Family History

Over the last fifteen years I have devoted a fair amount of time and energy tracking down my own ancestors and those of my wife’s family. This effort has been largely successful with a number of branches dating back several centuries. I’ve traced my four grandparents’ Segger, McEwan, Adams and Smith families in Great Britain to thirty-one of my thirty-two 3x great grandparents and well beyond for many of those branches.

The photo above is of the family of my great-grandparents Joseph Segger (1863-1932) and Edith Maria (Havers) Segger (1870-1941) and was taken in Edinburgh just before the beginning of WW1. My grand-father Bertam Reginald Segger (1895-1959) who served in the Royal Navy, ultimately as Chief Petty Officer, is top left. His brother Joseph, top right, served in the Royal Berkshire Regiment and died of injuries sustained in France in February 1917. Fred on the middle left was a gunner in the Royal Field Artillery and John on the middle right served in the Royal Scots. All four brothers are listed on the following plaque still proudly displayed at Roseburn School, Edinburgh. The three daughters from left to right were Adelaide (Adie), Edith Maud and Margaret Josephine (Daisy).

Photo by Cameron Segger, 2012

My mother’s father was Royal Engineers Regimental Sergeant Major James Challis (Chas) Adams (1888-1971). Below is a photo of him (bottom right) with his parents Royal Artillery Warrant Officer 1 Edwin Adams (1858-1895) and Mary Ann (Polly) Benns (1857-1938) taken in 1892 in Malta 3 years before Edwin’s untimely death.

For my wife Diane’s family the search has been equally extensive for her Lecuyer, Galipeau, Vanderhorst and Pullins ancestors as well as her children’s paternal Reid family.

The Ontario Genealogy Society has published two of my articles in their May 2019 issue which document aspects of my research into Diane’s ancestors.

War of 1812 Loss Compensation Delayed – Jacob Bechtel (1759-1838)

Honing Your Skills with Heritage Society Applications

The following tracts have been prepared, mostly for the private use of our families.

My family:

Collecting Ancestors – article published in the September 2010 issue of Au Courant discussing the search for my maternal grand-mother.

From Modest Beginnings : The Segger-Adams Ancestors Two Hundred Years Ago (2012)

Three Cheers for Norman J. Segger: 90 Years Young (2013)

Sylvia (Adams) Segger: Recognizing her 85 Wonderful Years (2014)

Diane’s family:

Lecuyer-Galipeau Ancestors (2013)

Lecuyer’s Camp History (2014)

Bechtel Waterloo Homesteads (2015)

In Search of Fertile Fields: The Migration of the Vanderhorst – Pullens Family from Holland to North America (2013)

The Reid-Farrow Ancestors (2014)

For the family history of my first wife Nicole Rita (St. Louis) Segger (1951-2006) I have obtained extensive family trees compiled by her sister Lorraine (St. Louis) Harrison dating back to the very early settlement of Quebec.

Robert E. Lee visits Charlotte Harbor in 1849

Some may consider it insensitive to post an article about Robert E. Lee in this time when his role in US history is often challenged. There are citizens in Lee County, Florida, where I spend time in the winter, who would like to have the large portrait of him in Confederate uniform removed from the County Chambers. This article deals with a little known early contact Lee had with his namesake county in between his service with the US Army in the Mexican-American War and his later leadership role with the Confederacy. At the time he was a US Army Captain of Engineers and a Brevet Colonel.

Below is a link to the guest blog which I prepared for the Punta Gorda History Center to mark the 170th anniversary of Robert E. Lee’s 1849 visit to Charlotte Harbor with a U.S. Army Board of Engineers survey team.

http://puntagordahistorycenterblog.blogspot.com/2019/03/170th-anniversary-of-robert-e-lees.html

New Florida Presentations

This winter I will be delivering at least three new presentations in the Punta Gorda area.

  • I have updated my Burnt Store Road material for the Burnt Store Golf & Activity Club. The title for this November 2018 talk is Fifty Fun Facts About Burnt Store Road.
  • In January Butch Coward and I are co-presenting to the Burnt Store Lakes Property Owners Association on the topic of the early flower growing operations in the area. We will screen two short films shot in the early 1960s describing the floriculture of the Coward & Hobbs company and I will also use a series of historical maps to outline the history of the property before this commercial operation.
  • In February I will be delivering a new history presentation to the Renaissance Academy of Florida Gulf Coast University at their Herald Court location. This session will draw upon a series of published and unpublished accounts from surveyors, trading post operators, military officers, customs officials and other adventurers to describe conditions in the Charlotte Harbor / Peace River area prior to the end of the Civil War in 1865.

Kilimanjaro, Kurelek and the War of 1812

You may wonder what these three topics have in common. As it turns out, nothing at all other than they were all topics of presentations I was involved in over the last year.

In October 2017 Loretta Phinney and I did a combined presentation at St. Stephen’s on the Hill, Mississauga which described our ascents of a very different “hill”. My presentation focused on a self-directed five day budget-rate climb of Africa’s largest mountain which I did with three friends in the early 1970s (see photo of the February 1973 Kilimanjaro ice cap below).

Loretta’s presentation, very well illustrated by a large number of excellent photos, summarized her eight day climb to the summit of Kilimanjaro with an organized tour group in the spring of 2017.

In February 2018 I presented another in my series of history based lectures at Florida Gulf Coast University’s Renaissance Academy in Punta Gorda. This one was titled “Unique Perspectives on the War of 1812”.  I had a lot of fun providing the primarily American audience with a balanced take on that war which turned out to be quite different from what is generally taught in US schools.

In June 2018, again at St. Stephens on-the-Hill in Mississauga, I delivered a presentation on the Canadian artist William Kurelek who, in 1965, had created a painting depicting the story of Zacchaeus in the tree surrounded by the St. Stephens church and its congregation.

Burnt Store Road Book – Print Copy Published

On November 1, 2016 a print version of Graham’s eBook Where Do We Live? Research by a Seasonal Resident of Burnt Store Road (aka The Burnt Store Road Book) was published by the Burnt Store-PPYC Charitable Boating Foundation. Graham had previously granted the rights to the book to this charity.

It is available at a variety of book stores and other outlets around Charlotte and Lee Counties including Sandman Book Company, Copperfish Books, Burnt Store Marina Trading Post, CHEC and the Cape Coral Historical Society. The Library of Congress Control Number is 2016915567 and the ISBN  is 978-0-692-78351-1.

The eBook was freely distributed for the first 15 months and was downloaded over 750 times. In the summer of 2017 the eBook was made available for download in exchange for a US$9.50 contribution to the same charity which has published the print version. Download instructions are now available on the book launch website – www.wheredowelive.com.

The Burnt Store-PPYC Charitable Boating Foundation is a non-profit 501(c)3 organization established in 2014 by a group of residents of the Burnt Store area. The 2017 directors are Jeff Hawley, Carole Lick, Graham Segger, Bill Southworth, Kay Ackerson, Carmen Comite, Lon Acheson, and John Vanderslice. The mission of the organization is to provide educational and outreach opportunities related to boating and marine topics for the community. Examples of sponsored activities are cruises with members and staff of local children’s groups such as the Boys and Girls Club of Charlotte County and participation in the Wounded American Veterans (WAVE) day on the water program. Other activities include the publishing of Graham’s book and printing of boating safety material. The Foundation’s Florida Solicitation of Funds registration number CH45066.

Update – As of December 2017 all of the initial print run has been sold or consigned to book stores. The Foundation has printed a Second Edition available January 1, 2018. The Second Edition has some updated and new material and has been printed in black & white to allow the Foundation to reduce the selling price to $25.

Where Do We Live? book launch day

The eBook version of Where Do We Live? Research by a Seasonal Resident of Burnt Store Road, Florida was self-published on January 12, 2016 after eighteen months of rewarding and enjoyable effort. Other than participation in technical writing in my former career, this is my first publicly available book. Writing it has been a fascinating project and a great learning experience.

The book is a compilation of research essays about Burnt Store Road which runs for twenty miles between the Florida towns of Punta Gorda and Cape Coral. It is an historic route which has many interesting stories to tell. It explores a wide range of subjects of interest to local residents, including the location of the likely Burnt Store, the development history of the area, the conservation lands which border the road, the hurricane history of the region and early commercial activities around and in Charlotte Harbor.

 

Great Photo Recognized

Diane and her sister, Kate Renz, were in Florida in July 2014 and went kayaking in the mangroves near Matlacha.  Kate is a very good photographer and took a series of pictures of an Osprey which had just caught a Snook for its lunch.  I submitted one of the pictures to The Beacon, the monthly newsletter of the Burnt Store Marina community and it showed up on the front cover.  Congratulations Kate!!

2014 09 Beacon - page 1

Update – March 2018 – Kate visited again in 2017 and again took many great photos of the Burnt Store area. Four of these photos, submitted by me with brief commentaries, were published over the course of the last six months in the Beacon. Her photo of Diane’s Pink Quill plant was featured on the cover of the February 2018 Beacon.

I Thank You by The Tenors

BBBSC Logo
I have been associated with the Big Brothers Big Sisters organization for many years, first as a Big Brother in Metro Toronto, and more recently as a committee member for Big Brothers Big Sisters Canada and Treasurer of the Big Brothers Big Sisters Canada Foundation.  I believe passionately in the value of the mentoring goals of the organization.  I am also a lover of great music, so am pleased that there is now an opportunity to support BBBSC and also enjoy an excellent new tune.

The Tenors, Canada’s JUNO Award-winning vocal super group, have joined forces with Big Brothers Big Sisters of America spokesperson Laura Kaeppeler to launch a new single titled, ‘I Thank You’. The song, which also commemorates the 100th anniversary of Big Brothers Big Sisters of Canada, is now available for download worldwide through iTunes with proceeds contributed to assist in the ongoing development and support of mentoring services to children and young people.  Conceived by Kenny Munshaw and co-written with Marc Jordan and The Tenors, ‘I Thank You’ speaks to the impact that caring mentors play in the lives of young people. ‘I Thank You’ was recorded by The Tenors and Miss Kaeppeler, a former Miss America.

To download the tune access iTunes then search for  I Thank You (feat. Laura Kaeppeler) by The Tenors.

Graham

Along the Shore: Rediscovering Toronto’s Waterfront Heritage

ALONG THE SHORE: Rediscovering Toronto’s Waterfront HeritageBook cover 2

By  M. Jane Fairburn

ECW Press 429 pp., $32.95 soft cover

My friend Jane Fairburn opens her new book, Along the Shore: Rediscovering Toronto’s Waterfront Heritage, with a double page reproduction of the Carte au plan nouveau du lac Ontario, 1757 by René-Hippolyte Laforce overwritten in part with a poem by Canadian poet Gwendolyn MacEwen.  It is just this kind of magical juxtaposition which makes this book so charming.  Jane seamlessly weaves together stories about the history, landscape, geography and people of the Toronto waterfront communities of Scarborough Bluffs, the Beach, Toronto Island and the Lakeshore.  In each section she documents the stages of evolution: pre settlement; humble beginnings as farming and then resort destinations; the establishment of villages; the destruction and loss of those communities and current renewal efforts.

As you might expect from the inquiring mind of a lawyer and former Crown Attorney, Jane has mined the archival institutions of Toronto and Ontario to great effect reproducing many rare photographs, illustrations and maps.  Her list of works cited runs to 16 pages. The stories of such well known Toronto waterfront personalities as Marilyn Bell and Ned Hanlon are of course included, but also the stories of many lesser known but equally interesting characters and events.  I was particularly struck by the realization that two of the biggest Toronto stories of the twentieth century: Marilyn Bell’s triumphant 1954 swim across Lake Ontario and the deadly landing of Hurricane Hazel occurred just one month apart.

New residents of Toronto, and that surely includes the majority, will be amazed to learn of the way in which the lakefront has been transformed from its early Lake Iroquois shoreline to the present, first by nature and more recently by man.  Along the Shore is focused on the four communities noted above but also touches, in less detail, on the inner harbour and the town of York. The book is available at most GTA bookstores and Internet book sellers as well as through www.janefairburn.com.

Graham

 

Welcome note

Welcome to my public website.  The site is fairly bare bones at present containing my business bio and recent articles which I have written for publication in other media. I’ve also posted a few recent sailing and general interest blogs for the enjoyment of friends and family.

Best regards,

Graham