It seems that one of the Charles persons that I have been chasing down could not be the son of James. He is actually younger than James. However, he does not rule out the Charles in the 1820 census form. That Charles not only has more sons, but also is clearly older. Being able to rule out one is helpful and helps clarify the record on Old Charles.
Charles was son of Henry Townsend; the family came from England via Canada. His sons are listed as Harold and Charles. He has two sisters, on in Prince Edward listed in the Obituary or 1914. The Obit states Charles had been in the area for 50 years. That means he arrived in Jefferson County in 1864. Our James left Jefferson County just about the time as this Charles "arrives." This Charles is born in about 1842. His wife survives him. .
He was clearly a hard working man. He died from injuries sustained from lifting asphalt. Quite an endeavor for a 72 year old man.
There is no doubt that this record is the sister mentioned in the obituary who is in Bloomfield, Prince Edward, Ontario. It it is the same one that is there in 1861; a good size family.
However, I do note that one researcher has a Henry F (or P?). Townsend in Theresa with a son Charles. He is not to be confused with the Henry K Townsend of Champion that was born in Fairfield and moved to St. Lawrence. The Henry under discussion here appears to be a Henry F (or P?) that came from Bloomfield England perhaps Somerset, to Bloomfield, Prince Edward and about 1843 came to the U.S and married. This Henry would have had a baby in the 1850 Census.
There is a Charles of the Henry Townsend family in Theresa; he was 3 months old in the 1850 Census. Now, the Charles of the Henry in Teresa, Jefferson County is just a tad bit young to be the Charles in the Obituary above, but it is close enough that I believe that researcher should evaluate the obituary and the underlying information. I spent a bit of time in Canada's BMDs, and did not see a record for a child Charles that matched the obit or the family as a whole. I suspect that Charles might have been born in the U.S, but one never really knows. Obituaries are only as good as the information that the living people have. If they are different people, then that is 6 Charles (sigh).
But maybe the birth record is there and I didn't look at the records closely enough? The records for Catholics in Lower Canada are patchy on the various computer assisted company websites. I suggest going directly to the archive web pages, and don't hesitate to expand your search to Nova Scotia. However, I did note a Henry over there, and the wife was Elizabeth, but the records seemed a bit out of kilter and the dates seemed a bit off. I find that when that happens it is often a cousin line.
The Charles in the Obituary above should also be kept separate from the Charles of Brownstown of the Josiah group that drowned at sea off the coast of MA. He died intestate, unmarried and with no issue. So they are different guys.
Then there is Charles that is the son of James Townsend of my group. Trust me, this guy is not our Charles. The Charles in my group worked the circus circuit, and when he came back to Jefferson County, it was covered extensively in the papers.
Then there is the Charles in the 1820 Census. This guy is decidedly not him. The father of the guy in the Obituary would have been about 2 years old in the 1820 Census! What I think has happened is that people have taken the Census record of Charles in 1820 and mushed it with the Obit above to try to make one super old guy. The Charles in the 1820 Census and the Charles in the obit are different people.
Now, if someone wants to research this one, there are two Bloomfield locations in England. One is in Somerset and one is in Staffordshire. Now, if the Henry in this obituary is the one that I think it is, then he will not appear in the 1851 Staffordshire Religious Census, because he is already across the pond. But in that Census I noted a 75 year old man named Henry and a 6 year old boy named Henry living the same family, with no 'middle' Henry. The little boy Henry would have been born after the Henry in the obit left, but I sort of think that family would be worth looking at. It could be Henry's father and Henry's nephew.
Somerset resources are hit and miss for many people, but Catholics have the Bishop's Journal which has various details beyond the basic B.M.D. data. Some of the electoral rolls have been typed, like this one for Charles Henry Townsend.
One last note: I did look for James Townsend over in the Canadian records again; I kind of hoped that Henry and James were brothers. None are the right age, and two that are indexed as Townsend surname entries are really Andersons. So actually look at the record before you get excited. And as always, remember when searching in Lower Canada, the French spelling often prevails. Townsend becomes Tousaint or Towson depending on the Parish priest. Soundex is your friend in searching the records in Lower Canada.
To summarize the 5 Charles:
1) Charles in the 1820 census in Champion, 1830 Census in LeRay, born around 1790
2) Charles in Brownstown son of Nathan, a sailor, who never appears on his own, but drowns, dies intestate, no issue.
3) Charles son of Henry in Teresa who dies in 1914, and (4) his son Charles (still alive in 1914)
5) Charles son of James of Philadelphia, the Circus guy.
Possibly a sixth if Charles (3) is not the guy in the Obit.
To summarize the 2 Henrys
1) Henry K born in Fairfield, appears in the 1820 Census of Champion
2) Henry P/F in Theresa
There could be a 3rd Henry if the Henry in the Obit is not the same as the Henry in Teresa.
And let's not forget the old Henry waiting to be discovered with grandson Henry in Bloomfield, UK, and the Henry that is in the Prince Edward records, and another Wm Henry Townsend in the early Parish records.
Plenty of James Townsend men in those records, but none born the year of the summer that never arrived in 1816.