Dedicated to the Tennants and Grawbargers who settled the Ottawa Valley in the 1850's.

The Grawbargers sailed to New Amsterdam (New York) in 1710 or so on the "Elizabeth". Some of their family members (Andrew Grawbarger) migrated northward as loyalists to the British Crown in the late 1700s or early 1800s.

The Tennants sailed to Canada in June 1820 on the "Commerce" out of Greenock Scotland and Dublin Ireland . They originally settled in Lanark Township in Lanark County Ontario and subsequently spread throughout Canada and the USA.

Meeting up in the Wilberforce Township area (near Killaloe) in the 1850s the Tennants and Grawbargers became fast friends and intermarried quite extensively.

Moving northwest into the Petawawa area together in the 1870s they founded the "Tennant Settlement" on what is now part of the Petawawa Military Base. Being bought out by the Military in 1906 some moved into nearby Chalk River while others made the trek to the Restoule/Golden Valley area and others rode the rails to Manitoba, Alberta and British Columbia.

Their story of hard toil and heavy burdens marked them as they set down roots and pioneered the Lanark area in the early 1800s. Finding strength in each other and through their fantastic familial relationships as their descendants married other pioneers, the Tennants and their extensive families spread out from Lanark to explore whole new homesteads and occupations.

Thomas Tennant and Ann Hill would be proud of the varied and broad legacy of their descendants. Their heart-wrenching decision to sail to a new world would in a few short decades after their death, ultimately be rewarded with their progeny weaving themselves into and becoming a part of the very essence of Canada.

Their never ending spirit lead their descendants to become explorers, clergy and pastors, shanty-men, hunters, trappers, doctors, farmers, scientists, administrators, lawyers, railroaders, soldiers, writers, educators, paramedics, morticians, elected officials, police officers, firefighters, sports enthusiasts and entrepreneurs of the day.


Thursday, August 27, 2020

 200th Anniversary of the arrival of the Tennants in Canada

The journey of the Tennants on the ship 'Commerce'


Thomas Tennant and his wife Anne Hill and their extended family arrived in Canada at Montreal aboard the sailing ship Commerce in August 1820. 

The Commerce was a three masted ship with 1.5 decks. She had a draft of 17 feet. The ship was 111 feet long and 29 feet 6.5 inches broad and was built in Quebec at Fort William Henry in 1813. A sketch of the Commerce by Graham McBride of Halifax is shown below. It comes from page 13 of 'Carlow to Lanark - An Irish Family History' written by Robert Dawson Tennant.



Thomas and Anne emigrated to Canada with seven sons and two daughters. They were George and his wife Elizabeth Smith, William, John, Richard, Elizabeth, Judith, Thomas, Robert and Joseph and a man servant.

After landing in Montreal in August 1820 they all made their way to Fort Wellington at Prescott. The adult men then left for Perth via Brockville. In Perth they made formal arrangements for their Location Tickets. Thomas, the patriarch, and his wife Anne Hill settled on the 10 Concession of Lanark Townsip in  Lanark County. His children and their families settled in various other locations along the 10th and 12th Concessions of Lanark Township.

Settlement in Lanark Township


The family walked to their new home on the 10th Concession of Lanark Township in Lanark County around the 23 of November 1820. We know this as Elizabeth Smith, wife of George, the eldest son of Thomas, gave birth to her first child George Ansley Tennant on 23 November 1820 in the home of local resident, Willie Ireton, near Drummond Centre and Innisville, not too far from the Mississippi River. (From 1987 to 1991 I lived on 10 Concession Drummond Township not too far from Innisville and Drummond Centre). 

A photo of the log house of George Tennant and Elizabeth Smith is shown below from the summer of 1937.


Robert Dawson Tennant, the author of the Tennant family history book 'Carlow to Lanark - An Irish Family History' writes on page 20 of his geneaology regarding their journey to Lanark that "matriarch Ann[e] (Hill) Tennant carried an iron pot and some of their dishes". That pot is on view in the Middleville Museum. 



The museum is not too far from the original Tennant settlement. It is highly recommended that anyone interested in early Lanark Township life and times in general and the Tennants in particular, should visit the museum. It has several items of Tennant noteworthyness and overall gives an excellent perspective on early life in the area. Mike Tennant and Doug Tennant are shown in the photo below with a chest of drawers from the early Tennant household and which is on display at the Middleville Museum.



A low key celebration but a celebration nonetheless


On Saturday August 22, 2020 Mike Tennant and his wife Lorrie (nee Sawyshyn), Jeannie Tilson and Doug Tennant gathered during the great 2020 Covid-19 pandemic at the Tennant cemetery at 943 Concession 10B of Lanark Township to commemorate the 200th Anniversary of the arrival of the Tennants in Canada. After a memorial toast, salutation/prayer in memory of Thomas and Anne and their immigrant family, a modest picnic was enjoyed on the grounds of the cemetery. Mike provided a selected reading  from Robert Dawson Tennants family history and we all reviewed various stories about our ancestors and how our family has grown through marriagees and about how the Tennants and their descendants journeyed throughout North America..

Scott Meabry - cemetery custodian (who just recently assumed those duties from Gerald Tennant) expended considerable time and effort to ensure the grounds were exquisite for the 200th Anniversary celebration.

Lorrie, Mike and Jeannie at the 200th Anniversary Celebration of the arrival of the Tennants in Lanark Township.

Jeannie Tilson and Doug Tennant at the Thomas Tennant and Anne Hill gravestone at the Tennant Cemetery




Wednesday, March 25, 2020

The Rockingham, Ontario Tennants

The following post information is about new research results linking William Tennant (1824-1902) of the Rockingham, Ontario area (near Barry's Bay) to his father Richard Tennant (1797-1879).


For nigh on 100 years or so, it seemed that William Tennant (1824-1902), son of  Richard Tennant (1797-1879) and Jane Cardiff (1801 - ?) was a lost soul. Indeed, in the family history book written by Robert Dawson Tennant entitled "Carlow to Lanark - An Irish Family History" William has his name listed once on page 64 along with his genealogical cataloguing system number '53' and that is it. There is no other information listed, that this blogger could find, in the book about William. Do not confuse him with the William listed as number '3' by Robert Tennant on page 25 in his book and who died in 1821 unmarried.
The family history book about all things 'Tennant'

So what happened to William Tennant, son of Richard and Jane Cardiff? Where did he go? Who did he marry? Did he have children? All good questions which went unanswered for tens and tens of years until a distant relative of mine from the North Bay, ON area called one late winter Friday night in 2014 to enquire if I would 'just take a look' at some information about a 'William Tennant who had married a Mary Coughlin'. After discussing the matter for a considerable time via telephone I agreed to do the research. Then with dogged determination, I let life get in the way and put off the research for almost four years. One rainy day while my wife Jeannie was doing some geneaology, I decided to work on some 'dougieology' and set about checking out the Drouin collection for St. Patrick's parish near Renfrew, ON.

In the parish registery there are some very discernable entries about a William Tenant (which is an early variable of the Tennant surname) who was baptised into the Roman Catholic religion and then was married that very same day to a Mary Coughlin by the parish priest Father John McNulty.
A screen shot of the registry is provided herein for your review as well as this amateur geneaologists attempt at transcibing the entries.

Transcription (below) from the St. Patrick Roman Catholic parish registry. St. Patrick’s church is near Calabogie or Renfrew ON. The first entry (No. 74) by Father John McNulty is regarding the baptism of William Tennant (1824-1902), son of Richard Tennant and Jane Cardiff. The second transcription  (No. 11) is about the marriage of William Tennant and Mary Coughlin.

No.74    May 14, 1851 of the Indulgence Grant received After Incantation, Baptised (illegible word - possibly 'such') Conditions William Tenant aged 27 Years of Lake Doré Settlement. Sponsor John McNulty and Bridget Coughlin St. Patricks

No.11    May 14, 1851 of the Indulgence Grant Married Wm. Tenant to Mary Coughlin before witnesses John McNulty and Bridget Coughlin St. Patricks

William's father and mother (Richard Tennant and Jane Cardiff) are shown living in the Lake Doré Settlement area in Wilberforce Township, Renfrew County, ON in the 1851, 1861 and 1871 census documents. While the census for New Brunswick and Nova Scotia was completed in 1851, Canada West and Canada East did not start their collection of data until the following year. Therefore, for Canada West and Canada East, and in Wilberforce Township, what is known as the Census of 1851 officially began on January 12, 1852. Wilberforce Township is named after William Wilberforce (1759 – 1833) who was a British politician, philanthropist, and a leader of the movement to abolish the slave trade.

As William fell in love (hopefully and obviously) with Mary Coughlin, it was for him, given the context of the times, to have to consider and choose to change his religious denomination and convert from being a member of the Church of England or protestantantism to Roman Catholic. In 1851, when William got married to Mary Coughlin, it would have been literally unthinkable for him to convert to Roman Catholicism and remain as an accepted part of the Tennant family associated with Richard Tennant and Jane Cardiff. The only option for William to be able to marry Mary would be to convert to Roman Catholicism. This would have triggered, in that day and time, the action of being ostracised and/or shunned by his parents and siblings. This shunning or ostracisation by Richard and Jane with regard to their son William, would have been a momentous action and would explain why there was no further mention of or information provided about him in the family history book. For all intents and purposes, William would have been considered 'dead' and unknown to his parents and other family members.

So, having researched and found that a William Tennant was baptised as a Roman Catholic on May 14, 1851 and then married that same day to Mary Coughlin is interesting. All the more interesting is that this William Tennant was from the Lake Doré Settlement where Richard Tennant and Jane Cardiff were living having moved there from Lanark Township, Lanark County ON about 1843 or 1844. We know this as their daughter, Elizabeth Tennant (1844 - 1923) who married William Carnegie (1818-1896), was born in Wilberforce Township according to the 1871 Canadian census.

William Tennant was married 14 May 1851 to Mary Coughlin. The 1851 census was conducted in 1852, due to delays, and there is no record of him living with or near his father Richard, in the 1851 census.

William Tennant and Mary Coughlin were content to stay in the Brudenell/Sebastopol Township area for the rest of their lives. They had five children (see insert).


William died 18 November 1902 and was buried on 21 November at St. Ann's Parish Church. Mary died 16 May 1906. The following is taken from the church registery: Item # 4 Page 267 # S 7 Mary Coughlin was born in Ireland  (Mrs. Wm. Tennent) May 18th 1906 We, the undersigned blessed the body of Mary Coughlin Tennent who died the day before yesterday aged seventy-three years. Witnesses to burial James Stanley.

In the 1861 census William chose to list his religion as Church of England while Mary and the children were listed as Roman Catholic. The census shows William and Mary living amongst Mary's 'Coughlin' relatives (see insert from the 1861 census). Indeed, Mary's parents, Simon and Mary O'Brien were living just down the road from her and William.

1861 Census for Brudenell Township

On 20 September 2019 my wife, Jeannie, and I ventured to the Brudenell area (Letterkenny Road and Rockingham area) after having confirmed by telephone several months earlier that descendants of William Tennant and Mary Coughlin were still living in the area.

We met up with Allen Howard Tennant and his wife Lorna Roberston who live on Tennant Road just off Letterkenny Road. Over tea and homemade cookies we exchanged some stories of family lore on both sides and thoroughly enjoyed a wonderful 'mini family reunion'. With Allen and Lorna (my 3rd cousin 1X removed) calling themselves the 'Rockingham Tennants', Jeannie and I (of the Chalk River Tennants) left our new-found cousins and headed home. It was exciting knowing that we had finally met the descendants of William Tennant and Mary Coughlin - mystery solved!
Some of the Rockingham Tennants

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Robbie Burns Celebration 2016 - Chalk River Legion Wm. Bryant Branch #562

2016 Robbie Burns poster
Approximately 40 people attended the very first sit down Burns Supper at the Royal Canadian Legion in Chalk River ON. Jeannie Tilson was accompanied by Ray Lavallee on the pipes at this supper and they played a wee concert for the attendees. The meal, prepared by Carol Thompson and her helpers, consisted of roast beef, mashed potatoes and turnips, and a wonderful homemade dessert. 

Traditional Fare, a celtic style trio, played wonderful music. Traditional Fare is Jim Beattie, Paul McClelland, and Dan Schryer.