|
|
|
|
Matches 1,201 to 1,250 of 2,135
# |
Notes |
Linked to |
1201 |
Lucille LaVoy was the twin of Julia LaVoy. | LaVoy, Lucille (I01109)
|
1202 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Borck, Lucinda Gail (I06573)
|
1203 |
Lucy DuVall was single. She lived at 918 Central, Toledo, OH. | DuVall, Lucy (I01938)
|
1204 |
Lydia Delp is found in Etta Grobe Speelman (Spielman) entry, 1920 Census, Dixon, IL. She died single, having once lived in Woodstock, IL. | Delp, Lydia (I04469)
|
1205 |
Lydia Lapointe lived in Whiteford Twp., Monroe Co., MI. | LaPointe, Lydia (I00677)
|
1206 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Morrison, Lyle Alfred (I04353)
|
1207 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Lynn (I10928)
|
1208 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Oliver, Lynn (I07222)
|
1209 |
Mable L. Surfus, wife of Floyd Earl Miller, was still living in 1991 at 1009 South Williams St., Bluffton, IN 47614. | Surfus, Mable L. (I08052)
|
1210 |
Madeleine Despres was one of the King's Daughters who came to the New World to find a husband under the protection of the King of France. | Despres, Madeleine (I06267)
|
1211 |
Madeleine LaPointe lived on the family farm on W. Dean Rd. in Erie, MI wit her husband and family. | LaPointe, Magdeleine (I01098)
|
1212 |
Madeline LaVoy Phillips/Phelps lived in Ohio. | LaVoy, Madeline (I01136)
|
1213 |
Madelyn Deszell married Charles Schawraz, divorced him, took back her maiden name, and was living in Toledo in 1977 (See mother's obit) | Deszell, Madylin Mary (I01991)
|
1214 |
Mae's married name was Mrs. Mae Kransberger of Harper Woods. She was Frederick LaVoy's step daughter. | Kransberger, Mae (I00221)
|
1215 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Smith, Mallory Ann (I09236)
|
1216 |
Marcel was Curator of the dodge County Historical Socieity. He died of cardiac failure, age 76 years old. he remarried to Aletta Reinhart after Bernice's death.
Aletta was the widow of Benjamin Reinhart, Sr., Bernice's stepmother.
Obit from (Beaver Dam) Daily Citizen, pg 14, Monday, February 12, 1979, reads as follows:
"Marcel J. Smith, 76, of 312 N. Lincoln, died at his home on Saturday, February 10, 1979. He had suffered from a heart condition the past three months.
"Funeral Services will be held on Tuesday at 11 a.m. from the Briese Roedl Weber Funeral Home. Rev. Richard Welsh and Rev. Philip Essex will officiate and burial will be in St. Patrick's Cemetery.
"Mr Smith was born in Beaver Dam on January 6, 1903, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Smith. He was a graduate of Beaver Dam High Schol and married Bernice Brooks of Beaver Dam on January 5, 1926. She died in 1973. On January 7, 1978, he married Aletta Reinhart of Norco, California. Mr. Smith was a member of St. Patrick's Catholic Order of Forresters and was a curator of the Dodge County Historical Society for the past eight years. He was formerly employed by the MIR Company.
"Survivers are his wife, two daughters, Mrs. James (Beverly) Hammer and Mrs. Glen (Carmen) Martinsen, both of Beaver Dam; a son David of Oconomowoc; 13 grandchildren, four great grandchildre, two brothers, Roland and Alvin, both of Beaver Dam, and a sister, Mrs. Butch (Nina) Glodosky, Beaver Dam.
"He was preceded in death by his parents, his first wife, a sister, and a grandchild."
| Smith, Marcel (I04853)
|
1217 |
Marcella LaPointe lived with her husband Mr. Ziems in Fairfax, VA in 1969. | LaPointe, Marcella (I02191)
|
1218 |
March 16, 1997
Jim Ryland
Curator, Historical Collection
Monroe County Historical Museum
126 South Monroe Street
Monroe, MI 48161
Dear Mr. Ryland:
I have meant to type this letter for over a year concerning your exhibit of the LaVoy Family papoose-carrier and artifacts donated by Miss Mildred LaPrad in about 1954. There are some minor errors in the exhibit's description and more information I would like to share with you and your visitors, including a picture of "Mrs. Mary LaVoy".
I am providing the following narrative with footnoted documentation:
The "Mrs. Mary LaVoy" who made the papoose carrier can be further identified as the matriarch of the Monroe County LaVoy Family. She is the former Marie Gouin, daughter of Charles Gouin, an early French-Canadian settler in Detroit of prominent family, and a "sauvagesse", as early parish records of Ste. Anne de D‚troit indicate. This was an illegitimate union as Charles Gouin was married at the time to Suzanne Boyer (1).
Marie/Mary Gouin was thus only a half-blooded Indian, not full-blooded. She was of the Potawatomi Tribe of Indians whose village on Delery's map of Detroit was located west of Fort Ponchartrain de Detroit overlooking the Detroit River. Her Indian name was "White Feather" until she was baptized at the age of 11 at Ste. Anne de Detroit. Her mother's name was "Little Snipe".(2)
Mary/Marie was born February 8, 1790 at Detroit, and married July 5, 1808, at Ste. Anne de Detroit, Francois LaVoy, newly arrived in Detroit from St-Philippe-de-la-Prairie, near Montr‚al, Canada. (3)
Prior to their marriage Francois LaVoy, patriarch of the Monroe County LaVoy Family, was a trapper in what is now the Temperance area, but which at that time was a large woods. He traded his furs in Canada and on trips back and forth in Detroit met White Feather/Marie Gouin. When they were married, they were forced out of the tribe, as Marie/Mary's Potawatomi relatives considered the marriage to a white man a disgrace to the tribe. (4)
Somewhere between 1810-1820 the couple appears to have gradually moved into Monroe County as a permanent settlement, Oral tradition states that they could not successfully farm their land in Detroit because it was swampy. Marie's father had actually sold them land in the Grand Marais, or "great swamp" at what is now Windmill Point in Grosse Pointe.(5)
Fran‡ois and Mary LaVoy parented nine known children from 1809 to 1832, some in Detroit and others in Monroe County. These were: Charles, Mary who married Joseph DuVall, an unnamed ungendered still born, Lambert, Fran‡cois, Jr., David, Fabian, Paul, and Esther. From these children spring the LaVoy families and some DuVall families of Monroe County. They lived in a cabin at Dean and Dixie, now in Temperance, but formerly called Dean's Corners, where the cabin stood as late as 1909. (6)
Mary Gouin LaVoy died September 9, 1852, age 62, and her husband Fran‡ois followed her four days later on September 13, 1852. (7)
FOOTNOTES:
(1) Ste. Anne de D‚troit parish records as published in Denissen's French-Canadian Families of the Detroit River Region.
(2) Baptism found in Denissen, op cit., and family oral tradition passed on through Mary/Marie's great-great-granddaughter, Esther LaVoy Templin of 250 W. Erie Rd, Temperance, MI.
(3) Dennisen, op. cit.
(4) Family oral tradition passed on by Mary/Marie's great-great-granddaughter, Mary Luceilia Reau Stark (whose mother was Lucy LaVoy), who resides in Luther House, Temperance, MI.
(5) Monroe County and Detroit Federal Censuses; 1909 obituary of Fabian ("Tobias") LaVoy, and City of Detroit Deeds; oral tradition passed on by Esther LaVoy Templin, as above.
(6) Dennisen, op. cit.; 1909 obituary of Fabian ("Tobias") LaVoy in Monroe County Historical Collection; 1850 Federal Census for Esther; St. Joseph's Baptism Records, Erie, MI, for Paul.
(7) Monroe County Probate Records of their estate.
The card with the papoose-carrier exhibit states the carrier was first used around 1840 to "carry her (Mary's) 11 children around. Mary/Marie's children were born from 1809-1832, so if that was its original purpose, the carrier dates from that period. Mrs. Mildred LaPrad was a great-great-granddaughter of White Feather, and her grandmother, Mary LaPrad was a granddaughter, not a daughter of White Feather (Marie/Mary Gouin LaVoy). There are only nine recorded children, but Miss LaPrad may well have known of a family oral tradition of two more children not baptized at Ste. Anne de Detroit or St. Joseph's, Erie.
I am sure this is more than is necessary for the exhibit, but as this account records oral traditions of elderly people in Monroe County, it is one way of preserving these traditions.
Thank you for your time in reading this letter and considering any changes to the information in the exhibit. I might add that books on the Potawatomi Indian crafts indicate the designs and materials used for the papoose-carrier are classically Potawatomi.
The picture, of which I am sending you a laser print, of White Feather/ Marie Gouin, has passed down by Marie's daughter, Mary LaVoy Duvall, to a great-great-great-granddaughter, Wendy DuVall-Angelocci of Novi, MI.
Sincerely yours,
Patrick LaVoy Tombeau (313) 421-7323
| Gouin, Marie ("White Feather") (I00028)
|
1219 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Cousino, Marcia J. (I02738)
|
1220 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Marcia (I01140)
|
1221 |
Margaret ("Marguerite" or "Peg") Tambo AKA Tambeau, the sixth child of William Tambo, Sr., and Elizabeth Fitzsimmons, was born l9 De- cember l9ll in Olyphant, PA. She was baptized at St. Patrick's Church in Olyphant. She married William Diven, the son of William T. Diven and Edith Mae Macabee, on 8 September l930 in Scranton, PA. William Diven was born 5 September l9l0 in Frederick, Maryland. They resided in Dearborn, MI at 63l8 Hartwell in the l940's and at 22946 Wellington during their married life until they retired to Venice, Florida, where William Diven died 8 September l979 of lung cancer. He is buried in Sarasota, Florida, Masonic Cemetery. Peg Tambeau Diven married a second time to Lee Grubaugh 2l February l980 in Venice, Florida, in the Reorganized Church of the Latter Day Saints. Lee Grubaugh is the son of R. B. Grubaugh and Viola Johnson.
For many years during her marriage, Peg Tambeau Diven worked at Montgomery Wards Department Store on Michigan Avenue and Schaeffer across from the old Dearborn (MI) City Hall, as a sales clerk in women's clothing. In their later years Peg and Bill Diven enjoyed square dancing as a hobby. Peg Tambeau and Lee Grubaugh resided at l024 Euclid Rd, Venice, Florida.
Social Security Death Records indicate she was born 18 December 1910 and died in Bradenton, FL, on 28 July 1999, age 88 years. She was lucid until the day she died according to Dorothy Diven, the former wife of Peg's son, William Morris Diven, who took cary of Peg until her death. She states she was buried with her husband William Diven in Sarasota, Florida (The Masonic Cemetery). Peg had neither Alzheimers's nor Parkinson's Disease at the time of her death according to Dorothy Diven.
Peg Tambeau and William Diven had one child: William Morris Diven.
II-l-l-6-l: William Morris Diven was born 8 July l937 in Dearborn (MI) General Hospital. Education: Albion (MI) College, l955-59, B.S., History. William is National Sales Manager for Universal Industries, Mattapoisett, MA, a manufacturer of sports hats. His current address is 7 Delmont St, Fairhaven, MA. William married twice: (l) Judith Duncan and (2) Lindy Trigg.
(1) William Morris Diven married 3 September l958 Judith Duncan, the daughter of John Duncan and Anita Carolla ("Carol") Fleming, in the Lu- theran Church of the Redeemer, Birmingham, MI. They lived in Birmingham (MI) from l959-63, Tampa, Florida, l963-68, and Houston, Texas, l968-76. Divorced: Houston, TX, l976-77. Three children.
(2) William Morris married a second time to Lindy Trigg in chicago, Illinois in l977-78. Divorce, l982, Chicago, IL. No Children.
He appears to have married a third tie to Dorothy ? and appears to be living in January, 2005, according to White pages.com at 204 24th St., Bradenton, Fl., 34205-4910. phone: 941-747-0776. They were divorced as of 2005 and he now lives near his daughter Elizabeth near Austin, TX (2005). Dorothy Diven's new number is 941-723-3355 (2005). She lives at 204 24th St. W., Bradenton, FL 34205-4910.
Judith Duncan Diven remarried to James Miner Schupick and lived in Houston, TX, in 1988. A review of WhitePages.com in in January, 2005, James Schupick lived at 199 Northview, Brookland, Tx, 75931. Phone: 409-698-2248
William Morris Diven and Judith Duncan had three children, Elizabeth Carol, Jennifer Lee, and Jon William Diven.
II-l-l-6-l-l: Elizabeth Carol Diven, born 9 September l960, Royal Oak MI. Education: B.B.A, Marketing, Texas A and M. Occupation: support spe- cialist, computers. Former employer: Information Access, Cleveland, OH. Known as "Beth".Former address: 8696 Broadview, Apt 323-G, Broadview Hgts., OH. Currently lives in Houston, TX. (2005) See her entry for address and phone number
II-l-l-6-l-2: Jennifer Lee Diven, born l2-3l-62, Royal Oak, MI. Former address: 8034 Antoine, Apt. l07, Houston, TX. See current address in her entry. Education: correspondence course from International Bible and Seminary School, Florida. Former occupation: temporary help, Kelley Girls, Olston Services.
II-l-l-6-l-3: Jon William Diven, born 8 January l965, Tampa, FL. Education: University of Rochester, Eastman School of Music. M.A. level studies in music. Occupation: teacher. Former address: 96 Meigs St, Rochester, NY. Currently lives in Spyer Germany. See address in his entry.
| Tambo\Tambeau, Margaret ("Peg") (I04162)
|
1222 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Margaret Ann (I00786)
|
1223 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Fenney, Margaret (I03405)
|
1224 |
Margaret's first marriage ended in a divorce. In 1965 she lived at 1008 Cleveland St., Lincoln park, MI, with her second husband, Ed Schelfont, according to her brother Emmanuel Jarvis. | Jarvis, Margaret (I06940)
|
1225 |
Marguerite Langlois
Ancestor on the Clement, Madore, Pitt and Presse lines: http://www.angelfire.com/rnb/madore/bio/Marguerite_Langlois.html
Sister of Francoise married to Pierre Desportes. Remarried Rene Branche on Feb 17 1665.
Samuel D.Champlain was born 1567, Brouage, France and he died in Quebec on the 25 December 1635. Champlain sailed in the printemp of 1603 for Nouvelle France on the 12 ton ship the Bonne Renommee. It anchored at Tadoussac a summer trading post. In 1604 he joined the North American expedition of Pierre de Monts as Geographer and Cartographer. The premier winter 35 out of 79 men died of scurvy on the isle of Ste.Croix. The two following winters were spent on Port Royal near Digby, N.S. He passed the summers exploring the rivers of Maine and charting the coast as far as Cape Cod and Martha’s Vinyard.
In 1608 he and 32 colonist established the settlement at Quebec. In may of 1620 he again sailed from Honfleur, France to Nouvelle France with his 22 year old wife Helene. The ship the St.Etienne cleared with lady passengers. Helene his wife of 10 years, (she was 12 when married) and three ladies in waiting and a maid of all work. After a 2 months crossing they reached Tadoussac on 7 July,1620 and there met Eustache Boulle, Helene’s brother. They later arrived at Quebec where a population of 60 were waiting For the next four years Helene had nobody of her own sex to talk to other than her three ladies in waiting, Madame Hebert (Marie Rollet) and daughter, the two Langlois girls Francoise married to Pierre DesPortes the baker, and Marguerite married to Abraham Martin dit L’Ecossais and during her last winter the wife of Nicolas Pivert. Champlain and his wife resided in Fort St.Louis, from July 1620 to 21 Aug,1624 and sailed for Dieppe, France leaving Emery DeCain in charge of Quebec with a population of 51.
Sources:
Samuel D.Champlain by Samuel Eliot Morison Drouin, Sulte.
Jack Langlois doryl@freeway.net
| Langlois, Marguerite (I05495)
|
1226 |
Marie Archambault II was only 12 years and 7 months old at the time of her marriage to Urbain Tessier. She died August 6, 1718, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal at the age of 83. She bore 17 children, of which 13 survived to adulthood.) See Tanguay Genealogical Dictionary, Vol. 1, p. 11. | Archambault, Marie (I05067)
|
1227 |
Marie Jarvis married three times. One husband was ? Grant by whom she had three children, another husband was a Walter Hill under whose name she died in 1961. The name of the third husband is not known. Walter married Marie's sister Katherine after Marie died in 1961, according to her brother, Emmnauel Jarvis. | Jarvis, Marie (I06937)
|
1228 |
Marie LeClair's death occurs before the death of her son, Francois Xavier Tremble who died 15 Oct 1812, according to the research of Liana Trombley in the scapbook section J.B. Trombley's entry. It is also before 1811 as her widower remarries on April 30, 1811 to Marie Isabelle Massia.
Quentin-Roulois Descendants
Posted by: Liana Trombley (ID *****6274) Date: February 08, 2006 at 14:10:57
In Reply to: Nicolas QUENTIN, 1633-1683, m. Magdeleine Roulois. by Dicky of 6
Looking for Etienne Cantin/Quentin, as mentioned in this marriage record taken from PRDH:
Contrat de Mariage - Certificate #767874 Canada (Archives Notariales) Conrac
30 Dec 1796 -
Ignace Tremble, R: Pointe Levis. Age 23.
Marie Anne Leclerc, R: St Henri de Lauzon. Age 25
Father: Ignace Tremble, Laboureur, R: St Henri de Lauzon.
Father: Pierre Leclerc, Laboureur, r: St Henri de Lauzon.
Witnesses:
Etienne Quentin, cousin of groom Ignace <<<<<<<<<<<<
Charles Tremble, brother of Ignace, R: St Henri de Lauzon
Louis Noel, uncle of Marie Anne, R: St Henri de Lauzon
Louis Miray, Notaire
Source: http://genforum.genealogy.com/quentin/messages/6.html | Leclerc, Marie-Anne Thecle (I06402)
|
1229 |
Marie Teste/Testu was a fille a merier according to Peter J. Gagne': "Before the King's Daughters: The Filles a Marier 1634-1662, p. 289:
Marie Teste/Testu was born in about 1640 in Salles-de-Villefagnan, diocese of Angouleme, Angoumois, France, the eldest of three children of Jean Teste and Louise Talonneau. Marie came to Canada in 1659. She married on 24 November 1659 to Antoine Pepin dit LaChance in Quebec. Niether could sign the marriage contract. Antoine and Marie had 12 children. Marie was buried 11 September 1701 at Ste-Famile, Ile d'Orleans. Antoine was also buried at Ste.-Famille 23 Janaury 1703.
The baptismal dates and places of their 12 children show their movements during their lifetime in New France: 1660, Quebec; 1662-1666. Ile d'Orleans with baptisms at Chateau-Richer; 1667-1676, Ste Famille, Ile d'Orleans; 1779 twins were born on Ile aux Grues and baptised at Cap-St-Ignace. ; 1682, Ste-Famille. Ile-d'Orleans; 1691-1703, Ste.-Famille, Ile d'Orleans where Marie and Antoine died and were buried.
Filles à Marier --"Marriageable Girls"
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Between 1634 and 1663, 262 filles à marier or "marriageable girls" emigrated to New France representing one quarter of all the single girls arriving in New France through 1673. They were recruited and chaperoned by religious groups or individuals who had to assure and account for their good conduct. In general, they were poor, although there were some members of the petty nobility among their ranks.
As opposed to the Filles du Roi who emigrated between 1663 and 1673, the filles à marier came alone or in small groups. They were not recruited by the state and did not receive a dowry from the King. They were promised nothing but the possibility of a better life. If they survived the perils of the crossing, they lived with the daily threat of death at the hands of the Iroquois. If they survived the Iroquois, they had to deal with the hard life of subsistence farming, harsh winters spent in a log cabin that they may have helped build, epidemics of smallpox and "fever" and difficult and often dangerous childbirth.
Crossing the Atlantic was a dangerous undertaking in the 1600s, and it is estimated that 10% of all passengers en route to New France died during the crossing. Sickness and disease were the main factors contributing to deaths at sea. Passengers were forced to share the hull with livestock that was either being shipped to the colony or served as meals during the crossing. While the passengers may have been permitted on deck during good weather and calm seas, storms forced their confinement to the hull where they were shut in not only with the livestock, but also with the odor of latrine buckets, seasickness and the smoky lanterns used for lighting. The climate and close quarters fostered the rapid spread of diseases such as scurvy, fever and dysentery. Under such conditions, very little could be done for those who were suffering. The method for dealing with the dead was to sew them up in their blankets and throw them overboard during the night.
The filles à marier chose to emigrate under perilous conditions to a wilderness colony because the advantages offered by the colony were great enough to make them forget the dangers of the crossing and rude character of colonial life. In France, the girls would have had little or no choice in their marriages because arranged marriages were the norm for the artisan and working classes as well as for the elite. Parental consent was required for men under the age of 30 and women under the age of 25. Young girls were placed in convent schools or pensions only to await a marriage in which they had no choice or to become a nun. In New France, these women could choose whom they wanted to marry and had the freedom to change their minds before the marriage took place.
Most of the filles à marier belonged to the rural class and were the daughters of peasants and farmers. A small number were from urban families, the daughters of craftsmen, day laborers and servants, while an even smaller number were the daughters of businessmen, civil servants, military men and the petty nobility. Their average age was 22, and more than one-third had lost at least one parent. About 20% were related to someone who was already a colonist. Most were married within a year of their arrival in New France. While waiting to find a husband, many of the girls lodged with religious communities --either the Ursulines in Québec City or the Filles de la Congrégation Notre-Dame in Montréal-- although about 100 filles à marier lodged with individuals.
Peter J. Gagné has defined the qualifications to be considered a fille à marier as follows:
Must have arrived before September 1663
Must have come over at marriageable age (12 thru 45)
Must have married or signed a marriage contract at least once in New France or have signed an enlistment contract
Must not have been accompanied by both parents
Must not have been accompanied by or joining a husband
[Source: Before the King's Daughters: The Filles à Marier, 1634-1662 by Peter J. Gagné. Pawtucket, RI: Quinton Publications, 2002. pp 13-38]
| Teste\Testu, Marie (I10076)
|
1230 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Marie Therese (I00861)
|
1231 |
Marie Younglove lived in Toledo, OH. She was the first wife of Moses LaVoy, Jr. | Younglove, Marie (I00204)
|
1232 |
Marie-Louise Crete, born February 12, 1746, Quebec, the widow of Alexis Davignan dit Beuregard, remarried to Louis Bernard on 9 August 1767 at Chambly, Quebec Canada where this latter couple remained until at least 1771, but by 1773 were in the Assumption, Sandwich, Canada area across the Detroit River from Fort Detroit. No burial records were found for them at Monroe,MI, St. Antoine de la Riviere aux Raisin, in the book published by the Frenchtown Chapter of the French Canadian Heritage Society of Michigan: "Souls of Sr. Antoine's Cemetery of Frenchtown, Michigan and their Heroines" (2000). However, Basil Bernard dit Lajoie, the son of Louis Bernard dit Lajoie and Marie-Louise Crete, born in 1777 without a place listed for birth, was buried 4 November 1822 in St. Antoine de la Riviere aux Raisins Cemetery. Basil married Catherine Bissonet 11 February 1817 in Detroit. His half-brother Anthony Davignon dit Beauregard, Sr., b. 1762, place unknown, married 13 February 1792 in Detroit. His son Antoine Davignon dit Beauregard, Jr. was born 18 march 1793, in River Raisin, but baptised in Detroit. Considering her birth year of 1746, Marie Louise Crete could have died in either Detroit or St. Antoine where her son is located as early as 1793 when his son Anthony, Jr. was born. While many Davignons and Bernards are buried at St. Antoine's no such records exist for Marie Louise Crete and her second husband Louis Bernard, making it likely they died before 1793 in Detroit. St.
Antoine de la Riviere aux Raisins was founded in 1788.
See also: Tanguay, Genealogical Dictionary, Vol. 3, pg. 198. Tanguay does not carry on Marie-Louise Crete's ancestral line, but the sight below does using the PRDH as the primary resource for the data.
See the following site for information below from the PRDH: http://pages.infinit.net/gildus/duss5d.htm (Gilles Dussault website) (The PDRH stands for "Le Programme de Recherche en Demographie Historique" or The Program for Research into Historic Demography)
Alexis Davignon
Fils de François Davignon et Madeleine Maillot
Mariés à Chambly le 17 mai 1762
Marie-Louise Crête
Fille de Henri Crête et Elisabeth Leduc
Enfant(s)
Marie-Françoise Davignon
Marie-Louise Crête, mariée en deuxième noce à Louis Bernard
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Louis Bernard
Fils de Pierre Bernard et Marguerite Durand
Mariés à Chambly le 9 août 1767
Marie-Louise Crête
Veuve François Davignon
Enfant(s) | Crete, Marie Louise (I03886)
|
1233 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Mark David (I01138)
|
1234 |
Mark Gauthier died of a heart attack. He was a teacher. | Gauthier, Mark Emery (I07111)
|
1235 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Oliver, Mark (I07226)
|
1236 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Bowling, Mark William (I06761)
|
1237 |
Mark Winter, Sr., lived in Jamestown, NY. | Winter, Mark Lewis Sr. (I04738)
|
1238 |
Mark Worton, as of 2005, lived Nashville, TN. | Worton, Mark (I09877)
|
1239 |
Married in Calfironia, May, 1994 (?) | Fleming, Ann (I04793)
|
1240 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Coward, Brad Alen (I04612)
|
1241 |
Martha Flory entered the IHM convent on September 14, 1962 and resigned on April 17, 1985. | Flory, Martha Mae nun (I06794)
|
1242 |
Martin Gaylord McCarty weighed 1 pound at birth. He was kept near cans of warm water to keep him warm and fed with an eye dropper.
At the time of his death Martin was a sailor on a Mediterranean cruise. He was a second class marine with the U.S. Navy. He was buried in Deerfield, MI, Cemetery. (see obit)
He was single at the time of death. | McCarty, Martin Gaylord (I01573)
|
1243 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Martin (I00857)
|
1244 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | McCarty, Martin (I01639)
|
1245 |
Marvin Deszell was in the U.S. Army. stationed in Alaska, in 1977. (see mother's obit) | Deszell, Marvin Robert (I01989)
|
1246 |
Mary Cluckey Dusseau suffered from cancer of the liver for two years. in thend she jaundiced, even her eyes turned yellow, and she was ordered to be d by her doctor, according to her daughter-in-law, Allie Dusseau Lisle.
Lerna Dusseau, her daughter, stated that she had a sister named Margaret and a brother named Ernest in an August, 1959, interview in Los Anglees, CA with Patrick L. Tombeau
| Cluckey, Mary (I00235)
|
1247 |
Mary Delrue was single. | Delrue, Mary (I04114)
|
1248 |
Mary Ellen Healey and Don Wagner reside at (1994):
05819 Camp Daggett
Boyne City, MI 49712
(616) 582-7415 | Healey, Mary Ellen (I00961)
|
1249 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | LaVoy, Mary Ann (I02301)
|
1250 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Martin, Mary Carol RN (I01623)
|
|
|
|