Our Family History

Edouard ARBOUR

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Nom Edouard ARBOUR Naissance 10 mai 1890 Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada, Genre Masculin Décès nov 1943 Quebec,62020,Capitale-Nationale,Quebec,Canada, _CREA 17 sept 2023 _FIL LEGITIMATE_CHILD ID personne I3483 Arbour-Pierre1615 Dernière modif. 16 sept 2023
Père Wilfrid Ovila ARBOUR, n. 6 juin 1862, Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada, d. 16 avr 1902, Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada,
(Âgé de 39 ans)
Mère Rosa DUBE, n. 30 nov 1867, Saint-Martin,,Chaudière-Appalaches,Quebec,Canada, d. 2 août 1908, Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada,
(Âgé de 40 ans)
Mariage 20 oct 1885 Quebec,,Chaudière-Appalaches,Québec,Canada,[Église de Saint-Martin,Saint-Martin,Laval,Canada] - Saint-Martin _CREA 21 août 2024 _UST MARRIED ID Famille F459 Feuille familiale | Tableau familial
Famille Stephanie LEBLANC, n. 22 août 1889, Montreal,,Montreal,Quebec,Canada, d. 2 oct 1970, St Petersburg,,Pinellas County,Florida,Usa,
(Âgé de 81 ans)
Mariage 25 juil 1910 Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada, _CREA 21 août 2024 _UST MARRIED Enfants 1. Officer Joseph Edouard "Guy" ARBOUR, n. 26 mars 1912, Sainte-Thérèse-de-Blainville,,Laurentides,Québec,Canada, d. 13 mai 1944, Louvain-la-Neuve,1348,Brabant Wallon,Wallonie,Belgique,
(Âgé de 32 ans)
ID Famille F1249 Feuille familiale | Tableau familial Dernière modif. 21 août 2024
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Carte d'événements = Lien Google Earth
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Notes - 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.
- 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.