Our Family History
Notes
Résultats 1,651 à 1,700 de 9,705
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1651 | Au moins une personne vivante ou marquée privée est liée à cette note - Les détails ne sont donc pas publiés. | En vie (I70252)
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1652 | À vérifier pas absolument certain que cette Philomene Boucher # 4256 soit l'épouse de ce Theophile Boucher # 3867 | BOUCHER, Theophile (I17097)
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1653 | À verifier, pas absolument certain que cette Philomene Boucher # 4256 soit l'epouse de ce Theophile Boucher #3867. Ces deux noms apparaissentcomme pere/mere de Edouard Boucher marié a Lucienne Surprenant le 17oct 1923 sur un registre demariagee desthist reraéfav's18 Rivitab» «tab»de Iberville | BOUCHER, Philomene (I17098)
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1654 | A widow of Wyke Regis Parish when she married Henry | TALBOT, Mary (I72421)
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1655 | A widower in the 1851 Census living at Verbena Cottage, Bishopsteignto. | LAMACRAFT, Robert (I48891)
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1656 | a young man, Francois worked as a mariner, like his father. When he was18-years old, Francois immigrated to the United States of America withhis parents and settled in the State of Louisiana. Francois and his wife Jeanne had nine children, six daughters and three sons. By 1810, thefamily lived in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, where they contributed to the immense growth of the community. In 1810, the town filled only six pages in the Census rolls, but by 1820, had grown to 24 pages. Francois andJeanne lived there in 1810 with three of their daughters, as the others seem to have died by then. In fact, none of their sons lived until adulthood and the ARBOUR name ended with Francois on this line. In December 1810, the family lived next door toFrancois DAIGLE, probably Jeanne's father. A Private Fr. ARBOUR fought with the 8th Regiment (Meriam's Regiment), Louisiana Military, during the War of 1812. There were no other Francis/Francois ARBOURs alive at this time so one may conclude it wasthis Francois who fought for his home and that he died after 1812. However, speculation exists that Fr. could actually stand for Frederickso no conclusions can be made. It is unclear when or where Francois andJeanne passed away. Jeanne was alive during the Census taken in December 1810, so she died some time after this. Furthermore, there is a Francois ARBOUR listed in Baton Rouge in the 1830 Census and in the 1840 Census. He is probably also ourFrancois. Property sold by Francois: Iberville County Louisiana Archives Deed -- Allin , Pierre - Arbour, Francois -- 16 January 1806 File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Crystal Devillier oneonone a cox.net 02 Feb 2007, 9:02 pm Written: January 16, 1806 Date: January 16, 1806 Sale -- Francois Arbour to Pierre Allin A plantation of his ownership, situated in this County on the right bank of the Mississippi river, bounded above to the properties which the purchaser had acquired on date of yesterday, of Joseph Braud and below by those of Hypolites Mallet,composed of three arpents and eighteen feetof front on forty of depth with the opening which corresponds to it, in a word, such as it comprises and containsactually, such as the purchaser, has seen, visited and accepted, and which belongs tothe vendor forhaving been purchased at the auction of the property of the late Charles Robichaut, who had acquired it at the public sale of the succession of the late Charles Henry, according to as it is confirmed by the documents existingand deposited in the archives of the Government of Baton Rouge. And the said Charles Henry had the ownership of this land by concession accored in the name of S.M.C. of the said three arpents and eighteen feet of land of front on forty of depthmentioned hereinabove, aswell as for like quantity of front and depth which had formerly belonged to Joseph Braud and that on date of yesterday the latter had sold to the same Mr. Pierre Allin. Additional Comments: Transcribed from original French in 1978 by Delma Abadie File at: http://ftp.rootsweb.com/pub/usgenweb/la/iberville/deeds/arbour429gdd.txt | ARBOUR, Francois John (I1990)
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1657 | A. J. and wife were Patrons of St Anthony School in Baton Rouge, LA, in1957In 1940, Allain reported that he had earned $1,680 in 1939. | ARBOUR, Allain Joseph (I1659)
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1658 | Abel Benoît dit Laforest, originaire de Ste-Hermine, ar. Fontenay-le-Comte,év. Luçon, Poitou (Vendée) | BENOÎT, Abel (I13023)
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1659 | Abjucation Naissance: Saint-Jean-Baptiste, v. Chateau-Salins, ev. Metz, Lorraine (Chateau Moselle) | Famille: Christophe MULLER / Angelique CHARBONNEAU (F36150)
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1660 | abjuration | SIMONEAU, Pierre (I71450)
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1661 | Abjure la Religion Prétendue Reformee en l'église, cathedrale de N.D.Q.. Acte signee J. De Lacroix de St- Vallier, Temoin: Jacques de Brisay deNonville et Catherine Courtin | SICARD, Jean (I29352)
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1662 | Abjure le calvinisme le 27 septembre 1685 à St-Nicolas de La Rochelle. N'estpas venue au Canada. | COUSSEAU, Sarah (I28004)
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1663 | Abraham continued the farming tradition living at Thurlstone nearPenistone and marying local girl Mary Wainwright in 1811. She gave himthree sons but died in 1823 giving birth to a daughter. The daughter,Mary, sadly only lived a few months. In 1828he married ElizabethCreswick ( Criswick) but had no more children. On the death of hisfather in 1832, Abraham inherited the farm at Worrall and moved in. Hecontinued to prosper and bought more land in Wadsley Park.Elizabeth died in 1850 and in 1851,aged 60, he retired, and passedLane Farm to his son Richard who had been living with him and sharingthe work. It comprised the Dwelling House; barns and stables;cow-house; parcels of land; parkland;and Timber Croft.In his willdated 1855 Abraham also left Richard an annuity for life.Son WILLIAM would only inherit the part of Wadsley Park bought byAbraham in 1835.During his lifetime Abraham also purchased part of WADSLEY PARK ESTATE- lying between Lough Dyke and Lane Farm - for £1,800.UnfortxgMal'hôtelllee?es 1753b»Ditab» «tab»unately in 1862 Richard died aged 45 and in march 1865 his onlygrandson, Thomas Edward also died aged just5, leaving no one to takeover the farm.In 1865 ABRAHAM ran into some financial difficulty. A Mr Brownrequiredrepayment of interest on a previous loan, but Abraham had toobtain another loan from Mortomley Hospitalto help out.In 1865 Dyson Holme Estate was sold to a Jos. Dickinson and in July1866 Abrham died.After Abrahams death in 1866 a valuationwas made on Lane Farm(Worrel) - £3,315-4xgMal'hôtelllee?es 1753b»Ditab» «tab»s-9d- probably as a precursor to selling. The farm comprised - small farmhouses; ploughing land and woodland; rough and unfurnishedout-buildings; 2 Cutler workshops; 4 cottages; 3 gardens. Was this thebreak up of the farming era in the Jackson family?Abraham and his wife Elizabeth are buried in the same grave as that ofhis father and mother (Abraham and Martha), in the churchyard of StNicholas Bradfield.The gravestone islaid flat, directlyonentering the churchyard, onthe path. | JACKSON, Abraham (I45769)
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1664 | Abraham was Benjamin's only son and kept the family farming tradition.He married Martha Shaw, who was a local girl and his first twochildren were born in Bradfield and Bolsterstone. Sometime betwen 1784and 1788 hemoved to Hawkshead in Lancashire (now Cumbria) and this iswhere his next two sons were born. He may have moved in order to makebird lime which is a substance made by fermenting holly branches. Agreat deal of holly grew in this part of the Lake District and birdlime wasmuch in demandin the Colonies where it was used not to catchbirds but to catch flies. He returned to Bolsterstone around the timeof his father's death in 1804 and was joint executor of his father'sWill.He lived for a time at Hermit Royd and Thurlstone near Penistone,before moving to a farm in Worrall, which he owned. By the time of hisdeath in 1832, he was quite prosperous, having increased the amount ofland he owned and made other investments in land and property.In his Will (dated 10 July 1831) he leaves :1. To Benjamin Jackson an annuity of £15 from rents of properties inMiddlewood.2. £300 to be shared between Benjamin's children after they had allreached 213. To Ann he also left £300 and specific instructionsthat it was forher 'sole use', sugMal'hôtelllee?es 1753b»Ditab» «tab»gesting that he did not want her husband ThomasWhitley to get his hands on it!4. To William he left £250 and £50 to come from tolls on the turnpikeon Penistone Road.5. Abraham received everything else ie propertyandland and any moneyleft after exgMal'hôtelllee?es 1753b»Ditab» «tab»penses were paid.6. Household goods were to be shared or sold and the money shared.Both ABRAHAM and his wife - MARTHA - are buried in the churchyard ofSt Nicholas church in Bradfield Yorkshire. | JACKSON, Abraham (I45767)
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1665 | According to Alex Lebon's miner's file and a paper established in 1894,Jules was born in 1868 in St.-Etienne, married to Albertine Choitel, he was a brick layer, and lived in l'Etoile (departement de la Somme, arrondissement d'Amiens, canton de Picquigny). | LEBON, Jules Auguste (I52025)
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1666 | According to Alex Lebon's miner's papers, Emile was born in 1870 in St.Etienne. In 1894 he was a bachelor, a miner, and lived in Barlin (canton d-Houdain). | LEBON, Louis Emile (I52080)
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1667 | According to both the 1901 Census and his Death Registration, Jean-Octave was born on 10 Jun 1856. John was not listed on the Voter Registration Rolls in Chicago in 1888-1892. This could have been because he neverattained US Citizenship. Itcould also be because he had moved away. --> John did indeed move away. He married in QC in 1885, so apparently heleft Chicago sometime before this. ___ Bio from Facebook on 09 Jun 2010: 09 June 1854 -- Born in Montreal, Quebec, Jean-Roch-Octave ARBOUR was the 4th of 9 children of tailor Theodore ARBOUR and his wife Rachel TISON. As a young man, John followed his elder brother Peter to the United States. He was found living on Bloomendale Street in Chicago, Illinois,with Peter's family in 1880. Following in their father's footsteps, both brothers worked as tailors. Both brothersalso seem to have heavily favored the HARBOUR spelling of their last name. While Peter remained inthe US and later died there, John appears to have returned to Quebec. Perhaps he was disillusioned at Chicago's prospects for a nice bride ofFrench Canadian origins. John finally settled down in 1885, when he married in Montreal to 16-year old AnnaCHARBONNEAU on 18 May. John and Anna had 3 children, one daughter and 2 sons, although only son Raoul would give them any descendants. Between 2 marriages, Raoul had 2 children and no known grandchildren. John was just 52-years old when he diedinMontreal on 05 April 1907. Anna lived more than 50 more years but never seems to have remarried. She died in Montreal on 11 November 1959, atthe age of 92. Both of them were buried in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Catholic Cemetery in Montreal. | ARBOUR, Octave (I4061)
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1668 | According to CEF Records, on 21 February 1916, Edouard heard his country's call to duty and left his young wife to enlist with the Canadian Expeditionary Forces. At the time of his medical examination, he was 5' 6½" tall, weighed 133 pounds,and hadlHoez.sus-e Le ssaole?ees18 Rivitab»«tab»a fair complexion, brown eyes, and brown hair. Private ARBOUR then became part of the 69th Battalion and boarded a ship for England, from whence he went to France for five months. Edouard then began having difficulty keeping up withtroop marches, owing to shortness of breath and chest pain. On 15 November 1917, the Medical Board determined that hesuffered from Neurasthenia, as he complained of pain in his back, legs, and testicles, was extremely nervous, was afraid towalk in the road, and could not read a book as it made him cry. Although no specific heart defect was noted, on 22 November 1917, they decided to send him back home to be based in Ottawa, awaiting a permanent decision of his fate. On 5 February1918, Edouard was determinedto be medically unfit and was summarily discharged from service. He returned to his wife and son in Ste-Therese. On 1 Sep 1923, Edouard returned home to Canada after 6 weeks of workingor at least looking for work in North Dakota. He had arrived in the USfrom Gretna, MB, on 23 Jul 1923. He was planning on returning on the Highway via Gretna. While still retaining his "good" health, it would appear as though Edouard's foray into the US was not all that successful,as he was returning home with just $20 in his pocket. | ARBOUR, Edouard (I3483)
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1669 | According to CEF Recrods, on 13 May 1918, Arthur was drafted into service with the Canadian Expeditionary Forces (CEF) while living in Montreal. At the time of his enlistment, he was 5' 5" tall, weighed 130 pounds, and had a fair complexion,brown eyes, and brown hair. He then became a soldier in the 1st Depot Battalion, 1st Quebec Regiment. On 3 June 1918, Arthur left the CEF and re-enlisted in the Royal Canadian Air Force. His fate beyond this is unknown. He had 4 Living Arbour | ARBOUR, Ernest (I3656)
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1670 | According to family story . . . During the Vietnam War, Vic tried to enlist in the United States Military, only to initially be denied becauseof his Canadian Citizenship. Somehow Vic did eventuallyserve two toursof duty in Vietnam. The second wastoprotect his brother from having to serve. Notes from Wendy (PRODELL) HEWITT: Victor Arbour died as a result of injuries sustained in an automobile accident on 08 Nov 1985. The accidenthappened in White Lake Township, MI, on Bogie Lake Rd atthe Lakeland High School curve. He died atthe ageof 36. He was on his way home from work and was involved in an accident with a meat truck. His injuries were numerous and he died seven weeks later at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital in Pontiac, MI. He and his wife Sheila met in the unemployment lineatMichigan Employment Security Commission in Pontiac. He went to school at Ferris State in Big Rapids, MI. Victor was an auto mechanic and worked for the US Postal Service Vehicle Maintenance. He was an avid sportsman. Death Certificate #0834070 fromOakland County, MI. Burial in Highland Cemetery,Highland, MI. Vic and Sheila had no children. US Department of Veterans Affairs BIRLS Death File, 1850-2010 Name: Victor Emanuel Arbour Gender: Male Birth Date: 9 Feb 1949 Death Date: 30 Dec 1985 SSN: 384509993 Branch 1: ARMY Enlistment Date 1: 21 Mar 1967 Release Date 1: 3 Dec 1970 He had one child with ????Claudill before he married Sheila Prodell. | ARBOUR, Victor (I7092)
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1671 | According to her death certificate, Mary died from a condition known aspuerperal eclampsia. In every source consulted, puerperal eclampsia always referred to a condition regarding women during or after childbirth. This seems strange as Mary was notmarried and there was no mention of pregnancy or childbirth on her death certificate. According to her death certificate, Mary was buried in Fayette Cemeteryin Fayette, Delta Co, MI. However, there is a gravemarker for her in Saint Peter the Fisherman Cemetery in Delta Co, MI. | ARBOUR, Mary (I6053)
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1672 | According to her Death Registration filed with the Archives of Quebec, Juliette was born on 17 Jul 1889. La Press (Montreal, QC) -- 18 Mar 1939 [English translation] THERRIEN -- In Montreal on 18 March 1939, at the age of 49 years, Mrs. Alexandre Therrien, nee Juliette Arbour, died. The funeral will be heldon Tuesday, the 21st of this month. The funeral procession will leave from her residence, 3549 St Denis Street, to St-Alphonse Church in Youville and then to the Cote-des-Neiges Cemetery. Family and friends are asked to attend without further invitation. Opinion of the hour of the funeral on Monday. La Presse (Montreal, QC) -- 18 Mar 1939 [original French] THERRIEN -- A Montreal, le 18 mars 1939, a l'age de 49 ans, est decede Mme Alexandre Therrien, nee Juliette Arbour. Les funerailles auront lieu mardi, le 21 courant. Le convoi funebre partira de sa demeure, No 3549 rue St-Denis, pour sa rendre a l'eglise St-Alphonse d'Youville, et dela au cimetiere de la Cote-des-Neiges. Parents et amis sont pries d'y assister sans autre invitation. Avis de l'heure des funerailles lundi. She had 9 children | ARBOUR, Marie Archange Charlotte Juliette (I5682)
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1673 | According to his Death Registration filed with the Archives of Quebec, Henri was born on 15 Oct 1910. From Denis ARBOUR via email on 03 May 2008: "Le vingt-huit avril mil neuf cent vingt-huit, nous, curé soussigné, avons inhumé dans le cimetière de cette paroisse le corps de Henri-Adéodat Arbour, décédé l'avant veille à l'âge de dix-huit ans et sept mois après avoir reçu les sacrements de l'e acusaole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»Église. Étaient présents Joseph Arbour et Alexandre Bujold, soussignés, et une foule de parents et amis. Lecture faite." "On the 28th of April 1928, I, undersigned priest, have interred in this's parish cemetery the body of Henri-Adéodat Arbour, deceased the day before yesterday at the age of eighteen years and seven month after receiving the Church's sacraments. Werments de l'e acusaole?ees18 Rivitab»«tab»e present Joseph Arbour and Alexandre Bujold, undersigned, and a crowd of relatives and friends. Reading done." Henri-Adéodat is a son of François-Xavier-Arthur ARBOUR and Marie-Louise-"Alma" HENRY. Their names were left out but Arthur signed the document event though the priest did not mention his name at all. | ARBOUR, Adeodat (I1239)
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1674 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, as well as the Social SecurityDeath Index, Ernest was born 06 Jul 1898. According to his WWI Draft Registration, Ernest was of medium height and medium build, with blue eyes and brown hair. According to his WWI Draft Registration, Ernest lived with a Mrs. Mina ARBOUR. We can only speculate that this is his wife. According to the 1940 Census, Ernest had completed 8th grade. In 1940, Ernest reported that he had earned $1,150 in 1939. | ARBOUR, Ernest (I2229)
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1675 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Edouard was tall with a mediumbuild, blue eyes, and brown hair. He was also noted to have lost part of 3 fingers on his left hand. ___ In 1940, Edouard reported that he had earned $1250 in 1939. ___ Kennebec Journal (ME) -- 28 Mar 1973 EDOUARD M. ARBOUR Augusta -- Edouard M. Arbour, 83, died Tuesday morning at his home, 28 Water St., after a long illness. He was born in Joliette, PQ, 2 April 1889, the son of Michel and Adelaide Lasalle Arbour. Mr. Arbour was a communicant of St Augustine Catholic Church. A lifelong resident of Augusta, he had been employed by Bates Manufacturing Company, Edwards Division, for 52 years in the carding department prior to his retirement in 1961. He was a member of St John the Baptist Union of America Conseil Laval. Survivors include four sons, Edouard D. Arbour, Armand E. Arbour, Richard Arbour, and Roger R. Arbour, all of Augusta; a daughter, Miss Juliette Arbour of Augusta; two brothers, Rosaire and Anselme Arbour, both of Augusta; a sister, Mrs. Genaro (Marguerite) Porcello of Medford, MA; nine grandchildren; six great-grandchildren; also several nieces, nephews, and cousins. A Mass of the Resurrection will be sung Thursday morning at 10 at St Augustine Catholic Church. Burial will be in St AugustineCemetery. ARBOUR, Edouard M. -- Friends may call at the Plummer Funeral Home Inc,16 Pleasant St., Augusta, today from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 pm. A Mass of the Resurrection will be sung Thursday morning at 10 at StAugustine Catholic Church. ___ Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) -- Monday 21 Feb 2011 -- Keith Edwards AUGUSTA'S MANUFACTURING LEGACY -- Group Working to Turn Remaining Building Into Museum Augusta -- For more than 100 years, workers toiled inside the massive brick Edwards Mill complex before it was destroyed by a spectacular blaze in 1989. {Photos} {Jan Michaud, left, SANDY ARBOUR, andMaurice Pelletier examine early 20th century photos of mill workers Tuesday at Michaud's Augusta home. The group wants to convert the former electrical distribution building at Edwards Mill complex, located at Mill Park in Augusta, into a museum for mill history.} {The former electrical distribution building for the Edwards Mill complex at Mill Park in Augusta. A group is proposing to utilize thestructure for a museum.} Now, a small group made up primarily of descendants of those workers are working to make sure the memories and stories aren't buried with the charred ashes ofthe riverside former mill. "Manufacturing in Augusta -- I don't want it to be lost for our children" said Jan Michaud, president of Friends for a Heritage Center at Mill Park. "This is the workforce that was thebackbone of the city." At its peak the Edwards Mill work force numbered1,300 people -- many of them Franco-Americans and other immigrants whocame to America, and Augusta, to work. They made cotton cloth productsfor a thriving company -- and lives for themselves and their families.Now a core group of 10 local residents are raising funds and interest in turning the only still-standing Edwards Mill building -- a two-story, 1,800-square-foot brick building on a small hill overlooking the formermill -- into a museum. The museum would seek to honor and recall thecity's thousands of manufacturing workers, starting with the many who toiled at Edwards, but later expanding, Michaud said, to include paper mill and other manufacturing workers from the city's past. Members of Friends for a Heritage Center at Mill Park have been laying the foundation for the museum for three years, interviewing, photographing and recording video and audio of 31 former mill workers, documenting their stories and memories. "These folks were reluctant at first," Michaud, whosegrandfather worked at the mill, said of the mill workers they've interviewed. "They'd say, 'Oh, you don't want to talk to me, I don't have anything interesting to say.' We said, 'Wejust want your memories. What was it like? How did work affect your family?' And, inevitably, they'd open up. "Once they started to talk, they couldn't stop." The former cotton mill at 1 Water St. frames one side of the city's downtown area. Employment at the mill sometimes peaked at as many as 2,000 workers. Thecity owns the building, which is locatedin the Capital Riverfront Improvement District -- an area created in 1999 as a joint venture between the city and the state to emphasize and protect the river. As such, organizers, who are incorporated as a nonprofit group, will need both the city and Capital Riverfront Improvement District board to sign off on the project. City Councilor Patrick Paradis, a member of the district's board, said the City Council and district board have both spoken favorably about the proposal. "We want to see that building go from being an unused building to a wonderful museum to all the people who worked there," said Paradis, whose father workedatthe mill for 35 years, and whois also of French ancestry. "This history is going away -- every week,someone who worked there is passing away. We wantto capture their history." Jan Michaud's husband, Victor Michaud, whose grandfather and great-grandfather worked at the mill, said the building they're eyeing for a museum was deemed structurally sound in a 2002 assesment. But it was estimated at the time that it would take about $1.5 million to restore the building and convert it into a museum. Maurice "Moe" Pelletier, vice president of the group whose father-in-law worked at Edwards and whose father worked at what later becomethe Statler paper mill in Augusta, said a major next step is to have a new assement done so the group can form a business plan. In addition to photos, the Friends for a HeritageCenter at Mill Park has cloth products made at the mill, tools and a huge logbook from the 1930s listing each worker, their pay and how much they paid in rent to live in numerous company-owned homes surrounding the mill. "I just found my grandfather's, he was in the card room," saidSandy Arbour as she looked through the logbook recently. "Lookat all these French names... Amazing." University of Maine at Augusta architecturestudents have already come up with different designs for turning the building, currently used by the city for storage,into a showplace. A fundraiser for the project is planned for Friday at Le Club Calumet, featuring comedian Louis Philippe as "FatherFrenchie," and musician TinaCharest. The group has an online presence on Facebook as well. It's http://heritagecenteratmillpark.blogspot.com. Jan Michaud, a former elementary school principal, said they'd like to have the buildingrestored and museum up and running within five years. She said they'd also like to include a small cafe in the building,as a place for people to gather and also to help pay for the costs of maintaining and running the museum. "We're hoping we can make somethinghappen for the community," she said. "It's an awesome spot for tourists to come and start their walk-through of the city here, go downtown, go over to Fort Western. "It's a dream, and we're hoping to make it a reality." | ARBOUR, Edouard (I2169)
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1676 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Emile was of medium height andmedium build with brown eyes and black hair. He also had a disabled arm. ___ Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) -- 15 Jul 1918 FOR PHYSICAL EXAMINATION Local Board for Division No. 1, Kennebec County, upon advice of the Legal Advisory Board and government appeal agents, and in accordance with the decision of the District Board, has re-classified thefollowing old registrants who were given deferredclassification at the time of their filing their questionaires and they are now all in Class 1. These men have been called to appear for their physical examination at the office of the Local Board, Post Office Building, Augusta, on Friday afternoon,10 July, at 2 o'clock: Emile Arbour, 28 Water Street, Augusta Louis J. Arbour, 47 Washington Street, Augusta [By 20 Jul 1918, Emile was found disqualified for military service. However, Louis was accepted. He was either part of the group going to CampDeevens on 26 Jul 1918 or was headed to Fort Slocum, NY,on 5 Aug 1918.] ___ Emile owned a barber shop co-located with a poolroom -- Arbour & Beaudoin -- with Elisee BEAUDOIN. It was located at 54 Northern Avenue in Augusta, ME. Emile's grandson Michael PARE fondly remembers his granddad'sbusiness: "I shot a few racks in there as a youngster while drinking an ice cold Orange Crush purchased for 5 cents from the cooler that was situated in the same room. Ah, the memories . . ." ___ In 1940, Emile reported that he had earned no money in 1939. Marie's mother Lena also lived with them in 1935 and in 1940. ___ Kennebec (ME) Journal -- 15 Jun 1959 EMILE ARBOUR Augusta -- Emile Arbour, 68, of 11 Boothbay St, died Saturday at the Augusta General Hospital after a long illness. Born 6 May 1891, son of Michel and Adelaide Lasalle Arbour in Joliette, QC, he was the husband ofMarie Laflamme Arbour. Mr. Arbour retired a few months ago after 37 years of barbering as an associate in the Arbour & Beaudoin Barber Shop. Survivors are his widow; fours sons, Alphonse and John, Augusta, Paul E., PA, and Joseph, MA; three daughters, Mrs. Edmond Pare,Miss ChristineArbour, and Miss Estelle Arbour, all of Augusta; five brothers, Edward, Joseph, Rosaire, Anselm, allof Augusta, and Ernest, MA; two sisters, Mrs. Alfred Turgeon, Augusta, and Mrs. Jerry Porcello, MA; and nine grandchildren. Funeral services will beat 8 am Tuesday at St Augustine's Catholic Church. ARBOUR, Emile -- Friends may call at Plummer's Funeral Home, 16 Pleasant St, Augusta. Please omit flowers. | ARBOUR, Emile (I1738)
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1677 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Francois was of medium height and medium build with blue eyes and brown hair. At the time, he was a widow with a small child. From Ann Irene STILKEY, wife of Raymond J. ARBOUR: Ray is very proud ofhis Franco-American background and the history regarding Franco American immigrants in Augusta. The area in which they lived was called "SandHill." The cotton mill thatemployed them was at the bottom of Sand Hill and their church, St Augustine, was at the top. The generation of Francois and his children were very much discriminated at that time due totheir ethnic background and it was my husband's generation that brokethecycle. My in-laws left the "Hill" when Ray was 3-years old and movedto the "English" part of thecity, which was really frowned upon. Around the time Ray was getting ready to start school in the non-French speaking part of the city, my in-lawsdecided they needed to teach him to speak English ashe only spoke French at that time. He has memories of other children in the neighborhood teasing him because he only spoke French. He still is quite fluent in French, buthis first language is nowEnglish. His younger brother, however, can understand French quite well buthas difficulty conversing. I also remember Olivine. She refused to speak English and only spoke French, except when it was just she and I,because I do not speak French. On 30 Nov 1915, Francois and Augustine travelled to the US via the portof Newport, VT, and were headed for Augusta, ME, to their house at 22 Mill Brook. Francois was 5'9" tall with a medium complexion, brown hair, and blue? eyes. Augustine was 5'3"tall with a medium complexion, brown hair, and blue? eyes. They carried $68 with them. ___ Bio from Facebook 25 Feb 2010: 25 Feb 1893 -- Francois-Xavier-Gilbert ARBOUR was born in Joliette, QC,as the 4th of 12 children of Charles-Barthelemi ARBOUR [who was profiled on 14 Feb] and Marie-Celina BOISVERT. At approximatelyage 14, Francois emigrated to the US from Canada but then returned sometime later. Around age 20, Francois trekked across Canada to arrive in Alberta. On 25Nov 1913, in Morinville, AB, Francois married 16-year old Augustine DUPUIS. They had one son who died just after birth in Alberta before theiremigration to the US in about 1915. On 30 Nov 1915, Francois and Augustine traveled to the US via the port of Newport, Vermont, and headed for Augusta, Maine, to their house at 22 Mill Brook. Francois was 5'9" tall with a medium complexion, brown hair, and blue eyes. Augustine was 5'3" tall with a medium complexion, brown hair, and blue eyes. They carried $68 with them. Just 3 months later, Augustine gave birth to their son Jean-Marie ARBOUR in Feb 1917. In Jun 1917, Francois registered fortheWWI Draft, when he was noted to be of medium height and medium build with blue eyes and brown hair. At the time, he was a widow with a small child, as Augustine had suffered an untimely death after little Jean'sbirth. On 25 Jun 1917, Francoismarried for a second time to Olivine M. PARE, who then bore 8 children over the next 10 years. Throughout hislife, Francois worked as a fixer, a pulp maker in a paper factory, a cotton mill worker, and as an employee of the Edwards Manufacturing Company. He then seems to have become sick by 1933, when he had no job. In 1935, 42-year old Francois passedaway in Augusta, ME, before ever having met any of his 18 grandchildren. Olivine lived another 38years beforepassing away in 1973. One of these grandchildren is Raymond J. ARBOUR.Ray's wife Ann Irene STILKEY explains a little bit about their way of life in Maine: Ray is very proud of his Franco-American background and the history regarding Franco-American immigrants in Augusta. The area in which they lived was called "Sand Hill." The cotton mill that employed them was at the bottom of Sand Hill and their church, St Augustine, was at the top. The generation of Francois andhis children werevery muchdiscriminated against due to their ethnic background and it was Ray's generation that broke the cycle. Ray's parents left the "Hill" when Raywas 3-years old and moved to the "English" partof the city, which was really frowned upon. Around the time Ray was getting ready to start schoolin the non-French speaking part of the city, his parents decided they needed to teach him to speak English as he only spoke French. Ray has memories of other children inthe neighborhood teasing him because he only spoke French. Although quite fluentin French, his first language is now English. Ray's younger brother, however, can understand French quite well but has difficulty conversing. Olivine also refused to speak English and spoke only French. | ARBOUR, Francois Xavier Gilbert (I1735)
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1678 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Fred was tall with a slender build. He had brown eyes and brown hair. Also living with Fred and Ethel during the 1930 Census, was his niece Barbara ARBOUR. Whose daughter was she? She was brother Henry's daughter. Fred and Ethel appear to have reaised her after her parents separated. Perhaps they even adopted her, asshe is mentioned in his obituary as their daughter. ___ Times Record (Troy, NY) -- Tuesday 09 Sep 1975 FRED ARBOUR; FORMER RESIDENT OF MECHANICVILLE North Pownal, VT -- Funeral Service for Fred Arbour, 81, formerly of North Pownal and Mechanicville, were held Monday at 11 am from the San Soucie Funeral Home in North Adams, MA. Rev. Lafayette Sprague, rector ofSt John's Episcopal Church,officiated. Interment was in Southview Cemetery, North Adams. Mr. Arbour died Friday at his home after a long illness. He was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Mose Arbour. He was formerly employed by the New York State Power Company in Mechanicville for 38years. He had resided in North Adams since his retirement. Survivors include his wife, the former Ethel Woodbury of North Adams, and a daughter, Mrs. Vernon Ray, of Boxford, NY. --> Note added 22 Mar 2012: Fred and Ethel must have disowned their son, Henry, after his unsavory actions as a young man. --> Note added 04 Jul 2012: Henry was actually a son of Fred's brother Henry and his wife Daisy. After Daisy's untimely death, Fred and Ethel raised Barbara and Henry. | ARBOUR, Frederick (I3964)
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1679 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Harry was born on 12 Mar 1900.He was of medium height and medium build. He had blue eyes and sp.. (illegible) hair. In 1942 North Adams, MA, a Harry ARBOUR worked at Greenfield and lived at 56 Jackson Street. Is this our Harry or his brother? US WWII Army Enlistment Records (1938-1946) Name: Harry J Arbour Birth Year: 1901; Race: White, citizen; Nativity State or Country: Vermont; State: Massachusetts; County or City: Berkshire Enlistment Date: 19 Oct 1942; Enlistment State: Massachusetts; Enlistment City: Springfield; Branch: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA; Branch Code: Branch Immaterial - Warrant Officers, USA;Grade: Private; Grade Code: Private; Term of Enlistment: Enlistment for the duration of the War or other emergency, plus six months, subject to the discretion of the President or otherwise according to law; Component: Selectees(Enlisted Men); Source: Civil Life Education: 1 year of high school; Civil Occupation: Draftsman, Electrical; Marital Status: Separated, without dependents; Height: 63; Weight: 158 North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Monday 18 Oct 1948 [In an ad for the Community Chest -- akin to today's United Way] . . . Independent Condensers Workers Union No. 2 -- Harry Arbour, President North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Wednesday 17 Nov 1948 ANNUAL ELECTION OF INDEPENDENT CONDENSERS' WORKERS UNION SCHEDULED FOR 21 DEC . . . President Harry Arbour declined to run for re-election. | ARBOUR, Harry Joseph (I4291)
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1680 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, John was of medium height and medium build with black eyes and dark hair. According to his WWII Draft Registration, John was illiterate, as he made his mark with an "x". ___ North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Thursday 13 Jul 1926 NORTH POWNAL Mrs. John Arbour, daughter Gertrude, and son Harold have returned to their home following a trip to West Point and Kingston. North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Thursday 31 Jan 1929 NORTH POWNAL John Arbour has been confined to his home by illness for several days. ___ North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Monday 08 Jul 1935 BROTHERS CAUGHT IN HENHOUSE BREAK -- One Arrested Here After Tri-State Search -- One Sentenced -- Gets One To Two Years In Bennington Court Today For Entering Coop Of Pownal Men Noyes and Everett Thomas, brothers of Hoosick Falls, NY, gave the police of three states, Massachusetts, Vermont, and New York, a little business Saturday night and Sunday morning after allegedly breaking into a henhouse owned by John Arbourand T. G. Brownell at Sunnybrook Farm in Pownal, VT. After passing through the hands of officers in all three states, they were arraigned this morning in thecourt of Bennington, VT, on charges of breaking and entering in the night. Everett Thomas, 25, pleaded guilty to this charge and was sentenced to not less than one year nor more than two years in thestate's prison. His case was continued until Friday afternoon by Judge George A. Mather and he was placed under $500 bail. JudgeMather will assign counsel at that time. The rather involved proceedings leading up to the court appearance started when a burglar alarm sounded and turned on the lights in a henhouse at Sunnybrook Farm at about 12:40 o'clock Sunday morning.Aroused, Mr. Brownell and Mr. Arbour arrived just in time to see a car driving off their property. Mr. Brownell fired several shots at the car but failed to find his mark. The two Pownal men then gave chase and followed the car in the direction of this city. When they arrived here they notified the local police, who, a short time later, picked up the car they described on West Main Street, arresting Noyes Thomas who was in the machine alone, his brother having apparently sneakedinto the woods at Pownal. Yesterday morning Corporal Hillfrank of the New York State Police Barracks at Petersburg notified the local police that he wanted both the Hoosick Falls brothers. He came to this city for Noyes Thomas and spent sometime looking for Everett Thomas in this city and Williamstown. Everett Thomas was picked up later by Corporal Hillfrank at his home in Hoosick Falls. The New York State Trooper then turned both men over to Vermont authorities in Bennington.The owners of the Pownal farm say that there were 200 fowls in the henhouse which was broken into and 125 in another nearby coop.They also say that an attempt was made to break into the henhouse about three weeks ago. ___ North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Monday 23 Nov 1936 JOHN ARBOUR FRACTURES LEG John Arbour is at the Mary McClellan Hospital, Cambridge, NY, where he was taken on Saturday afternoon following an accident at his home in which he sustained a broken leg. The fracture was reduced by Dr. Vickers and Dr. Maxon of the hospital staff. North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Wednesday 25 Nov 1936 NORTH POWNAL John Arbour returned to his home yesterday from the Mary McClellan Hospital in Cambridge, NY. North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Monday 20 Jun 1938 NORTH POWNAL John Arbour is recovering at his home here from a minor operation on his nose performed by Dr. W. L. Curran of North Adams. In 1940, John reported that he had earned $728 in 1939. North Adams Transcript (MA) -- Thursday 25 Jun 1942 NORTH POWNAL John Arbour is confined to his home with an acute attack of rheumatism. ___ Times Record (Troy, NY) -- Friday 17 May 1946 POWNAL Mr. and Mrs. John Arbour and Miss Gertrude Arbour recently attended thefuneral of Mrs. Arbour's stepfather, Henry C. Armstrong, of Bennington. Bennington Evening Banner (VT) -- 21 Aug 1956 NORTH POWNAL BRIEFS John Arbour, Miss Gertrude Arbour, and Harold Arbour visited relatives in Schenectady, NY, Saturday. Bennington Evening Banner (VT) -- 06 Sep 1956 NORTH POWNAL BRIEFS Miss Gertrude Arbour and her father, John Arbour, left Wednesday for Roanoke, VA, where they will visit Mr. Arbour's son, Harold J. Arbour, who is an instructor at Hollins College in Roanoke. Mr. Arbour has been spending the summer with his father and sister here. ___ Troy Record (NY) -- 31 Dec 1959 JOHN D. ARBOUR John D. Arbour, 81, formerly of Hoosick and a retired meat market proprietor in North Pownal, VT, died suddenly yesterday at Roanoke, VA. He and his daughter Miss Gertrude Arbour had been spending the winter with his son, Harold J. Arbour, an instructor at Hollins College. Born in Canada, Mr. Arbour resided in Hoosick and Bennington before moving to North Pownal in 1903. He was the son [sic] of Mrs. Rebecca Gower Arbour, who died in 1956. Besides his daughter and son, he is survived by a sister, Mrs. Minnie Nadeau, North Pownal. Funeral Services will be Saturdayat 3 pm, from the Mahar Funeral Home in Bennington, where Rev. John J.McCarthy, rector of All Saints' Episcopal Church, Hoosick, will officiate. Entombmentwill be in Park Lawn Cemetery until spring when burial will be in HoosickRural Cemetery. ___ About John's kids, from Linda Hall, Director of Solomon Wright Public Library in Pownal, VT, on 11 Mar 2005 : Gertrude Arbour died in December1993. She lived in North Pownal and her bachelor brotherhad also livedwith her. She was born in 1903 in Bennington, VT, and moved to North Pownal, VT, when she was two. She went to business school after high school (perhaps Bliss School in North Adams) and worked for a Judge in Adams, MA, for more than 30 years. She joined her brother atHollins Collegein Virginia and returned to VT for the summers. Harold Arbour taught in the Navy schools of business administration then at Hollins for 15 years. Both retired in 1970. Harold died in 1985. She left some money toa church in Hoosick, NY, in memory ofher parents. (article does not say their name). You probably can check the Soc. Security Index for the dates of their death. I can get this from the cemetery stones in the late spring after the mud has dried. They bothare buried in the cemetary across from their home in North Pownal, VT. | ARBOUR, John Adelard (I4161)
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1681 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, John was of medium height and medium build. He had grey eyes and dark brown hair. It is unknown if John ever married or had children. He lived with his parents in Spencer, Massachusetts, from 1887 through 1911 and from 1918 through 1920. In 1911, John paid his parents $2.00 rent per month. According to the 1940 Census, John had only completed the 5th grade. In 1940, John reported that he had earned $393 in 1939. Perhaps our John is the John ARBOUR who was born on 19 Mar 1881 and whodied in Aug 1970. His SSN 044-05-8367 was issued in Connecticut before1951.[SSDI] | ARBOUR, Joseph Jean Baptiste (I4935)
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1682 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Joseph was of medium height and medium build, with blue eyes and light brown hair. He also had a disabled arm. ___ In 1940, Joseph reported that he had earned $960 in 1939. ___ Kennebec Journal (ME) -- 14 May 1968 JOSEPH B. ARBOUR Augusta -- Joseph B. Arbour, 75, of 22 Cumberland St., died Monday at Augusta General Hospital after a long illness. He had been an employee of the Edwards Division of Bates Manufacturing Company for50 years. He was born in Joliet, PQ, Canada, 8 June 1892, the son of Michel and Adelaide Lasalle Arbour. He was a communicant of St Augustine Catholic Church, a member of Artisans Society, and the StJohn the Baptist Union of America Counseil Lavalle, and prior to his retirement was employeed as aslubber tender in the card room at Bates. He is survived by one daughter, Muriel Dostie of Augusta; four brothers, Edouard, Anselme, and Rosaire, all of Augusta, and Ernest Arbour of Boston; two sisters, Mrs. Bernadette Turgeon of Augusta and Mrs.Marguerite Porcello of Medford, MA; three grandchildren; several nieces, nephews, and cousins. A high requiemMass will be sung at 9 am Thursday at St Augustine Catholic Church. Burial will follow in St Augustine Cemetery. ARBOUR, Joseph B. -- Friends may call at the Plummer Funeral Home Inc, 16 Pleasant St., Augusta, from 1 pm to 10 pm today and Wednesday. A high requiem Mass will be sung at 9 am Thursday at St Augustine Catholic Church. ___ Bio from Facebook on 05 Jun 2010: 05 Jun 1892 -- Born in Joliette, Quebec, Joseph-Francois ARBOUR was the3rd of 12 children of carter, mill laborer, and teamster Michel ARBOURand his wife Adelaide LASALLE. Lured by the prosperity in the textile industry, his family emigrated fromQuebec to the United States, settling in Augusta, Maine, when Joseph was about 11. As a young man, Joseph began working in the cotton mills, first as a spinner, then as an operative, and lastly as "a slubber tender in the card room." All totaled, hewas an employee of the Edwards Division of Bates Manufacturing Companyfor 50 years. On 15 January 1917 in Augusta, Joseph married 21-year old Clara POULIN. In the ensuing years, they had 4 children - 2 daughtersand 2 sons - although only Murielseemsto have married and had children. According to his WWI Draft Registration from June 1917, Joseph was of medium height and medium build, with blue eyes and light brown hair; he also had a disabled arm. In Augusta on 08 April 1965, Clara breathedherlast breath. Joseph followed her 3 years later, passing away on 13May 1968. Both were buried in St Augustine Catholic Cemetery in Augusta. | ARBOUR, Joseph Francois (I4908)
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1683 | According to his WWI Draft Registration, Joseph was of medium height and medium build. He had blue eyes and light brown hair. At the time of Alice's death, Joseph was grandfather to 10 and great-grandfather to 4.[obit] The Montana Standard (Butte, MT) -- Sunday 06 Jan 1963 GOLDEN WEDDING Mr. and Mrs. Tom Williams and family spent Sunday in Dillon at the Joe Arbour home where they were hosts at a golden wedding celebration honoring Mr. and Mrs. Joe Arbour, Mrs. Williams' parents. Among those from Wisdom who attended the golden wedding celebration were Mrs. Dwain McKevitt and girls, Melody Triplett, Mrs. Amy Stephens, Amy Stephens, HallieStephens, and Mr. and Mrs. Argyl Stephens and Terry Jo. The Montana Standard (Butte, MT) -- Sunday 20 Jan 1963 DILLON RECEPTION FETES COUPLE ON ANNIVERSARY Dillon -- A reception honoring the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Arbour, Dillon, was given recently. Mr. Arbour, a former Butte resident, is the brother of Mrs. B. J. Lawrence, 1634Schley. The couple was married in Butte on31 Dec 1912. They lived in Wisdom and Portland, OR, before moving to Dillon about 10 years ago. There are four children living, including Mrs. Charles (Joanne) Viviano, Long Beach, CA, Mrs. Raymond (Vivian) Simonsen, Helena, Mrs. Thomas (Roberta) Williams,Wisdom, and Wayne Arbour, Helena. Among the guests attending the reception were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Williams and son, Wisdom; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Simonsen, Helena; Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Arbour, Helena; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Viviano and children, Long Beach,CA; Mrs. Bonnie Arbour, Dillon; Mrs. Douglas Dower and children, Great Falls; Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Lawrence,Butte; Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dickson and son and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Rosendal, Anaconda; Mrs. Amy Stephens and daughters and Mr. and Mrs Argyle Stephens, Wisdom; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Larson, Dillon. Also, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Lippert, Helena; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Harda, Mary Jo Waldemar, Mr. andMrs. William McMannis, Isabella Harting, Maggie and Jane Bryan, Linda Wiley, Josephine Wolf, May Sprinkle,Edna Blackburn, Molly Kambich, Mr.and Mrs. Ralph Huntley, Mrs. Dwain Kevitt and daughters, Melody Triplett, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Kennison, Philip Bond, Mrs. Roy Simonsen, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tovey. | ARBOUR, Joseph Carl (I2505)
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1684 | According to hiw WWI Draft Registration, Joseph was tall with a slenderbuild, black eyes, and black hair. | ARBOUR, Joseph Edouard Barthelemy (I1636)
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1685 | According to Irene SAUER, Eva and Eugene had no children. During the 1930 Census, Eugene's widowed mother lived with them. She also lived with them in 1940. According to the 1940 Census, Eva had completed the 7th grade. In 1940, Eva reported that she had earned $553 in 1939. | ARBOUR, Eva (I3727)
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1686 | According to Land Records, George purchased 160 acres of land in Gettysburg, SD, on 15 Nov 1909. In 1911, George owned a total of 240 acres of Sections 28 and 29, Twp 119 N, Ranges 78 and 79 W, loacted in Riverside, Potter Co, SD. It is unclear if George and Eva farmed the land. In 1928, George and Eva, as well as their daughter Bernice and son George were all listed as registered Republicans on the Voter Registration Rolls in California. George was a Registered Republican in California in 1928 According to the 1940 Census, George had completed 8th grade, which washigher than average for the time. | ARBOUR, Georges H(Regis Or Bud) (I2441)
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1687 | According to Lea (ARCAND) RIZZI, Paul is the biological son of Cora's brother Paul Homer PILOTTE and his wife Irene M. WOLFE. From Lea (ARCAND) RIZZI on 10 Jun 2005: Hello Family and Friends: I am sure you remember the accident that took my cousin Paul Arbour's son Justin and his wife. Baby Autumn is doing very well. Shortly after, Paul's wife had to go to the hospital for a medical problem that she has hadfor many years. She is now in a nursing home and possibly will not make it home. Now Paul, who had had three strokes, had his fourth about a little over a week ago. He is totally paralyzed on one whole side. Thedoctors said he had no left brain action and last night he recommended Paul be taken off his feeder since he could not swallow or think. It will be done sometime today with his family around him. Please pray for this sweet person and gentle man whotook care of everyone except himself.Thank you so much for your prayers. From Lea (ARCAND) RIZZI on 13 Jun 2005: Paul had made a written requestthat if he was on tubes after a few days, he wanted the tubes removed.They now have him on morphine and the doctors feel without his blood pressure medication he would have a massive heart attack and it wouldn'tbe long after that. His sister handled the request to the doctor and Paul was able to answer to the fact that was what he wanted. They brought his wife to him from the hospital to say goodbye and when his daughter came to see him, he was trying to cry; he really loved her. All his family left yesterday because many had to go home. They were all affected by this happening to him, but they all expected it because it was hisfourth stroke and was very serious this time. From Lea (ARCAND) RIZZI on 07 Jul 2005: Paul will be in a nursing home for the rest of his life and Mickey is settled in at home, according toPaul's sister Holly Turner who was settling Mickey at home. ___ www.projo.com (RI) -- Wednesday 26 Dec 2007 -- by Alisha A. Pina WHERE LOVE BLOOMS This couple proved love is ageless and the determined will make it happen. The bride couldn't wear heels. Fluffy, comfortable slippers decorated with lace and pearl-like beading will do. In reciting his vows, the groom was barely understood.But hisgrin, and the sparkle in his eyes, screamed, "I do." Neither could stand and hold hands during the ceremony. Serena Cole and Paul Arbour, instead, sat and faced each other. They touched by clutching the chaplain's knee-length stole. And neither hadthe finances for last Wednesday's wedding. The staff at Eastgate Nursing& Rehabilitation Center, where the two met just three months ago, tookcare of that. A volunteer, Ines Heirsch, made the dress and veil by hand and bakedthe three-tier cake.Others catered, decorated, got the legal paperwork and donated the rings. "Paul came to us in August, and in October they announce to us that they were getting married and were in love," said Renee Ferruccio, the Waterman Avenue center's charge nurseand unit manager for the first floor. "At first, we thought it was cute and then we knew they were serious, so we went right to work." It was a first for the center, which houses 63 residents on its two floors. Cole, 65, and Arbour, 62, had roomsonopposite wings on the same floor. Theymet at one of the many activities held there. "We met in exercise class," Cole said, while confiding she caught him sneaking a peak. Next came the love letters, whichArbour had the nurses deliver. Cole walkedher responses back to his room once she found out where it was. When asked what she likes most about Arbour, she looked at him, his eyes still dancing with delight, and said, "His looks and his smile." Ferruccio said,"They began holding hands atallthe activities. They set the wedding date for December 19." It was Arbour's third marriage. His first two wives died, Cole explained. And it was Cole's first. "My mother wouldn't let me getmarried, but now that she passed away, I can get marriedwhenever I want," the former Maine resident said. "She didn't like the guys I picked." When asked if her mother would approve of Arbour, Cole said, "She better, because I married him."Arbour is a former tow truck driver who grew up in East Providence.The wedding took place in a common area and the aisle was the center's corridors. The Eastgate chaplain, Susan Eenigenberg, who usually helps the residents through grief, illnesses, loneliness and the death of friends and relatives, officiated. "Ohhh, I'm gonna cry," a staff member said as the traditional music began to play. Another said, "We did it. Look, look, the bride is coming!" The best man was Eastgateresident Melvin Goldenberg; the matron of honor, Cole's roommate, was JoannaFortes."Welcome," Eenigenberg said. "A wedding is such a wonderful occasion, full of hopes, dreams and excitement. Loveis powerful and yet it is also simple. It is the highest achievement."She skipped several lines of their vows, stating theyhave already proved they are committed to each other "in sickness and in health." The chaplain continued, "Love never fails. What you have given me is [the ideato]never give up. That is love." When it was time tosay, "I do," Arbour didn't wait until Eenigenberg finished. "I will with the help of God," the groom said. He was dressed in a maroon button-down, black slacks,and a tie. His boutonnièrewas pinnedto his red-and white-striped suspenders. Said Cole, "Paul, I wish to be your wife. Ipromise to lgrant, Ae,e Le ssaole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»ove and support you from this day forward as long as we both shall live." She got up and walked to himfor their first official kiss. Those in the audience -- including one of Arbour's daughters, a lot of staff, disabled residents and others -- thenthrew fake rose petals at them. Cole gladly showed off her diamond ring aspeople congratulated her. Yet she wouldn't let go ofher man'shand. They will move into a new room together in the coming days. ___ He had 6 Living Arbour | ARBOUR, Paul Armand (I4235)
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1688 | According to Marilyn ARBOUR GOUETT: As a pedestrian, Marie has sufferedsevere head injuries in two separate car accidents, the first one on 12 December 1984, and the second one on 24 February 1996. ___ Toronto Star (ON) -- Saturday 24 Apr 2010 KELLY, Marie Elizabeth Arbour - Passed on to Heaven Thursday, 22 April 2010 after a brave 26-year miracle. A devoted wife of 56 years to Joseph, loving mother of Joseph, James, Karen, Denise, Sandra,Deborah and Thomas. She will be missed by her grandchildren Marissa, Dan, Caitlin, Julia, Jordan, Pierce, Maggie, Alison, Carlye, Lachlan and Bronwyn. Mariewas one of the founding members of St. Brigid's Parish Young People's Club along with her lifelong friends Helen Coffee, Mary Trombetta and Betty Gallagher. In addition to raising a large, healthy and happy family, Marie was instrumental in assisting her husband Joe with his successin life including founding RE/MAX Hallmark Realty. Marie will be missed by everyone she met and will surely guide all who knew her to her side in Heaven. Marie will be resting at Paul O' Conner Funeral Home, 1939Lawrence Ave. E., on Sunday, 25 April, from 3-5 pm and 7-9 pm, where friends and family will be welcome to gather and pay their respects. Thefuneral will be held at 2 pm on Monday, 26 April, at Canadian Martyrs Church at 522 Plains Rd., at Woodbine Ave., with the burial held after Mass at St John's Cemetery Norway, 256 Kingston Rd. and a reception following (shortly after 4 pm) at Canadian Martyrs Parish Hall. In lieu offlowers, donations can be made to Community Head Injury Resource Services, 62 Finch Ave. W., North York, ON M2N 7G1. Excerpt from Marie's online Guestbook 24 April 2010 It is very difficult to say good bye to a lovely person who touched ourlives deeply. Good journey Marie ... A-okay. Much love the Kelly girlsin Calgary ~ Glenda Kelly, Calgary, Alberta | ARBOUR, Marie Elizabeth (I5742)
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1689 | According to Patricia Anne (AUDET) ZIMBA: Like at least one of her siblings, Germaine also contracted polio as a youngster. However, she survived and was merely left with a slightly impaired left leg. Waterville Morning Sentinel (ME) -- 26 Mar 2002 Waterville -- Germaine A. Zimba, 80, of Eustis Parkway, died Monday morning, 25 Mar 2002, at Maine General Medical Center in Waterville after a short illness. She was born in Augusta, 29 Dec 1921, the daughter of Louis and Emma (Genest) Arbour. Sheis survived by a son, F. William "Bill" Zimba and his wife, Patricia, of Unity; grandchildren, Jeffrey and Angela Zimba of Shawmut, Cheryl and Blaine Anthony of Waterville, and Greg and Wanda Zimba of Benton; two great-grandchildren, Jordan and Drake Zimba; two step-great-grandchildren, Shauntelle and Courtney Anthony;and by several nieces and nephews. At her request there will be no public visitation nor funeral service. Burial will be at a later date at the convenienceof the family. Memorial donations in her memory may be sent to March of Dimes, Maine Chapter, 12 Acme Road, PO Box 68, Brewer ME04412. Arrangements are with Gallant Funeral Home, 10 Elm St, Waterville. | ARBOUR, Germaine Yvonne (I4152)
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1690 | According to the 1920 Hallograss,Aroostook county, maine , usa census, Edwina and LilianneLeblanc were residing with their maternal grand-parents, Adolphe et Marie Lamare. Their parents Benoit Leblanc et Albertine Lamarre had already moved to New-Brunswick leaving those 2 daughters behind.Census is inphotos. | LEBLANC, Edwina (I29802)
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1691 | According to the 1920 Hallograss,Aroostook county, maine , usa census, Edwina and Lilianne Leblanc were residing with their maternal grand-parents, Adolphe et MarieLamare. Their parents Benoit Leblanc et Albertine Lamarre had already moved to New-Brunswick leaving those2 daughters behind.Census is in photos. | LEBLANC, Lilianne (I51893)
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1692 | According to the Augusta Directory, Barthelemi owned a grocery store --Toulouse and Arbour -- with Alfred J. TOULOUSE. It was located at 39 Washington Street in Augusta, ME. The two of them operatedit from about 1921 until Barthelemi's death in 1936. Alfred then continued the business under his own name until about 1969. In 1967, Alfred shared the building space with Toulouse and Dowling Real Estate. In 1971, the address was a vacant store front. According to his WWI Draft Registration, Barthelemi was of medium height and medium build with brown eyes and dark hair. Kennebec Journal (Augusta, ME) -- 23 Jan 1936 BARTHELEMI ARBOUR Barthelemi Arbour, in business in this city for a number of years and widely known and liked, died early Wednesday at the Fairfield Sanitorium, aged 37 years. He was the junior member of the firm of Toulouse and Arbour, grocers with a store on Washington Street. His death followed a long illness. He was born 11 April 1898, in Joliet, Canada, the son of Barthelemi and Celina Boisvert Arbour. He came to Augusta as a young boy and attended school at St Augustine's parochial school and the Augusta public schools. For a time he was employed at the Edwards Manufacturing Company and for a number of years at the former Fuller-Holway Company warehouse on Water Street. In 1921, Mr. Arbour and Mr. Toulouse entered into a business together. The deceased made friends readily and had a wide circle of loyal friends. He belonged to a number of organizations, including the Society of Artisans, Foresters, Union St Jean de Baptist, and Society de St Jean de Baptist, also the Calumet Club. Besideshis wife who was Marie Gosselin, he is survived by six daughters, Jean d'Arc, Rita, Juliette, Gabriel, Georgette, Carmine, and one son, Robert; also three sisters Sister Barthelemi of Trois Rivieres, SisterGabriel ofValley Fields, PQ, and Mrs. Treffle Gilbert of this city, and three brothers, Joseph, Edward, and Hector Arbour, all of Augusta. The body is at the home at 4 Stewart Lane, and funeral services will be held Saturday morning at 8 o'clock at StAugustine's Catholic Church. | ARBOUR, Adolfe Barthelemy (I1248)
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1693 | According to the SSDI, Lionel was born on 15 Apr 1923. Social Security Number: 007-07-0366 issued in Maine | DAIGLE, Lionel Viateur (I28601)
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1694 | Acte de baptême:"Le quatrième jour de juin de la présente année par moisoussigné: Charles A. Martin prestre chanoine de la cathédrale faisantles fonctions curiales en cette paroisse a esté baptisé Charles Letardif, fils de Guillaume Letardif et MiAWor iseert),bres18 Rivitab» «tab»arie Godin sa femme, né le même jour. Les parrain et maraine ont esté Charles Godin fils de Charles Godin et Louyse Mathieu fille de Jean Mathieu tous habitans de cette mesme paroisse qui ont déclaré ne scavoir signer de ce interpellé suivant l'ord MiAWor iseert),bres18 Rivitab» «tab»onnance".(signé) Charles Amador Martin | TARDIF, Charles (I72471)
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1695 | Acte de mariage de François Poudret et de Marie GiraultLe douze mai 1807 par devant nous Charles Leboiteux maire et officier public de la commune de Vasles sont comparu François Poudret laboureur demeurant avec son pére, né le vingt sixoctobre 178rnellfecti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»6 signé au registre de Gautier vicaire à Vasles, filsmajeur de Jean Poudret laboureur demeurant à le Chatre de cette commune et de feue Magdeleine Bouquet d'une part et de Marie Girault demeurant avec son péreetmére née levingt troisaoût 1789 sigllfecti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»né au registre de Porcherinvicaire à Vasles, fillemineur et légitime des présents Jacques Girault laboureur et de Marie Liége demeurant à la métairie de la Saisinière de cette commune d'autre part . Lesquelsnous ont requis de procéder à la célèbti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»ration du mariage projeté entre eux et dont publications ont été faites en notre maison commune de Vasles le 19 et 26 avril de cette année, aucune opposition au dit mariage faisant droit à leur requisition après avoir donnélecture des pièces ci-deslèbti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»sus mentionné et du chapitre 6 du titre code civil intitulé du mariage, avons demandé au futur époux et future épouse dit vouloir se prendre pour mari et femme chacun d'eux ayant répondu séparement et affirmativementdéclaronsau nom de la loi que lelèbti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»dit François Poudret et Marie Girault sont unispar le mariage ,de tout nousavonsdressé acte en présence de Louis Mimault demeurant à Gorbeau de cette communr qui estl'oncle de l'époux et de Jacques Guérindemeurant au bourg de la commune des Forgelelèbti??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»s qui estcousin de l'époux et de René Liègedemeurant à la Gruzadière de cette commune oncle de l'épouse et de René Girault demeurant à la Poitevinièrede cette commune qui est l'oncle de l'éouse lesquelsaprés qui avons donné lecture ont dit époux ei??heuole?ees18 Rivitab» «tab»ttémoinsdéclaré ne savoir signéLe Boiteux Maire | Famille: Francois POUDRET / Marie GIRAULT (F12733)
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1696 | Au moins une personne vivante ou marquée privée est liée à cette note - Les détails ne sont donc pas publiés. | En vie (I32201)
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1697 | Adelard J. TETREAULT 1884-1936 St Anne Roman Catholic / Paroisse Sainte Anne Parish Cemetery Lesperance Rd. , Tecumseh, Sandwich East Township Essex County, ON (Concession 2, Lot 151) | TETREAULT, Adelard (I86853)
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1698 | Adele never married or had children. She lived with her sister Leontineand her family. | ARBOUR, Adele Marie (I1209)
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1699 | Adolph never married or had children. He lived in Baton Rouge in 1900, in 1910, and in 1920. In 1900, he lived with his widowed mother at 609 St Louis Street. In 1910 and in 1920, he lived with sister Edna and brother-in-law Alfred PERSAC. Adolph Arbour 25 July 1858 - 26 June 1929 A devoted son and brother You who loved us in life, Do not forget us in death. | ARBOUR, Adolph (I1250)
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1700 | Adopté par Bertrand Versailles et Antoinette Arbour.Fille de Oliva Arbour | ARBOUR, Noella (I6342)
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