Acheson Family
Joseph Acheson Row 1 Col 1
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Alexander Acheson Row 2 Col 1
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Sadie Acheson Row 3 Col 1
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Miller Family
Joseph Miller Row 1 Col 2
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Sarah Bradin Miller Row 2 Col 2
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Maggie Miller Row 3 Col 2
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Benedict Family
Smedley Benedict Row 1 Col 3

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Peter Benedict Row 2 Col 3

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Albert Benedict Row 3 Col 3

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Fourth Family

Although James was born in Bathurst, he grew up in the Chatham area. When only two, his mother Mary died suddenly and the widowed father moved back to Bathurst with only the family he could support. James stayed and was adopted into the Thomas Brooks household in Newcastle, across the river from Chatham. James and Mary Jane Kirkpatrick were united in 1870 at Newcastle. Their marriage bond had been co-signed by her brother, Hugh Kirkpatrick. The family must have prospered, as James and Mary had a formal portrait done with the twin daughters, Edith May and Anna Myrtle. James has the striking composure of a successful businessman, in suit and stylish tie. Years later, James and Mary would need to sell their land property during difficult times.

In the 1820’s, New Brunswick was a destination for industrious young men seeking adventure. John Foggin was such a man, having a skill in woodworking that would earn his passage across the sea. Like his father William, he worked in the trade of joiners and cabinet makers in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, England. But growing up in a family with nine siblings, John saw the new world as an opportunity to make his own life. New Brunswick was a vibrant colony of the British Empire and became a primary source of timber and shipbuilding, where a woodworker would be very welcome. John emigrated, married and raised five of his own and settled in the Bathurst area of northeast New Brunswick, passing away at the age of 88.

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