• James Godfrey Hanna’s father arrived at Quebec from Dublin about 1763 and two years later had established himself as a clockmaker, watchmaker, silversmith, and merchant at “the sing of the Eagle and Watch,” 15 Rue de la Fabrique. There he trained James Godfrey to follow him as a craftsman and merchant, and in 1803 he took his son into partnership. After his [father’s] death in 1807, James Godfrey continued the business along the lines established by his father.
3068, p 1• In addition, he owned a quarry on Rue Saint-John which he leased in 1817. Hanna also began to develop the seigneury of Saint-Charles-de-la-Belle-Alliance in the Beauce region, which his wife inherited from her father. In 1817 he purchased 3,000 acres in the area, probably near his wife’s property, and in the same year he announced his intention of petitioning the House of Assembly for permission to build a toll-bridge over the Riviere Famine in the parish of Saint-François (at Beauceville).
3068, p 1• Hanna’s partnership with Delagrave and other plans were abandoned early in 1818 when he went bankrupt. ...his bankruptcy brought to an end the family’s association of more than 50 years with the silversmith-merchant trade of Quebec.
Hanna probably left Quebec soon after his bankruptcy. He settled on his wife’s property in the Beauce where he attempted to live the life of a seigneur.
3068, p 1• M. James Godfrey Hanna was a “horloger” someone who repairs the clocks and watches, living in Quebec City. He even knows what street: Cote de la Fabrique, very close to Chateau Frontenac (if you have ever visited the old town, Quebec city is beautiful and some parts well preserved like the beginning of Nouvelle France). This corresponds exactly with your Record.
They are buried in the Anglican cemetery in Sillery (suburb of Quebec). There are monuments about them...
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