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The
Trussler Clan - page
1 - by Hartley Trussler
The history of the Trussler Clan must
begin in 1833 when George the First and his brother John came
to Canada from England. When I was in England in 1967 and 1969
I visited some Trusslers in Midhurst Sussex and tried to find
some family connection but was not successful. However, I did
find that a Trussler was buried in the old Church at Easebourne
not far from Midhurst in 1275. There are quite a few Trusslers
in and around Midhurst and Chichester and strangely about half
are Trusslers and half are Truslers. As you probably know, George
spelled his name with 2 - s's and his brother John with one s.
They were game keepers on the Petworth
Estate and the reason they came to Canada as George I often stated
was because they were afraid they might be caught poaching .
The penalty for poaching even in those days, even killinq a rabbit
or pheasant was being sent to Australia on a convict ship. only
about half the convicts survived the voyage and George and John
didn't want to take chances. So in May 1833 they boarded a small
sailing ship from Portsmouth with their families for Canada.
They both had large families, George had 6 and John about the
same. The trip across the Atlantic and up the St. Lawrence took
about a month and the hardships were almost inhuman They landed
at Quebec where they stayed for a week or more for a ship to
Montreal. From Montreal they had to take small boats between
the rapids and carry their stuff over the portages. Near Brockville
little James, who was only ten, fell overboard and the skipper
wouldn't stop to rescue him and he was never seen again. It was
thought he was picked up by fishermen because he could swim and
it was afterwards known there was a Trussler in that neighborhood.
I believe too that Harriett, who was about nine or ten died on
the way across the ocean. It was said Elizabeth (Gilbert) wife
of George never fully recovered from the tragic loss of her children.
At that time Waterloo and Brant Counties
were being colonized by land companies and George settled in
German Mills. Now Preston and Cambridge, John went to Camlachie.
There was no work just then but one of the settlers promised
him work when haying started. George said: "We can't live
on grass until that time." - and I guess the kind hearted
farmer kept them from starving. He worked for a living in that
area for a few years and then bought lots 144-145 and 146 on
the corner of the Huron Road and the Town Line between Waterloo
and Wilmot Townships, now named Trussler Road. Here he settled
and started clearing the land of the dense forest and lived the
rest of his life. When he died it was willed to his youngest
son George the Second and has passed down to the youngest son
ever since - from George I to George II, from George II to Oscar,
from Oscar to Clifford and from Clifford to Stewart. Now in the
fifth generation.
George the First was a strong burly man
with an aggressive personality who never backed down from anybody.
At Bees and Fairs it was the custom to have contests of strength,
such as wrestling and boxng and he was generaIly the last in
the ring. His wife Elizabeth (Gilbert) was a tall red haired
lady of the English gentry upper class. A good wife and excellent
mother. The Trusslers were a prolific breed and the families
of George and Elizabeth now in the sixth generation number in
the hundreds. I haven't been able to research the family record
of their family - namely John, Harriet, James, Fanny, David,
William, Thomas and George, but I suppose some of their descendants
are here today. However, I have gotten a pretty complete record
of George Junior's family, which now in the fifth generation
numbers in the hundreds and is spread over all parts of the world.
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