If this is confusing, or is posted in the wrong forum, my apologies in advance.
From what I've read, the Canadian government is not particularly welcoming to retired Americans, apparently in the belief that American retirees are interested only in Canada's nationalized health services. That is not the case with my wife and myself. When my wife retires in two years, here's our financial situation:
From various pensions, 401Ks, and Social Security, when we both retire, we will have a combined retirement income of at minimum $US5200 ($CAN7000)/month, or $US62,400 ($CAN83,000)/year.
We have health insurance through United Health Care and the US Medicare system, which we pay for. As it will take us some time to achieve full Canadian citizenship, I don't know how our health insurance would work out in Canada.
I've been trying to find information on what I've heard termed a "Canadian Heritage" path to citizenship: my maternal grandfather, John Patrick Higgins, was born on March 2, 1865 in St. Anicet, Quebec. My maternal grandmother, Margaret Wallace, was a British Home Child, born in the poorhouse in Dundee 1st District, Angus, Scotland, June 4th, 1882. Her mother, Isabel Wallace, died of tuberculosis in the Dundee East Poorhouse at the age of 24 on April 1, 1889, and my grandmother, Margaret Wallace, six years of age, was taken to the Nottingshill, QHS (Quarriers Homes of Scotland, Bridge of Weir, near Glasgow), on January 28, 1889.
On May 30th, 1889, my grandmother Margaret Wallace, boarded the S. S.
Siberian, a steamship of the Allan Line, and left for Canada with a group of about 84
orphan girls listed on the ships manifest as “Mr. Quarrier’s Children.” They first went to
Brockville, Ontario, Canada to be housed in one of Miss MacPherson’s “distributing
homes” called “Fairknowe,” where they waited to be accepted by prospective foster
parents. Margaret was sent to live as a domestic with the Moore family in Trout River, Quebec, near the border with the US, soon after arriving in Brockville.
My maternal grandfather, John Patrick Higgins, and my maternal grandmother, Margaret Wallace, were married on November 21, 1917 in the chapel at Valleyfield, in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec. Their second child, Mary, was my mother. She was born on May 13, 1922 in Trout River, NY, just over the border from Trout River, Quebec.
(I have all certified birth, marriage and death records)
Any info greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Bart
From what I've read, the Canadian government is not particularly welcoming to retired Americans, apparently in the belief that American retirees are interested only in Canada's nationalized health services. That is not the case with my wife and myself. When my wife retires in two years, here's our financial situation:
From various pensions, 401Ks, and Social Security, when we both retire, we will have a combined retirement income of at minimum $US5200 ($CAN7000)/month, or $US62,400 ($CAN83,000)/year.
We have health insurance through United Health Care and the US Medicare system, which we pay for. As it will take us some time to achieve full Canadian citizenship, I don't know how our health insurance would work out in Canada.
I've been trying to find information on what I've heard termed a "Canadian Heritage" path to citizenship: my maternal grandfather, John Patrick Higgins, was born on March 2, 1865 in St. Anicet, Quebec. My maternal grandmother, Margaret Wallace, was a British Home Child, born in the poorhouse in Dundee 1st District, Angus, Scotland, June 4th, 1882. Her mother, Isabel Wallace, died of tuberculosis in the Dundee East Poorhouse at the age of 24 on April 1, 1889, and my grandmother, Margaret Wallace, six years of age, was taken to the Nottingshill, QHS (Quarriers Homes of Scotland, Bridge of Weir, near Glasgow), on January 28, 1889.
On May 30th, 1889, my grandmother Margaret Wallace, boarded the S. S.
Siberian, a steamship of the Allan Line, and left for Canada with a group of about 84
orphan girls listed on the ships manifest as “Mr. Quarrier’s Children.” They first went to
Brockville, Ontario, Canada to be housed in one of Miss MacPherson’s “distributing
homes” called “Fairknowe,” where they waited to be accepted by prospective foster
parents. Margaret was sent to live as a domestic with the Moore family in Trout River, Quebec, near the border with the US, soon after arriving in Brockville.
My maternal grandfather, John Patrick Higgins, and my maternal grandmother, Margaret Wallace, were married on November 21, 1917 in the chapel at Valleyfield, in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec. Their second child, Mary, was my mother. She was born on May 13, 1922 in Trout River, NY, just over the border from Trout River, Quebec.
(I have all certified birth, marriage and death records)
Any info greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Bart