantly related through marriage. Beats me what to call it though! The photos are from Everett Malcolm Coulter's Wartime file, here, [1]

— janet19616

Joseph emigrated to Ontario with his wife and family and had a farm in Milverton, Ontario.

Samuel died 28 August 1878.

Milverton

About Milverton, Ontario: The village was originally called West's Corner, named after Andrew West who settled there in 1848. In 1871, Rev. P. Musgrove, a Presbyterian Minister from Milverton, England, suggested that the name be changed to Milverton. So the Ontario village itself was named after Milverton, Somerset in England.

Sources

[1] Stephanie Luet