John D. Muttart’s third son, Frank (1877-1960) lived and farmed on the pioneer Muttart acres of his uncle John. He mar- ried Helen B. Ferguson and had three sons and two daughters. These are Dorothy, Mrs. Lloyd Waugh of Wilmot Valley; Ken- neth of Searletown; Vernon of Cape Traverse; Morley who is married on the homestead to Alice Jewel and has filo/daubhterfl', Susan, and Mildred, Mrs. Wendell MacWilliams, of Carleton, who has two sons, Earle and Eric.

The youngest daughter in the John D. Muttart family, was Bessie Maude who married James Stavert of North Bedeque. They now reside in Charlottetown where their only son, Stanley, also lives.

Hedley L. Muttart, fourth son and youngest of the family, was born in 1880 and is still living. He settled in the old home and farmed the fields that his father had cleared. He was mar— ried first in 1902 to Mildred F. Ferguson who died Feb. 22, 1922. He is the father of nine sons and daughters. He married the second time in 1930 to the former Cecelia J. Waugh.

In the family of Hedley L. Muttart and Mildred F. Ferguson, Edna Ethel is the eldest. She married Boyd Lowther of Carle- ton, with one daughter, Mildred. The second daughter, Amanda, now of Boston, Mass, married George H. Newsome and has one son, Richard. Evelyn, living at North Tryon, is married to Sterling Lord and has two sons - Donald and Roger. Jennie, Mrs. Frank Jardine of Wilmot Valley has one daughter, Beulah. Areta, who married Jack Annear of Lower Montague, has three sons and two daughters; Ralph, Eileen, Morley, Harry and Ruth.

The four sons in the Hedley Muttart family include: John A., of Albany who married Adelaide Pooley and has three sons and one daughter, James Hedley, Louis, Hillard and Dale. George H., of Tryon married to Florence Dixon, has two sons and one daughter, Robert, Wendell and Louise. Harold, married to Nor- ma Small, lives in the old home with four children: Lloyd, Dawna, Ralph and Jeanne. Wallace Muttart, married to Jennie Brown, has a son, Douglas, and daughters, Linda and Connie. They live on the former Louis H. Muttart homestead at Cape Traverse, which has ben farmed exclusively by Muttart’s for over one hun- dred and fifty years.

MYER’S HISTORY

Thomas Myers came over from England with a large party of immigrants in 1825 at the age of twenty-two (22) years. He was born in 1803. Later “Thomas Myers” married “Mary Ann Hutcheson”, (who also came out with the people from England) making their home in Hampton. To them were born seven (7) sons, namely, Thomas Jr., Abraham, Isaac, Wesley, Robert, Jacob and George. Two of the sons moved away, “one” to Western Can- ada and “one” to the States. The only other son’s destination that we know is, “Thomas Jr.” who married “Mary Jane Trows- dale,” from Hampton and settled there, a few years later they moved to Carleton buying two hundred and seventy-five (275) acres of land. “Thomas Jr.” passed away in 1896 and his Wife in

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