Owen Dating In Huguenot

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18 min readJul 1, 2021

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Owen was there to pull it out and then later kissed her. He then returned after a short time and Cristina and Owen started dating. Cristina first started seeing signs of Owen’s ongoing PTSD when Owen had a terrible nightmare due to the blades of the ceiling fan spinning, which was what he last saw before he fell asleep.

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ARCHIVED TOPIC: Family trees

  1. This Table contains the names of Huguenot families Naturalized in Great Britain and Ireland; commencing A.D., 1681, in the reign of King Charles II., and ending in 1712, in the reign of Queen Anne. But in the reign of William and Mary, the largest number of foreign refugees were Naturalized in these countries, from 1689 to the 3rd July, 1701.
  2. A Huguenot Born 1664, La Rochelle. Of the Iden Family Dating from 1280 AD to the. Back the Records to Ludwig Knauss to the Year 1723 James Owen and Tilghman.
  3. 1756: Owen Syllavan — 2016; 1945: Sudeten Germans, known but to God — 2015; 1794: Elisabeth of France, sister of the king — 2013; 1956: Andreas Dimitriou and Michalis Karaolis, the first EOKA men hanged — 2012; 1900: Three Algerians in Setif — 2011; 1821: Stephen Merrill Clark, boy arsonist — 2010; 1994: John Wayne Gacy, scary clown — 2009.

Please note this is an archived topic, so it is locked and unable to be replied to. You may, however, start a new topic and refer to this topic with a link: http://www.banjohangout.org/archive/370432

Banjo Lefty — Posted — 11/23/2020: 17:41:16

How many of us are researching your family tree, and, if so, what have you found? In my case, I discovered a prison record for a young man who had been convicted of attempted beastiality. I was intrigued by the ‘attempted.’ It doesn’t seem to me to be a very difficult crime to commit.

Wet Spaniel — Posted — 11/23/2020: 18:05:42

quote:

Huguenot

Originally posted by Banjo Lefty

How many of us are researching your family tree, and, if so, what have you found? In my case, I discovered a prison record for a young man who had been convicted of attempted beastiality. I was intrigued by the ‘attempted.’ It doesn’t seem to me to be a very difficult crime to commit.

It can be more difficult tan you’d imagine — especially if you are short like me…

my Dad traced our family tree bac a very long way, it turns out that my ancestors sailed across the North Sea from Norway to settle,in the UK. I also have a great, great, great uncle Claude who headed over into your neck of the woods to become an actor in the silent movies. The biggest stumbling block my dad had was his own mother — it turned out that one of our fairly recent (last 80 years) was born out of wedlock and my Granny simply would not admit to the fact because of the shame it had brought to the family. It was only hard work and research that helped my dad get past thins dead end — inconceivable by today’s way of thinking eh?

Paul R — Posted — 11/23/2020: 18:21:33

On my Dad’s side they were Irish Potato Famine people who came to Montreal. Prior to that someone went from France to Ireland, thus the French last name. Dad said his father was a ‘minstrel’ who played banjo. He also played fiddle.
I don’t know Mom’s side prior to her father. He became the Director of the City of Montreal Fire Department. He was an Orangeman who married a Catholic. When he died (early Fifties) he had to get a dispensation to be buried in the Catholic cemetery on Mount Royal — and they couldn’t enter by the main gates.
One of my daughter’s boyfriends told her that his great-grandfather was the Director of the Montreal FD. She told him that her great-grandfather was, too. Then they looked at each other funny — until they realized that their grandfathers weren’t the same person. Awkward moment.
Grandfather Carson rests beneath a tall, well kept headstone, joined by my parents, aunts, uncles, and cousins. Grandfather Rappell rests not far from there, but under a small stone, about the size of a brick, with a number on it, in a pauper’s grave — Dad took me there once.

Brian T — Posted — 11/23/2020: 18:37:59

We can document ( ! ) eight or nine generations back to blacksmiths in England.
They don’t give a sweet rat’s patootie who we are.
The End.

Owen — Posted — 11/23/2020: 18:41:09

quote:
Originally posted by Banjo Lefty

<snip> I discovered a prison record for a young man who had been convicted of attempted beastiality. I was intrigued by the ‘attempted.’ It doesn’t seem to me to be a very difficult crime to commit.

Even though I’ll never understand ‘why,’ I suppose not everybody follows the ‘Don Cherry’ thread, so I figure one of Paul’s posts might fit in about here: The first time I saw Utah Phillips, Saul Broudy backed him up on harmonica. Utah introduced him thusly: ‘Saul was doing animal husbandry at the University of Minnesota until they caught him at it.’

Dating agency in lexington missouri. mike gregory — Posted — 11/23/2020: 19:16:56

One of my ancestors lived long enough to produce offspring, before being hung for sheep stealing.
We are DISTANTLY related to the Haigs of Scotch whiskey fame, and Alexander Haig, , the United States Secretary of State under President Ronald Reagan and the White House chief of staff under presidents Richard Nixon and Gerald Ford.

5B-Ranch — Posted — 11/23/2020: 19:26:17

Mike I see the resemblance!!
Not to much into family trees. But I have planted a tree or two in my life time. No world shakers that I’m aware in our family but with my last name which rhymes with bones and starts with a J who knows. BUT we are the proud owner of the everyday saying “Keeping up with the Bones’” so I’m still waiting on my residual checks from each and everyone of you that says that without our family’s permission.

Edited by — 5B-Ranch on 11/23/2020 19:28:04

BanjoLink — Posted — 11/23/2020: 20:57:58

Recently found out my great great great grandmother on my mother’s side was a revolutionary war hero (heroine) and had 22 children, after marring a Revolutionary War Captain at age 16. Most of the children lived, which was unusual in the 1700’s and early 1800's.

Good Buddy — Posted — 11/23/2020: 21:03:50

quote:
Originally posted by Banjo Lefty

How many of us are researching your family tree, and, if so, what have you found? In my case, I discovered a prison record for a young man who had been convicted of attempted beastiality. I was intrigued by the ‘attempted.’ It doesn’t seem to me to be a very difficult crime to commit.

Chickens can be hard to catch sometimes, trust me :D

Cyndy — Posted — 11/23/2020: 23:03:07

For me, genealogical research is a passion and I spend many hours a week researching and writing. Too many, maybe. :)
One of my favorite finds is a series of New York City deeds from around 1800 where my husband’s female ancestor is a party. In one of them she becomes a trustee for her sister’s property to protect ownership. It strikes me she was pretty savvy. I think she left an unhappy marriage (her husband advertised for her return) and ended up running an oyster house.

chuckv97 — Posted — 11/23/2020: 23:18:19

My grandmother’s family on my Dad’s side were North Sea fishermen in the 1800’s. One fall they ended up way north of Scotland when the weather turned and a storm swept them further asea. They had to spend the winter in Iceland.

Edited by — chuckv97 on 11/23/2020 23:19:42 Phillipsburg new jersey zip code.

m06 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 00:06:11

My dad used to talk about the living family he grew up among but hardly at all about those who had gone before. I met and knew his sister and his aunt who were the only close kin still alive when I was a kid. I guess grandparents are our natural connection to that past story and sadly both my paternal grandparents died before I was born. I knew little or nothing about anyone on that side of the family who lived before about 1890.
Some years ago I thought I’d do the research and I’m glad I did. Now I know where family are buried, have visited a few graves to pay my respect, I know what they did for work and where they lived. I believe that we all reach a point where we have an innate sense that we need that narrative. I now have half the story that helped to shape who I am.
What amazed me was, apart from record of birth marriage and death, how much tiny personal detail can be found in the historical record from 200+ years back. I came across an 1812 excise fine for my GGG grandfather detailing his overloaded cart, where he was stopped and how much he was fined. Also details of a pottery company that same relative had established in the last decade of the 18th century.
And, via newspaper reports, one event he was caught up in as a kid: when he was 14 he lived in an opencast mining area and gunpowder for the mining was regularly carted though the village where he lived. On one morning in 1785 a cart laden with 2 tonnes of gunpowder stopped outside a row of cottages. No-one knew for sure, but local witnesses assumed that on his break a spark from the carter’s pipe set the whole load off. The resulting explosion flattened 14 cottages making many villagers temporarily homeless, damaging many more including blowing the windows out of the schoolhouse. They never recovered the remains of the carter or his young mate. The news reports formed a national request for financial aid that was also repeated in churches around the country.
Being aware of events that our ancestors were caught up in and no doubt stayed in their minds is a form of connection. Narrative.

Edited by — m06 on 11/24/2020 00:17:56

Paul R — Posted — 11/24/2020: 00:15:20

quote:
Originally posted by 5B-Ranch

Mike I see the resemblance!!
Not to much into family trees. But I have planted a tree or two in my life time. No world shakers that I’m aware in our family but with my last name which rhymes with bones and starts with a J who knows. BUT we are the proud owner of the everyday saying “Keeping up with the Bones’” so I’m still waiting on my residual checks from each and everyone of you that says that without our family’s permission.

I didn’t keep up with them — I married one.

m06 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 01:31:05

quote:
Originally posted by chuckv97

My grandmother’s family on my Dad’s side were North Sea fishermen in the 1800’s. One fall they ended up way north of Scotland when the weather turned and a storm swept them further asea. They had to spend the winter in Iceland.

The words ‘North Sea fishermen’ don’t begin to describe how tough that life was in the 1800’s. Brutal.

Do you ever listen to shanties? Your family members would’ve sung some of those work songs most days of their working lives.

Edited by — m06 on 11/24/2020 01:42:36

Banjonewguy — Posted — 11/24/2020: 03:02:56

Through other family member’s searching, not mine, I have traced my dad’s side of the family in the US dating back to the mid 1700’s. On my mom’s side, her grandfather immigrated from Scotland in the mid 1800’s. It’s hard to trace anything farther than that because he deserted the army during the civil war because he was ordered to kill unarmed prisoners and refused to do it. That led to him changing his name and moving to the other side of the state which, back then, may as well have been across the country.

OM45GE — Posted — 11/24/2020: 03:12:29

I didn’t have to do much research. There is a book on my father’s side of the family called “The Cogswells in America” that traces the family back to the 1600’s in the US and earlier in England. It was published early in the 1900’s. My grandfather is my most recent named ancestor in the book with my dad and his sister are mentioned as his children but not named.
My mother’s family has been in the US about as long. They were Scots who arrived here as indentured servants. The settled in Maine and the family history is well documented though not published in book form.
It’s all sort of interesting, but I think it’s much more meaningful who you are as a person than who you’re related to. Like most of us, my ancestors and relatives include scoundrels and luminaries.

Edited by — OM45GE on 11/24/2020 03:16:52

phb — Posted — 11/24/2020: 03:40:59

Like most people here I can trace back my family to the Thirty Year’s War when most church registers were lost due to the war. On my dad’s side there were mostly poor people that were yarn weavers. In two subsequent generations only one of ten and twelve, respectively, baptised children survived childhood. On my mother’s side there is the typical Berlin mix of locals, Dutch, Polish and French immigrants. The Dutch were invited to help drain the boggy area, the French were Huguenots that were expelled from France and invited by the Prussian king to settle in his realm, the Polish just mixed in. They were also rather poor up until around the 1890s. We still own the home of my mother’s family that was built in 1803. It’s not a palace.

rinemb — Posted — 11/24/2020: 05:09:28

My wife’s primary hobbie has been gen research. She began before computers and internet. old fashion letter writing, courthouse and library contacts: mail, visits, and digging..all over the country.]
After getting deep into her patriarchal, then she started on my family vine.
A few years ago, we made breakthroughs on her mother from Germany who was never told who her biological father was. We found out and went to France to meet her first cousin.
She has Dozens of ringed binders full, and dozens of boxes full of ancestry stuff.
And is a full active member of several gen websites in USA and Europe.
Her current project is to find my patriarchal dude who came to America in about 1750s. Much info on my family after that, but no one has found his home origin. Lazarus Rine. early records (not original claim Prussia) My wife may be close to busting that???
Brad

kww — Posted — 11/24/2020: 05:26:54

The only relatively well-known relative is Wyatt Earp, my third cousin, 4x removed. He is, oddly enough, my third cousin, 4x removed twice because his aunt Drucilla is my great-great-great-grandmother through both my mother and father.

wizofos — Posted — 11/24/2020: 06:12:10

My Dad’s family is pretty well documented being on of the first German settlers (1846) in the hill country south of Austin. The Hoelscher/Buxkemper family is well documented in Texas lore. I have a book that is about 3' thick that documents all the known members and it is estimated that I have about 10,000 cousins world wide.
I started doing some investigation when this Covid thing started and I recall my Mother’s Mother (My maternal grandmother) used to talk about being Kashubian and speaking kashubie. I always thought that we were Polish, but apparently the Kashubians are a separate culture in Poland and their language is one of the two official languages in Poland. The interesting thing is that my maternal Great-Grandmother supposedly was born in a covered wagon in Minnesota in February. She was a sickly child so the family turned around and went back to Chicago where from what I can tell they settled in a Kashubian area on the north side and attended a mainly Kashubian parish. This ‘sickly’ child only had one daughter (my grandmother) but had 5 husbands and even married her step-son and lived to 95. I have not been able to trace back farther than my Great-Grandmother on that side.

Richard Hauser — Posted — 11/24/2020: 07:10:26

I have never checked out my family lineage. My family said little about their relatives. All I knew was the fact my mother was originally Canadian and my father’s family had emigrated from Germany. When my mothers relatives visited, they only spoke French. So I went fishing when they were around.
Before my sister took it to Chile, our attic contained a beautiful hand carved sled designed to carry a child. So there must have been a carpenter somewhere along the line. Unfortunately I did not inherit that skill.

Edited by — Richard Hauser on 11/24/2020 07:11:04

steve davis — Posted — 11/24/2020: 08:00:55

My Mom’s people moved here in the early 1900s.
My Great-Grandfather Thomas Underwood worked in our local granite quarry.
Dad’s side came from the Port Clyde area for many generations,mostly the local Indian tribes with no records kept.

Owen Dating In Huguenot Village

DC5 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 08:13:23

quote:
Originally posted by Banjo Lefty

How many of us are researching your family tree, and, if so, what have you found? In my case, I discovered a prison record for a young man who had been convicted of attempted beastiality. I was intrigued by the ‘attempted.’ It doesn’t seem to me to be a very difficult crime to commit.

Sounds like he got caught with his pants down.

There’s a joke about a farmer sitting in a bar looking sad and his friend asks what’s wrong. He replies some things you just can’t explain. He said he was milking the cow and she kicked the milk bucket so he took some rope and tied her right leg to the stanchion. Then the cow kicked the bucket with the left leg and the farmer did the same with the left leg. Then the cow started swatting the farmer in the head with it’s tail so the farmer decided to tie the tail up to an overhead beam. He found a stool, but had no more rope, so he took off his belt to tie up the tail. During this process his pants fell down and right at that moment his wife walked into the barn. Some things you just can’t explain.

DC5 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 08:27:51

There are more than a couple of first cousin marriages, which explains a lot. There is supposed Penobscot Indian blood on my mothers side, but most of the story behind that has been proven false so the only way I’ll really know is if I have a DNA test done. On my fathers side we can trace back to the revolutionary war where one great great something or other went from Washington’s side to the British side and after the war moved to Canada and helped found a town. Family immigrated back to Lawrence Massachusetts and spread about central Mass. There’s a family castle ruins somewhere in Wales, and part of the family comes from County Cork. My mother’s side, being Swedish, becomes very hard to trace. The first family member changed his name when he came to America, so tracing back to Sweden becomes difficult, and following Swedish family names is quite a challenge. Had one great great grandfather who fought in Cuba during the Spanish American War. I used to wear his coat in the winter, nice wool coat with a cape. My Grandfather founded the David Clark company, which started out making bras and girdles, but moved to space suits and hearing protection and communications.

BanjoLink — Posted — 11/24/2020: 09:09:32

Here is a blurb on my 3G Grandmother.

Remsleep — Posted — 11/24/2020: 09:11:08

Thanks to a cousin of my late father’s with an interest in genealogy we have a pretty detailed record of his side of the family going back to Lithuania in the IIRC 16th century. Records on my mother’s side start with my great-grandfather, who immigrated to the US from Galicia in the late-19th century; he had 9 children who lived to adulthood. We have lots of pictures from that generation, but I don’t think anyone knows much about family left behind in the old country. In all likelihood, descendants of any family members who didn’t emigrate were killed in the Holocaust.

krw2dbw — Posted — 11/24/2020: 09:21:41

I’ve got the Geneology for my Father’s side of the family from 1549. Our name was originally spelled Ouellette and it appears from the Church records in England that the Vicar spelled the name phonetically as Willits. We ended up in the northern part of Strattfordshire . It is unclear when we crossed the Atlantic, however we are related to a Rev Thomas Whillet, the first Governor of New Amsterdam. My Dads mother’s maiden name was Coutant. They settled Long Island and James Bower Coutant, a Quaker, was responsible for petitioning Peter Styvendant(sp) on behalf of the people of Long Island for the right to worship as Quakers on Long Island instead of Lutheran as was practiced on the mainland. The Coutant and Willits families moved to Cardington Ohio and participated in ‘underground railroad’ activities. Prior to 1860. My Greatgrandfather Clayton Newbull Willits served as a Union soldier during the Civil War. He became aggrevated with the Friends Society and quit the Quaker church because they would not authorize his marriage to Mary Vicker of, England. He became Methodist. Meanwhile Elwin Coutant retired as a Captain of a Cargo Ship and took a post in the ‘United States Lifesaving Service’ as keeper of the Mosquito Lagoon House of Refuge, at Turtle Mound, along the shores of Florida, along the peninsula north of Cape Canaveral. In the late 1800, travel in the state of Florida was usually by the St John’s River, or the beaches. The Houses of Refuge were in place to rescue shipwreck survivors and travelers stranded on the beach. No fresh water for miles. An interesting fact, either US 1 or A1A , was built with Artesian wells every ten miles, I think. The well at Ponte Vedra was still extant when I was in the scouts. Anyway , The Coutant family produced two daughters and a son. Amy Ethel Coutant married Ralph C. Willits. She painted for Lemouge(sp) porceline signing her works ECW. I don’t know if she painted before she married but her initails would have been AEC. In her adolescence she served as a courier for the First Bank of Miami with a pistol strapped to her side on horseback. She and her sister had a GW Washburn fiddle which ultimatley came unglued in the Florida heat and humidity of the shore. My brother inherited it’s pieces from my uncle and had it reassembled and finished. It now lives with me.

DC5 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 09:24:34

I feel sad for people 75 to 100 years from now. There will be no boxes of pictures or letters stored in the attic from our generation. Most of the media it is stored on will be destroyed, or completely forgotten. We could be living in the new dark ages.

krw2dbw — Posted — 11/24/2020: 09:29:40

There is a publication on the History of the Houses of Refuge, it seems my great uncle was a trained photographer and chronicled much of their activity.

phb — Posted — 11/24/2020: 10:18:49

quote:
Originally posted by BanjoLink

Here is a blurb on my 3G Grandmother.

‘She regained her footing but had lost her sense of direction. She struggled toward the bank, although she wasn’t certain if it was the correct side of the stream. ‘

How can one not know which bank of a river is the right one? A river only flows in one direction. Other than that an interesting read!

phb — Posted — 11/24/2020: 10:29:10

quote:
Originally posted by DC5

I feel sad for people 75 to 100 years from now. There will be no boxes of pictures or letters stored in the attic from our generation. Most of the media it is stored on will be destroyed, or completely forgotten. We could be living in the new dark ages.

I feel sorry for the people 2,000 years from now. We don’t carve a lot into stone.. :o)

Brian T — Posted — 11/24/2020: 10:40:27

I did the conventional nDNA profile test with Ancestry.ca.
In the years since, DNA ‘matches’ have popped up.
In all instances, they continue to outline our family heritage.
In fact, right down to the named county source of our family in Ontario.
Really has done no more than to confirm what we have been able to document.

krw2dbw — Posted — 11/24/2020: 10:41:15

As storage media continues to progress and obsolescence occurs so quickly, those dark ages may occur more quickly than expected. Who has a PC that can read 5.25 inch floppies?

phb — Posted — 11/24/2020: 10:56:10

quote:
Originally posted by krw2dbw

As storage media continues to progress and obsolescence occurs so quickly, those dark ages may occur more quickly than expected. Who has a PC that can read 5.25 inch floppies?

As a matter of fact, I do. It is a portable 286 with a built-in CRT which is the size of a suitcase and weighs a ton.

DC5 — Posted — 11/24/2020: 12:43:46

quote:
Originally posted by phb
quote:

Owen Dating In Huguenot Village

Originally posted by DC5

I feel sad for people 75 to 100 years from now. There will be no boxes of pictures or letters stored in the attic from our generation. Most of the media it is stored on will be destroyed, or completely forgotten. We could be living in the new dark ages.

Owen Dating In Huguenot Church

I feel sorry for the people 2,000 years from now. We don’t carve a lot into stone.. :o)

We do, however, move stone much further than our ancestors did. There is a hospital in Worcester Massachusetts that has a huge stone garden and waterfall. All the stone was imported from Arizona. Imagine the archeologists and geologists 2,000 years from now pondering over that one. Not so much as to how, but why? Heck, I ask that question now. We have beautiful rocks right here in New England.

History of the Huguenot Emigration to America

Owen Dating In Huguenot London

Author : Charles Washington Baird
File Size : 51.22 MB
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Download »History of the Huguenot Emigration to America by Charles Baird Washington, first published in 1885, is a rare manuscript, the original residing in one of the great libraries of the world. This book is a reproduction of that original, which has been scanned and cleaned by state-of-the-art publishing tools for better readability and enhanced appreciation. Restoration Editors’ mission is to bring long out of print manuscripts back to life. Some smudges, annotations or unclear text may still exist, due to permanent damage to the original work. We believe the literary significance of the text justifies offering this reproduction, allowing a new generation to appreciate it.



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