Joined: Feb 2007
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John Hanbury (1855-1928) Brandon Manufacturer, and Lumberman.
6/12/2009 at 7:51 AM
Born at Markdale, Ontario on 12th June 1855, son of William Hanbury and Jane Whitby, he left home at the age of 10 years, farmed for five years then learned the trade of plasterer, mason and bricklayer. He later went into the contracting business.
He moved to Brandon, Manitoba in January 1882, and resumed his the contracting business, being responsible for construction of the post office, the merchants block, the Langham Hotel, the General Hospital and many other buildings in Brandon.
He continued this work until 1892 when he began the Hanbury Manufacturing Company, specializing in doors, windows and other house fixtures. In 1898 he purchased the assets of the Assiniboine Lumber Company, including a sawmill at Brandon, and timber-cutting rights in the Duck Mountains.
At one point, he employed two hundred men, and established mills at Cranbrook, Elko and Van Couser, BC. In 1901 he organized the Manitoba Hardware & Lumber Company, with himself as President, head office at Brandon, and branches at Hamiota, Miniota, Virden and Reston.
In 1880 he married Martha Miles of Ospera, Ontario. They had eight children: Martha Hanbury (wife of A. B. Fleming), Edgar John Hanbury, George Richmond Hanbury, Wilfred Hanbury, Ella May Hanbury, Lawrence Martin Hanbury, Edith Hanbury, and Mary Victoria Hanbury.
His wife died in 1898 and, the next year, he married Minnie Isbister. He was a Mason, a member of the Brandon Board of Trade, the Hospital Board, and served on the Brandon city council. His Brandon home, built around 1908 at the corner of Fifth Street and Lorne Avenue, was described at the time as being the finest frame house in Manitoba.
He moved to Vancouver, BC in 1910, and died at Point Grey, BC. on April 3rd 1928.
Sources:
A History of Manitoba: It's Resources and People by Geo. Bryce, 1906