Identity area
Type of entity
Authorized form of name
Duval family (Edmund Hillyer)
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
Branch begins in 1805
History
Edmund Hillyer Duval (1805-1878), the son of Peter Duval and Elizabeth Wood Duval was born at Houndsditch, London, England, on 8 February 1805. On 28 September 1828, he married Sarah Turner (d. 1840), the daughter of Mary Lamb and John Turner, at Aldgate, London. They had no fewer than 7 children: Elizabeth (1831-1833), Edmund Hillyer (1832-1907), Sarah (1834-1835), Marianne (1836-1923), Amelia (1838-1906), Sarah Kewell (1839-1840), and Eliza Lury (1840-1928). Edmund Duval and his family came to New Brunswick in the 1840s and settled in Saint John. His brother, George Duval, immigrated to the province several years later and also made his home in or near Saint John.
Between 1835 and 1845, Edmund H. Duval was headmaster of a large school in Bristol, England, sponsored by the British School Society. This organization operated a number of such schools that were intended to provide basic education for the working-class. In 1845 he was invited by a group of Saint John businessmen to establish a British Model school in the Mechanics' Institute to train teachers. From 1848 to 1859 he was principal of the Normal School, at Saint John, which soon became the standard for teachers' training throughout the province. In 1859 he became the chief inspector of schools for the city and county of St. John.
A Deacon of Germain Street Baptist Church, Saint John, in 1870 Edmund H. Duval received a certificate of licence to preach from that congregation. He fought to improve social conditions for blacks or the descendants of Black Loyalists, particularly those living at Loch Lomond, also known as Willow Grove, located near Saint John. To better assist blacks at Willow Grove, he bought a farm there and taught residents farming techniques. He was instrumental in the construction of Willow Grove Baptist Church in the 1850s, which was considered a mission of Germain Street Baptist Church. Edmund Hillyer Duval died at Willow Grove, Simonds Parish, on 17 September 1878.
Several of Edmund H. Duval's children followed in his footsteps. In 1870, Eliza Lury Duval married William Fotherby Burditt (d. 1931), the son of the Rev. Thomas Burditt, a Baptist preacher, of England and Wales. They lived in or near Saint John. Edmund Hillyer Duval, Jr., married Matilda Jane Marshall, in 1863, and they made their home in the province of Québec. Daughters, Marianne Duval and Amelia Duval, may be considered followers of the Social Gospel movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Marianne Duval ran a Mothers Meeting group at Willow Grove for the poor, both black and white, in the early 1860s. She married twice, first to John George Lewis Wilson (d. 1867), of London, in July 1866, and second to Charles H. Allan (d. 1878), of Saint John, in 1877. Amelia Duval was active in social welfare groups in Saint John. She ran a Sunday school at the local almshouse and worked with the King's Daughters Society, later known as the International Order of King's Daughters and Sons. She died unmarried on 13 September 1906.
Places
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
Mandates/sources of authority
Internal structures/genealogy
General context
Relationships area
Access points area
Subject access points
Place access points
Occupations
Control area
Authority record identifier
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
Language(s)
Script(s)
Sources
Dictionary of Canadian Biography, "Edmund Hillyer Duval"; Daniel F. Johnson, Vital Statistics from New Brunswick Newspapers On-line; and Duval family history sheets.