Carl lived in California. Raymond lived in Washington. Heath b. 23 Feb 1890, lived in Hyder, Alaska.
<><><>
Oliver Edward b. 20 Apr 1861, d. 16 Dec 1944 in Penticton, BC, son of Thomas Ives and MaryJane Wood, 111. 15 Dec 1886 Annie Theresa McCabe, daughter of Miss Mayhew and Peter McCabe, Tryon.
Edward and Annie lived in Elkhom, Man., in 1889, then Penticton, BC.
Edward Ives and Annie McCabe had 2 children: IdaJean b. 17 Feb 1892, d. 17 Feb 1892. Robert Thomas b. 8June 1894, d. 1948, m. Sarah Eleanor Henry.
<><><>
Isaac b. 26 Feb 1863, d. 30 March 1954, bur. Cape Traverse Church of Scotland Cem., son of Thomas Ives and Mary Jane Wood, m. 15
March 1884 Louisa Holmes Howatt, b. 1 Oct 1866, d. 13Jan 1942, bur. Cape Traverse Church of Scotland Cem., daughter of Donald Howatt
andJanet MacEachem. See Howatt history. Isaac was a sawmill owner and operator in Montague in 1936.
Isaac Ives and Louisa Howatt had 2 children: Thomas Gordon b. 28 May 1885, d. 9 Nov 1954, bur. Charlottetown Peoples Cem., m. Elva Stewart.
Henry William b. 1 Apr 1889, d. 4Jan 1961, bur. Montague, m. Flora MacEachem.
<><><>
Charles William b. 1 May 1869, d. 12 Feb 1948, bur. Tryon Peoples Cem., son of Thomas Ives and MaryJane Wood. Charles never married.
Charles operated Ives’ Grist Mill and Ives’ Lower Mill. Charles lived in the homestead on the Mill Road, and his sisters, Bessie Cochrane, and Georgina Georgie Bacon, lived with him. Charles sold his house and farm in 1923 to William Callbeck and moved to a smaller house on the property but bought it back a year later. Charles installed a telephone connection, the first in the community, from his house to the Grist Mill. Georgie’s son, Charles Bacon, after graduating from university, re- turned to work for his Uncle Charles in the North Tryon Electric Light Plant. Charles finally sold the farm and Grist Mill to Charlie and Wanda Llewellyn, but retained ownership of the Electric Light Plant. The Llewellyns sold the farm to the Alfred Cairns family, who sold it to the Vance Dixon family. The quaint old Thomas Ives farm house now serves as a machine shed, but it has contributed as much as can be expected for over a century. The Ives’ Mill office, built near the pond in the field
161