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1951 | Phyllis Marie Saulnier May 17, 1934 - September 26, 2018 Share this obituary Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share in Email Sign Guestbook| View Guestbook Entries| Send Sympathy Card SAULNIER, Phyllis Marie ? Age 84, of Meteghan Centre, wife, mother, sister and friend to many, passed away suddenly on Wednesday, September 26, 2018. Born in Meteghan Centre, she was a daughter of the late Fidele and Agnes (Sullivan) Robichaud. Phyllis worked at La Villa Acadienne for 19 years and took great pride in her work. She will be fondly remembered by family and friends for her love of life. She loved to host and entertain and often had morning tea gathering at her house, many summer nights spent in the garage, listening to all the stories and her favorite Friday night activity, CIFA Bingo with the gals. Music was a big part of her life, singing in the church choir most of her life and recently with Les Voix Dans l?Vent. She played the piano and keyboard. Phyllis will be forever remembered by her loving husband of 60 years, James; children, Donna Saulnier, Hammonds Plains; Marcel (Jocelyne), Little Brook; Yvonne (Guy) Mombourquette, Meteghan River; grandchildren, Donald, Nicolette, Oriane, Renée; great-grandchildren, Bryson and Savannah; siblings, Bernice Boudreau, Meteghan; Conrad (Therese) Robichaud, Meteghan Centre. She was predeceased by daughter, Marie; sisters, Barbara, Anne Marie, Clara, Therese. Funeral arrangements are under the care of Meteghan Funeral Home. Funeral will be held Saturday, September 29, at 11:00 a.m. in Stella Maris Church, Meteghan, Rev. Wieslaw Papuga officiating, co-officiated by Rev. Albeni d?Entremont. Burial will follow in parish cemetery. Donations may be made to Jacky Comeau & Friends Cancer Help Fund Association or to Heart & Stroke Foundation of Nova Scotia. | Robichaud, Phyllis Marie (I3887)
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1952 | Pierre Adonis Thibodeaux was one of four children born to Adonis Thibodeaux and his wife Irma Lorinor Labauve. Pierre's brother Jean was his twin. Pierre was employed as a farmer for the majority of his work life. | Thibodeaux, Pierre Adonis (I11872)
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1953 | Pierre Clouatre/Cloatre was born about 1700 in the Acadia area of Nova Scotia. He married Marguerite LeBlanc in 1722, Grand Pre, Acadia, Nova Scotia. They are the parents of the following known children (found in baptismal records): 1) Marie Josephe (1723- ) md Pierre Hebert 2) Louis (1724- ) md Marguerite Landry 3) Marguerite (1726- ) 4) George ( 1727- ) md Cecile Blanche Breau 5) Dominique (1729-1770) md Francoise Boudreau 6) Marguerite Charlotte (1732- ) 7) Madeleine (1733-1800) md Charles Boudreau 8) Pierre Silvain (1740- ) md Marie Madeline Boudrot 9) Marie (1742- ) 10) Anne (1744-1820) md Bernard Capdeville 11) Marthe (1746-1768) He and his family were exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland in 1755. His wife is listed as a widow on the Acadian census taken there in July 1763, so he died prior to that date. | Clouatre, Pierre (I9844)
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1954 | Pierre Cyr and Marie Francoise Bourgeois were married April 10, 1670 in Port-Royal, Acadia (Nova Scotia). Their children born in Beaubassin, Acadia Jehan Baptiste Cyr born about 1671. Jean Pierre Cyr born about 1677. Guillaume Cyr born January 1680. | Cyr, Pierre (I13036)
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1955 | Pierre is also known as Pierre Thibodeau L'Ainé (the elder), as he a younger brother who was also named Pierre. He married Anne Marie Bourg in 1690, in Acadie. They are the parents of the following: 1) Anne-Marie (1691-) md Jean-Baptiste Comeau 2) Philippe (1692-) md Isabelle Vincent 3) Alexandre (1694-1752) md Francoise Benoit 4) Pierre (1694-) md Marie-Josephte Boudreau 5) Antoine (1699-) md Suzanne Comeau 6) Jean-Baptiste (1700-) md Marguerite Boudreau 7) Joseph (1701-) md Marie-Josephe Bourgeois 8) Rene (1703-) md Anne-Marie Boudreau 9) Angelique (1704-1756) md Antoine Bariault His burial place is per Steven A. White. The following info is per the Albert County Museum website: https://www.albertcountymuseum.com/pierre-thibodeau/ In 1698, his father and four of this Pierre's brothers left Port Royal to start a new settlement, along with a friend named Pierre Gaudet. They traveled by boat (that he had built) along with four of his sons (Pierre, John, Antoine, and Michel) and eventually decided to settle along the Chipody River. They cleared the land for the settlement and farming, started a gristmill and sawmill, hunted furs, etc. They became friends with the local Indians and had a very good relationship with them. In the spring of 1700, Pierre (senior) returned to Chipdy with his wife and nephew. He spent the winters in Port Royal and the spring through fall in Chipody. Chipody is now known as Shepody. | Thibodeau, Pierre (I7986)
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1956 | Pierre is the son of Bernard Daigle and Claire Bourg. He was born about 1696, as he was 63 when he died. He married (1) Madeleine Gautrot in 1715, in Grand-Pre, Acadie. They are the parents of at least the following: 1) Olivier Daigle (1717-) md Angelique Doiron. Pierre married (2) Marie-Louise Testard in 1750. They both died in France during the Acadian expulsion. He married Marie-Louise Testard Pinet in 1750. | Daigle, Pierre (I11783)
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1957 | Pierre is the son of Claude Boudreau and Catherine Meunier. He was born in about 1712, as he was 47 years old when he died. He married (1) Marie Doiron on 3 August 1733, in Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Grand Pre, Acadie. They are the parents of at least the following: 1) Anastasie (1744-1785) md Amand Vigneault 2) Augustin-Remi (1745-) md Osithe Hebert He married (2) Madeleine Gaudreau on 17 November 1753, Port-Lajoie, Île-du-Prince-Édouard, Canada (per S. A. White). He died during the expulsion, at sea - between Louisbourg, Nova Scotia and St-Servan, France. They traveled on one of the "Cinq Paquebots Anglais" ("Five English Ships") - Yarmouth, Patience, Mathias, Restoration, John Samuel. They arrived in St-Malo on January 23, 1759. Please note that he is listed in the Tres-Ste-Trinité de Cherbourg registry as being buried on 2 June 1759, but Stephen A. White lists that he died at sea en route to France as does the ship log. They were on the Yarmouth, which reached Saint Malo on 23 January 1759. Since there is a question on his actual burial, I have listed him as being buried at sea, in order to be safe. | Boudrot, Pierre (I11308)
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1958 | Pierre is the son of Noel Suret and Francoise Colarde. He married Jeanne Pellerin on 4 February 1709, in Port-Royal, Acadie. They are the parents of the following: 1) Pierre (1709-) md Catherine Brault 2) Joseph (1712-1750) md Marguerite Terriot 3) Anne (1714-) md Joseph Doucet | Surette, Pierre Joseph I (I9489)
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1959 | Pierre Sire was born in St. Germain de Bourgeuil, Touraine-en-Loire, France (200 km SW of Paris) about 1644 and was a gunsmith/locksmith. Historians say he came over with the French army to service their weapons. He was 24 yrs. old when he arrived in Acadie in 1668. He married Marie Bourgeois 10 April 1670 in Port Royal. Her Father, Dr. Jacques Bourgeois was the army surgeon and also served the people. Dr. Jacques Bourgeois was a 21 year old surgeon who had arrived with a group of military emigrants in 1642. Census 1671- Port Royal, Acadia, Canada - Pierre SIRE, gunsmith (locksmith), Marie Bourgeois, wife, 18, Jean, son, 3/12, 11 cattle, 6 sheep. Public Archives, Ottawa, Canada, film C-2752,( http://acadian-genweb.acadian-home.org/frames.html) A review of the original record of the 1671 census clearly shows Pierre was not an Armurier: but with some fading: more probably a Suerrier. This is still a metal working trade, equal in general background to locksmith, but also clock-maker. This trade would include smithing as well and some armorer work. His economic standing and education and specific French Batarde handwriting developed from at least 10 years of schooling. He didn't do much farming in Acadia for his first years: as evidenced by the small establishment he had in 1671: which implies he had income of some sort and he married the daughter of the most well set man (the Royal Surgeon) in Acadia as well. That ship carrying Le Borgne and Bourge that arrived in 1668 for the handover is the most likely mode of Pierre's arrival and it is known that it was a French naval ship from Dieppe. (2011, 2012 V.Suzanne Sears) (http://genforum.genealogy.com/cyr/messages/2217/2174/2138/.html ) From: cajun@@acadian.org To: ACADIAN-CAJUN-L@@rootsweb.com SOURCE: "Madawaskan Heritage": There is good reason to believe that PIERRE SYRE arrived in Acadia after the signing of the Treaty of Breda (July 11, 1667) and before the arrival of Hector D'Andigne, Sieur de Grandfontaine (August 5, 1670). PIERRE SYRE was the first of the SIRE (CYR) line to arrive in Acadia. Pierre Laurent Molins made the following entry in an all-important census of 1671: "Gunsmith; PIERRE SYRE, 27 years of age, his wife Marie Bourgeois 18 years of age, their child a boy named Jehan, 3 months. Their livestock; eleven cattles and six sheeps ; no land under cultivation. The Center of Acadian Studies in Moncton, New Brunswick, has in its custody a file of Placide Gaudet's papers on the SIRE (CYR) family. Two rough notes made by the eminent genealogist caught my eye: "PIERRE SYRE; gunsmith, native of France where he was born in 1644; married at Port Royal in 1669, Marie Bourgeois born in 1652, daughter of Jacques Bourgeois (surgeon) and Jeanne Trahan. PIERRE died in Beaubassin where, in 1680, his widow married a second time Germain Girouard, son of Francois and Jeanne Aucoin. The date of Marie's second marriage is in church records, but the rest of Gaudet's note consists of deductions indubitably based on the 1671 Acadian Census. For example, simple subtraction produces 1644 as the year of Pierre's birth. The year of his marriage could be said to be 1669 or 1670, since his son was then three months old (at the time the census was taken), which was in the early Spring. Jean was probably born in January 1671 , or even December 1670". Gaudet's second note read: "PIERRE CYR; armurier, nee 1644 en France, vint en Acadie vers 1668; il est mort en 1679 a Beaubassin". Gaudet may not have intended these notes be considered definitive and taken for gospel but, along with the census, they constitute our best information concerning PIERRE SIRE and they have been widely accepted. It can be argued that PIERRE arrived in Acadia about 1668, since his wife was a local girl and he already had a three month old son in early 1671 (when the census was taken). He could not have been in this situation had he arrived in August of 1670 with Grandfontaine. Similarly, it is unlikely that he came before 1668, because Frenchmen were not coming to English occupied Acadia between 1654 and 1667. It can also be argued that he died in 1679, because his son Guillaume was born in 1680. Church records confirm his widow remarried June 9, 1680. Pierre's occupation as a gunsmith, suggests a connection with the military, although this is hardly conclusive. Was his arrival in Acadia related to the dismantling of the Carignan Regiment in Quebec in 1667-68? De Tracy and Talon had returned to France during those years with many officers and men of the Regiment, to say nothing of the 403 veterans who had opted to stay in the "new world". PIERRE may or may not have been a veteran of the Carignan Regiment; he may or may not have had any connection with Grandfontaine or his fellow officers; he may or may not have come direct from France as a military man or as a civilian. | Cyr, Pierre (I13036)
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1960 | Pierre Thibodeaux, III, Son of Pierre "le jeune" Thibodeaux, II & Anne Marie Aucoin. Husband of Francoise Saulnier . Father of, Marie Josephe, Jean Baptiste, Anne Marie, Adelaide Francoise, Susanne, Celeste, Pierre Cyrille & Pierre Thibodeaux, IV. Y-DNA Base Haplogroup R-M269 Big Y 700 R-FT273430. Haplogroup Assignment From The Acadian AmerIndian Ancestry DNA Project @ FTDNA. ~ Deadra Doucet Bourke Full Sequence MtDNA Haplogroup J1b1a1. Haplogroup Assignment From The Acadian AmerIndian Ancestry DNA Project @ FTDNA. ~ Deadra Doucet Bourke | Thibodeaux, Pierre Cyrille Sr. (I9894)
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1961 | Pierre was a prisoner at Fort Cumberland, escaped and was a refugee ay St John River in 1756. Then to Islet and Kamouraska from 1758-1767, then to St Anne in 1767. CORMIER, PIERRE, settler; b. 3 Aug. 1734 in Rivière-des-Héberts (near River Hebert), N.S., son of Pierre Cormier and Cécile Thibodeau (Thibaudeau); d. 24 March 1818 in Memramcook, N.B. Pierre Cormier?s family moved about 1750 to the French-controlled side of the Chignecto Isthmus, perhaps in response to the blandishments of Jean-Louis Le Loutre*, and in 1752 they were living at Aulac (N.B.). Early in 1755 Pierre married Anne Gaudet, daughter of Augustin Gaudet and Agnès Chiasson of nearby Tintemarre (Tantramar). Anne was often called Nannette; hence Pierre came to be nicknamed Pierrot à Nannette. They were to have five sons and two daughters. Cormier?s repute derives from the colourful tradition of his escape from the British on the eve of the Acadian deportation of 1755 [see Charles Lawrence*]. There is more than one version of this tradition, but the greatest credibility may be given that recorded in 1877 by the genealogist Placide Gaudet*, who had the advantage of consulting many of Cormier?s grandchildren. According to Gaudet?s account, Pierrot, taken prisoner with his brothers at Jolic?ur (Jolicure, N.B.), was put aboard a Carolina-bound deportation vessel but slipped overboard the night before its departure. By creeping through the tall hay on shore he attained an aboiteau guarded by British soldiers and, when their backs were turned, clambered onto the butt of a timber over the water. Swinging from one butt end to another, he succeeded in crossing the aboiteau unobserved. On the other bank he again crept through the fields until he was able to break for the woods. After narrowly evading a band of soldiers tracking him with a dog, he arrived at an extent of water separating him from an Acadian encampment. Once recognized he was soon crossed over. Learning from these families that his own had fled the night before toward Quebec, Pierrot immediately left in search of them. The Cormiers were reunited at Sainte-Anne (near Fredericton, N.B.), where they remained until Robert Monckton*?s raids persuaded them to move to Kamouraska (Que.), likely in 1758. According to another tradition, Pierrot, Jacques, and François Cormier were serving in the militia at the fall of Quebec in 1759. Subsequently they joined a French frigate at Pointe-Lévy (Lauzon and Lévis), lured with other young Acadians by promises of passage to France. After engagement with two British war vessels near the fîlets Jacques-Cartier, the frigate ran aground. Only about 60 of 160 crew members managed to swim ashore through the icy April waters, but these included the three Cormier brothers. This tradition likely refers to the encounter off Cap-Rouge between Jean Vauquelin* and Robert Swanton* in May 1760. Pierre Cormier and Anne Gaudet resided at L?Islet (Que.) between 1761 and 1764, but about 1765 they returned to Sainte-Anne with his mother and four brothers. By July 1783 Pierrot had cleared 20 acres of a tract he had continuously occupied for 13 years. The Acadians of Sainte-Anne had not secured title to their farms, however, and grants to disbanded soldiers and loyalists were soon encroaching on what they considered to be their land. They deemed the small acreage reserved to them insufficient to support their families. Learning of vacant land on the west side of the Memramcook River, about 20 families removed there between autumn 1786 and summer 1787, including those of Pierre Cormier and four of his married children. Pierrot had meantime lost his Nannette, and his aged mother died during the trip. The vacant land at Memramcook had been granted to Joseph Goreham* and then sold to Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres*. On 5 June 1792 the Cormiers and others presented a memorial to the New Brunswick government complaining of the ?extravagant? demands of DesBarres?s assign, Mary Cannon*, and arguing that his land should be escheated and granted to them in consideration of the substantial improvements made during their occupation. Their efforts were thwarted by DesBarres and his agents, but it was not until after 1809 that they were turned out to find other places to live in the Memramcook valley. Stephen A. White AD, Charente-Maritime (La Rochelle), État civil, Beaubassin, 1712?48 (mfm. at CÉA). AN, Section Outre-mer, G1, 466, no.30. Arch. paroissiales, Saint-Thomas (Memramcook, N.-B.), Reg. des baptémes, mariages et sépultures (mfm. at CÉA). CÉA, Fonds Placide Gaudet, 1.28-6,1.33-7, 1.64-24; ?Notes généalogiques sur les familles acadiennes, c.1600?1900,? dossier Cormier-3. PANB, RG 10, RS108, Petition of William Anderson, 1785; Petition of Charles Bickle, 1785; Petition of French inhabitants of Dorchester, 1809; Petition of John Jouett, 1785; Petition of John Ruso, 1785; Petition of Joseph Sayre, 1786. PANS, RG 1, 409. Tanguay, Dictionnaire, 3: 129. Clément Cormier, ?La famille Cormier en Amérique,? L?Évangéline (Moncton, N.-B.), 8 août 1951: 4?5; 10 août 1951: 5. Placide Gaudet, ?La famille Cormier,? Le Moniteur acadien (Shédiac, N.-B.), 22, 29 janv. 1885. General Bibliography | Cormier, Pierre (I1561)
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1962 | Pierre's last name is spelled Commeau on the census records. He's the son of Jean de Comeau IV Lord, Ecuyer de Chassenay and Marguerite Ocquidem. He married Rose Bayol in Port Royal, Acadia in about 1649. They are the parents of the following: 1) Estienne (1650-1723) md Marie-Marguerite Landry and Marie-Anne Lefebvre 2) Pierre (1652-1730) md Jeanne Bourg 3) Francoise (1654-1678) md Jehan Gaudet 4) Jean (1657-1720) md Francoise Hebert and Catherine Joseph 5) Pierre (1658-about 1740) md Jeanne Bourgeois 6) Antoine (1661-) md Dorcus Wooden 7) Jeanne Commeau (1662-1725) md md Etienne Hebert 8) Marie-Jeanne (1664-) md Etienne Rivet 9) Jean-Augustin (1665-1755) md Catherine Babin Please note that his parental information is from Family historian Father James Comeau, O.P., who claims that the Pierre Comeau who came to Acadia was the son of Jean de Comeau de Créancy, seigneur of Chassenay, in the upper Loire valley, and Marguerite Ocquidem de La Choselle. I don't know that this has been proven. | Comeau, Pierre (I3376)
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1963 | Pierre-born c1765, aboard ship, in St.-Domingue, or in New Orleans; son of Pierre ARCENEAUX & Marie-Josèphe GODIN dit Lincour; brother of Eusèbe; arrived LA 1765, an infant; in Cabanocé census, 1766, right [west] bank, age 1, with parents & brother; in Cabanocé census, 1769, right [west] bank, age 5, with mother, stepfather Basile PRÉJEAN, & brother Usèbe; in Ascension census, 1777, right [west] bank, age 13, with mother, stepfather, 1 full brother, & 3 half-siblings; married, age 21, (1)Pélagie, daughter of Jacques BEBE & Marguerite LANDRY, 6 Apr 1786, St.-Jacques; married, age 22, (2)Angélique, daughter of Michel BOURGEOIS & his second wife Anne LANDRY, 24 Apr 1787, St.-Jacques; moved to Lafourche valley; in Valenzuéla census, 1795, called Pedro ARSENAUX, age 33[sic], with wife Angéla age 26, sons Valentin age 4, Alexandro age 2, daughter Enrrieta age 6, & Josef PERON age 52[sic], next to father-in-law; in Valenzuéla census, 1797, called Pierre ARCENEAUX, age 34[sic], with wife Angélique age 27, sons Valantin age 4[months?], Alexandre age 3, & orphan Joseph PERON age 12, 0 slaves, next to father-in-law; in Valenzuéla census, 1798, called Pierre ARCENEAUX, age 35[sic], with wife Angélique age 26, sons Pierre age 8, Alexandre age 6, Pierre age 2, & daughter Henriette age 10, 40/3 arpents, 4 slaves, next to brother-in-law Jean-Baptiste FOREST; moved to Attakapas District, late 1790s, settled on the Teche near Atakapas Post, now St. Martinville; died [buried] Atakapas 5 Jan 1799, age 34 | Arseneaux, Pierre (I7177)
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1964 | PIKE, ANN PENTLAND Jan. 16, 1933 to Sept. 14, 2010 Ann Pentland Pike, 77, died peacefully at home in Chula Vista, September 14, 2010, from pancreatic cancer. Born in Buffalo, NY, daughter of Marium and Lewis Pentland, Ann grew up in Wallingford, CT, where she was an All-New England Field Hockey player and synchronized swimmer. Ann attended Bradford Junior College and Columbia School of Nursing. She enjoyed cooking, skiing, tennis, golf, gardening, nature, traveling, and reading. Ann was a people person and took the time to talk to everyone she came in contact with. Ann was always there for others. Ann served as President of the Holden Women's Club, President of the Worcester Music Guild, Vice President of the Women's Republican Club of Chula Vista, and as a Eucharistic Visitor for Church of the Good Shepherd. She was a scout leader for her children, sang in a choir and served as a Candy Stripe Coordinator. She is survived by her husband of 54 years, Robert Pike, their children, Robert and Terri Pike, James and Kelly Pike, Melissa Pike, John and Jean Pike , five grandchildren, brother Richard Pentland of Massachusetts and his wife Jean, her childhood friend. A Memorial service celebrating Ann's life will be held at 2:00 p.m. on October 1st, Friday, at Church of the Good Shepherd, Bonita, CA. In lieu of flowers the family suggests donations to the, or San Diego Hospice. | Pentland, Ann (I14063)
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1965 | Pilgrim Francis Eaton married 3rd, about 1624. CHRISTIAN PENN , a passenger on the Anne; she married 2nd, in July 1634, Francis Billington, son of JOHN BILLINGTON. Francis & Christian had 3 children: Rachel Ramsden, Benjamin, & a child who was deemed an idiot and not named in any record, though he/she lived at least to the age of 21. Source: Anderson's Great Migration Study Project. Find A Grave contributor Julie Evans adds: Christian Penn: b. Abt 1607, England. m. (1) Bet 1625 - 1634, MA, Francis Eaton. m. (2) Jul 1634, Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA, USA, Francis Billington. d. Jul 1684, Middleboro, Plymouth Co., MA. Burial: Unknown Christian PENN #18970, (daughter of George PENN #18982 and Elizabeth _______ #18983) Born: Abt 1607 in England. While she did not come to America on the Mayflower, she arrived shortly thereafter, between 1621 - 1632. m. (1) Marriage: Francis Eaton between 1625 - 1634. Maybe before 1632 and probably before 1627. Three children. m. (2) Marriage: Francis Billington to Christian Penn (Eaton), July 1634, Plymouth. Nine children. m. Jul 1634, in Plymouth, Plymouth, MA, to Francis Billington, In July 1634, Francis married Christian Eaton, the widow of Mayflower passenger Francis Eaton who had died the previous year autumn. Christian brought three of her own children, and one step-child from her deceased husband's previous marriage, all under the age of 14. With Francis Billington, she had nine more children. They raised their family at Plymouth, and moved in their later years to Middleboro, where they both died in 1684. The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers, p. 156: "CHRISTIAN PENN THIS passenger is assumed to be a female but no connection with any other passenger is known. She received one share in the 1627 division. As the second wife of Francis Eaton (q. v.) of the Mayflower bears this rare baptismal name it seems probable that she married him between 1627 and 1633." The English Ancestry and Homes of the Pilgrim Fathers, Additions and Corrections p. vii: "Page 156: CHRISTIAN PENN. She received one share in the 1623 division. As Christian Eaton she received one share in the 1627 division, so she married Francis Eaton before 1627. As they had a daughter, Rachell in 1627 they probably married around 1625." Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. 1, page 448, <1>: "<1> p. 438, The name of Francis' [Eaton] 2nd wife is not known. It is believed that she might be the unnamed maid servant who came with the Carver family on the Mayflower. Gov. Bradford said she had "married and died a year or two after". The files do not identify his 3rd wife, she was Christian Penn who married 2nd Francis Billington2." Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. 1: Francis EATON1, d. pre 8 Nov. 1633, Plymouth (inv.) Sarah ( ) EATON, d. 1621, Plymouth CHILD OF Francis EATON1 & 1st Sarah ( ): <1> Samuel EATON2, b. 1620, England CHILDREN OF Francis EATON1 & 3rd Christian ( ): (3) <1> Rachel EATON2, b. c1625; d. pre Oct. 1661* Benjamin EATON2, b. aft. 1 June 1627 ; d. 16 Jan. 1711/2, Plympton, "aged" <2> Child, b. ( ), d. aft. 1650, unm." Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. I: Children of Francis Billington & Christian (Penn) Eaton: Elizabeth Joseph Martha Mary Isaac Child, b. pre 1651, d.y. Rebecca Dorcas, b. c1650; d. aft. 1711; m. Edward May, d. 10 Aug. 1691, Plymouth Mercy [NOTE: Is unnamed child Francis, Jr? Is Dorcas who I have as Desire?]. Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. 1, p. 106-111: "JOHN BILLINGTON MICRO #1 OF 2 John BILLINGTON1, d. 1630, Plymouth <1> CHILDREN OF John BILLINGTON1 & Elinor ( ): (2) John BILLINGTON2, d. pre 1630 <1> Francis BILLINGTON2, b. c1604-06 ; d. 3 Dec 1684 <1> Thomas BILLINGTON, d. pre 1 May 1662, Taunton (inv.) Mrs. Abraham BILLINGTON, d. 1825 CHILDREN of Samuel BILLINGTON & Eliza Nickerson (dau of David); (4) Levi BILLINGTON, b. ( ) Eliza BILLINGTON, b. ( ) Samuel BILLINGTON, b. ( ) Mary BILLINGTON, b. ( ) FRANCIS BILLINGTON2 (John1) CHILDREN OF Francis BILLINGTON2 & Christian (PENN) Eaton: (9) <2> Elisabeth BILLINGTON3, b. 10 July 1635; d. aft. 22 Mar. 1709/10, Providence RI Joseph BILLINGTON3, b. pre Feb. 1736/37; d. betw. 7 Jan 1684/5 - 1692, prob. Block Island RI Martha BILLINGTON3, b. c1638; d. aft 9 Jun 1704, Plainfield CT Mary BILLINGTON3, b. c1640; d. aft. 28 Jun 1717 Isaac BILLINGTON3, b. c1644, d. 11 Dec. 1909, ae 66, Middleboro Child, b. pre 1650, d.y. Rebecca BILLINGTON3, b. 8 June 1647; poss. d. y. Dorcas BILLINGTON3, b. c1650; d. aft 1711 Mercy BILLINGTON3, b. 25 Feb. 1651/2; d. 28 Sept. 1718, Rehoboth Edward MAY, d. 10 Aug. 1691, Plymouth <3> CHILDREN OF EDWARD MAY & Dorcas BILLINGTON3: <4> CHILDREN OF Richard Bullock & Elizabeth BILLINGTON3: (4) <5> ...." [p. 109] "CHILDREN OF John MARTIN & Mercy BILLINGTON3: (4) John MARTIN4, 10 Jun 1682 Robert Martin4, b. 9 Sept. 1683 Desire MARTIN4, b. 20 Mar. 1684/5 Francis MARTIN4, b. 7 May 1686 Desire CARPENTER5 (Desire Martin4), b. 3 June 1716; d. 28 May 1800, Stevens Corner Cem., Rehoboth Hezekiah HIX, b. c1715, d. 5 Feb. 1788*, ae 73, Stevens Corner Cem,, Rehoboth CHILDREN OF Hezekiah HIX & Desire Carpenter5: (8) Hannah HIX6, b. 17 May 1740 James HIX6, b. 21 Apr. 1742 Mary HIX6, b. 17 Mar. 1746/7 Desire HIX6, b. 27 Dec. 1750 Gideon HIX6, b. 26 May 1752 Jotham HIX6, b. 26 May 1752 (twin) Nathan HIX6, b. c1761* Renew CARPENTER5 (Desire Martin4), b. 6 Jun 1714, d. 9 Feb. 1787, Stevens Corner Cem., Rehoboth Jabez Round, b. c1708, d. 14 Mar. 1790, Stevens Corner Cem., Rehoboth <28> CHILDREN OF Jabez ROUND & Renew CARPENTER5: (11) Isaac ROUND6, B. 23 Jan. 1733/4 Jabez ROUND6, b. 8 Jan. 1735/6; d. 20 May 1806*" [p. 110] "110 BILLINGTON Abigail ROUND6, b. Jan. 1740 Isaiah ROUND6, b. 30 Jan. 1741 Rebecca ROUND6, b. 21 Mar. 1742 Sibbel ROUND6, b. 10 Sept. 1744 Oliver ROUND6, b. 1 Apr 1747 Rhoda ROUND6, b. 26 Jan. 1750 Esther ROUND6, b. 8 Oct 1752 Simeon ROUND6, b. 4 Feb. 1755 ************ FOOTNOTES <1> p. 106, John Billington, b. c1580, poss. Lincolnshire, Eng. , d. in Sept. 1630 when he was executed for murder. His wife Elinor (not Helen or Ellen), maiden name unknown, and was living 2 Mar. 1642/3, the wife of Gregory Armstrong. John Billington2 was living at the time of the May 1627 Cattle Division but deceased at the time of his father's death in Sept. 1630. Francis Billington2's year of birth is uncertain due to conflicting records. He was thought to be "aged forty years or thereabouts" in 1649 (b. c1909) ; age 68 in 1674 (b. c1606) ; and age 80 when he died in 1684 (b. c1604) . <2> p. 106, There is no file sheet listing all the children of Francis & Christian so they have been added for easier reference. Christian (Penn) Eaton is said to have died c1684 (Stoddard:115 says July 1684). The petition of her son, Isaac Billington, (1 Mar. 1703/4), implies she died the same year as her husband Francis..."They were near 80 years old when they dyed: & it is now 18 years since." Unfortunately, the time span he mentions does not prove Christian died in 1684 but rather 1686. His referral to "18 years since" could refer not to the death of his parents but to the death of his last surviving parent, Christian, in 1686. <3> p. 106, "Bowman gives his date of death as 20 Aug. although in checking the reference given (MD 16:62) it clearly says 10 [underlined] Aug. <4> p. 106, Four unnamed children...." Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. I: p. 111: "Footnotes for John Billington: REFERENCE LIST: GENEALOGICAL ARTICLES PERTAINING TO BILLINGTON FAMILY RESEARCH Mayflower Descendant (MD) (1899-1937) 15:247-253 - Washburn Notes: Will of John Washburn Mayflower Quarterly (MQ) (1975-1990) 46:14-15 - Presidential Mayflower Connections (correction - MQ 46:197) 48:67-71 - Esther (Carpenter)(Bardeen) Bowen, An Elusive Billington Descendant 49:170-179 - The Martins of Swansea & The Martins of Rehoboth 50:21-30 - Judah Fuller6, The Bloomer's Daughter 50:71-76 - The Additional Children of Joseph & Mercy (Canedy) Williams & Their Migrations to Western MA & Groton NY 50:180-187 - There were Three Hezekiahs, Not One, In the Round Family 51:196-198 - The Family of Jabez & Renew (Carpenter) Round, A John Billington Line 52:137-143 - Desire Billington and Her Grandfather Francis Billington's Estate Miscellaneous Mayflower Families In Progress: John Billington of the Mayflower and His Descendants for Five Generations (MFIP), pub. by General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 1988. NEHGR 124:116 - Francis Billington of Lincolnshire TG 3:228-248 - Some Descendants of Francis Billington of the Mayflower * * * * * * * * * * * **Now available: Mayflower Families Through Five Generations: John Billington of the Mayflower (MF5G), pub. by General Society of Mayflower Descendants. 1991." Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume Twenty One, John Billington, General Society of Mayflower Descendants 1620 Plymouth 1857, p. 6-7: "SECOND GENERATION 2 FRANCIS 2 BILLINGTON (John 1) b. England, prob. Lincolnshire, about 1606 to 1609; d. Middleboro 3 Dec. 1684 "aged 80." He m. Plymouth July 1634 CHRISTIAN (PENN) EATON, b. England ca. 1607; d. Middleboro ca. 1684. She m. (1) Plymouth 1624 or 1625 Pilgrim Francis Eaton, b. England; d. Plymouth between 25 Oct. and 8 Nov. 1633; by whom she had three children: Rachel, Benjamin and another, living in 1651, whose name is unknown. Francis Billington lived at Plymouth until 1669 when he moved to Middleboro and occupied land granted to him as one of the "First Comers." He lived htere until his death, except for a few years during King Philip's War when he fled to Plymouth for safety. On 18 April 1642 his daughter Elizabeth was apprenticed; and 14 January 1642/3 he bound out son Joseph, "aged vi or vii" and two daughters, probably Martha and Mary, one five years old and the other even younger. Bradford stated in 1651 that Francis Billington had eight children. On 2 March 1642 Francis Billington of New Plymouth, planter, sold to Mr. John Atwood of Plymouth, land in Plymouth. In 1674 Francis Billington deposed that he was aged 68. In his old age Francis Billington was dependent on his son Isaac for support and died intestate. No probate record appears, although son Isaac petitioned the probate court in 1703/4 for title to all his father's Middleboro lands, stating he had had sole care of his parents in their old age. A Plymouth County Court Case of Sept. 1722, brought by Isaac's daughter Desire 4 (Billington) Bonney and her husband, James, shows that Francis Billington died intestate leaving issue two sons and five daughters, viz: son Joseph (eldest, who inherited a double portion) and Isaac; daughters Elizabeth, Mary, Dorcad, Mercy and Martha, with a total of eight shares in the estate. A 3 Dec. 1719 quiclaim deed from Francis's father Francis and grandfather (unnamed) Billington (Family #12), reading "my father Francis and grandfather (unnamed) Billington" seems to imply a son Francis, Jr. But in the absence of any mention of such a son in contemporaneous Plymouth records, coupled with the fact that Francis's 4 deed evidently transferred the shares of Joseph Billington, we conclude that the deed contains a clerical error. The original must have read "my father Joseph [underlined] and grandfather Francis [underlined] Billington." Indications are that the seven children named in the Bonney suit and their progeny were the only survivors of Francis 2 Billington. A more detailed account has been published. Children (BILLINGTON) all b. probably Plymouth: 3 i ELIZABETH 3 b. 10 July 1635 4 ii JOSEPH b. 1636 (bef. 2 Feb. 1636/7) 5 iii MARTHA b. ca. 1638 6 iv MARY b. ca. 1640 7 v ISAAC b. ca. 1644 (based on age at d.) vi child d. y. vii REBECCA b. 8 June 1648; dvidently d.y. 8 viii DORCAS b. ca. 1650 9 ix MERCY prob. unnamed dau. b. 25 Feb. 1651/2" Mayflower Deeds & Probates: Francis BILLINGTON to William CROW. ...30 July 1666, Francis & Christian BILLINGTON deed land to William CROW." Mayflower Dees & Probates - Petition: "Francis Billington2 (John1) Petitioner of Issac BILLINGTON. ,Plymouth Co. PR #2001> ...1 Mar. 1703/4...A true Narrative or Relation or A Bill of Changes drawn up by Isaac BILLINGTON and his wife Hannah...concerning the great expence & charge they were at, in keeping their aged parents, Francis & Christian BILLINGTON, late of Middleborough in the County of Plymouth in New England, deceased; for the space of 7 years, even to their Death & Burail. They were near 80 years old when they dyed; & it is now 18 years since. Soon after ye former, never to be forgotten, improverishing indian Warrs, my aged Father, Francis BILLINGTON, came to me and told me he must return again to Middleborugh for he could no longer subsist at Plymouthy, & urged me with ye greatest importunity to goe with hi8m, alledging that he should perish if I did not, for there his lands & livings were; whereupon (tho then I lived comfortably at Marshfield) I removed with my family to Middleborough to take care off & provide for my aged Parents, according to their request. And did for near ye space of 7 years provide both house, food and apparal for them & kept them both in sickness & health; & at death was at ye charge of ye funerall; Ant Lieut. TOMPSON then Selectman of ye Town promised me that if I would take care of them & not suffer them to want, I should have all ye estate that my father left at his decease & whatever divisions & allotments of lands might fall to him & his heirs, should be mine; And if I did not take care of them all must be sold by ye Selectmen for their relief. And indeed what my Parents left at their decease was but a small recompence, for ye great charge and trouble that I was at, for near seaven years together; which if I should reckon by six shillings pr week would amount to above ten times ye value of all the lands. Now mmy humble request to ye honoured Court is, that (seeing I can have no other recompence by ye lands) it may be settled upon me & mine; That none of ye rest of ye relation, seing that never did any thing towards releiving them in their wants, may trouble me or mine in our peaceable & quiet possession of those late divisions of lands, falling to my deceased father, which I have purchased at so dear a rate...Signed by Issac & Hannah BILLINGTON." Mayflower Deeds & Probates 61 (Washburn), Fn: Re Francis Billington: Issac Billington & Joseph Billington: <1> .58, Since there has arisen some question as to the accuracy of the clerk's copy of this deed, I have left out the name in question so as not to compound the error and confuse the family researcher. While the clerk's copoy says "my Honoured Father Francis BILLINGTON" and does not name the Grandfather, it should probably be the other way around - "my Honoured Father" and "my Honoured Grandfather Francis BILLINGTON". The grandfather in question, Francis2 had only two sons, Isaac & Joseph, he did not have a son Francis. See MF5G 5:50 and MQ 52:133." Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol I, page 110, Footnote: "Christian (Penn) Eaton is said to have died c 1684 (Stoddard:115 says July 1684). The petition of her son, Isaac Billington, (1 Mar. 1703/4), implies she died the same year as her husband Francis..."They were near 80 years old when they dyed; & it is now 18 years since." Unfortunately, the time span he mentions does not prove Christian died in 1684 but rather 1686. His referral to "18 years since" could refer not to the death of his parents but to the death of his last surviving parent, Christian, in 1686. " d. July 1684 in Middleboro, Plymouth County, Massachusetts. d. Abt. 1684, Middleboro, Plymouth Co, MA. | Penn, Christian (I9368)
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1966 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | OGrady, Mary Theresa (I67)
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1967 | Please note that according to Stephen A. White, there is no record of Francois' death or burial. While it's possible that he died on this date at sea, since that's during the deportation, Stephen A. White has compiled the ship registers for the deportations. There isn't a record for this Francois as being on board any of the deportation ships nor dying at sea. | Dugas, François (I9206)
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1968 | Please pray for the repose of the soul of Ernest Freyou, whose passing from this life his family announces with great sadness, yet profound faith in the love and mercy of God. He passed away surrounded by love, respect and gratitude at the age of 78, on Friday evening, 1 September, at his home on Freyou Road following a courageously fought extended illness. He leaves his wife of nearly 60 years, the former Deanna Fouquier; his five children, Jeffery of Thibodaux and his wife the former Lucy Coquat, Joni of New Iberia and her husband A.B. ?Dolph? Curet, III, Joy of New Iberia and her husband Michael Bonin, Jason of Breaux Bridge and his wife the former Cindy Carpenter, and Jeremy of Youngsville and his wife the former Lauren Senette; eighteen grandchildren, Heath and Lee Freyou, Beau, Mary Claire, Caroline, Andrew and Adam Curet, Breigh Bonin Casanova and husband Brian, and Alex and Ian Bonin, Jacob, Joshua, Emily, Jordan and Joseph Freyou, and Emma, William and Thomas Freyou; two great-grandchildren, Daniel and Katherine Casanova; his brothers, Glenn and Wayne of New Iberia; and sister, Phyllis Freyou Phillips of New Iberia. Going before him were his parents, Sidney ?Doc? Freyou and Irene Landry Freyou, and his grandparents, Simon and Anastasia Broussard Freyou and George Joseph and Feliciane Louviere Landry. He was born in New Iberia and grew up on the family farm in rural Iberia Parish. He always cherished the lessons about life and hard work he learned as a boy working with his family on the farm. He attended Peebles School, was a graduate of New Iberia High School and the University of Southwestern Louisiana. Embarking upon a life of generous duty to God, family and country, he joined the Louisiana Army National Guard in 1957, was commissioned an officer in 1960, and served a long distinguished career in Artillery, Infantry, Transportation and Finance before retiring a Colonel of the United States Army Reserve in 1990. After serving Iberia Parish as Secretary-Treasurer of the Police Jury from 1966 until 1983, during which time he was active in the Louisiana Secretary- Treasurer?s Association, he turned to a career in banking when he accepted an invitation to work for the New Iberia National Bank, whose president and CEO he became in 1988 after its re-branding as New Iberia Bank. He remained as regional president of Regions of Acadiana after that bank?s purchase of New Iberia Bank in 1997, until his retirement in 2005. In retirement, he sought to serve Iberia Parish once again and was elected as Iberia Parish President from 2008 until 2012. He also spent years serving on the boards of Iberia Medical Center, Teche Electric Cooperative (president), the Iberia Industrial Development Foundation (chairman), the Greater Iberia Chamber of Commerce, First National Bankers? Bank in Baton Rouge, CoBank in Denver, Colorado, Teche Federal Bank in New Iberia, and the advisory board of IberiaBank. He was proud to serve on the boards of the Community Foundation of Acadiana, the Sugarcane Festival Association, the Acadian Memorial Foundation, the Shadows-on-the-Teche, the United Way of Iberia, as well as on the finance commission of St. Nicholas Church in Lydia. He was always especially proud of his attachment to the Iberia Parish 4-H Foundation of which he was a founding member, and was honored in 2016 by induction into the Louisiana 4-H Hall of Fame. He loved to travel and most cherished his pilgrimages to the Catholic shrines of North America, Europe and the Holy Land. The family respectfully requests visitors to come to Pellerin Funeral Home in New Iberia between 3:00 and 9:00 pm on Tuesday, 5 September, and again from 9:00 am until 1:30 pm on Wednesday, 6 September. The Holy Rosary will be prayed at 7:00 pm on Tuesday evening. A Requiem Mass will be at 2 pm on Wednesday, 6 September, at the Church of Our Lady of Perpetual Help in New Iberia, Rev. Fr. Bill Melancon, presiding. Entombment will follow in the Holy Family Cemetery in New Iberia. Pallbearers will be his grandsons. Honorary pallbearers will be Terrel Dressel, Allen Gosnell, Preston Guillotte, Kenneth ?Kenu? Romero, E.P. ?Topper? Breaux, Leo Lancon, Tracy Migues, Jackie Judice, Ray Pellerin, Henry Fairchild, Alfred Ackal, Tommy LeBlanc, Huey Olivier, Jerry Shea, Mike Berry, Art Suberbielle, Chris Jordan, Jerome Weber, Reagan Sutton, Dr. Charles Miller, and godson Matthew Freyou. The family wishes to express its heartfelt gratitude for the kind and superb care provided over the years and recently by Dr. Jimmy Falterman, Dr. Gene Brierre, Dr. Jon Leleux, Dr. D.J. Daly, Dr. William Wierda and Dr. Techksell Washington and their associates and staffs, and by the inimitable nursing staff of the 5th floor of Our Lady of Lourdes Medical Center, and for the tender care of Hospice of Acadiana. In lieu of flowers, the family suggests that contributions be made to Catholic Services of Acadiana, the Shadows-on-the-Teche, M D Anderson, or Hospice of Acadiana. Pellerin Funeral Home, 502 Jefferson Terrace Blvd, New Iberia, LA 70560, 337.365.3331, is in charge of arrangements. | Freyou, Ernest (I8850)
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1969 | Pocasset-Memorial Funeral Home Jane Augusta Robidoux ( April 19, 1929 - November 26, 2014 ) Jane Augusta (Melanson) Robidoux 85 of Tiverton, RI passed away on Wednesday Nov. 26th. She was the widow of William Robidoux Jr. Born in Fall River, she was the daughter of the late Jane Augusta (Reid) and Joseph Henry Melanson. She had previously worked at Lamport Manufacturing until it closed. She is survived by a daughter Cheryl Astorino and her husband Louis. She also leaves a grandaughter Stacy Congdon and her husband Peter along with their family Samantha and Joshua Congdon. In addition she leaves a grandson Steven Astorino and his wife Patricia and their family William, Aiden and Claire Astorino. She is also survived by a sister Marion Sousa (husband Robert) and several nieces and nephews. She was the sister of the late Dorothy White, Richard Melanson and George Melanson. Visitation SUNDAY 4 - 7PM. Her Funeral will be held MONDAY at 9:30 at the POCASSET MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME 462 Main Rd, Tiverton, RI with a Service to commence at 10am in the Funeral Home. Burial at Notre Dame Cemetery. www.almeida-pocasset.com In lieu of flowers, donations may be made to the Visiting Nurse Services of Newport and Bristol Counties 1184 East Main Rd, Portsmouth, RI. 02871 | Melanson, Jane Augusta (I1974)
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1970 | PORT BARRE - Funeral services will be held at 5 p.m. Friday at Sacred Heart Roman Catholic Church for Mrs. Eugenie D. Lalonde, 98, of Port Barre, who died at 11:05 a.m. Wednesday at Opelousas General Hospital after a long illness. Burial will be at the St. Leo Cemetery, Leonville. Visitation began Wednesday and continues until midnight today at the Sibille Funeral Home of Port Barre. Recitation of the rosary will be at 7 p.m. today at the funeral home. Mrs. Lalonde was a member of the St. Leo Ladies Altar Society. Survivors include three sons, Allen Lalonde of New Orleans, Melvin Lalonde of Leonville, and Mitchell Lalonde of Port Arthur, Texas; four daughters, Mrs. Daniel (Agnes) Lalonde of New Orleans, Mrs. Royson (Hilda) Fontenot of Port Barre, Mrs. Abel (Versa ) Robin of Arnaudville, and Mrs. Edwin (Eula) Hayes of Port Barre; one sister, Mrs. Charles (Eunice) Miller of Lafayette; 30 grandchildren; 56 great grandchildren; and 12 great-great-grandchildren. Sibille Funeral of Port Barre is directing. Daily World Opelousas, Louisiana 23 Jan 1986, Thu ? Page 4 | David, Eugenie D (I11778)
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1971 | Port Barre ? Services will be held at 2:00 PM, Wednesday September 13, 2006, at Sacred Heart Cathoic Church in Port Barre, for Hilda ?Te Da? Lalonde Fontenot,82, who died at 11:05AM Monday, September 11, 2006. Burial will follow at Sacred Heart Catholic Cemetery in Port Barre. Ms. Fontenot was a loving wife, mother, and friend who lovingly devoted her whole life to her family and children. Ms. Fontenot is survived by her four sons, Donald ?T? Ray Fontenot and wife Sandra of Port Barre, Johnny Fontenot and wife Tammy of Port Barre, Ricky ?Dut? Fontenot and wife Melissa of Pecanierre, Mike Fontenot and wife Monica of Pecanierre; six daughters, Janelle Babin and husband Ronald of Houma, Cheryl Bonfanti and husband John of Baton Rouge, Enola Stoute and husband Bob of Port Barre, Janice Deanie Bergeron and husband Boo of Pecanierre, Cindy Mahan of Baton Rouge, Becky Fontenot Landry and husband Ronnie of Brusly; a sister, Versie Mae Robin of Cecilia; 21 grandchildren and 21 great grandchildren. She was preceded in death by her husband, Royson ?Son? Fontenot; parents Olide and Eugeneie David Lalonde; four brothers, Numa, Allen, Melvin and Mitchell Lalonde; two sisters, Eula Hayes and Agnes Lalonde; a grandchild Desiree Hidalgo and a great grandchild Chandler Austin Luke and two daughters in law Donna Rae Fontenot and Gail Fontenot. The family requested that visiting hours be observed in the Sibille Funeral Home of Port Barre from 10am-10pm and reopen Wednesday at 8am until the service time. A rosary is scheduled for 7pm on Tuesday. Sibille Funeral Home of Port Barre is in charge of arrangements. | LaLonde, Jeanne Hilda (I11774)
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1972 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Prendiville, Eileen (I12868)
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1973 | PRENDIVILLE, Josephine (Josie), d. 4/3/1992, bur. 6/3/1992, BO #88354, Plot: D10-1105-0 PRENDIVILLE, Michael Joseph, d. 1/10/2000, bur. 5/10/2000, BO #96390, Plot: D10-1105-0 | ??, Josephine (I12880)
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1974 | Prince Albert of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (Francis Albert Augustus Charles Keijsers;[1] created Prince Consort 1857; 26 August 1819 ? 14 December 1861) was the husband of Queen Victoria. He was born at Schloss Rosenau (a former castle converted into a ducal country house) in the Saxon duchy of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld to a family connected to many of Europe's ruling monarchs. At the age of 20, he married his first cousin, Queen Victoria; they had nine children. Initially he felt constrained by his role of consort, which did not afford him any power or responsibilities, but gradually developed a reputation for supporting many public causes, such as educational reform and the abolition of slavery worldwide, and was entrusted with running the Queen's household, office and estates. He was heavily involved with the organisation of the Great Exhibition of 1851, which was a resounding success. The Queen came to depend more and more on his support and guidance. He aided the development of Britain's constitutional monarchy by persuading his wife to be less partisan in her dealings with Parliament?although he actively disagreed with the interventionist foreign policy pursued during Lord Palmerston's tenure as Foreign Secretary. Albert died at the relatively young age of 42, plunging the Queen into deep mourning. On her death in 1901, their eldest son succeeded as Edward VII, the first British monarch of the House of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, named after the ducal house to which Albert belonged. | of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, Prince Albert (I14374)
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1975 | Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn and Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld For his part the Duke of Kent, aged 50, was already considering marriage, and he became engaged to Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (17 August 1786 ? 16 March 1861), who had been the sister-in-law of his now-deceased niece Princess Charlotte. They were married on 29 May 1818 at Schloss Ehrenburg, Coburg, in a Lutheran rite, and again on 11 July 1818 at Kew Palace, Kew, Surrey. Princess Victoria was the daughter of Francis, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, and the sister of Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld, husband of the recently deceased Princess Charlotte. She was a widow: her first husband had been Emich Carl, 2nd Prince of Leiningen, with whom she had had two children: a son Carl and a daughter Feodora. Issue...................... They had one child, Princess Alexandrina Victoria of Kent (24 May 1819 ? 22 January 1901), who became Queen Victoria on 20 June 1837. The Duke took great pride in his daughter, telling his friends to look at her well, for she would be Queen of the United Kingdom. Mistresses Madame de Saint-Laurent- Mistress of Prince Edward Various sources report that the Duke of Kent had mistresses. In Geneva, he had two mistresses, Adelaide Dubus and Anne Moré. Dubus died at the birth of their daughter Adelaide Dubus (1789 ? in or after 1832). Anne Moré was the mother of Edward Schenker Scheener (1789?1853). Scheener married but had no children and returned to Geneva, perhaps significantly in 1837, where he later died. In 1790, while still in Geneva, the Duke took up with "Madame de Saint-Laurent" (born Thérèse-Bernardine Montgenet), the wife of a French colonel. She went with him to Canada in 1791, where she was known as "Julie de Saint-Laurent". She accompanied the Duke for the next 28 years, until his marriage in 1818. The portrait of the Duke by Beechey was hers. Mollie Gillen, who was granted access to the Royal Archive at Windsor Castle, established that no children were born of the 27-year relationship between Edward Augustus and Madame de Saint-Laurent; although many Canadian families and individuals (including the Nova Scotian soldier Sir William Fenwick Williams, 1st Baronet[20]), have claimed descent from them. Such claims can now be discounted in light of this research. Quebec Due to the extreme Mediterranean heat, Edward requested to be transferred to present-day Canada, specifically Quebec, in 1791. Edward arrived in Canada in time to witness the proclamation of the Constitutional Act of 1791, become the first member of the Royal Family to tour Upper Canada and became a fixture of British North American society. Edward and his mistress, Julie St. Laurent, became close friends with the French Canadian family of Ignace-Michel-Louis-Antoine d'Irumberry de Salaberry; the Prince mentored all of the family's sons throughout their military careers. Edward guided Charles de Salaberry throughout his career, and made sure that the famous commander was duly honoured after his leadership during the Battle of Chateauguay. The prince was promoted to the rank of major-general in October 1793. He served successfully in the West Indies campaign the following year, and was commander of the British camp at La Coste during the Battle of Martinique, for which he was mentioned in dispatches by General Charles Grey for his "great Spirit and Activity."He subsequently received the thanks of Parliament. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prince_Edward,_Duke_of_Kent_and_Strathearn | Hannover, Prince Edward Augustus Duke of Kent (I14376)
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1976 | Prince Frederick of Hesse-Kassel was a younger member of the dynasty that ruled the Landgraviate of Hesse-Kassel and a Danish general. He was born as the youngest son of Hereditary Prince Frederick of Hesse-Kassel and Princess Mary of Great Britain. He was the last surviving grandchild of George II of Great Britain, dying one month before Queen Victoria ascended to the throne. He married Princess Caroline of Nassau-Usingen , he bought the castle of Rumpenheim, Offenbach, from his brother Carl, and it became the family's seat. His descendants are known as the Hesse-Kassel-Rumpenheim branch of the House of Hesse, one of only two branches that survived to the present day. Children: William (24 December 1787 ? 5 September 1867), married Louise Charlotte of Denmark (1789?1864) and was the father of Louise of Hesse-Kassel (wife of Christian IX of Denmark). Karl Friedrich (9 March 1789 ? 10 September 1802) Friedrich Wilhelm (24 April 1790 ? 25 October 1876) Ludwig Karl (12 November 1791 ? 12 May 1800) Georg Karl (14 January 1793 ? 4 March 1881) Luise Karoline Marie Friederike (9 April 1794 ? 16 March 1881), married Graf George von der Decken (1787?1859), King's Hanoverian General of the Cavalry (Germany) Marie Wilhelmine Friederike (21 January 1796 ? 30 December 1880), married Georg, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1779?1860) Augusta Wilhelmine Luise (25 July 1797 ? 6 April 1889), married Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge (1774?1850) | Hessen-Kassel, Friedrich III (I14389)
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1977 | Princess Augusta of Hesse-Kassel (German: Auguste Wilhelmine Luise von Hessen-Kassel; 25 July 1797 ? 6 April 1889) was the wife of Prince Adolphus, Duke of Cambridge, the tenth-born child, and seventh son, of George III of the United Kingdom and Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. The longest-lived daughter-in-law of George III, she was the maternal grandmother of Mary of Teck, wife of George V. Princess and Landgravine Augusta of Hesse-Kassel, third daughter of Landgrave Frederick of Hesse-Kassel, and his wife, Princess Caroline of Nassau-Usingen, was born at Rumpenheim Castle (French: Château de Rumpenheim, German: Rumpenheimer Schloss), Kassel, Hesse. Through her father, she was a great-granddaughter of George II of Great Britain, her grandfather having married George II's daughter Mary. Her father's older brother was the Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel. In 1803, her uncle's title was raised to Elector of Hesse ? whereby the entire Kassel branch of the Hesse dynasty gained an upward notch in hierarchy. Marriage On 7 May, in Kassel, and then, again, on 1 June 1818 at Buckingham Palace, Princess Augusta married her second cousin, the Duke of Cambridge, when she was 20 and he 44. Upon their marriage, Augusta gained the style HRH The Duchess of Cambridge. The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge had three children. From 1818 until the accession of Queen Victoria, and the separation of the British and Hanoverian crowns in 1837, the Duchess of Cambridge lived in Hanover, where the Duke served as viceroy on behalf of his brothers, George IV and William IV. In 1827 Augusta allowed that a new village, founded on 3 May 1827 and to be settled in the course of the cultivation and colonisation of the moorlands in the south of Bremervörde, would bear her name. On 19 June the administration of the Hanoveran High-Bailiwick of Stade informed the villagers that she had approved the chosen name Augustendorf for their municipality (since 1974 it is a component locality of Gnarrenburg). The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge returned to Great Britain, where they lived at Cambridge Cottage, Kew, and later at St. James's Palace. The Duchess of Cambridge survived her husband by thirty-nine years, dying at the age of ninety-one. She was buried at St Anne's Church, Kew, but her remains were later transferred to St George's Chapel, Windsor Castle. 25 July 1797 ? 7 May 1818: Her Serene Highness Princess Augusta Wilhelmina Louisa of Hesse[2] 7 May 1818 ? 6 April 1889: Her Royal Highness The Duchess of Cambridge Ancestry [show]Ancestors of Princess Augusta of Hesse-Kassel Issue The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge had three children: Name Birth Death Notes Prince George, Duke of Cambridge 26 March 1819 17 March 1904 illegally married, 1847, Sarah Louisa Fairbrother; had issue Princess Augusta of Cambridge 19 July 1822 4 December 1916 married, 1843, Frederick William, Grand Duke of Mecklenburg-Strelitz; had issue Princess Mary Adelaide of Cambridge 27 November 1833 27 October 1897 married, 1866, Francis, Duke of Teck; had issue, including Mary of Teck, wife of George V | von Hessen-Kassel, Auguste Wilhelmine Luise (I14388)
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1978 | Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (17 August 1786 ? 16 March 1861), later Duchess of Kent and Strathearn, was a German princess and the mother of Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom. As the widow of Charles, Prince of Leiningen (1763?1814), from 1814 she served as regent of the Principality during the minority of her son from her first marriage, Carl, until her second wedding in 1818 to Prince Edward, son of King George III of the United Kingdom.[1] geni.com Princess Victoria Mary Louisa von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld (Wettin, Ernestiner), Duchess of Kent German: Victoria Mary Louisa von Sachsen-Saalfeld-Coburg, Duchess of Kent, French: Princesse Victoria de Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld (Herzogin zu Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld), Duchess of Kent Birthdate: August 17, 1786 Birthplace: Ehrenburg Palace, Coburg, Upper Franconia, Bavaria, Germany Death: March 16, 1861 (74) Frogmore House, Windsor, Berkshire, England (haigus) Place of Burial: Royal Mausoleum at Frogmore, Windsor, Berkshire, England Immediate Family: Daughter of Franz Friedrich Anton of Saxse-Coburg-Saalfeld, Duke and Augusta Carolina Sophia of Reuss-Ebersdorf, Countess, Duchess of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld Wife of Prince Emich Karl von Leiningen, 2'er Fürst zu Leiningen and Edward Augustus Hanover, Prince, Duke of Kent and Strathearn Mother of Prince Karl Friedrich Wilhelm Emich von Leiningen, 3'er Fürst zu Leiningen; Anna Feodorovna Auguste Charlotte Wilhelmine von Leiningen, Fürstin zu Hohenlohe-Langenburg and Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom Sister of Gräfin Sophie Friedrika Caroline Luise von Mensdorff-Pouilly; Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld; Grand Duchess Anna Fyodorovna of Russia; Unnamed Son von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld, Prinz; Duke Ernst I of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha; Ferdinand of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha; Marianne Charlotte von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld, Prinzessin; Mary Luisa Victoria von Sachsen-Coburg, Prinzessin; Leopold I, King of the Belgians; Maximilian von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld; Franz Maximilan Ludwig von Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld, Prinz; Princess Sophie of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld; Princess Antoinette of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld and Princess Juliane of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld « less Occupation: Duchess of Kent and Strathearn, Duchess of Kent, Prinses van Saxe-Coburg | Sachsen-Coburg-Saalfeld, Princess Marie Luise Viktoria (I14377)
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1979 | Prosecution of Jean Campagna, 1685: Deposition of Andree Martin, aged forty years, widow of Francois Pellerin; deposition of Isabelle Pellerin, aged twelve years.? geni.com Andrée Theriot (Brun) French: Andrée Brun Birthdate: August 21, 1646 Birthplace: Martaizé, Vienne, Poitou-Charentes, France Death: July 26, 1727 (80) Port Royal, Annapolis County, NS, Canada (Maladie l`âge avancé) Place of Burial: Port-Royal, Acadie Immediate Family: Daughter of Vincent Brun and Marie-Renée Brun Wife of Germain Theriot and Émmanuel Hébert Mother of Germain Thériault / Térriot, II; Pierre Thériot; Catherine Aucoin; Jean-Guy Theriault; Catherine Aucoin; Guillaume Hébert; Marguerite Thibodeau; Jacques Hebert, Sr.; Alexandre Hébert; Martin Hebert and Jean dit Manuel Hebert « less Sister of Madelaine Brun; Françoise Lebrun; Sebastien Brun; Marie Sebastienne Brun and Marie-Madeleine Trahan Occupation: Ménagère au foyer. Immigrant ================ Beaubassin, April 24, 1679, Marriage. PIERRE MERCIER called CAUDEBEC - of the parish of Barneville in Normandy, son of Nicolas Mercier and Jacqueline Picard. ANDREE MARTIN - of the parish of St. Jean Baptiste of Port royal, widow of Francois Pellerin, habitant of Beaubassin, daughter of Pierre Martin and Catherine Vignaux. Witnesses: Mr. de la Valliere, knight, seigneur of Beaubassin and commandant of Acadia; Sieur d'Autremont, attorney of the king; Pierre Martin, the widow's father; Jean Augin Meignaux. (Source: Own copy of Acadian Church Records 1679 - 1757, Winston de Ville, Claitor's Publishing Division, 1964, reprinted 2010, p 2.) ============ | Martin, Andrée (I9797)
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1980 | Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother was an English monarch. She reigned as the Queen of Great Britain, Queen of Ireland, Queen of the British Dominions, and the Empress of India from 1936 until the death of her husband, George VI, in 1952, at which point she became known as ?Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.? Born Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon in 1900, during the last reigning months of Queen Victoria, she was the ninth child (and fourth daughter) of the 14th Earl of Strathmore, a descendant of the Royal House of Scotland. She grew up at her parents' country estate in Hertfordshire, north of London, where she was educated at home. Although it was reported by biographers that she preferred James Stuart, the son of a Scottish earl, she married the Duke of York in 1923 after a three-year engagement and gained the title ?Her Royal Highness the Duchess of York.? The Duke of York was the second son of the reigning monarch at that time, George V, and his wife, Queen Consort Mary. In 1926, Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon gave birth to Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor, and four years later, she gave birth to her second and last child, Margaret Rose. The Duke of York, as the second child of George V, was not destined to become king; however, when George V died in January 1936 and Prince Edward ascended to the throne as King Edward VIII, only to abdicate eleven months later, the Duke of York was crowned George VI, King of Great Britain, Ireland, and the British Dominions, as well as the Emperor of India. His wife, Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes-Lyon, was crowned Queen of Great Britain, Ireland, and the British Dominions, and also Empress of India. When King Edward VIII abdicated so he could marry an American divorcee, Wallis Simpson, the monarchy was scandalized. As consequence, the new Queen Elizabeth set about molding her husband into a viable and acceptable monarch for the Great British Empire. She worked diligently and aided the king to overcome his speech impediment, at times serving as a buffer for his notoriously fierce temper. Sharply opinionated, she also worked to discredit the king's older brother and his new wife, denying Wallis Simpson the title of ?Her Royal Highness (H.R.H.).? With the coming of World War II, Queen Elizabeth supported her people during the London Blitz of 1940, often visiting the commonwealth immediately after a severe bombing raid. The Royal Family became a symbol of Britain's wartime spirit. Unbeknownst (or ignored) by the majority of her subjects was that fact that she believed British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement towards German Chancellor Adolph Hitler was a better course of action than war; she distrusted the motives of Winston Churchill, loathing the man, hoping to bar him from government affairs. When her husband died suddenly in 1952, she was given the title of ?Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother? in order to distinguish herself from her eldest daughter, Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor, who would ascend to the throne in the same year; however, most of her subjects preferred to affectionately call her the ?Queen Mum? or the ?Queen Mother.? In her later years, the 1970s and 1980s, she became the standard for all royal behavior, and gave advice to both Diana Spencer (who married her grandson, Prince Charles) and Sarah Ferguson (who married her other grandson, Prince Andrew) on how to behave in public. During the turbulent years when both her grandsons divorced their wives, she was considered one of the Royal Family's most stable and influential assets with the public. She was noted for her devoted public service and her love for her people, which was amply returned by her subjects. In some public opinion polls, she was favored over her daughter to be monarch, a position that she would not and simply could not hold. She died peacefully in her sleep at the age of 101, just two months after the death of her second daughter, Princess Margaret Rose, Countess of Snowdon. She was laid to rest beside her husband, King George VI, at Windsor Castle. From Find a Grave Edited by descendants Vitals | Bowes-Lyon, Elizabeth Angela Marguerite The Queen Mother (I14366)
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1981 | Queen Elizabeth, The Queen Mother, 1900 - 2002 Lady Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon was born into British nobility, the 9th of 10 siblings. In 1923, she married Prince Albert, the Duke of York, having turned down several previous proposals because she had misgivings about royal life. When her brother-in-law abdicated in 1936, Albert became King George VI and Elizabeth became the Queen consort of the United Kingdom. Upon her husband?s death in 1952, her elder daughter Elizabeth ascended to the throne, and she became known as the Queen Mother. She remained active in public life up to and even after her 100th birthday in 2000 and died at 101, seven weeks after the death of her younger daughter, Princess Margaret. | Bowes-Lyon, Königin Elizabeth Angela Marguerite (I14365)
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1982 | Quinton was born in Newcastle,England to Richard Pray and married Joan Vallance on 15 Jan 1627 in Mayfield,Sussex,England. They had at least ten or twelve children born in Mayfield,England. I will list the twelve that I have info on and one can go from there. Info comes from FAG member and the "Pray Family of Braintree,Quincy & Weymouth,Mass." by Col.Harold Leonard Pray. Elizabeth Pray-28 Jul 1622 Ephraim Pray-1623 Hugh Pray-4 May 1628-23 Nov 1642 Quinton Pray Jr.-Abt 1625/1626-15 May 1630 Richard Pray-1627-1693 Sarah Pray-20 Mar 1630-20 Apr 1667/John Hardman Dorothy Pray-26 Oct 1634-11 Dec 1705/Richard Thayer John Pray-5 Mar 1636-Bef 23 Sep 1676/Joanna Downam Hannah Pray-30 Dec 1638-3 Feb 1717/Henry Neale William Pray-17 Jan 1640-10 May 1641 Thomas Pray-2 May 1642-26 May 1643 Joan Pray-Abt 1644 | Pray, Quinton (I9393)
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1983 | RACHEL, eldesr known child of Francis Eaton by his 3rd wife, was born at Plymouth about 1625. She married at Plymouth 2 March 1645/6 Joseph Ramsden (or Ramsdell). Source: Anderson's Great Migration Begins Find A Grave contributor Julie Evans adds: Rachel Eaton: b. Abt 1625, Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA. m. 2 Mar 1645/6, Plymouth, Plymouth Co., MA, Joseph Ramsden/Ramsdell. d. Bef Oct 1661. Burial: Unknown Mayflower Births & Deaths, Vol. 1: Francis EATON1, d. pre 8 Nov. 1633, Plymouth (inv.) Sarah ( ) EATON, d. 1621, Plymouth CHILD OF Francis EATON1 & 1st Sarah ( ): Samuel EATON2, b. 1620, England CHILDREN OF Francis EATON1 & 3rd Christian ( ): (3) Rachel EATON2, b. c1625; d. pre Oct. 1661* Benjamin EATON2, b. aft. 1 June 1627 ; d. 16 Jan. 1711/2, Plympton, "aged" Child, b. ( ), d. aft. 1650, unm." Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume Twenty One, John Billington, General Society of Mayflower Descendants 1620 Plymouth 1857, p. 6-7: "SECOND GENERATION 2 FRANCIS 2 BILLINGTON (John 1) b. England, prob. Lincolnshire, about 1606 to 1609; d. Middleboro 3 Dec. 1684 "aged 80." He m. Plymouth July 1634 CHRISTIAN (PENN) EATON, b. England ca. 1607; d. Middleboro ca. 1684. She m. (1) Plymouth 1624 or 1625 Pilgrim Francis Eaton, b. England; d. Plymouth between 25 Oct. and 8 Nov. 1633; by whom she had three children: Rachel, Benjamin and another, living in 1651, whose name is unknown. Francis Billington lived at Plymouth until 1669 when he moved to Middleboro and occupied land granted to him as one of the "First Comers." He lived htere until his death, except for a few years during King Philip's War when he fled to Plymouth for safety. On 18 April 1642 his daughter Elizabeth was apprenticed; and 14 January 1642/3 he bound out son Joseph, "aged vi or vii" and two daughters, probably Martha and Mary, one five years old and the other even younger. Bradford stated in 1651 that Francis Billington had eight children. On 2 March 1642 Francis Billington of New Plymouth, planter, sold to Mr. John Atwood of Plymouth, land in Plymouth. In 1674 Francis Billington deposed that he was aged 68. In his old age Francis Billington was dependent on his son Isaac for support and died intestate. No probate record appears, although son Isaac petitioned the probate court in 1703/4 for title to all his father's Middleboro lands, stating he had had sole care of his parents in their old age. A Plymouth County Court Case of Sept. 1722, brought by Isaac's daughter Desire 4 (Billington) Bonney and her husband, James, shows that Francis Billington died intestate leaving issue two sons and five daughters, viz: son Joseph (eldest, who inherited a double portion) and Isaac; daughters Elizabeth, Mary, Dorcad, Mercy and Martha, with a total of eight shares in the estate. A 3 Dec. 1719 quiclaim deed from Francis's father Francis and grandfather (unnamed) Billington (Family #12), reading "my father Francis and grandfather (unnamed) Billington" seems to imply a son Francis, Jr. But in the absence of any mention of such a son in contemporaneous Plymouth records, coupled with the fact that Francis's 4 deed evidently transferred the shares of Joseph Billington, we conclude that the deed contains a clerical error. The original must have read "my father Joseph [underlined] and grandfather Francis [underlined] Billington." Indications are that the seven children named in the Bonney suit and their progeny were the only survivors of Francis 2 Billington. A more detailed account has been published. Children (BILLINGTON) all b. probably Plymouth: 3 i ELIZABETH 3 b. 10 July 1635 4 ii JOSEPH b. 1636 (bef. 2 Feb. 1636/7) 5 iii MARTHA b. ca. 1638 6 iv MARY b. ca. 1640 7 v ISAAC b. ca. 1644 (based on age at d.) vi child d. y. vii REBECCA b. 8 June 1648; dvidently d.y. 8 viii DORCAS b. ca. 1650 9 ix MERCY prob. unnamed dau. b. 25 Feb. 1651/2" | Eaton, Rachel (I9371)
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1984 | Radegonde Lambert was born in France; parents unknown. Radegonde Lambert Was 21 Years & Jean Blanchard was 31 years old when whey got married around 1642. They were already married when they arrived in Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada. Radegonde and Jean had 3 girls and 3 boys: Madeleine Blanchard - 1643 - 1683 Anne Blanchard - 1645 - 1714 Martin Blanchard - 1647 - 1717 Guillaume Blanchard - 1650 - 1714 Bernard Blanchard - 1652 - 1686 Marie Blanchard - 1656 - 1697 1671 Census: Jean Blanchard is 60, married to Radegonde. They have 6 children. There is no mention of Radegonde Lambert or her husband after the 1686 Census & there is no mention of them in the 1693 Census, so it is assumed that they both died between those years. | Lambert, Jeanne Radégonde (I3599)
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1985 | Ralph Comeau It is with great sadness that we announce the sudden passing of Ralph Joseph Comeau, age 80, of Halifax, on January 6th, 2019 at home. Born August 9, 1938 in Meteghan Centre, he was the son of the late Louis and Marie (Theriault) Comeau. He was a sheet metal worker (Local 409) and worked for many years for Steen Mechanical Contractors. He was also a co-owner of Grand View Motel and Cottages in Black Point from 1986 to 1993, along with his wife. For a short time he worked for GC Snair and Son of Black Point. He loved old classic television programs and western movies, especially Clint Eastwood and John Wayne. He enjoyed his time with his grandchildren, taking them for tractor rides and boat trips on St. Margaret?s Bay. In his later years, he developed a very quiet and dry wit. He is survived by his loving and deeply caring wife of 59 years, Marjorie (Amiro) Comeau; his son Joey (Lynda) Comeau, Beaverbank; his daughters Darlene (Todd) Berhow, Kentucky; Shelley (Paul Herron) Comeau, Dartmouth; Carolyn (Jack) Zwicker, Straffordville, Ontario; and Tanya (Darryl) Dutton, Halifax. He had nine grandchildren: Emily and David Comeau; Jordan, Elizabeth and Renee Berhow; Samantha Comeau and William Daley; Holly and Stephanie Zwicker. He is survived by his sisters Loretta (Harley) Fletcher and Doris Gaudet, and his brother Raymond (Patricia) Comeau. He is predeceased by his brother Felix Comeau. Visitation will be held at Cruikshank?s Funeral Home, 2666 Windsor Street, Halifax on Friday January 11 from 6-8pm. Funeral Mass will be held at Saint Mother Teresa of Kolkata Parish, 6032 Normandy Drive, Halifax on Saturday, January 12 at 11am followed by a reception. Burial to follow at Oakridge Memorial Gardens, Sackville. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to Diabetes Canada or the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Canada. | Comeau, Ralph Joseph (I3179)
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1986 | Ray Anne O?Neill On Saturday, February 15, 2020, of Silver Spring, MD. Beloved wife of the late Daniel Richard O?Neill; mother of James Joseph O?Neill, Jenny Marie (Carl) Stockmeyer, Polly Frances (Sean) Cogan, John Thomas O?Neill, and the late Nancy Elizabeth Allison; grandmother to Cade and Richard Stockmeyer, Mary Kate Cogan, Brendan Allison and Kirby O?Neill. Committal Prayers at Gate of Heaven Cemetery Chapel, 13801 Georgia Ave., Silver Spring, MD on Saturday, February 22, 2020 at 10:30 a.m. | ??, Ray Anne (I12790)
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1987 | Reason This Information Is Correct: Note Shortly after the birth of their daughter Martin Dugas died leaving his young, nineteen year old wife with two small children. Martin was 24 years old at the time of his death, Ancestry.com | Dugas, Martin (I9320)
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1988 | Record of LeBlanc Genealogy states that Elisabeth was born in exile See parent note when they were deported in 1755 to New England. | LeBlanc, Élizabeth (Isabelle) (I5730)
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1989 | Regina Marie Hebert Hebert was one of five children born to Theodore Hebert and his wife Odile Lejeune. Regina was united in marriage in West Baton Rouge, Louisiana to Justin Joseph Hebert, Sr. | Hebert, Regina Marie (I6202)
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1990 | Réginald d'Entremont January 05, 1943 - April 20, 2016 Share this obituary Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share in Email Send Sympathy Card d?ENTREMONT, Réginald - Age 73, Meteghan River. It is with great sadness that the family of Réginald d?Entremont announces his passing on Wednesday, the 20th of April 2016 at home. He was born in Meteghan River, the son to the late Émile and Cécile (Lombard) d?Entremont. Reg was a graduate of Collège Ste-Anne (where he forged life-long friendships that were of great importance to him) and St. Mary?s University. He started his adult life as a draftsman at A.F. Theriault and Sons before entering the teaching profession. He taught for several years at Yarmouth Memorial High before returning home to teach at Clare District High. The life of an educator suited him well as he enjoyed teaching mathematics and physics to several generations of youth. After illness forced him into early retirement, Reg remained active within the community. He served as treasurer of the Festival Acadien de Clare for many years and enjoyed playing duplicate bridge. He spent countless hours helping those in the community who needed help in filling out governmental forms and represented over thirty individuals in appeals with the Canada Pension Plan. He was a firm believer that you should always help those that were in need whenever and in whatever capacity possible. Reg is survived by his daughter, Susan (Dave), Ottawa; sons, Craig, Meteghan River and Mark (Amy) Lake Charles, La; granddaughters, Amber d?Entremont,Toronto and Sarah d?Entremont, Lake Charles, La; sister Aline (James) Quinlan, Little Brook; brothers, Alyre (Gloria), Halifax and Léo (Lynda), Dartmouth; brother-in-law, Bruce (Diane) Jacquard, Arcadia and sister-in-law, Patsy Brennan, Sydney. Reg was pre-deceased by his loving wife Gloria and sister Émilita. As per his wishes, cremation has taken place and funeral services will be held Saturday, July 16th, 2016 at 11:00 a.m. in Sacred Heart Church Saulnierville. Burial at Sacred Heart Parish Cemetery. Donations may be made in Reg?s name to Le Transport de Clare or a charity of your choice. | d'Entremont, Réginald (I7928)
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1991 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Lodrigue, David Jr. (I8922)
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1992 | REMEMBER, eldest daughter of Pilgrims Isaac & Mary (Norris) Allerton, was born say 1615. She is listed as "Mayflower Passenger". Mary married by 6 May 1635 Moses Maverick [MBCR 1:147], son of Rev. JOHN MAVERICK [MD 5:129-41; NEHGR 96:358-61; Small Gen 669-80]. Find A Grave contributor Dan Silva adds: born 1614 in Leyden, South Holland, Netherlands died 12 Sep 1655 in Marblehead, Massachusets | Allerton, Remember (I9066)
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1993 | Rene Landry is on the Wall of Names at the Acadian Memorial in St. Martinville, Louisiana Plaque 5 Left. Listed with him are 5 of his 8 children: Marin, Felicity, Olivier, Joseph and Firmin. [1] Rene Landry was born in 1716 in Pisiguit, Acadia. He was the son of Abraham Landry and Marie Guilbeau. When he was 21, he married Marie Terriot, age 19, daughter of Jacques Terriot and the late Marguerite Leblanc 18 Feb 1737 at Saint Charles des Mines, Grand-Pré, Acadia.[2] He died in Jun 1781 in Ascension Parish, Louisiana and was buried 3 Jun 1781 Donaldsonville, Ascension Parish. [3] Residence/Probate Census: 7 Jul 1763 Oxford, Talbot, MD [4] Census: 14 Sep 1769 Cabahannocer (Lower), St. James, LA [5] Census: 1 Aug 1770 Ascension, LA [6] Event: Land 5 Nov 1775 Ascension Parish [7] Census: 23 Apr 1777 Donaldsonville, Ascension, LA [8] Probate: 17 Jun 1781 Ascension, LA [9] Marriage Marriage 1 Marie Marguerite THERIOT 18 Feb 1737 in Grand Pré, Acadia [10] Children Pierre LANDRY b: Abt 1738 in Grand Pré Marguerite LANDRY b: Abt 1742 in Anne (Agnes) LANDRY b: Abt 1743 in Acadia Marin LANDRY b: Abt 1748 in Pisiguit, Acadia Felicite LANDRY b: Abt 1750 in Acadia Olivier LANDRY b: Abt 1752 in Acadia Joseph Rene (dit Dios) LANDRY b: Abt 1757 in Oxford, Talbot, MD Firmin LANDRY b: Abt 1760 in Oxford, Talbot, MD Marriage 2 Anne LANDRY Bef 14 Sep 1769 in LA Children Valentin LANDRY b: Aft 1 Aug 1770 in , , LA c: 15 Jan 1771 in St. James, St. James, LA Pierre Jean Baptiste LANDRY b: 6 Feb 1773 in , Ascension, LA c: 7 Feb 1773 in Donaldsonville, Ascension, LA Anne Appoline LANDRY b: Abt Jun 1776 in , Ascension, LA Sources ? Title: The Wall of Names at the Acadian Memorial; Author: Wall of Names Committee; Jane G. Bulliard, Chair; second edition, 2015; Bodemuller The Printer, USA; Personal Copy. p. 20 ? Library and Archives Canada, Fonds de la paroisse catholique Saint-Charles-des-Mines (Grand-Pré, N.-É.) - 1869; Canadiana, Heritage, Parish registers: Nova Scotia : C-1869 (Image 711): http://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c1870/711?r=0&s=4 ? Title: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records; Author: Catholic Church; Vol 2, 1770-1803; Contains Baptismal, marriage and burial entries taken from some 46 registers housed in the Archives of the Diocese of Baton Rouge; Personal Copy; p. 447 Text: Rene LANDRY, age 64 years, buried 3 Jun 1781 at Ascension Catholic Church, Donaldsonville, LA (ASC-1, 184). ? Title: Acadian Exiles in the Colonies; Author: Janet Jehn; Publication: Covington, KY: Author, 1977; pp. 144 & 156 Text: 445 "Recensement des habitants Neutres de Lacadie détenus a Oxford, En Maryland" René Landry, Marie son epouse, Marg'te et Marin Landry, Felicité et Olivier Landry, Joseph et Firmin Landry .... 8 "Census of the Neutral Inhabitans [sic] of Acadia Detained at Oxford, in Maryland" René LANDRY [three names omitted], Félicité and Olivier LANDRY, Joseph and :Firmin LANDRY.? ? Title: Cabanocey, Lillian C. Bourgeois; New Orleans: Pelican Publishing, 1957; reprinted Pelican Publ., 1998. Personal copy; p. 178. Original in Archivo General de Indias, Papeles procedentes de Cuba, legajo 187A, folio 220-231. Text: Left Bank, Mississippi River 140 René LANDRY, 53; Anne LANDRY, wife, 37; Joseph, son , 12; Firmain, son, 9. [The children are from his 1st marriage. Two other sons are on plots #138 and #139. Her children from 1st marriage are listed alone in household #147.] ? Source: #AJRO BLaF ? Title: Acadian Genealogy Exchange; Author: Jehn, Janet, ed.; vol. IV, no. 1 (Jan), p. 16; Source published by Karen Theriot, Rootweb.com Text: Article "Spanish Land Grants to Acadian Exiles:" Grantee René LANDRY, with property of 5 arpents on the left [east] bank of the Mississippi River, opposite Bayou Lafourche. ? Source: #AJRO BLaF :p. 5 Text: 55. Rene LANDRY, 54, 6 arpents of land; Anne LANDRY, 38; Marin LANDRY, his son, 22, 4 arpents; Olivier LANDRY, id, 17, 4 arpents; Dios LANDRY, id, 12; Firmain LANDRY, id, 10; Firmain BROUSSART, his stepson, 19; Jean BROUSSART, id, 10. ? Title: Ascension Parish, Louisiana, Civil Records, 1770-1804; Author: Eileen Larré Behrman, comp.; Publication: Conroe, TX: Author, 1986; p. 21 Text: Renee LANDRY died, and a sale began on 17 Jun 1781 of all movables followed an inventory made on the 7th & 8th of Jun 1781, at the request of the tutors of minor children of his 1st and 2nd marriages. Anne LANDRY, his 2nd wife, had been tutrice of the children, but "since then she has fallen entirely into madeness and has lost use of her good sense." Total amounted to 1,011 piastres & 7 escalin, to be divided among the interested parties. Another inventory was done on 7 Jun 1787 (see pp. 919-950 of Book A), for the eight children of Renee LANDRY's 1st marriage to Marie THERIOT. Included were three slaves. Entire inventory amounted to 2,311 piastres 1 escalin. ? Title: Catholic Church Records, vol. 1a: Acadian Records, 1707-1748; Author: Diocese of Baton Rouge; Publication: Diocese, 1999. The Registers of St. Charles aux Mines in Acadia, from Grand Pré, carried into exile to St. Gabriel Church of Iberville, LA. Personal Copy; p. 186 Text: Rene LANDRY, age around 21, son of Abraham & Marie GUILEBOT of the parish of Assomption of the Virgin of Pigiguit, married 18 Feb 1737 Marie TERIOT, age around 19, daughter of Jaques & deceased Marie LEBLANC (consanguinity 4th degree). Witnesses: Joseph TERRIOT [signed]; Abraham LANDRY; Jacques TERRIOT [signed]; Jean TERRIOT [signed]; Jacques LEBLANC [signed]; Charles LANDRY; René LeBLANC [signed]; R. LEBLANC [signed]; Pierre LANDRY; groom & bride signed with X. (SGA-2, 198). Source: AJRO BLaF Title: Colonial Settlers along Bayou Lafourche, 1770-1798; Author: Albert J. Robichaux, Jr.? Publication: Harvey, LA: 1974. 2nd printing Hébert Publications, 1980; Personal Copy; General Census of the Habitants of Valenzuela of Lafourche, Two Thousand Sixty-four Persons; April 10, 1797; /s/ N, Verret; (Original: Papeles Procedentes de Cuba, Legajo 215A) | Landry, Rene (I4333)
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1994 | Rene married Marie Bernard in 1659, in Port-Royal, Acadie. They are the parents of the following: 1) Antoine (1660-) md Marie Thibodeau 2) Claude (1663-1747) md (a) Marie Babin and (b) Anne-Catherine Thibodeau 3) Cecile (1664-1741) md (a) Etienne Racois and (b) Pierre Theriault 4) Jean (1666-1752) md Cecile Melancon 5) Rene (1668-) md Anne Theriault 6) Marie (1671-1746) md Martin Dupuis 7) Marguerite (1673-) Martin Dupuis 8) Germain (1674-) md Marie-Madeleine Melancon 9) Jeanne (1676-1710) md Jean Theriault 10) Abraham (1678-) md Marie Guilbault 11) Pierre (1680-) md Madeleine Brossard 12) Catherine (1682-1754) md Jacques Leblanc 13) Anne (1684-) md Rene Blanchard 14) Charles (1688-1722) md Catherine Brossard 15) Isabelle (1690- ) Rene died in about 1693. According to Stephen A White, Acadian Landry's can trace their roots through two Landry's both named Rene. And this Landry is the progenitor of all Landry's in the Maritime provinces. | Landry (Dit Le Jeune), René (I3687)
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1995 | René's second son François, born at Port-Royal in c1680 (Bona Arsenault says c1682), married Jeanne, daughter of Jean Hébert and Marie-Anne Doucet, in c1703, probably at Minas, and settled there. Between 1703 and 1729, Jeanne gave François a dozen children, six sons and six daughters. The British deported members of the family to Massachusetts in the fall of 1755. Colonial officials counted François, Jeanne, and their son Jacques le jeune and his family at Braintree in April 1757. They were still in the colony in August 1763. Later in the decade, they followed other exiles in New England to British Canada. François died at St.-Ours on the lower Richelieu in March 1770, in his early 90s. His daughters married into the Landry dit Labbé, Thibodeau, Hébert, Breau, and Cormier families. Five of his six sons also created families of their own. | LeBlanc, François (I2410)
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1996 | René's third son Michel, born at Minas in c1726, followed his family to Petitcoudiac. He married Anne-Euphrosine Vincent probably at Minas in c1750 but may have settled at Chignecto or in the trois-rivières. From 1751 to 1754, Anne-Euphrosine gave Michel three children, two sons and a daughter. They escaped the British roundups in Nova Scotia in the fall of 1755 and sought refuge on the Gulf of St. Lawrence shore. Sometime in the late 1750s or early 1760s, they either surrendered to, or were captured by, British forces in the area and held in a prison compound in Nova Scotia. Anne-Euphrosine gave Michel another daughter in c1762 perhaps at Fort Edward, Pigiguit--four children, two sons and two daughters, in all. In October 1762, British officials counted Michel and his family of six at Fort Edward, so their younger daughter likely had been born by then. In 1764-65, they followed the Broussards from Halifax to Louisiana via Cap-Français, French St.-Domingue, settled with them on lower Bayou Teche. Michel died "at Vermillon" in the Attakapas District in January 1784, in his late 50s. His daughters married into the Fostin, Daigle, and Trahan families on the prairies. His two sons also married there, into the Hugon and Thibodeaux families, and created vigorous lines in what became St. Martin, St. Landry, Lafayette, and Vermilion parishes. Michel Trahan of Grand-Pré, age 39, Jean Ursule, and perhaps René's brother, came with wife Anne-Euphrosine Vincent of Port-Royal, age 34, and four children--Paul, age 13; Françoise, age 12; Jean-Athanase, called Athanase and Thanase, age 11; and Marie-Françoise, age 2. They settled on the lower Vermilion River. Michel died "at Vermilion" in January 1784, in his late 50s. Daughter Françoise, widow of Jacques Fostin, fils and Simon-Pierre Daigle, fils, died in Lafayette Parish in December 1826, in her early 70s. Daughter Marie Françoise, wife of cousin Jean-Baptiste Trahan, died in Lafayette Parish in June 1832, in her late 60s; her succession was filed at the Vermilionville courthouse that month. Michel's sons Paul and Athanase settled on Bayou Vermilion in what became St. Martin and Lafayette parishes. They and their many sons produced vigorous family lines. | Trahan, Michel (I12417)
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1997 | Renée Breau came from France with her husband Vincent Brun, according to her great-grandson Claude Pitre (Doc. inéd., Vol. III, p. 28). The baptismal records of Renée and Vincent?s daughters Madeleine (January 25, 1645) and Andrée (August 21, 1646) are in the registers of the parish of La Chaussée, in the present department of Vienne (see DGFA-1, p 289). | Breau, Renée (I2668)
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1998 | Renée- Madeleine Boudreaux (Bourg) Birthdate: before circa 1655 Birthplace: Port-Royal, Acadie Death: after circa 1686 Sainte-Famille, Pisiguit, Acadie Place of Burial: Pisiguit, Acadie Immediate Family: Daughter of Antoine Bourg and Antoinette Landry Wife of Charles BOUDREAUX and Charles Boudreaux Mother of Jean-Baptiste BOUDREAUX; Marie- Francoise Trahan; Charles Boudreaux; Élisabeth (Isabelle) Boudreaux; Rene Boudreau; Marguerite Boudrot; Claude Boudrot; Jean-Baptiste Boudreau; Denis Boudreau; Jorome Boudreaux; Joseph Boudreau and Anne Boudreault « less Sister of Francois Bourg; Marie Bourg; Jean Bourg; Bernard Amand Bourg; Martin Bourg; Marie-Jeanne Bourg; Henriette / Huguette Bourg; Jeanne Comeaux, II; Abraham Bourg; Michel Bourg; Marguerite Bourque and Antoine Bourg | Bourg, Renée Madeleine (I2543)
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1999 | rescilla Gaudet October 08, 1932 - August 06, 2011 Share this obituary Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share in Email GAUDET, Prescilla - 78 of La Villa Acadienne, Meteghan, formely of Little Brook, passed away August 6, 2011 in the Villa. Born in Concession, she was a daughter of the late Raymond and Marguerite (Thibault) Belliveau. She is survived by her husband of 59 years, Delbert, Little Brook; Son, Peter, Mass.; Daughter; Christine Gaudet, Maine; Brothers: Raymond, Concession; Coral, Church Point; Sisters: Therese O'Neil, Concession; Annette Thibodeau, Church Point. She was predeceased by a son Peter at birth. Cremation has taken place under the direction of Meteghan Funeral Home. Private prayers will be held for family only. A reception for family and friends will be held Monday, August 8 at 3 pm in the St. Mary's Rectory, Church Point. | Belliveau, Prescille (I5185)
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2000 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Leger, Joseph C. (I2962)
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