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Field name | Value |
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Title | Letters from Claude to his Family in England, 1896 |
Author | Gardiner, Claude (1872-1956) |
Date | 12 Jan-12 Apr 1896 |
Document Type | Correspondence |
Reference | M-8896-46 |
Library / Archive | Glenbow Museum |
Collection Name | Edwards, Gardiner Family Fonds |
Description | Letters from Claude Gardiner to his parents giving details of how he spent Christmas, the couple living with him helping on the farm and cooking, finding someone to look after his cattle for the winter, his attempts to make bread and falling ill with influenza. |
Series Description | From Series 7 – Claude Gardiner (1872-1956) (predominant 1894-1925). 30 cm of textual records. Claude William Edwards Gardiner, 1870-1942, was born in England, the son of Lt. Col. E. J. Gardiner, and Laura Gardiner. He came to Canada in 1894 and settled at Olsen Creek in the Porcupine Hills of southern Alberta, where he ran the Wineglass Ranch until 1930. In 1907 he married Alice Edwards, and they had two children, Claudia and Oliver Ernest. After retiring, he and Alice travelled extensively then settled in Victoria. The series consists of extensive letters to his parents about his early ranching experiences, diaries and notebooks related to farming activities, letters to his wife, miscellany, and obituaries. |
Biographical Note / History | Oliver Cromwell Edwards (1850-1915) a medical doctor from Ontario, came to the Qu'Appelle area of Saskatchewan in 1882 as an employee of the Indian Department. He travelled to Fort Resolution in both 1900 and 1901 as part of the Treaty Eight Commission. In 1901 he was appointed the physician for the Blood and Peigan Reserves near Fort Macleod, Alberta, and he moved to Stand Off, Alberta where he resided until his death. His wife, Henrietta Muir Edwards (1849-1931) was prominent in the women's rights movement. She was convener of laws of the National Council of Women for 38 years. She was one of Alberta's "Famous Five" who fought to have Canadian women recognized as "persons". For further information see Patricia Roome's "Henrietta Muir Edwards: The Journey of a Canadian Feminist", PhD thesis, Simon Fraser University, 1996. Henrietta's sister, Amelia Muir (1848-1938) came to Alberta in 1907 to live with the Edwards. The Edwards had three children, William Muir (1879-1918), Alice (Gardiner) (1878-1964), and Margaret (Stewart) (1888-1913). Alice married Claude Gardiner (1870-1942), an Englishman who came to Alberta in 1894. They ran the Wineglass Ranch near Fort Macleod until 1930 when they travelled, then retired to Victoria, British Columbia. Claude's mother, Laura Gardiner (1846-1932), and his sister, Barbara Gardiner (1874-1964), came to Alberta in 1896 to visit, and subsequently lived in Fort Macleod until returning permanently to England in 1914. The Gardiners had two children, "Gard" Gardiner (1910-1996), and Claudia (Whipple) (1907-2000). Claudia and her husband Clifford N. Whipple (1906-1977), had five daughters, Peggy (Bowcott), Mary Elizabeth (Lacerte), Bonnie (Muir), Nicki (Edwards) and Louise (Wymore). |
Theme(s) | Permanent Settlement and Successive Generations |
Places | Fort Macleod, Alberta, Canada |
Nationality | English |
People | Gardiner, Claude |
Keywords | agriculture, living conditions, travel, family, employment, health and sickness |
Additional Information | Please note: Some of the metadata for this document has been taken from the Glenbow Museum catalogue. |
Language | English |
Document(s) linked to |
Letters from Claude to his Mother in England, 1897-1899 |
Copyright | Glenbow Museum |