Mable Salvadge ca 1890s |
Many of my wonderful readers tried to help find Mable. Several Facebook friends also tried to find her. We didn't have much to go on, just her name, place of residence, occupation and that she was thought to have never married.
One of my Facebook friends and reader of this Olive Tree Genealogy blog spotted my post and went on a hunt. Diligent and creative searching on Ancestry.com led him to Mable Salvage (Salvadge), an unmarried teacher in Stratford Ontario. Further research on my part led to the conclusion that this is indeed "our" Mable!
16 year old Mable is found living with her younger siblings and her widowed mother Fannie Salvage in Stratford, Perth County Ontario in 1891. Her grandfather William Ruff, 80, is living with the family. William and his daughter Fanny were born in England and Fanny was working as a carpet weaver to support the family.
Ten years later Mable is found living in the town of Mitchell which is just outside of Stratford. Her occupation is recorded as teacher and her date of birth 9 August 1874.
Going back to 1881 provides her father's name - Robert Salvadge age 42 and sadly the deaths of her father Robert and older brother Charles in October 1882 of Typhoid Fever.
Mable and her younger sister Louisa lived together for many years at 176 Hibernia Street in Stratford and are found together as early as 1935. By the 1957 Voter's List, Louisa was not with Mable.
I also found Mable Salvadge on a list of school teachers in Ontario as of November 1932 and she was recorded as teaching at the Avon School.
So now we have a bit of detail to type up and tape to the back of the beautiful painting that Mable created of herself as a young woman. This is what I love about collecting - finding the stories of the individual or individuals who once owned the item, and giving them a voice after many years of silence.
Welcome home Mable!
What a wonderful story! Thanks for sharing! Everything has a story and what a great idea to attach it to the item.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great contribution! And nice job crowd sourcing the detective work. I love stories like this - returning identities to unknown images.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful gift and find. Welcome Mable!
ReplyDeleteI love it! What a wonderful story & a great bit of detective work!
ReplyDeleteA beaut story and great rescue of Mable's portrait. Well done, Lorine.
ReplyDeleteIf I were Mable's relative I'd be thrilled with a copy of it.
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