Fraser
Clan of West Hill
B I O G R A P H
Y
ELIZABETH MUIR
LINDSAY
3/5/1889-3/25/1975
Elizabeth
Lindsay was the daughter
of John and Elizabeth
Muir. John, her father,
was a coal miner who was born in Carluke, Lanarkshire,
Scotland. Elizabeth's mother, also an Elizabeth, was a tailor in
Scotland who was born in Dalserf.
Elizabeth Lindsay lost two brothers in WW
1: Frank Muir,
an Able Seaman was killed on Monday November 13, 1916;
Louis Mccutcheon Muir, Private 8th Bn. Gordon Highlanders, died Saturday October
9, 1915. Following the war, her third brother and last sibling,
Hugh Muir,
emmigrated to Australia in 1922 never to be seen by her, or his
family, again.
Elizabeth Lindsay was married to David
Lindsay and they led a very comfortable life in Motherwell, Scotland.
David worked with his father in the tubeworks and had such a
wonderful singing voice, he could have turned professional, had there
been the opportunity. Elizabeth was a talented knitter and sewer who
assisted her mother as a tailor. Together Elizabeth and David were
the parents of Betty, David, Isabel, Annie, Stuart, George and John.
Adding to the many losses Elizabeth was to suffer in her life, her
children George and Anne died shortly after birth. A determined but
sensitive and shy woman with a flair for poetry, Elizabeth had no
desire to leave Scotland when her husband, David, decided to follow
in his sister and brother-in-law's footsteps and move the family to
America in 1922 to seek an even better fortune. This was the same
year her brother Hugh left for Australia to seek his own fate.
Leaving her parents and homeland for the "New World" was a sad
adventure for Elizabeth, the loss of her brothers and children
already lying heavily upon her.
Unfortunately the financial success story
that was Canada during the Roaring Twenties, all too soon gave way to
the Great Depression and the job David had been promised in Toronto
failed to materialize. He did manage to find work with the Canadian
Pacific Railway and then moved to their flagship hotel, The Royal
York in Toronto. With a large family to support and struggling, along
with the rest of the world, to make ends meet, Elizabeth also took
work at the Royal York, on the cleaning staff. In Canada, Elizabeth
and David added Robert (Bob) and James to their family. However,
their standard of living in Canada was hard and radically lower than
it had ever been in Scotland.
"The Four Bettys"
Elizabeth Muir, her granddaughter Betty
Gibson, great grandaughter Betty Murphy and daughter Elizabeth
Lindsay
Elizabeth's parents visited briefly on
their way from Scotland on an ill-fated journey to find their son
Hugh in Australia. Her parents made it to Australia but were never
able to locate their missing son; and Elizabeth's father, John Muir,
tragically died and was buried there in 1932. Alan Appleby has since
discovered that Elizabeth's brother, Hugh, was captured by the
Japanese on on the Island of Nauru in 1940 and likely died a prisoner
of war. Although devastated by these tragic losses, Elizabeth and
David, had to travel to Australia themselves, to bring Elizabeth's
mother home with them to Canada. Then, Elizabeth Muir herself passed
away in 1948.
Elizabeth Lindsay's husband David died in
1953 and Elizabeth was left to struggle along on her own, with the
support of her children. She became withdrawn and depressed,
retreating deeper into her self during the last years of her long
life. Her shy and gentle wit, revealed itself less frequently.
Elizabeth had always expressed herself in poetry, which she wrote
whenever and wherever the opportunity arose.
She died in Toronto, in 1975, and is
buried with her husband in the grave next to her mother at Pine Hills
Cemetary in Scarborough.
Links to Home Paternal
Line Genealogy
Ring Lindsay Shepherd Renshaw