American-Canadian Genealogist Issue #135
Transcription
American-Canadian Genealogist Issue #135
American-Canadian Genealogist American-Canadian Genealogical Society – 4 Elm Street, Manchester, New Hampshire Issue #135, Volume 39, Number 1, 2013; ISSN 1076-3902 Official Journal of American-Canadian Genealogical Society P.O. Box 6478, Manchester, NH 03108-6478 Founded in New Hampshire in 1973 American-Canadian Genealogical Society P. 0. Box 6478 Manchester, NH 03108-6478 Telephone: 603-622-1554 URL: www.acgs.org E-mail: [email protected] Membership Dues: (U.S. Funds only). Individual Member = $35 for Americans, $40 for Canadians – in U.S. Funds. Family members in same household pay an additional $10.00 in the U.S./$20.00 in Canada. Student Membership 50% of individual membership per year. Overseas membership is $50. Institutional membership is $50. Life Membership is 15 times single/family membership – effective January 1, 2009. 2012/2013 Officers: President: Vice President: Treasurer: Corresponding Secretary: Recording Secretary: Gerard Savard, #4972 Bernadette Meunier, #9489 Pauline Cusson, #2572 James Gaudet, #5381 Jackie Watson, #7227 Directors with Terms Expiring in 2013 Ron Blais, #6271 Constance Hébert, #5175 Cecile Durocher, #9737 Janine Penfield, #9134 Directors with Terms Expiring in 2014 Jeanne Boisvert, #6394 Dennis Joyal, #1592 Muriel Normand, #5706 Andy Tellier, #9821 Cofounders & Honorary Presidents: Acquisitions Auditing: Chairperson/Coordinator Robert Maurier, Norma Boyce, Buildings/Grounds/Safety: Herb Boyce, Computers: Sam Harris, Editorial: Pauline Cusson, Inventory: Muriel Normand, Library: Jeanne Boisvert, Jackie Watson, Membership: Bernadette Meunier, Publications: Pauline Cusson, Research Services: Constance Hébert, Shipping: James R. Gaudet, Richard Coté, Web Site Liaison: Gerard Savard, American-Canadian Genealogist Pauline Cusson, #2572 E-Mail address for Queries in the Genealogist: [email protected] E-Mail address for letters to the Editor or for submitting articles: [email protected] Visit us at: 4 Elm Street & corner of W. Baker St. Next to Blessed Sacrament Church Manchester, New Hampshire Hours: Roger Lawrence, #1 & †Lucille Caron-Lagassé, #2 Committees/Boards: Journal: Editor: #2068 #7655 #8504 #5996 #2572 #5706 #6394 #7227 #9489 #2572 #5175 #5381 #5973 #4972 Wednesday 9 AM – 9 PM Friday 9 AM – 9 PM Saturday 9 AM – 4 PM Sunday 1 PM – 5 PM 1st & 3rd * * except July and August and the 3rd Sunday in December – by appointment only Call ahead during winter months Special Hours by Appointment Only Call 603-622-1554 during regular operating hours. American-Canadian Genealogist © 2012 American-Canadian Genealogical Society ISSN 1076-3902 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Table of Contents President’s Letter Gerard Savard, #4972 ............................................................................................................. 2 Editor’s Page Pauline Cusson #2572 ............................................................................................................. 3 Tribute to Lucile Caron Lagasse, #2 1922-2013 ............................................................. 4 From Other Publications Larry Autotte, #3505 ............................................................................................................... 5 From the Library Director Jeanne Boisvert #6394........................................................................................................... 9 French-Canadians on the Move: The François Desruisseaux Family Moves to Kansas Don Patrie.............................................................................................................................. 10 Eastward Migration: The History of the Souviney Ancestors in Quebec Randall Souviney .................................................................................................................. 14 Who is Marie Anne dit Gims, Jimes, Barnes, Canady, Kennedy? Michelle Murphy #9907 and Muriel Chabot Normand #5706 ......................................... 17 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online John Barnes .......................................................................................................................... 24 French & Indian Raids in New England Donald P. Chaput #2867 ....................................................................................................... 26 Who Was General Bernado De Galvez And Why Is He the Man We Honor With Our Color Guard Ron Cormier #2553 .............................................................................................................. 30 Queries and Answers Mary Anna Paquette #2378..................................................................................................31 New Members Bernadette Meunier #9489 .................................................................................................. 34 Important Notices ....................................................................................................................... 34 Donor’s List to the Building Fund and Financial Analysis................................................... 35 Notices The Editor reserves the right to edit all contributions. American-Canadian Genealogist: Copyright 2013 by the American-Canadian Genealogical Society. The journal, as a whole, is the property of the ACGS. Article contents are the responsibility of the author. Copyright of articles belongs to the author. Statement to protect our non-profit status with the U.S. Postal Service: The AmericanCanadian Genealogist is the official quarterly publication of the ACGS. Volume number and issue number are found on the front cover with ISSN number. The address of the Society is found on the back cover. 1 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 President’s Letter Gerard Savard, #4972 [email protected] It is with sadness that I start my president's letter with the news of the passing of one of our co-founders, Lucille Caron Lagasse. Lucille was 90 years old at her passing and had lived a very full life, being involved with local and national politics, lovingly raising a family and helping to nurture a small genealogical society into a first-class research facility. Lucille was very proud of her French-Canadian Heritage. My condolences to her friends and family. She will be missed. anniversary festivities. More details to follow. Like many other societies, we are facing the challenges posed by competition from internet resources, the expense of maintaining a facility and the challenge of acquiring new resources that will continue to draw membership. In view of that, we have formed a Strategic Planning Committee whose charter is to recommend courses of action that our society should take in order to maintain relevance to our members. The immediate goal is to increase our membership base to assure that we comfortably cover our fixed expenses. Among the ideas brought forth is adding more member-accessible content to our web site. 2013 will be a busy year for the Society. As many of you realize, we are in the middle of a fund-raising campaign to pay off the necessary repairs to our building. We have had positive responses from you, our members, as well as local businesses and societies. We are aggressively seeking grants from various foundations. In the past, we have also received generous bequests from individuals who remembered us in their wills. Just a mention of ACGS in an obituary can encourage others to contribute to our continuing success. How can you help? We are looking for volunteers who can get involved in various projects, people who possess talents in web design, publishing, accounting, fundraising, organizing conferences and many other specialized talents. It's a great opportunity for someone who is retired to get involved in worthwhile projects. We have a need to bring additional members onto various committees, such as membership, the publishing of our journal and others so that we can assure the continuity of these functions in case we lose some of our key volunteers. I sincerely hope that you will consider sharing your talents with us. Please email us at [email protected] with any thoughts, suggestions as to what you would like to see from ACGS in the future, talents that you possess, etc. It is our sincere intention to continue to serve the genealogical community well into the future. Final preparations for the NERGC conference are coming to an end. This very popular genealogy conference to be held at the Radisson Hotel in Manchester NH on April 17-21, promises to be another successful endeavor that ACGS is involved in. I'm hoping to see many of you there. Please look for more details in this journal or visit the NERGC website, www.nergc.org. Because of NERGC, we will not be having a Spring Workshop day this year. We are looking forward to our Fall Conference however, where we will combine featured speakers with 40th 2 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Editor’s Page Pauline Cusson, #2572 [email protected] It is always a challenge to begin this page, especially in a new year. It will be especially challenging this year of our 40th year of incorporation. We have some great ideas for celebrating this event but with limited funds. Unfortunately, one of our co-founders, Lucille Caron Lagasse #2, passed away January 15, 2013. We will celebrate her life and monumental contributions to this society as well. See our tribute to her on the next page. who are a part of his ancestry. Don does an excellent job of compiling statistics on the Indian raids and their captives that he has gathered from the works of Emma Coleman and various other well-known authors on this subject. It was such a pleasant surprise to hear from a former member, Ron Cormier, who used to live in Connecticut and attend our conferences. Ron has written a wonderful article on the Acadian influence in the Revolutionary War and in particular in the Louisiana region. I find this to be so much more informative and understandable than when I was in grammar school being taught American History by French-Canadian nuns – now there is a dichotomy! It makes a big difference when you see History through the life events of your own ancestors. From the man who brought us the “Candy Man” article in our last issue, Randall Souviney, we have two more articles. It was difficult to decide which one to put in this issue. I think you’ll enjoy the one I’ve chosen on his research trip to find his ancestors. Look for his article on the “King’s Daughters” in the next issue. It is always encouraging to me when we get new authors submitting articles for our readers to enjoy. Library Director and Book Reviewer, Jeanne Boisvert came across an article in another periodical and wrote to the author, Don Patrie. He has graciously allowed us to reprint his article on the migration of his ancestors to Kansas. We hope this will encourage our readers to find out what happened to those emigrants who did not follow the mass-migration trend to New England. A rich heritage developed far away from here and we knew little about it. We tend to forget that there was life beyond New England even in the mid-nineteenth century. Our top researcher, Muriel Normand, has been working on what began as a very simple research task –a year ago! She and Michelle Murphy whose line Muriel was working on have collaborated on Part I of a very excellent article for this issue. Having worked with Muriel on other research projects, I can assure you this one will prove to be quite revealing. My hat is off to the both of you. I know we’ll be hearing more from Michelle and Muriel in subsequent issues. Our Queries Editor, Mary Anna Paquette, has brought back some of the older queries that she thinks may not have been answered in the past. Perhaps, with new resources, some of these Queries can be answered…….. could be a treasure trove for some of our members if they get answered and published in our journal. We have a returning author - member Don Chaput. Don is a former board member of the Society as well. He has submitted a very interesting article on the New England captives brought to Canada 3 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Lucille Caron Lagasse, #2 Co-founder of ACGS GOFFSTOWN, NH - Lucille Caron Lagasse, 90, of Goffstown, died Jan. 15, 2013, at her home. She was born the fifth of six siblings in Manchester, Aug. 5, 1922, to Athanase and Anna (Ducasse) Caron, of Canadian descent. She lived through the Depression and was a graduate of Holy Angels High School. She was proud to be an aircraft mechanic during World War II. She was active in politics, serving in the state Legislature. She ran for Congress, was campaign manager for many governors, New Hampshire congressmen and senators. She chaired President Ronald Reagan's successful New Hampshire elections. Paulette Weaver of Kentucky, Annette Holleran of Weare; her three sons, Charles Lagasse of Bow, Michael Lagasse of Weare and Richard Lagasse of Goffstown; her beloved 12 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. We all mourn the loss but we rejoice in her life. But for a happenstance 40 years ago when Lucille’s son was a student of Professor Roger Lawrence at St. Anselm College, the birth of ACGS may not have occurred. When her son went up to the Professor’s desk to ask a question, he noticed some genealogy charts among the Professor’s papers. He noted that his mother had some charts just like that. One thing led to another and fortunately for us, Lucille, Roger and some 60 other people became the charter members of the AmericanCanadian Genealogical Society in September 1973. She was co-founder of the AmericanCanadian Genealogical Society in Manchester. She served on the board of the New Hampshire Union Leader under William Loeb. She championed involvement in church, school, town meetings, and was a natural leader. She was passionate about health and authored a book on eating naturally. She was a compassionate, loving wife and mother who worked, sang and danced well into her 80s. As many attested at her funeral service, Lucille was like the ‘ever-ready bunny with sneakers.’ She just kept going. At 85 she decided to publish a book on eating healthy – something she always promulgated in her lifetime. She loved to entertain friends and family, especially cooking. She touched many lives with her generosity, hospitality and warm smile. Her daughter Annette gave a beautiful rendition of Lucille’s life as they lived it with her. We could have sat there and listened for hours. Never a dull moment in the Lagasse home! She was predeceased by her husband of 29 years, Armand J. Lagasse, in 1976. She is survived by her two daughters, She never missed an opportunity to encourage us to continue the work of keeping her ‘sixth’ child - the American-Canadian Genealogical Society – growing and thriving. It is an honor to have known her. pdc 4 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 From Other Publications Laurent Autotte, #3505 Larry goes through each of the journals listed below looking for new publications to pass on to the Acquisitions Committee. While he’s doing that, he also glances at the articles in each journal and creates a list of the table of contents from each one. A nice service to keep our members informed – thank you. Acadian Genealogy Exchange (Newsletter) (English) Vol. 41, October 2012 Arrival of the Acadians in Louisiana Ancestors Found Ile du Prince Edouard Babin Family Nicolaus Mius – the German Student Mius d’Entremont Ancestry Descendants of St. Louis, King of France American Ancestors (New England Historic Genealogical Society) (English) Vol. 13, No. 4 Introducing the Winthrop Fleet: Massachusetts Bay Company Immigrants to New England, 1629-1630 A Great Migration-Era Family Relic Personal Archiving and the Genealogist On the Trail of Treason: Peggy Shippen’s Amazing Story The Authenticity of Joseph Ware’s Journal: A Historical Argument Revisited Eighteenth-Century Family Histories Ancêtre (L’) (Société de Généalogie de Québec) (French) Vol. 39, No. 300 Gens de souche: Le Patronyme Normand Les triplets de Beauport Les premiers habitants de Sainte-Croix Edmond Tessier, fils de l’ancêtre Mathurin Robert Giffard: premier séjour en Nouvelle-France Anglo-Normand (L’) (Bulletin de l’Association Gaspé – Jersey – Guernesey) (French/English) Vol. 14, No. 3 La Passe Méditerranéenne Pipon family genealogy Au fil des ans (Société Historique de Bellchasse) (French) Vol. 24, No. 4 Le XXième siècle sera celui du Canada Au fil du temps (Société d’histoire et de généalogie de Salaberry) (French) Vol. 21, No. 3 Les outils du charpentier 5 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Berkshire Genealogist (Berkshire Family History Association, Inc) (English) Vol. 33, No. 4 Old Fort Massachusetts Ancestor Tables: Minnie Estella Robison; Thomas Loring Baylis Chinook (Alberta Family Histories Society) (English) Vol. 33, No. 1 Discovering Cousins with Autosomal DNA Testing for Genealogy Autosomal DNA: The New Revolution Expanding the Concept of Family History and Relationships Through DNA Connecticut Ancestry (Connecticut Ancestry Society, Inc.) (English) Vol. 55, No. 2 Descendants of Abraham Bennett and his wife Christian Botsford of Newtown, CT Early and mid-20th Century Vital Records of Norwalk: a Trio of Findings Aids Vital Records of Greenwich, CT, 1847-1852: Overview Births, Greenwich, CT, 1847-1852 Connecticut Genealogy News (Connecticut Society of Genealogists, Inc.) (English) Vol. 5, No. 4 Interesting Data from the 1850 Census The Connecticut Historical Society Museum and Research Center – Full of Surprises Profiles of Connecticut’s Civil War Veterans Spotlight on the Town of East Hampton Connecticut Nutmegger (The) (Connecticut Society of Genealogists, Inc.) (English) Vol. 45, No. 2 Determining the Parents of John Tyler, Born 1722/1723 in Branford, Connecticut The Davignon/Deveneau/Devnew/Devernoe Family of New York, Massachusetts and Connecticut: Abraham Davignon and His Descendants Collins, McGrath and Maloney Families: From County Limerick, Ireland to Connecticut Hartford District Probate Records from 1750 As abstracted by Lucius Barnes Barbour from Volume 25 (1793-1800) The Mythical Wives of Josiah Starr (1657-1716) of Danbury, Connecticut Benedicts, Before America: What Our DNA Surprisingly Reveals: Benedict Surname DNA Project Interpreting a 1778 Connecticut Pay Journal Table Dans l’Temps (Société de Généalogie Saint-Hubert) (French) Vol. 23, No. 3 150 ans! Un passé plein d’avenir: Paroisse Saint-Hubert 1862-2012 Échos Généalogique (Société de Généalogie des Laurentides) (French) Vol. 28, No. 3 Les Synnett d’Amérique (Synet, Senet, Sinotte, Synotte) Entraide généalogique (L’) (Société de Généalogie des Cantons de l’Est) (French) Vol. 35, No. 4 Du nom de famille Mongrain au nom de famille Montgrand: un changement inattendu Les Pruneau d’Amérique Des noces d’or chez les Brassard 6 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Entre-Nous (Club de Généalogie de Longueuil) (French) Vol. 21, No. 3 Jean-Elie Gingras (1804-1891): constructeur de navires Laurent Hise: Soldat Voltigeurs canadiens et la guerre de 1812 L’énigme Catherine Pillard et l’instruction en Nouvelle-France L’instruction en Nouvelle-France Generations (New Brunswick Genealogical Society) (English) Vol. 34, No. 3 Andrew and Abigail (Tracy) Smith Sugarloaf Mountain of Campbellton, NB Descendants of Thomas and Elizabeth Green, Part 1 The North Shore: Incidents in the Early History of Eastern and Northern New Brunswick, Part 2 Heritage Summary: Charlotte County Héritage (Société de Généalogie de la Mauricie et des Bois-Francs) (French) Vol. 34, No. 4 À l’origine des noms de famille [Fournier; Bernier; Bergeron] Les dossiers: Annette Christiaansz: [Marie Anne Louise Christiansen/Christianson] Une vie movementée Norbert Parent, le frère de mon grand-père, est devenu un américain Les premières femmes de la Nouvelle-France, filles à marier et filles du Roy Javelier (Le) (Société historique de la Còte-du-Sud) (French) Vol. 28, No. 3 L’histoire du Lac Frontière L’origine d’un nom: Le chemin des anglais Lanterne (La) (Société de Généalogie de Drummondville) (French) Vol. 17, No. 3 Jean Rougeau et son temps (Part 1) Mémoires (Société Généalogique Canadienne-Française) (French) Vol. 63, No. 3 Les origines des familles Le Neuf et Le Gardeur L’île Sainte-Hélène es ses habitants – 17ième et 18ième siècles L’implantation des Grégoire dans la région de Lanaudière at 18ième et au début du 19ième siècle Généalogie et heritage de la famille Vanier Une lignée agnatique Saint-Amant Sur la piste de John, Irénée et Émile Lessard Michigan’s Habitant Heritage (French Canadian Heritage Society of Michigan) (English) Vol. 33, No. 4 Kateri (Catherine) Tekakwitha: Her Connection to Inhabitants of Le Détroit du Lac Érié some of the First Miracles Described as Obtained through her intercession War of 1812 – Preludes to the War and Key Events Occurring During the War in PresentDay Michigan, Northeastern Ohio, and Essex County, Ontario – Conclusion Petite Cote, 1749 to DRIC: The Oldest Continually Inhabited European Settlement in the Province of Ontario: Part II, Appendix C 7 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Burials from L’Assomption-de-la-Pointe-de-Montréal-du-Détroit, 12 July 1800 – 27 December 1805: Part 4 Engagé Contracts to Détroit: 24 August 1712 to 2 April 1721 – Part 1 Pierre Chesne dit Saint-Onge, #1 Pierre Chesne dit Labutte (1698-1774), #2 Pierre Chesne dit Labutte (1729-1804), #3 Pierre Chesne dit Labutte (1770-1813), #4 Pierre Labutte of the Detroit River Region (1800-1879); Part II: #1 Pierre Chesne dit Labutte Essex and Kent County, Ontario Militia Rolls for the Period 25 December 1812 to 24 January 1813 Nos Sources (Société de Généalogie de Lanaudière) (French) Vol. 32, No. 4 Fonds Ferland Les chemins de la mémoire Mont Julien Déziel Sainte Kateri Tekakwitha Nova Scotia Genealogist (The) (Genealogical Association of Nova Scotia) (English) Vol. 30, No. 2 Your Introduction to GOONS!!! Sexuality and Family History – a Conversation? A Genealogy Research Trip to Your Ancestral Homeland Quarterly (French Canadian/Acadian Genealogists of Wisconsin) (English) Vol. 26, No. 4 What’s in a Word Coutume de Paris Ramures (Les) (Société de Généalogie – Les Patriotes, Inc.) (French) Vol. 21, No. 2 Catherine Pillard L’adoption et la Généalogie Les Maillou dit Desmoulins L’harmonie Calixa-Lavallée: 102 ans d’histoire Marie-Anne Levasseur Revue de Salem (La) (Franco-American Institute of Salem, Inc.) (English) Vol. 14, No. 3 Professeur J.-N.-A. Beaudry (1863-1912) Sent By the King (La Société des filles du roi et soldats du Carignan, Inc.) (English) Vol. 15, No. 2 A Journey to Québec: To understand the lives of my ancestors The Intendant’s Gift Jean-Baptiste Talon First Intendant of New-France – Part three Bishop François Xavier de Laval-Montmorency Health Care in 1665 Québec Souvenance (La) ( Société d’Histoire et de Généalogie Maria-Chapdelaine) (French) Vol. 24, No. 1 L’Ancêtre Jean Baril 8 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Sur L’Empremier (Société Historique de la Mer Rouge) (French) Vol. 7, No. 2 L’atelier de pêche des Pellerin de Shédiac La maison Hamilton Vermont History (Vermont Historical Society) (English) Vol. 80, No. 2 The Narrative of the Captive, George Avery, 1780-1782 A Fire by the Pond: The British Raid in Derby, Vermont, December 27, 1813 The General Court-Martial of Charles G. Chandler ********************* From the Library Director Jeanne Boisvert #6394 The following books were donated to ACGS from our base of generous members and friends. Although they are relatively older books, it seems important to let you know we have added them to our shelves in the Main collection. Feel free to request any information you feel may relate to your ancestors through our Research Services. CREDIT GUIDE FOR LOWELL, MA, copyrighted in 1912 by the Merchants Mercantile Co. It is an alphabetical listing of persons and their credit ratings which was determined by opinions of bankers, attorneys and other businessmen of the area. Each credit rating is also accompanied by their occupation. of books, farm and farm products, improvements and repairs. The report lists the Massachusetts towns in alphabetical order. The end of the book has tables of: Statistics of Poor Relief, including the cost to cities and towns of supporting and relieving poor persons in Institutions, in private families, and in their own home. CITY AND TOWN ALMSHOUSES and the PAUPER ABSTRACT: published in 1913, the 34th annual report of the State Board of Charity of Massachusetts. This book contains the Laws relating to almshouses, such as their inspections, management, construction, number of inmates, consumptive inmates, defective inmates, vagrants, libraries CITY OF LOWELL TAX LIST OF 1919: This book contains names of residents in alphabetical order including their personal value. Then there is an alphabetical listing of streets with the house # and the occupant with the value of the building, land, and the area with the value per foot. [Ed. Note: while these types of books are not really of genealogical value, they do give us a snapshot of what a typical mill town looked like in the early 20th Century in New England. We hope there is someone out there who will be astonished to find their ancestors mentioned in one of these books.] ************ 9 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 French-Canadians on the Move The François Desruisseaux Family Moves to Kansas Donald Patrie [email protected] [Editor’s note: This article first appeared in Le Manousien Volume 20 Number 3 Spring 2012, the quarterly newsletter of Les Descendants de Louis Houde et de Madeleine Boucher (1655) Inc. Their postal address is: Case postale 10090, succ. Sainte-Foy; Québec, QC G1V 4C6 CANADA. This newsletter is published in French and English. Their e-mail address is: [email protected]. Thank you Jeanne Boisvert for spotting it and asking the author to submit it for our journal. pdc] On a cold December morning in 1879, Francois Xavier Desruisseaux, along with his wife of nearly 14 years Emilie Lavigne and seven children were in the Grand Trunk Railroad Station, in Montreal waiting to board the train that would eventually take them to Salina, Kansas. What would make a man who had lived in Ste-Croix for 40 years uproot himself, his wife, and seven children for a new life in a strange, sometimes harsh land a thousand miles away from his native Quebec? The answer to the question is simple; the reason has been the same for centuries – a need for more arable land! The population of Quebec farmers had increased ten times since 1763 and the land was unable to support this farming population indefinitely on either side of the St. Lawrence River. The result was overcrowding, overuse of the arable lands and economic hardship within Quebec province. It was time for many to move on to more favorable conditions. The older children were helping their mother with the small children, while their large pieces of luggage were being loaded in the baggage car. Smaller bags of personal items needed for the arduous trip, would be carried on to the passenger car as the two adults and seven children, ranging in ages from two years to eleven years, would require these items during their sixday trip. Among those items would be foodstuff to help feed the nine people for the early part of the trip. Francois knew that there would be food vendors at most of the train stops; he also knew such food could be expensive and money was scarce. By 1850, 201 French-Canadian families had already moved South and West into the Kankakee area of Illinois to seek more land and a better way of life. When the train whistle blew, the family said their good byes to the relatives and friends who gathered at the station to see them off. All of the adults knew that this was their final “adieu” as it was very doubtful that they would see each other again. Tears were flowing as the party of nine boarded the train. The last whistle blew and the train slowly pulled away from the station. The die had been cast; there was no turning back. The westward move was encouraged by French-Canadian priest, Charles Chiniquy, after a visit to the Kankakee area in 1851. Father Chiniquy published a letter in several French-language newspapers in Quebec encouraging families to move to Illinois where land was cheap and plentiful and a “sober and religious man can thrive.” Father Chiniquy was correct; in general, the French-Canadian popula- 10 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 tion was quite successful in its new environment. By the 1870s, the children of the early Illinois settlers were reaching maturity and began moving into Clay and Cloud counties in Kansas where, in the 1870s, 160-acre plots of land were made available by the U.S. government under the Homestead Act. People were again on the march to obtain arable land for farming and settlement. family now had 320 acres of good productive farmland. Of special interest to me, a 40-acre plot of land, next to the Desruisseaux land was owned by a Joseph Hayes, who married Marie-Anne Desruisseaux, the oldest daughter of François and Emilie, on 30 November 1891. Marie-Anne and Joseph were my grandparents. Joseph and MarieAnne had three daughters. Edith, the middle daughter, married Ellra Patrie, and I, Donald Patrie, was their first child. Records show that François X. and family arrived in Kansas on 24 December 1879, after a long six-day train ride from Quebec. François lived on his farm for 13 years, raising their 12 children, most of the children living in Cloud County for their entire lives. After retiring from the farm, François and Emilie moved to Clyde living there until his death on 9 March 1920. His wife lived another 10 years. Both are buried in Calvary Catholic Cemetery, Clyde, Kansas. Although François missed the Homestead Act of 1870, in other ways, his timing was perfect. By 1879 passenger train travel was possible to the new lands. Before the advent of passenger trains, travel was limited to horse and wagon, and travel to Kansas would have been measured in weeks not days. Also, freight trains allowed more goods to be moved into the expanding West faster and at more reasonable prices making living easier and cheaper. Another important factor to French Canadians in the area was that a Catholic Church had been built close by in St Joseph, Kansas. One cannot help but be impressed by our ancestors who moved from France to Quebec, and many onward to the United States. These hardy souls shared two things in common, they spoke the same language, and they were Roman Catholic. These bonds helped assure their success in their new surroundings no matter where they settled. The patriarch of the Cloud County Desruisseaux clan lost little time in acquiring the land he needed to raise and feed his family. Just four months after his arrival, on 3 April 1880, François purchased 160 acres of land, located in Elk Township of Cloud County, Kansas. The land was located three miles north and one mile west of Clyde, Kansas. The land sold for $1,000.00 ($6.25 per acre) with François paying down $600.00. In later years, two plots of nearby land of 80 acres each were purchased by E. Desruisseaux and F. Desruisseaux, probably sons Edward and Fred. The Desruisseaux Their common religion was also the social bond that held them together and gave them a common place to meet and greet, share news, recipes, and later a place to educate their children. Although these new immigrants to the area only numbered a few hundred families, they were able to build three churches within miles of each other in the vicinity. Not only did they build the church proper, but also built parish houses, and schools. These people were cash poor, but donated their time, labor and what little money they could afford to erect their new churches. 11 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 One of the early churches named after St. Peter was built in southwest Cloud County, but the settlement was by-passed by the railroad and faded into the landscape. After the railroad was built, a new town called Aurora was plotted and built near the railroad site. In 1893, the Catholic population of Aurora made up of largely French Canadians, built a church and apparently named it St. Peter. On Easter Sunday in 1909, the church was destroyed by a storm. Almost immediately, a new church was under construction and a year and half later the new church was completed along with a parochial school. I believe this church is still standing but not in use. The town has a population of less than one hundred people. Central Kansas. In the years following, a wooden church, rectory, and parochial school were established in St. Joseph. In 1910 the church burned to the ground and nearly everything was lost in the fire. A new brick church was built and completed in 1911. The church was one of the first, if not the first parish established in the Diocese of Salina, KS. Although, this beautiful church was formally closed in June 1993, it has remained a tourist attraction because of its architecture and beautiful stained glass windows. In December 2010, the Cloud County Historical Society purchased the church from the Salina Diocese. This purchase assures that there will be visitors and events centered in the church, and the church will be maintained to keep its rightful place in the history of the French Canadians in Cloud County. St. John the Baptist Catholic Church located in Clyde, KS was built in 1905. The church is a building of French Gothic architecture with two towers, one large, one smaller. It is located with two other buildings. One is St. Ann’s school built in 1888, and the other building is a rectory built in 1928. A church cemetery is just a few miles away from the church. My parents, a sister, and many of my relatives are buried in this beautiful cemetery. The church is still active today. If you would like to view photographs of the church, please go to www.stjoeschurch.org. [Ed. Note: Out of curiosity I was looking at the public trees on Ancestry.com and found a tree that included Joseph Hayes married to Marie-Anne Desruisseaux, however the corruption of her surname was quite disturbing – Dreuisauch. Looks like they were trying to sound the ‘x’ on the end of the real surname! Why they didn’t use the Houde surname in the U.S. leaves us with a big wonderment. According to the author, Don Patrie, they did finally settle on the surname of Derusseau or Derousseau. pdc] St. Joseph’s Church in St. Joseph, Kansas is known as the Mother Church of the Diocese. St. Joseph Church was started in the late 1860s when Father Joseph Rimmele administered to the approximate 60 French-Canadian families in their homes in St. Joseph, KS. In 1873 the Bishop sent newly ordained Fr. Louis Mollier, born in Savoy, France, to North 12 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Ancestral Line of François-Xavier Houde dit Desruisseaux Donald M. Patrie Primary Person Spouse Marriage Date/Place I Louis Houde Madeleine Boucher Marin & Perrine Malet 12 January 1655 Québec City II Jacques Houde dit Desruisseaux M-Louise Beaudet Jean & Marie Grandin 6 October 1686 St-Louis-de-Lotbinière III Charles Houde dit Desruisseaux Ursule Duguay Pierre & Angèlique Delugrè 19 November 1721 St-Antoine-de-Tilly IV François Houde M-Louise Bergeron Joseph & Marie Croteau 10 January 1763 St-Antoine-de-Tilly V Jean-Louis Houde M-Thérèse Coté Jean-Baptiste & Thérèse Boucher 10 August 1802 St-Antoine-de-Tilly VI François-Xavier Houde Agnès Aubin Noel & Marguerite Bruneau 16 April 1833 Ste-Croix VII François-Xavier Desruisseaux Émilie Lavigne Charles & Olive Perreault 21 January 1868 St-Patrice-de-Tingwick VIII Marie-Anne Desruisseaux Joseph Hayes William & Eliza Ann Hainline 30 November 1891 Concordia, KS IX Edith Mae Hayes Donald Maurice Patrie Ellra Gilbert Patrie George & Stella Cole 14 July 1921 Greenleaf, KS X Carmen Reynalda Magner William & Maximina Rosario Llamas 12 Dec 1953 Manilla, Philippines 13 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Eastward Migration: The History of the Souviney Ancestors in Quebec Randall Souviney [email protected] [Ed. note: this article by Randall Souviney first appeared in: La Sève, Le Journal des Sévigny dit Lafleur, 18 (2), July 2007; now defunct. ~pdc] My phone rang at 3:30 a.m. and startled me awake. Calls at this time of the night were never good news. My mother was on the line and she told me my Dad had finally given in to the cancer, and could I come home to Maine right away. I was attending a conference in New Orleans and in the back of my mind I expected to get ‘the call’ in the next few weeks, but it never comes when expected…or easy. 1982). We drove from our family home in Dresden, Maine to Scotstown, Quebec where my grandfather John was born. We assumed that the family name had been changed from Sévigny to the more Anglicized surname of Souviney a hundred years ago, so we were looking for evidence in local churches for Sevigny or Sevigne surnames that might be connected to our family. Scotstown, where my grandfather John was born, was on the Trans-Canada railway and we discovered was also one of the primary sources of the fine gray granite that was used in construction throughout Quebec. We were not able to locate the church records in this small town and so we did not find any evidence of John’s birth. I arrived in Portland the next day. My father was born on Munjoy (Mount Joy) Hill in Portland on 23 August 1914. He was born of immigrant parents, one Catholic from Quebec and the other Jewish from Poland. John Souviney is my grandfather and Bessie Schuster is my grandmother. I never met them. Their marriage lasted only six years during this turbulent time of World War I, but they produced three children. Our family knew little about our ancestry of either side, except my uncle learned that their family originally came from the Sherbrooke, Quebec area and that we had relatives in Portland, Maine and Hartford, Conn. I promised my Mother at the funeral that I would do what I could do to track down Dad’s family tree. We drove on to the garden city of Sherbrooke and found several Sevignys buried in St. Michael’s cemetery, but none that seemed connected to the meager family history that mother had collected from our distant cousin Rose Souviney who lived in Palm Springs, California. Rose had spent most of her youth at the Notre Dame Convent School in Sherbrooke, and was the only member of the family who maintained her French fluency. We drove south through Magog, Quebec since I had found a World War I Registration Card for one of the Portland Souviney men who reported his wife was currently living in Magog, Canada. Again, we had no luck finding any Sevigny graves in Magog but had a wonderful visit in this lakeside resort town in the Eastern Townships. We drove home It was 15 years later that I finally was able to take my mother on our search for dad’s past in the Catholic graveyards of Sherbrooke. We were armed with my grandfather John’s death certificate (d. 1 Jun 1937 in Hartford, CT) that my mother received after grandmother Bessie’s death in Providence, Rhode Island (d. 20 Dec 14 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 to Maine satisfied with our adventure, but were still puzzled about how my Dad’s family found their way to Maine over 100 years ago. Later I would discover that we were very close to our ancestors’ graves…we were just one township away. 5) Joseph Edouard Sevigny & Celina Lacroix dit Langevin (m. 19 Feb 1855, North Stukley, now Bonsecours, Quebec). 6) Joseph Andre Sevigny & MarieLea Leriger dit Laplante (m. 15 Aug 1882, Chesham, Quebec). A year later I found online the Descendants de Jullien-Charles de Sevigne dit Lafleur, Inc., and from their website, Louis Richer of the Society de Genealogie de Québec. With a little help from Ancestry.com and the U.S. Census records, I was able to provide Mr. Richer with the likely names of my great-grandfather and great-grandmother. He soon discovered that the Québec marriage index had mistakenly listed my greatgrandmother’s last name as Lachance instead of Laplante, which is why my mother had no luck finding their marriage record years before. Once this was corrected, Mr. Richer quickly found my Dad’s line back to Julien-Charles. The following line has been documented by Michael Sevigny and other members of the Descendants de Julien-Charles de Sevigne dit Lafleur, Inc., who are currently documenting the marriage records for the entire Sevigny line (also see the Randall Souviney Family Tree at http:://www.ancestry.com): 7) Jean-Baptiste André Sévigny & Bessie Shuster (m. 21 Feb 1914, Portland, Maine). 8) Leslie John Souviney & Doris Lily Randall (m. 1 Jun 1940, Dresden, Maine). 9) Randall John Souviney & Stephanie Jo Mika (m. 21 April 2006, San Diego, California). With this new information in hand, my wife and I traveled to Québec in December 2006 to trace the migration of my family from Neuville and Tilly near Québec City through the Eastern Townships to Notre Dame des Bois, on the border with Maine. We flew to Manchester, NH from San Diego, CA where I am a lecturer at the University of California and Stephanie is an MRI technologist at a private clinic. We rented a car and drove to the historic Auberge Knowlton for our first night. We visited the St. Benoit-duLac Abbey, a pastoral monastery complex nearby overlooking Magog Lake. Then we drove to Notre Dame des Bois and North Stukley (now Bonsecours) where the local priest generously allowed me to search the church records where I found the baptismal record of my greatgreat grandfather Joseph André. 1) Jullien-Charles de Sevigne dit Lafleur & Marguerite Rognon dit Laroche (m. 18 Apr 1695, Neuville, Quebec). 2) Antoine Sevigny & Marie Francoise Beland (m. 10 Jan 1735, Neuville, Quebec). I also recently found in the Canadian Genealogy Index a listing for Joseph Sevigny working as a barber in Scotstown, Quebec in 1891. This added viability to the story since all three of Joseph’s brothers were barbers in Portland, Maine until the 1950s. We then drove to St-Césaire, Rouville (now 3) Joseph Sevigny & Marie-Louise Fontaine Bienvenu (m. 27 Nov 1775, Vercheres, Quebec). 4) Pierre Sevigny & Elizabeth Isabelle Brissett (m. 30 Sep 1811, St. Haycinthe, Quebec). 15 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Chambly) and found the baptismal record of my great-great grandfather Joseph Edouard, and then drove further back through time to St-Hyacinthe where Pierre Sevigny and Elizabeth Brisset were married in 1811 and on to StAntoine-de-Tilly. This charming village is situated across the St. Lawrence River from Neuville. Julien-Charles and his family lived there for several years. In 2002, a plaque was placed at the base of the St. Antoine de Tilly church listing Sevigny dit Lafleur as one of the founders. construction crew on the Sherbrooke Eastern Townships & Kennebec Railroad. Curiously, two of their sons later worked as linemen on the Portland Terminal Railroad and the Western Pacific Railroad, and the two other sons became a chef (my grandfather) and a soldier who fought in two World Wars. Rose, their only daughter, married into the family who owned the Levee Meat Market in Portland and later she and her husband started a successful plumbing business in Palm Springs, California. As we drove west through the Eastern Townships, we traveled back a generation for each 50 miles we drove until we reached Québec City. In the years after he arrived as a soldier from France, immigrant Julien-Charles settled south of Québec City in Neuville and later across the St. Lawrence in Tilly. My grandmother, Marie-Lea, came from similar family stock and she had a direct line back to the immigrant Clement Lériger dit Laplante, a French soldier who arrived in 1685 to fight in the war with the Iroquois Nation…but that story is for another time. In Québec City, the Museum of Civilization: French America Exhibit expertly documents the 200-year ‘eastward migration’ of French pioneers from the St. Lawrence River to the New England border, and beyond. These settlers cleared the primal forest to develop the pioneer farms, mined for copper, sulfur, and asbestos and built canals and railroad lines throughout the region and to Portland, ME. By the middle of the 1800s, the industrial revolution was in full bloom and many French Canadians crossed the border to work in the lumber industry in Maine and the mills on every river in New England. This is the story of my French-Canadian ancestors. The Souviney family now lives in Maine, New Jersey, Maryland, Georgia, Florida and California and everyone is comforted to know more about where we came from…and we hope that by knowing this history our children will be better able to figure out where they are going. Thinking back to our trip, I imagine that our trip began in 1890 when my grandfather was born in Scotstown. My greatgrandfather Joseph André had moved there from his family home in Notre Dame des Bois after marrying Marie-Lea Lériger dit Laplante. He worked as a barber for the granite workers and the 16 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Who is Marie Anne dit Gims, Jimes, Barnes, Canady, Kennedy? Michelle Murphy #9907 in collaboration with Muriel Chabot Normand #5706 [email protected] It was a clue to the long rumored Native American in my family – that’s what got me started. Just like many Americans of French-Canadian descent, I had always been told I was part Indian, Cree in fact, and there had even been a NativeAmerican blanket passed down, that my father vehemently swore he saw with his own eyes as a child. I told myself I would look into this and do the whole “genealogy thing” just until I found that connection as that was all I was interested in. About one and a half years later, I have over 1,300 people in my tree and almost as many in my husband’s tree. But have I solved the question of my NativeAmerican heritage? With the help of the American-Canadian Genealogical Society (ACGS) the answer is, well, maybe. Grafton, MA), probably in the late 1800s/early 1900s, and decided that someone had to go to Quebec and see if they could claim this land. What happened next varies depending upon who you talk to. Some say one of the brothers went to inquire and came back without the land but then quietly retired. Others say the unpaid taxes were so much on the land that it was not worth claiming. And yet a third version is that the Boutiette brothers hired a trustworthy scout to go up to Canada and inquire about the land. But he turned out to be not so trustworthy as they never saw him or their money again. What all the stories have in common is that eventually the Canadian government reclaimed the land (although Muriel of ACGS later helpfully pointed out that the Will actually left Ann Labrie the rents, etc. from the land and not the land itself). Regardless of all this, I realized the brothers believed they were related to Ann Labrie, who was mentioned in the Will, and I needed to figure out how. The letter from my cousin also stated an intriguing conclusion – because the Will also mentions Barnes’ wife Isabella (nee Johnson) in England, my cousin was of the belief that Barnes had a child with a Native American while in Canada and that child was Ann Labrie. Armed with this information and access to my mother’s World Ancestry.com subscription, I was off. Luckily my mother, who is of purely Polish descent, had developed an interest in genealogy and had the foresight to gather family history information from my father’s extended family while some of the older generation were still alive. Once I expressed an interest, she eagerly provided me with copies of letters my great uncle had received from a cousin who had been researching the family history a few decades before. Among the letters was a Last Will and Testament from 1810 of a British Military Officer named John Barnes. The letter from my cousin, which accompanied the Will, stated that John Barnes left land in Quebec to one Ann Labrie, wife of Felix Labrie, of the borough of William Henry. The story goes that my 2nd great grandfather, Nelson Boutiette, and his brothers got together one summer in central Massachusetts (most likely With the information provided by my mother, I was able to trace five generations from me to a Mary Ann Labrie who married Edward Boutiette (see Figure below), probably in the 1850s (frustratingly, I have yet to find their marriage record). Additional information in the 17 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 letters from my cousin, confirmed by Mary Ann Labrie’s 1896 death record and the record of her second marriage in 1885, provided me with her parent’s names – John or Felix Labrie of Canada and Mary A. R. Cole of New York. At this point I cannot say enough about how wonderful the Drouin Collection is. It is a microfilmed collection of parish records, including French Catholic parishes in Quebec. I was able, with relative ease, to find the marriage of Jean Felix Labrie and Mary Cole and his parents – Jean Felix Labrie and Anne Kennedy. But after that I was a bit stumped. Figure: Pedigree chart of Mary Ann Labrie leading up to John Barnes. Jean Felix Labrie’s (the son) mother is listed as Anne Kennedy on his marriage record, and on his baptismal record in 1805 as “anne fille naturel de … Jean Barnes Dept. Quartier maitre Général” or Anne, natural daughter (implying born out of wedlock) of John Barnes, Dept. Quartermaster General. On her own marriage record to Jean Felix Sr. she is listed as “marie anne dite gims” and actually signed her name, “Marianne Jimese”. On her death record she is listed as Marie Anne Barnes. We have been unable to locate her baptismal record. So based on these records she has been called Anne Kennedy, Anne, natural daughter of Jean Barnes (which connected us nicely to John Barnes and the Will), Marianne Jimese or Gims, and Marie Anne Barnes. At this point I felt I needed some help to sort through all this to figure out who Marie Anne Kennedy/Jimese/Barnes was and if her mother was in fact a Native American. That is when I contacted the ACGS and asked them if they could help me sort this out. This is what the Research Department found: ---------------Since Michelle’s packet included a copy of John Barnes’ Will, research began by retrieving the original Drouin image of 18 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Marie Anne’s marriage to Jean Felix Naud Labrie in 1805. Marie Anne had signed the document, which implied some degree of education as very few habitants were literate at that time. The witnesses were Joseph Naud Labrie, brother of the groom and representing his father, François Ossan, his friend, Mr. Charles de St Ours, écuyer, Gims Simpson representing the father of the bride and many others. Charles de St Ours signed along with Marie Anne. lives and for the separate use of the survivor of them the said Ann Simpson and Ann Labrie (Marie Anne) and her assigns during her natural life, exclusive of their present respective or any after taken husbands and so that they respectively by any writing under their respective hands may effectually dispose of the same and so that every receipt signed by the said Ann Simpson and Ann Labrie alone respectively shall be an effectual discharge for the same rents, issues and profits from time to time after the death of the survivor of them the said Ann Simpson and Ann Labrie. Upon trust for all and every child and children of the said Ann Labrie lawfully begotten equally to be divided between or among them […] Charles de St Ours was also mentioned in Barnes’ Will, as shown in this excerpt: I give and devise unto Major Charles Saint Ours, Seignor of the Parish of St Ours on the River Richlieu in the Province of lower Canada in North America, and Isaac Winsloe Clark of Montreal in lower Canada, aforesaid Esquire, all that farm or lot of lands belonging to me situate, lying and being in the Parish of St Ours aforesaid and in the parish of Sorel (now called William Henry) in the same Province with the dwellinghouses, outhouses, barns, stables [etc…] To hold unto and to use of the said Charles St Ours and Isaac Winslow Clark, their heirs and assigns forever. Upon Trust Nevertheless, that they, the said Charles St Ours and Isaac Winslow Clark and the survivor of them and his heirs do and shall apply the rents, issues and profits thereof in equal parts, shared and proportions for the separate use of Ann Simpson, the wife of James Simpson, formerly a Gunner in my company in the Royal Artillery aforesaid but now residing in the Parish of Saint Ours aforesaid, Farmer and Ann Labrie, the wife of Felix Labrie, of the Borough of William Henry in lower Canada aforesaid, and their respective assigns during their joint natural Based on my research thus far, I wondered if Ann Simpson from the Will was the wife of Gims Simpson, who represented the father at Marie Anne’s wedding. I also wondered if her name was also Anne Kennedy (since Marie Anne was sometimes referred to with the surname Kennedy) and if, in fact, she might be Marie Anne’s mother. Certainly, there was not enough proof yet. The Programme de recherche en démographie historique (PRDH), which is a database of parish record information from the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries in Quebec, yielded a Jacques Simpson married to Marie Anne Kennedy Canada before 1789 at an unknown location. Although we have been unable to locate the marriage contract, Michelle Murphy later located the marriage at the Anglican Christ Church in Sorel, which reads: March 4, 1786, Gunner James Simpson, of the Royal Artillery, to the widow Ann Burrows: By permission of Cpt. Barnes, his officer. 19 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 While we do not know who Burrows is, I was able to find information regarding Anne’s children by James Simpson. They had at least five children, three of whom survived into adulthood, Elisabeth, Louis Jacques and Pierre Simpson listing the mother in each of these baptisms as Anne Kennedy. I also found the baptisms for the children of Marie Anne Jimese and Jean Felix Labrie in the hopes of finding Marie Anne’s mother listed as a godmother. Jean Felix and Marie Anne, or Anne, as she was more commonly known, had at least three children: Jean Felix Labrie, born 1805 in Sorel, died 1840 in St. Ours; Pierre Labrie born 1808 in Sorel and believed to have died under the name Narcisse Labry two months later in Sorel; and Louis Naud Labrie, born 1809 in Sorel and died in 1889 in Worcester, MA (the death register indicates he was 20 years younger than he really was, but the parent’s names – Jean F. Labrie and Annie Barns - match up). treal and there in black and white: …..Et Demoiselle (Marie)Anne Kenady majeur, demeurante en la paroisse de St Ours, fille de Ann Kenady……elevee par Sr. James Simson lui servant de pere… Translated: Anne Kenady of major age, residing in the parish of St Ours, daughter of Ann Kenady…..raised by Sr. James Simson, he representing her father. So Anne Kennedy was indeed her mother; so much for the Indian! (Although Michelle maintains that since we do not know who Anne Kennedy was, you never know…) We learn from the marriage contract that although illegitimate, John Barnes had established guardianship for the child (Marie Anne) he had with Anne Kennedy to be Charles St. Ours, the Seigneur de St. Ours and James Sawers, a sergeant in the Artillery. It is also noted that John Barnes had leased the land granted to him by the Seigneur in St Ours, to James Simson, specifically so that he and Ann Kennedy would provide for the child. Her dowry consisted of a good cow, a good horse four years old, a bull or ox of 3 years, a pair of 6 month old pigs and 2 sheep that were a year old; all contributed by James Simpson. The groom, Jean Felix, brought several lots of land in Sorel and on Islands in the St. Lawrence River to the marriage and his dowry to his future wife was two thousand pounds; should he die first, that money would be given to Marie Anne before any distribution to the children or others specified in a donation or Will. All possessions were to be shared in common. In the course of this, I noted that not only was a Louis Simson listed as Louis Naud dit Labry’s godfather in 1809 in Sorel, but Louis Simpson is also mentioned as a witness to Louis Naud Labry’s marriage in 1831 in St. Ours. In fact, Louis Simpson is mentioned in the marriage record as being the maternal uncle of the groom, implying Louis Simpson and Marie Anne, the groom’s mother, were siblings and that perhaps Anne Kennedy really was her mother. At this point I was feeling pretty confident that Marie Anne was most likely raised by the Simpson family and that Anne Kennedy, or the widow Burrows, was her mother; but I felt that a look at the contract for their marriage might yield more definitive info. I was able to obtain a copy of the marriage contract for Jean Felix Neau dit Labrie and Anne Kenady through the Archives of Mon- Marie Anne lived a short life of approximately 28 years; she died September 27, 1810, five years into the marriage leaving five year old Jean Felix and one year old Louis. Following her death, on January 28, 1811, Jean Felix and James Simson met with P.L. Planet, judge to sign a tutelle or tutorship regarding the two 20 The Research Department American-Canadian Genealogical Society PO Box 6478, Manchester, NH 03108-6478 ● Tel 603-622-1554 Constance Hébert, #5175, Coordinator E-mail: [email protected] Volunteers The Research Department of the AmericanCanadian Genealogical Society is made up of members who volunteer their time and talent to do genealogical research for other members. A fee is charged for this service to provide funds for the acquisition of additional resources. Canadian Resources Our major holdings include a collection of Catholic Church records, indexed in répertoires, for the provinces of Québec, Ontario and New Brunswick. We are acquiring new répertoires of baptisms and burials along with a number of Protestant Church records. United States Records We have extensive records of marriages from churches of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island and Vermont. We also have CD collections such as; PRDH, Family Tree Maker, Maine marriages (limited years). Films On film, we have vital records of New Hampshire to 1900; Vermont, 1760 to 1908; Massachusetts marriages and births, 1840-1905; the Loiselle file of Québécois marriages; the Moncton (Archdiocese) file which contains church records of Westmorland and Kent Counties, New Brunswick; and church records of Charlevoix County, Québec to 1908. Other Reference Materials Tanguay’s Dictionnaire généalogique des familles Canadiennes; Drouin’s Dictionnaire national des Canadiens-français and Répertoire alphabétique des mariages des Canadiens-français, 1760-1935; Petit Drouin, Jetté’s Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec, Drouin Collection digital images of original records, Arsenault’s Histoire et généalogie des Acadiens, Bergeron’s Le grand arrangement des Acadiens au Québec and Stephen White’s Dictionnaire généalogique des familles Acadiennes. How to Request a Search 1. Using the standard 4-generation pedigree chart provided on the next page, give us as much information as possible to help us get started. Indicate clearly the one line to be searched. Include name of both parents and dates of birth, marriage and death if known. 2. Please list sources for all known information and include copies of documents you may have. 3. Mail your request to the address above. 4. Allow 4-6 weeks for a reply; allow more time when difficult lines are involved. 5. If you are a member, always include your member number. Fees – Effective August 2008 Direct line: $35/members; $55/non-members.. Primary source documentation: add $20 per line Single event: $10/members; $20/non-members Minimum fee of $10/members - $20/nonmember payable in advance. No research will begin without the minimum advanced payment. Client will be notified of the balance due for final payment. Copies of all references used to trace your line are included with your research package. Single Events Members can send requests for single events to the Queries Editor for publication in the American-Canadian Genealogist. Single event requests can also be submitted to the Research Department at the above e-mail address. Please include spouse and parents and location if known. Requests sent to the Research Department will carry the single event fee as described above. Be sure to include your membership number July 2008 4 Generation Pedigree Chart 8 ______________________ b. p.b. b. Date of Birth m. p.b. Place of Birth p.m. m. Date of Marriage 4 ______________________ d. p.m. Place of Marriage p.d. b. d. Date of Death p.b. p.d. Place of Death 9 ______________________ m. * Source Required b. p.m. p.b. d. d. p.d. p.d. 2 ______________________ |*Source: | b. 10_____________________ | p.b. b. | m. p.b. | p.m. m. | d. 5 ______________________ p.m. p.d. d. b. |*Source: p.d. p.b. | d. | 11_____________________ p.d. | b. *Source 1_______________________ | p.b. | b. d. | p.b. p.d. | m. | p.m. 12 _____________________ | d. b. | p.d. p.b. | *Source: 6______________________ m. | p.m. b. | d. p.b. | p.d. 3 ______________________ m. spouse of no. 1 p.m. b. 13_____________________ d. p.b. b. p.d. d. p.b. *Source: p.d. d. | *Source: p.d. | | 14_____________________ | b. | 7 ______________________ p.b. m. b. p.m. p.b. d. d. p.d. p.d. *Source: 15_____________________ b. p.b. d. p.d. Legend: © American Canadian Genealogical Society Publications for Sale American-Canadian Publications Catalog # AG002 AG003 AG006 AG012 Title American-Canadian Genealogist - current back issues (#119 and higher) American-Canadian Genealogist - single issues - #1 - #122 except 39 and 50 American-Canadian Genealogist - Issues 1 - 122, plus indexes Beginner’s Course in French-Canadian Genealogy – Including some background on the Economy, Society, Culture and Customs of our Ancestors. CD ROM includes postage & handling Price $3.00 $1.00 $125.00 $15.95 Books Catalog # BK002 BK010 BK011 BK012 BK013 BK014 BK015 BK016 BK019 Title Price Phaneuf Funeral Records, Manchester, NH (1890-1952) J. N. Boufford & Sons Funeral Homes, Manchester, NH (9526 Records, 2 vols.) (Dec 1911 - Apr 1915, Dec 1921 - Dec 1977) Pionniers de Boucherville , the Story of the Founding Families. IN FRENCH Le Régiment Carignan , the Story of Each of the Men who Came to the Aid of New France and Stayed to Become our Ancestors. IN FRENCH Franco-Americans of New England, A History, by Armand Chartier IN ENGLISH Journeys Taken, by William F. Kane – “The journey of typical French-Canadian immigrant families” French Migration to North America 1600-1900, by Jean-Louis Houde/Translation by Hubert Houle. Book printed in French & English Emphasis on Houde family Melanson-Melançon: The Genealogy of an Acadian and Cajun Family by Michael B. Melanson. Hard Cover. 1,040 pages. Indexed. In English $50.00 $99.00 $20.00 $20.00 $21.95 $22.00 $25.00 $49.95 $15.00 Routes to Your Canadian Roots - Paul L. Bourassa, Jr. #5940 Charts Catalog # CH102E CH12E CH12F CHTB01 Title Price 10 Generation Fan Chart - English, numbered (printed on card stock) 12 Generation Ancestral Chart – Parchment-English 12 Generation Ancestral Chart – Parchment-French Mailing Tube Plus Postage, holds up to 5 Fan Charts + 5 maps $6.00 $2.00 $2.00 $5.00 Civil Records Catalog # VR001 VR002 VR003 Title Price Allenstown, NH Marriages (1888-1995) Civil Records Allenstown, NH Deaths (1888-1995) Civil Records Laconia, NH Marriages (1826-1892) Civil Records $45.00 $35.00 $15.00 Maps Catalog # CHTB01 MPFR01 MPON01 MPQC01 Title Price Mailing Tube Plus Postage, holds up to 20 Maps or Parchment Charts Map: France, w/cities, towns, provinces & departments (circa 1600's) out of stock Map: Ontario, black & white, w/cities, towns & counties Map: Quebec, black & white, w/cities, towns & counties $5.00 $5.00 $3.50 $3.50 Publications on Compact Disc [CD ROM] Catalog # CD001 Title Price CD002 CD003 CD004 Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Canadiennes , by Cyprien Tanguay, on CD - Includes Corrections and Additions by J. Arthur Leboeuf Nicolas Guillemet Book – Combs & Guilmette [English] Livre du Nicolas Guillemet – Combs & Guilmette [French] Lowell, MA Select Records- 18,730 marriags 1826-1997; 13,590 birth records 1798-2001; 686 death records 1889-2009 CDRP2 CDRP3 CDRP4 CDRP5 CDRP6 CDRP8 CDRP9 CDRP10 CDRP11 CDRP12 CDRP16 CDRP17 CDRP18 CDRP19 NEW ITEMS FOR SALE - Do not add postage for CDs St-Georges, Manchester, NH Marriages (1890-1975) Ste-Marie, Manchester, NH Marriages (1880-1973) St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Marriages (1871-1993) St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1871-1993) Two Volumes St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Burials (1871-1993) Two Volumes St-Edmond, Manchester, NH Marriages & Burials (1916-1992) St-Edmond, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1916-1992) Blessed Sacrament, Manchester, NH Marriages (1903-1993) Burials (1938-1992) Blessed Sacrament, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1903-1987) St-Basile-le-Grand, Madawaska, New Brunswick Marriages (1791-1997) St-James, Island Pond, VT Baptisms (1872-1935) Marriages (1882-1942) Burials (1872-1948) St. Joseph, Laconia, NH Baptisms (1871-1993) St. Joseph, Laconia, NH Marriages (1871-1993) St. Joseph, Laconia, NH Burials (1900-1993) Catalog 1 $32.50 $20.00 $20.00 $60.00 $17.50 $22.50 $25.00 $50.00 $50.00 $22.50 $22.50 $22.50 $22.50 $20.00 $22.50 $25.00 $20.00 $12.50 CDRP20 CDRP21 CDRP22 CDRP23 CDRP24 CDRP26 CDRP27 CDRP28 CDRP29 CDRP34 CDRP35 CDRP36 CDRP37 CDRP38 CDRP39 CDRP40 CDRP41 CDRP42 CDRP43 CDRP44 CDRP45 CDRP46 CDRP47 CDRP48 CDRP49 CDRP50 CDRP51 CDRP52 CDRP53 CDRP54 CDVR1 CDVR2 Infant-Jesus, Nashua, NH Baptisms (1909-1994) Infant-Jesus, Nashua, NH Marriages (1977-1994) Burials (1919-1994) St. Joseph, Fitchburg, MA Marriages (1891-1937) St. Joseph, Fitchburg, MA Baptisms (1890-1995) St. Joseph, Worcester, MA Marriages (1891-1937) St-François-Xavier, Winooski, VT Marriages (1868-1994) St-François-Xavier, Winooski, VT Burials (1868-1994) St-George, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1890-1996) Two Volumes St-Georges, Manchester, NH Update to Marriages (1975-1997) Burial (1895-1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Marriages (Sep 1910 - Dec 1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Baptisms (1911-1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Burials (May 1914-1997) Sacred Heart, Laconia, NH Baptisms Sacred Heart, Laconia, NH Burials (Nov 1901-1996) Mission of Norton Mills, VT Marriages-Baptisms-Burials (1888-1955) Sacred Heart, Schenectady, NY Marriages (1903-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Marriages (1885-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Baptisms (1885-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Burials (1887-1998) Our Lady of the Lakes, Lakeport (Laconia) NH Marriages (1905-1996) Our Lady of the Lakes, Lakeport (Laconia) NH Baptisms (1928-1997) St-Columba, Schenectady, NY Marriages (1908-1974) St-Joseph, Cohoes, NY 4453 Marriages (18 Oct 1867 - 30 May 1999) Two Volumes Our Lady of Grace, Ballston Lake, NY 1338 Marriages (Sep 1922-Jul 1999) 2548 Baptisms (Nov 1922-Jul 1999) 326 Burials (Nov 1924-Jun 1999) St-George, Albany, NY 876 Baptisms (Apr 1917 - Dec 1998) 233 Marriages (Aug 1917 - Aug 1996) 398 Burials (Mar 1917 - Feb 1989) St-Jean Baptiste, Troy, NY 1677 Marriages (15 Aug 1852 - 31 Dec 1970) Burials (Oct 1875 - 31 Dec 1970) $22.50 $17.50 $45.00 $50.00 $17.50 $25.00 $22.50 $50.00 $37.50 $25.00 $22.50 $12.50 $22.50 $17.50 $12.50 $22.50 $20.00 $20.00 $10.00 $12.50 $10.00 $22.50 $50.00 St-Jean Baptiste, Troy, NY 5961 Baptisms (Aug 1852 - Dec 1970) $27.50 $45.00 St-John the Baptist, Suncook, NH 10563 Baptisms (03 Jan 1873 - 31 Dec 1999) Two Volumes St-John the Baptist, Suncook, NH 5916 Burials (May 1873 - Dec 1995) 414 Marriages (updated from Pauline Methot's; Jan 1979 - Dec 1999) $22.50 $12.50 $27.50 Visitation of BVM, Schuylerville, NY 837 Marriages (Sep 1891 - Sep 1987) 2,511 Burials (many dates to 1987) $35.00 $22.50 Allenstown, NH Marriages (1888-1995) Civil Records Allenstown, NH Deaths (1888-1995) Civil Records $22.50 $17.50 Repertories Published by ACGS Catalog # RP002 RP003 RP004 RP005 RP006 RP008 RP009 RP010 RP011 RP012 RP013 RP014 RP015 RP016 RP017 RP018 RP019 RP020 RP021 RP022 RP023 RP024 RP025 RP026 RP027 RP028 RP029 RP030 Title Price St-George, Manchester, NH Marriages (1890-1975) Ste-Marie, Manchester, NH Marriages (1880-1973) St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Marriages (1871-1993) St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1871-1993) Two Volumes St-Augustin, Manchester, NH Burials (1871-1993) Two Volumes St-Edmond, Manchester, NH Marriages & Burials (1916-1992) St-Edmond, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1916-1992) Blessed Sacrament, Manchester, NH Marriages (1903-1993) Burials (1938-1992) Blessed Sacrament, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1903-1987) St-Basile-le-Grand, Madawaska, New Brunswick Marriages (1791-1997) St-Paul, Franklin, NH Marriages-Baptisms (1884-1921) Sacred Heart, Taftville, CT Marriages (1883-1924) Notre-Dame-des-Canadiens, Worcester, MA Marriages (1870-1930) St-James, Island Pond, VT Baptisms (1872-1935) Marriages (1882-1942) Burials (1872-1948) St-Joseph, Laconia, NH Baptisms (1871-1993) St-Joseph, Laconia, NH Marriages (1871-1993) St-Joseph, Laconia, NH Burials (1900-1993) Infant-Jesus, Nashua, NH Baptisms (1909-1994) Infant-Jesus, Nashua, NH Marriages (1977-1994) Burials (1919-1994) St-Joseph, Fitchburg, MA Marriages (1891-1937) Two Volumes St-Joseph, Fitchburg, MA Baptisms (1890-1995) Two Volumes St-Joseph, Worcester, MA Marriages (1891-1937) Notre-Dame-des-Canadiens, Worcester, MA Marriages (1931-1947) St-Francois-Xavier, Winooski, VT Marriages (1868-1994) St-Francois-Xavier, Winooski, VT Burials St-Georges, Manchester, NH Baptisms (1890-1996) Two Volumes St-Georges, Manchester, NH Update to Marriages (1975-1997) Burial (1895-1997) Notre-Dame-des-Canadiens, Worcester, MA Marriages (Dec 1947 - Jun 1997) Catalog 2 $40.00 $45.00 $50.00 $100.00 $100.00 $45.00 $45.00 $45.00 $45.00 $40.00 $20.00 $15.00 $40.00 $45.00 $50.00 $40.00 $25.00 $45.00 $35.00 $90.00 $100.00 $35.00 $25.00 $50.00 $45.00 $100.00 $75.00 $25.00 RP031 RP032 RP033 RP034 RP035 RP036 RP037 RP038 RP039 RP040 RP041 RP042 RP043 RP044 RP045 RP046 RP047 RP048 RP049 RP050 RP051 RP052 RP053 RP054 RP055 RP056 RP057 RP058 RP059 RP060 RP061 RP062 RP063 RP064 RP065 RP066 RP067 RP068 RP069 RP070 RP071 RP072 RP073 RP074 RP075 RP076 RP077 RP078 RP079 RP080 RP081 RP082 RP083 RP084 RP085 RP086 RP087 RP088 RP089 RP090 RP091 RP092 RP093 RP094 RP095 RP096 Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, Whitehall, NY Marriages (Jul 1843 - Dec 1997) Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, Whitehall, NY Baptisms (1844-1997) 2 Volumes Notre-Dame-des-Victoires, Whitehall, NY Burials (1860-1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Marriages (Sep 1910 - Dec 1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Baptisms (1911-1997) St-Joseph, Salem, NH Burials (May 1914-1997) Sacred Heart, Laconia, NH Baptisms Sacred Heart, Laconia, NH Burials (Nov 1901-1996) Mission of Norton Mills, VT Marriages-Baptisms-Burials (1888-1955) Sacred Heart, Schenectady, NY Marriages (1903-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Marriages (1885-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Baptisms (1885-1998) St-Patrick, Jaffrey, NH Burials (1887-1998) Our Lady of the Lakes, Lakeport (Laconia) NH Marriages (1905-1996) Our Lady of the Lakes, Lakeport (Laconia) NH Baptisms (1928-1997) St-Columba, Schenectady, NY Marriages (1908-1974) St-Joseph, Cohoes, NY 4,453 Marriages (18 Oct 1867-30 May 1999) 2 Vols. Our Lady of Grace, Ballston Lake, NY 1,338 Marriages (Sep 1922-Jul 1999); 2,548 Baptisms (Nov 1922-Jul 1999); 326 Burials (Nov 1924-Jun 1999) St-George, Albany, NY 876 Baptisms (Apr 1917 - Dec 1998) 233 Marriages (Aug 1917 - Aug 1996) 398 Burials (Mar 1917 - Feb 1989) St-Jean Baptiste, Troy, NY 1677 Marriages (15 Aug 1852 - 31 Dec 1970) 2,705 Burials (Oct 1875 - 31 Dec 1970) St-Jean Baptiste, Troy, NY 5,961 Baptisms (Aug 1852 - Dec 1970) St-John the Baptist, Suncook, NH 10,563 Baptisms (03 Jan 1873 - 31 Dec 1999) Two Volumes St-John the Baptist, Suncook, NH 5,916 Burials (May 1873 - Dec 1995) 414 Marriages (updated from Pauline Methot's; Jan 1979 - Dec 1999) Visitation of BVM, Schuylerville, NY 837 Marriages (Sep 1891 - Sep 1987) 2,511 Burials (many dates to 1987) Franco Marriages from Goffstown, NH (1893-1992), by Arthur Boudreau & Anne-Marie Perrault St-Paul, Candia, NH 1,087 Baptisms (Jan 1972 - May 1999) 232 Marriages (Jun 1972 - Apr 1998) 205 Burials (Feb 1972 - May 1999) St-Patrick, Troy, NY 3,917 Marriages (Sep 1872 - Jul 2000) Two Volumes St-Joseph, Schenectady, NY, 2,902 Marriages (28 Aug 1862 - 31 Dec 2000) St-Raphael, Manchester, NH 2,491 Marriages (30 May 1888 - 31 Dec 2000) St-Raphael, Manchester, NH 8,301 Baptisms (Mar 1888 - Apr 2001) 2 Vols. St-Raphael, Manchester, NH 3,965 Burials (Mar 1888 - May 2001) Sacred Heart, Schenectady, NY 3,750 Baptisms (25 Oct 1903-30 Jun 2001) Sacred Heart, Schenectady, NY 2,071 Burials (Mar 1904 - Jul 2001) St-Columba, Schenectady, NY 5,146 Baptisms (Dec 1907 - Nov 1974) St-Columba, Schenectady, NY 2,028 Burials (May 1909 - Nov 1974) Ste-Catherine of Siena, Manchester, NH 1,861 Marr. (Nov 1954-Dec 1999) Ste-Catherine of Siena, Manchester, NH 5,212 Bapt. (Sep 1954-Jan 2000) Ste-Catherine of Siena, Manchester, NH 1,787 Burials (Aug 1954-Feb 2000) Visitation of BVM, Schuylerville, NY 3,589 Baptisms (Jan 1867-Nov 1987) Notre-Dame de Lourdes, Schuylerville, NY 902 Marr. [Jun 1889-Dec 2001] Notre-Dame de Lourdes, Schuylerville, NY 2,621 Bapt. [Nov 1889-Jan 2002] Notre-Dame de Lourdes, Schuylerville, NY 1,304 Bur. [Nov 1889-Jan 2002] Our Lady/Assumption, Rotterdam, NY 1,518 Marriages [Dec 1933-Jun 2002] Our Lady/Assumption, Rotterdam, NY 4,406 Baptisms [Oct 1933-Jun 2002] Our Lady/Assumption, Rotterdam, NY 1,981 Burials [Oct 1933-Jun 202] St. Anne, Waterford, NY - 693 Marriages [Nov 1908-Jul 2002] & 791 Burials [Jan 1925- Jun 2002] St. Anne, Waterford, NY/2,752 Baptisms [Jul 1887-Jun 2002] St. Alphonsus, Glens Falls, NY/2,902 Marriages [Jul 1855 to Mar 2003] St. Louis de Gonzague, Nashua, NH 17,770 Baptisms (Jun 1871 to Mar 2001) 3 Volumes Precious Blood, Holyoke, MA / 4,577 Marriages [1884-1983] 3 Vols. St. Alphonsus, Glens Falls, NY/10,999 Baptisms [1855-2003] 2 Vols. St. Alphonsus, Glens Falls, NY/4,533 Burials [1855-2003] St. Louis de Gonzague, Nashua, NH /10,695 Burials (Feb. 1873-March 2001] 2 Volumes St. Patrick, Troy, NY/4,815 Burials [Jul 1919 – Apr 2004] St. Patrick, Troy, NY/11,493 Baptisms [Sep 1872 – Apr 2004) Precious Blood, Holyoke, MA/16,764 Baptisms [Apr 1869-Jun 1986] 4 Volumes Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Holyoke, MA/ 3,409 Marriages [Jun 1890 to Jul 1991] 2 Volumes St. François-Xavier, Nashua, NH/ 9,817 Baptisms [Jan 1885 to Feb 2003] 2 Volumes St. François-Xavier, Nashua, NH/ 5,135 Burials [Jul 1885 to Mar 2003] 2 Volumes out of print/available in CD version St. François-Xavier, Nashua, NH/ 3,155 Marriages [Jul 1885 to Oct 2002) 2 Volumes St. Peter, Farmington, NH 541 Marr; 1,492 Bapts; 487 Bur Feb 1920 - Dec 2000 St. Joseph, Cohoes, NY 14,308 Baptisms [Sep 1868 to Aug 2005] 3 Volumes St. Paul, Hudson Falls, NY / 1,289 Marriages Dec 1883 – 20 Jun 1992 St. Paul, Hudson Falls, NY / 3,917 Baptisms Dec 1883 – 07 Jun 1992 St. Paul, Hudson Falls, NY / 2,396 Burials Dec 1883 – Jun 1992 Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Manchester, NH /2,028 Marriages Dec 1911 - October 2005 Catalog 3 $50.00 $75.00 $35.00 $50.00 $45.00 $25.00 $45.00 $35.00 $25.00 $45.00 $40.00 $40.00 $20.00 $25.00 $20.00 $45.00 $110.00 $45.00 $25.00 $55.00 $55.00 $90.00 $70.00 $45.00 $30.00 $18.00 $80.00 $47.00 $55.00 $70.00 $35.00 $40.00 $25.00 $50.00 $25.00 $55.00 $50.00 $22.00 $40.00 $35.00 $40.00 $25.00 $50.00 $60.00 $35.00 $45.00 $50.00 $70.00 $130.00 $99.00 $85.00 $55.00 $95.00 $55.00 $85.00 $125.00 $75.00 $80.00 $60.00 $73.00 $40.00 $110.00 $45.00 $55.00 $35.00 $60.00 RP097 RP098 RP099 RP100 RP101 RP102 RP103 RP104 RP105 RP106 RP107 RP108 RP109 RP110 RP111 RP112 RP113 RP114 RP115 RP116 RP117 RP118 RP119 RP120 RP121 RP122 RP123 RP124 RP125 RP126 RP127 RP128 RP129 RP130 RP131 St. Joseph Cathedral, Manchester, NH / 6,342 Marriages [1869-1976] 2 Volumes Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Manchester, NH /6,449 Baptisms Oct 1911 - 30 Apr 2006 [closed] St. Gabriel, Rotterdam, NY / 2,445 baptisms; 837 marriages; 1,244 burials / Nov 1957 - Apr 2006 Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Manchester, NH / 2,466 Burials Nov 1911 - Mar 2006 Our Lady of Perpetual Help, Holyoke, MA / 8,151 Baptisms - June 1890 to August 1991 - 2 Volumes St. Anthony, Schenectady, NY / 4,182 Marriages - Oct 1916 to Jun 2006 - 2 Volumes St. Mary, Troy, NY /9,790 Marriages - Aug 1844 Dec 2006 - 4 Volumes - Hard Cover St. Mary, Troy, NY /24,040 Baptisms - Sept. 1844 - Apr 2007 - 3 Volumes - Hard Cover St. Mary, Troy, NY /5,591 Burials - Aug 1844 - April 2007 - Hard Cover St. Anthony, Schenectady, NY/13,693 Baptisms Sep 1912 - May 2007 2 Volumes - Hard Cover St. Anthony, Schenectady, NY/5,242 Burials Oct 1916 - Jun 2007 - Hard Cover St. Joan of Arc, Menands, NY/B-M-D 1927-2005 [various start & end dates] - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Springfield, MA/4,130 Marriages Oct 1869 - Oct 2003 - 2 Volumes - Hard Cover St-Joseph, Greenwich, NY / 2,728 Baptisms; 991 Marriages; 2,669 Burials / 1879-2002 - Hard Cover Church of the Resurrection, Nashua NH / 1796 Baptisms; 537 Marriages; 414 Burials /1970-2001 - Hard Cover Our Lady of Angels, Albany, NY / 3,687 Marriages / 1867 - 2004 - Hard Cover Our Lady of Angels, Albany, NY / 11,953 Baptisms / 1867 - 2005 2 Volumes - Hard Cover Our Lady of Angels, Albany, NY / 9,017 Burials / 1887 - 2005 - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Springfield, MA/12,124 Baptisms / October 1869 - October 2002 2 Volumes - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Schenectady, NY/ 7,063 Baptisms/ June 1861 - November 2005 - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Schenectady, NY/ 4,100 Burials/November 1862 - February 2006 - Hard Cover Immaculate Conception, Schenectady, NY/6,654 Baptisms/May-1904-July 2006 - Hard Cover Immaculate Conception, Schenectady, NY/2,167 Marriages/May 1904-July2006 / 2,543 Burials/August 1905 - February 2005 - Hard Cover St. John the Evangelist, Concord, NH/14,290 Baptisms 2 Vols. Aug 1855 - Jul 2003 - Hard Cover St. John the Evangelist, Concord, NH/4,649 Marriages 2 Vols. Aug 1855 - Apr 2003 - Hard Cover Sacred Heart Holyoke, MA / 5,038 Marriages 2 Vols. May 1880 - Nov 2000 - Hard Cover St. John the Baptist, Schenectady, NY/4,949 Marriages 2 Vols. May 1854 - June 2009 Hard Cover St. John the Baptist, Schenectady, NY/14,436 Baptisms 2 Vols. Oct 1854 - June 2009 Hard Cover St. John the Baptist, Schenectady, NY/11,242 Burials 2 Vols. Jan 1886 - June 2009 Hard Cover St. Theresa, Manchester, NH/ 890 Marriages Nov 1934-May 2003/ 2,093 Baptisms Oct 1934-Jun 2004/ 736 Burials Dec 1934-Jul 2004 Hard Cover Sacred Heart Holyoke, MA / 18,581 Baptisms 2 Vols. Jan 1877 - Feb 2001 - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Fort Edward, NY/ 2,314 Marriages Nov 1869-Sep 2005 / 2,894 Burials Sep 1886-Sep 2005 - Hard Cover St. Joseph, Fort Edward, NY/7,294 Baptisms Nov 1869 - July 2005 - Hard Cover Northern NY Parishes: Schroon Lake; Wells; Lake Pleasant; Olmstedville; Indian Lake; Blue Mtn Lake. 1867-2009 4,966 Baptisms, 2,732 Marriages, 1,600 Burials - Hard Cover St. Francis of Assisi, Northville, NY B-M-D 1920-2006 and St. Joseph, Broadalbin, NY B-M-D 1890-2006/ 1,313 Marriages; 3,808 Baptisms; 1,366 Burials - 1 Vol Hard Cover $70.00 $70.00 $55.00 $40.00 $80.00 $90.00 $140.00 $140.00 $45.00 $100.00 $45.00 $75.00 $100.00 $75.00 $45.00 $85.00 $110.00 $85.00 $110.00 $85.00 $85.00 $80.00 $90.00 $125.00 $95.00 $100.00 $95.00 $125.00 $100.00 $65.00 $135.00 $90.00 $85.00 $125.00 $100.00 RP132 St. Luke, Schenectady, NY/ 2,840 Marriages Jan 1917-2003 - Hard Cover RP133 RP134 St. Luke, Schenectady, NY/ 8,930 Baptisms and 3,893 Burials Jan 1916-2003 - Hard Cover Immaculate Heart of Mary, Hudson Falls, NY/4,206 Marriages Dec 1844-Aug 2004 - Hard Cover $100.00 $95.00 $70.00 RP135 Immaculate Heart of Mary, Hudson Falls, NY/14,937 Baptisms Dec 1844-Aug 2004 - Hard Cover $125.00 RP136 RP137 RP138 RP139 RP140 RP141 RP142 RP143 RP144 RP145 RP146 RP147 Immaculate Heart of Mary, Hudson Falls, NY/4,289 Burials Mar 1887-Mar 1999 - Hard Cover St. Patrick, Albany, NY 4,379 Marriages August 1859 - June 2006 - Hard Cover St. Patrick, Albany, NY 12,800 Baptisms August 1858 - June 2006 - 2 vols. Hard Cover St. Patrick, Albany, NY 4,000 Burials 1923 - 2006 - Hard Cover St. Lawrence, Troy, NY 1,370 Marr; 4,552 Bapt; 920 Burials Oct 1868 - Nov 1983 - Hard Cover Holy Trinity, Troy, NY 704 Marr; 1,974 Bapts; 949 Burials Nov 1908 - Jun 1998 - Hard Cover Holy Cross Salem, NY 582 Marr 1865-2003; 2,028 Bapts 1862-2002; 1,085 Burials 1899-2003- Hard Cover $70.00 $95.00 $115.00 $65.00 $85.00 $65.00 $75.00 $100.00 $95.00 $95.00 $95.00 $100.00 St. Patrick, Cambridge, NY 1,007 Marriages 1862-2001; 3,522 Bapts 1863-2002; 2,396 Burials 1883-2002- Hard Cover St. Joseph, Cohoes, NY 7,770 Burials 1868 - 2003- Hard Cover St. Christopher, Nashua, NH 1,702 Marriages 1950-2002; 5,671 Bapts 1950-2002; 1,398 Burials 1951-2002 - Hard Cover Sacred Heart, Albany, NY 1,981 Marriages 1874-2009; 2,020 Burials 1938-2010 - Hard Cover Sacred Heart, Albany, NY 5,906 Baptisms 1874-2010 - Hard Cover Repertories Published by Others for Sale by ACGS Catalog # C01 C02 C03 C04 C05 C06 C08 C09 C10 C11 Title Price Fr. Fernand Croteau Collection for Sale by ACGS St Mary, Rollingsford, NH 1,000 Marriages [1856-1976] St Rosaire, Rochester, NH Marriages [1883-1976] St Martin, Somersworth, NH 3,311 Marriages [1852-1976] St François-Xavier, Nashua, NH 2,707 Marriages [1885-1977] St Charles, Dover, NH 1,494 Marriages [1893-1976] St Joseph, Salem, NH 1,752 Marriages [1910-1977] and Mary Queen of Peace, Salem, NH 260 Marriages [1966-1977] St Joseph, Nashua, NH 662 Marriages [1955-1977] and Enfant-Jésus, Nashua, NH 1,725 Marriages [1909-1977] St Bernard, Keene, NH 4,087 Marriages [1861-1978] and Ste-Marguerite Marie, Keene, NH 327 Marriages [1955-1978] Sacré-Coeur, Greenville, NH Marriages [1885-1978] Ste Marie, Hillsborough, NH 778 Marriages [1892-1979]; St Patrick, Bennington, NH 227 Marriages [1936-1979] and Ste Theresa, Henniker, NH 245 Marriages [1945-1979] Catalog 4 $8.00 $15.00 $27.00 $25.00 $12.00 $16.00 $18.00 $32.50 $15.00 $14.50 C12 C13 Sacré-Coeur, Wilton, NH 1,022 Marriages [1882-1978] and St Pierre, Peterborough, NH 650 Marriages [1900-1978] St Patrick, Milford, NH 1,080 Marriages [1868-1978] $15.50 $8.50 C14 St Mathieu, Plymouth, NH Marriages [1916-1975]; St Timothee, Bristol, NH Marriages [1953-1976]; Ste Helene, Enfield, NH Marriages [1899-1975]; St Denis, Hanover, NH Marriages [1888-1979]; Sacré-Coeur Lebanon, NH Marriages [1875-1979]; Ste Agnes, Ahland, NH Marriages [1904-1980] $55.00 C15 C16 C17 C23 C28 C29 C31a C31b C32 St Patrick, Newport, NH 1,133 Marriages [1902-1979]; St Patrick, Croydon, NH/George Mills, NH/Sunapee, NH/Grontham, NH Marriages [19021979; Notre-Dame de Fatima, Enfield, NH 133 Marriages [1952-1979] and Ste Catherine, Charlestown, NH 422 Marriages [1904-1980] St Mary, Claremont, NH 4,086 Marriages and St Joseph, Claremont, NH 290 Marriages [1920-1980] Establishment of Catholic Churches in New England Ste Theresa, Manchester, NH 590 Marriages [1934-1976] St Mary, Rochester, NH Marriages [1872-1994] Ste Catherine, Lisbon, NH 200 M [1958-1988]; St Joseph, Lincoln, NH 666 M [1902-1988]; St Joseph Woodsville, NH 685 M [1896-1988] and St Matthew, Whitefield, NH 840 M [1886-1988] St Patrick (A-K), Nashua, NH Marriages 1855-1996 St Patrick (L-Z), Nashua, NH Marriages 1855-1996 St Mary, Dover, NH 3,868 Marriages [1833-1991] $21.00 $55.00 $5.00 $6.00 $18.00 $26.00 $31.50 $32.00 $39.50 C33 Sacré-Coeur, Marlboro, NH 281 Marriages [1886-1978]; St Joseph, Hinsdale, NH 721 Marriages [1884-1978]; St Antoine, W. Swanzey 128 Marriages [1878-1978]; St Pierre, N. Walpole, NH 700 Marriages [1877-1978]; St Patrick, E. Jaffrey, NH 1,342 Marriages [1885-1978]; St Denis, Harrisville, NH 141 Marriages [1903-1976]; St Stanislas, Winchester, NH 610 Marriages [1875-1978] and Immaculate Conception, Troy, NH 392 Marriages [1902-1978] $35.00 C34 All Saints, Lancaster, NH 1,371 Marriages [1851-1981] Holy Rosary, Hooksett, NH 962 Marriages [1886-1987]; St Lawrence, Goffstown, NH 417 Marriages [1943-1987] and St Pierre, Auburn, NH 570 Marriages [1948-1987] Immaculate Conception (A-K), Portsmouth, NH Marriages [1851-1990 Ste Rose-de-Lima, Littleton, NH 1,881 Marriages [1882-1988] Immaculate Conception (L-Z), Portsmouth, NH Marriages [1851-1990 Ste Catherine, Portsmouth, NH Marriages [1951-1990]; St James Portsmouth, NH Marriages [1958-1990] St Louis de Gonzague, Nashua, NH Marriages [1871-1977] St Thomas Aquinas, Derry, NH 375 Marriages [1888-1977] Immac. Concep., Penacook, NH (A-K) 1,218 Marriages [1855-1981]; Sacré-Coeur, Concord, NH (A-K) 1,101 Marriages [1892-1980]; St Pierre, Concord, NH (A-K) 762 Marriages [1946-1980]; Coeur-Immac., Concord, NH (A-K) 298 Marriages [1956-1980]; and St Jean l’Evangeliste, Concord, NH (A-K) 3,891 Marriages [1855-1980] *Same as C43 above (L-Z) St Leo, Gonic, NH Marriages [1892-1977] *Limited quantities. $16.00 C35 C36 C37 C39 C40 C41 C42 C43* C44* C45 $22.00 $27.50 $20.00 $27.50 $16.50 $44.00 $16.79 $43.00 $42.50 $12.00 **Postage Costs **A-C Genealogist: Multiple issue package (more than 20) - postage included in purchase price. **A-C Genealogist: Single Back issues – postage $1.50 first issue, .90 each additional. **Charts: Must be shipped in mailing tubes, postage $5.00 ea. tube (up to 3 charts). **Maps: Folded flat, postage $1.00 for the first - .50 for each additional. **Maps: In mailing tube, postage $5.00 each tube (holds up to 20 Maps). *** CDRPs are Postage free - Do not include postage for CDs of Repertoires even if included with book orders Orders for Books, Repertoires, Civil Records only: $20.00 or less NOTE POSTAGE INCREASE 9/1/10 $10.00 * 250.01 to 500.00 50.00 $13.00 * 500.01 50.01 to 100.00 $16.00 * 500.01 & over CAN $50.00 includes insurance 100.01 to 250.00 $20.00 * 20.01 to $25.00 * FREE in the U.S. * for Canadian shipments under $501 add 25% of normal postal charge shown above +$10 for insurance Expect 2-4 weeks delivery on orders. 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Mail completed form with your payment or credit card information to: ACGS – Treasurer PO Box 6478 Manchester, NH 03108-6478 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 minor children. Jean Felix became the tutor and James the subrogate tutor who was entrusted with the value of the goods coming to them from the death of their mother. appears he had a son, also named John Barnes who was a member of the Royal Regiment of the Artillery as well. According to a vivid account from the book The Life of General Sir Howard Douglas, Bart., G.C.B., G.C.M.G., F.R.S., D.C.I. From His Notes, Conversations, and Correspondence by S.W. Fullom, in 1795, a Lieutenant John Barnes was sent from England aboard the ship Phillis to bring British soldiers, women and children to Canada. But the Phillis did not make it to its destination as it sank off the coast of Newfoundland. While a few survived both the shipwreck and being stranded in the cold on an uninhabited island, Lieutenant Barnes was not among them, having been swept out to sea prior to the ship sinking. It is revealed that this Lieutenant Barnes was John Barnes' son when Lieutenant Howard Douglas, who survived the ordeal, meets with Prince Edward, who commanded the forces in Nova Scotia, to recount the tale. The Prince, "almost immediately inquired for Lieutenant Barnes, and learnt his fate with the deepest pain, knowing that he was an only son, and that the blow would be irreparable to his father, Colonel Barnes, to whom His Royal Highness was much attached." In 1795, John Barnes was a Lieutenant-Colonel in the Quebec region. Three days later on January 31, 1811, the inventory after death was held. This was particularly necessary when they had to divide the estate between the surviving spouse and the children, especially when the surviving spouse was going to marry again. Present were Jean Felix Neaud Labrie, James Simpson, Francois Paul Hus Cournoyer, who sold Jean Felix several properties inventoried in this document, and Francois Aussant, his friend, also present at the wedding. Both were sworn to the task of assessing the value of all property “according to their souls and conscience based on the current fair value of things at the present time.” Also present were the two notaries who signed the document, Gamelin Gaucher and Henry Crebassa. The marriage contract had established a community of all possessions at the time of the marriage and acquired after as well; thus this was the content of the inventory. The inheritance rights, according to the marriage contract, were equal and reciprocal with the children receiving half to be managed by James Simson. All debt was to be paid off prior to the distribution and goods other than the land concession, which were auctioned off to facilitate the distribution. Whether this child of John Barnes was born in England or Canada, I am not yet sure, although I did find a record of a John Barnes being born to a Marie Franks and John Barnes in TroisRivières, Quebec in 1780; godparents were Henry and Elizabeth Freder. The record does not reference a legitimate marriage, but the baptism was in a protestant church where that language was not consistently used. Also, there is no mention of John Barnes’ rank or position, which Muriel tells me is unusual; John Barnes was a CaptainLieutenant at that time. And finally there On February 18, 1811, Jean Felix Neaud Labrie married Marie Josephe Renois in Sorel. He later married Marie Reine Guillotte in 1828, also in Sorel, before he died in 1839. -------------While Muriel worked on translating all these documents, I continued to dig around regarding John Barnes. It 21 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 comes the question of the child’s age and military career. If this child, born in 1780, is in fact the same Barnes that perished in the shipwreck, then he would have been 15 when aboard the Phillis and ranked as a Lieutenant. According to The Royal Regiment of the Artillery in Quebec City 1759-1871 by Christian Rioux, the minimum age of entry to Woolwich Academy in England, graduation from which was normally required for all officer candidates, was 14. The average number of years cadets stayed at the Woolwich at that time was two years. During that time period, many cadets received their commissions before completing their training. Therefore, perhaps a case could be made for this child to have been John Barnes’ son, sent to England for training at about 14 years old, trained at Woolwich a short while then sent back to Canada to join the forces there. But then again, it may not be the same individual. Hopefully more research will provide us with additional information. Muriel has been unable to find any further mention of this child in any other document. In summary, as with most genealogical pursuits, while I have some answersMarie Anne’s parents were Anne Kennedy and John Barnes, I am left with new questions – who was Ann Kennedy and who was the mother of the Lieutenant Barnes who died in the shipwreck? I am very grateful for Muriel and her hard work tracking down and deciphering the various difficult-to-read documents. However, I have not given up on my search for the long-rumored Native-American ancestor – after all, based on the DNA analysis of my sister, there is 0.1% Native American in her genes – so there must be some connection, somewhere, right? In the next issue of the Genealogist, we will cover the rather interesting life of Jean Felix Labrie prior to his marriage to Marie Anne when he was 36 years old and that of their son Jean Felix who participated in and was arrested for high treason during what has come to be known as the Papineau Rebellion of 1837-38. ******************** ~ Woven in History ~ The Fabric of New England The 12th New England Regional Genealogical Conference April 17-21, 2013 Radisson Hotel & Conference Center Manchester, NH Early Bird rate of $110 ends February 28, 2013 See the program brochure at www.nergc.org Registration is open at RegOnline.com http://www.regonline.com/Register/Checkin.aspx?EventID=1097198 22 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Ancestral Line of Marie Anne Kennedy dit Gimes dit Barnes Researched by: Michelle Murphy & Muriel Normand Direct Line Spouse (Parents, if known) Marriage/Notes I Major General John Barnes (had Anne Kennedy many ranks before death, this was b. 1753 d. 1826 his final) b. 1746 d. 1810 Never married to each other II Marie Anne Kennedy dit Gimes, Jean Felix Naud dit Labrie b. 1768 m. 1805- St Ours, Barnes d. 1839 (Jean Pierre Augustin Naud dit Richelieu b. 1782 d. 1810 Labry & Anastasie Daigle) III Jean Felix Nault dit Labrie b.1805 d.1840 Mary Ann Rebecca Cole b.bet.1804-1807 d.1883 (John Cole & Philendy Guild/Guile) m. 1833- St Ours, Richelieu (also in the United States before 1827) IV Mary Ann Rebecca Labrie b. 1833 d. 1896 Edward Boutiellet b. 1832 d. 1877 (Pierre Boutillet & Sophie Paquet) m. before 1858- (unknown location) V Nelson Boutiette b. 1858 d. 1928 Eliza Harper b. 1863 d. 1941 (Joseph Harper & Mary Wood) m. 1880- Grafton, MA VI Nelson Joseph Boutiette b. 1880 d. 1945 Mary Evangeline Desmarais b. 1892 m. 1912- Grafton, MA d. 1974 (Adelard Desmarais & Mary Dumas) VII Gloria Marguerite Boutiette b.1923 d.1959 John Joseph Murphy b.1920 d.1988 m. 1944- Grafton, MA (John J. Murphy & Marie C. Mitchell) VIII John Joseph Murphy b.1946 d.2001 Halina Marie Szajna (Antoni Szajna & Janina Socha) m. 1971-South Grafton, MA IX Michelle Kathleen Murphy Jesse Donald Edmands 23 m. 2007- Worcester, MA American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online 1801-1820 (Volume V) BARNES, John, army officer and politician; b. c. 1746, probably in Great Britain; d. 30 April 1810 in Bath, England. promoted second captain in 1779 and captain in December 1782, and was put in command of an artillery company stationed in Sorel. Even though his company returned to England in October 1783, Barnes remained its captain until 1794, since his work at headquarters relieved him from the obligation of accompanying his unit. John Barnes entered the Royal Military Academy in Woolwich (London) as a cadet on 16 August 1760. It was at this institution that future engineer and artillery officers of the British army received their technical training. The following year he received a commission in the Royal Artillery with the lowest rank that of lieutenant fire worker. He was promoted to second lieutenant in 1771 and first lieutenant in 1774. In 1783, after the War of American Independence, Barnes became the person responsible for distributing supplies to the loyalists in that part of the province east of Cataraqui (Kingston, Ont.). He also had to assemble loyalists for resettlement in such areas as Baie des Chaleurs [see Nicholas Cox] and Cataraqui [see Michael Grass]. Furthermore Governor Haldimand entrusted Barnes with the responsibility for making land grants to a group of loyalists under Alexander White which he had authorized to settle in the seigneury of Sorel, on the south shore of the St Lawrence River. In September 1784, in accordance with the governor’s instructions, Barnes set off on a tour to inspect the loyalist settlements in the eastern part of Québec. His mission was to prepare a list of those who were receiving supplies, to uncover abuses, and to pick out those making no effort to establish themselves. This tour took a year. On its conclusion Barnes reported the loyalists’ satisfaction but recommended that their allowances not be cut off on 1 June 1786 but instead be continued until 1 September to enable them to subsist until the harvest. Barnes came to the province of Québec in the summer of 1776 with the military reinforcements sent to counter the American invasion [see biographies of Benedict Arnold; Richard Montgomery]. He was probably an officer in one of the four artillery companies that, having left Woolwich in March 1776, were dispatched to Chambly and Montréal. Because of the state of war, the British army in the province was increasing its headquarters staff. As a result, on 8 September Barnes was appointed assistant to the quartermaster general, Thomas Carleton. The quartermaster general’s department contained a deputy quartermaster general and three other assistants also chosen from among the officers. Barnes, who was responsible for the Montréal sector, had to organize the transport of troops, arms, and supplies and to develop plans for billeting the soldiers. In October 1785 Henry Hope, who held the post of quartermaster general, became commander-in-chief of the British troops, replacing Barrimore Matthew St Leger. He decided to entrust management of the quartermaster general’s department to Barnes, who was given the title of deputy quartermaster general. This post carried with it the task of supervising the Provincial Marine and the office of the barrack master general. After From the autumn of 1778 Barnes carried out the same duties at Sorel. With the arrival of the loyalists, however, his tasks were broadened to include quartering those who were in the armed forces and putting up those who were simply refugees. He also had to intervene to try to settle the problems caused by the insubordination of the self-proclaimed minister of the Church of England in Sorel, Thomas Charles Heslop Scott. He was 24 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 his promotion Barnes moved to Québec, where military headquarters were located. England and on 15 August, after 25 years in the colony without a break, he departed. Officially he remained on the rolls as deputy barrack master general in North America until September 1802, but he never returned to the Canadas. He was promoted colonel in the army in 1802, colonel of the Invalid Battalion of the Royal Artillery in 1803, and finally major-general in 1809. He died the following year in Bath. In the first elections to the House of Assembly of Lower Canada in 1792 Barnes was elected for the borough of William Henry. This riding corresponded to the town of Sorel, which since 1787 had been called William Henry. He represented it until the end of the first parliament in 1796. His legislative career amounted to supporting the English party. During this period he was promoted to major in 1794 and lieutenant-colonel the following year. On 21 December 1795, at Québec, he married 21-year-old Isabella Johnson from nearby Belmont; Anglican minister Philip Toosey officiated and Henry Caldwell, a friend of Barnes, served as witness. John Barnes was one of many staff officers. Trained in the professional corps of the British artillery, he spent the greatest part of his career in administration and logistics. Since promotions in the Royal Artillery were made according to seniority, Barnes received them periodically, even though he was not serving with his regiment. His rise was swifter in wartime, and he took advantage of the expansion of the British Empire in North America to carve out a place for himself in the military hierarchy. In 1799 the post of deputy quartermaster general was transferred to Halifax, N.S.; Barnes resigned from office but obtained the post of deputy barrack master general, which allowed him to remain at Québec. In 1801, as the senior officer there, he commanded the garrison. That year he obtained leave to go to Christian Rioux ANQ-Q, CE1-61, 21 Dec. 1795; CN1-256, 19 Dec. 1795. BL, Add. MSS 21697; 21699; 21700; 21714: 331–428; 21723: 14, 298–300; 21724: 251–56, 387, 399; 21744: 82; 21796–98; 21848: 219–20 (mfm. at PAC). PAC, RG 1, L3L: 43397; RG 8, I (C ser.), 29: 56–57; 209: 62; 512: 129; 744: 57, 63–64, 72, 74. PRO, CO 42/46: f.89; 42/48: ff.201–3, 215; 42/49, 6 April 1786; WO 17/1507: ff.7–12; 1711508: ff.1–9; WO 28/6: f.183; 28/7: ff.71, 73, 90, 94 (mfm. at PAC). “Les dénombrements de Québec” (Plessis), ANQ Rapport, 1948–49: 16, 66, 119. Kingston before War of 1812 (Preston), 1, 71. Quebec Gazette, index. F.-J. Audet et Fabre Surveyer, Les députés au premier parl. du Bas-Canada, 17–24. Battery records of the Royal Artillery, 1716–1859, comp. M. E. S. Laws (Woolwich, Eng., 1952), 47–83. “Collection Haldimand,” PAC Rapport, 1887: 411, 413, 433, 440–41, 469, 471–75. Desjardins, Guide parl ., 143. Kelley, “Church and state papers,” ANQ Rapport, 1948–49: 332, 339. List of officers of the Royal Regiment of Artillery . . . , comp. W. H. Askwith (4th ed., London, 1900), 12. “Papiers d’État,” PAC Rapport, 1890: 173–74, 278. Quebec almanac, 1792–1801. Quebec directory, 1790, 1791. Azarie Couillard-Després, Histoire de Sorel de ses origines à nos jours (Montréal, 1926), 127, 133, 158–61. Earle Thomas, “The loyalists in the Montreal area, 1775–1784” (paper presented to the annual meeting of the CHA, Halifax, 1981), 18–21. Hare, “L’Assemblée législative du Bas-Canada,” RHAF, 27: 371–73. 25 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 French & Indian Raids in New England Donald P. Chaput, #2867 When my wife, Mary-Jean (ACGS# 3047), and I first compared our genealogies, we discovered that we were ninth cousins through captives taken from the Deerfield raid of 1704. We have since found that between us we have six ancestors from New England who were involved in various raids. For me, there has always been some nagging curiosity concerning them and luckily I came across a book titled: New England Captives Carried to Canada between 1677 and 1760 during the French and Indian Wars, authored by Emma Lewis Coleman (the Southworth Press, Portland, ME - 1925). Although I had heard of several raids, e.g. Oyster River, Dover, Deerfield, Groton, Haverhill, Wells and Exeter, I never really had a feeling for the total number of raids and the vast number of people affected One of the leading factors in the instigation of raids by the French-allied Indians was the establishment of the Indian Missions whose residents wanted to please the French officials and their sometimes notso-Christian missionaries. These missions were: A. those that included primarily Huron & converted Iroquois (or Maqua) a) Lorette (later Ancienne Lorette) Huron only, 1650 b) Caughnawaga* - Iroquois c) Sault-au-Recollet, 1696 d) Sault St-Louis, 1696 – 1715 e) Lac-des-Deux-Montagnes, 1721 f) St-Regis, 1752 B. those that included primarily Abenakis a) Sillery, 1637 b) St-Francois-de-Sales, 1680 c) St-Francois-du-Lac d) Bécancour e) Jeune Lorette, 1697 f) Norridgewock (on the Kennebec River), 1697 Before I get into the statistics that were pulled from the book, a little background would be in order. The French and Indian Wars referenced (as they are identified in the U.S.) were: King Philip’s War, 1677 - 1760 King William’s War, 1688 - 1697 Queen Anne’s War, 1702 - 1713 Governor Dummer’s War - 1722 1726 King George’s War - 1744 - 1748 (in Europe: The War of Austrian Succession) The French and Indian War, 1755 1763 (in Europe: The Seven Year’s War) * Caughnawaga was actually five different locations. The first was an Indian village attached to LaPrairie in 1667. The next four were founded by successive moves westward of the previous village whose land was no longer suitable to grow Indian corn in 1676, 1690, 1696 and 1716. In the last four cases the French referred to each one as Sault StLouis and the resident Indians as the Sault Indians. The people taken during these wars by either side, British or French, were not considered prisoners of war but rather “captives of border warfare” and their disposition was not regulated by treaty. After this, all of the North American area was British and raids were no longer necessary. 26 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 The dates used in this book are all Old Style and would seem to disagree with corresponding data from Jetté [Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec des origins à 1730 by René Jetté] or Tanguay [Dictionnaire généalogique des familles canadiennes by Msgr. Cyprien Tanguay], since Britain did not convert to using New Style dates until September of 1752. To convert to the more accurate French dates one would have to add 10 days to the dates in the 1600's and 11 days to the 1700's. tomahawking to death her kidnappers on an island in what is today Concord, NH (now identified by an historic marker). Connecticut - 5 raids and had 45 captives taken By far the fewest of any of the affected future states was Connecticut. Massachusetts - 35 raids affecting 483 captives. One of the largest raids of all was at Deerfield 29 Feb 1704 when 165 people were taken or killed. Haverhill, MA was another town that was hit often with devastating effects. Some of the lesser known areas include Billerica, Worcester, Marlborough, Westborough, Groton, and Lunenburgh. Many of the “redeemed”, i.e. returned captives, petitioned the General Court (legislature) and were given “relief” in the form of money for their time as captives. One of my ancestors, Mathias Farnsworth, was taken in August 1704 from Groton. He became the progenitor of all those of the name Phaneuf when his name was decimated by the French clergy. The author has also included captives taken at unknown locations and uncertain dates as long as a captive could be identified. Coleman does not include raids where a captive can neither be identified nor a fate determined, so there is no determining how many more captives are not included. Several of the dates and the specific number of captives are missing because the only record of the event is in another town’s or the General Court’s records indicating that the event has occurred, so these are not included in the figures below. Some the facts that I found to be of interest: the first captive was taken on 19 Sep 1677 in a combined raid on Hatfield and Deerfield, MA; the Otis family of Dover, NH had 3 generations taken as captives; John Stark, the future Brigadier General of the Revolutionary War, was taken at Rumney on 28 Apr 1752. The Indians brought him to the mission St-François- du-Lac where he was sold to the French for 40 pounds. He returned home 6 Aug of the same year; Hannah Dustin was taken from Haverhill, MA 15 Mar 1697. For those who don’t know, she became a legendary figure for her escape by Maine - 85 raids and 798 captives. By far the most affected colony of all, not a single civilized location was skipped over. All colonization east of Wells was abandoned for ten “doleful” years after the 1620 May 1690 destruction of Fort Loyal (Falmouth) when 70 were taken. Almost without exception the captives from Maine had been transplants from Massachusetts, of which it was part. New Hampshire - 62 raids, 486 captives. During the majority of this period the colony’s civilization extend roughly in an arc ranging from Rochester past Rumford (now Concord) on to Keene. The western-most part of the state, along the Connecticut River, was settled by pioneers expanding 27 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 north from Massachusetts. Settlement was so swift that the towns were not even named but rather were given a number, the most famous of which was #4 (Charlestown after 1753) which was settled by the Farnsworth brothers of Groton, MA. pants; massacres - usually the result of general attacks but much more devastating to the target town in the number killed and taken. For example, the numbers specified above are no doubt substantially lower than the actual, if all data were to be known. Many reports of the events list youngsters simply as “children were taken,” or the head of the household and “family,” or sometimes “several men were . . .” In many reports women and children are never mentioned. The Most Raids The total number of raids was rather surprising with almost every British wilderness outpost being hit at one time or another, if only by passing Indian marauders on their way to or from a larger event. In the four colonies above, there was a total of 186 individual raids and although the colonies themselves did suffer, the individual settlements were affected even more. Those experiencing the greatest number of incursions were: Dover, NH (including Oyster River which was a part of Dover until 1732) had 10 raids affecting 188 people #4, 9 raids and 39 people Saco-Biddeford, ME - 8 raids and 37 people Deerfield, MA 7 raids and 197 people York, ME 7 raids and 121 people Haverhill, MA 6 raids and 103 people Exeter, NH 6 raids and 26 people Wells, ME 5 raids and 179 people Groton, MA 5 raids and 45 people The largest raids include: 1703 Wells, 168 people 1704 Deerfield, 165 1692 York, 121 1694 Oyster River, 94 1690 Casco, 70 1690 Salmon Falls (Maine), 52 1689 Dover, 52 1689 Pemaquid (Maine), 50 1697 Haverhill, 40 1708 Haverhill, 33 1677 Deerfield, 30 The majority of the raids were done by small Indian bands, mostly from the French mission towns. Most of the captives were brought to these towns. The Indians who participated in these raids were not the classic savages as usually depicted in novels. Before leaving their homes, they attended a special mass dedicated to the success of the venture, they had communion, and they prayed. On the return trip, they often carried women and children who were too weak to keep up. Although it is true that some of the captives were killed on route to Canada, in most of the cases it must have seemed to the Indians to be the more practical of solutions; to leave a weakened person alone in the wilderness insuring them of the inevitable slow death The Largest Raids There were many degrees of raids from: small - small bands or even single Indians; general attacks - made up of both Indians and French troops, sanctioned (sometimes even initiated) by the Canadian Government and led by French commanders. There were raids where over 700 Indians & French participated. Even small attacks might have over 100 partici28 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 as opposed to the swift hatchet may have actually seemed to them to be merciful. members; were redeemed by relatives or municipalities; converted to Catholicism and became a part of the local community (our ancestors); or were even transported to France. In one well-known incident, Eunice Williams (the wife of Deerfield’s minister) had her skull split open by a killing tomahawk blow but, this was after she had fallen through ice into freezing waters. There was no way she could have survived having her wet clothing sticking and freezing to her body. It is not known how many of the Indian names found in Jetté and Tanguay could actually be those of New Englanders who had gone native. Some of the listed Native Americans may not have been so “native” after all. These could be some of the “lost” captives whose fates were never determined. Several of these pioneers were even wellknown by their captors and had been on friendly terms with them. In one not exceptionally uncommon incident, the Indians approached a house they had often frequented, were invited in for breakfast, and only afterwards secured their hosts as captives. Interestingly enough, many New Englanders were taken captive more than once, some even three times. The records of the Ursuline nuns at Québec make frequent mention of young English girls being brought to them by the Indians, but the records only indicate their French baptismal names (many of these girls could no longer speak their native tongue). Trying to associate these with specific known captives would be impossible or at the very best mere guesswork. Some have made guesses as to origin of specific recorded names, e.g., Braquil or Breaky could possibly be Brackett; or Huilier could be Wheeler. There were various outcomes for these many captives: A. some were kept by the Indians. Of these, their fates include: going native, i.e., voluntarily staying with and living the Indian lifestyle; becoming slaves; being adopted by the Indian family; escaping; being sold to habitants for money or liquor; or being sold to the government for return to New England (usually by trade agreement with the individual colonial legislatures). B. of those bought by Canadians and sometimes even Priests, they: became servants; joined the family as full-fledged In some Canadian records the captivebride’s parents were listed as the Indians who were the adoptive parents effectively ending any further search for ancestors. In recent months we have learned that this could also happen in reverse - an Indian girl being brought to civilization by a father working in the fur trade would have her parents recorded as the trader and his white-wife. This would explain how my wife, Marie-Jean’s Mitocondrial (maternal) DNA line is Native-American. 29 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Who Was General Bernado De Galvez And Why Is He the Man We Honor With Our Color Guard Ron Cormier #2553 - [email protected] A Connecticut Acadian [Ed Note: From the author, Ron Cormier….. “This article will be in the Sons of the American Revolution publication, and The Naples Crier newsletter shortly. I thought you might find it interesting and if you wish to publish it, you may” – pdc] Here is the rest of the story. On May 8 1779, Spain declared war on the British Empire. They then directed the Governor of Louisiana, Bernado de Galvez (1746-1786), to raise an army to help the American Colonies in the war. River. All of this happened in 14 days of fighting. Judge Gayarre in his History of Louisiana, writing of these battles, has this to say: "The Militia bore themselves with indescribable zeal in every labor, and in the service of the artillery they gave constant proof of a perfect discipline, and they seized many opportunities to cast themselves upon the enemy, especially the companies of Acadians within whose breasts spring up memories of the cruelties perpetrated in the last war, wherein they were forced by the King of England, to abandon their homes in Newfoundland." (Sic) General Galvez immediately asked the Acadians from Attakapas, Opelousas and Pointe Coupee to join in the expedition. Over 600 answered the call as this was an opportunity to "get back" at the British for their treatment of the Acadians in 1755-1763. On 27 Aug 1779 Galvez left New Orleans to attack Fort Bute at Manchac. By the time he was in the attack, 7 September 1779, his army had grown to 1,200 men and he overwhelmed the fort very quickly. Galvez himself, says: “The same desire shown by the people in the city was expressed by all the individuals in the German coast, Opelousas, Attakapas and Pointe Coupee. He then took his army to Baton Rouge on 13 September and attacked the fort on 21 September. His Acadian cannoneers were so good and accurate that the Fort surrendered that afternoon. There were 700 British troops and 100 local Militia who were imprisoned. As part of the surrender Galvez insisted that the forts at Fort Pamere, Natchez, Amite River and Thompson Creek had to surrender also which they did when they heard of the cannon fire that Baton Rouge had taken. Thus the British flag disappeared as did the troops on the entire lower Mississippi "The zeal, the activity and the patience shown by our Acadian militia cannot be expressed in words , , . considering the zeal of these men, their spirit, their bravery, their steadiness and good will with which they defended their Sovereign cannot be told in ordinary 30 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 words; and, besides, their having scorned with utmost valor all the risks, they were the ones who had the hardest labor in the artillery service, and all other hardships." Headquarters - Before Yorktown October 12, 1781 To Don Francisco Rendon: "I was greatly honored with your favor of the 2nd. It gives me pleasure to find so good a disposition in Don Bernardo de Galvez to concert his operations in such a manner against the common enemy, that the interests of his Most Catholic Majesty (Spanish King) and those of ourselves and our ally, France may be mutually benefitted. Now we move to 1780 where Galvez and his 2,000-man army move to Fort Charlott on the Mobile River and then went on to take Mobile on March 14, 1780. Galvez then regrouped and refurbished his men before attacking the British stronghold at Pensacola. This was to be the most difficult test of the little army from Louisiana. After a bitter campaign, the Old Fort San Carlos surrendered on 9 May 1781. This opened up Florida to the colonies and defeated the British at their strongest point thus making all of the Mississippi and Florida an American foothold prior to the battle at Yorktown that ended the war. "I am. Sir, etc,"—George Washington (from Writings of George Washington, Vol. 8) Stories of the Acadians' bravery have appeared in histories; others were handed down from father to son for generations and it would be impossible to enumerate the many brave deeds credited to them. Of the exploits of Galvez, General George Washington had the following to say: **************************** Queries and Answers Mary Anna Paquette, #2378 [email protected] Each member is entitled to post three (3) queries per issue. Queries should be specific rather than a request for ‘all data’ on a particular individual, however if space is available, we will print general queries. It is more productive if you stay with one event per query. Q. 3754 McCuane/McKeown/McCanon/McKeane, Catherine Seek parents of Catherine McCuane (or McKeown, McCanon, McKeane). Tradition says she was orphaned on her way to Canada from Ireland and was raised by a French family. She married Thomas Croteau 6 Oct 1846 at St Nicolas, Levis, Quebec. Catherine died 13 April 1898, Lewiston, ME. (Beverly Cloutier, #5554) 31 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 SOMETHING OLD, SOMETHING NEW! Beginning with this issue, as space permits, we will re-publish some of the old Queries that have never been answered. Perhaps the answers were found but never sent to be published. We only ask that if you do find the answer to someone's Query that you send it to [email protected]. (from Issue #104) Q. 3614 SPARK-MAROTTE/MAROTTE-LABONTE Seek marriage date and place, and parents of John Spark-Marotte of St Hilaire, Rouville, PQ and Ursule Marotte-Labonte. Their son, Dorile Spark-Marotte (known in Troy, NH as Dosithee Marotte) m. Agnes Lapointe 13 Jun 1875, Adamsville, Brome, PQ. (Paul J. St. Pierre, #1919) (from Issue #105) Q. 3623 FORTIN, Bernard-Pierre Seek date and place of marriage, and any children of that marriage, of Bernard-Pierre Fortin [Louis/M.-Marthe Plante, m. 17 Jun 1734, I.O.] (Mary Plante, #3621) (from Issue #105) Q. 3624 FORTIN, Joseph Seek date and place of marriage, and any children of that marriage, of Joseph Fortin [Louis/M.Marthe Plante, m. 17 Jun 1734, I.O.] (Mary Plante, #3621) (from Issue #105) Q. 3625 DECOTEAU/DESCOTEAU Seek birth place of Moise Decoteau and Rosana Choiniere, parents of Elzear Decoteau. Elzear was married 18 Jun 1898, and was 21 years of age according to the marriage application. The application also states that Elzear was born in Fall River, MA about 1877. (Albert H. Roy, #0008) (from Issue #105) Q. 3626 WHITNEY, Elias Isaac Seek mother of wife of Elias Isaac Whitney, b. 1 Feb 1821, Onondaga, NY. Attended Onondaga Hill School. (Lawrence E. Zipp, #8942) (from Issue #105) Q. 3627 WHITNEY, Peter Seek mother of wife of Peter Whitney, b. 1787, Poughkeepsie, NY, d. abt 1883. Mother may have been Dutch Mohawk. (Lawrence E. Zipp, #8942) (from Issue #105) Q. 3629 LECLAIRE, Charles Seek parents of Charles LeClaire who was buried at Notre Dame de Lourdes Cemetery, Schuylerville, NY on 3 Jul 1912. His wife was Marie Poisson and the family is known to have been members of St Joseph Parish, Cohoes, NY in 1879 when a child was baptized. Family lore relates that the couple was from St John's, Canada. (Dennis Breton, #1636) (from Issue #105) Q. 3630 BEAULIEU/VEILLEUX Seek date (abt 1879) and place of marriage of Eugene Beaulieu b. 29 Sep 1860, l'Isle Verte, Rimouski [Antoine/Marcelline Pettigrew] and Marie Veilleux, b. abt 1863 [François/Elmire Levesque]. (Carole Beaulieu, #7900) 32 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Answers to Queries ACGS thanks our members who are able to find answers for those searching their elusive ancestors. It would be helpful if the source of the information was also given. PLEASE NOTE: Any member who has access to records, or may already have the answers can send them in. Answers are submitted to the Queries Editor to be published in the next earliest possible Journal. It is not the responsibility of the Queries Editor to do the research of queries. A. 3753 Demers/Leominster, MA (Issue #134) The name of the order is "Daughters of the Holy Spirit". I confirmed it with the current pastor, Monsignor Goguen. I found this wonderful history of the parish here: http://www.clicktrinity.com/library/studio216/docs/history.pdf. The order has a website: http://www.daughtersoftheholyspirit.org/heritage.html. Interesting is in the history a Msgr. Gravel is named pastor of the church in September 1950. (Submitted by: Dennis M. Lyddy, Leominster, MA) A. 3753 Demers/Leominster, MA (Issue #134) In answer to your Query in the American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol 389, Issue 134, page 182, I have this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daughters_of_the_Holy_Spirit and http://www.clicktrinity.com/library/studio216/docs/history.pdf and http://www.fillesstesprit.org/site/english/716.html (Submitted by: Norman J. Landry, #3444) A. 3753 Demers/Leominster, MA (Issue #134) In regards to question Q 3753 in the last issue of the Genealogist, the nuns from Ste. Brieuc were the Daughters of the Holy Spirit. My aunt, Sister John, was one of them. Her habit was all white with a giant black rosary hanging at her side. She had a black ribbon around her neck which had a dove on it (symbol of the Holy Spirit). She was bilingual in French and English. Her obituary follows. St. Brieuc is in the present day dept. of Cotes-du-Nord, in the old province of Brittany, France. (Submitted by: Helen Morin Maxson, # 960) Norwich Bulletin (Norwich, CT) Wed. March 23, 1983 Jean Dupuis Sister Jean du Divin Coeur, D.H.S., 80, a resident of Villa St. Joseph, 55 Gilman St., Putnam, for the past year, died Tuesday at the villa. She was born in Attawaugan [Killingly] Jan. 12, 1903, the daughter of Joseph and Demerise (Bissonnette) Dupuis. She professed her religious vows as a member of the Daughters of the Holy Spirit on Sept. 9, 1925 at the Mother House, Ste. Brieuc, France.She spent most of her religious life as a teacher. Her first assignment was in Chicopee, Mass., 1925-1926. She then went to Waterbury 1926-1934. She returned to Putnam to St. Mary and remained there from 1934 until 1955. She then returned to Chicopee, Mass., from 1955-1957. In 1957 she returned to the Holy Spirit Provincial House in Putnam and took on the duties as a sub-mistress at the Novitiate where she remained until 1974. In 1974 she took on the duties of stamp collecting for the missions and was living in the community of Our Lady of the Holy Spirit in Putnam. In 1982, she went to Villa St. Joseph as a patient. Survivors include one sister, Mrs. Alice Morin of Norwichtown, two brothers, Cyril Dupuis of West Hartford and Jean C. Dupuis of Southington, one nephew, the Rev. Ronald Dupuis RSH of Woonsocket, R.I., and several nieces and one sister-in-law, Mrs. Jeanette Luzi of Bristol. The Gilmore Funeral Home, 104 Church St., Putnam, is in charge of arrangements. 33 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 New Members Bernadette Meunier, #9489 [email protected] [Ed. Note: Please remember to send Bernadette your change of address if you move. It is becoming more and more useful for us to also have an e-mail contact, especially if we send you something by regular mail and it comes back to us. Thank you.] 10006 Joseph Hubbard, P.O. Box 1045; 16 Wilson St., Milton, NH 03851 10007 Irene Ferland, 9 Pine Cone Dr., Alfred, ME 04002 10008 Shelley Amidon, 9 Pine Cone Dr., Alfred, ME 04002 10009 Maurice Langlais, 1 ch. L’Anse aux Canards, St-Marie-de-Kent, NB E4S 0C7 10010 Donald Drouin, P.O. Box 102, Bedford, MA 01730 10011 Nancy Larue, P.O. Box 1045, Milton, NH 03851 10012 10013 10014 10015 10016 10017 10018 Alice Noyes, 144 Exchange Ave., Manchester, NH 03104 Herbert Decato, 140 Roscommon Place, McMurray, PA 15317 Jean Prevete, 13 Old Suncook Rd. #306, Concord, NH 03301 Sydney Rose, 20 Coountry Lane, Rochester, NH 03867 Allyson O’Brien, 86 Parnell Pl, Nashua, NH 03060 Audrey Waltner, 14 Elsohn Rd, Ancram, NY 12502 Hilly Gardner, 74 Lafayette St., Manchester, NH 03102 *************** Important Notices Sunday openings remain the same for this year. We will open the 1st and 3rd Sunday each month from January through June; and September through November; in December we are open on the 1st Sunday only. On Holiday weekends, we can open by appointment. Our hours are 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. Call 622-1554 in advance. Because of the New England Regional Genealogical Conference being held 17-21 April of this year at the Radisson Hotel in Manchester, the ACGS will not have its Spring Workshops. All our volunteers will be helping at the Radisson or at our library. We will be opened extra hours on Thursday, April 18th to accommodate any attendees who may have extra time at this conference to do some research in our library. Plan for our 40th Anniversary Conference are underway. It promises to be a good one. It will be held on September 28th. We haven’t selected the location yet but we are hoping to hold it off site to better accommodate more attendees. If you plan to attend, please let us know at [email protected] and put 40th Anniversary in the subject. Or drop us a note. Our lineup of speakers includes: Lucie LeBlanc Consentino; Dick Eastman; Joe Manning. More details in the next issue. 34 American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Donors’ List for the Building Fund As of December 31, 2012 First name Last name Middle/Other Level Arthur David Geoffrion Guimont St. Mary’s Bank In Memory of plaque stone stone Ralph Ronald & Evelyn Arthur Fleurette Louise Cecile Richard Albert & Constance Dorothy Linda Elaine George Robert Janine Robert Beaudoin Blais Boudreault Coté Desclos Durocher Eastman Hamel Jordan Lambert Latour Laurence Maurier Penfield Provencher NH Volunteers Clifford Anne Craig Raymond 5th Regiment Abbott Ackley Adams Allain Alpine Club Amiot Auclair Autotte Babineau Beauchesne Bedard Belanger Bernard Bissaillon Blais Blake Boisclair Booth David Robert Laurent Robert Hector Robert James Sean Gerald M. Gary Roderick Marie Rita Cecile Poulin Manchester Tetreault 35 leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf leaf other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 First name H. Joseph Nancy Dennis Charles Dominick Laura Vivian John & Constance Lillian Robert F. Elaine Gail Albert A. Peter Lauria Linda Shirley Brendan Suzanne Vivian Lorraine Arlene Robert F. Mary Glenn Marguerite Chris Albert M. Donald Arthur of American Rosemary Gilbert Rev. Raymond Sam Virginia James R. Gerard J. Lorette Claire Jay Judith Suzanne Eleanor Last name Brisbois Brown Campbell Cappello Carlson Carter Cook Coulon Crowley Cunis Curley Daigle D'Antonio Daubney Davis Davis Denehy Desort Dimasi Doran Drew Edwards Emmons Eschrich Fontaine Foran Fortier, Jr. Fournier Fournier Fournier Association Gagne Gagnon Gagnon Gale Gallien Gaudet Gauthier Gendron Giguere Gorey Gorin Gosselin Gracie 36 Middle/Other Parizo Marston Hogue Level other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 First name Irene Monique G. Dennis Linda Denice Joan Jane Marie Alan R. Eugene Suzanne M. Carol Donna Janet M. Carol Leonard Edward Paul Rita Roger & Donna Margaret S. Georgette June Donalda Jeannine T. Elaine Dennis Carolyn P. Doris Timothy Richard B. Michael A. Michele Margaret William Constance Shirley Mark Jeffrey Doreen Roy Thelma Last name Grigorenko Groulx Guilmette Hall Hathaway Hennehan Henrick Hoffman Holley Huard Jackson Joyal Kramer Kuzel Labrie Lamarine Lambert Lambert Lanctot Langford Lavalliere LeClair Lessard Levesque Libovicz Lyddy MacDonald Manning Mayville McCarthy McCauley McKenzie Meeks Mercier Messier Mitchell Morand Morin Murphy Nepveu NH Ball Bearings, Inc. Nicastro 37 Middle/Other Swaine Maurice Level other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 First name Christopher Robert G. Daniel Janet Daniel Donna Margaret Gerard F. Michael Hazel Donald Christine Robert Eugene Denice Pierre Paul Lawrence Elaine T. Edward John L. Suzanne M. Peter Jeanne Marie Trefton John Michael Ky Donald Mary Ellen Ann P. Christina Andre Adelard Margot Frank A. Stephen Vincent F. Charles Kathleen Mae Allen John A. Shirley Last name Nolin Norbut O'Neil Ouellette Pelletier Perry Plummer Poirier Potaski Potvin Poulin Pude Rainville Rheault Roberge Robitaille Salvas Sands Scott Shevlin Sirois Slack Smith Soderquist Soucy St. Louis Stafford, Jr. Stratoti Suprenant Swansburg Taft Talbot Tellier Thisdale, Jr Thompson Tremblay Trudel Tully, II Turner Voisine Voisine Whelan White Middle/Other Bartlett Roy 38 Level other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other other American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 Financial Analysis of the Building Fund Drive Launched in September of this year. AMERICAN CANADIAN GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY CONDENSED UNAUDITED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS 12 Months Ended December 31, 2012 1/22/2013 INCOME STATEMENT 12/31/2012 ACTUAL YTD 12/31/2011 ACTUAL YTD FOLIO REVENUE: Membership Dues Publication Sales Library Income Research Income Conference Fees Building Fund Donations Prior Year Bequest Miscellaneous Society Income Rental Income Total Revenue DISBURSEMENTS: Membership Renewal Costs Quarterly Journal Publication Publications For Sale Library & Research Expenses Conferences Occupancy Costs Miscellaneous Expenses Total Disbursements Net Earned Surplus 39 $44,366 $10,591 $49,850 $18,040 $2,887 $2,387 $1,761 $22,793 $0 $3,293 $3,901 $3,878 $3,745 $26,908 $1,842 $2,607 $10,500 $11,375 $97,127 $123,597 $1,057 $20,279 $3,538 $1,794 $1,392 $32,895 $8,819 $69,774 $683 $26,351 $8,021 $1,653 $957 $46,988 $9,187 $93,840 $27,353 $29,757 A B C D American-Canadian Genealogist, Vol. 39, Issue #135, 1st Quarter 2013 A B C D Timing differences in lapsed membership dues receipts and lost members. Non-recurring item. Paid for 5 journals in 2011 vs. 4 in 2012. Payment timing difference. Energy efficiency measures, milder winter and capitalized repairs. See E, below. BALANCE SHEET 12/31/2012 ACTUAL YTD 12/31/2011 ACTUAL YTD FOLIO ASSETS: Checking & Savings Inventory for Resale Current Assets $20,799 $65,989 $58,371 $65,938 $86,788 $124,309 H.Q. & Library Building Furniture & Fixtures Library Holdings 2012 Capital Improvements Fixed Assets $230,172 $131,741 $338,429 $230,172 $131,741 $335,123 $61,550 $761,892 $0 $697,036 Total Assets $848,680 $821,345 $0 $0 $0 $0 $848,680 $821,345 LIABILITIES: Liabilities Total Liabilities EQUITY: Net Equity & Earned Surplus E 2012 Capital Improvements paid from the following sources: 2011 Bequest $26,908 2012 Fund-Raising $22,793 continuing Prior Years' Earned Surplus $11,849 $61,550 40 E E American-Canadian Genealogical Society P. 0. Box 6478 Manchester, NH 03108-6478 Telephone: 603-622-1554 URL: www.acgs.org E-mail: [email protected] Committees and their Members Acquisitions: Chair: Robert Maurier, #2068 Laurent Autotte, #3505 Buildings, Grounds & Safety: Chair: Herb Boyce, #8504 Conferences: Chair: TBD Computer Committee: Chair: Sam Harris, #5996 Robert Paquette, #3262 Roland Marchand, #144 Gerard Savard, #4972 Editorial Board: Chair: Pauline Cusson, #2572 From Other Publications: Laurent Autotte, #3505 Indexing: Constance Hébert, #5175 New Members: Bernadette Meunier, #9489 Proofreading & Queries Editor: Mary Anna Paquette, #2378 Finance Committee: Auditor: Norma Boyce, #7655 Budget: Pauline Cusson, #2572 and James Gaudet, #5381 Fundraising and Grant Writing Chair: Ron Blais, #6271 Jim Gaudet, #5381 Muriel Chabot Normand, #5706 Gerry Savard, #4972 Research Services: Chair: Constance Hébert, #5175 Jeanne Boisvert, #6394 James Gaudet, #5381 Lorette Leafe, #5384 Robert Neveux, #4604 Muriel Normand, #5706 Library Board: Co-Chairs: Jeanne Boisvert, #6394 and Jackie Watson, #7227 Constance Hébert, #5175 Pauly Labbe, #4261 Lorette Leafe, #5384 Muriel Normand, #5706 Janine Penfield, #9134 Mailing: Co-Chairs: James R. Gaudet, #5381 Richard Coté, #5973 Membership: Chair: Bernadette Meunier, #9489 Ron Blais, #6271 Publications: Chair: Pauline Cusson, #2572 David Bonitatibus, #5508 Lorette Leafe, #5384 Kathy Pasko, #7741 Julie Smith, #3147 Publicity: Coordinator: John Cooke, #8741 Web Site Liaison: Gerard Savard, #4972 CD For Sale: New Publications for Sale ‘Select’ Lowell Records CD Holy Cross, Salem, NY Baptisms-Marriages-Burials 1862-2003 RP142 - $75.00 18,730 Marriage records 1826 - 1997 13,590 Birth records from 1798 - 2001 686 Death records from 1889 - 2009 CD004 St. Patrick, Cambridge, NY Baptisms-Marriages-Burials RP143 - $100.00 $60.00 These are selected records and they do not encompass all the data from the years indicated above. Order from: American-Canadian Genealogical Society ACGS-Treasurer P.O. Box 6478 Manchester, NH 03108-6478 St Joseph, Cohoes, NY 7,770 Burials 1868-2003 RP144 - $95.00 St Christopher, Nashua, NH Baptisms-Marriages-Burials 1950-2002 RP145 - $95.00
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