HASEN
HASKELL
HASKETT
HASKEY
HASLAM
HASLETT
HASSELL
HASTED
HASTIE
HASTINGS
HASTY
HASWELL
HASWOOD
HASEN o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-06-16 published
HASEN,
Jack
Austin (1942-2007)
Passed away peacefully, at home with his family by his side,
on Thursday, June 14th, 2007. Jack will be forever missed by
his loving wife Christina and sons Tyler and Adam. Jack wrote:
'Since I fell in love with Christina, she has been my rock, friend
and companion. I will love her forever and will always be a part
of her. I have been blessed with 2 wonderful sons, Tyler and
Adam, whom I will cherish forever, and blessed with their wonderful
mother, Patty
HASEN, who lovingly brought them into this world
for us.' Jack will be deeply missed by his sister Mussette
BARKER,
his brother Ken and their families, Christina's family and his
many Friends. Jack was a member of the 1968 Canadian Olympic
Team (yachting). He was also a long time member of Royal Canadian
Yacht Club and Ashbridges Bay Yacht Club. He graduated with his
Civil Engineering degree from the University of Waterloo (1967),
and finished his M.B.A. at Western (1974). He was a real estate
development executive with Hudson's Bay Co., and later with Slough
Estates Canada Ltd. as Executive Vice President. The family will
receive Friends at the Humphrey Funeral Home - A.W. Miles Chapel,
1403 Bayview Avenue (south of Eglinton Avenue East) from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.m. on Sunday, June 17th. A graveside service will be
held at Mount Pleasant Cemetery with the procession from the
funeral home beginning at 11 a.m. on Monday, June 18th. Condolences
and memories may be forwarded through www.humphreymiles.com.
'Life has been good and rewarding'
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HASKELL o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-12-18 published
ALLAN,
Dorothy (formerly
DOYLE, née
HOYLAND)
Born in Sheffield, England, Dorothy died peacefully in her sleep
on December 16, 2007 at Meighen Manor in Toronto. She was 87.
A loving wife, she was predeceased by her first husband Ronald
Edward DOYLE (father of her five children) and her second husband
Donald Sutherland
ALLAN.
Beloved mother of Patti (Steve
HASKELL)
of Waterloo, Dorothy (John
McGINN) of Stittsville, Kathy (John
BLACK) of Cookstown, Michael
DOYLE
(Gaston
COMEAU) of Crescent
Beach, Nova Scotia and Pam
DOYLE (Glen
EASTON) of Toronto. Cherished
Nanny of eight: Matthew (Brook) and Lindsay
McGINN;
Kate
EMMERSON
Kira, Alec and Michael
BLACK;
Megan and Drew
EASTON. She is survived
by her sister Joan
VICKERS, a life long friend and support.
Widowed at an early age, Dorothy was a tremendous role model
and inspiration to her young family. Throughout her life, as
a mother and educator, she set an example of service. She was
a teacher at Central Peel Secondary School in Brampton, Mimico
High School, Silverthorn Collegiate and Humber College in Toronto.
Dorothy and Don enjoyed sailing and lawn bowling at the Royal
Canadian Yacht Club. They were also members of The Graduates
Club and avid bridge players. The family would like to express
their appreciation to the Davis Wing staff at the Isabel and
Arthur Meighen Manor for the wonderful care provided for our
mother. A celebration of Dorothy's life, followed by a reception,
will take place Thursday, December 20th at 11: 00 a.m. at Turner
and Porter Funeral Home, Butler Chapel, 4933 Dundas Street West,
Etobicoke, Ontario M9A 1B6 (416) 231-2283. For those who wish
donations may be made in her name to your local Alzheimer Society.
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HASKETT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-07-18 published
The last survivor of Canada's camps for First World War 'alien
enemies'
As a girl, she was one of 5,000 Ukrainian Canadians and about
3,500 Eastern Europeans who were interned under the War Measures
Act and held prisoner behind barbed wire
By Allison
LAWLOR,
Special to The Globe and Mail; Globe and Mail
archives, Page S8
Halifax -- After years of trying to convince her children that
she had been imprisoned as a little girl in an internment camp
in Spirit Lake, Quebec, Mary Manko
HASKETT fought to ensure that
all Canadians, would remember what had happened to her and thousands
of others during the First World War.
At first, her children were unable to find the place on a map
and assumed their mother was confused and had referred instead
to something that happened in Ukraine. But in 1986, after reading
a newspaper article, they finally understood the truth of her
tragic story of being forced to live in a bush camp in rural
Quebec in 1915.
She was one of 5,000 Ukrainian Canadians and about 3,500 Eastern
Europeans who were interned under the War Measures Act and accommodated
at 24 camps across the country until 1920. Another 80,000 people,
the majority Ukrainian, were forced to register as "enemy aliens"
and required to report to local authorities on a regular basis.
Most had come to Canada at the turn of the century, when the
government encouraged Ukrainian immigration with promises of
freedom and free land.
"I have lived with memories of that injustice all my life," she
once said. "I can never forget what was done to my family and
me. We were innocent and yet we were treated as enemy aliens."
After the war ended, the matter was forgotten by the rest of
Canada, said Ms.
HASKETT, who was the last known survivor of
the camps. "For many years, it was almost as if it was all a
bad dream, a nightmare it would be best if we forgot, certainly
not something other Canadians wanted to talk about with us, the
victims."
For years, Ms.
HASKETT served as the honorary chairperson of
the National Redress Council of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil
Liberties Association. "I don't want an apology. How can anyone
today apologize for something that happened 80 years ago?" she
once told Lubomyr Luciuk of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties
Association. "I want people to remember."
Ms. HASKETT's parents, Andrew and Katherine
MANKO, arrived in
Canada from an area of Ukraine that belonged to Poland, then
part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in the early 1900s. When
war broke out against Germany, Austria, Hungary and other parts
of Eastern Europe, her family and thousands of others like them
were regarded as enemy aliens. Depending on where they lived,
some were forced to turn over money and property - which, according
to McGill University historian J.H. Thompson, the government
later auctioned for 10 cents on the dollar or kept. Some of that
wealth is still in federal coffers.
Starting in 1914, camps and work sites were set up in British
Columbia, Alberta, Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick and
Nova Scotia. Those of German heritage were sent to the more comfortable
camps -- even though Imperial Germany was the wartime enemy --
while racist attitudes of the day pushed most of the Ukrainian
detainees to the wilds of northern Quebec and the backcountry
of British Columbia and Alberta.
In April, 1915, it was the Mankos' turn. The federal government
rounded them up with several other Ukrainian families from a
parish in Montreal's Point St. Charles area and put them on a
train. They were taken hundreds of kilometres away to an internment
camp behind barbed wire at Spirit Lake, known today as Lac Beauchamp,
in Quebec's Abitibi region. It didn't matter that Mary, then
6, and two of her siblings were born in Canada.
"It wasn't fair they were taken out there. They had done no wrong,"
said her daughter, Fran
HASKETT. "It was very sad."
At Spirit Lake, Mary and her brother, John, sisters Annie and
Carolka, and her parents, all lived in a bunkhouse in the woods.
Because she had been so young, Ms.
HASKETT remembered very little
of her time at the camp except for mental images of soldiers
with bayonets standing guard, and of her father returning, half-frozen,
after spending the day cutting firewood and clearing forests.
The children were not allowed to attend school and the family
was issued only two pairs of stockings. To make matters worse,
Carolka died at the camp before she had reached her third birthday.
The family was never able to locate her grave.
Hers was one of many deaths. Some internees were killed trying
to scale the barbed-wire fence; others simply gave up and committed
suicide. Overall, 107 detainees died in the camps.
Most internees were forced to do heavy labour and had their belongings
confiscated, Doctor Luciuk said. At the Spirit Lake camp, the first
internees had to clear the bush to create farm land. "It was
an experimental farm carved out of the woods," he said.
On June 14, 1916, the Mankos were released. But it wasn't until
1920 that the last of the camps were closed.
"After a while, it became obvious that they posed no threat,"
said Doctor Luciuk, who teaches political geography at the Royal
Military College in Kingston. For 20 years, he has scoured federal
documents, interviewed survivors and written books about the
events.
Why Ms. HASKETT and all the others were interned remains open
to debate. Some historians point to xenophobia; others suggest
wartime fervour. Canada was aligned with Britain against Austria-Hungary
and was facing a labour shortage. The internment camps provided
cheap or free labour to build the country's infrastructure and
economy.
After the Manko family was released from the Spirit Lake camp,
they made their way to Toronto and opened a grocery store in
the Cabbagetown neighbourhood. They later moved to Mississauga,
where Ms. HASKETT spent the majority of her life. "They never
had much money," Fran
HASKETT said. "They could stretch it."
Ms. HASKETT worked at a Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. plant for
a time. In 1930, she married Frank
HASKETT, a factory worker
and union man. They had five children, losing one boy to a heart
defect when he was less than a year old.
While raising her children and taking care of the family home,
she formed a club with some women in the neighbourhood. They
would regularly meet, away from their families, to talk, play
cards or go to see a show. She always loved singing Ukrainian
and other folk songs. "She was vivacious and had a wild sense
of humour," Fran
HASKETT said. "She was such a people person."
In 1986, Ms.
HASKETT read a Globe and Mail article about the
internment camps. The story had been written by Doctor Luciuk, and
she tracked him down. "She was in no way bitter," he said. "She
didn't see herself as a victim."
Ms. HASKETT wasn't interested in an apology or compensation for
herself or any of the descendents of internees - she simply wanted
the government to acknowledge that the internment had occurred,
and that the value of the internees' confiscated wealth and forced
labour to be put into an endowment fund to be used for educational
purposes so that no other Canadians would ever again suffer in
the same way.
On November 25, 2005, royal assent was given to Bill C 331, The
Internment of Persons of Ukrainian Origin Recognition Act. The
act acknowledges that persons of Ukrainian origin were interned
in Canada during the First World War and legally obliges the
government to negotiate "an agreement concerning measures that
may be taken to recognize the internment" for educational and
commemorative projects. So far, the latter mandate has not been
fulfilled.
"We always hoped we would secure a timely and honourable redress
settlement that Mary could bear witness to as the last known
survivor of Canada's first national internment operations," Doctor Luciuk
said. "I hope that when we secure our settlement, and we will,
Mary will be there in spirit."
Mary Manko
HASKETT was born in Montreal on August 10, 1908. She
died of pneumonia at a long-term care facility in Mississauga
on July 14, 2007. She was 98. She is survived by her son John
and by daughters Fran and Dianne. She was predeceased by her
husband, Frank, and by sons Ronald and Paul. A funeral mass will
be held at St. Christopher's Catholic Church in Mississauga today
at 10 a.m.
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HASKEY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-08-27 published
DI PAOLO,
Frank
Paul
(Actuary, Former Vice President Confederation Life)
After a lengthy illness on August 24th, 2007 in his 81st year.
Beloved husband of Stella. Dear father of Maria and Paola and
her husband James
WYLIE.
Sadly missed by his brother-in-law Peter
HASKEY.
Friends may call at the Morley Bedford Funeral Home,
159 Eglinton Ave. W. (2 stoplights west of Yonge St.) on Monday,
August 27th from 7-9 p.m. Funeral Mass at Holy Rosary Church,
354 St. Clair Ave. W. (east of Bathurst St.) on Tuesday, August
28th at 2 p.m. In lieu of flowers, donations to the charity of
one's choice would be appreciated.
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HASLAM o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-12-28 published
HOWARD,
Daniel
James
Daniel our most precious 1st born child has passed away on Wednesday,
December 26, 2007. Beloved
son of Jane and John and dear brother
to Andrew. Daniel struggled with his disability for 20 years,
but finally lost his battle at North York General Hospital surrounded
by his family. Dear grand_son of Donald and the late Shirley
HOWARD
of Renfrew and Charles and Coreen
FENTON of Toronto. Nephew of
Pamela FENTON and Ann and Stephen
HASLAM and cousins Rebecca and
Claire and many other family members. He will be lovingly remembered
and sadly missed by his Aunt Susan
HOWARD of Munster Hamlet.
He was beautifully cared for by his nurses Jean, Dana, Sheila,
Susan, Shenaz and many other caregivers over the years. He will
be missed by all his teachers and fellow students at Park Lane
School.
Special thanks to Doctor Leo
LEVIN,
Donna and the staff
at Markham Pediatrics and Doctor R.
MUNN for all their support.
Thanks to the Hospital for Sick Children and all the staff that
cared for him there. Friends may call on Friday, December 28th,
from 7-9 p.m. at the R.S. Kane Funeral Home (6150 Yonge Street,
at Goulding, south of Steeles). Funeral service to be held on
Saturday, December 29 at 9 a.m. in the chapel. Interment Westminster
Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, donations to the Hospital for Sick
Children, Easter Seals or President's Choice Children's Charity.
Condolences - www.rskane.ca R.S. Kane 416-221-1159
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HASLETT o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-06-11 published
AMUNDRUD,
Gordon
Leonard (1924-2007)
World War II Veteran Department Of National Defence
Peacefully, at the Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health Centre
on Friday, June 8, 2007. Predeceased by his beloved wife, Barbara
(née HASLETT.)
Loving father to David (Bev,) Gail (Jim,) Beverley
and Karen (Benoit). Cherished grandfather of Andrew, Erik, Kirsten,
Lauren, Justin, Alex and Matt. Dear brother of Howard (Helen)
of Cochrane, Alberta; Marjorie (Louis) of Calgary; Kenneth (Molly)
of Edmonton; Norman (Margaret) of Stony Plain, Alberta, and Marlene
(Ron) of Regina. He will also be sorely missed by his many cousins,
nieces and nephews. Near and dear to his heart was Vania, who
provided care and comfort for seven years. Born and educated
in Aylesbury, Saskatchewan, Gordon enlisted at age 18. He served
as a pilot in the Royal Canadian Air Force and saw combat duty
with Royal Air Force 76 Squadron out of Holme-On Spalding Moor,
attaining the rank of Flight Lieutenant. He earned his Mechanical
Engineering Degree at the University of Saskatchewan. A Gas Turbine
Engine Specialist, he was involved with the Avro Arrow, the Bras
d'Or Hydrofoil and the four Tribal Class Destroyers. Gordon was
active as a coach in minor baseball and hockey, and as a volunteer
in competitive swimming. His passions were photography and all
outdoor activities. Friends are invited to visit at the Central
Chapel of Hulse, Playfair and McGarry, 315 McLeod Street, on Tuesday
from 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service will be held in the Chapel of the
Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health Centre on Wednesday at 3 p.m.
The family would like to thank the kind and caring staff and
Dr. TOBIN of Gatineau 2 North, where he spent his final 5 years.
In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Alzheimer Society
of Ottawa or to the Perley and Rideau Veterans' Health Centre.
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HASSELL o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-07-26 published
BURRELL,
Joan
Marguerite (née
HASSELL)
By Anne SCANLAN,
Page L8
Mother, "Nana," wife, sister, friend. Born September 11, 1930,
in Toronto. Died April 28 in Toronto of leukemia, aged 76.
Joan was a woman of style and class, best known in her later
years as the matriarch of the family home in North York. The
role of doctor's wife fit her like a slipper, although it was
hardly as glamorous as she might have first imagined.
The third daughter of Beth and Jack
HASSELL,
Joan was a city
girl. It was in the city that she met medical student Archie
BURRELL, on a date arranged by Joan's sister, Carol, who was
dating Archie's University of Toronto med student pal, Douglas
BRODIE.
Doctors
BURRELL and
BRODIE were destined to be brothers-in-law.
The bride soon followed the groom back to the countryside from
which he hailed, specifically as the town doctor in Dundalk north
of Orangeville, Ontario (Archie was from nearby Hanover.) Dundalk's
claim to fame is that it's Ontario's highest point (526 metres)
it's unlikely that the high point of Joan's career as a doctor's
wife was the day a patient came by the house with four recently
slaughtered chickens as payment for Doctor
BURRELL's services.
More to her liking was the response at the local general store
when Joan first arrived: "You just leave the bags here and we'll
deliver them to you. You're the new doctor's wife."
Joan and Archie had six children: four girls and two boys. (Two
of the girls were delivered by Archie himself because he beat
the scheduled doctor to the delivery room.) Joan and her young
family learned quickly that a country doctor was on permanent
call.
She became the wife of a city doctor in 1962, when the family
moved to North York. Life with Joan was always an adventure.
No matter where the out-of-town destination, the car wouldn't
get far before Joan would find a lake suitable for a spontaneous
swim.
In the fall of 1982, Joan and Archie ventured to Saudi Arabia,
where Archie worked in a hospital clinic. They used Jetta as
a jetting-off point to travel in Europe and Asia. After returning
to Canada, Joan followed her husband to the north, where Archie
filled in for doctors on vacation.
In her later years, Joan loved nothing more than being surrounded
by her six children and 10 grandchildren. Her laughter could
fill a room. Music was also close to her heart. Joan sang in
the choir of the Forest Grove United Church, and would often
have a grandchild seated next to her on the piano bench at home.
On the night of Joan's final family Christmas gathering, her
family surrounded her as she played Christmas carols deep into
the evening. She never looked more content.
Anne SCANLAN,
Joan's daughter, submitted this on behalf of siblings
John, Sylvia, Elaine, Ruth and Andrew.
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HASTED o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-11-14 published
BELFORD,
Alice
Grace (née
HASTED)
Passed away peacefully at Stevenson Memorial Hospital in Alliston,
on Sunday, November 11th, 2007, at the age of 94. Grace
BELFORD,
beloved wife of the late Joseph F.
BELFORD. Dear mother of Joan
BELFORD
(Peter
WHITE/WHYTE) of Toronto and Richard of Saskatoon. Fondly
remembered by step-grandchildren Darren
WHITE/WHYTE
(Katherine) of
Kingston, and Laura
(WHITE/WHYTE)
NEWSOME
(Don) of Roanoke, Virginia.
Predeceased by her brother Syd
HASTED.
Born in Toronto in 1913,
Grace attended George Syme Public School and Runnymede Collegiate.
After she married Joe in 1939, they moved to the country where
Joe took over the Tottenham Creamery. Both Joe and Grace became
Tottenham stalwarts as members of Christ Church (Anglican), the
bridge club, the lawn bowling club, and supporters of every community
undertaking. After recovering from Joe's unexpected death in
1982, Grace went on to enjoy travelling the world, and involvement
in the horticultural society, the library, and the Tottenham
food bank. Four years ago, she entered a new life chapter first
at Simcoe Village, and later at Simcoe Manor. Visitation at the
Rod Abrams Funeral Home #1666 Tottenham Rd., Tottenham (905) 936-3477
on Thursday November 15th, from 6-9 p.m. Memorial Service to
be held Friday, November 16th at Christ Church (Anglican) Tottenham
at 11: 00 a.m. If desired, donations may be made to Stevenson
Memorial Hospital Foundation or a charity of your choice.
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HASTIE o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-08-04 published
KOBE,
Dale
Karl
In Durham Thursday August 2, 2007. Dale
KOBE of Hanover, formerly
of Durham in his 64th year. Beloved husband of Diane (née
HASTIE.)
Loving father of Stephen (Jacklyn), Bryan (Branda), and Jannette
(Harry) BAILEY all of Durham. Loved brother of Gary (Hermaine)
of Kitchener. Sadly missed by grandchildren Mark, Amanda, Brett
and Tom and his nieces and nephews and their families. The family
will receive Friends at the Royal Canadian Legion, Durham on
Tuesday from 10 a.m. until 12 noon. Funeral Service will be held
at the Royal Canadian Legion, Durham at 12: 00 noon on Tuesday
August 7, 2007. Interment Durham Cemetery. Arrangements entrusted
to Fawcett-McEachern Funeral Home and Cremation Centre, Durham.
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HASTIE o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-09-17 published
RYDALL,
Joan
Adeline (née
FERGUSON)
Peacefully at her son's home at R.R.#2, Durham on Saturday, September 15,
2007. Joan (née
FERGUSON) of Orangeville in her 62nd year. Loved
mother of Sherry
OUTHWAITE and Alan
LEIBTOG of Hamilton and Calvin
(Maureen) of R.R.#2, Durham. Loving sister of Jack (Hazel) of
R.R.#2, Hanover, Jessie
PITTMAN of Scarborough, Ella (Roy)
WHITE/WHYTE
of Midland, Norman (Derlene) of Port Elgin, Mike of Alma, Joyce
(Bob) BARHAM of Walkerton, Jean (Keith)
HASTIE of R.R.#2, Priceville
and Nancy (Robert)
TALBOT of Walkerton. Sadly missed by her grandchildren
Erin, Katey, Becky and Amy. Predeceased by her parents Irwin
and Janet and her sister Gladys
HELM.
The family will receive
Friends at the Fawcett-McEachern Funeral Home and Cremation Centre,
Durham on Monday from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Funeral Service will
be held at the Royal Canadian Legion, Durham at 1 p.m. on Tuesday,
September 18, 2007. Interment Amos Cemetery, Dromore.
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HASTINGS o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-12-29 published
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON, Mary Elizabeth
(McBRIDE, née
SACZKOWSKI)
After a two year courageous battle with cancer, Mary (née
SACZKOWSKI)
of Shallow Lake passed away Thursday, December the 13th, 2007
in her 49th year. Beloved wife of Tim. Loving mother of Chris
GIERUSZ (Courtney
HOFELS) Bolton, and Amanda
GIERUSZ (Chris
PARISIEN)
Shallow Lake. Devoted grandmother to Alex, Nicholas and Noah.
Cherished sister of Cyndi (Tom
FRAME) Acton, Ellen (Jeff
CAMBELL)
Torrance and Richard (Cathy) Kingston. Predeceased by parents
Richard and Wilma (Graham
HASTINGS.)
Daughter-in-law of Georgina
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON,
Meaford and sister-in-law of Jim
THOMPSON/THOMSON/TOMPSON/TOMSON (Sue
BROWN)
Shallow Lake. Former employee of Maple View Residence of Owen
Sound. A celebration of Mary's life will take place Saturday,
January the 5th, 2008 at Victoria Parks Community Centre, 35 Victoria
Cres., Mono Mills from 1: 00 pm-3:00 p.m. If so desired, donations
to the Terry Fox Run would be appreciated (as per Mary's wishes).
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HASTY o@ca.on.york_county.toronto.globe_and_mail 2007-05-29 published
DESROCHES,
Pierre (1931-2007)
In Longueuil, on May 24, 2007, of cancer, died Pierre
DESROCHES,
formerly Executive vice president of the Canadian Broadcasting
Corporation, executive director of Telefilm Canada, Officier
des arts et des lettres de la France, Doctor Honoris Causa of
the Faculty of Arts of Ottawa University, surrounded by his family.
Dearly beloved Denise
MacBETH, loving father of Daniel (Helene
ALLARD) and Anne-Marie (Normand
HASTY,) loved grandfather of
Marie-Eve, Elise, Claude, Thomas and Mathilde, survived by his
brother Marc and his sisters, Denyse, Monique and Micheline.
The family will receive their Friends at the Groupe Yves Légaré,
2750 Marie-Victorin E., in Longueuil, (514) 595-1500 on Thursday,
May 31st from 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m. Funeral service will be
held on Saturday, June 2 at 11 a.m. in the Cathedrale St-Antoine
de Padoue, corner of St-Charles St. and Chambly, in Longueuil.
If desired, memorial donations may be made to Ste-Justine Hospital
Foundation (neonatalogy), to La Fondation du Père Lindsay or
to The foundation of Les Jeunesses musicales du Canada.
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HASWELL o@ca.on.grey_county.owen_sound.the_sun_times 2007-07-27 published
CROSSEY,
Linda
Ann (née
BROOKING)
Peacefully at the Grey Bruce Health Services in Owen Sound on
Thursday,
July 26th, 2007. Linda Ann
CROSSEY (née
BROOKING,)
of Owen Sound. Loving wife of Glenn (Archie)
CROSSEY for 45 years.
Much loved mother of Brentt
CROSSEY and his wife, Janice, of
Kitchener and Michele
WHITE/WHYTE and her husband, Don, of Wiarton.
“Gammie“ to Lauren and Hannah
WHITE/WHYTE and Erica and Beth
CROSSEY.
Dear sister of Greg
BROOKING and his wife, Patricia, of Annan.
Sister-in-law of Don
CROSSEY
(Sylvia) and Bill
CROSSEY (Mary,)
all of Bowmanville. Most cherished friend of Linda
WATSON, of
Oshawa and Patricia
HASWELL, of Owen Sound. Predeceased by her
parents, Howard and Dorothy
BROOKING.
The family will receive
Friends and relatives at the Brian E. Wood Funeral Home, 250 -
14th Street West, Owen Sound (519-376-7492) on Saturday, July 28th,
2007 from 1: 00-4:00 p.m. If so desired, the family would appreciate
donations to the Grey Bruce Health Services Foundation as your
expression of sympathy.
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HASWOOD o@ca.on.manitoulin.howland.little_current.manitoulin_expositor 2007-01-03 published
George Archie "Waabaankwad" (Paul)
WAHSQUONAIKEZHIK
In loving memory of George Archie "Waabaankwad" (Paul)
WAHSQUONAIKEZHIK,
August 3, 1931 - December 19, 2006.
Waabaankwad of South Bay (Wikwemikong) passed away at the Plummer Hospital in Sault Sainte Marie in his 75th year.
Loving son of Margaret and John (Paul)
WAHSQUONAIKEZHIK,
both predeceased. Dear stepson of Daniel and Julia
WEMIGWANS.
Loving
father of Viola (late Frederick)
RECOLLET of Sault Sainte Marie and Robert
MADAHBEE of Ottawa. Beloved grandfather to Holly (Albert,) Tracey
(Jamie), Crystal and Rheal. Great grandfather to Chelsey, Eva-Marie,
Hayden and Wassnodeh. Dear brother to Theresa
HASWOOD
(Tully) of Rock
Springs, New Mexico, Christina
SINOBERT (Cecil) of Sagamok, Bernadette
RECOLLET
(Stanley, predeceased) of Wikwemikong, Josette
WAHSQUONAIKEZHIK
(Brad) of Sudbury, Jean
DEBASSIGE of Sudbury, Ernest (Annette) of
Keshena, Wisconsin, Gabriel of Birch Island, Francis (Beverly) of Sault
Sainte Marie, Luke (Tara) of Fort Alexander, Manitoba, Christopher of
Sudbury, Thaddius
LAVALLEE of Wikwemikong, Tina
McCURLEY
(Ken) of Birch
Island. Predeceased by siblings Rita, Annette, Bertha, Celina, Patricia,
Ida, Joseph Louie and Adam. He will be sadly missed by many nieces and
nephews, adopted and step-family members, extended family throughout the
pow wow circle, Friends. Archie enjoyed hunting, fishing, playing
baseball, step dancing, joking and story telling. Archie attended
numerous pow wows, carrying the Veterans Staff. Archie served in WW2 and the
Korean War. Rested at South Bay Community Centre from 7 pm,
Thursday, December 21, 2006 until the Funeral Mass on Saturday, December
23, 2006 at 11 am. Burial in Veterans Cemetery.
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