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Ronald Carick Macdonald

Ronald Carick Macdonald

Male 1904 - 1987  (~ 82 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Ronald Carick Macdonald was born in Oct 1904 in Oliver Mills, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA (son of Carrick Macdonald and Mary Douglas); died on 30 Jul 1987 in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Carrick Macdonald was born on 4 May 1868 in Stevenston, Ayrshire, Scotland; died on 9 Mar 1952 in Wayne, Passaic County, New Jersey, USA.

    Carrick + Mary Douglas. Mary (daughter of James Douglas and Ellen Hanna) was born on 11 Sep 1876 in Glasgow, Scotland; died on 15 Aug 1937 in Paterson, Passaic County, New Jersey, USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Mary Douglas was born on 11 Sep 1876 in Glasgow, Scotland (daughter of James Douglas and Ellen Hanna); died on 15 Aug 1937 in Paterson, Passaic County, New Jersey, USA.
    Children:
    1. Douglas Macdonald was born in 1900; died in 1918.
    2. 1. Ronald Carick Macdonald was born in Oct 1904 in Oliver Mills, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA; died on 30 Jul 1987 in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    3. Gordon Fullerton Macdonald was born in 1907; died in 1971.
    4. Carrick Macdonald was born in 1908; died in 1979.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  James Douglas was born in Jul 1847 in Glasgow, Scotland; died on 4 Aug 1904 in Oliver Mills, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA.

    Notes:

    MAN BLOWN TO ATOMS
    In the Dynamite Explosion at Oliver's Mills ? Two Girls Hurt? Narrow Escapes

    With a roar that could be heard for miles, the nitroglycerine building of the dynamite department of the Oliver Powder Mills at Laurel Run, on the Wilkes-Barre Mountain, [Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA] exploded yesterday [4th August 1904] afternoon at 1:25 o'clock, killing one man and injuring two girls. So great was the concussion that windows and doors in all parts of Wilkes-Barre rattled and the report was heard in Pittston and Nanticoke.The cause of the accident is a mystery, the only man who could give any information in regard to it having been killed. James Douglass, Sr., together with his son, James Jr., were employed in the building. Mr. Douglass, Sr., had charge of the manufacture of nitroglycerine and his son served as his assistant. Just before the explosion, the elder man told his son to go and eat his dinner and left the building and went to the boiler house nearby and was eating at the time the explosion occurred.

    He was knocked from the bench on which he was seated and the machinery in the building was badly wrenched and twisted. He hastened outside after recovering from the shock and discovered that the building he had just left and in which his father was working, was entirely destroyed.Another building just back of the boiler house was occupied by two girls who were seated in front of a window, filling cartridges. The concussion blew in the window behind which they were seated and the flying glass injured them to some extent.The sound of the explosion and the cries of the girls brought the other employees to the scene and the girls were quickly taken from the ruins of the building and hastened to the office, where their wounds were dressed.

    After the girls had been taken care of, the employees made a search for the body of Mr. Douglass. The search was continued until late in the afternoon but not a vestige of his body could be found. A small portion of the trousers which he had worn, were found some distance away in the woods, but outside of this nothing was found and it is supposed that his body was blown to atoms.

    ... the dead man ... was one of the most valued men in his employ. He had been with him about ten years and was always placed in charge of the plant during the absence of Mr. Houghton. He was an exceptionally bright man and had been well educated. He was quiet and unassuming and was a great reader, never reading anything but the highest class of literature. He was valued for these qualities and because of the fact that he could always be depended upon to keep control of himself during danger. His loss will be deeply felt at the plant, and Mr. Houghton says no one, except the members of his family, will feel his loss more deeply than he. He seems to have been a favorite among the men also and they speak highly of his heroism, stating that at one time when a fire broke out in the plant, all the rest of the men ran away and Mr. Douglass stayed and put out the fire. He often stated that he would never leave a building when it was on fire, and this may have been the cause of his death yesterday. He is survived by his wife and five adult children. Two daughters live at home and are employed at the dynamite mill. Another daughter is married and her husband is employed in the black powder mill. James, Jr. was an assistant to his father, but narrowly escaped death, as noted above. The other son lives in Paterson, N.J. Mr. Houghton says that Mr. Douglass was an extremely careful man and he cannot account for the accident.

    James + Ellen Hanna. Ellen was born in Aug 1847; died in USA. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Ellen Hanna was born in Aug 1847; died in USA.

    Notes:

    (Research):Is her surname Hanna? Or isit her middle name?

    Children:
    1. James Douglas was born on 20 May 1875 in Glasgow, Scotland; died on 14 Dec 1947 in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA; was buried in Oak Lawn Cemetery, Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA.
    2. 3. Mary Douglas was born on 11 Sep 1876 in Glasgow, Scotland; died on 15 Aug 1937 in Paterson, Passaic County, New Jersey, USA.
    3. Henrietta "Nettie" Douglas was born on 23 Jul 1881 in Scotland; died on 21 Jun 1921 in Wilkes-Barre, Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, USA.



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