I can see deaths for all the other earlier male siblings, Walter, Wm#1, Albert & Thomas...all registered Barton Regis district as were most births....so that ends the theory that a brother may have been in another family's home at census. Perhaps Fred was going to a brother-in-law in 1930? I have not seen the ship's records. I see no divorce if he was that Fred married to Ada, 1921, but truthfully, it wasn't enforced enough back then to make people take it all that seriously. People would just split or even go so far as to remarry without one. KarenM & my husband can vouch for that as their grandfathers did just that! That cold and heartless war made some very sad people, looking for some happiness they might never find.
Well, Krissy, other than looking in newspapers....unlikely if there were no children to write an obit... or being lucky with find-a-grave one day, I think that we have to let this one go. We'll likely not outlive Canada's privacy laws, and one must leave a footprint in order to find one. He likely didn't keep contact with veterans affairs or the Legion, as his death would have been recorded somewhere near the end of his paperwork. You've actually found more than most. My husband paid for a whole lot of blank papers when he got my grandfather's info as a gift several years ago. Also wounded in 1915, changed over to a Scottish regiment & most info was destroyed in ww2, so I have nothing after that, and he served to 1914 - 1919
all the best, J.J.