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Sarah "Sadie" Elizabeth Hastings

Female 1872 - 1944  (72 years)


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  • Name Sarah "Sadie" Elizabeth Hastings 
    Born 6 Jan 1872  Lemonville, Whitchurch Township, York County, Ontario Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Female 
    Died 12 Jan 1944  Regina, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Buried 19 Jan 1944  Regina Municipal Cemetery Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Person ID I05716  All
    Last Modified 16 Jun 2008 

    Father Adam Hastings,   b. 17 Nov 1827, near Belfast, Ireland Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 9 May 1910, Rouleau, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 82 years) 
    Mother Alice McDowell,   b. 12 Jan 1844, Upper Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 25 Dec 1928, Regina, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 84 years) 
    Married 10 Apr 1860  Dundalk, Grey County, Ontario Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • Adam Hastings was raised on his father’s homestead in Whitchurch Township. His meagre education would have been in the village school at Lemonville, and would have comprised reading, writing and arithmetic. He followed his father as a yeoman or farmer and remained with the father until the latter’s death. While he had purchased the homestead (west half of Lot 12, Concession 6) in 1851 and 1854, his father bequeathed it to him in his will. In addition Adam purchased the west half of Lot 15, Concession 6 November 22, 1854 from John Stickley.

      It is said his marriage was “arranged” by his twin sister Mary Anne who married John McDowell of Dundalk. The bride to be was Jane McDowell, John’s sister; however, on meeting Adam, she declined the offer. Adam, not to be deterred and, in view of the long expensive trip from Lemonville to Dundalk, simply turned his affection to her younger sister Alice who consented. The marriage would last 50 years and be blessed with 15 offspring. The young bride was never accepted by his mother, which led to unhappy times since the home had to be shared. The mother regarded the bride as a “mere child”.

      He sold his land holdings in 1870 and became a merchant operating a general store in the village of Lemonville. He was postmaster of Lemonville from 1870 to 1873. The “Old Lemonville Store” still stands as a private residence on the 6th Concession, Whitchurch Township.

      He turned his efforts to lumbering in 1874 in Laxton Township, Victoria County at Elliott’s Falls on the Ghost River two miles north of Norland. By crown grant he acquired 21 acres on the west side of the Ghost River and 102 acres on the east side and established a sawmill and shingle mill, both power operated by the falls. The sawmill represented an investment of over $4,000, a considerable amount at this date. In November 1886, he retired to Norland and rented the mills to Jos. McLaughlin. The Victoria Recorder dutifully reported: “Mr. Hastings is to become a citizen of Norland. Happy to have Mr. Hastings and family amongst us”.

      While residing in Elliott’s Falls and Norland he played an active part in local and public affairs. In 1874 he was elected councillor, Laxton Township Council. The same year the swamps were corduroyed on the tenth line north of the Cameron Road with Adam Hastings in charge of the work. He assisted in establishing S.S. No. 2 Beech Lake School which his children attended. In 1880 he contested the government’s right to lengthen a timber slide on the west side of the river and forced construction on the east side. On October 10, 1876 we won first prize for “sawn shingles” in the manufacturer’s section, Laxton and Digby Fall Show. Town records indicate Adam Hastings supplied 100 4x12 13R. maple planks for deck on bridge at Norland for $36 or $7/m.

      He believed in total abstinence from alcohol. It is interesting to note that he, Charlie, James, Jennie and Samuel were all members of Crystal Fountain Lodge No. 215, British American Order of Good Templars, a fraternal order advocating temperance. It held regular meetings with regalia at which spelling matches, debates, religion and prayer were the order. A true Ulsterman, he was a member of the Loyal Orange Lodge, playing dues of .10 cents per month. A devout Methodist, Sunday evenings were occupied with the traditional family hymn-sing around the organ.

      A strict disciplinarian, he was at the same time a kind, considerate father and husband, but he did demand instant obedience and respect. He was always respectfully referred to as “father” by family members. From his wedding picture of 1860 one is immediately impressed by his most notable feature; his determined cold eyes – slightly crossed. Combined with his height, moustache which droops downward and goatee, he seems to portray a pragmatic man not easy to know nor easy to cross.

      In September 1888 a fire roared out of control north of Norland resulting in the complete destruction of the mill, leaving the family without income. It was quickly decided that the West offered the best prospect with available land “for the boys”. On October 1, 1888 he bid farewell to the family and departed for the great North West to seek the fortune that awaited all who would face the ordeal of homesteading on the prairies. He would send for the family when he was established.

      He would have taken the narrow-gauge Toronto & Nippissing Railway for the 87 mile – 10 hour trip to Toronto from Coboconk. In Toronto he transferred to the C.P.R.’s “Pacific Limited” for the three day journey to Troy. On the trip westward he joined other eager settlers making their way to the “promised land” all crowded into the famous colonial cars with their uncomfortable wooden seats and wooden berths. Designed specially by CPR president Van Horne, these cars would transport thousands to the North West along with their meagre belongings.

      The mill was never reconstructed. The land was abandoned and seized for non tax payment in 1899 by the county. A power plant was later constructed at the Falls but is now abandoned. Today, there is a provincial government campground on the 20 acre site which offers a place to rest beside the river and Falls for highway travellers.

      In 1888 the prairies of Western Canada were known as a great lone land. Alberta and Saskatchewan had not been established and settlers were slowly commencing to move westward from the newly organized province of Manitoba. The Canadian Pacific Railway had been completed in 1885. It triggered the greatest wheat rush ever known. Land, land without end, to be had for the asking – rich land that would grow forty bushels to the acre. The Adam Hastings family would be one of those families that flooded the prairies from Eastern Canada, the U.S.A. and Europe.

      Adam Hastings arrived in Troy (Qu’Appelle) in October 1888 to be met by his nephew George Senze Davidson who owned and operated the Queens Hotel. He would stay with him while searching for a homestead. He walked the Regina plains but was unimpressed by the area, flat as a table with its rich black earth, because he observed “it took one extra ox to pull a plow”. Fourteen years later he would realize his error and eagerly accept homesteads on the plain.

      He filed an application for homestead on NE 24-18-12-W2 on October 11, 1888 and immediately sent for his son Samuel Thomas to join him. During the winter of 1888-89 they constructed a house on the land. On May 9, 1889 he wrote: “My dear alice spring has finally arrived in the North West, the crocuses are in bloom the house is __ so please make haste Sam and i are fine love Adam” (sic). “Make haste” she did for on June 9, 1889 the family left Norland to join him.

      The homestead was located in the Rose Valley district about seven miles north east of Indian Head just above the Qu’Appelle Valley. A small coulee and creek cross the land so he maintained the objective of always seeking land with water.

      Rose Valley was described by the Winnipeg Free Press on October 25, 1901 as being “one of the best in the Territories for farming purposes” and listed Adam Hastings as “following that pursuit in the region”.

      Adam Hastings established Rose Valley Protestant Public School No. 191 on an acre of his land for the benefit of his children and in 1901 his son Hugh A. Hastings is recorded as being secretary.

      He and the family proved the homestead by construction of a 12’ x 18’ house with a 14’ x 18’ kitchen valued at $400, along with a pole straw stable and a log granary. He cleared over 50 acres. In 1892 he owned four cows and three horses. On February 27, 1892 Patent was issued. The land was sold and transferred to William John Orchard on March 21, 1902 in consideration of $2,000.

      Early in 1902 with some interesting help from his friend William J. Bulyea, Liberal member of the N.W.T. Legislative Council, Adam Hastings was successful in obtaining five homesteads on the Regina Plains for his five sons: Samuel Thomas, Adam Luther, Clarence Beverly, Hugh Alexander and Robert William Gordon.

      The family moved to the homesteads located north of the town of Rouleau in April, 1902 and established the family home on the NE 20-15-21-W2, being the homestead of Adam Luther who was otherwise occupied as a grain buyer at Balgonie.

      Politically, Adam Hastings was a Liberal; of this there is not the slightest doubt. As a young man he was nurtured in the Clear Grit Methodist tradition of Ontario. A reform movement advocating simple, responsible government and fervently opposed to political or religious privilege. In the North West he revered Sir Wilfrid Laurier with the chieftain’s picture occupying a place of honour in the living room.

      He and his sons were “Clifford Sifton Men” and later “Jimmy Gardiner Men” and were organizers for both. So strongly did he inculcate his political Liberal beliefs in his children that every son, many grandsons and grandchildren actively organized and supported the part in Western Canada.

      Clarence, his son, travelled by horse and buggy throughout South Saskatchewan in 1905 spreading the message. Clarence would summarily discharge a deputy returning officer who was doubtful about his wife’s vote with the comment “any man who cannot control his wife’s vote is unqualified to be a DRO”.

      In 1935 his daughter, Mary Ann, in congratulating her nephew, Gordon Hastings, on his marriage “hoped his bride was a Liberal and not Roman Catholic”. His son, Adam, would “deliver” a Liberal nomination to James G. Gardiner in Cupar, Saskatchewan in 1912 and his youngest son, Hugh, in his retiring years would faithfully and regularly canvass Regina city on behalf of the party.

      His granddaughter, Marjorie Pearl Hastings Guy was secretary of the Saskatchewan Liberal Association and served as executive assistant to the part leader and late premier, W. Ross Thatcher.

      Adam and Alice Hastings celebrated their golden wedding anniversary April 10, 1910. The family presented father with a gold-headed walking cane from Ireland on the occasion.

      He executed his last will and testament on April 23, 1910 in which he bequeathed his personal estate to his beloved wife of 50 years.

      Adam Hastings died at Rouleau, Saskatchewan May 9, 1910. His funeral was held in the family residence with five sons and son-in-law Thomas Matchett acting as pallbearers. Because of his build – 6’4”, 250 lbs. – an oversized coffin had to be used which would not go through the doorway. The bay windows had to be removed from the house to permit the coffin to be taken in and out. The undertaker attempted to collect interest on the price of the coffin. He had specially ordered it three years in advance of Adam’s death. The interest was not paid.

      On his demise, his wife Alice moved to Sintaluta to live with her daughter, Mary Ann, who was employed as an accountant by her older brother James McDowell Hastings. Mother and daughter later moved to Regina and resided at 2130 Broad Street, 2277 Hamilton Street and 19 Crescent Annex Apartments.

      Alice McDowell Hastings died December 25, 1928 at Regina and was buried December 27, 1928 beside her husband Adam and their son Robert Andrew Gordon in the Rouleau Cemetery.
    Family ID F1159  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Thomas Allan Matchett,   b. 6 Aug 1867, Omemee, Ontario Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 20 Jan 1950, Victoria, British Columbia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 82 years) 
    Married 19 Dec 1894  Indian Head, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Notes 
    • If Mary Ann (Minnie) was the serious concerned daughter of Adam Hastings then certainly Sarah Elizabeth (Sadie) was the happy, jovial, devil may care daughter. It was said of Sadie that she never missed a party or a trip and loved the companionship and good fellowship of friends and family. They could have added, like her brothers Adam, Clary and Charlie, she never missed a scotch and water.

      Educated at Norland and Lindsay, Ontario, in October 1888 she stood second in the third class at Lindsay High School with 760 of 1000 points. She completed her matriculation and taught part-time in Haliburton Township before joining the family in the North West in 1892. She was employed in 1894 as a teach at Balgonie where she met and married Thomas Allan Matchett.

      Thomas Allan Matchett was of Irish stock. His grandfather had come from Ireland in a group of 400 Irish protestants from County Fermanagh. His grandfather had come from Ireland in a group of 400 Irish protestants from County Fermanagh. They settled as a body in the south half of Emily Township, Victoria County near the Village of Omemee. The north half of the township was settled by Irish catholics and brave was the man who dared cross the line on the 12th of July.

      The Matchett family came to the North West in 1884 and settled in the Davin-Balgonie district. Thomas and his four brothers (George Christopher, William Richard, Henry J. And Robert) along with the father would all prove homesteads. Thomas’ homestead was the SE 12-18-17-W2 with a pre-emption on NE 12-18-17-W2.

      As a young man, Thomas drove a mule team freighting supplies from Qu’Appelle to Prince Albert in the North West Rebellion of 1885. He worked on the Sir John Lister-Kaye corporate farm in the Balgonie district for a salary of $5 per month. He would later recall being invited to dine by Lady Lister-Kaye in a private railway car and was totally embarrassed at the experience of “dining” with English nobility. He worked on a ranch at Baintree, Alberta but returned to Balgonie at the urging of his mother who firmly believed cowboys lived a ribald life of sin and wanted no part of it for her Methodist son.

      He developed and nurtured a profound respect and love of horses. While he could neither read nor write, he could name and recite without error the pedigree of hundreds of horses on sight. He was a shrewd, hardworking businessman and farmer.

      Thomas A. Matchett was a Conservative; a fact with certainly displeased his father-in-law and brothers-in-law. At election times family gatherings were kept to a minimum as the debate always flared as to whether Louis Riel was a martyr or a traitor.

      He sold the homestead to Anton Diewold, August 26, 1901 in consideration of $1,600. Thereafter, he and his wife operated a general store and bought grain for the Winnipeg Grain Company in Balgonie. In 1910 they disposed of their holdings to J.K. Wilson and moved to Regina. Here they purchased 2277 Hamilton Street which would be the family Regina home for 24 years. Thomas operated a livery stable in the 1800 block Cornwall Street. It was totally destroyed and all the stock lost in the Regina cyclone of 1912.

      In 1913 he purchased a 480 acre farm near Lumsden in the Wascana valley, 24 miles north-west of Regina. It comprised 160 acres in the valley through which passed the Wascana river and an additional 320 acres of first class cultivated farm land above the valley. He maintained his farming operations through the depression years with but on seed grain advance, a remarkable feat considering the difficulty and vagaries of the drought that wreaked economic havoc in Saskatchewan. A testimony to his skill, hard work and farming determination.

      He moved to Cadboro Bay near Victoria on Vancouver Island in 1944 and lived his retirement years with his daughter, Alice, near his granddaughter Marion Elizabeth (Betty) Soutar.

      The Wascana valley farm is today a recreation park area operated by the City of Regina.

      Sarah Elizabeth Hastings Matchett is interred in Regina Municipal Cemetery while Thomas Allan Matchett was cremated.

      About 18 miles east of Regina City at the south-west corner of the Balgonie cemetery there stands two blue spruce trees. They are alone and are in strange contrast to the surrounding flat prairie and scrub brush. They were brought from British Columbia and firmly planted in 1924 by Thomas A. Matchett as a living tribute to the immortal memory of his mother and father who are there buried.
    Children 
     1. Alice Knowlson Matchett,   b. 1 Oct 1896, Regina, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 17 Apr 1989, Victoria, British Columbia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 92 years)
     2. Robert Gordon Hastings Matchett,   b. 5 Feb 1907, Vancouver, British Columbia Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 4 Feb 1983, Victoria, British Columbia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 75 years)
     3. Marion Elma Matchett,   b. 8 Jan 1912, Regina, Saskatchewan Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 21 May 1973, Victoria, British Columbia Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 61 years)
    Last Modified 1 Mar 2008 
    Family ID F1401  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBorn - 6 Jan 1872 - Lemonville, Whitchurch Township, York County, Ontario Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarried - 19 Dec 1894 - Indian Head, Saskatchewan Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDied - 12 Jan 1944 - Regina, Saskatchewan Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 
    Pin Legend  : Address       : Location       : City/Town       : County/Shire       : State/Province       : Country       : Not Set

  • Photos
    Family of Adam Hastings and Alice McDowell, Rouleau, Saskatchewan 1906
    Family of Adam Hastings and Alice McDowell, Rouleau, Saskatchewan 1906
    Standing: Adam Hastings & Wife Alice (McDowell) Hastings
    Left to Right: Clarence Hastings & Eva P. Winter, R.A. Gordon Hastings & Mary A. Hastings, Sarah E. Hastings, Hugh Hastings & Elenore Reichert at Rouleau, Saskatchewan in 1906
    Indian Head Homestead
    Indian Head Homestead
    Adam L. Hastings, Mary A. Hastings, R. A. Gordon Hastings, Sarah E. Hastings, Hugh A. Hastings, Clarence B. Hastings holding William Earl Hastings

    Headstones
    MATCHETT, Sarah E.
    MATCHETT, Sarah E.




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