Person:Rosa Kelly (1)

Watchers
Rosa Mae Kelly
m. 3 Sep 1889
  1. Rosa Mae Kelly1891 - 1977
  2. Richard Henry Kelly1892 - 1975
  3. Charles Albert Kelly1894 - 1979
  4. Agnes Edna Kelly1897 - 1943
  5. Ruby Maud Kelly1899 - 1967
m. 16 Feb 1911
  1. Gladys Sarah Harrington1912 - 2005
  2. Evelyn Rosa Harrington1913 - 2000
  3. Nellie Edna Harrington1916 - 1916
  4. Robert William Harrington1920 - 2004
  5. Joseph John Harrington1922 - 1998
  6. Margaret Elizabeth Harrington1926 - 2003
Facts and Events
Name Rosa Mae Kelly
Gender Female
Birth? 25 Mar 1891 Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Marriage 16 Feb 1911 Souris, Manitoba, Canadato John Richard Harrington
Death? 10 Jan 1977 Outlook, Saskatchewan, Canada
Burial? 13 Jan 1977 Fertile Valley Cemetery, Conquest, Saskatchewan, Canada
Ancestral File Number 4S87-33

?? Line 185: (New PAF RIN=20)

   1 BURI
   2 PLAC Fertile Valley Cemetery, Conquest, Saskatchewan, Canada

Letter written in 1967 By Rosa Mae Harrington

A blue eyed red headed grand duaghter has asked about our wedding. As this is our 56th wedding anniversary we have been "remembering" and this is what we remember.

For various reasons we could not be married at Carisvoke (?), where I lived with my Grandmother and uncles and aunt, so I went home to Mother and Father at Souris just after New Years 1911. Before Jack left in October to go to the homestead we had agreed to be married early in February so as to get settled in before Spring Work started. Shortly after New Years Jack wrote that we had better postpone the wedding until Spring as the roads were very bad. He had no conveyance to get to town, no one to look after his horses, etc. Through letters I made him understand that I didn't like that idea and arranged that I would be ready whenever he arrived, as soon as he could maanage to get down to Souris. That meant that we could not have the wedding Father and Mother wanted in the little country Church a mile from their home, and with their friends around. So Mother and I kept busy, made the wedding cake which Mother decorated beautifully, quilted and sewed bedding etc. and waited.

We were getting ready for a Tea Party on Feb 15, Mother's 44th birthday when the telephone rang and it was Jack at the home of his Uncle and Aunt Lizzie Green in Souris. He had arrived on the 2 P.M. train. He wanted to get a livery team and come out. But I wouldn't heart to that - as $15 was too much for a homesteader to spend. SO after talking he said he should get back as soon as possible. A neighbor was taking care of one team he had left - the other team and a borrowed sleigh in the livery barn at Laura, and the house would be freezing up. So I said we could be in Souris the next day if he could get his part ready. He said his Uncle Harry would take him and what kind and size of wedding ring did I want; I said I would like one like Mothers, a flat-wide one. Later that evening he phoned that the ring was bought, the license obtained and the wedding would b in the Anglican Deanery in Souris. It was too cold to heat the big Church. So Father got his sleigh ready, loaded my packed boxes that wouldn't freeze, put a wash boiler, filled with oats, on the stove filled the oven with big stones, set the alarm for 6 am and went to bed. A very excited bunch of people.

Next morning we were up, had breakfast, and got our warmest clothing hunted out; and finally got away shortly after 8 am, not quite daylight. Father had got hay in the sleigh box, covered it with blankets, put the hot oats in a big sack for Mother and me to sit on, and the hot-stones at our feet. When we were seated, Father put a big binder canvas all over the sleigh box, except where he stood in the front. So off we went. Ruby and Edna, my sisters, were caretakers at the school, so had to go to school, and didn't like that. We had 14 miles to go from the farm, it was 40 degrees but sunny and calm. Half of the winter trail was on the ice of the Souris river where the trees were hanging with hoar frost, so it was a lovely drive but slow, and we did not get to town until 11 am. Father put the team in the livery barn and the stones to warm for going back. We went into the Crescent Hotel and met Jack and several friends I knew. Talked for a while then had dinner in the Hotel where Father had reserved a table the night before. What we ate I do not know but the Hotels at that time served very bountiful dinners at noon for farmers coming long drives into town. Then Father got out the team again and we drove a mile around the river to the "Deanery" and Aunt Lizzie Green was already there. The little altar in the Deanery had candles and a couple of blooming plants. Do with Mrs. Hiwilt, Aunt LIzzie and Father and Mother. John Richard Harrington was married to Rosa Mae Kelly on February 16, 1911 at Souris, Manitoba.

As the train was to leave around 3 pm we had to drive back about 1 1/2 miles to the station in time for Father to check out the boxes and us to check our luggage. We had about 1/2 hour to wait and during that time one of my uncles came in on the Winnipeg train and another from Brandon. So I said Good-bye to them. The train we took via Brandon had a few of our friends on it going to Brandon Bonspiel and we had a visit with them.

What we wore - Well Jacck had bought - a suit in the Fall before, dark gray tweed with greenish specks, and his overcoat was black Melton cloth with a sea otter fur collar, and a dark gray Fedora hat; He looked smart

Mother and I had made a cream cashmere dress, in a shirtwaist-style, with lovely white pearl buttons, and a fishu of real Nottingham lace that my Great Grandmother had made in England before coming to Canada. I couldn't wear that at 40 degrees, so I did wear my new Fall suit of dark green wool and a white lace blouse, also had green kid gloves, and a big dark green hat - with brim drooping on one side. It had a big tafetta silk rosette on the droopy side that held in place a 16 inch white ostrich feather that ran around the high side with the tip of the feather coming down behind my right ear. And over all I had to wear my black astrakan fur coat with the sable collar. Green was to me a very becoming color. I thought I looked smart too - in spite of the old saying "Married in green not fit to be seen."

Well Jack and I changed trains at Brandon , changed again at Regina about 1130 pm and got to Saskatoon about 6 am. No diners of sleepers on any of those trains so we got breakfast at the Empire Hotel and a room to freshen up. Left about 10:15 am and got to Laura about noon where we had dinner in the hotel. Jack got the team out of the livery barn, loaded up our luggage, and started south. It was bitterly cold and nothing much to see after we left the Laura sand hills. A big prarie fire had swept through that area about 6 years before so even the prairie brush was too small to see in the deep snow. We got to the Jim Rose place (after 4 pm) where Bob and family live now, and Jack got the other tema of horses he had left there. It had a sod house on it - with a 24 inch window. Mr & Mrs. Hedinger had been visiting there for the day so each of the 4 panes had a face looking out. They wanted us to stop but I held the horses until we got the extra team tied on. Then we started home. I could not see any trail but Jack did and kept telling me that the creek ran there, and the creek ran here, and that was the beginning of our land, etc. but I couldn't see anything but a wide expanse of white snow. And was surely glad when we stopped at the "Shack" at dark. Even the sod barn was covered with snow and I stepped up to my knees in snow when I got out of the sleigh. Jack had left plenty of wood and kindling so soon had a good fire started before he put the team away. What we had for supper I do not remember. Mother had given me cookies and cooked ham which I had in one suitcase so I suppose we ate some of that

And our home - In 1909 the 1st year Jack came to the homestead he had lumber hauled out from Tessid and built a building 12 x 16 feet on the field west of our trees and lived in that winter coming out in the spring to work. Next fall, knowing he was to get married, he had that building moved into the bend in the creak and built onto it another piece on the west, 12 x 10 feet for a bedroom. During that winter he lathed both parts and covered the inside with a bluish gray heavy building paper. Put a shelf in the bedroom to hang clothes under. And put up a 3 cornered cupboard in the living part on top of which he had the tea kettle the tea pot and coffee pot. As they were all chrome plated they looked lovely. He also built a movable wash stand that held the water pail on top and slop pail below. He had built a small stable, had several chairs, and the small, 4 holed "Gem" stove. He had bought a full dinner set of dishes, with light green scrolls, a supply of cutlery and pots. In fact was a very "sophisticated" bachelor. I thought everything was lovely. The barn was sod and big enough to hold the 4 horses, 1 cat and 1 rooster. That was what I came to on Feb 17th 1911.

Am I sorry? Not yet. And I don't think Jack is either. Does this answer a granddaughter's "curiosity"? It is being written on our 56th anniversary.


Added-on note by Mary Agnes. In answering Josephine's questions Mother didn't include a few things I remember our parents telling us. On the way home, before they got to Jim Rose's they had to drive through Billy Baird's yard. He heard them coming and made them a gift of 2 Plymouth Rock hens in a sack. That was the start of the flock we all remember. Another incident happened a few days after they arrived. Dad had to return to Laura to get Mother's trunk. A fierce blizzard kept him away for three days. It was the first time in her life that Mother had ever been alone. Of course she had 2 horses, a rooster, 2 hens, and a cat out in the sod barn.


EULOGY FOR ROSA MAE HARRINGTON, written by Mary Bryant, a daughter

"We did not want to loose her. This dear, dear, Mother: this woman. This Canadian pioneer whose life would trace the remarkable events of a new country. Whose wedding journey with Jack in horse-drawn cutter through stormy winter weather to his homestead has led to ALL the days we've had.

We knew her gentle firmeness, Fiath and faithfulness, Care, Love for each of us.

She gave us her intellect. Lively curiosity and many interests, in books in handycrafts, making things, A dress, a car curtain, a doile, a quilt, a delicious supper, friends, growing a garden, Finding wild flowers, pussy willows. She loved poetry-keeping favorites on the cupboard door Sometimes she sang - hymns she knew by heart.

Always eager to help- To hold a horse's head, tend the farm animals, Go for repairs, Take a lunch: Throughout the years "helping your Dad" was, perhaps, her greatest joy.

The presence of "Grannie" Palmer, white cloth on the Singer Treadle, A little cry in the bedroom, And another little Harrington had joined the family.

She had a rocking chari, a comfortable lap. She sang on wash days, while the rifce pudding baked, and she was thankful to have clothes to wash.

She grew with us in our learning- Suffered as we erred, Boasted of us all. Always worried in our tribulations but courageous in her own. Mother has come to tranquility surrounded by our sadness; Bud in a garden of loving memories.

And our home - In 1909 the 1st year Jack came to the homestead he had lumber hauled out from Tessid and built a building 12 x 16 feet on the field west of our trees and lived in that winter coming out in the spring to work. Next fall, knowing he was to get married, he had that building moved into the bend in the creak and built onto it another piece on the west, 12 x 10 feet for a bedroom. During that winter he lathed both parts and covered the inside with a bluish gray heavy building paper. Put a shelf in the bedroom to hang clothes under. And put up a 3 cornered cupboard in the living part on top of which he had the tea kettle the tea pot and coffee pot. As they were all chrome plated they looked lovely. He also built a movable wash stand that held the water pail on top and slop pail below. He had built a small stable, had several chairs, and the small, 4 holed "Gem" stove. He had bought a full dinner set of dishes, with light green scrolls, a supply of cutlery and pots. In fact was a very "sophisticated" bachelor. I thought everything was lovely. The barn was sod and big enough to hold the 4 horses, 1 cat and 1 rooster. That was what I came to on Feb 17th 1911.

The presence of "Grannie" Palmer, white cloth on the Singer Treadle, A little cry in the bedroom, And another little Harrington had joined the family.

She had a rocking chari, a comfortable lap. She sang on wash days, while the rifce pudding baked, and she was thankful to have clothes to wash.

She grew with us in our learning- Suffered as we erred, Boasted of us all. Always worried in our tribulations but courageous in her own. Mother has come to tranquility surrounded by our sadness; Bud in a garden of loving memories.

References
  1.   1911 Canadian Census.

    Rosa Mae Harrington
    married
    age 20
    birth date: March 1891
    birth place: Toronto, Ontario
    Spouse
    Tribal: Canadian
    Religion: Anglican
    Province: Saskatchewan
    District: Battleford
    District Number 208
    Sub-district: Markell Office Special
    sub-district number 38
    census year 1911
    page 30

    Spouse's name: John Richard Harrington
    birth date: Nov 1887
    age: 23
    birthplace: Ancastin, Ontario