Misc. Notes
From Alloa Scotland, prior to the early 1770s.
From Linda Shaw:
He was a sergeant in the 6th Regiment of Foot, later known as the Royal Warwickshire, and his regiment used to return to that English county to recruit, where he met Hannah.
From Helen Gibson, correspondent, the Sprague Project (
http://www.sprague-database.org), note of March 22nd, 2006:
“From The Truro Weekly News (Kent Family of Musquodobiot by D. Reid): In the year 1785 Alexander Kent, an officer in the army of King George III, left the shores of his native England to seek a new home in the New World, a tract of land in the province of New Brunswick having been granted to him. He was accompanied by his young wife, Hannah Swinburne,and while the ship lay for a time in Dublin Bay his eldest son, James, was born. Sgt. Kent went to the West Indies on business connected with his retirement on half-pay and died there. Many years ago an old man told the writer (D. Reid) that it was reported that he had been killed in a duel but if it was true his grandchildren where ignorant of it. Comment: James Kent, the brother of Alexander, in a land grant says that Alexander died of the effects of the bad climate. This is quite possible since the British Army had many deaths due to the yellow fever while stationed in St. Lucia.”
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Misc. Notes
Stephen Gourley, according to Millar Book was a son of James Gourley and his wife Catherine Stevenson, and was one of the Grantees of Township of Truro, and who died in 1790. His wife died July 5th, 1804, aged 90 years. Stephen Gourley was brought by his parents to Truro in 1760, and for a time kept an Inn at Board Landing, where considerable shipbuilding was carried on at that tine. He married Hannah Swinburn, widow of the late Alex Kent in 1707. They moved to Lower Stewiacke and settled on the farm that his grandson Robert J. Pollock later resided on, (and is now the farm of E.G. Campbell) where he kept an Inn. (This also includes the Lamont Kent Farm.) His house stood on the west side or road, where Mr. Pollock’s (Campbell’s) farm now’ stands. He died February 15th, 1820 age 68 years. His widow died January 3lst, 1831 aged 75 years
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