Thanks to Beverly Johnson deanjohnson@torchlake.com
for sending this story about the William Russell family. The typing errors, however, are
mine.Thomas Russell and Mary Monk Russell and seven children lived in Shoreham Parish
of County Kent, England. His sixth child William Russell was the only son to come to
Canada, then to the United States. A grandson, James came later.
William Russell, Sr. married Hannah Ann Letchford in England, they had nine children.
In the spring of 1857 they decided to come with their nine children to Canada, near
Brockville, Ontario, on the St. Lawrence River. The trip for the family would have many
hardships; the difficult voyage would last six weeks, they had a newborn, born December
1856; but, the hardest difficulty to bear was the lost of their eight year old son, James,
due to an epidemic on ship. He was buried at sea.
William and Hannah Russell had a farm in Canada from 1857 to 1864 when they decided as
a family to move to Elk Rapids. By this time some of their children had married; but, with
their extended families they started out by boat, along with their farm animals. This
journey too would be long; first via Lake Erie, up Lake Huron, then into Lake Michigan to
the port of Elk Rapids. In 1864 Elk Rapids was a city but the port had no docks. The
animals were pushed off the boat into the water and left to swim to shore.
People arriving in 1864 in Antrim County could well be described as the very early
pioneers of the region; the Russell family would be included in that list. When they first
arrived, they were sharecroppers south of Elk Rapids. Then, in 1869 William, Sr. took
advantage of the 1862 Homestead Act and acquired his homestead of 160 acres in Milton
Township.
William Sr.'s sons Charles and John were too young to apply so the
Homestead reads William Sr. and as they became older, the property was divided between
Charles and John. Henry and William, Jr., now married, also applied and each received
their own homestead properties of 144 and 147 acres respectively. Thomas purchased
property also. The Russell's land, if not side by side, was all in the same area.
William Russell Sr.'s 160 acre homestead was in what we know today as Torch Lake
Township; but, in 1869 that area was Milton Township. The homestead was sold in 1967, just
two years shy of having been in the Russell family for 100 years. The first and second
generations of William Russell held the flame a long time; but, like so many families of
that time, as the older members retired, the younger members left the farm for the city
for better jobs.