Langley Centennial Museum
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Object Description
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Object ID
2607
Title
Thomas Bird and Ellen Jane Parry-Evans in front of their house.
Date
[before 1922].
Description
Thomas Bird and Ellen Jane Parry-Evans in front of their Willoughby house.
Photo Inscription/Caption
Under the photo in the original album: "mum and dad in front of house before verandah was put on."
People/Subject
Parry-Evans Residence (Thomas Bird Parry-Evans)
This house is situated at 7649 - 208 Street in Willoughby. The property was purchased by Mr. Thomas Bird Parry-Evans from Robert Allen Oakes in 1895. The house was built in 1896 by Thomas Parry-Evans and a Mr. Lawrence, a builder from Surrey. An addition was built in the back of the house before 1907. Mr. Parry-Evans and his wife planted an orchard of 60 trees, a few of which still remain on the property. In later yeas, the Parry-Evans farm, which originally consisted of 160 acres, focused on the production of chickens and eggs. A chicken house remained on the property (although is likely gone today-2020). After Mr. Parry-Evans died in 1922 in an accident at Galbraith's Sawmill, the property was left to his wife and further passed on to their daughter, Myrtle McKenna (nee Parry-Evans).
Parry-Evans, Ellen Jane (nee Bland)
Ellen Jane Parry-Evans (nee Bland) married Thomas Bird Parry-Evans March 23, 1910. She died May 8, 1941 at age of 68 (therefore born approximately 1873).
Parry-Evans, Thomas Bird
Thomas Bird Parry-Evans emigrated from Colwyn Bay, North Wales to Canada. He first went to New Orleans and moved all over the United States. He owned a fish boat in Puget Sound. For three weeks, he returned back to North Wales, but settled in Langley in 1895. He stayed at the Towle Hotel in Fort Langley and subsequently purchased a house from Robert Allen Oakes. In 1910, he married Ellen Jane Bland. Mr. Parry-Evans primarily farmed and worked in the logging camps, but around 1898, he went up to the Gold Rush in the Yukon. Sam Larmon, who was a helper on the farm, probably stayed on the property during that time. In 1922, he died in an accident at the Galbraith's Logging Mills.
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Argus v4.4.0.36 - Langley Centennial Museum