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The Holy Trinity – Research, Restore and Record - Series Introduction
The Holy Trinity series will invite you to join as the community comes together in raising the first church, building the current, and the changes along the way. It will explore the restoration of century old stones, discuss the techniques used to restore and document a cemetery and provide insight to the importance of maintaining these artifact as long as possible. In addition, I will also dive into the personal lives and stories of the neighbours, friends and family interre
eternalcarestonese
Apr 223 min read


Buried in the Furrows: The 9th Furrow – John Stewart (1782-1869) The Momentum of the Settler
“He came from Turrerich, in Glen Quaich, in 1832, having left the Glen that year about the middle of June, and arrived at North Easthope on the 1st of September; eight families from the same place emigrated and travelled together and settled in the township and in the adjoining one, South Easthope.”
eternalcarestonese
Mar 258 min read


The 6th Furrow - Andrew Riddell Sr. (1782 - 1862) The Legacy of North Easthope
Andrew recited his story as John dictated, as Andrew spoke, Linton imagined those faraway Scottish hills, the patchwork fields, stone walls, and heathered slopes now traded for maples, black oak, and the relentless hum of mosquitos. The tone of Andrew’s voice suggested neither regret nor longing, only the clarity of a man who understood the weight of choices. A man who new big risks could bring big rewards.
eternalcarestonese
Mar 49 min read


The 5th Furrow - John Kelly (1811 -1892) The Resilience of Clearing
John had a good idea what it was going to take, when he first stepped onto Lot 15, it was not a farm. It was a wilderness so thick that daylight barely touched the ground. “I commenced to improve on my land (it being then a perfect wilderness, travelled only by the Indian) late fall of 1834. The snow was on the trees then I recollect well, for, on beginning to chop down some trees to build my small ‘shanty’ with the snow at the stroke of the axe would be falling down upon me.
eternalcarestonese
Feb 2510 min read


The 4th Furrow – James Hastings (1795 – 1875) The Measure of Progress
James stayed another twenty‑seven years, tending the land they had built together, watching their children grow into the world they had carved from the wilderness. When his time came in 1875, he joined her beneath the white marble headstone that still stands today a quiet testament to a family who endured, who hoped, and who helped shape the early heartbeat of the township.
eternalcarestonese
Feb 188 min read
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