Sunday 3 June 2018

And Where Did They End Up?



For a time, a period of about 20 years, most of the Caswell siblings made a go of farming in the Saskatoon area.  Mary Jane & Hugh Donnan, Robert & Fanny, James Dickson Caswell & Mary, Sarah & Ephraim Case, John J & Patience Caswell, David and Joseph; brother Samuel and wife joined them about 1903.  Alexander Kennedy Caswell was in the Saskatoon area at one time, bought land in Alberta, but spent his final years in California. 
Saskatoon had but fourteen houses in 1887 when the Caswells started arriving in Clark’s Crossing.  A decade later it became evident that Saskatoon was growing and Clark’s Crossing was not.  A letter from John to a government official cites, as a reason for moving to Saskatoon, the need to have regular schooling for his children.  Underlying the move to Saskatoon for several of the brothers was recognition that the land values in Saskatoon were increasing far beyond any that could be anticipated at Clark's Crossing.
John also wrote that he wanted to get a better market for his registered Shorthorn cattle.  “These he began advertising in the first issue of the “Phenix” in 1902 and continued to do so in boxed ads written in a style that would indicate the TV commercial world would have claimed him if he’d been born about a hundred years later."[1]  I found a few examples of the “Phenix” on line.

Saskatoon Phenix Oct 17, 1902

Saskatoon Phenix May 1, 1903

        
John J Councillor for Local Improvement - Caswell’s district began at 22nd Street and stretched north some 12 miles.  It contained most of Smithville and the heart of the original farming section around Saskatoon.  Elected councillor for Division 1, and then first Chairman, was John J. Caswell.  Although he lived in section 33, Twp 36, Range 5 he represented Twp 37, where he had his main farm after 1899.
 Although considered windy and contentious, John seems to have been respected by his neighbours for his skill as a farmer which won him a number of prizes at agricultural fairs.  The first council meeting was held on June 24, 1904 a little over a year later he resigned on moving to California. [2]  He sold his Saskatoon ranch to Mr. Allan Bowerman, who resold it in a few months to the Canadian Pacific Railway (at a great profit) for its shops. The house became a Roman Catholic convent.  


Rob took up land in Saskatoon on the summit of Caswell Hill.  John’s ranch was just to the east of Roberts.  Dave went a little northwest of town, obtaining land that became a part of the city airport.  Joe eventually moved to a farm four miles southwest of Saskatoon.
A couple of years earlier, Thomas had settled in Ceres, just south of Modesto and about ninety miles east of San Jose.  Brother William had lived in Williams, California, before moving to Sacramento. Alexander spent some years in Modesto and two of his sons, Ernest and Clarence, established homes there.  Joseph and Robert made frequent winter journeys to visit their brothers in California.  Margaret Caswell Styles husband Robert and grandchildren clustered around Hughson, a few miles east of Ceres.  Lucy (Donnan) and Ernest Shipman also moved to Ceres.  Stanislaus County, California had become a second nucleus of the Caswell family.
By 1900 Mary Jane & Hugh Donnan had followed the railroad and moved to Grand Forks, BC.  The rest stayed in the Saskatoon area and lived out their days there.
By the time of the 1983 reunion the only males in Saskatoon bearing the Caswell surname and descended from Andrew and Mary Jane were of Roberts’s children and grandchildren.

1983 Caswell Reunion Saskatoon




[1] Cory in Recall; History of Cory by Mary Pattison

[2] Cory in Recall; History of Cory by Mary Pattison