|
HOME SURNAME LIST NAME INDEX SOURCES EMAIL US |
THIRD GENERATION6. Phyllis Daisy Whittaker
was born on 1 Jul 1911 in Saskatoon Saskatchewan. She died on 6 Dec 1992
in Denver Colorado. Mom was born in Saskatoon the eldest of two girls. She
grew up there and after graduation from high school went to work for British
American Oil (Gulf today) in Regina. Mother was active in her church and sang
as a soloist for many years. As her five children were finishing high school
she attended college part time and in 1964 graduated with a Bachelor Degree in
Fine Arts. Mother was a painter and painted many oils over the years many scattered
amongst various of her children and friends from College. After all her children
had left home she took a job teaching at Sir Sanford Flemming College in Peterborough
Ontario. When she retired she was head of the Secretarial Science Program at
the College and had been for several years. After they retired to Ottawa they
travelled extensively for several years visiting the children in their various
homes in California, British Columbia, Colorado and Ontario. She was affectionately
called "Grandma Whoshe" after her first Grandchild arrived on the scene.
This resulted from her startled remark after being called Grandma by one of her
kids, Grandma Who's She?. Her Grandchild who was just starting to talk dubbed
her Grandma Whoshe.
She was married to Ronald Edward Hamilton
(son of Hugh Edward Hamilton and Fanny Louisa
Carr) on 11 May 1940 in Saskatoon Saskatchewan. Ronald
Edward Hamilton was born on 13 May 1915 in Unity, Saskatchewan. He died
on 2 Apr 1993 in Denver Colorado. Ron grew up in Unity Saskatchewan and attended
the University of Saskatchewan at Saskatoon, He graduated with a masters degree
in Chemical Engineering. He was Manager of the University Figure Skating Club.
He worked for Gulf Oil in Regina after graduation. After he married mother he
was assigned to the munitions works a Winnipeg Manitoba for the duration of the
war (WWII). He was one of a three man team that discovered smokeless black
powder, an invention he could not talk about for over 25 years. Smokeless black
powder is not really smokeless but rather a very light grey which hung low on
the horizon making it very difficult to spot the allied guns when they were fired.
The conventional black powder made clouds of heavy black colour which rose above
the guns. After the war he moved his family to Toronto and settled in Mimico
while working for Maple Leaf Milling as a process engineer from 1946 until 1951.
In 1951 he moved his family to the Niagara Parkway Near Boyer's Creek south of
Chipawa. He worked for North American Cyanamid as a Chemical Engineer until 1954.
In the summer of 1954 he moved his family to Elsah Illinois to become a professor
of Chemistry at Principia College. A post he held until he graduated with a doctorate
from Washington university in 1964. In 1964 he move the family to Kingston Ontario
and worked for Gulton Industries in Ganonoque. In 1969 he moved to Peterborough
to work for Canadian General Electric as a computer programmer and process control
modeler for chemical process automation of the pulp and paper industry and later
for the petroleum industry. He was retired in 1974 and moved to Ottawa where
he was involved in designing and building solar efficient housing for private
individuals. In 1990 he and his wife moved to their eldest daughters home in
Highlands Ranch Colorado where they lived until they both passed on. Phyllis
Daisy Whittaker and Ronald Edward Hamilton had the following children:
|