The colonies during the 19th century offered the chance for young men to better themselves in a new country and tales of such successes that were brought back to Lincolnshire spurred on more to make this drastic change in their circumstances and to seek their fortunes in faraway places. Many from Bourne made the perilous sea voyage across the Atlantic to the New World and among them was Joseph Tye Flatters. He was born in Bourne on 6th July 1841 and on 21st August 1865 he married Frances Harriet Hester, then aged 21, of Hanthorpe village, and was working as a professional photographer, most probably for his father-in-law, a partner in the grocery and drapery business Rodgers & Hester which operated from shop premises in the market place on a site now occupied by the National Westminster Bank and also included a photography service.
Joseph was also well known in the town as a bell ringer at the Abbey Church and for playing trumpet with the town band and with the band of the 15th Lincolnshire Rifle Volunteers, based at Bourne. He was a private in the military unit but he was also a crack shot and frequently won prizes at their shooting competitions. On 4th October 1867, for instance, the unit held its annual shoot over 150, 200, 500 and 600 yards followed by a dinner at the Angel Hotel when awards were presented and Joseph took the first prize of £7 [£350 in today's money] together with the Prince of Wales Challenge Cup. He also qualified for a share in the £5 awarded for the best drill attendance of the year. This
money most certainly helped pay his fare to Canada and, undeterred by the fact that he had a large family,
sailed aboard the SS Scandinavian, a steamship with sailing masts, which
departed from Liverpool on 19th May 1871 and after a short stop at
Londonderry to take on more passengers, bringing the total up to 850,
arrived in Quebec on 30th July 1871 with his wife and their four young children, sons Joseph,
James and William and daughter
Nellie. Twins had also been born to them in England but both had died before they emigrated although they were to have eight more children in Canada, but one, a baby girl called Fannie Lewella, died soon after Christmas in 1882, six weeks before her second birthday.
Another incident occurred during the winter months at Quyon, 26 miles away, while serving a legal notice on a Mr Brady, a member of a notorious family of fighters who gave Sheriff Flatters a terrible beating before putting him in his sleigh, turning the horse around and sending it packing on the road back to Aylmer and after reaching home badly injured, he was quite ill for a long period.
The killing left Joseph's widow Frances in difficult circumstances and although the two eldest boys, John and William were already working, she had nine other children still to support, among them three-months-old Josephine, the latest addition to the family who had arrived on 20th March 1885. But Joseph had been a careful man and he wrote in his diary for the year 1879 that he had taken out an insurance policy on his life for $1,000 and so his family would not have been left penniless and the town council also voted to pay Joseph's widow his entire year's salary of $400 that he would have received had he lived.
Frances lived to be 84 and died at Aylmer, Quebec, on 31st August 1928, but not before she had returned to England for a visit in 1906, sailing from Quebec aboard the steamer Empress of Ireland, her first time home since she had left for a life in the unknown 35 years before. Today, her extended family is a large one and spread throughout Canada. Her youngest daughter Josephine, the last in line in the picture above, was the mother of Mrs Ethel Guertin, now aged 98, who now lives at Gatineaux, near Quebec. She has told me this stirring tale of her grandfather, one of the early pioneers from Bourne in Lincolnshire who helped bring stability to a small and then untamed part of the North American wilderness, and of her grandmother who was left with a large family and little else but hope to bring them up but showed true pioneering courage to smooth the path for their survival. Joseph's memory is still strong in the family and the actual trumpet he played with the 15th Lincolnshire Rifle Volunteers and the Bourne Town Band that he took with him to Canada is treasured by the family and has recently been handed down to his great great grandson, Jeffrey Guertin, aged 25, who works as an industrial engineer in Toronto, and so Bourne will be remembered here for many years to come.
REVISED MAY 2016 See also The Bourne woman who became a New World pioneer The Joseph Flatters trumpet Attic photo remembers Bourne pioneer
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