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Notice d'autorité
Famille

Aubut (famille)

  • Famille
  • 1942 - 1970

Le fonds d'archives de la famille Aubut fut constitué à partir de la documentation amassée par Ida Lavoie Aubut depuis le deuxième guerre mondial jusqu'à la fin des années 1970. La partie qui touche à la guerre témoigne de la participation de Morel Aubut, son mari, au conflit en tant que membre des Forces Armées régulières canadiennes participantes à la campagne des armées Alliées en Belgique durant l'année 1942. Le couple Aubut-Lavoie c'est uni dans le mariage le 7 octobre 1940 à la paroisse Notre-Dame-Des-Sept-Douleurs d'Edmundston. Le couple eut un seul enfant, soit Roger né, le 20 janvier 1942. Morel Aubut est né le 7 août 1913. C'est au tout début de la guerre en 1940 qu'il s'enrôla dans les Forces Armées. Il fut envoyé en Angleterre et delà au front en Belgique durant 10 mois en 1942. En 1944, Morel Aubut a reçu son congé de service dû à un traumatisme et il revient au Canada. De retour à la vie civile, Morel pratique et enseigne la photographie à Edmundston et il est aussi membre fondateur d'un club de tir d'armes à feu. Morel Aubut décède le 27 septembre 1977 à Edmundston et son épouse Ida Lavoie, le 28 mars 1983.

Brun, Donald et Lorette

  • Famille
  • 1933 -

Donald Brun est né à Cap-Pelé (Nouveau-Brunswick), le 14 octobre 1933, fils d'Émile Brun et d'Euphémie Cormier. Il a épousé Lorette Cormier de Saint-Paul-de-Kent (N.-B.). Le couple réside à Cocagne (N.-B.).

Confederation of Regions

  • Famille
  • 1988 -

Le parti Confederation of Regions (COR) a vu le jour au Nouveau-Brunswick en 1988 au lendemain des élections fédérales qui vit naître plusieurs partis d'extrême droite à travers le pays. Parti anti-francophone et anti-bilinguisme il trouva la majorité de ses adeptes parmi la population anglophone qui traditionnellement votait pour le parti Conservateur mais rejeta ce dernier pour ses projets d'implanter plus de services en français dans la fonction publique néo-brunswickoise.

Les Acadiens de Poitou

  • Famille
  • ca. 1773 -

C'est du Poitou d'où sont partis, avec des familles de l'Anjou, de l'Aunis et de la Saintonge, la plupart de ceux qui ont colonisé l'Acadie de 1632 à 1671. Lors du Grand Dérangement en 1755, des centaines de leurs descendants ont été déportés en France et à la suite du traité de Paris en 1763, les Acadiens qui avaient été déportés en Angleterre ont été à leur tour, rapatriés en France. Le gouvernement de Louis XV se préoccupa alors de les établir dans le royaume. En 1773 et 1774, certains de ceux-ci ont été établis au Poitou.

Violette (famille)

  • Famille

Albénie J. Violette, the son of Sarah Levasseur and Germain Violette, was born at St. Léonard, Madawaska County, New Brunswick on 6 October 1873. On 16 April 1894 he married Marie Annie Akerley (Memery, Mamary), and they had no fewer than 11 children, including Marie Blanche Hélène, Frederick Henry, Mary Edna, Charles Dollard, Léonard G., and Émile. A. J. Violette lived briefly in the state of Maine, but lived most of his life in the parish of St. Léonard. Prominent in the community, he owned and operated a number of businesses -- S. J. Violette Woodworking Factory, The Brunswick Hotel, St. Léonard Brick Yard, St. Léonard's Fox Farm, The Hammond hotel (Van Buren, Maine), Martin & Violette (general store), and A. J. Violette car dealership. During the Prohibition years, he ran a lucrative rum-running, moonshine, and bootlegging business that crossed provincial and international lines. Several of his children were involved in these illegal enterprises. A. J. was a prominent member of the Progressive Conservative Party for many years. He died on 24 April 1928. A. J. Violette's sons, Émile F. and Leonard G., both served overseas during the Great War. Émile was with the Second Divisional Signaling Company, Second Canadian Division in France. Following his return to Canada in 1916, he was appointed Special Recruiting Officer for Madawaska County. Later he moved to the United States, residing in Portland and Presque Isle, Maine and in Berlin, New Hampshire where he was manager of the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. In addition to his overseas service in the First World War, brother Léonard acted as Civilian Recruiting Advisor for Madawaska County in the 1940s. He was also a member of the Edmundston branch of the Royal Canadian Legion. Like his father, Léonard was involved in a number of enterprises. He operated Len's Service & Filling Station, the Hotel Brunswick, and was involved in the rum-running operation and probably the car dealership. Source: When Rum was King by B. J. Grant, 1984.

Robinson Family

  • MS15
  • Famille

Charles Robinson was born in New York in 1781. He married Mary, also born in New York in 1783. They had a son, John (1820-1900) who married Martha Springer (1822-~1871) in 1847. They had seven children, John R (1858-?), George Carpenter (b. 1859), another son with unknown name, Mary Ann, Martha Elizabeth, Rachel Jane (1856-1948) and Rebecca Amelia. George Carpenter married Annie Scott Babington in 1895. They had four children: Ethel Blanche (1896-?), Elsie Marie (1900-?), Helen Blanch (1896-?), and Victor Cecil (1898-?). Victor married Helen Louise Chapman in 1925 and they had a daughter named Robena in 1930. The family had a large farm called Robinson farm in Cambridge Narrows.

King Family

  • Famille

Penny King Ericson was the daughter of Nathalie Currier King (1907-?). Nathalie’s
parents were Arthur Pearson Currier (1877-1939) and Gertrude Woodwell Little (1878-1959), who married in 1903. Arthur’s mother was Mattie Mathewson King (1869-1966). She was from New Hampshire. Her parents were Alonzo Mathewson (1830-1890) and May R. Gleason (1840-1895).

Arthur’s parents were Benjamin Pettingell Currier and Emma Louise Little. Benjamin’s parents were George E. Currier (1833-1905) and Sarah Ann Simonds (1839-1925), she was his second wife. Sarah Ann Simonds’ parents were Nathanial Gerry Simonds and Sarah Wadleigh (d. 1900). George’s parents were William Currier (1816-1885) and Hannah Currier. William’s parents were William Currier (1774-1844) and Elizabeth Coffin Doyle (1794-1864).

Heustis Family

  • Famille

: Herman Irvine Heustis and Hayward Lewis Heustis were the sons of Lewis Hunt Heustis (1863-1923) and Celia A. Parent (1868-1900). Lewis Hunt Heustis’s parents were Charles Heustis (1832-1910) and Eliza J. Lint (d. 1904). Hayward was born on April 27, 1893 in Upper Queensbury and died on June 15, 1964 in Orchard Nursing Home, Barony. Herman was born around 1896 and died on April 12, 1981 in Fredericton. They are buried at Nackawic Cemetery.

Palmer Family

  • Famille

There appear to be two branches of the Palmer family and it is not clear how they are connected:

Arnie (Arlie) Leroy Palmer was born in Hampstead, Queens County, on July 25, 1902. He was the son of Edgar Palmer (1888-1944) and Annie Lacy. Edgar was the son of Benjamin Palmer (1834-1909) and Sarah McAlpine (1825-1900). The Palmers were a Loyalist family, starting with Marcus Palmer Sr. (1767-1822). Arlie married Gertrude Palmer (1905-1988) and died in 1990. The family had a farm that had been in thefamily since Marcus Palmer Sr.

Moses L. Palmer (1854-1938) married Helen Moore in 1879 in Keswick Ridge. They had six children: William (Willie) Robert (b. 1899), Laura (b. 1883), Nellie, Phoebe Annette (b. 1880), and James Rich (b. 1884). Willie married Effie Libby (b. 1903) in 1903.

True Family

  • Famille

William Carr [1754-1834] and Sarah Tapley [1761-1833] married in 1787 and had nine children, Alexander [1788-1892], William [1799-1880], Edward [1792-1866], Richard [1800-], Olive [1804-], Sarah [1790-], Asa [1790-1876], infant [1802-], and Hulda [1810-1872]. William married Mary Ann Whelphy. Their daughter Louise married Isaac Hagerman [1834-1926]. They had one daughter Georgia Ann [1868-1930]. Alexander married Jane Sophia Hagerman in 1818 and who died in 1842. They had son A.H. Carr, daughter Lucinda Carr who married John True in 1859 and Matilda Carr [-1849] who married Eben Carr in 1842. Alexander had three more sons and four more daughters.

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