Friday 31 January 2020

Crossing the Atlantic in 1906



I was going through some of my mother's papers the other day and came across several sheets of three-ring binder paper, my grandad had used to write about his life in Canada including  this story about how he arrived here. His own words, written post-retirement in 1971, cleared up a puzzle I had been trying to figure out: which ship he came on. 

The Rev. Canon Edmund Graff Nicholls Grant  was born on April 28th, 1887. He died in January1979.  This little excerpt is taken from what he called  Reminiscences 1906 -1964.

He left by train from Cardiff to catch the ship in Liverpool. Quite an adventure for a 17-year-old.


Grandad Grant's voyage away from home in Wales to a new life in Canada:

It was a wet and rather depressing morning in the middle of March 1906 when I boarded the train which was to take me to Liverpool. A couple of brothers and a sister saw me off, on that, which to me was a memorable night, at the age of almost 18 years.

The next day I found the vessel, a CPR ship, called "Lake Manitoba" which was to take me across the Atlantic.
The Lake Manitoba [Source:http://www.norwayheritage.com/p_ship.asp?sh=lamam]

After getting on board, I was shown to my "stateroom," which was the hold of the ship and which the portholes were on a level with the ocean. As far as I can remember, there were about 100 men in this hold, which is a cavity in a ship below deck. We slept and had meals in the hold.
I spent the greater part of my time on deck, although it was chilly. The journey took 12 days, weather at times pretty rough, & 1 day (24 hours) we only made 50 miles. I was not sea-sick at all, but lots of passengers were. We landed at St. John NB on a cool and frosty morning where I took the train for Toronto. I stayed for a day in that city and took the train for Sutton, via the Grand Trunk RR.
Sutton Railway Station in 1906 http://www.trha.ca/trha/history/stations-2/sutton-station/