Waterloo Region Generations
A record of the people of Waterloo Region, Ontario.

Nancy Gofton

Female 1822 - 1842  (20 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Nancy Gofton was born 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; was christened 16 Dec 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England (daughter of Samuel Gofton and Elizabeth Hall); died 30 May 1842; was buried , Wanner Mennonite Cemetery, Cambridge, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Name: Nancy Warner
    • Eby ID Number: 00126-7626.1
    • Residence: 1837, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada

    Nancy married George M. Warner 11 Jul 1837, North Dumfries Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada. George (son of John M. Wanner and Elizabeth Wecklin) was born 1816, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; died 6 Dec 1900, Listowel, Wallace Twp., Perth County, Ontario, Canada; was buried , Woodlawn Pioneer Cemetery, Listowel, Perth County, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Isaac Wanner was born 1838, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; died Yes, date unknown.
    2. Hannah Warner was born 11 Feb 1841, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; died 10 Apr 1922, Maryborough Twp., Wellington Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried , Woodlawn Pioneer Cemetery, Listowel, Perth County, Ontario, Canada.
    3. Samuel Wanner was born 6 Apr 1842, , Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; died Yes, date unknown.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Samuel Gofton was born Abt 1790, , England; died Jul, , Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; was buried , Unmarked grave, Waterloo County, Ontario.

    Other Events:

    • Eby ID Number: Waterloo-29894
    • Residence: 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1817, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Epidemic: 1834, Galt (Cambridge), Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; Cholera

    Notes:

    Family lore indicates that Samuel died coming from from a circus and died of cholera and was buried at the side of the road, His horse was brought to his widow.

    _____________

    From an account of the cholera epidemic in which Samuel perished is below.

    "The most striking and melancholy example within our knowledge of the generations and effects of the local infection occurred in this vicinity in the summer of 1834.

    On the 28th of July, 1834, Galt, a village on the Grand River, U. C. was visited by Showmen with a Menagerie. It was exhibited under an awning of canvass, nearly enclosed at the sides, and drawn together in a conical form almost to the top. The day was excessively warm, and the crown suffocating. The exhibition lasted about 3 hours. It is estimated that about 1000 persons were present, and that not less than 200 of them died of Cholera within ten days. The population from which the assembly at the exhibition was composed, in the Township in the vicinity of Galt, it supposed to be about seven thousand.

    The first case was in one of the Showmen, who sickened on that day, which was Monday. No other case occurred until the following Wednesday morning - on that day not less than thirty were attacked all of whom had been at the show - The greatest number of cases were on the Thursday and Friday following - but new cases occurred for several days. In speaking of an attack, we here allude to the time the patient supposed the attack commenced - the time he was "taken down" . The average length of time the disease lasted after this event was about sixteen hours.

    Four days previous to the exhibition of animals at Galt, two children of Mr. J. G., on the Governor's Road, 12 miles south east of Galt, were attacked with Cholera, one of which died. On the same day (24th July,) two cases of what we shall call second grade Cholera came under our care, being the first that occurred of that form of the disease within our knowledge that season - About this time also, many were affected with first grand symptoms, - but with the exception of the children alluded to we have not been able to learn that any case of fully developed Cholera occurred in this part of the province previous to the exhibition of animals at Galt, and for several days subsequent to that event, and in which more than two hundred were attacked with Cholera, all had been at that exhibition with only two or three exceptions. From the 6th of August the disease became more general and not confined to such as were at the Menagerie; but this time it appeared at Hamilton and Dundas - situations more low and marshy than Galt, and adjacent to Burlington Bay of the Head of Lake Ontario. From these facts it is evident that a deteriorated state of the atmosphere existed previous to the 28th July, yet the fatal catastrophe following the exhibition at Galt was mainly attributable to the highly vitiated, or imperfectly oxygenated air, produced by the numerous and sweltering crowd under the canvas - the ventilation being altogether inadequate for so numerous and crowded assemblage. It also appears that at Hamilton, Dundas and several other situations the Epidemic influence was the product of the more common causes of general infection, united with a local infection, which last is caused by the action of heat upon putrescent vegetable matter...."


    Elam Stimson, MD, The Cholera Beacon, being a treatise on the Epidemic Cholera: as it appeared in Upper Canada in 1832-4:

    Samuel married Elizabeth Hall 17 Apr 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England. Elizabeth was born 9 Jun 1794, , England; died 21 Sep 1853, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; was buried , Mount Hope Cemetery, Kitchener, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Elizabeth Hall was born 9 Jun 1794, , England; died 21 Sep 1853, Waterloo Twp., Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada; was buried , Mount Hope Cemetery, Kitchener, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • FindAGrave: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/125049012
    • Name: Elizabeth Gofton
    • Name: Elizabeth Willson
    • Eby ID Number: Waterloo-29895
    • Residence: 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1817, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England
    • Residence: 1835, Blenheim Twp., Oxford Co., Ontario, Canada

    Children:
    1. Samuel Thomas Gofton was born 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; was christened 31 Jul 1815, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; died 1877, , Oxford Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried , Washington Cemetery, Washington, Oxford Co., Ontario.
    2. John Gofton was christened 19 Aug 1817, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; died Yes, date unknown.
    3. Roger Gofton was born 10 Oct 1820, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; died 1 Jun 1874, Blenheim Twp., Oxford Co., Ontario, Canada; was buried , Plattsville Community Cemetery, Plattsville, Oxford Co., Ontario.
    4. 1. Nancy Gofton was born 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; was christened 16 Dec 1822, Sigglesthorne, , Yorkshire, England; died 30 May 1842; was buried , Wanner Mennonite Cemetery, Cambridge, Waterloo Region, Ontario, Canada.
    5. Robert G. Gofton was born 25 Feb 1832, Blenheim Twp., Oxford Co., Ontario, Canada; died 26 Feb 1888, Plattsville, Blenheim Twp., Oxford Co., Ontario, Canada.
    6. Charlotte Gofton was born 10 Sep 1832, , Ontario, Canada; died 5 Jul 1900, , Ontario, Canada; was buried , Plattsville Cemetery, Plattsville, Oxford Co., Ontario.