The Resurrectionist of Ainleyville: Body Snatching in 19th Century Brussels

The Resurrectionist of Ainleyville: Body Snatching in 19th Century Brussels

Written by Sinead Cox, Curator of Engagement & Dialogue 

Panic in Ainleyville 

“AINLEYVILLE: EXCITING CHASE AFTER A RESURRECTIONIST,” reads an intriguing headline from the May 5, 1864 Huron Signal: “The Miscreant Overhauled and the ‘body’ captured!” After no doubt succeeding in capturing its reader’s full attention, the cheeky tale of the so-called ‘resurrectionist’ (grave robber) unfolds as follows: a group of young men raucously depart an Ainleyville tavern where they had been discussing current politics with whiskey and rye. Passing a burial ground, they spot a suspicious figure carrying a heavy sack, and quickly identify him as a scoundrel and “one of the bloody body snatchers!” The men proceed to pursue and tackle the suspected fiend, and wrestle the sack away from him:  

The bag was opened by excited fingers, and what was the sight that met the eyes stretched wide open to take in a horror? Not a mutilated, outraged human body, but a lot of most harmless looking bran, which the supposed resurrectionist had borrowed from a neighbor.  

The punchline of the piece is that the vindicated ‘resurrectionist’ promised his assailants not to tell anyone about this embarrassing encounter, “but he made no promise against writing.” (i) 

Whether or not this exact sequence of events ever happened, the newspaper’s uncredited account satirizes a perceived preoccupation with “body raising” that afflicted residents of Ainleyville in the spring of 1864: a scare that was not quite as outlandish as the Signal’s mockery may suggest. The story itself acknowledges that before their misadventure, the excitable young men were discussing, “the recent cases of body snatching…very naturally.”  Natural because, only a few months prior, a very real ‘body snatcher’ had admitted to illegally disinterring the remains of a young woman from the Methodist New Connexion Cemetery (today Brussels Cemetery).  

While the Huron Signal could merrily recount the apprehension of a bran resurrectionist, the same paper had gravely (no pun intended) condemned this actual incident as a “hideous offence.” (ii)  The alleged grave robber was 22-year-old Edward Hudson (also spelled Hotson), originally of Markham. (iii) Committed to the Huron Gaol on March 6, 1864, the registry described him as 5 ft 7 inches tall, with blue eyes and dark brown hair. This record mentions only the commonplace crime of “trespass,” but his given profession provides a motive for something more lurid: he was a medical student. 

The Progress of Science vs. the Sanctity of the Grave 

The Grand Jury at Edward Hudson’s eventual trial would be reminded of the seriousness of his offence, and that “it be might well be for the ‘progress of science,’ but that progress was not to be aided by sacrilege.” (iv) Grave-robbing (either by ‘resurrectionists’ for-hire or medical practitioners themselves) was a longstanding practice in medicine because of a seemingly unresolvable paradox: training doctors to save lives and advances in medical science both required human cadavers, but there was no adequate supply of consenting donors to bequeath those bodies. Prevailing social norms and tradition meant that most 19th-century Canadians (v) preferred prompt burial with religious rites. Two decades before Ainleyville’s body snatching scare, the controversial 1843 Anatomy Bill for the United Canadas set out to provide medical schools with legal cadavers. It allocated the remains of those who died “publicly exposed” or in public institutions like gaols or hospitals if they were not claimed by friends or family. (vi)  

Dr. William “Tiger” Dunlop, then Huron’s Member of the Legislative Assembly and himself a medical doctor, argued firmly in favour of the 1843 Bill against those who feared it would deny a ‘decent’ burial to vulnerable groups like new immigrants. He acknowledged that “there is a prejudice all over the world, a strong prejudice in favour of the sanctity of the grave…but he would not have it obstruct the acquisition of anatomical knowledge, for without it even a physician may do more harm than good.” During debates, he also raised the spectre of the notorious Burke & Hare case in Scotland, wherein the perpetrators had resorted to murder to supply valuable corpses. Dunlop viewed the matter pragmatically, arguing that since medical students would always need cadavers to learn, the graves of the poor would be pilfered regardless of any law. He owned that he himself had participated in grave-robbing excursions at least 70 times in the United Kingdom:  

A dissecting room was a dirty sight to a stranger, more so because [it] was not under legal protection. The work has to be done by stealth, in a hurry, and by night. [Dr. Dunlop] had carried bodies in baskets and [re]buried them in a ploughed field to escape detection. But place these [medical] schools under law, and these things will cease.  

Dr. Dunlop proclaimed he would not object to his own corpse being dissected after death (but any visitor to his tomb at Gairbraid north of Goderich will know this did not happen). (vii) 

The passing of the 1843 bill provided medical schools with cadavers in a manner that was conveniently out-of-sight and out-of-mind for those not facing extreme poverty, homelessness or institutionalization. Illegal exhumations persisted in the coming decades, however, confronting wider Canadian society with the fact that the essential paradox of societal needs versus norms had never actually been resolved.   

Men Pretending to be Doctors   

A new and developing settler community, Ainleyville, was still a relatively remote outpost in the 1860s, situated on the border of Morris and Grey Townships. Part of the amalgamated municipality of Huron East today, the village was not officially renamed Brussels until 1872 to align with its train station. A rural community located a great distance from any medical college would seem an unlikely place to encounter a black market for cadavers. When a grisly “trail of blood” leading from a Thornhill churchyard revealed the emptied grave of a man killed in a farm accident in 1861 for example, the York Herald confidently predicted that the culprits would be found in nearby Toronto. (viii) Referring to the 1864 case in Huron County, the Signal lamented that stealing bodies from their graves, “has been too much in vogue in large cities, but is now first heard of here.” (ix) 

Although there was no anatomy school in Huron County, the northeast part of the county had several medical men practicing at the time. Ainleyville’s Dr. Isaac J. Hawks was initially co-accused alongside Edward Hudson for the crime of “disinterring a dead body” in March, 1864, although he was not ultimately jailed. According to newspaper accounts, Hudson lived with Hawks at the time of the crime and worked in his drug store. (x) Remembered as Brussels’ first doctor, Dr. Hawks was also an enterprising businessman. In addition to his services as a physician and surgeon, the County employed him as coroner in the townships of Grey and Morris during the early 1860s, and he owned a general store in Bodmin. (xi) Both Edward Hudson “medical student” and Dr. Isaac J. Hawks, M.D. appear in the 1863/1864 County of Huron gazetteer as professionals in Ainleyville, implying that Hawks provided medical services with a license, and Hudson without. (xii)  

A so-called ‘indignation meeting’ at Ainleyville two years earlier had publicly exposed, though, that the credentials of many rural physicians with that reassuring “Dr.” prefix fell short of a completed university degree or medical license. Angry citizens had convened in 1862 after Dr.  A. Lenders had used his powers as coroner to delay a Morrisdale man’s funeral and burial. (xiii) Lenders insisted on holding an inquest, despite colleagues Dr. Hawks and Dr. Caw’s preceding assessment that it was a straightforward death from natural causes. The assembled residents suspected that Dr. Lenders had callously offended “the feelings of the bereaved” for a petty rivalry. The secretary for the meeting referred to Lenders as a “medical student” and concluded:   

The would be Dr. (Lenders) raised the whole excitement in the community because he wished to vent his spleen on the other two medical gentlemen, who unfortunately have no license, and the inconsistency of the thing is, he is said to have none himself…Men pretending to be Doctors have carried the thing too far in this part. We are daily trampled on by charlatans. There is a great need for reform…But we want no more quacks. (xiv)  

With the medical education of so many practitioners allegedly incomplete, it is not difficult to imagine that informal lessons in anatomy or surgery were taking place in Morris and Grey Townships, requiring the illicit purchase of cadavers.  The questionable legality of medical practice generally around Ainleyville in the 1860s certainly set the scene for the graverobbing scandal to come.   

The Queen Vs. Edward Hudson 

On the morning of March 3, 1864,  the body of Elizabeth Hislop Broadfoot was found to have been “partially exhumed.” (xv) It is unlikely there was any actual grave to rob dug in the frozen grounds of the New Connexion cemetery south of Ainleyville in early March. Cold weather could actually expedite a body snatcher’s work by better preserving remains and necessitating that they be stored in an above-ground mortuary until the spring thaw. Although the available details are few, reference to a partial exhumation suggests that some part of the remains or their coverings were discovered missing: perhaps either because of tampering onsite, or the body had been hastily re-interred after dissection.  

Elizabeth had died days before on Feb. 29—1864 being a leap year. Born in Scotland only 25 years earlier, she had emigrated with her family as a child and settled in Grey Township. She lived in a log home about two miles north of Walton with her father, John Hislop, before marrying “respectable” Morris farmer Robert Broadfoot in December, 1862. (xvi)  The same month as her tragically short life ended, she had given birth to her only son, John H. Broadfoot.  

Maternal mortality was not uncommon in the 19th century, and post-partum complications were very likely responsible for Elizabeth’s demise. During the period many devastating diseases also claimed the lives of young people in Huron County. Diphtheria, scarlet fever, typhoid and meningitis, among other outbreaks, could claim several members of the same family in a manner of days or even hours, necessitating hasty burials.  Perhaps any knowledge that Elizabeth had passed away from a post-partum infection or blood loss, rather than contagion, could have also factored into a grave robber’s choice.  

Whatever the circumstances of the young woman’s death, the illegal disinterment of her body would have shocked the community, the grieving Hislop and Broadfoot families most of all.  Elizabeth’s widower stood before the Justice of the Peace to accuse Dr. I. J. Hawks and Edward Hudson on March 5. Hawks was discharged when this local court failed to find sufficient evidence for the doctor’s involvement in the crime. The young medical student, however, was committed to the gaol at Goderich to await his trial at the higher Quarter Sessions court on March 10 and 11 

Contemporary community gossip in the vicinity of Ainleyville was no doubt consumed by this case. Most locals would have been connected to a victim or alleged perpetrator, as indicated by the more than dozen potential witnesses listed on court documents. Names included not only bereaved husband Robert Broadfoot and his father-in-law John Hislop, but multiple local doctors including Dr. D. B. McCool, Dr. Hawks and Dr. Lenders, and prominent citizens including merchant N. W. Livingston and a son of the village’s namesake Ainley family. (xvii) According to The Mitchell Advocate, a local tailor and a clerk in Livingston’s store were widely known to have assisted Hudson with the crime, but the 22-year-old medical student remained the only one facing legal consequences. (xviii)   

Hudson faced two separate indictments: one charge for the larceny of Elizabeth’s shroud and coffin, and another for disinterring a body. The Grand Jury at Goderich determined that there was no proof of larceny, and returned “no true bill” against the defendant. For the charge of body raising, Edward Hudson changed his plea to guilty and the jury did return a true bill. Whether he admitted guilt out of remorse or pragmatism, he was now a confessed and convicted resurrectionist.  The resulting sentence was “to be imprisoned for one month in the common Gaol and pay a fine of ten pounds, and remain in Gaol until the same be paid.” (xix) This penalty Hudson must have paid in full, as he walked free on April 13 

My Life with You did not Long Last 

Ainleyville’s  lingering fear of graverobbing seems to have escalated to something of a brief moral panic, as derided in the Huron Signal’s story about its citizens rescuing a snatched bag of bran. This hypervigilance was not gothic Victorian imaginations run amok, but precipitated by true events that had no doubt sincerely frightened people. The consensus of public opinion was that Hudson had not acted alone, and it is unlikely that he could have moved and dissected a body without help.  His shocking arrest would have prodded villagers to contemplate if more undetected disinterments had already taken place, and whether they were still in the company of those responsible. The scandal would have also further broken trust with the region’s dubious ‘doctors,’ if not professional medicine in general.  

More than a decade later, Brucefield would similarly face “considerable excitement” when the bones of a long-buried man were reported missing from Tuckersmith’s Friarton Brae cemetery in May,1878. (xx) This panic was short-lived. The man’s widow corrected the spread of false information in a correction to Clinton’s New Era newspaper months later: “the grave was not robbed, but had been disturbed by a horse tramping over it.” (xxi)   

After serving his time in gaol, Edward Hudson soon escaped ignominy in Canada West for the United States. Amidst the American Civil War, he enlisted in the U.S. Army at Detroit in September, 1864. Although his erstwhile colleague Dr. Isaac J. Hawks avoided criminal charges,  the accusations reportedly damaged the doctor’s reputation: “the prevailing opinion of the country is, that he was quite cognizant of the whole affair.” (xxii) Dr. Hawks was the most generous financial donor to the Ainleyville New Connexion Methodist church in 1865, but he seemingly disappeared from local prominence after the mid 1860s. (xxiii) After years of already working as physician and surgeon for the rural residents of Huron County, he finally acquired a license to practice medicine on Dec. 20, 1864. (xxiv)  

Widower Robert Broadfoot remarried and moved to western Canada and ultimately Kansas. John Hislop continued to occupy the family farm between Walton and Brussels until his own death in 1881, survived by several of his other children.  

Although there is little detail known about the short life of Elizabeth Broadfoot, her gravestone still stands in the Brussels Cemetery today as an enduring monument to how much her loved ones cared for her and deeply missed her when she died in the winter of 1864. Her son would sadly never have the chance to know his mother, but the inscription on Elizabeth’s stone includes a poem that made her love for him immortal: “Mourn not for me my life is past/my life with you not long did last/But mercy show and pity take/and love my infant for my sake.”  

Graverobbing as Gothic Tale 

Sensationalism, tragedy and even humour all co-exist in the history of grave robbing. In 1843, Tiger Dunlop garnered laughter on the floor of the Legislative Assembly when he joked about a false accusation of body snatching received in his Glasgow youth: the doctor was unable to disclose his alibi because he had actually been disinterring a corpse at a different churchyard. (xxv)  From the opposite side of the matter two decades later, Elizabeth Broadfoot’s family were rightfully horrified to discover that her body had been illicitly exhumed while they mourned.  Public reactions to the crime hint at broader societal discomforts. Laws regarding cadavers required that the most disadvantaged members of Canadian society provide their remains for the benefit of all: an uneasy peace for science versus the sacrosanct. Widely held concepts of “decent” burial discouraged willing donations of bodies.  Taboos therefore led to secretive, illegal—and consequently intriguingly lurid—practices. Suspicion of doctors as body snatchers fostered distrust against imperfect, evolving medicine as practiced by imperfect, questionably credentialed people. It is no wonder that the citizens of Ainleyville in 1864 were frightened and appalled, but perhaps also equal parts morbidly fascinated by the news of a resurrectionist in their midst.  

Reflecting on Canada’s grave-robbing past, Professor Royce McGillivray notes that contemporary accounts of these crimes served as horror stories that appealed to Victorian readers’ righteous moral outrage, but also simultaneously served as ghoulish entertainment. He argues that graverobbing would thus be remembered with a thrill in the next generation, “just as people delight in Gothic novels and vampire movies.” (xxvi) Both outrage and sensationalism can be recognized in local newspapers’ coverage of the Hudson case. And both impulses were skewered by the Huron Signal’s mocking tale about a bag of resurrected cereal, demonstrating a culture self-aware of its own obsessions, its “eyes stretched wide open to take in a horror.” In digging up this incident from 1864 (pun intended), I don’t claim any modern superiority in my motivations as a reader or storyteller, but a macabre lens on the past does not have to strip these tales of their humanity or their pathos. A bit of ghoulish fascination can be a light that guides us through the darker corners of history, and to better understand something of our attitudes and fixations surrounding death and dying today.

 

Further Reading
Sources
  • i“Ainleyville: Exciting Chase after a Resurrectionist,” The Huron Signal, 1864-05-05. Pg 2. Accessed via Huron County’s Digital newspapers.
  • ii The Huron Signal, 1864-03-10, pg 2.
  • iii He appears in the transcribed gaol records as “George.” All court and newspaper accounts refer to him as Edward. It is possible he gave a false name or this was an error. George coincidentally was his father’s name. It is unlikely (but not impossible) that this was simply a case of going by a second name, as the 1851 census also shows he had a brother named George. Hotson seems to be the more accurate spelling of his surname, but I have used the “Hudson” spelling to be consistent with Huron court records.
  • iv The Huron Signal, 1864-03-10, pg 2.
  • v At this time meaning residents of Canada East and Canada West.
  • vi The Provincial Statutes of Canada, passed in the year 1843,  Kingston: Stewart Derbishire & George Desbarats, 1843. 7 Victoria – Chapter 5 An Act to regulate and facilitate the study of Anatomy, 9th December, 1843.  Accessed via British North America Legislative Database; University of New Brunswick.
  • vii Canada. Parliament. Legislative Assembly. Debates of the Legislative Assembly of United Canada, 1841-1867, Volume 3, pg 464-467.
  • vii York Herald, 1861-12-20, pg 7. Accessed via Richmond Hill Public Library (Our Ontario).
  • ix The Huron Signal, 1864-03-10, pg 2.
  • x “Ainsleyville,” County of Perth Herald (Stratford), 1864-03-23, pg 3. Accessed via Stratford-Perth Archives.
  • xi  A bygone Morris Township village with a modest population of 50 in 1864.
  • xii County of Huron gazetteer and general business directory for 1863-4, Sutherland Bros Publishers & Printers: Ingersoll (Canada West), 1863, pg 107. Accessed via Canadiana. Appears as “Edward Hotson.”
  • xiii His name appears elsewhere as ‘Lander,’ but appears to be the same man working as doctor and coroner in vicinity of Ainleyville. Dr. Hawks’ name appears in records as ‘Hawkes’ also, and is sometime mis-transcribed as “J.J. Hawkes” instead of “I.J.”
  • xiv “Indignation Meeting,” The Semi-Weekly Signal, 1862-09-19, pg 4.
  • xv County of Perth Herald, 1864-03-23, pg 3.
  • xvi Ibid.
  • xvii Indictment: The Queen vs. Edward Hudson, Counties of Huron & Bruce, 1864, Box #49, Municipality Court Records 1864, Huron County Archives.
  • xviii County of Perth Herald, 1864-03-23, pg 3.
  • xix Proceedings of the Quarter Sessions including the Clerk’s transactions for the Huron County Quarter Sessions 1841-1873, Vol 30, pg 153, CA3ONHU3UOU1P76, Box 827, Huron County Archives.
  • xx“Grave Robbing,” Huron Expositor, 1878-05-17, pg 8.
  • xxi “Correction,” The Clinton New Era, 1878-09-05, pg 8.
  • xxii County of Perth Herald, 1864-03-23, pg 3.
  • xxiii Report of the Canadian Wesleyan Methodist New Connexion Missionary Society, auxiliary to the Methodist New Connection Missionary Society in England, Wesleyan New Connection Missionary Society: London, Canada West, 1865. Accessed via Canadiana.
  • xxiv Licenses, Upper and Lower Canada, Canada East and Canada West and Ontario, 1817-1867 – 3947 C-3947, Library and Archives Canada / Bibliothèque et Archives Canada. Accessed via Canadiana.
  • xxv Debates of the Legislative Assembly of United Canada, 1841-1867, Volume 3, pg 464.
  • xxvi Royce McGillivray, “Body Snatching in Ontario,” Canadian Bulletin of Medical History Volume 5, Number 1, 1988, pg 58.

 

 

Take a European Road Trip this Fall Without Leaving Huron County!

Take a European Road Trip this Fall Without Leaving Huron County!

Huron County Road Trip

Google Maps, 2021

Although some travel is beginning to return, many people are not ready for a full European vacation just yet. But did you know that you can take a European city tour without leaving Huron County? The Huron County Museum’s acting Education & Programming Coordinator Dan Genis has put together a great fall road trip around the County where you can visit our local ‘European’ cities.

Brussels, ON

Postcard of Main Street, Brussels, ON. Huron County Archives

Brussels, Huron East, Huron County, ON: Founded as Ainleyville in 1855, Brussels was chosen by railway workers as the name for the new train station when the railway came to town. In 1872 the village was officially incorporated as Brussels and it quickly grew into a prosperous community with many industries, churches, and a main street of fine brick blocks. For more on the history of Ainleyville/Brussels, see Maddy Gilbert’s blog. Today Brussels features fantastic accommodations, delicious restaurants, and unique shops and studios. Take a Historic Walking Tour, stroll through the Brussels Conservation Area, or picnic by the dam in this enchanting village.

European version: Brussels, Belgium: The capital city of Belgium, the headquarters for NATO, and the de facto capital of the European Union, Brussels is one of the most important and multicultural cities in the world. The city is also lined with art galleries and cafes, with beautiful art nouveau streetscapes and a charming medieval town centre.

Better version? Brussels, Huron County – Too many politicians in the Belgian version.

Belfast, Ashfield-Colborne-Wawanosh, Huron County, ON: First called Newcastle, the name was changed to Altonville when the settlement was registered in 1858. Soon after many families from the north of Ireland settled in the area, and by 1879 the village name was recorded as Belfast. At one time Belfast had a post office, general store, blacksmith shop, hotel and tavern, and one of the first Orange Lodges in the county. Although only a few structures remain in this four-corner community, it lies in the centre of an oasis of quiet country and cottage life. Explore the picturesque countryside, check out the fall colours in the Lake Wawanosh Conservation Area (parking at 85442 Creek Line), or if it is the end of the day, enjoy a breathtaking Huron County sunset.

European version: Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom: The capital and largest city in Northern Ireland, Belfast has shaken off its industrial and troubled past to become known as a hip and vibrant party town. It also boasts a state-of-the art museum that tells the story of the ill-fated RMS Titanic, which was built in the shipyards there.

Better version? Belfast, Huron County – Huron County’s Belfast was in no way connected to the Titanic sinking.

Varna, ON

“Just a Post Card from Varna…Too Busy to Write”, dated Feb 5, 1914. Black and white photo of Beatty’s store and the Sterling Bank of Canada. Huron County Archives, 2008.0032

Varna, Bluewater, Huron County, ON: Varna was named by settler Josiah Secord after the Black Sea city that was home to the French and British fleets during the Crimean War. Although there already existed a log school and tavern when Secord arrived in 1854, he opened the first store and post office in the village. It was not long before a cooper, hotel, blacksmith, saw mill, and Anglican church opened and Varna was a bustling community. Today Varna is home to an outstanding craft brewery, picturesque hiking trails at Bannockburn Conservation Area and the Varna Nature Trails, all within 10 minutes of beautiful Lake Huron.

European version: Varna, Bulgaria: Bulgaria’s third largest city sits on the Black Sea and dates back to Ancient Greek and Roman times. Part port city and part seaside resort, Varna has vast parks, large beaches, and an impressive archeological museum and Roman bath complex.

Better version? Varna, Huron County – The Black Sea is too salty.

Zurich, ON

Postcard of Goshen Street, Zurich, ON, dated July 4, 1910. Visible businesses P. Benders and Co. headquarters for Boots and Shoes. The steeple in the background is the Lutheran Church. Huron County Archives, A991.0052

Zurich, Bluewater, Huron County, ON: Zurich was founded in 1856 and soon boasted a mill, hotel, schoolhouse, and the Hay Township Hall. Known for its Swiss and German heritage, this influence can be seen in the impressive clock tower at St. Peter’s Lutheran Church, which was designed by George Hess and was completed in 1878. Today it is one of only three “Canadiana Tower Clocks” in Canada still operating as it was designed to run. The nearby artisan boutiques, wineries, fruit markets, and craft brewery make Zurich a charming and unique stop.

European version: Zürich, Switzerland: One of Europe’s financial centres and the largest and wealthiest city in Switzerland, although not the capital (that would be Bern). Zürich manages to combine a historic city centre full of winding streets and churches with a modern hip and artsy culture.

Better version? Zurich, Huron County – Switzerland is notoriously hilly – no thanks.

Honourable Mention: Dublin, Perth County, ON: Founded as Carronbrook in 1854, settler Joseph Kidd changed the name to Dublin in 1878 after his hometown. When salt was discovered down the road in Seaforth, Kidd piped the salt brine to an evaporation plant he had built in Dublin. He also constructed a sawmill and a business block on the main street. Today, Dublin is known as “Ontario’s Furniture Village”, and predictably has some great shops selling furniture and housewares. Although technically just over the border in neighbouring Perth County, Dublin has historical ties to Huron County and gets an honourable mention here.

European version: Dublin, Republic of Ireland: From its Gaelic and Viking beginnings to its 18th century heyday, all of the medieval castles and cathedrals make Dublin feel like an open-air museum. It also features over 1000 pubs along with Guinness’ famous St. James’s Gate Brewery, and has a world class live music scene to boot.

Better version? Dublin, ON– Far fewer U2 cover bands here.

Unsafe in any County: Windshields

Unsafe in any County: Windshields

This is the second instalment of a four-part series, Unsafe in any County, by Special Project Coordinator Jeremy Dechert. The series focuses on the dangers posed by historic automobiles or automobile components and is inspired by the Museum’s growing database of digitized historical newspapers from across Huron County. These newspapers can be accessed by visiting our website. In our first instalment, we focused on the dangers of the 1953 Buick Roadmaster’s braking system.

This week, we will be focusing on the dangers and innovations of early automobile windshields. Windshields were first introduced as optional vehicle components in 1904. Automobile manufacturers such as Ford and Cadillac offered windshields as standard equipment as early as 1911 while other manufacturers such as Studebaker, EMF, and Flanders offered windshields as optional equipment available at an extra cost. Windshields were not standard features on most vehicles until 1915.

The Herald. May 24, 1912 p.5

Originally, windshields were made with single sheet plate glass. The 1925/1926 Essex Super Six, originally owned by the Museum’s founder Mr. Neil, and on display here at the Huron County Museum, has a windshield made of plate glass. This glass was effective for keeping bugs, debris, water and snow out of a vehicle. However, should an accident occur, it was less successful at keeping the driver or passenger(s) in. They could easily be ejected through the window or the glass could break into large, sharp pieces which were liable to cause injuries. There are numerous accounts of such injuries occurring in Huron County as seen in local newspaper articles.

The Seaforth News. September 15, 1938 p.2

 

The Wingham Advance. May 15, 1930 p.1

The Signal. April 29, 1920 p.8

The Signal. June 21, 1917 p.7

In 1909, there was a major development in glass technology: safety glass. Safety glass does not break as easily as plate glass. It is intended to crack and splinter rather than shatter when impacted. This type of glass helps to prevent occupants from being ejected from the vehicle in the case of a crash, provides more rigidity to the car frame in the case of a rollover, and makes it more difficult for thieves to break into a vehicle. The August 2, 1956 edition of the Zurich Herald included a concise explanation of how safety glass was invented by French Chemist Edouard Benedict…by accident.

Zurich Herald. August 2, 1956 p.6

Wingham Advance-Times. July 18, 1929 p.2

Two decades after its invention, Ford was the first vehicle manufacturer to include safety glass as a standard feature on a vehicle under $1500. Meaning, Ford was the first company to put this new windshield in front of the average consumer. Beginning in 1929, triplex safety glass windshields were a standard feature on all Ford models. This triplex glass consisted of three layers. The outer two layers were made of regular sheet glass and the inner layer was made of cellulose, giving the windshield rigidity and form. In 1928, The Seaforth News ran an article describing the manufacturing process for “Non-Shatterable Glass.”


Seaforth News. July 12, 1928 p.7

Although the invention of safety glass undoubtedly saved many drivers and passengers from injury and death, it did not avoid criticism. In 1937, The Department of Highways (US) outlined the shortcomings of safety glass in an article titled Automobiles – and Sudden Death. Though sensationalist in tone, the article notes the danger of partial occupant ejection during automobile accidents. According to the article, the safety glass could “guillotine.” Ralph Nader echoed this concern in 1965. He specifically criticized the quality of safety glass. He named safety glass windshields as the third greatest culprit in causing injury during automobile accidents. He argued that while safety glass windshields often prevented an occupant from fully leaving the vehicle, they did not protect occupants who were only partially ejected. The glass would act as a jaw when the occupant’s momentum came back towards the vehicle following the initial impact. Safety glass has progressed immensely since 1965 but this great innovation was not an instant solution to a serious safety issue facing motorists. For more automobile history, visit our website and search our growing collection of digitized newspapers from across Huron County.

 

excerpt: “Automobiles – and Sudden Death,” Clinton News Record September 2, 1937 p.7

 

Old News is Good News: All About ‘Project Silas’

Old News is Good News: All About ‘Project Silas’

What discoveries await you in Huron’s newly digitized historical newspapers? Special Project Coordinator Jeremy Dechert introduces Project Silas! Stay tuned for more updates, search tips and highlights.

From The Brussels Post, Nov. 18, 1898.

The Huron County Library, in partnership with the Huron County Museum, has been digitizing, OCRing (optical character recognition technology which reads and transcribes images) and publishing historical newspapers from communities across Huron County. Codenamed Project Silas, this initiative is aimed at assisting both academic and casual researchers in their quest for knowledge of Huron County’s past. Local newspapers are robust sources of historical information due to their consistent and specific reporting on particular persons, events, and places. Digitizing newspapers which were previously on microfilm and allowing them to be text searchable further democratizes public information and saves researchers countless hours of work and frustration by making multiple papers available from the comfort of your own home.

Cultural Services staff at the County of Huron have worked diligently to both build the project structure and process and post newspapers from the towns and villages of Blyth, Exeter, Goderich, and Wingham so far. I took over the project at the beginning of this month, and have recently added papers from Brussels to the website. Papers from Clinton and Seaforth are soon to follow. By the end of 2017 we hope to have additional papers from Zurich, Gorrie, Wroxeter, and Goderich on the website as well.

 

Stay up-to-date on the progress of Project Silas by…

Visit our website: http://dev.huroncountymuseum.ca/digitized-newspapers/

Liking our Facebook page Huron County Museum

Following us on Twitter @hcmuseum

Huron’s Unheard Histories: Searching for Grey Township’s Black Pioneers

Huron’s Unheard Histories: Searching for Grey Township’s Black Pioneers

What’s your journey to Huron County? This spring, visitors to the Huron County Museum can follow the journeys of seven families across the globe and through time in Stories of Immigration and Migration, a temporary exhibit dedicated to tales of settling in Huron County. The exhibit traces the circumstances that caused individuals within Canada and across the world to leave their former homes, as well as the migrants’ experiences building new lives in Huron. With Stories set to open on April 5th, researcher Sinead Cox shares why the journeys of some Huron County families are more difficult to research than others: 

Museum staff are looking forward to shedding light on local histories that have never been featured in our galleries before with Stories of Immigration and Migration, an exhibit which spans a period from 1840 to the present day. When research started several months ago, I had the pleasure and privilege of speaking or corresponding directly with the more recent ‘migrants’ featured in the exhibit, and the opportunity to include their own words, insights and chosen artefacts. For those individuals who arrived more than a century ago, however, our research relied on archival records that often uncovered as many questions as answers.

One compelling story that remains incomplete is that of Samuel and Mary Catherine James, a Black farming couple born in Nova Scotia who were some of the earliest settlers in Grey Township circa the 1850s. Nova Scotia was a destination for many former slaves from the colonial United States, including loyalists who had served the British crown during the American Revolution, in the eighteenth century. The James family also lived in Peel, Wellington County, before settling in Grey–which was part of the “Queen’s Bush” territory, rather than the Huron Tract lands managed by the Canada Company. Since the Jameses were farmers, they probably came to Huron County to achieve the same objective as most other pioneers: to own land. The James clan, including children Freeman, Coleman, Magdalene and Colin, farmed in a row on Lots 24 of Concessions 9, 10 and 12, Grey Township. According to 1861 census records, the whole family lived together in the same log house when they first moved to Huron.

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Tragedy struck the James family when, in a matter of only three months–between November 1866 and January 1867–Colin (aged 23), Freeman (aged 39), and Mary Catherine (aged 77) all died.  Whether their passings were related or coincidental, this unimaginable loss must have been a devastating blow to a pioneer family that relied on family members to share the burden of work. Mother and sons are buried at Knox Presbyterian Cemetery, Cranbrook.

According to land registry records, Freeman’s farm at Lot 24, Concession 12, still not purchased from the crown at the time of his death, was taken over by his sister Magdalene “Laney” James’ husband, Charles Done. Charles was also a Black farmer from Nova Scotia, and living in Howick when he married Laney at Ainleyville (now Brussels) on November 4th, 1867.

Laney and Coleman, the two surviving James siblings, each raised large families in Grey Township. In the 1871 census, Coleman and his wife, Lucy Scipio, already had eight children, five of them attending school. According to the same census, both Coleman and Laney could read and write, but their spouses could not. The family was struck by tragedy once again in April, 1873 when Coleman’s nine-year-old son, also named Coleman, died of “inflammation of [the] liver” after an illness of nine months.

Coleman sold his farms in 1875, and by the 1881 Canadian census, both he and Laney had left Huron County and relocated to Raleigh, Kent County with their families. This move to Raleigh would have enabled the James siblings to join a larger Black community at Buxton: a settlement founded by refugees that came to Canada through the Underground Railway.

The James family had relocated many times: according to tombstone transcriptions, Mary Catherine was born in Shelburne, Nova Scotia, and Colin in Digby, before the family moved to Ontario and lived in Wellington County, Huron County, and Kent. Census, birth and death records indicate that Coleman’s children ultimately settled in Michigan. Most farm families in nineteenth-century Ontario moved in search of the same benefits: a supportive community life, the ability to make a living, and good agricultural land. Black farmers, however, faced barriers of discrimination and exclusion that white settlers did not, and this sometimes necessitated leaving years of hard work behind to repeatedly seek a better life elsewhere.

It’s that moving on that can make traces of Huron County’s early Black settlers difficult to find in history books or public commemorations. The collections at the Huron County Museum, for example,  are entirely acquired through donations from the community, which tends to emphasize the experiences of families that stayed here, found success, and had descendants who retain ties to the county to this day. We know less about the settlers who moved out of the county-even those who lived in Huron for decades, like the Jameses– and thus we also lack clarity about the opportunities they sought elsewhere, or the specific challenges they may have faced here.

The details I could glean from a few days’ of research did not provide enough information to interpret why the James family came to Huron County–or why they left–for Migration Stories. But I hope future research opportunities will add to this initial knowledge, and to a better understanding of the contributions and experiences of the individuals who have moved in and out of Huron County, including Black pioneers like the James family.  

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Special thanks to Reg Thompson, research librarian at the Huron County Library, for starting and contributing to the research used for this piece. If you have information about the James family and would like to share, contact Sinead, exhibit researcher: sicox@huroncounty.ca

You can see Stories of Immigration and Migration at the Huron County Museum (110 North Street) from April 5th until October 15th, 2016.

This post was originally published in February and republished in March after technical difficulties with the server.