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MORISON Donald George

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  MORISON Donald George

    Family/Spouse: PAPINEAU M. A. Rosalie. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 2. MORISON George A.  Descendancy chart to this point was born in St. Hyacinthe, Province of Quebec, Canada.


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  MORISON George A. Descendancy chart to this point (1.Donald1) was born in St. Hyacinthe, Province of Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    George A. Morison

    Posted by Dick Campbell on Fri, 18 Jun 1999

    >From the 1907 book by Alvin H. Wilcox, "A Pioneer History of Becker
    County Minnesota" chapter XVIII, pages 269-271:

    George A. Morison, nephew of William and Allan Morrison, was born in
    St. Hyacinthe, Province of Quebec, Canada, October 4th, 1839; his
    father being Donald Geo. Morison and his mother M. A. Rosalie
    Papineau, daughter of D. B. Papineau, and niece of the Hon. Louis
    Papineau, the talented leader of the French element in Canada, and
    the principal instigator of the Canadian rebellion of 1837.

    Morison attended common schools until nearly ten years of age, then
    went to college for five years in his native village, rounding up his
    education with a four year term in a large village store.

    He visited the west in 1858 and 1859, spending several months in Old
    Superior, Wisconsin, in Crow Wing on the Mississippi, and also at
    Long Prairie, the old agency for the Winnebago Indians.

    That was in the early days, when travel was by canoes or over Indian
    trails, and the trip from Superior to Crow Wing was made in a birch
    canoe, up the St. Louis River to Floodwood River, which was followed
    nearly to its source, thence over a portage into Prairie River, which
    flows into Sandy Lake, and thence into he Mississippi River.

    He returned to Canada in November, 1859, where he remained a few
    years. In May 1865, he landed in St. Paul, Minnesota, and lived in
    Little Falls and Crow Wing during the next three or four years.

    He started in business at Leech Lake in January, 1869, and in the
    fall of the same year came to White Earth annuity payment with a
    stock of goods which he eventually closed out to Wm. W. McArthur,
    then a licensed Indian trader there. In August, 1870, Morison and
    McArthur combined their business and carried on trading in the Indian
    country, under government license, at Leech Lake, Red Lake, White
    Earth and Otter Tail, under the above firm name, dissolving co-
    partnership in August, 1871; Morison retaining all trading posts in
    the Chippewa country, except that of Otter Tail, where McArthur
    continued in business. Morison remained in the Indian trade until
    July, 1880, and made his headquarters at White Earth Agency during
    the last five years of his career as an Indian trader. He, however,
    continued to live on the reservation, where he carried on farming and
    stock raising, on a small scale, with his cousin Allan Morrison, Jr.

    In the fall of 1882, he in company with Arnold A. Ledeboer, also of
    White Earth, opened a general store at Red Lake Falls, Minnesota, (at
    that time a very much boomed town), but owing to a series of bad crop
    years, low prices, and general dull times, the venture was not
    successful and they closed their business in 1887; Morison returned
    to White Earth.

    In the fall of 1894, he entered government service at White Earth
    Agency, and later, in January 1896, was stationed at Red Lake Sub-
    Agency, as reservation overseer, a position he held until July 1st,
    1901, when he returned to White Earth. Since January, 1905, he has
    formed part of the office staff at the agency, having charge of the
    allotting of land under the provisions of the "Steenerson Act."

    By an Indian wife he has one son, Allan F. Morison, born February
    6th, 1882. He has been in the government Indian service for a number
    of years and is now attached to the agency office force.

    It will be noticed that William and Allan Morrison wrote their names
    with two r's, while Geo. A. Morison writes the name with only one r,
    as did a long line of ancestors before him. This difference in
    writing the name, was brought about in a curious manner. When William
    Morrison joined the Northwest Fur Company, he had to sign article of
    engagement, as they called it at the time, to serve for five years,
    and the notary who did the writing, wrote the name Morrison, as did
    other branches of the family; when William came to sign, he called
    the notary's attention to the error in spelling, but was told that it
    mattered little, to sign it as written and it would be just as good.
    Several years later when Allan Morrison, his brother, came to Lake
    Superior, he also had to write his name as his elder brother did, and
    hence the change in their manner of writing the name. In the Island
    of Lewis, Scotland, which is the cradle of the family, the name has
    been spelt for a thousand years or more, with only one r, thus,
    Morison.

    Becker County, Minnesota, Genealogy

    Family/Spouse: Unknown. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. 3. MORISON Allan F.  Descendancy chart to this point was born on 06 Feb 1882.


Generation: 3

  1. 3.  MORISON Allan F. Descendancy chart to this point (2.George2, 1.Donald1) was born on 06 Feb 1882.