Grenville, and remained an active Magistrate up to
 his decease. As a business man he was strictly
 honest, industrious, enterprising and uncommonly
 energetic, fearing no danger and ready to undergo
 any hardship, both of which his business as a lum¬
  
magnitude of his business operations and the large
 supplies of farm produce required in carrying on
 his numerous lumbering establishments, he created
 a market which was of incalculable advantage to
 the early settlers, by whom he was held in great
 esteem. He was a sincere member of the Church of
 England, but was always ready and willing to con¬
 tribute to other churches. He died October Ioth,
 1842, leaving by his wife, Sarah Clough (born October |
 29th, 1775; died May r5th, 1860), the following
 children:
 
(1) Ruth, born February 17th, 1800; married
 February 18th, 1824, to George Longley, of
 Maitland, and had children ; (1) William Wells, born
 March 29th, 1825; died December 26th, 1844; un¬
 (2) George C., born October 29th, 1827 ;
 She died
 
 
married.
 (3) Sarah Maria, born February 8th, 1835.
 October 4th, 1847.
 
(2) Sally, born June 16th, 1801 ; married January |
 rith, 1826, to George Malloch, of Brockville, and had
 children ; (1) Sarah Ann, born October rath, 1826 ;
 (2) George William, born April 6th, 1828 ; (3) Ruth
 Elizabeth, born July 1829. She died December
 
 
25th, 1835.
 
(3) Horace Clough, born October 31st, 1802;
 married L. Blasdell, 1832, and had children : William,
 Henry, Sarah, Emily, Lydia, Hiram, Warren, Julia.
 
(4) Maria, born October 7th, 1804; died January
 
 
married Mary Hogan 1842, and had children:
  
Herbert, Clara, Alphonso.
 (6) Isaac Brock, born July 30th, 1812; married
  
Elizabeth Reade, May 17th, 1859, and had children :
 William, born March 2gth, 1860; Thomas Reade,
 born June 24th, 1861 ; Ruth, born March 4th, 1866.
 
(7) Thomas Proctor, born Febuary sth, 1816 ; died
 August r5th, 1816.
 
(8) Frances Adeline, born August 17th, 1817.
 
The descendants of William Wells, the first settler
 in Canada, and his wife, Sarah Clough, now living,
 are in number fifty-one, nearly all resident in
 Canada.
 
 
Tue KINCAID FAMILY.
 Archibald Kincaid was born at Bannockburn, near
 Stirling, Scotland, on October 4th, 1780. He was
 early apprenticed to the tailoring trade, which,
  
having learned he married and started business on
 his own account. In the year 1804, he emigrated to
 America, bringing with him his wife and two
 brothers, John and Alexander, and a small stock of
 goods, with which to establish business in America.
 He came to Upper Canada and settled at the present
 site of Brockville, which was then a wilderness. He
 began working at his trade, taking in exchange for
 work, pork, flour, etc., such things as he could ship to
 Montreal and sell. After being in Canada two
 years, he started to return to Scotland with his
 wife, and was shipwrecked in the Straits of Belle
 Isle, losing all he possessed. After wandering
 about for two years, he again made his way back to
 Upper Canada, and commenced working at his
 trade at Brockville, which then contained but a few
 houses, no streets or clearings having then been
 made. He continued at his business, and, as the
 country became settled, enlarged his trade, by which
 he amassed considerable wealth. After some years,
 having become too feeble to continue his business,
 he removed with one of his sons to Yonge, near
 Farmersville, where he died in the year 1865, aged
 eighty-five years.
  
He raised a family of ten children, three daughters
 and seven sons, of whom there are now but five
 living, the eldest being James Kincaid, who resides
 in Brockville, the other brothers and sisters having
 all settled near Farmersville, where they are en¬
 gaged in business and farming.
  
THE LonG Ley FAMILY, oF MAITLAND, COUNTY OF
 GRENVILLE.
  
George Longley, the youngest son of William
 Longley, born in 1788, at Newbiggin, County of
 Westmoreland, England, removed to Canada in
 1512, and settled in Quebec, where he entered into
 He married, Feb¬
 ruary 18th, 1824, Ruth, eldest daughter of William
 Wells, Esq., of Augusta, County of Grenville, Upper
 Canada. He removed to Maitland, Upper Canada,
 in 1826, and carried on an extensive business in
 lumbering, milling, and farming. He was elected
 a member of the Provincial Parliament of Upper
 Canada, for the County of Grenville, in 1828, having
 been previously appointed a Justice of the Peace.
 Mr. Longley took great interest in farming, follow¬
 ing up all the latest improvements, and was one of
 the first to import a superior breed of cattle into
 Canada. He undertook a voyage to England, in
 1842, for the recovery of his health, but died at
  
roth, in the same year. By his wife, Ruth Wells
 (she died October 4th, 1847), he had the following
 children :—