Cobourg and District Images

A letter to Mrs. M.R. Sprague from Miss Lorna D. Fraser

Description
Media Type
Text
Item Type
Photographs
Description
A letter to Mrs. M.R. Sprague from Miss Lorna D. Fraser
Source: Unknown
Acquired: January 2008
Date of Publication
1835
Subject(s)
Local identifier
Stanton-08-05
Language of Item
English
Geographic Coverage
  • Ontario, Canada
    Latitude: 43.95977 Longitude: -78.16515
Copyright Statement
Copyright status unknown. Responsibility for determining the copyright status and any use rests exclusively with the user.
Contact
Cobourg Public Library
Email:info@cobourg.library.on.ca
Website:
Agency street/mail address:

200 Ontario Street, Cobourg, ON K9A 5P4

Full Text
Victoria University Library
Toronto, Canada

Office of the Librarian
July 8th, 1974

Mrs. M. R. Sprague
77-HavelocK Street
Cobourg, Ontario

Dear Mrs. Sprague:

Henry Bird Steinhauer was an Ojibway Indian, born in 1820 near Rama on Lake Couchiching. His original name is apparently not known, but at a very early age he attended a Methodist school at the Credit Mission and travelled as a member of a boys' choir in the United States where a Mr. Steinhauer of Philadelphia undertook to sponsor his education provided he adopted the Steinhauer name. Henry Steinhauer attended Upper Canada Academy in Cobourg from about 1835 to 1837 and then taught school in connection with the Alderville Mission. In 1840 he set out with Rev. James Evans for the West, remaining for several years at Lac La Pluie before rejoining Evans at Norway House where he stayed until 1850. He was ordained at the Lon0on Conference of 1855 and was sent to Lac La Biche and later to Whitefish, Alberta. He married a Cree, and among his children were two sons, Robert Bird and Egerton Ryerson, both of whom became Methodist ministers [and a daughter who married John McDougall]. He died in 1884.


Robert Bird Steinhauer was born February 16, 1861 and, with his brother Egerton, came to Cobourg to be educated. He received his B.A. degree from Victoria in 1887 (in the same class as C.W. Brown, the father of your friend, Mrs. Morton). He was apparently a popular student, winning the Senior Stick. He also preached for many years at Whitefish. In 1937 Victoria conferred upon him an honorary D.D. degree. He died in July, 1941. He was, I understand, the father of the new Lieutenant-Governor of Albert.


This information, I think, confirms the stories that you and Mrs. Morton recall.


Yours sincerely,
(Miss) Lorna D. Fraser
Librarian
Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy