Our Maritime Ties
Notes
Matches 25,396 to 25,410 of 26,840
# | Notes | Linked to |
---|---|---|
25396 | The index to the New Brunswick Vital Statistics gives their marriage date as the 9th of September but the official document gives it as the 6th of September 1926. Witnesses at their marriage were Adolphe Richard and Jeanne Bourque, both of Middle Sackville, New Brunswick, Canada. | Family F4599
|
25397 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Oslac (I12356)
|
25398 | The land was given to them by Messieurs Duchambon and Dubuisson. They had cleared enough land to sow 32 bushels of wheat but had sowed only 6 and 1/2 bushels of wheat because that was all the seed that they had. | Arsenault, Abraham (dit Le Petit Abraham) (I2989)
|
25399 | The Leaflet on the Vienneau family obtained in 1994, gives the sailing period from France to North America as sometime between 1750 and 1756. However, a son is baptized in Quebec city in November 1751 so the sailing must have occurred between 1750 and fall of 1751.-note by A.Owen, March2019 In the article La Famille Vienneau written by Placide Gaudet and published in l`èvangeline newspaper on 12 July 1974, it mentions that 24 families left France to sail to Maghs (today Machias, Maine). For reasons that have never been known, the captain of the vessel landed them in Quebec city after having been aboard the ship for eleven months. Among these families was that of Michel Vienneau. Tradition reports that Michel was a cartwright and his wife was a shepardess...they arived in Quebec around 1750. | Vienneau\Vianot, Michel (I105)
|
25400 | The letter gave them written permission to settle on Ile Royale at the good pleasure of the King. | Richard, Pierre (I2052)
|
25401 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family F3294
|
25402 | The marriage entry falls between two baptism entries dated Jan 1863 and Feb 1863. Believe the year of the marriage is 1863 and not 1862. Witnesses at the marriage were Amos Comeau and Olive Comeau. | Family F4465
|
25403 | The marriage registration gives her age as 29 years. Witnesses for their marriage were Edmond Thibodeau of Richibouctou Office, NB and Beatrice Vienneau of Amherst, NS. | Family F2787
|
25404 | The Miquelon census was taken on 15 May 1767 and Appolonie aged 7 years appears with her family. | Arsenault, Apollonie (I6085)
|
25405 | The Miquelon census was taken on May 15th, 1767. | Arsenault, Anne (dite Nanon) (I6079)
|
25406 | The name of his first wife is unknown. | Family F130
|
25407 | The name, Belliveau, appears many times in the parish registers of La Chaussee. Antoine Belliveau's date of arrival in Acadia is unknown. | Belliveau, Antoine (I785)
|
25408 | The obituary gives her age as 91 when she died on 29 Aug. Therefore an assumption has been made that she must have died in 1971. | Melanson, Justine (I5658)
|
25409 | The only source of information I have at present is a Letter provided by Dr. Albert Dobson of Abbotsford BC, from "Uncle Ed" (James Edward Dobson) to "Madge) in 1941: "Richard Dobson m. Charlotte Richardson, b. 23 Mar 1776. They were married 10 Apr 1793. She was the daughter of a British Army Officer, whose regiment was then stationed at Charlottetown, PEI." This letter included the list of information from the family bible. Most of the information is reliable, but not entirely. There was a statement in the same letter that the Dobsons came to Halifax on the ship Duke of York in 1772, but that is not true, since the Dobsons went via Boston and a baby daughter died and was buried in Boston. Richard Dobson and Charlotte Richardson had a son Joseph Dobson, who married Hannah Harriet Ingram. According to email information from Betty Dobson ("Inkspotter") to Jean Simon, Hannah was the daughter of James & Barbara Ann (Richardson) Ingram. If Barbara Ann Richardson and Charlotte Richardson were sisters, then Joseph Dobson and Hannah Ingram were first cousins! There were a lot of first-cousin marriage in those days. I have another interpretation of existing data which might complicate the plot still further: Richard Dobson's older brother David "the spy" Dobson, b. May 1753, married Hannah, widow Richardson on 2 Aug 1784 at St. Pauls Anglican, Charlottetown PEI. If this Hannah was born about 1753, then she is old enough to be the mother of Charlotte Richardson born 1776. Thus David, the older brother, might have married the widowed mother, and Richard, the younger brother, 9 years later, could have married the daughter. [A theory only, but it is quite possible.] Your Barbara Ann Richardson, if born about 1782, could be a sister of Charlotte, and also a daughter of Hannah. [?] | Richardson, Charlotte (I10823)
|
25410 | The parish register gives the witnesses at their marriage as Luois Arsenaud and Mary Bourc. There is a 3rd degree of consanguinity. | Family F3176
|