St. John the Baptist Church - Photo by Cal Shook |
Mrs. Myatt was a survivor of the Halifax Explosion and is the person I believe my great Aunt Anna Bella Landry was talking about in the following quote.
“…my cousin living over on the Dartmouth side… just on the other side of Halifax Harbor. Well she was injured. She lost an eye and she was badly hurt. I can’t remember her name… I don’t know if she died since or not. I know her sister’s name was Marie. But that was a sister to her and I can’t think of her name.
Of course, my Uncle Joe, they never found a bit of him. They never found one bit of him. That was my Aunt Pauline’s husband. And they never found him at all, he was blown to bits because he was right on the wharf when the thing went off and they didn’t find him.” - Anna Bella Landry Bradley, Halifax Explosion Survivor
Mrs. Myatt is the daughter of Joseph and Pauline (Bouchard) Burke from River Bourgeois, Cape Breton. She was born between 1889 and 1894.
The Burke Family moved to Halifax around 1905.
Her father Joseph, a stevedore, was killed in the Halifax Explosion on December 6, 1917.
Mrs. Myatt’s mother, Mrs. Pauline Burke was visited by G. Hoban of the Halifax Relief Commission on 16 of December 1918 who recorded the visit as follows:
“Mrs. Burke seemed depressed… Her married daughter Mrs. Myatt who had been injured in the explosion and lost an eye had contracted influenza and died leaving three small children, and this was a great blow to her.” G. Hoban, HRC Case #393
Can’t begin to imagine how it must have felt, losing a husband and then a daughter to influenza, leaving her three children without a mother – so devastating.
On 10 of February 1919 an E. Williamson of the Halifax Relief Commission went to visit Mrs. Burke then wrote:
“ Called for Mrs. Burke… Child stated her mother was out. Had gone to Dartmouth to nurse a cousin who was very sick with a cold.” – E. Wlliamson, HRC Case #393
Two months after her daughter dies, Pauline goes over to Dartmouth to take care of one of her daughter’s children, a cousin to her other children.
I wonder if anyone in this family beside Mrs. Myatt was injured during the Halifax Explosion. Her death in 1919 appears to have left Mr. Myatt (though he’s never mentioned) a single parent with three young children. I’d appreciate any additional information you might have about Mr. and Mrs. Myatt and their children. I have some of their names and ages below thanks to HRC Case #393 from the National Archives of Nova Scotia. Any additions information you can give would be appreciated as I continue to write a memoir about my grandfather and his family.
Note: Below is a list of Burke family members, Mrs. Myatt’s parents and siblings, their ages and occupation or schooling on December 6, 1917 (Halifax Explosion) The Burke’s were living in five rooms at 19 Stairs Street in Halifax. Mrs. Myatt might have been 26 at the time living in Dartmouth with her husband and three young children.
Parents
Joseph – age 54 – stevedore at Pier 8
Pauline – age 50 – housewife
Siblings
Malcolm – age 27 – (widower) – Merchant – was staying with family intermittently
Harry – age 20 – “mentally affected (non disaster) lives at city home” HRC case #393
Annie – age 18 – Moir’s Chocolate Ltd.
Marie – age 13 – b. 19 Dec 1904 – St Joseph’s School – 6th grade
Clarence – age 8 – b. 6 Feb 1909 – St Joseph’s School – 4th grade (boys went in afternoon)
Eddie – age 5 – b. 6 July 1912 – not school yet
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