Hi Elizabeth! You should have asked me where the St. James Goose Creek
Church (historical one) was, I couldve told you, I have been there LOTS of
times!! You get on Rebbank Rd. in Goose Creek then you take a right on Snake
Road, then go down snake road and it will curve well right after that curve
there will be a little dirt road on the right hand side with a tan colored
house on it, well thats the caretakers house- go down that dirtroad and the
church will be on your left, so so simple to find I ca
Hi Craig,
At 07:56 PM 4/25/00 EDT, Cwlefevre@aol.com wrote:
>I have been searching for years for the family members and ancestors of Isaac
>Lefever (1660-1731) who immigrated to New Paltz in 1683. I could find
>nothing even while researching in Europe from 1980 to 1993. This is not the
>Isaac Lefevre born in 1669. Can anyone help?
>
>Craig LeFevre
I'm not sure an Isaac LeFevre immigrated to New Paltz in 1683.
Ralph LeFevre in his History of New Paltz... mentions only Simon and
Andre LeFevre as comi
Hello List
I am new to the list and I don't know yet if anyone will be able to help me, but I will try. I am researching some Huguenot families who came from Montbeliard to Nova Scotia in 1752 (Patriqun, Jonah/Jeaune). I will be travelling to France in Sept. and I would like to locate the villages these people came from in Montbeliard. Does anyone know much about Montbeliard? Would you know if these places still exist: Longevelle, St. Maurice, Allandans, Vernoy? Can they be located on a current map?
Looking for ancestors of Jacques Cacheau (Jacob Cacho) born in Alsace in
1750. His family was supposedly Huguenots. They fled to Germany and
later he came to America by himself in 1772. He fought in the American
Revolution and was an interpreter for General Lafayette. Does anyone
have any Cacheau members in his/her family tree? Research ideas?
Thanks
Marsha
Following is a small portion of a public notice/ad placed in the SC
Gazette, August 13, 1737. The full ad mentions many names; I am just
posting those that I recognize as names of interest to researchers on
this list. I rather imagine this list has been reprinted in other
publications and is accessible a number of ways. But for now, here is a
part:
-------
WHEREAS there has been little or no Regard had to the many
Advertisements published in the former Gazette relating to Grants lying
signed in the Sec
My imigrant ancestor was approved by the SC Huguenot Soc. in 1967....and did
not make it to the National List until 1999....So don't assume that they have
listed all "approved" Huguenot surnames. If your family tradition has been
that they were Huguenots by all means post them to the list....let the
various socieities prove otherwise....in the meantime continue your research
and gather your own documentation.
Hello Listers.
The earliest references I have to the HULBERT family is
William, b. c1820, England, d. 1910. m. 20 Mar. 1842, to Caroline
COPELAND. Lived in LONDON, ENG in this time period.
William is said to have been one of 11 children born in
Enland. (maybe the youngest??) His father is said to have then
gone to the USA and sired 10 more children.(?) The wife in England
may have died. Whether he married again
Hi Audrey,.. I had asked you about my Paris line (of various spellings),
but I should ask you, about my daughter-in-law s Parrish line. They were
in Kent in the early 1700s. Since I dont know my geographics well in
England, and I know that it is relatively small, I thought I would take a
shot at mentioning it.
>My Parish line was in Suffolk, England in the 1700s.
>My COLLINS group were around the Plymouth area of Devon in the 1700s as
>well.
>
>Audrey
Diane in Iowa, USA
mailto:meregra@avalon,net
h
<< map showing Chicken Creek.
As I recall, it runs northeast into the Santee River not fr from a big
swamp. >>
Greetings from SC. I have the Delorme topo maps for SC & Mill's Atlas and
would be happy to check for Chicken Creek if you would narrow down the area
by county or general location (nearest city, etc.).
URQ
Elizabeth,
That is the funniest word picture I have ever seen! The only thing
missing is Chevy Chase and come to think of it.....I suppose you were not to
far from the real one!
Jane Boucher Frost
"In the Heart of the Ozarks"
-----Original Message-----
From: Huguenotreunion@aol.com
To: Huguenot-L@rootsweb.com
Date: Monday, April 24, 2000 6:13 AM
Subject: Re: [Huguenot] Groomsville Church-George Chicken's Church?
>Brandon, make sure you know where
Dear Florence,
Thank you for your to look up Abraham Moulin and his descendents in your
book. The furthest back I've been able to push my Mullins line is to James
Mullins in Virginia, born before 1744, who died in Charlotte County on
December 26, 1764. Does your book say from where the ship he sailed on
came. There might have been stops in both England and Ireland before the
ship turned towards North America. Could you tell me the title, publisher,
and year published of your book. There's an off chanc
Maybe it is a well-kept secret, but I didn't realize until just now when
I read their newsletter that the Hugo Soc of SC has a website that is
running. Check it out:
http://www.huguenotsociety.org/
Good Evening...
This question is to the list members who may be searching early South
Carolina, or Barbados families.
I would like to ask if you may have the surname COLLINS in
your data base in any connection. Dates would be from mid 1600s on through
1786. Any connection at all to a Collins would be very much appreciated.
Of course, I will be happy to share whatever I have.
Thank you.
Diane in Iowa, USA
mailto:meregra@avalon,net
http://www.genweb.net/~meregra (genealogy web page)
icq# 8679306
My records are somewhat in a tangle, so anyone with this LEWIS MOUZON's
descendancy showing the BONNEAU and DUTARQUE relations, please chime in.
I have this fellow's first wife being ANN DUTARQUE; is the latter a
sister to the JOHN DUTARQUE who is executor here? I have the ANTHONY
BONNEAU [b. abt. 1714] who married MARY DUBOIS [and thus future
brother-in-law to at least two MOUZONs] as deceased August 3, 1750,
before the date of this article--unless the date of this article is one
of those double dates and
Elizabeth and other GUERIN researchers,
I forwarded your posting on to Denise Guerin Rice. We'll see if she has
heard of William.
Elsie Wilson
At 06:03 PM 4/29/2000 -0400, you wrote:
>Can someone give me the connection that WILLIAM GUERIN has to the other
>GUERINs of SC in 1762? I have nothing on him.
>
> >From the SC Gazette, July 24, 1762:
>
>"JOHN LOGIN AND WILLIAM GUERIN
>"Acquaint their friends that they have entered into a copartnership and
>that they have a good assortment of goods which they inte
Hi, what surname list do you speak of??? I am the list Mom here. What can I
do to help...Marie
----- Original Message -----
From: Dvina
To:
Sent: Thursday, April 06, 2000 4:32 AM
Subject: [Huguenot] Help I'm new
> I got here because some nice person gave me the address so I need help to
> find the surname list if someone wouldn't mind.
>
> Dvina
>
>
At 07:26 AM 4/19/2000 , you wrote:
>Hello from the beautiful temporary HQ of the Huguenot Internet Genealogical &
>Historical Society (HIGHS) Reunion 2000.
Hello Elizabeth and list members,
I'm sure that those of us who cannot be with you in person are with you in
spirit. I hope that you all have a wonderful time.
I noted with great interest your schedule. I have an ancestor buried in
the Huguenot churchyard there in Charleston. I visited there almost 30
years ago with my mom and saw the stone of P
Hi, Howard--thanks for the informatiion on Louis Bevier's New Paltz
Huguenots, etc. Since it's from LeFebre's History of New Paltz, shall try
for the whole book. Thanks again joan
It sure would be nice if the subject line was changed to reflect what a
message being sent is about.
I hope this suggestion does not but my hopes rise
whenever
I
see a response to a message using the subject I started. Ed T of PGH
I have not found my family name RAYMER in the list of Huguenots on the
website. According to our family history, our ancestor RAYMER (first name
unknown) fled to Ontario, Canada from France about 1800. Sometime while
there he and his sons got into an argument with a Catholic priest about the
Protestant Bible, and my ancestor struck the priest. Supposedly at that
time, that was a crime that was punishable by hanging so the family fled to
the U. S. via New York, ending up in Michigan. The first record
Check with me later this afternoon or this evening. I am a descendant
of Abraham and have some information on the family,although not a great
deal. I was getting ready to sign off when I found your request and
don't have the time to look it up just now. Remind me later and I'll be
glad to look up the information. I have to pick it out of a book my
grandmother wrote and unfortunately, there is no "tree" as such. You
have to read and extract names yourself. It takes a few minutes.
Florence Parman
Hugu
Good Morning Elizabeth!
Your message was a lovely way to start my morning!
I have been following the H. Reunion in Charlston with much interest.
I was there a year ago, after many years of longing to see the city and
area where my (possibly) H. ancestors lived after they left Barbados.
To find that you are from Simsbury is exciting to me.
Thank you for writing... and I look forward to "talking"to you after you
are hone again, and past your recovery time. :)
Diane in Iowa, USA
mailto:meregr