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FRUMP…TRUMP BEING CHASED BY GOOSE AND MOOSE
Marjorie broke out laughing as I did…thanks for sending John…assume I can forward it (hope I can) IF so, can you resend as I lost when I removed source…used bbc so no one would steal source. -
Canadians are loved and respected by some Americans…if noon by the King of Chaos
There are Americans who love us even if the KING OF CHAOS does not.alan

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EPISODE 1,233 –EDWARD FREEMAN EX HEAD GARDENER—PERSUASION EXAGERRATION: PAMPHLETS AND BROCHURES — 1900 -1914
EPISODE 1,233 –EDWARD FREEMAN EX HEAD GARDENER—PERSUASION, EXAGERRATION: PAMPHLETS AND BROCHURES — 1900 -1914
THE DECISIONalan skeochfebruary 11, 2025Edward Freeman decidedto migrate to Canada sometime between 1900 and 1905.Was it a spur of the moment decision or was it carefully planned like his flower gardensat Eywood? I never asked him even though there were many opportunities to do so.
250,000 others decided to immigrate in 1905…the biggest spikeoccurred in 1910when 400,000 immigrants arrived in Canada.The Edward Freeman family were part of this mass movement ofpeople from the old world to the new world. How is this explained?
EXPLAINING WHY EDWARD FREEMAN EMIGRATED TO CANADA IN 1905A good part of the explanation can be summed up in one word, “advertising”much of it done by one man, “Clifford Sifton”Bright coloured optimistic brochures were sent to England and elsewhere in Europe.Towards the end of the 19th century Canada’s Minister of the Interior authorizeda seemingly endless stream of positive paper images of Canada.“Clifford Sifton, the Minister of the Interior from 1896 to 1905, was the driving force behind the greatest immigration scheme in Canadian history. Through his efforts, the Department of the Interior distributed tens of thousands of pamphlets similar to this 30-page atlas on western Canada. The atlas describes the opportunities and the free homesteads that were available for prospective immigrants in western Canada. The style is flamboyant and spectacular – not to mention overstated – and had some similarities to a travelling “medicine show.”






One historian notes that the flood of propaganda that glorified Manitoba was no just restrictedto brochures. Photography, especially photographic post cards, also boosted emigration toCanada WEst (i.e. Manitoba)


Ocean liners specialized in transporting settlers. Such as The Allan Line ‘Victoria’that EdwardFreeman chose … They boarded the Victoria in 1905 on its maiden voyage…landedat St. John, New Brunswick and then by an immigrant train to Toronto, Ontario.




HOMESTEADING…WAS NOT AS PRETTY AS A POSTCARD OR A GOVERNMENT BROCHURE














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EPISODE 1,230 : PLANT COLLECTORS CATALOGUES 1879 AND 1883 …AND A BOTHY WHERE UNDER GARDENERS STUDIED
EPISODE 1,230 : PLANT COLLECTORS CATALOGUES 1879 AND 1883 …AND A BOTHY WHERE UNDER GARDENERS STUDIEDalan skeochfebruary 5, 2025Estate owners like those at AUDLEY END loved novelty plants. plant collectors scoured the world for them.Head Gardeners expected their under gardeners to study plantings in the tiny bothy room that was oftenbuilt into the brick surrounded gardens. New estate owners often brought their gardeners with them to planthe estate gardens. The salaries varied from 50 to 100 pounds per year plus room and possibly board.There was dignity in being a head gardener. Only thing wrong was tipping your hat to accept inferiority.But life was good. life might even be better in Canada. It was not so.When Edward Freeman migrated to Canada he expected something similar. He was wrong…and had tobecome a carpenter and during World War One he was a munitions maker…artillery shell casings on a metal lathe. His gardening dayswere nearly forgotten. But not quite. He eventually created his own estate garden on a piece of rock strewnswamp land in Erin Township, Wellington County. That took time and he had many shocks in the adjustmentto Canadian life. Why did he migrate? I think he was tricked by false advertising. Canada was not all bread and honey.More of that story is yet to come.Have you ever had your house burn down? Have you ever had to step on the bottom rung of a ladder…i.e. start all over again?Take a seat in the bothy below and read the plant catalogues. Note the fire place. Lots of fires in Canada in those days.alan














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EPISODE 1,229: EDWARD FREEMAN…”HATED MY JOB AS HEAD GARDENER — TOO MUCH PRESSURE”
EPISODE 1,229: EDWARD FREEMAN…”HATED MY JOB AS HEAD GARDENER — TOO MUCH PRESSURE”
alan skeochfeb. 4, 2025EDWARD FREEMAN — INCOME AS HEAD GARDNER AT EYWOODWhat was Edward Freeman earning as head gardener at Eywood from1898 to 2006? I never asked him. Is it too late to find out? I mulledthat question over all night and discovered there is a way to removethe cobwebs.Average £110 pound a year / $536.00 (19th Century)*lodgings includedIn 1960british pound was worth $2.80 US
Bunmahon, Southern Ireland in 1960MY JOB IN IRELAND HELPED — LEARNING TO MANAGE MEN — MONEY
Many of our Irish employees at Kirwin’s pub, Bunmahon, 1960As mentioned earlier I had an interestng job in Southern Ireland in 1960.There is an abandoned copper mine called Knockmahon on the westernedge of County Waterford. In 1960 the African source of copper was injeopardy so Denison Mines contracted Hunting Technical and ExplorationServices to complete a surface survey of the site using A Turam electro magneticinstrument. Since the previous summer I had been using the Turamsystem in Western Alaska the company sent me to Ireland.
Why did I need so many employees? Imagine a bull or a near feral hog? Or trying to work above and below groundalone — needed help.My pay was $400 a month. The job lasted three months. Help wasto be hired in Ireland. The daily rate of pay was one pound per day…i.e. $2.80 U.S. per day.I hired a lot of people as the job was made difficult by herds of cattleeating great swaths of our insulated copper base line. Then they wouldruminate and throw up balls of our wire terminating the survey. Anotherdanger was feral pigs that Barney Dwan, my first helper, said had eatena Nun and all that was found were her shoes with feet in them. Would youbelieve that story? No matter. I was strapped in to the Tjuram and neededa man to lift me or push me through the bramble fences of small Irishfields. Another problem was training a linecutting crew to set up ourgrid for the survey. And a man or two men to guard our motor generatorwhich was used to create a magnetic field. Why should you care?





All these employees had to be paid. So I discovered the rate of payin Ireland in 1960 was one pound per day ($2.80 U.S,.). Each Fridaywas payday. Seemed to me the rate of pay was low so I boughtpacks of cigarettes and chocolate bars as sweetenters for the job.Made me feel like a big shot.I really was just a field man gathering data for Dr, John Scam, a geophysicist,to study and try to determine how much copper was beneath the ground.John Hogan, a geologist was also present representing Dennison Mining Corp.How could this experience help me discover what my granddad, EdwardFreeman earned as head gardener at Eywood? In 2020, historian Chantal Graysonresearched the incomes of servants on great estates in England likeEywood. She averaged the rates of pay and arrived at a figure foreach class of servant. Head gardeners earned an average 110 poundspeer year. Presto! Now I knew what Edgar Freeman earned. $560 er year.Or 46.6 cents per day…six day week. Of course Edward also got ahouse and perhaps food.My Irish employees were getting $2.80 per day. I was getting $13.30 perday plus room and board. The cost of tuition at the University of Torontowas $425.00 in 1960.HERE IS THE BOMBSHELLHow did Edward Freeman earn enough money to bring his family toCanada in 2006? Why did he decide to emigrate. I thought he hada good job in England. He liked his work at Eywood becausehe talked about the place so much. Grandpa and grandma correspondedwith many of the Eywood servants,
Edward Freeman at Eywood and at his farm in Canada — decades apart
One day in 1955 or 1956, I asked him if emigration had been a big mistake.Didn’t Edward Freeman love his job as Head Gardener?
How to discourage pigeons at Eywood GardensWORDS BELOW ARE MY WORDS…AS I REMEMBER“No, Alan, I did not like the job. did not like having to tip my hatto Mr. Gwyer. Did not like to indicate I was a Commoner to my‘betters’ so often. My job as Head Gardener was filled with tension.Food and flowers had to be produced. Gardening is a chancy business…weatherand weeds. If I failed to produce then I would lose my job.Then there was the job of keeping the estate looking ship shape….those rotodendrons
did not appear from nowhere. The men and boys had to be told what to do.The gardens required planning. Greenhouse glass was breakablel. The jobwas endless.”“I thought you loved gardening.’‘i do. I love gardening here in Canada. Look at that crop ofrhubarb…that’s ours. Look at the orchard. Those are ourtrees. When we moved here from Northern Ontario our wanderingended. Would we go back to Eywood even for a visit ? No!”I failed to ask him how he could afford to migrate to Canada. I cannot figureout how he did it. My cousin Ted Freeman who knew granddadbetter than I did said he made a little money on the stock marketIs this correct? I have no idea.ALANPOSTSCRIPTGARDENING STAFF TASKS
- Average wages for gardeners varied between £50 to £100 per year.
- Wages depended on the gardener’s experience and the type of estate or garden.
- Skilled gardeners, especially those working in large estates, earned higher wages.
- Many gardeners received additional benefits, such as accommodation and food.
- Seasonal work could affect earnings, with some gardeners earning less in winter months.
- The rise of horticultural societies contributed to the professionalization of gardening.
- Wages were generally lower in rural areas compared to urban settings.
- The introduction of labor laws began to influence wage standards during this period.
- Female gardeners typically earned less than their male counterparts.
- Economic conditions and demand for gardening services also impacted wages.
NEXT STORY; WANDERING THROGH THE WILDERNESS…FAILURE AFTER FAILURE