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Tuesday, 6 February 2024

The Doak family of Doaktown, New Brunswick, Canada

 By Elaine Corbett

The Doaktown museum of the Doak family

Doaktown Heritage site with photographs

Marion Wallace Cumnock Connections family tree link.

My 4 times great grandmother Marion Wallace was married twice.
Her first husband was Thomas Symington, and together they had nine children before his untimely death in 1802. They farmed at Whitehill, Ochiltree, and when Thomas Symington died, Marion carried on the farm alone until she remarried.

Her second husband, who is my 4 times great grandfather was James Smith, from Clowhernon (I think), with whom, fortunately for me, she had two more children.

The story of her daughter Mary Symington is one of travel, adventure, and some sadness with the family of her husband James Doak out in Canada.

James Soak and Mary were married at Stair in 1809. At this time Mary could have been living at Whitehill farm, and James at Roadinghead farm in Ochiltree. This clip from the OS maps shows the locations, later split by the construction of the railway line




James Doak, Mary, and three of their children embarked on the crossing to New Brunswick in 1820. Their youngest daughter Miriam (could that have been Marion after Mary’s mother?) was five years old and tragically, she died on the ship and was buried at sea. What a distressing beginning to their new life in Canada. Mary may well have been pregnant at the time with her third son, who was born in August of that year in Doaktown.

James, Mary and their family settled in Blissfield, a neighbouring parish to Doaktown where the rest of the family, who had travelled a couple of years earlier, had begun to establish their businesses.


Click HERE for a Wiki entry describing the Doaktown historical site where some of their legacy has been preserved.

This item was posted on Ancestry by Raymond Pearson in 2011 

On or about 1820 the Doak Family of Ayrshire, Scotland moved bag and baggage to the Miramichi.  Their grants of land were located along the river from Boiestown toward the Bay.  They brought with them items of equipment, even a combined lumber, wool and grist mills.  The old squire Robert Andrew Doak (preferred Andrew) established himself in a public house at Chatham.  His son, Robert, ran his farm and the mill which was a prosperous venture for many years.

According to records found at the New Brunswick Public Archives, Robert Andrew Doak died in Doaktown at the age of 65 in 1823. Unfortunately, there is no concrete information, as yet, concerning his wife, Agnes who may have died prior to Robert Andrew Doak’s passage to Canada accompanied by two or three of his children. 

His son Robert who is referred to above as having managed the farm and mill is Doaktown's own "Squire Doak" after whom the Village is named.

On his death all assets went to his son James Andrew Doak then aged 33. 


The ‘old squire’ is listed in the Cumnock Connections tree as being a wright by trade. To me, looking at the list of things he brought with him, he must have been a millwight. This was a man who brought the knowledge, equipment, and skills to engage a workforce into building a new life in a new country. He knew how to harness the power of water to drive his mill, his sons knew how to farm the land and raise animals, and I have no doubt that his daughters and daughters- in-law knew how to use the wool mill, how to spin and weave cloth.
This was in the 1820s. I was surprised that they had managed to export all the tools and equipment with them - perhaps even the mill stones as well as the cogs and pulleys to operate the mill, but this was an age of wooden tall ships, skilled mariners, and boats that would regularly load up with stone ballast just for stability. 



Here is another version of events from William R. MacKinnon, “DOAK, ROBERT,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography , vol. 8, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed February 5, 2024, http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/doak_robert_8E.html .


DOAK , ROBERT , businessman, farmer, office holder, and justice of the peace; b. 4 April 1785 in Ochiltree, Scotland, third of eight children of Robert Doak and Agnes —; mr. Oct. 3, 1808 Jean Kirkland, and they had three sons and three daughters; d. April 5, 1857 in Doaktown, NB  

Nothing specific is known about the youth, education, or financial background of Robert Doak. In 1815 he and his family left Scotland intending to settle in Kentucky. However, inclement weather forced their ship into the port of Miramichi, NB, and the passengers were landed there. Doak remained in the colony at Newcastle and by 1817 had established himself as an innkeeper in nearby Nelson Parish. The next year his elder brother, James, arrived with his wife and three children, and both brothers entered into partnership with Alexander MacLaggan to operate a mill in Blackville. By July 1822 the Doaks had sold out to MacLaggan and moved approximately 20 miles farther up the Southwest Miramichi River to the present site of Doaktown; there they were joined by their father, who had recently emigrated from Scotland. On 1 April 1825 Robert Doak Jr purchased lot 45 from the Ephraim Wheeler Betts estate (having earlier obtained two adjacent lots for farmland) and his brother James and his family settled in close proximity.   

In conjunction with his son James Andrew, whose family was to share the homestead, Doak soon had constructed and was operating a carding-mill, gristmill, and kiln, and later built a sawmill and oatmeal mill, the latter serving the whole of Northumberland County . The mills were operated by water-power; there was a brook-fed mill-pond at the rear of the property which provided a constant source of water. Doak also farmed and, according to family tradition, “raised as many as one hundred hogs every year which they salted down or smoked to be sold. The cellar used to look like a wholesale grocery at times.”

Shortly after his arrival in upper Miramichi, Doak became involved in local government. In 1822 he was appointed overseer of the poor, town clerk, and clerk of the market. The following year he became overseer of highways for the district and in this capacity he supervised the construction of the road between Fredericton and Newcastle. The Miramichi fire of October 1825 affected Doak and his enterprises, although not as disastrously as it did many of the earlier established settlers. Claiming a loss of £20, he petitioned the relief government committee set up by the provincial and received half the amount. In the same year he was appointed a justice of the peace for the county. Unlike most other men after 1800, Doak had managed to bypass many of the lesser municipal offices such as overseer of fisheries and fence viewer: the normal pattern was to hold two or three of the more minor positions before becoming a magistrate. In 1826 he became a school trustee, a post which ten years later enabled him to force long-term squatters from a school reserve lot adjoining his own property and to have the land granted to himself later that year for “safe-keeping.” A school was eventually built on the site. Appointed acting coroner for the area in 1829, he was still holding inquests as late as 1844. 

Until the mid 19th century, the settlement had remained nameless, at times being referred to as part of Ludlow and after 1830 as Blissfield Parish. Following the completion of the highway and the establishment of a post office, the village was designated Doaktown, because Doak was the most politically influential and the most affluent resident. When in 1847 the first bridge was built across the Miramichi at the village, Doak, who admired a large elm tree standing directly in line with the road, persuaded the road supervisor, for £5, to place a slight crook in the highway.

Doak's career was not without blemishes. At a special session of the county council in 1819, he was accused of keeping a gambling house. In 1830 he was fined for the illegal selling of spirituous liquors – a common offense of the times, yet unfitting his position. And from 1837 to 1840 he was a key figure in an unpleasant domestic lawsuit between himself and his son-in-law William Robinson, “an absconding debtor”; at the same time he served as a presiding magistrate at the trial.

Doak, commonly known as “the Squire,” was noted for his benevolent spirit; he contributed generously to the religious and educational life of the community, with gifts of land for a Baptist church (although the family was Presbyterian) and the local school.

William R. MacKinnon

[Information concerning Robert and Jean Kirkland Doak was kindly supplied by a descendant, the Reverend Douglas Earle of Halifax, from a family Bible in his possession . wrmack .]


From these two descriptions of the early days of Doaktown, James seems to have been in partnership with his brother Robert, and although the younger brother it was Robert Doak who became the village leader.








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