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Ellison

William John Ellison’s father, Thomas Henry Ellison, was born in 1828 in the County of Armagh in Northern Ireland, coming to this country in a small sailing vessel which took seven weeks to make the crossing.

In Towbridge, Ontario he met and fell in love with a pretty red-haired girl, Margaret Reid, of United Empire Loyalist family, whom he married.  Nine children were born of this union, six girls and three boys of which William John was the youngest.  He was born on October 25th, 1876 at Listowel, Ontario. 

They came west in 1878, first to Morris where they lived on land called River Lots.    Later they moved and lived near Cartwright and finally to Glendenning District in 1887, to Mr. Boucher’s farm, whose wife had passed away when the boy Lewis was born.  Grandma Ellison raised the two children, a little girl and Lewis, their father returning to the United States.  Grandma Ellison answered any calls to help the sick,   day or night.

Mr. Boucher came back four years later and gave Grandma Ellison the farm with a spring on it, for having looked after the two children.  When we were little Dad took us out to the spring for a picnic at least once a year, with the team and rubber-tired buggy.  We always brought a sealer of the spring water home with us.  This was special.

Grandpa Ellison passed away December 26th, 1892, the farm later being sold to Mr. Henderson, Mrs. Albert Stilwell’s uncle.  He sold it to Frank Gibson, Mrs. Stillwell’s brother; he sold it to Rollie Oliver’s Dad, Dick Olver.  Grandma moved into Killarney where she passed away on Feb. 17th, 1918.

William (Billy) worked as a small boy driving a snatch team, (having to stand on a handy pail to harness his horses), when the railway was built.  His own first team was a mule and an ox.

Later he worked for the father of Robert Stead, (the author), then for Mr. John Wallace at Cartwright.  There he met Ellen Lena Simpson.  They were married at Watt Nicol’s home in the Glendenning District, by the Rev. M. P. Floyd on December 24th, 1902.  Miss Caroline Cummings was the bridesmaid and Billy Smith the best man.  Three children were born of this union, Lucy, Ethel and Bernice.

When William worked on the railroad the men played poker at night.  He won a grain sack full of tobacco and one night he lost all of it.  That finished his poker playing.  His eldest brother Tom worked on the railroad when the last spike, a golden one, was nailed in the track at Vancouver.  The porters pulled the blinds down on the train window when they were travelling through the mountains as the women would scream and people would get down near the floor.

In 1903 he worked for Tom Readman as a blacksmith, later buying the equipment.  In 1905, he went to the United States for six months, but came back and settled permanently in Killarney where he worked for Albert Stillwell in the blacksmith trade and in May, 1916, took over the business of W. K. McNamee and three years later built a shop of his own where he carried on until he death May 6th, 1940.
Mrs. Ellison still resides in Killarney.

In religion he was a Presbyterian.  He was a staunch member of Bethel Orange Lodge Black Chapter for manty years.
As a young man he was an ardent sports fan.  Travelling many miles by foot and horseback to kick football and play lacrosse.  He walked from Cartwright to Brandon and home again.  One time he rode a bicycle part way, that was too strenuous, he sold it and walked.
Billy Smith and Uncle Jim would cut wood and Billy brought a load in to Killarney the next day.  He would sell it for $1.25.  He paid 25 cents for his dinner and 25 cents to put the team in the livery barn.