Name |
Gerald MALLETT [1] |
Residence |
Between 1900 and 1940 |
13 Station Road, Truro, Cornwall, England |
- When the family first moved here, the address was "1 Cotehele Villas", as recorded in the 1901 census. In the 1911 census Edith gave her address as 13 Cotehele Terrace, but the enumerator recorded it as "13 Station Road"
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13 Station Road This appears to be the house as it looks today (2015) that Frederick William Mallett, his wife Edith and their family lived in from roughly 1900 to 1940.
Courtesy Google Maps Street View |
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13 Station Road This appears to be the house as it looks today (2015) that Frederick William Mallett, his wife Edith and their family lived in from roughly 1900 to 1940.
Courtesy Google Maps Street View |
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Mallett Ladies at "Cotehele" From the left: Una Mallett, Florence Mallett, Edith (Rillston) Mallett, and Florence (Lander) Goodman.
Courtesy Wayne Mallett. |
Birth |
Abt Dec 1904 |
Truro, Cornwall, England [1, 2] |
Gender |
Male |
Census |
2 Apr 1911 |
Cotehele, 13 Station Road, Truro, Cornwall, England [3] |
- Edith was described as a widow, so obviously Frederick William died prior to the census date. She recorded her address as "13 Cotehele Terrace, Truro", but the enumerator recorded it as "13 Station Road, Truro". The house apparently still stands today (2015), but the address is Station Road, as the enumerator had it. "Cotehele Terrace" seems not to exist.
Edith stated that she had been married for 23 years, and that she had had 11 children, with 8 of them still living. There must have been a child born and died between censuses that has gone unrecorded here.
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Photo |
Abt 1915 |
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Donald and Gerald Mallett Donald and Gerald as young boys.
Courtesy Wayne Mallett. |
Photo |
Abt 1919 |
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Donald and Gerald Mallett Donald and Gerald as teens: Donald is on the left, Gerald is on the right, and Fraser Hunter stands bewteen them. Taken at home in the spring of 1919.
Courtesy Wayne Mallett. |
Emigration |
23 Mar 1920 |
London, England [4] |
Immigration |
5 Apr 1920 |
Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada [5] |
- Gerald and Donald arrived after a 2 week crossing aboard the "Grampian" with the stated intention of becoming Farmers in Lloydminster "B C". The province is obviously incorrect, because they show up in the 1921 census in Saskatchewan, near Lloydminster, in 1921.
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RMS Grampian The ship that brought Gerald and Donald Mallett to Canada in 1920. |
Census |
1 Jun 1921 |
16, 51, 1, 4, Streamstown, Alberta, Canada [6] |
- Gerald Mallett was living with his older brother Frederick Harold, having just recently immigrated to Canada. Their brother Donald Mallett was living on the neighbouring farm with WJ Wilson, probably Myrtle's brother. This was the same family that Frederick Harold was living with in 1916. Frederick owned his own farm, and Gerald had "Just Arrived". Frederick Harold's farm may have been the same farm that Myrtle's parents inhabited in 1916. The section numbers were not given in 1916, but their farm was next door to William John Wilson in that year, as Frederick Harold's was in 1921. Myrtle's parents seem to have moved to Wolverine Saskatchewan, east of Saskatoon, about 500KM from Streamstown.
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Miscellaneous |
2 Apr 1926 |
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada [7] |
- Gerald obviously travelled home for a visit. He gave his Mother's address as his departure point, and his brother Frederick Harold's address in Lloydminster as his destination. The voyage aboard the "Ascania" from Southampton to Halifax took about a week and a half. He had £10 in his pocket, and was travelling inland via CN (Canadian National Railway).
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Photo |
Abt 1964 |
 |
Donald and Gerald Mallett Donald and Gerald as Grown Men. Gerald is on the right.
Courtesy Wayne Mallett. |
SW Group |
1 |
UKC 1881 |
N |
Death |
Abt 1987 [8, 9] |
Burial |
Abt 1987 |
Glenwood Cemetery, Edson, Alberta, Canada [9] |
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Person ID |
I2191 |
Southwest |
Last Modified |
19 Nov 2020 |