Showing posts with label McDonald. Show all posts
Showing posts with label McDonald. Show all posts

Sunday, August 12, 2007

MACDONALD in Helmsdale, Kildonan

I am quite new to genealogy and have quite a bit of patchy information about family. Anyway I have discovered my MacDonalds have may have originated from Helmsdale, Kildonan. My gggrandfather was James Charles MacDonald (McDonald) who was born in Helmsdale in 1843, married Elizabeth Tait. His daughter Mary Ann, who is my great grandmother, was born about 1867 in Aster Shetland Islands. I also have a list of a list 6 generations of names that are father to son only including the males in my side of the family no siblings. I am interested in finding more info on my MacDonalds.They emigrated to Southland New Zealand in 1865.

Wellington, New Zealand
(ref EM0013)

Saturday, August 11, 2007

MACKAY & MACDONALD

I have two main families in Sutherland County: MacKay and McDonald.
My first known ancestor in the MacKay family was William MacKay born ca 1789/90 and married Barbara Macpherson b ca 1792 d/o Robert Macpherson tenant in Islandrier who married Janet Calder d/o John Calder. William and Barbara lived at Alt na Calliche in Durness.
William and Barbara were evicted ca 1820 and made their way south to Rogart parish. Their children were: Neil, Robert, Alexander, John, William Barbara and Jesse.
Neil married Marion /Merrion Macdonald of Blarich and they lived at 24 Ardachue, Rogart parish. These are my ancestors. Alexander 1824-1902, married May/Mary Robb 1833-1911, their daughter Barbara who also married a MacKay, George, who was a porter at the Rogart railway station and their family emigrated to Edmonton, Alberta. Their daughter Barbara found me on the internet and now I have additional 'Mackay family' to add to the already rather large lot of people of Sutherland County.
For the McDonald Family, Peter Dillon of New Zealand is active in searching for (and finding) and correcting our past findings. He has a great website devoted to this family...... We still do not know who Ann(e) Ross was that married Angus McDonald sometime in or around 1771 nor Elisabeth Anderson who married their eldest son, Finlay/Phillip b 1774 and begat a rather large family.... The most recent mystery revolves around the baptism of some of the children: of Ann and Angus -- their first is listed as Margaret McDonald McCoirl christened 17 Nov 1771 in Auldebreck, Lairg parish. She died 12 Nov 1856 at Rhianbreck, Lairg and another daughter Catherina (Kett) McDonald or McCoirl was christened on 26 Sept 1787 in Brecklead, Lairg. Then Hugh McDonald or McCoril christened 19 April 1791 in Brecklead and died 23 June 1867 in Nova Scotia, Canada. The rest are plain McDonald. The McCoirl is a big mystery to everyone.....
Any ideas?
For now, best wishes
Stratford, Ontario, Canada

Friday, August 10, 2007

McDONALD & BAILLIE in Dornoch & Golspie

My current brick wall is Halket McDonald and Jane Baillie. The couple are recorded in both the Dornoch and Golspie Parish Records as being married 11 Dec 1830. Halket is listed as being from Skelbo Moor, Dornoch Parish and Jane is listed as being from Iron Hill/Kirkton, Golspie Parish. In 1831 they emigrated to Zorra Township, Oxford County, Upper Canada, as their first born, Angus, was born there. According to his headstone, Halket (called Hacket in Canada) died 10 Jul 1837 aged 36 years. My primary interest is in determining the parents and siblings of both Halket and Jane.
Larry McDonald
Ontario, Canada

(ref EM0016)

Sunday, August 5, 2007

ROSS, MACKAY, CLARKE & others


I am researching the ROSS family from Lairg, mainly, however, once a family starts being researched it enlarges and many other names come along too.

Jenelle's POLSON family is one that has come along into my family albeit on my Dad's side rather than my Mum's that has the ROSS family.

Some of the families on my Mum's side:
ROSS, Donald - Lairg, Sutherland
MacKAY, Janet - Lairg, Sutherland
CLARKE, John and Nicholas maiden surname Carruthers - Rosehall, Sutherland
ARMSTRONG, Joseph Gordon - Creich, Sutherland
DINGWALL, Kennethina, parents Niel and Merran maiden surname MacLeod - Durness, Sutherland
MacKAY, Alexander -
FRASER, Margaret, parents Charles and Jessie maiden surname ROSS - Scotland
MacDONALD, Annie, parents Murdoch and Henrietta maiden surname MATHERSON - Lairg, Sutherland

then on my Dad's side:
POLSON, Angus Sutherland - Marrel, Sutherland
MURRAY, Elspeth - Rogart, Sutherland


Jeni Simpson Christchurch, Aotearoa/New Zealand

Saturday, August 4, 2007

MACDONALD, MUNRO, MACKAY


This is a photo of my great grandmother, Hughina Munro, ms Macdonald, born 1852 in Durness, died 1951 in Golspie. She had 11 brothers and sisters and 10 children of her own, 3 sons who died in or as a result of WW1.
These are the folk I am researching:

MACDONALDS
MACDONALD, Archibald b. 1804? Ross and Cromarty? d. 1886, Durness m. MACKENZIE, Chirsty b. 1810 Assynt d. 1889 Durness - children:
MACDONALD, Johana born. Durness. 1831-1907
MACDONALD, Alexander born Durness 1834
MACDONALD, Mary born Durness 1834
MACDONALD, Isabella born Durness 1835
MACDONALD, Donald born Durness 1839
MACDONALD, Fairly born Durness 1841
MACDONALD, Kenneth born Durness 1843-1862
MACDONALD, Duncan born Durness 1844
MACDONALD, John born Durness 1848-1905
MACDONALD, Eric born Durness 1850-1862
MACDONALD, Hughina born Durness 1852-1951 (g.grandmother)
MACDONALD, Mary Belle born Durness 1855
Any information on Archibald Macdonald b. 1804 (differing dob and place of birth - so very hard to track down)

MUNRO
MUNRO, Donald b. 1807 Tongue, Sutherland d. 1884 married MACKENZIE, Jannet (Jessie) b. 1815 Durness d. 1909 Casheldhu - children:
MUNRO, Margaret b. 1841 d 1912 Casheldhu
MUNRO, Eslpie b. Durness 1843
MUNRO, William b. 1844 Durness d. 1894 Golspie (g.grandfather)
MUNRO, Jemima b. 1847
MUNRO, Dolina b. 1851
MUNRO, Isabella b. 1853
MUNRO, Kennethina b. 1857
MUNRO, William b.1844 m. 1873 MACDONALD, Hughina b. 1852 Durness d. 1851 Golspie - children:

MUNRO, Christina Isabella b. 1873 Tongue
MUNRO, Angusina b. 1876 Cromarty
MUNRO, Donald b. 1877 Urquhart, Ross and Cromarty (Saskatchewan? )
MUNRO, Jessie Mackenzie b. 1880 Durness
MUNRO, Archibald b. 1881 Durness d. 1923 Chicago, Ill. USA
MUNRO, Eppie b. 1884 Golspie
MUNRO, Mary b. 1886 Golspie d. 1952 Golspie (grandmother)
MUNRO, Duncan b. 1888 Golspie d. 1947 d. 1947 Crosby, ND. USA
MUNRO, William b. 1891 Tain d. 1916 d. France
MUNRO, John Alexander b. 1893 Golspie d. 1917 d. FranceSearching for more info. on
MUNRO, Archibald b. 1881 and
MUNRO, Donald b. 1877

MACKAY
MACKAY, Donald b. 1811 m. 11 Jun 1836 to GORDON, Ann
MACKAY, William (Ploughman at Meikle Creich, Bonar-1880) Birth: 1845 Death: 1911 Golspie Marriage: 25 May, 1880 to MACPHERSON, Jane
MACPHERSON, Duncan b. 1805 in Rogart m. MACKAY, Ann b. 1807 in Golspie
MACPHERSON, Jane b. 1851 (Spinster, Merchant's Daughter, Pittentrail, Rogart - 1880)MACKAY, William b. 1845 and MACPHERSON, Jane b. 1851children:
MACKAY, Ann b.1881 Golspie (no info)
MACKAY, Donald Alexander b. 11 Feb. 1883 Golspie
MACKAY, Duncan b.1885 Golspie d.1961 Golspie (grandfather)
MACKAY, William George b. 1887 Golspie d. 1914-18 France?
MACKAY, John Sturrock b. 13 May, 1889 Golspie d. 1 Apr. 1890
MACKAY, John Sturrock b. 1892 (Sep.1959 lived at 19 Victoria Street, St. Catherine's, Ontario) (need info)
MACKAY, Robert Soutar b. 1894 Golspie d. Mar. 1898

Any connection to any of the above would be great.
Golspie

MACKAY, MACDONALD, MACLEOD, Rogart

Still seeking any info or connection for Robert MacKay b.1734 in Rogart (Possible parents :Father: Hugh MACKAY Mother: Janet MACDONALD) married Barbara MacLeod (no info) October 26, 1778 (in New York).

After serving as a soldier in the 42nd Regiment during the Rev. War, he came to New Brunswick, Canada in 1783 as a Loyalist and settled on Nashwaak River, Saint Marys Parish, York County, New Brunswick, and raised four sons.

Tammy McKay
New Brunswick, Canada

SIMPSON, TOUGH, MACDONALD, MACKAY in Eddrachillis, Lairg & Rogart

Hello, These are the folks and places that I'm researching.

The TOUGH line originated from Stirling - William TOUGH (b.1794 d.1880) m. Lillias CULLEN (b. c1793 d. 1880).
The SIMPSON line came to Scourie, Eddrachillis from Tain, Ross & Cromarty - Alexander SIMPSON (b. c1774 d.1863); Fa: Alexander SIMPSON m. Elizabeth CLARKE (b. c1775 d.1855; parents were Alexander CLARKE and Elizabeth ROSS).
John SIMPSON, (b.1808 d.1888; Tain, Ross and Cromarty and Eddrachillis) was the son of Alexander SIMPSON and Elizabeth CLARKE. He married Ann Cullen TOUGH (b. ~ 1824 Gargunnock, Stirling; d. 1903 Nairn). Their children include John SIMPSON (b. 12 May 1853; Scourie, d. 1918 Balmoral, Manitoba, Canada) who married Catherine MACDONALD (b. 1853 m.10 Feb 1882; Scourie, d. 1932 Balmoral, Manitoba, Canada).
The MACDONALD/MACKAY line from Lairg (Torroble) Donald MACDONALD (?--bef. 1851) m. Marion MACKAY (b. ~ 1778 d.1870; Fa: William MACKAY, Mo: Jane MATHESON).
Children: Donald (b. ~ 1803 d.1888), William (b.~ 1805 d.1880) and Jane (b. ~ 1805 d.1891).
I'm currently trying to determine when/where Donald MACDONALD died, I have not been able to locate this family definitively on the 1841 census. His wife is listed in the 1851 Census (house no. 23; Torroble, Parish of Lairg) as a widow and lotter.
Alexander MACKAY (b. ~ 1779 d.1872 East Langwell, Rogart; Fa.Alexander, Mo: Christina) m. Catharine MACKAY (b. 1788 d.1866; Fa.William).
Children include Merran Mackay (b. 1816 (Langwell, Rogart) d. 1865(Scourie) who married Donald MACDONALD (b. 1803 (Lairg) d.1888(Scourie), son of Donald MACDONALD above).
Any information on connections to these families would be welcome.
Thanks
Donna Marie Bilkovic
Virginia, USA

CAMPBELL in Lairg & MACNAB in Creich

My interests are starting with my 4th great grandparents, Alexander Campbell born 1768 Lairg, son of Alexander Campbell married Christian Gray, born c1774 Lairg, daughter of Angus Gray & Ann Sutherland. Their children married into the following families.Bethune, MacKay, Ross, McDonald (from Rogart).

Also researching my 2nd x great grandmothers family, McNab. Ellen McNab born 1819 Creich, daughter of Kenneth McNab & Catherine Calder.
Regards
Lorraine Weaver
Cairns, Queensland, Australia

SUTHERLAND, MACDONALD in Fishertown, Golspie


David SUTHERLAND, Fishertown, Golspy, a Gaelic-speaking seaman, through John SUTHERLAND, christened in Golpie, 01 May 1748, through Donald "Davy" SUTHERLAND d. pre-1866, Fisherman.

Anne MACDONALD b. 1780 d. 02 October 1866, Fishertown, Golspie through James SUTHERLAND b. 1812, Fishertown, Golspie d. 25 August 1892, Age: 80 m. 25 Nov 1836 to Elizabeth MACKAY b. 20 July 1817, Embo, Dornoch d. 1898 dau of Alexander MACKAY, Embo, Dornoch & Anne SUTHERLAND, Embo, Dornoch, through James SUTHERLAND b. 1858 Fishertown, Golspie m. 10 October 1879 Golspie, to Mary MACRAE, Fishertown, Golspie b. 26 January 1858, Fishertown, Golspie d. 27 January 1937, Fishertown, Golspie

In the 1841 Census for Scotland, James SUTHERLAND and his wife, Elizabeth MACKAY [b. Embo, Dornoch] lived on Shore Street, Fishertown, Golspie. They had one of the original cottages built according to plans laid out by the Countess of Sutherland for a village based on the "Street of the Fishertown" in the early 1800's. The cottages were 50 feet by 20 feet with a croft of 3/4 of an acre. The men built their own cottages and had a 99 year lease on the land. This cottage on Shore Street was tenanted by James and Elizabeth until their deaths.

William MACRAE, b. Fishertown, Golspie, Sutherlandshire,, m 31 May 1792, Golspie, to Sarah SUTHERLAND - Children of William and Sarah: 4 (known)

through Robert MACRAE [3rd child of 4 known] b. 24 May 1806, Fishertown, Golspie m 04 March 1830, Golspie, to Jane URQUHART b. Brora, Parish of Clyne, Children of Robert and Jane: 4 (known)

through William MACRAE [2nd child of 4 known] b. 05 June 1832, Fishertown, Golspie, m. March 1853, Fishertown, Golspie to Jane SUTHERLAND b. 14 April 1832/1835-36, Fishertown, Golspie - Children of William and Jane: 5

through Mary MACRAE b. 26 January 1858, Fishertown, Golspie d. 27 January 1937, Fishertown, Golspie m. 10 October 1879, Fishertown, Golspie to James SUTHERLAND b. 04 February 1856, Fishertown, Golspie d. 30 October 1931, Fishertown, Golspie Children of Mary and James: 8

through Williamina SUTHERLAND [4th of 8 children] b. 08 July 1887, Fishertown, Golspie d. 13 February 1959, Los Angeles, CA m. 17 July 1913, Pittsburgh, PA to Henry Brown ANDERSON b. 09 October 1885, Evanton, Kiltearn, Scotland, son of William ANDERSON, Sawmiller, [whose family were originally crofters in Clyne, Scotland] and Jane BROWN, Bothwell/Glasgow, Scotland[dau of John BROWN, 18 May 1808 Badnellan/Clyne & Christine MCLEOD, 1820 Badnellan, Clyne] d. 02 January 1920 Pittsburgh, PA, Children of Williamina and Henry: 3

Research by Harriet Brown Anderson, 1918-1997 [Corrections to Sutherland tree by Morag Mackay Sutherland and Roland Johnson]

Photograph above shows part of Shore Street, Golspie

Below is my aunt's story:


Narrative by Harriet Brown Anderson:
My mother, Williamina Sutherland, and her cousin, Christine Sutherland, left Golspie as teenagers and went to Edinburgh to look for work. Mother became a house maid/governess until, in 1907, she had earned enough money for her passage to America. She, her brother Aleck, and Christine sailed from Glasgow on the S.S. Caledonia, April 6, 1907. They entered the United States through Ellis Island on April 15, 1907. After being processed, they were put directly aboard a train for Youngstown, Ohio, where their sponsor lived. My mother went to work as a governess for the Hamilton family. Their daughter, Margaret, became a noted concert pianist. When the Hamilton's moved to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania to further their daughter's music education, they took my mother with them.

In 1909, Henry (Harry) Anderson, who was to become my father, followed Williamina to Pittsburgh. They had met while she was in Edinburgh and he was attending Edinburgh College of Agriculture. [And therein lays a whole other story...]. He and my mother were married on July 17, 1913 in Pittsburgh and subsequently became naturalized citizens there. They had three children. In1920, when I was just a year and a half old, my father passed away after he was involved in a streetcar accident with complications from spinal meningitis. My mother was left to support us three small children. She was advised to use the money my father left her and buy a boarding house. This was a catastrophe! She was too soft-hearted to insist on the rent from various tenants with endless hard luck stories. Instead of making money, she started using what was left of her savings. Her parents wanted us to come to Golspie to live with them. So after three years of trying to make a go of it on her own, Mother sold our house and returned to Golspie with us in 1923.

One of the stories told about our trip was that in Glasgow, she went into a store to buy some crackers for my brother, my sister and I to eat on the long trip north. The storekeeper looked at her rather peculiarly and said "Crackers?" She said "Yes, for the youngsters." He went off to the back of the store with a puzzled look and shortly returned with a box of firecrackers. Mother really had to laugh. She had forgotten that in Scotland, they call crackers for eating "biscuits." I guess the storekeeper wondered what her children were going to do with firecrackers on the train!


In Golspie, she had to depend on her parents for support since she could find no employment. We attended the same elementary school that all the Sutherland children had attended. We had the same teacher our mother had - Miss Sellars. Discipline was very strict in the school. If you were not obedient, the teacher would go out and get a switch from the tree and use it across your knuckles. On the other hand, if you did something that really pleased her, she always had a "sweetie" (a piece of candy) for you.

The people of the town were very religious and Sunday was a complete day of rest. They attended morning and evening church services. The evening service was conducted in Gaelic. No cooking was done on Sunday, so a pot of broth (a thick soup) was made on Saturday and kept heated for Sunday lunch and dinner. In those days, drinking water was drawn from the town pump. Sunday's water had to be drawn on Saturday. We children slept upstairs, while our grandparents had their bedroom on the first floor. One Sunday morning, we woke up early and decided to play the gramophone - which had to be wound up with a crank. Grandfather was so shocked that we would play records on a Sunday that he took the crank from the machine and never let us have it again!

In 1924, after ten months in Golspie, my mother decided she would return to America. So with three children, three trunks, twenty dollars and tickets to Pittsburgh, she landed in New York. We were met by her sister, Jean, who helped us get back to Pittsburgh. Mother immediately went out and found herself a job after registering us in Liberty Elementary School. As her financial condition improved, she looked for a place with a little more room. It was hard to find a reasonable place to live as no one wanted to rent to a widow with three children. Finally, she found a place where the people rented her two rooms on the third floor of a house. We stayed here a couple of months. Then she heard of a small house on a street that was just one block long, Selma Street. The house had a large kitchen and a livingroom with a fireplace on the first floor, and a large and a small bedroom on the second floor. The house had no electricity. Gas was used for lighting as well as for heating. The street was a true cross-section of America's melting pot, with families of Swedish, English, Irish, German, Scottish, Italian and African roots. The faiths represented were just as diverse. We were all poor, but every one of the parents had great pride in wanting their children to be American.

Mother went out and did day work as a domestic to earn a living. She worked for some of the wealthiest families in the country - Mellons, Scaifes, and D.M. Clemson, who was a partner of Andrew Carnegie. (When Mr. Clemson died, he left her a small amount in his will. Coincidentally, this was the first estate my father had worked for as a landscape gardener when he came from Scotland.) As we children grew, our family prospered and kept moving to better homes. We eventually lived in a duplex on Columbo Street across the street from the site where she and Henry Anderson had lived when my brother, their first child, was born.

In the late 1940s, my Mother, my sister and I moved to California because of Mother's health. She worked as a cook for some of the famous people of Beverly Hills: Tom May of the May Company, Jack Warner the movie producer, Gary Cooper the movie star, and the Battsons--owners of Union Oil Company. Eventually she worked as a housekeeper for Jose Iturbi, the world famous pianist. She was still working part-time for Mr. Iturbi when she passed away. She is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery in Glendale near the Wee Kirk-o-the-Heather in the section known as Everlasting Love...
Narrative by Harriet Brown Anderson, 1987 [1918-1997]
Edited by her niece, Carole E. Anderson



Friday, August 3, 2007

MACDONALDS of Newland & Armadale, Farr


William MacDonald of Newland, Farr
was born about 1766 according to age listed on tombstone in South Ronaldsay, Orkney, place unknown. The 1821 and 1841 census of South Ronaldsay both list him as born out of County (Orkney). He married Elizabeth MacKay who also is only listed on census above and again states born out of County (Orkney). She was born about 1770.

They are found on the 1811 Census of Newland, Sutherland with William MacDonald as head of household and 1 male, 6 females in house. Their children all state they are born in Farr, Sutherland on later censuses.

1. John MacDonald born about 1791, Farr, died April 3, 1868, Kirtomy, Farr - married Margaret MacDonald of Armadale, Farr (my direct line) - photograph on left shows their daughter Jane, my 3 x great grandmother, born June 8, 1817 at Pouleriscaig, Farr.

2. Dorothy MacDonald born about 1796, Farr, died April 13, 1863, Burray, Orkney, she married William Hossack

3. Ann MacDonald born about 1797, Farr, died August 13, 1845, Burray, married James MacDonald of the 93rd regiment

4. Isabella MacDonald born about 1803, Farr, died November 6, 1875, Bruntland, Burray, married James Groundwater

5. Barbara MacDonald born about 1805, Farr, died November 29, 1883, Burray married James Duncan

6. Margaret MacDonald born about 1807, Farr, died March 17, 1886, Lochside, Burray, Orkney, she married John Guthrie

A written history of this family states that all of the above spoke only Gaelic - no English. A family history written by one the daughters above states that the family were Glencoe MacDonald's and moved north as the years went on till they finally ended up in the Orkney, that they had lived in Strathhalladale (Farr) and were cleared three times till they landed at Newland. Finally in 1820 went to the Orkney Islands to live with no croft to go to - had to live in a boat on the bay until they could acquire one.

Any records or verification of the removals of William MacDonald in Strathhalladale would be greatly appreciated.

Thomas MacDonald of Armadale
Thomas MacDonald, born circa 1750, unknown where, died September 15, 1821 at Armadale, Farr. He married Mary Bain who was probably Mary MacKay alias Bain. She is listed in one parish record as Mary MacKay born circa 1757. Her burial stone says Farr. Thomas is listed being with Captain George Sutherland Company which was commanded about August 26, 1779 and disbanded at Fort George in 1783. the births of his children suggest that this was indeed a fact.

Mary emigrated with some of her children to Canada, leaving Armadale March 22, 1836. She is buried in Brucefield, Tuckersmith, Ontario in the MacDonald graveyard, Native of Farr, Sutherland died July 20, 1840.

Their children:

Barbara MacDonald born circa 1775 - place unknown but probably Portskerra, census data says Farr, Sutherland, died August 8, 1860, in Armadale, married George MacKay of Armadale

2. George MacDonald born about 1777, probably Portskerra, died October 27, 1861 at Brucefield, Tuckersmith, Ontario - no suggestion that he was ever married, gravestone says Native of Farr, Sutherland

3. Donald MacDonald, listed as baptized to Thomas and Mary in 1784, of Portskerra, nothing has ever been found on this man

4. Mary MacDonald, supposed twin to Donald, baptized at the same time in 1784 of Portskerra, died December 18, 1872 in Brucefield, Tuckersmith, Ontario, she was married to Hugh MacKay alias McHouston of Armadale

5. John MacDonald born about 1785 probably Portskerra, died in 1831 at Armadale, he was married to Jane Sinclair of Brubster, Caithness

6. Margaret MacDonald born about 1786 at Portskerra, baptism is registered, died sometime between 1845 and 1849 at Kirtomy, Farr, she married John MacDonald son of William of Newland (my direct line)

7. Rupart MacDonald born 1788 Portskerra , baptism is registered, unknown death, married in July, 1835 in Stanley twp, Ontario to Isabella MacDonald, he must have left prior to the rest of the family, seemed to be a colourful character

8. Isabell MacDonald born about 1791 probably Portskerra, unknown death, married to John Munro, they lived in Pouleriscaig, seems they immigrated with rest of family about 1836 but have not been seen since Sutherland, children all were in Ontario

9. Colin MacDonald born August 1792 probably Portskerra, his military papers say he was born near Thurso, at Farr, Caithness, he joined the 79th regiment in May, 1811, later in 1835 became Town Major of Montreal, later in the 1850's he joined the 50th regiment, he died January 9, 1862 in Montreal, he was responsible for bringing most of the family to Canada, including my 3 x grandmother Jane MacDonald, daughter to John and Margaret, he married Elizabeth Gillies

10. Sutherland MacDonald born 1793 probably Portskerra, died Brucefield, Tuckersmith, Ontario, June 7, 1863. Sutherland I dont believe ever married until he came to Ontario, very late in life (1858) to Ann McMillan 40 years his junior, he is buried at the MacDonald graveyard with his mother and brother at Brucefield, Tuckersmith, Native of Farr, Sutherland

There are two more children I am suspect, one is Ann MacDonald who married David Sinclair at Goderich, Ontario in 1843, the witness to the marriage was Sutherland MacDonald, have not found this couple after that and another suspect child is one Peter MacDonald, who's land the MacDonald graveyard is on. He moved/died prior to census that survived for the area, locate him in 1842 there, found children in the church records and his marriage.... ....but prior to 1860 he disappears without trace, he married Ann MacKenzie in 1841 and had at least four children, one male listed in the 1842 assesment, one found in a marriage record by name of Daniel (his children born in Kincardine area), then two baptisms, Elizabeth born Oct 8, 1850, Brucefield, and James MacDonald born April 20, 1858. I am not sure that Peter is a son to Thomas and Mary - he continues to be a huge brick wall.

Happy to share information and to add to it!