From the Almonte Gazette,
The Founder of Our Town (By Hal Kirkland)
In some communities there may be conflicting opinions as to who should deserve the distinction of being called the founder of that village or city. Almonte is not one of them. We know that Mr. Daniel Shipman was the founder of our town.
Who
was Daniel Shipman or Dan Shipman as he was then called, and what sort of man was he. It is
customary in biographies to first state the years of birth and death: Daniel Shipman was
born in 1791 in the
But
what is important is that he was the man who got the settlement moving. He built the first
saw mill in 1821 and the first grist mill in 1822. True, a man named David Shepherd might
have been entitled to the distinction - if he
had stayed. He got the original patent from the Crown in 1820 for the east half of
For
the record, there was one other man who might be called, quite correctly, of the town. He was John Gemmill, who was a farmer, and shortly after Shipman built
his mills, Mr. Gemmill built the first store in
Almonte. In 1822 there were two cows in the
Now
to tell something of Daniel Shipman. He was the youngest of three sons of Samuel Shipman by
a first marriage. His second wife bore him ten children.
The three sons by the first marriage, John, Joel and Daniel, came to
One,
can surmise that, either from an acquaintance or via the grapevine, he had learned of the
difficulties the discouraged David Shepherd was encountering and recognized an opportunity
up there on the
The
late Dr. W. B. Munro, who had been Professor of American History at
Dan
Shipman was not the only Shipman involved in the growing hamlet as he brought in relatives
to share in the management of his enterprises - and, we can assume, the profits. Mr. Boyce,
a brother-in-law (Daniel Shipman had married Prudence Boyce) came along with Dan, or shortly
afterwards, and was associated with him in the operations of the saw mill and the grist
mill. Also, he brought over a half brother, Stephen
Shipman, one of the second family of ten. In a genealogy of the Shipmans it is recorded
concerning Stephen: “Moved to the
In the very brief biography of Stephen, there is an item, not pertinent to this chronicle, but perhaps interesting to some. Stephen Shipman had married Charlotte Arnold, grand-daughter of Benedict Arnold, a Major General in the United States Army, a traitor, and later became a Brigadier-General in the British Army. But back to Daniel Shipman and his relatives who were all so involved in the life of our town. Norman and Sylvanus were Daniel's sons and carried on business after their father's death in 1853. In the Canada Directory of 1857-8, Norman Shipman's business was listed as grist mill and Stephen's as saw mill. There were other ventures. Back in 1851 Daniel Shipman, S. K. Shipman (probably Sylvanus) and Norman Shipman were shareholders in the Ramsay Woollen Cloth Mfg. Co.
In
a letter to the writer’s father, Col. Gemmill, then living in London, England, wrote:
"One day in the spring of 1851 Mr. Haskins and Mr. ---------- (late in the employ of
the Rosamond Woollen Co. of Carleton Place, called on my father,
John Gemmill who died the following year on the subject of establishing a mill at
Almonte. This project was looked on favorably by Mr. Shipman. Mr. John Scott and Mr. Hugh
Rae also favored it. The result was that a company was formed called "The Ramsay
Woollen Cloth Manufacturing Company.” It ran a short time and was burned. This was the
beginning of the industry in Almonte. Mr. John Gemmill was chairman of the Board in this
firm. Shortly after the fire Mr. James Rosamond moved
his machinery from
Mr.
Shipman was active also in matters affecting the whole township. As early as 1830 he
attended a meeting in Ramsay "To protest against the way they had been treated by the
Board of Magistrates.” With him at the meeting were John Gemmill, Robert Carswell, Michael
Corkery and others from Bathurst District. The Board of Magistrates were invariably tools of
the Family Compact, the "Establishment" of that day in
Daniel's
grandson, "Mr. L. W. Shipman, always contended that his grandfather had set aside this
lot for "The first church." Daniel was a man of his word. It should be mentioned
here that there were Presbyterian churches on the 8th line, outside of Ramsayville.
On this note we leave Mr. Daniel Shipman, except to repeat that he was buried in the
old Methodist cemetery which can be attested by visiting the cemetery. There may be some who
are unaware of the existence of this old cemetery. It is situated about a mile southeast of
Almonte on Highway 29. Indeed one might pass it without noticing that there was a cemetery
in the field along the roadside. Many of the headstones are broken off and lying on the
ground; a green moss has grown on some of the slabs thus obliterating the lettering.
A thicket of lilac and other small trees as are found growing along old log fences
has hidden many of the slab headstones that are still standing. The Shipman stones are among
those broken but at sometime in the past the fragments have been moved and leaned against
the the low iron railing that encloses the Shipman burial plot.
It is interesting that members of the Teskey family, who were the founders of the
The
writer is pleased to acknowledge his debt to Mrs. H. D. Gilmour of