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Hudson
Bay Company
SS Mount Royal
Stern Paddle Wheel Steamer
at 3 pm on Saturday, July 6, 1907
Sunk on route from Hazelton to Port Essington
at Kitselas Canyon, 93 miles from Hazelton.
6 of her crew of 22 drowned.
This page is the list of surviving Crew Members
that I have been able to find
There were 55 passengers on board per one article from the time
Captain
Stewart Burr Johnson
aka S. B. Johnson
Have seen his first name as
Stuart Burr Johnson
but clearly Stewart in 1880 census, and on his headstone
(abt 37 years old at time of the accident)
b- Mar 3, 1870, NY, USA (1870 on headstone, 1871 in other places)
d- Jan 17, 1949, At Wenatchee, Chelan Co., WA, USA, age 78
Burial: Waterville Cemetery, Waterville, Douglas Co., WA, USA
Link to a Picture of him, I think, below
son of Captain Charles Johnson and Hattie Johnson, nee De Puy (or
DePuy?)
Father- Charles Johnson,
b- July 8, 1842 at Neversink, Sullivan Co., NY,
d- Apr 4, 1912, at Lakeside WA, age 69
Buried in I.O.O.F. Fraternal Cemetery at Chelan, Chelan Co. WA
He bought his burial plots in Aug 1912 for $10
shown age 36 in 1880, Bookkeeper in Chicago
The son of Nicholas and Nancy (Sheely) Johnson. Stewart's
Grand-Parents.
One record I have seen says her maiden name was Leroy.
Stewart's Great-Grandfather John Johnson, served in the war
of 1812
His grandmother Nancy's mother was a Grant,
from the Grant family that came over on the Mayflower,
She was a relative of Ulysses S. Grant.
Mar 1904, found a note that said Captain Charles
Johnson
of Lakeside, is spoken of as Representative for Chelan Co.
Capt Johnson lost a leg, above the ankle, in the war of the rebellion.
at the battle of Honey Hill, November 30, 1864.
July 3, 1863, he was made Captain.
After the war he returned to New York,
went into the mercantile business in 1877.
went to Chicago, as he was there in census time of1880.
Family went to Wayne Nebraska in 1880
He was elected Clerk of Wayne Co. in 1866.
Stewart's father?, yes he was.
Apr 1888 the family of Captain Johnson
came to the Lakeside, Chelan Co. area.
here it says he was b- 1842, d- 1912
He returned to Nebraska to convince his 2nd wife to come to this
area,
His 2nd wife- Clara Gustina Emerson, Jan 12, 1888, at Cedar Falls,
Iowa
daughter of William and Emily (Hapgood) Emerson
b- Aug 17, 1853
d- Oct. 26, 1903
buried in I.O.O.F. Fraternal Cemetery at Chelan
WA. State Rep., Mayor of Lakeside, Okanogan Co.
WA
Married his First wife, and mother of Stewart, Dec 19, 1866, at
Hasbrouck, NY
Mother- Harriet "Hattie" Johnson, nee DePuy
b- ca 1846, in NY, age 34 in 1880
d-1887, at Ashland, Wisconsin, while visiting friends.
1880 all living in Chicago, Cook Co. IL, USA, Stewart age 9.
Father was a member of the State Legislature in Washington or
Oregon?.
Capt Johnson shown in Port Essington in 1901, married,
One of 3 women on board, when the ship went down, the Captain's wife,
Carrie B.
Johnson, nee Pepper, escaped as well to the Island.
they were married Apr. 11,1898 in King Co., WA
b- Aug 11, 1875 in IL, USA,
d- 1957
Burial: Waterville Cemetery, Waterville, Douglas Co., WA, USA
Father- Walter J. Pepper (1841-1921)
Mother- Clara Emma Pepper, nee Zimmerman (1850-1938)
1880- Carrie was age 5 at home at Millersburg, Mercer Co., Illinois,
USA
Carrie and her husband immigrated in 1900 to Canada
1897 he co-owned and was Captain of a steamer Stehekan on Lake
Chelan, WA
He sold his half share in Oct 1897.
1910-1911 he is listed in Prince Rupert Directory,
as Supt. Transportation, Foley, Welch & Stewart, (contractors for
the GTP Railroad)
Jan 19, 1920 census says Stewart Johnson and his wife
were in Lakeside town, Chelan Co, Washington USA
He is now shown as a contractor for the Railroad
1930 in Seattle, King Co. WA with his wife
1940 they were living in Manson, King Co., WA
1940 they attended a funeral in Chelan Co, obit say they were from
Manson.
As a boy he worked as a deckhand on river
steamers
on the Lewis, snake and Upper Columbia River.
Worked his way up to command of one of the best Steamers on the
Columbia River
He was the one and only Captain of the Mount
Royal
Chief Engineer
Benjamin "Ben" Madigan
b- Feb 26, 1838, in County Cork,
Ireland
d- Jan 4, 1920, age 81 in Victoria BC
One of the survivors of the sinking of the
"Mount Royal" Sternwheeler
He was saved by
George Little, and a Companion who
canoed out to part of the wreck
then chopped a hole in the overturned hull
so Madigan could escape from part of the wreck.
He was a Marine Engineer
Engineer on the "Sir James Douglas" Steamer ca
1872
earned $120.00 a month
William Clarke was the master of that steamer at that time
from Dryden's
Marine History of the Pacific Northwest
Benjamin Madigan, engineer, was born in County
Cork, Ireland, in 1838. When quite young he came to this country and
learned his trade in the DeLamater Iron Works in New York, leaving
there to enter the steamship service. After a short time on
the Ct ba route he went to San Francisco in 1862, and thence to
Victoria in July of that year. He secured employment on the
steamer Diana, and also on the old steamer Thames, remaining on the
latter about two years. In 1865 he joined the steamer Oiler
and made two voyages North with Captains Lewis and Swanson, then
going to the steamer Isabel, where he remained for two
seasons. After leaving the Isabel he spent the next four years and a
half on the mail steamer Sir James Douglas, and when the
Douglas was laid up with a broken shaft he was transferred to the
Maude, owned by Captain Spratt. While in Spratt's service he was
also engineer on the Cariboo Fly for nearly three years, but left to
serve on the Beaver, then belonging to Saunders. He purchased an
interest in the Beaver (the first steam powered vessel on the west
coast, it brought Sir James Douglas to Victoria in 1858 for the
first time.) and replaced her old-style engines with poppet valves,
provided new boilers, and made other
improvements. He operated the old craft about three years, and was
subsequently employed on the steamer .41e:rander, then in the
possession of Warren & Saunders. After she was bought by Dunsmuir he
remained at his post until 1882, when, with Captain
Myers, he went to England and brought out the steamer Sardonya:. The
following year he accepted a position on the Barbara
Boscowitz, which he is still occupying. think this book is ca
1883
wife- Margareta "Margaret" Francis Madigan, nee McCoyle
b- 1838 in USA
d- 1896
Died Jul 29, 1896 at Victoria, BC, Margaret Francis, wife of
Benjamin Madigan, 58, native of NY res/here since 1862. Leaves also
4 daughters, 2 sons, 2 sisters. Pallbearers: T Geiger, Capt J D
Warren, J Levy, H Saunders, L G McQuade, M McTiernan. [Colonist,
1896-07-29*] from Leona Taylor and Dorothy Mindenhall, “Index of
Historical Victoria Newspapers,” Victoria’s Victoria,
http://www.victoriasvictoria.ca/, 2007
1874 Ben Madigan is shown in Victoria Directory,
Engineer, living at Rock Bay
4 daughters and 4 sons I have found:
daughter- Eleanor Madigan
b- Dec 17, 1873 in Victoria BC
d- June 23, 1952
buried Ross Bay Cemetery, Victoria
married Arthur Lineham, Apr 13, 1898 in Victoria, BC
He was age 27 when he married, b- England
son of Francis R. Lineham, and Eliza Trueman
Eleanor was age 24 when she married
she had 4 children
daughter- Margaret Adalade Madigan
b- ca 1870, baptized in Victoria, age 20 when she married
married Stephen O'Brien, Sept 4, 1890 in Victoria
age 39 when he married, born in Wisconsin, Railroad Conductor
Lived in San Francisco in 1965
daughter- Mary Elizabeth Madigan
b- baptized Apr 3, 1866 in Victoria
1905 Victoria Directory shows her as a Nurse, lvs 320 Dallas Rd
Miss M. Madigan lived in Los Angeles CA, in 1965
daughter- Catherine Agnes Madigan
b- ca 1868, in Victoria, age 22 when she married
married Rodney Stewart Norton, Jan 10, 1890 in Victoria BC
he was age 33 born in New York
She was living in NY in 1965
son- Benjamin James Madigan
b- ca 1872 in Victoria BC
baptized St. Andrews Cathedral, Victoria
mothers name McCloy here.
d- Feb 11, 1875, age 2 yrs and 10 mo, in Victoria
Father reported death, living at Rock Bay, Victoria at the time.
son- Benjamin Valentine Madigan
baptized St. Andrews Cathedral, Victoria
mothers name MacCloy here.
son- George Owen Madigan
b- ca 1864, baptized in Victoria
d- Apr 19 Apr.1965, at Everett, Snohomish Co., WA, USA,
Died while on route to his home in Vancouver
married Kate Vincent "Katie" Adler, Dec 14, 1886 in Victoria, machinist
He was age 22
Him and his wife travelled to Havana Cuba in 1915
one of Ben Madigan's sons was "Inspector of Boilers" in 1907
found an Inspector in New Westminster, named G. O. Madigan,
I also found G. O. Madigan, "Boiler Inspector" in Vancouver, ca
1919.
then I found George O. Madigan so now know this is the right guy
I know George and Kate had a daughter
Irene Mary Madigan
she married Percival Harold Harold Murphy, Mar 15, 1913, in
Vancouver.
Irene was Baptized Jan 1, 1888 at St. Andrews Cathedral in Victoria
Picture link below for George
son- Louis John Madigan
b- Jan 12, 1879, Esquimalt? BC
baptized at St. Josephs Esquimalt, no date
1940 shows he was once married, a widow,
a placer miner on Franklin Creek, in Alaska, age 61
He was in Fairbanks AK when George died in 1965
1891 Ben shown married, no wife listed, living on
Johnston st, Ward 1, Victoria, age 54
1911 Benjamin Madigan was in Port Essington,
Chief Engineer,
(G. Boat Cignet? hard to read)
2nd Engineer-
David Albert Good
b- Feb 16, 1863 in ON
(He was in Port Essington in 1901)
1905 Victoria Directory, Marine Engineer, SS Mount Royal, HBC wharf
listed next to him the widow of a Captain C. Good, living at
Balmoral Hotel
possible mother and father?
1911 he was in Bamfield BC, shown as a Mechanical Engineer, single,
at Cable Station
2nd Officer-
C. Cluneness (spelling?)
(Colin Clunes? age 42 in 1901 in Georgetown, Port Simpson,
Nass river,
Census)
shown as night-watchman, Canadian, single
Died May 20, 1923 at Victoria, BC, Capt Colin
Clunes [Cluness], 67, born on a sailing ship off coast of NA,
resident of here 57 yrs. Leaves 2 sisters in Seattle, and a brother,
D McLeod, of Victoria. Clunes followed his calling for 52 yrs in
these waters, and many a time, in the early days, among the hazards
of Indian trading and the perils of navigating a little-known and
little-frequented coast, carried his life in the hollow of his hand.
He was a lifelong mariner, truly a son of the sea. It was on the
salt wave that he was born; all his years were spent on the billows;
and death came within a few wks of his last trip, ashore. It was in
1858, aboard sailing ship Avenger, of which his father was master,
that he was born. He came to BC as a lad of 13, in 1871, turned to
the sea on arrival, and began sailing out of Victoria on schr
Discovery. He secured his master's ticket at age 18, and
subsequently commanded many vessels in coast trade.
Woodside, a small steamer that plied between Victoria and Alberni
with passengers and freight, was Capt Clunes' command for many yrs.
On one occasion, in collision with another ship off Sooke, he
narrowly escaped with his life. It was necessary to take to the
boats and that in charge of the master capsized. He distinguished
himself by saving not only his own life, but of swimming to safety
as well, with a woman and child.
Woodside was saved on that occasion, but subsequently met complete
disaster when Clunes was still in command. This was in 1888. The
vessel's rudder was carried away when she was about 5 miles from
Nitinat Rv, WC, and the crew and passengers took refuge in the
boats. They landed 3 miles from Pachena, and were later taken to
Victoria by Indians. During the night the steamer drifted ashore and
broke up. It was owned by Muir Bros, of Sooke.
Numerous other small craft had Clunes as skipper in later days. He
was master of Lottie, 30 yrs ago, when that vessel was being used on
the construction of Esquimalt graving dock. Later he was in charge
of steamer Falcon, utilized in bringing coal from Nanaimo to
Victoria for the old Seattle-Victoria flyer, City of Kingston.
Twenty yrs or so ago, Capt Clunes was steamboating on the Fraser and
Skeena Rvs. On the latter he went as
master and sometimes as chief officer on HBC craft, among them
Mount Royal. He was aboard the latter when she turned turtle in
the Skeena when loaded with
passengers and cargo. He escaped with his life, but was never the
same man after this terrible experience. During the last decade or
two, he had been employed in various capacities aboard CPR coast
service ships. His last vessel, Tees, tied up recently. Clunes was a
man widely known among shipping men of the coast. Pallbearers: Capt
Paxton, J Clark, R Hampton, W Spencer, D McLeod, J Ogden. N 015 E P
[Colonist, 1923-05-20*]
info above from : Leona Taylor and Dorothy
Mindenhall, “Index of Historical Victoria Newspapers,”
Victoria’s Victoria, http://www.victoriasvictoria.ca/, 2007.
2nd Fireman
- name unknown
Deckhands-
6 Port Simpson Natives
One name- Joseph Offut
One Wood Passer,
2 Waiters,
2 Chinese Cooks,
and
one Deck Boy.
no names recorded in records I have seen
I would imagine Hudson Bay Archives would show who they were paying.
from Susan Tomlinson Durban, May 2013
Great-Granddaughter of Robert Tomlinson (Cedarvale)
sent this tidbit on the women passenger:
"Robert and Alice Tomlinson's daughter Anna Lucretia Moberly
(nee Tomlinson - 1880 - 1969)
who married Walter Moberly and was known as Annie.
Annie was on the Mount Royal the day it wrecked in Kitselas Canyon
and I have a letter from her to my grandparents
telling her story of the experience.
She was one of three women on the Mount Royal
that day headed for Port Essington.
The other two were Mrs. Phillips and the Captain's wife.
Annie continued on to Port Essington to catch the boat to
Victoria.
While in Victoria she attended the funeral of the Steward
at Christ Church Cathedral and went to see the mother of the purser.
Mrs. Phillips
could be either Jan P. Phillips,
wife of a cannery manager
or it could be Emily Phillips
wife of Arthur Phillips, a Retail Merchant,
McBride St, in Prince Rupert
Emily Phillips
b- Oct 1883 in England
d- Oct 10, 1925 in Prince Rupert
her husband Arthur Phillips
b- May 1885 in England
d-
They had a son Arthur Jr. Phillips
b- Dec 1908 in Alberta
d-
Or it could be:
Jan P. Phillips
b- May 1880 in ON
d-
her husband was also a Arthur Phillips
b- May 1871 in ON
d-
Salmon Cannery Manager
they also had one son George S. Phillips
b- Nov 1906 in BC
d-
No articles I
have read give her name or initial,
and these are only 2 Phillips females in 1911 census here.
There was a A. E.
Phillips that had a ranch at Carnaby ca 1913
did he have a wife?
Deceased Crew Members
SS Mount Royal Deceased Crew Members
Ext Links
Captain Johnson's
picture, on SS Operator
http://www.bcarchives.gov.bc.ca/cgi-bin/www2i/.visual/img_med/dir_99/h_07247.gif
Picture of George Owen Madigan, Boiler Inspector
Vancouver
http://searcharchives.vancouver.ca/staff-of-british-columbia-boiler-inspection-branch;rad
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Use my info as a clue to do your own research.
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