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Life & Times of William McDonagh
Beginning in Ontario
Farming in Alberta 1928 to
Working the Oil Fields in Persia in the 1930's
(All quotes by William McDonagh taken from reverse of photos)
ALBERTA - 1928
Rumely Tractor - Alberta 1928
"This is one of the buildings where I worked first at Harry Grogg's" -
William McDonagh 1928. "Cook & Bunk car, Alberta 1928" -
William McDonagh
William McDonagh
Marriage and Death Certificates
"Harvester's on their way West 1928" - William McDonagh; Maud Blanch
& Charlotte McDonagh.
Children: Gertrude, Charlotte, Maude
Blanch and William McDonagh Born in Welland, ON - Gertrude 10 May 1883;
Charlotte 12 June 1894; Maude Blanch 3 June 1897; William 1884; Stillborn Child
18 February 1892
Parents: William Henry McDonagh & Elizabeth M. Hill. William Henry
McDonagh b. July 10, 1857 - age 77 - Cause of Death, Myocardisis.
Resided: Port Robinson. Buried: Lakeview Cemetery, Thorold,
ON. d. Father: William Patrick McDonagh born Ireland Mother: Christina
Fletcher born Ireland. William Sheldon Hill McDonagh b. Aug. 1, 1884, Thorold,
ON
Parents - William Henry McDonagh & Eliz. Hill
Married Frances Louise Ware, age 25 b. Allenburg. Parents: Charles
T. Ware, Alice M. Misener. Married January 1, 1914, Welland.

July 1917 William McDonagh, Blanch McDonagh
Maude Blanch, William, Charlotte, Gertrude. Blanch McDonagh, top right
August 1918
"The bunk house with Earl's two kiddies in front"
"Standard drilling rig in fields, Persia - 1923" - Wm. McDonagh.
"Jim Gibson & myself inside Ctesiphon Arch outside Baghdad - March
1927"
"Flare from B75 drilling in Persia - 1924". "Ruins of
Palmyra, Assyria - March 30/27". "Ruins at Palmyra, Assyria.
March 30/27".
"Left to right - Ted Holmes, James Caldon, Jack Fisher, Persia
1924". "On board Olympic". "This is the first
bungalow I stayed in in the Fields. Bill Kerr is the only one that you
would know 1923"
"Ray P., Jim G., Arch. P."
"B160 with 2200 ft of 9 inch pipe on rack, Persia 1924"
- "Suez Canal, Egypt October 1923"

"Harbour
at Alexandria, Egypt, April 1927" - "Native palace along Euphrates
river, Mesopotamia, March 1927" - "Persia 1923, Arabs and Suris. The
Suri tribe belongs to the hills, note the bobbed hair"
"This is the first rig I worked on in Persia Jan 1924"
- "This picture was taken in the Suez Canal"
"Some of the boys that work around the bungalow Persia
1924" - "Ted Holmes and a Holt tractor, Mamatain,
Persia 1924" - "Docks at Alexandria Egypt April 1927" - "A
Dervish or Priest, Persia 1924" - "Bloss and Fred in Port Said
1923"
"Persia 1924" -"Hotel in Port Said 1923"
"Derrick" (name on back of rig photo)
"On board Olympic"
"Chester Graham & I on B96 Jan 1924"
"Date palms along Euphrates river above Mohammerah,
Persia" 1927
"Swansea Harbour 1923"-"Naftak Persia 1924"
"B75 Drilling in Persia 1924" - Persia 1924
1901
Ontario
Census
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Name:
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William H McDonagh
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Gender:
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Male
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Marital
Status:
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Married
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Age:
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43
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Birth
Date:
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10
Jul 1857
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BIRTHPLACE:
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Ontario
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Relation
to Head of House:
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Head
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Spouse's
Name:
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Elizabeth
M
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Racial
or Tribal Origin:
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Irish
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Nationality:
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Canadian
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Religion:
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Church
Of England
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Occupation:
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Farmer
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Province:
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Ontario
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District:
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Welland
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District
Number:
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123
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Sub-District:
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Thorold
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Sub-District
Number:
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K-1
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Family
Number:
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52
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Page:
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5
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Neighbors:
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View
others on page
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Household
Members:
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McDonagh, John
The following data is extracted from The Canadian Biographical Dictionary and
Portrait Gallery of Eminent and Self-Made Men,
Ontario
Volume, 1880.
John Mcdonagh is a native of
Rivers
Town
,
County of Sligo
,
Ireland
, and was born February 6, 1822. His mother, before her marriage was Elizabeth
Carson. His father, William McDonagh, was the youngest of five brothers, four of
whom volunteered in the militia at the time of the rebellion of 1798, afterwards
joined the regular army, served under
Wellington
in the Peninsular War, and were with him till after the battle of
Waterloo
. His father, who was not a whit behind the four brothers in patriotism, served
twenty-five years in the yeomanry or local militia, removing to
Upper Canada
in 1840, and settling in the
Township
of
Tecumseth
,
County
of
Simcoe
, where he died in 1877 at the age of eighty. The mother died about ten years
earlier.
In the spring of 1840 our subject joined Her Majesty's Royal Revenue Police, and
served three years, following his parents to this country in 1843. After
spending one year in the
County
of
Simcoe
, he removed to the Niagara District, and has resided in it for thirty-five
years. He spent a little more than one year in a saw mill at Dunnville; then
joined the mounted police on the Welland Canal, under command of Major
Richardson, serving until it was disbanded a year or two later.
In the spring of 1850 Mr. McDonagh and other Canadians caught the gold fever,
and made up their minds to see the young
El Dorado
of the Pacific Slope. Early in May of that year, twelve of them started out
with ox teams on the overland route, going via St. Joe, Mo. (where they secured
their teams and outfit), Fort Karney, Fort Laramie, Independence Rock, through
the valley of the Sweet river, crossing it sixteen times, and on the 18th of
June stood on the South Pass of the Rocky Mountains, where the westward flowing
streams take their rise. In the morning of that day they found water frozen in
their buckets.
They proceeded across the
Big
Sandy
Desert
a distance of seventy miles, to Green river, thence to the Big Bear, and up its
flats to Soda Springs; followed the
Humbolt
Valley
four hundred miles, to where it disappears in a sandy plain, and thence across
to
Carson river
, sixty miles, where their provisions gave out. They were two hundred miles from
Placerville, and four of the party, with four biscuits each, started on ahead of
the teams, Mr. McDonagh carrying thirty-six pounds, the others nothing. One man
besides him went through, the others giving out, and waiting for the teams to
pick them up. Mr. McDonagh reached
Placerville
, then called Hangtown, at two o'clock, p.m. of the fourth day, faint, yet would
have gone farther, rather than lie down and starve to death. He never saw a sick
day on the entire route, and walked all the way from St. Joe to
Placerville
, a distance of 2500 miles, reaching the latter place in the latter part of
August; others were sick, and were glad enough to be carried on an ox cart.
One of their party had a leg broken when eighty miles east of
Fort
Karney
, and the teams never halted, night or day, until they reached the Fort, where
he had his limb amputated, and had to remain some weeks.
Mr. McDonagh commenced mining in
Calaveras
County
, and was in
California
nearly four years. During the first two he was with Italian, French,
Portuguese, Chinese, and Indians, and never heard a word of English from any
lips but his own.
He had good success, returned in 1854 by the Nicarauga route, and on his way to
Canada
, halted at
Philadelphia
, and had his " dust " turned to coin. He has been often heard to
speak of the kindness which he received at the hands of the officers of the
mint. They charged him and his associate nothing for services, getting their pay
probably out of the alloy put into the coin to harden it, and politely showing
them through the great establishment, &c.
Since returning to
Canada
, Mr. McDonagh has resided at
Thorold
, and is one of the leading business men of the town, he has been manufacturing
and dealing in ship timber since 1855, and farming by proxy and through renters.
He has a farm of three hundred acres adjoining the town, other property in
Thorold
and at Merritton and
St. Catharines
, being in very comfortable circumstances. The several buildings which he has
erected in
Thorold
have been important improvements. He is quite enterprising.
Mr. McDonagh was in the Town Council five years; was Reeve and member of County
Council four years, and has been magistrate of the county a decade or more.
About the time of the
Trent
affair, 1861, he raised a volunteer company, and commanded it for three years,
and then resigned.
Mr. McDonagh is a Conservative in politics, and for the last eight years has
been president of the Liberal Conservative Association for the
County
of
Welland
.
In 1854 he married Miss Mary Ann Williams, daughter of Daniel Williams, an early
settler at Allanburg. The family came here from
New Jersey
, and are well known in this part of the Province. Mr. McDonagh belongs to the
Episcopal Church, of which he was warden several years. He is a kind man to the
poor, and a true friend of those suffering from any cause; has always been a
hard working man; had some severe "roughing" in middle life, yet is
still very healthy and robust, and as a business man he is a fine success.
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