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BIOGRAPHY
SADLER, DAVID, teacher and land
surveyor: b. Kirkpatrick-Juxta parish, Dumfriesshire, Scotland,
b. 9 Jul 1804; m. 1826, Jane Barclay, d/o William Barclay, formerly
of Scotland; d. Dalhousie, N.B., 7 Jun 1885.
David Sadler came to the Miramichi
from Scotland in the spring of 1824 and settled in Chatham parish.
He taught school there and in neighboring Glenelg for approximately
twelve years and then received an appointment as a deputy provincial
land surveyor. His Miramichi surveys included the establishment
of the metes and bound of the Little Southwest Indian reserve in
1836 and laying out of settlers' lots on surrendered portions of
the reserve in the 1840s.
In 1849 Sadler was made deputy
surveyor for Restigouche County and took up residence in Dalhousie.
When he died there thirty-six years later he was survived by five
of the ten children who had been born to him and his wife, Jane
Barclay. His sons John Sadler and William Sadler made their permanent
homes in Chatham, William being a businessman who died at age thirty-eight.
His son David Sadler Jr married and lived for a time at Napan. Like
his father, he was a land surveyor, and Sadler Brook on the Lower
North Branch of the Little Southwest drevies its name from him.
SOURCES: [b/m/d] Advocate 10
Jun 1885 / Hamilton (JT); PANB (teachers' petitions); Rayburn; Telegraph
11 Jul 1881
Source: W.D. Hamilton, Dictionary
of Miramichi Biography (1997), pp. 337.
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