Maw, Robert[1]
1848 - 1885 (36 years) Has 20 ancestors and one descendant in this family tree.Set As Default Person
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Relationship with Living Birth Dec 1848 Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Gender Male Census Jan 1852 (3 years) Whitby, , Ontario, Canada [2] - Name: Robert Maw Gender: Male Age: 2 Estimated Birth Year: 1849 Birthplace: Upper Canada Province: Canada West (Ontario) District: Ontario County District Number: 25 Sub-District: Whitby Sub-District Number: 244 Page Number: 297 Line Number: 35 Library and Archives Canada Film Number: C_11742
Census 14 Jan 1861 (12 years) West Whitby, Ontario, Ontario, Canada [3] - Name: Robert Maw Event: Census Event Date: 1861 Event Place: West Whitby, Ontario, Ontario, Canada Enumeration District: 04 Gender: Male Age: 12 Marital Status: Single Religion: C Of E Birthplace: U C Estimated Birth Year: 1849 Sheet Number: 33 Line Number: 15 Library and Archives Canada Film Number: C-1058-1059 Film Number: 2435932 Digital Folder Number: 4391565 Image Number: 00615
_UID 00D0B9CE7F6941B8BF8C38298771D1D6830D Death 13 Nov 1885 Brooklin, Durham, Ontario, Canada Patriarch & Matriarch Maw, Christopher
b. Abt 1649, Middleton By Pickering,, Yorkshire, England
d. Yes, date unknown (4 x Great Grandfather)
Snowdon, Isabella
b. Est 1778
d. Yes, date unknown (Grandmother)Headstones Submit Headstone Photo Person ID I11986 The Family Maw Last Modified 25 Oct 2017
Father Maw, William
b. Abt 1810, Hackness, , Yorkshire, England
d. 21 Nov 1872, Whitby, , Ontario, Canada (Age 62 years)Mother Sadler, Ester
b. Abt 1810, England
d. 6 May 1903, West Whitby, Ontario, Ontario, Canada (Age 93 years)Marriage 25 Nov 1835 Pickering, Ontario, Ontario, Canada Age at Marriage He : ~ 25 years and 11 months - She : ~ 25 years and 11 months. Family ID F2360 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Waring, Abigail Jane
b. 2 Oct 1849, Hallowell, Prince Edward, Ontario, Canada
d. 27 Dec 1884, Brooklin, Durham, Ontario, Canada (Age 35 years)Marriage 9 Jun 1880 Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Age at Marriage He : 31 years and 6 months - She : 30 years and 8 months. Children 1. Maw, Abbie Lewella
b. 16 Dec 1884, Whitby, , Ontario, Canada
d. Yes, date unknownFamily ID F1083 Group Sheet | Family Chart Last Modified 25 Oct 2017
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Event Map Click to display Birth - Dec 1848 - Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Census - Jan 1852 - Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Census - 14 Jan 1861 - West Whitby, Ontario, Ontario, Canada Marriage - 9 Jun 1880 - Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Child - Maw, Abbie Lewella - 16 Dec 1884 - Whitby, , Ontario, Canada Death - 13 Nov 1885 - Brooklin, Durham, Ontario, Canada = Link to Google Earth Pin Legend
Sources - [S171] The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, International Genealogical Index(R), (Copyright (c) 1980, 2002).
- [S192] Database and images, FamilySearch (www.familysearch.org), 1851 Canadian Census (January 12, 1852), (The census for 1851 was conducted in January 1852. The completed forms were sent to the Board of Registration and Statistics and later to the Department of Agriculture. Enumeration was by census district. Census districts were voting districts, not counties, although most have the same names as counties. For the most part, census districts were synonymous with cities and counties, and subdistricts were synonymous with towns, townships, and city wards. Villages, small towns, and parishes were generally enumerated as part of the township in which they were located. Census district and county boundaries were not always the same.), Library and Archives Canada Film Number: C_11728 (Reliability: 3).
- [S194] Canada Board of Registration and Statistics. Census page. From FamilySearch Internet (www.familysearch.org), 1861 Canadian Census (January 14, 1861), (The Census contains the 1861 census for the province of Ontario. At this time Ontario was not yet part of the Dominion of Canada, but was called Canada West. The census taker took the information on the census day starting January 14, 1861. Census takers were asked to record information about all those who were in each household on the census day. A census taker might have visited a house on a later date, but the information he collected was supposed to be about the people who were in the house on the census day. Enumeration was by census district. Census districts were voting districts, not counties, although most have the same names as counties. For the most part, census districts were synonymous with cities and counties, and sub districts were synonymous with towns, townships, and city wards. Villages, small towns, and parishes were generally enumerated as part of the township in which they were located. Census district and county boundaries were not always the same and there were many variations from location to location.).