Inheritance in Ontario: Wills and Other Records for Family Historians
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About this ebook
A guide to researching your family’s inheritance history in Ontario.
Whether your ancestor left hundreds of acres of land, money, or a few modest belongings, the records created when those legacies were distributed can provide valuable clues to family connections, relationships, and just how your ancestors lived.
Inheritance in Ontario will help you determine whether your relative’s will was proved in the Court of Probate, surrogate courts, or another court, and navigate the finding aids to locate surviving estate files and other complementary records at the Archives of Ontario, local courthouse or archives, or through FamilySearch.org. Not every Ontario estate was handled by a court, however, and land records, newspapers, and manuscript collections can also help you discover "who got what."
Jane E. MacNamara
Jane E. MacNamara is a long-time member of the Ontario Genealogical Society. She speaks about family history to groups throughout Ontario. She is the organizer of Genealogy Summer Camp, a program attracting out-of-town researchers to Toronto for a week of tutorials and research. Jane lives in Toronto.
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Book preview
Inheritance in Ontario - Jane E. MacNamara
GENEALOGIST’S REFERENCE SHELF
Inheritance in Ontario
Wills and Other Records for Family Historians
JANE E. MACNAMARA
In appreciation of my great, great aunt Catherine
who died in 1889 without writing a will.
Her estate file provided the names, locations, and
signatures of all her siblings —
and is one of the best records of my MacNamara family.
Contents
Preface and Acknowledgements
Introduction
Chapter 1 – Where to Look and What You Might Find
Chapter 2 – Early Records of Inheritance, 1763 to 1793 or Thereabouts
Chapter 3 – The Court of Probate, 1793 to 1858
Chapter 4 – The Surrogate Courts, 1793 to 1989, and More Recent Estates
Chapter 5 – Records of Inheritance in the Land Registry Office
Chapter 6 – Other Records of Inheritance
Appendix A – Surrogate Courts Archival Series Numbers
Appendix B – Published Indexes to Ontario Estate Records
Preface and Acknowledgements
As a family historian, I’ve found some wonderful estate files. I appreciate the family connections the documents proved and the insight into the life and times, and sometimes characters, of the people involved. I’m also a fan of understanding the process — seeing each piece of the estate file build to a conclusion and link to related records.
I had a lot of help from folks at libraries and archives while researching this book.
First and foremost, I would like to thank the staff at the Archives of Ontario — the reading room staff, those who fetched and carried and re-filed original records for me and those who answered, or tried valiantly to answer, my really difficult questions with a smile and genuine curiosity. I appreciated Paul McIlroy’s and Charles Levi’s insight into surrogate court records.
I am enormously grateful to the creators of and contributors to the Archives Descriptive Database and all the other painstakingly compiled finding aids at the archives. What would we ever do without you?
Thanks to Glenn Wright for digging into the background of some Library and Archives Canada records for me and to Yvonne Sorenson from the Family History Library in Salt Lake City for her work on the same records.
I would also like to acknowledge the efforts of Gloria Hunter, Wayne County Register of Deeds, Detroit; Dawn Eurich, archivist, Special Collections, Detroit Public Library; Tom Belton, senior archivist, Western University Archives and Research Collections Centre; Krista Richardson, Prince Edward County Archives; and Alexandra McEwen, Library and Archives Canada.
Some very clever folks read the manuscript, or parts of it, for me: Kathy Baker, Ruth Burkholder, Ruth Chernia, Brenda Dougall Merriman, and Kathie Orr. Lee Dickson, Ron Junkin, and Janice Nickerson provided suggestions and help along the way.
And a special thanks to all the students in my Hands-on Ontario Estate Records courses, for helping me to understand the records and sharing my fascination for both the search and the story revealed.
Introduction
While it is true that not everyone left a will or had a court-appointed administrator look after their affairs, many people who lived in Ontario did. Certainly no genealogical search is complete without a thorough search for an estate file.
Estate files can help you prove a death — a person had to be dead before their estate was distributed, or at least their relatives and the courts had to be convinced that they were no longer living.
In the absence of a death registration or record of burial, an estate file can provide an exact or at least an approximate death date to narrow your search. Family (or others) could not apply to the courts to administer the estate until at least a week after the death (two weeks if no will was written).[1] If there is a will in the estate file, the time between its signing and the application to administer the estate provides a finite window in which the death must have occurred. In many cases it is a narrow window — a matter of a few months.
There may be clues as to the testator’s state of health in the will itself, as blatant as phrases like being weak in body
or as subtle as a reference to a child not yet born
or a shaky signature.
Clues to the testator’s religious affiliation, educational background, and community involvement may be revealed in his or her bequests to charities.
An estate file rarely specifies the age of the testator, but references to family members and the possessions the person has accumulated may indicate whether advanced age compelled the testator to write a will or whether some other circumstance has inspired a younger person to acknowledge his or her mortality. A soldier might write his will before going into battle. A traveller might put his or her affairs in order before embarking on a significant voyage. Recent events — a marriage, birth of a child or grandchild, death of a spouse or parent, the acquisition of property, the launch of a new business or partnership — may also be triggers for the writing of a will.
Estate files may also provide family connections and indicate whether a particular relative survived to inherit or to act as administrator. If the person was married, the spouse is almost always mentioned in a will, although not always by name. Children were often mentioned, but again, not necessarily by name and some of the children might not be mentioned at all. However, there is an excellent chance that an estate file may provide names and locations of adult children and married names of daughters.
Is your ancestor’s name missing from his parent’s will? It was quite common for a parent to omit the name of one or more of his or her offspring (particularly adult sons or daughters) as beneficiaries. This doesn’t necessarily mean that the parent and child are estranged, or that the child has died. The parent may have provided a generous dowry for a daughter or set a son up in business. Consider those possibilities before you conclude that there was a rift.
And there could be a surprise. Offspring from previous marriages (or other alliances) may be acknowledged in a will.
Names of siblings and more distant relations of the deceased may also be found in an estate file in several different contexts. They may be beneficiaries of the estate, in which case the testator usually states the relationship — John Smith, son of my late brother Fred.
They may be involved in the administration of the estate, or step aside to allow another person to administer — in either case they will be well documented. Other relations, particularly earlier generations, may be mentioned as previous owners of property being bequeathed — the silver spoons left to me by my great aunt Matilda Smith.
Some of the most fruitful estate records in my own research have