Florence Ontario
Florence
Ontario is a very
small community a few miles South
East of Oil Springs. Hopefully I
will have
much more here soon. As I strive to
bring you the history of Petrolia
and
Oil Springs I will include other
close communities when I find
historical
pics that illustrate them.
editor's collection
This is downtown Florence ca.1908
editor's collection
The Florence bridge
photo by Phair A look
down Fansher Road. On a very nice October day
John Phair, David Hext and I took a ride to
Florence to ride down Fansher Road. As you
can see it was a worth while trip. I wanted
to check it out based on Jeffery Carter's
story.After our ride we had lunch in
Florence. Very good food there.
Fansher
Road:
It began as an Indian trail and grew
from there
By Jeffery Carter
Wednesday,
September
19, 2012 2:08:01 EDT PM
To a
casual observer, the Fansher Road appears to
be like
any other graveled stretch in Southwestern
Ontario.
Look a little
harder, however, and you'll notice subtle
differences.
The fence lines
and some buildings crowd the gravel. The road
itself appears far narrower than
others in the area.
And as you drive
along, you'll soon discover a circuitous route
of curves and T-intersections as
the road follows the course of the little
creek with the same name.
"This is
actually a given road... that means it more or
less started as a trail,"
says Darrell Johnston who farms at the eastern
terminus.
Johnston is
correct according to local historian Fred D.
Fansher.
Fred Fansher's
ancestors, David and Elizabeth Fansher, were
the first permanent settlers in
the former Township of Euphemia. They came to
Upper Canada from the United
States in 1822 and three years later, with 10
children and two sons-in-law
(Captain William Walker and Jonathan
Brackett), made their way to what is now
the Township of Dawn-Euphemia Township in
Lambton County.
"The lands
were situated along a creek which was spring
fed and emptied
into Big Creek
(Sydenham River). The creek was later called
Fansher Creek; there was also an
Indian Trail following the creek to the river
and this became known as Fansher
Road."
Much can be said
of the Fansher family.
As was the case
for other pioneers, they faced many
challenges. While lands along the creek
were well drained, there was the wilderness to
contend with and David and his
wife lost two of their children to typhoid
fever that first year.
David, 53, only
narrowly survived the disease to live another
29 years.
The family name
was given to the Fansher Methodist Episcopal
Church that was established in
1855. David's sons John and David Jr. were
among the first trustees and the
building was located on land that had belonged
to the patriarch's daughter
Sarah and her husband Captain William Walker.
The original
church building was replaced with a cement
block structure in 1911. This in
turn, was demolished in 1968. Today just the
cemetery remains.
Euphemia's
first school -a log structure
-built in 1834 also has a Fansher connection.
Captain Walker, David's
son-in-law, was instrumental in securing
funding and Walker's daughter Lavinia
had taught classes in the Walker home even
earlier.
In 1880, S.S. No.
4, known as the Fansher School, was built. It
remains standing, the grounds
still cared for.
Fred D. Fansher,
now of London, is among the last of his line
to have lived along the road with
his family's name. He spent years compiling
the history of his family and the
history of the entire Euphemia community.
Among the other
early names of Euphemia are Dobbyn, Moorhouse,
Smith, Bobier, Bilton, Brownlee,
Annett, Armstrong, Carey, Cross, Johnston,
Burr, Palmer and Rolston.
Some families
like the Dobbyns are still in the area.
There are also
relative newcomers. The Stenger family, for
instance, arrived from Europe in
the late 1940s. In 2013 they are looking to
celebrate their 60th annual tobacco
crop.
Then there's
Herman and Gerry Wygergangs who arrived in the
1970s from Holland.
Herman is the
last farmer with cattle along the road and for
years worked as a crane
operator. "I was supposed to be here for half
a year, until freeze up, but
it never froze up," he jokes.
If you are
interested in visiting Fansher Road, find your
way to either Florence in
Lambton County or Newbury in Middlesex.
From Florence,
simply head east from Three D's Restaurant.
The Fansher Road ends at Limerick
near Newbury.
From Newbury,
head along Concession Drive toward Bothwell
until the road bends southward.
Turn north up Limerick. The second road to
your left is Fansher.
Taking a map with
the concessions and side roads marked is a
good idea.
photo by Phair
by editor A few
of the tomb stones mentioned in the sign
right
photo by Phair Your editor
by the sign at the site of the former Fansher
Road United Church. They have a very nice
memorial at the site as you can see.
All of these pics and more are
from my own collection because people like you let
me copy them. I want more. Email Martin at martyd@ebtech.net