Vermette Family History


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Notes


Matches 676 to 700 of 1,097

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 #   Notes   Linked to 
676 Marriage record shows last name as Wilming de Harvich. Family F1322
 
677 Married at SS Peter and Paul Church Family F78
 
678 Married at St-Etienne d'Lauzon Parish, Levis, Quebec. Parish Register, in ACGS, Manchester, NH. Family F3474
 
679 Married at the church of Nativité de la Blessed Virgin Mary. Family F3998
 
680 Married before notary Antoine Ahdemar. She had a dowry of 200 livres, about the value of four muskets. She and Jean were married in the home of the Gibauds. Family F1600
 
681 Married by Rev. Jesse Walker. Likely first marriage in Ottawa. Ref: article by Rev. Field in United Methodist Church 150th Anniversary Booklet, Ottawa, IL Family F4878
 
682 Married by Reverend Julian E. Meyer, of Josephville, MO. Witnesses were John A. Huff, Lauryne Vermette, Bernard A. Sommer, and Dolores Sommer. Flower girl was Jean Sommer. Family F1
 
683 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F2963
 
684 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F4854
 
685 Mary Hughes Halter related that Jesse died accidently when a large log rolled over him when he was about 10 years old in Missouri.. HUGHES, Jesse Carol (I9731)
 
686 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. MILLER, Mary (I3143)
 
687 Massachusetts, Town and Vital Records, 1620-1988 lists the place of birth as Ludlow, MA. The birth was registered in the "Town of Wilbraham 1925" VERMETTE, Clifford Lucien (I13132)
 
688 materials sent by Centre - U of Maine, 126 College Avenue,
Orono, ME 04473 
Source (S65)
 
689 may have been called Elsie
Metis 
DUBOIS, Louise (I11198)
 
690 may have been called Isabelle RIVARD, Elisabeth (I11191)
 
691 maybe known by the surnames Mader or Madore MESSINEGIKOUE, Catherine (I11237)
 
692 Melvina Dulac, Daisy's mother, was living with her and her husband, Lafayette L. Rancourt, in 1930. DULAC, Daisy M. (I14052)
 
693 Memoirs of Mabel Skeels: "There was a war in Europe and they all got so poor. Peter's brother had to pay 70 cents for a rat to cook to eat. There was no money and no food. So they put the boy and girl on a big boat and sent them to America. Those kids almost starved to death on the trip over here. Peter Halter, 11, and his sister, Sara, 12, came from France. When they landed in New York City, they had $1.00 between them. They had to eat lunch. They didn't know a soul, couldn't speak a word of English, poor people. They just stood there and didn't know what to do. The Rohrer family were some of Peter's relatives. Earlier French people. They came and rescued the two. Took them into their home. Then they went to Iowa to live."

Note: Mabel Skeel's memoirs state that he arrived with his sister "Sara" who was 12, 1 year older than Peter. Sara is not identified in any records found to date but the description may fit his sister Margaret.

Notes of Pat Rafferty: "The story of their trip and Margaret's life is recorded in the Blink Family records. They started on what proved to be a three month trip across the Atlantic. They sailed on a cattle boat and were required to furnish their own food. At one point of the crossing they remained stationary for six weeks because there was not wind to fill the sails. They landed at New Orleans and took a boat up the Mississippi River, going to Otawa, Illinois to the Retz family, as their mother was related to Mrs Edward Retz (Rosalie Roher Retz). One record said they landed in New York with only $1.00 between them and neither could speak English. Margaret worked as a servant girl for fifty cents a week in a home where she could have Peter with her." 
HALTER, Peter (I9791)
 
694 Memories of Dr. Franklin Lowe: "Farm life was strenuous, but made for solid, substantial citizens. One night our home burned, the fire apparently starting in the summer kitchen. I was about five years old at the time and I'm told I was very stubborn, as it was with diffucultiy that they managed to get me out through the bedroom window; only by holding me could they keep me from running back into the house, as I wanted to go to bed. The fire demolished everything, except the smokehouse. With real pioneer spirit, the smokehouse was remodeled, rooms added and we again had a home. Remains of this building still stand, in 1975. Harvest life was strenuous, going six miles round trip, twice a day, with a horse-drawn wagon fitted out with water barrels to get enough water for the work hourses. It took a six-hourse team to plow a 24-foot strip of land. We seeded, using a two-wheel cart with a chain to the sowing machine, feeding the grain out of a hopper, sowing 30 to 40 pounds to the acres. In order to space the rows, a boy roade a horse with a guideline to one of the cart's horses, spacing the rows by using the last row seeded as the guide. The seed was covered by harrow or cultivator. On the fun side, a Sunday activity of the boys was to collect bird eggs, even to going down ropes suspended from cliff tops to rob the lightening striker's nests. Taking the eggs home, we would blow and string them to hang in festoons from our bedroom ceilings -- hundreds of them. We had many happy get-togethers with our neighbors, and also th emany relatives who lived nearby, including Grandpa and Grandma Jones. Grandma Jones was a midwife, and she and a neighbor, Mrs. Young, delivered many babies herabouts. Other relatives in the area were the Works, Heatons, Morehouses, Halters, and the Dittemores." LOWE, Franklin Alexander (I10115)
 
695 Metis RIVARD, Pierre (I11195)
 
696 Metis LEPINE, Jean Baptiste (I11214)
 
697 Metis NOLIN, Madeleine (I11225)
 
698 Metis COUVERT, Joseph Victor (I11292)
 
699 Metis claim # 1417 DUCHARME, Melanie (I11193)
 
700 Metis claim # 1814 PLOUF, Brigitte dit Villerbrun (I11213)
 

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