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Genealogy of the Loader / Loder family
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Cath

Female - Yes, date unknown


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Cath and died.

    Family/Spouse: Megrath, Philip. Philip and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. Megrath, Mary  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 10 Dec 1792 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; and died.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Megrath, Mary Descendancy chart to this point (1.Cath1) was born on 10 Dec 1792 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5894
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4709
    BAPM: RIN MH:IF32443

    Mary married Newhook, William on 31 Oct 1808. William (son of Newhook, Charles W. and Wilcox, Elizabeth) was born on 4 Dec 1782 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. Newhook, Ebenezar John  Descendancy chart to this point was born in in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada.
    2. 4. Newhook, George  Descendancy chart to this point was born in in Dildo, Newfoundland.
    3. 5. Newhook, May Young  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 4 Sep 1804; and died.
    4. 6. Newhook, Sarah  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 18 Feb 1815 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; and died.
    5. 7. Newhook, Charles  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1817 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; died in 1895 in St John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
    6. 8. Newhook, William  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1823 in Durrels Cove, Newfoundland; was christened on 23 Oct 1823; died in 1902 in St John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.
    7. 9. Newhook, Elizabeth  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 20 Jul 1823 in Durrels Cove, Newfoundland; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  Newhook, Ebenezar John Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada.

    Notes:

    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2429
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4720
    BIRT: RIN MH:IF32444


  2. 4.  Newhook, George Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in in Dildo, Newfoundland.

    Notes:

    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2437
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4723
    BIRT: RIN MH:IF32390


  3. 5.  Newhook, May Young Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 4 Sep 1804; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF2469
    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2470
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4259


  4. 6.  Newhook, Sarah Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 18 Feb 1815 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; and died.

    Notes:

    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2483
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4733
    BIRT: RIN MH:IF32445


  5. 7.  Newhook, Charles Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1817 in Trinity, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland, Canada; died in 1895 in St John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

    Notes:

     

    (13) Charles Newhook (bachelor), 1817-95

    Born at Trinity in 1817, son of William Newhook (Trinity). Died in 1895 at St. John's, where he is buried. He never married.

     

    In Hutchinson's 1864 Directory, he is listed as a shipbuilder at Trinity.

     

    Messrs. Archibald, and Gilbert G., Christian, of St. John's, men in their eighties, recall him as an old, small, bearded man at Trinity when they were boys there. They know he built a schooner called Lizzie, for their grandfather, George Christian. They say the last vessel he built at Trinity was the Hiawatha, which I myself have seen.

     

    Of his skill, Mr. Archibald Christian relates two anecdotes. First, he shaped a new stem for a vessel under repairs; when brought to be fitted in place, not a shaving had to be pared off it. Secondly, when a shipwright who had built a vessel in Prince Edward Island got nervous about the launching of her, Charles Newhook was brought there from Trinity and did the job.

     

    Mr. Gilbert G. Christian, when about seven, was launched in the new schooner Alberta, which Charles Newhook master-built in Slade's Cove, Trinity, for the local firm of Robert S. Bremmer.

     

    In "The Enterprise," a Trinity newspaper, of 4 December 1909, Rev. Walter R. Smith, who spent a number of years of his youth at Trinity, writes as follows: "I saw the new Dart launched in February 1859. She was a handsome craft, and designed and built by that A1 shipbuilder, Mr. Charles Newhook, who died at St. John's only a few years ago ...... she was not a very fortunate ship ...... In the future, I may speak of the Isabel, Thomas, Trinity and Henry Thomas; all these brigs I saw launched. They were all designed and built by Mr. Charles Newhook."

     

    A letter signed Rambler in "The Enterprise's" issue of 27 November 1909 speaks of "...... a little house in which Mr. Charles Newhook, shipwright, used to keep the models of the vessels Trinity,Henry Thomas and many others which he built."

     

    In the 1934 obituary in section (5) above, Shortis says that the Newhooks built "...... also the famous Henry Thomas, in which Capt. John Houlahan brought in 11,000 seals one spring."

     

    An anonymous article entitled "Harbour Grace History, The Old Ships, etc.," in the St. John's "Daily News" of about 19 May 1959, reads in part as follows:-

     

    "The Henry Thomas, one of the best known ships of those years, was built by Charles Newhook at Stoneman's Dock at Trinity, and was launched on the 8th February 1858. She went to the seal fisheryin March that year under Capt. George Stoneman, and was also employed in foreign parts with Stoneman as master ...... Capt. Field was in charge of her on a voyage to Sydney, and on her way back she was wrecked at St. Pierre. The St. Pierre merchants bought her and had her repaired, and made her the clipper of the French banking fleet. It was said that she could go through ice where other ships would get jammed and that she could run 18 knots."

     

    A newsitem in "The Courier," St. John's, of 17 January 1855, reads as follows:-

     

    "On the 4th of January there was launched from the dockyard of Messrs. R. Slade & Co., Trinity, a fine new brigantine named Isobel, of the burthen of 151 tons, new measurement. She was built by Mr. Charles Newhook, is intended chiefly for the seal fishery, and by competant judge is pronounced a handsome vessel, and as strong as wood, iron and good workmanship can make her. The launch was witnessed by a crowd of spectators all wishing success to the good ship and to her long-established and highly respectable owners."

     

    Mr. Andrew Horwood, of 140 Campbell Avenue, St. John's, tells me that on her first sealing voyage, the Isobel was dismasted in a gale, that she worked into Trinity under jury rig, was re-rigged as a brig and went out to the ice again the same spring.

     

    No names or particulars are known to me of other vessels that Charles Newhook (bachelor) master-built or repaired. He was the last Newhook master shipbuilder to practise that calling in Trinity,T. B.

     

     

     

    (13) Charles Newhook (bachelor), 1817-95

    Born at Trinity in 1817, son of William Newhook (Trinity). Died in 1895 at St. John's, where he is buried. He never married.

    In Hutchinson's 1864 Directory, he is listed as a shipbuilder at Trinity.

    Messrs. Archibald, and Gilbert G., Christian, of St. John's, men in their eighties, recall him as an old, small, bearded man at Trinity when they were boys there. They know he built a schooner calledLizzie, for their grandfather, George Christian. They say the last vessel he built at Trinity was the Hiawatha, which I myself have seen.

    Of his skill, Mr. Archibald Christian relates two anecdotes. First, he shaped a new stem for a vessel under repairs; when brought to be fitted in place, not a shaving had to be pared off it. Secondly, when a shipwright who had built a vessel in Prince Edward Island got nervous about the launching of her, Charles Newhook was brought there from Trinity and did the job.

    Mr. Gilbert G. Christian, when about seven, was launched in the new schooner Alberta, which Charles Newhook master-built in Slade's Cove, Trinity, for the local firm of Robert S. Bremmer.

    In "The Enterprise," a Trinity newspaper, of 4 December 1909, Rev. Walter R. Smith, who spent a number of years of his youth at Trinity, writes as follows: "I saw the new Dart launched in February 1859. She was a handsome craft, and designed and built by that A1 shipbuilder, Mr. Charles Newhook, who died at St. John's only a few years ago ...... she was not a very fortunate ship ...... In the future, I may speak of the Isabel, Thomas, Trinity and Henry Thomas; all these brigs I saw launched. They were all designed and built by Mr. Charles Newhook."

    A letter signed Rambler in "The Enterprise's" issue of 27 November 1909 speaks of "...... a little house in which Mr. Charles Newhook, shipwright, used to keep the models of the vessels Trinity, Henry Thomas and many others which he built."

    In the 1934 obituary in section (5) above, Shortis says that the Newhooks built "...... also the famous Henry Thomas, in which Capt. John Houlahan brought in 11,000 seals one spring."

    An anonymous article entitled "Harbour Grace History, The Old Ships, etc.," in the St. John's "Daily News" of about 19 May 1959, reads in part as follows:-

    "The Henry Thomas, one of the best known ships of those years, was built by Charles Newhook at Stoneman's Dock at Trinity, and was launched on the 8th February 1858. She went to the seal fishery in March that year under Capt. George Stoneman, and was also employed in foreign parts with Stoneman as master ...... Capt. Field was in charge of her on a voyage to Sydney, and on her way back she was wrecked at St. Pierre. The St. Pierre merchants bought her and had her repaired, and made her the clipper of the French banking fleet. It was said that she could go through ice where other ships would get jammed and that she could run 18 knots."

    A newsitem in "The Courier," St. John's, of 17 January 1855, reads as follows:-

    "On the 4th of January there was launched from the dockyard of Messrs. R. Slade & Co., Trinity, a fine new brigantine named Isobel, of the burthen of 151 tons, new measurement. She was built by Mr. Charles Newhook, is intended chiefly for the seal fishery, and by competant judge is pronounced a handsome vessel, and as strong as wood, iron and good workmanship can make her. The launch was witnessed by a crowd of spectators all wishing success to the good ship and to her long-established and highly respectable owners."

    Mr. Andrew Horwood, of 140 Campbell Avenue, St. John's, tells me that on her first sealing voyage, the Isobel was dismasted in a gale, that she worked into Trinity under jury rig, was re-rigged as a brig and went out to the ice again the same spring.

    No names or particulars are known to me of other vessels that Charles Newhook (bachelor) master-built or repaired. He was the last Newhook master shipbuilder to practise that calling in Trinity, T. B.
    BIRT: RIN MH:IF2415
    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2416
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF2417


  6. 8.  Newhook, William Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1823 in Durrels Cove, Newfoundland; was christened on 23 Oct 1823; died in 1902 in St John's, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada.

    Notes:

    Age 4 years 9 months when baptised in Jul 30,1811

     

    (12) William Newhook (Catalina), 1823-1902

    Born at Trinity in 1823, son of William Newhook (Trinity). Died in St. John's in 1902. I affix Catalina to his name, as that is the place where he was a master shipbuilder. A grandson is Mr. William T. Newhook, of Churchill Square Apartments, St. John's.

     

    He married Mary Ann Jeans of Catalina in 1850, and lived most of the next twenty years of his life there, where six of his nine children were born. He was both a shipbuilder and a house carpenter, and he helped build an Anglican church at Catalina.

     

    He master-built at Catalina the banking schooners Cactus and Hyderangea for Benjamin Snelgrove, supplying merchant; I myself have seen both vessels.

     

    He moved to St. John's to live about 1890, accompanied by his brother, Charles Newhook (bachelor). He brought with him some old family letters, written in French, which confirms the French extraction of the Newhook family. The letters were lost in the Great Fire of 1892.

     

    No names or particulars are known to me of other vessels that William Newhook (Catalina) master-built or repaired.
    BIRT: RIN MH:IF2497
    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2498
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF2499
    BAPM: RIN MH:IF2500
    EVEN: RIN MH:IF32165
    EVEN: RIN MH:IF32214

    William married Jeans, Mary Ann on 1 Dec 1850. Mary was born in 1823 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 10. Newhook, Inez Wilhelmina  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1853 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    2. 11. Newhook, Charles Ebenezer George  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 16 Dec 1855 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    3. 12. Newhook, Lucretia Anna  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1856 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    4. 13. Newhook, Elizabeth Anna  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1858 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    5. 14. Newhook, Evangelina Sabary  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 26 May 1860 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    6. 15. Newhook, Ebenerzer John  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 11 Jun 1863 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    7. 16. Newhook, Eaphenial Mary Burridge  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1865 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    8. 17. Newhook, Charles Wilfred Horace  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1867 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.
    9. 18. Newhook, Elfreda Nina  Descendancy chart to this point was born in 1871 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; died in 1936 in New Rochelle, NY..

  7. 9.  Newhook, Elizabeth Descendancy chart to this point (2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 20 Jul 1823 in Durrels Cove, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5885
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF4721



Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Newhook, Inez Wilhelmina Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1853 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5924
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5925


  2. 11.  Newhook, Charles Ebenezer George Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 16 Dec 1855 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5926
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5927


  3. 12.  Newhook, Lucretia Anna Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1856 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5928
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5929


  4. 13.  Newhook, Elizabeth Anna Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1858 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5930
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5931


  5. 14.  Newhook, Evangelina Sabary Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 26 May 1860 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5932
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5933


  6. 15.  Newhook, Ebenerzer John Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born on 11 Jun 1863 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5934
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5935


  7. 16.  Newhook, Eaphenial Mary Burridge Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1865 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5936
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5937


  8. 17.  Newhook, Charles Wilfred Horace Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1867 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; and died.

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5938
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5939


  9. 18.  Newhook, Elfreda Nina Descendancy chart to this point (8.William3, 2.Mary2, 1.Cath1) was born in 1871 in Catalina, Trinity Bay, Newfoundland; died in 1936 in New Rochelle, NY..

    Notes:

    BIRT: RIN MH:IF5940
    DEAT: RIN MH:IF5941