Book 3: Early Pioneers and Neighbours of Dundee QC: A Story of their Dundee Ancestors

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*See formats and bundles below ($30, $100, $225). Preorders to be placed via emailing the author at the Contact page ONLY. Shipping extra.*

Leasing St. Regis Indigenous Reserve Land – Part III
Aubrey’s Corners, Dundee Lines, Dundee Centre & Ridge Road Frasers – 1815-1950 @ 225 pgs

Aubrey, Schryer, McCaffrey, Millar, Currie, Gardiner, Armstrong, Cappiello, Johnson, Forsyth, Davidson, Farlinger, Stark, Ross, Dupuis, Staveley, Jack Fraser, McBain, William, Donald & Janet Fraser.

Over 1,350 family names with birth, death and many marriage dates are recorded in this book with 180 photos and maps, 8 family trees and 13 pages of family lineages for use in genealogy research. Scroll through images to see where your family is in the book!

The British created Lower Canada in 1791, including an unnamed township (later Dundee) north of the 45th parallel border with New York State, west of St. Anicet and south of the St. Lawrence River. In 1796, St. Regis First Nation Reserve (now Akwesasne) was created, encompassing Dundee and a portion of New York west past the village of St. Regis. 

After the War of 1812, Britain encouraged St. Regis to lease their Dundee lands to Scottish, Irish and United Empire Loyalist emigrants who established villages at “Aubrey’s Corners”, “Dundee Lines”, and along Dundee Centre Road while promoting surrounding settlements. The author’s great, great grandfather Alexander Fraser’s siblings William (1800), Donald (1803) & Janet (1798) emigrated to Dundee from Inverness, Scotland in 1830. 

William settled in Dundee Centre and established Dundee’s first school and his brother Donald lived on Ridge Road and his descendant operated a sawmill. The Schryer, Farlinger and Aubrey families were United Empire Loyalists from New York and Vermont States. The Dupuis family bought a lease previously owned by a Scottish family.

Book 3 of four Dundee Neighbours books focuses on the families identified above and their descendants, many of whom inherited their Indigenous leases in the 1800s, then converted them to clear titles after the leasing Enquiry of 1888.

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*See formats and bundles below ($30, $100, $225). Preorders to be placed via emailing the author at the Contact page ONLY. Shipping extra.*

Leasing St. Regis Indigenous Reserve Land – Part III
Aubrey’s Corners, Dundee Lines, Dundee Centre & Ridge Road Frasers – 1815-1950 @ 225 pgs

Aubrey, Schryer, McCaffrey, Millar, Currie, Gardiner, Armstrong, Cappiello, Johnson, Forsyth, Davidson, Farlinger, Stark, Ross, Dupuis, Staveley, Jack Fraser, McBain, William, Donald & Janet Fraser.

Over 1,350 family names with birth, death and many marriage dates are recorded in this book with 180 photos and maps, 8 family trees and 13 pages of family lineages for use in genealogy research. Scroll through images to see where your family is in the book!

The British created Lower Canada in 1791, including an unnamed township (later Dundee) north of the 45th parallel border with New York State, west of St. Anicet and south of the St. Lawrence River. In 1796, St. Regis First Nation Reserve (now Akwesasne) was created, encompassing Dundee and a portion of New York west past the village of St. Regis. 

After the War of 1812, Britain encouraged St. Regis to lease their Dundee lands to Scottish, Irish and United Empire Loyalist emigrants who established villages at “Aubrey’s Corners”, “Dundee Lines”, and along Dundee Centre Road while promoting surrounding settlements. The author’s great, great grandfather Alexander Fraser’s siblings William (1800), Donald (1803) & Janet (1798) emigrated to Dundee from Inverness, Scotland in 1830. 

William settled in Dundee Centre and established Dundee’s first school and his brother Donald lived on Ridge Road and his descendant operated a sawmill. The Schryer, Farlinger and Aubrey families were United Empire Loyalists from New York and Vermont States. The Dupuis family bought a lease previously owned by a Scottish family.

Book 3 of four Dundee Neighbours books focuses on the families identified above and their descendants, many of whom inherited their Indigenous leases in the 1800s, then converted them to clear titles after the leasing Enquiry of 1888.

*See formats and bundles below ($30, $100, $225). Preorders to be placed via emailing the author at the Contact page ONLY. Shipping extra.*

Leasing St. Regis Indigenous Reserve Land – Part III
Aubrey’s Corners, Dundee Lines, Dundee Centre & Ridge Road Frasers – 1815-1950 @ 225 pgs

Aubrey, Schryer, McCaffrey, Millar, Currie, Gardiner, Armstrong, Cappiello, Johnson, Forsyth, Davidson, Farlinger, Stark, Ross, Dupuis, Staveley, Jack Fraser, McBain, William, Donald & Janet Fraser.

Over 1,350 family names with birth, death and many marriage dates are recorded in this book with 180 photos and maps, 8 family trees and 13 pages of family lineages for use in genealogy research. Scroll through images to see where your family is in the book!

The British created Lower Canada in 1791, including an unnamed township (later Dundee) north of the 45th parallel border with New York State, west of St. Anicet and south of the St. Lawrence River. In 1796, St. Regis First Nation Reserve (now Akwesasne) was created, encompassing Dundee and a portion of New York west past the village of St. Regis. 

After the War of 1812, Britain encouraged St. Regis to lease their Dundee lands to Scottish, Irish and United Empire Loyalist emigrants who established villages at “Aubrey’s Corners”, “Dundee Lines”, and along Dundee Centre Road while promoting surrounding settlements. The author’s great, great grandfather Alexander Fraser’s siblings William (1800), Donald (1803) & Janet (1798) emigrated to Dundee from Inverness, Scotland in 1830. 

William settled in Dundee Centre and established Dundee’s first school and his brother Donald lived on Ridge Road and his descendant operated a sawmill. The Schryer, Farlinger and Aubrey families were United Empire Loyalists from New York and Vermont States. The Dupuis family bought a lease previously owned by a Scottish family.

Book 3 of four Dundee Neighbours books focuses on the families identified above and their descendants, many of whom inherited their Indigenous leases in the 1800s, then converted them to clear titles after the leasing Enquiry of 1888.