19 décembre, 2024

Commentaires

  • From Dede on 1916 - Habitants de l'Ile aux Chiens

    Descendants of Eugène ADMOND

    1 Eugène ADMOND b: Abt. 1853 in Langrolay, Manche, France
    .. +Rosalie ROLET b: Abt. 1853 in Langrolay, Manche, France
    ….. 2 Eugène Célestin ADMOND b: 11 September 1886 in Ile-aux-Chiens, Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, France d: 25 April 1952 in St Pierre, St Pierre & Miquelon, Dom-Tom, France
    ……… +Joséphine Louise Maria Andréa LEMAITRE b: 5 April 1885 in St Pierre, St Pierre & Miquelon, Dom-Tom, France d: 7 April 1969 in St Pierre, St Pierre & Miquelon, Dom-Tom, France
    ….. 2 Amélie Amanda ADMOND b: 3 November 1887 in Ile-aux-Chiens, Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, France d: 14 October 1899 in Ile-aux-Chiens, Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, France
    ….. 2 Elisa Marie Joseph ADMOND b: 14 November 1889 in Ile-aux-Chiens, Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, France d: 12 November 1982 in Montréal, Province-de-Québec, Canada
    ……… +Henri Anatole IZA b: 29 July 1880 in St Pierre, St Pierre & Miquelon, Dom-Tom, France

    Go to comment
    2010/11/02 at 11:48 pm
  • From yvon laroche on 1916 - Habitants de l'Ile aux Chiens

    bonjour je recherche des decendan de eugen admond je suis le fils de adelle admond je n,est dautre famielle mercie.yvon

    Go to comment
    2010/11/02 at 6:48 pm
  • From Marc Cormier on La CIBC à Saint-Pierre de 1919 à 1939

    Voir la page correspondante.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/31 at 10:38 pm
  • From Marc Cormier on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    « We shall now proceed in our narrative of colonial occurrences, taking the different stations in the order in which they have just been named; North America, West Indies, Coast of Africa, and East Indies. In the station of North America is included that of Newfoundland; at which island, or rather at St. John’s, its principal port, the British naval force, on the breaking out of the war, consisted of the 64-gun ship Stately, Captain J. S. Smith, bearing the flag of Vice-admiral Sir Richard King, the 32-gun frigates Boston, Fox, and Cleopatra, and four or five small sloops. The first act of hostility in this quarter was the capture of the small fishing islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, which had been taken from the French in 1778, and were injudiciously restored to them by the treaty of 1783.

    Aware of the importance of these fishery islands, the British government, in a very few days after war had been declared, despatched orders to Halifax, Nova-Scotia, for their immediate seizure. In pursuance of those directions, Brigadier-general Ogilvie, with a detachment of the royal artillery, and 310 rank and file of the 4th and 65th regiments, embarked, on the 7th of May, in the British 28-gun frigate Alligator, Captain William Affleck, the Diligente armed schooner and three transports. On the 14th, at daybreak, the Alligator and convoy made the island of St. Pierre; and, it having been stated (although, as it proved, erroneously) that a French frigate was in the harbour, a division of the troops was landed about five miles to the westward of the town; after which, the ships made sail for the harbour. A summons for the surrender of the islands was sent to M. Danseville, the commandant, who demanded terms of capitulation, but, on these being refused, surrendered the islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon at discretion. The battery consisted of eight 24pounders, the garrison of between 80 and 100 men, besides about 500 armed fishermen; and the whole population of the twe islands, of 1502 souls, including 761 for Miquelon. Eighteen small vessels laden with fish and two American schooners containing provisions and naval stores, were taken in the harbour. »

    The naval history of Great Britain, from the declaration of war by France in …
    By William James, Frederick Chamier

    Go to comment
    2010/10/30 at 12:52 pm
  • From Donna Gilbert on English

    What can you tell me about the part Thomas Snook (a seaman from Grand Bank) played in World War II? I have been told that his name is on a wall in St. Pierre somewhere. He was taken off dry dock and given a message? Can you give me more information?

    Go to comment
    2010/10/25 at 11:28 pm
  • From Ginette Boudreau Deschamps on Généalogie : Miquelon

    Pour une reponse a Beverly Tremblay, je suis la cousine de Rita , aux dernieres nouvelles elle demeure a Ville Lasalee, Roger a Vancouver et Robert etait dans la region de Magog, je suis la fille de Leda Illareguy, soeur de Paul pere de Rita

    Go to comment
    2010/10/24 at 9:05 pm
  • From Marc Cormier on 10 000 habitants en 2000?

    Pente p = (y2-y1)/(x2-x1)
    Projection y2 = p (x2-x1) + y1

    Go to comment
    2010/10/21 at 2:30 am
  • From Marc Cormier on 10 000 habitants en 2000?

    La pente moyenne correspondant à la croissance démographique entre 1921 et 2009 est de 35,08. En appliquant cette pente à la population de 1907, nous arrivons à une population de 10 380 habitants en 2010.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/21 at 2:12 am
  • From planchon on 1693 - 1763 : Commandants de la colonie

    Bonjour,

    avez vous un portrait de Mr SOURDEVAL ????

    pour mon blog

    http://albumdetimbres.blogspot.com/

    Cordialement

    Go to comment
    2010/10/17 at 10:30 am
  • From Marc Cormier on 1976 - Saint-Pierre et Miquelon, base navale et aérienne

    En savoir plus sur Philippe Rossillon
    http://agora.qc.ca/francophonie.nsf/Dossiers/Philippe_Rossillon

    Robert Reguly
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Reguly

    Xavier Deniau
    http://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xavier_Deniau
    http://www.assemblee-nationale.fr/11/tribun/fiches_id/1077.asp

    Go to comment
    2010/10/11 at 4:52 pm
  • From Marc Cormier on 1778 - The London Chronicle [17/11/1778]

    John Montagu was born in 1719 in Lackham, Wiltshire, the son of James Montague and a great-great-grandson of the first Earl of Manchester. Montagu entered the Royal Academy at Portsmouth on August 14, 1733 and served on board a number of vessels during the next seven years. He was promoted to lieutenant on December 22, 1740 and assigned to the Buckingham the following February. He attained the rank of commander in March 1744/5, and was made captain in January 1745/6 on board the 40-gun ship Ambuscade, seeing action at Cape Finistre the following May. He saw limited command in the eight years between 1748 and 1756, during which time he served as Member of Parliament for Huntington.

    Montagu returned to active duty in 1757 as captain of the Monarque, and one of his first responsibilities was to carry out the sentence of the court martial of Admiral John Byng (Governor of Newfoundland 1742) who had been found guilty of negligence for his decision to retreat from the French forces at Minorca the previous year. Byng was shot by firing squad on the quarter-deck of the Monarque on March 14.

    Montagu saw action in various European engagements during the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763). In 1770 he was made Rear Admiral of the Blue Squadron and the following year made Commander-in-Chief of the North American station, from the Gulf of St. Lawrence south to Florida and the Bahamas, a position he held until 1776 when he was made Commander-in-Chief and Governor of Newfoundland. In February of that year he was raised to Vice Admiral of the Blue.

    While in charge of the Newfoundland station, Montagu was mainly concerned with protecting the coast and the fishing fleet from American privateers. He succeeded in this by outfitting « a number of the best fast sailing vessels in the trade … as armed cruisers, putting young lieutenants, masters, mates, midshipmen, and petty officers in charge of them. With the men-of-war under his command and these improvised sloops and cutters, he most effectively protected our coasts from the American privateers. » (D.W. Prowse: 1895, pp. 340-1) With the outbreak of renewed hostilities with France in 1778, he ordered the capture of St. Pierre and Miquelon, had the town burned, and the 1392 residents sent back to France.

    His tour of duty in Newfoundland ended in 1778 and he returned to England. From 1783 to 1786 he served as Commander-in-Chief at Portsmouth and rose through the admiralty ranks, being made Admiral of the White Squadron on September 24, 1787. He retired to Fareham in Hampshire, where he died on September 7, 1795.

    Montagu married Sophia Wroughton of Wilcot, Wiltshire in 1748. They were the parents of one daughter and four sons. The three younger sons, George (1750-1829), James (1752-1794) and Edward (1755-1799) all followed their father into the service, George reaching the rank of admiral, James captain in the navy and Edward lieutenant-colonel in the army. George served as flag-captain to his father during the latter’s last year at Newfoundland.

    http://www.gaspee.org/JohnMontagu.htm

    Go to comment
    2010/10/11 at 2:45 am
  • From MC on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    65th (2nd Yorkshire, North Riding) Regiment of Foot
    Formed in 1758. In 1769, the regiment went to Boston, and was one of the regiments engaged at Bunker’s Hill on the memorable 17th June, 1775. Declared under strength, the men were drafted into other regiments and the officers returned to England in May 1776.. After being at home in 1823, the 65th served in the West Indies, Demerara and Canada until August, 1841, when it returned home. Three companies of 65th arrived in Upper Canada in December 1838.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/11 at 2:12 am
  • From MC on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    4th (King’s Own) Regiment of Foot
    Formed as 2nd Tangier Regiment in 1680 and designated the Duchess of York and Albany’s Regiment [1684], then Queen’s Marines [1685], King’s Own Regiment [1715] and finally the 4th Regiment in 1751. In 1758 the 2nd Battalion became the 62nd Regiment. The regiment arrived in Boston in June 1774, and fought at Bunker’s Hill, and in all the principal actions during the first three years of the War of Independence. In 1778 it was among the troops sent from New York to the West Indies. In 1780 it returned home. From 1787 to 1793 the regiment was in Canada and Newfoundland. It was in the Atlantic region of Canada in 1814.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/11 at 2:11 am
  • From MC on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    Note : Infantry

    65th Regiment, 1769-76: Nova Scotia; 1785-93: Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick; 1838-41: Nova Scotia.

    4th Regiment, 1787-97: Nova Scotia, Quebec; 1866-68: Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island

    http://www.cmhg-phmc.gc.ca/cmh/page-538-eng.asp

    Go to comment
    2010/10/11 at 2:00 am
  • From Marc Cormier on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    En savoir plus sur Ogilvie : « OGILVIE (Ogilvy), JAMES, army officer and colonial administrator; b. c. 1740, possibly in Scotland; m. Penelope–; d. 14 Feb. 1813 in London, England.

    James Ogilvie began his military career as an ensign in the lst Foot on 21 Sept. 1756, but in March 1757 transferred to the 4th Foot. He received his lieutenancy on 20 December of the latter year, and from 1759 to 1762 served in the West Indian campaigns of the British army. After his return to Britain, he was appointed captain on 30 March 1764. The 4th was sent to Boston, Mass., in June 1774, and Ogilvie saw a considerable amount of service during the American revolution, including participation in the battles of Long Island, Brandywine, and Germantown. In 1778 his ship was captured by the French off St Lucia, and Ogilvie was taken prisoner to France, returning to his regiment in Ireland in 1780. On 20 Nov. 1782 he was appointed colonel in the army. »

    « After hostilities broke out between Britain and France in 1793, Ogilvie, acting on instructions from London, organized an expedition against Saint-Pierre and Miquelon consisting of members of the 4th and 65th Foot and the Royal Artillery on transports, accompanied by a frigate and several armed vessels. In concert with a force from Newfoundland, on 14 May they attacked the ill defended French colony, which surrendered without firing a shot. Ogilvie returned to Halifax on 20 June with 570 officials, troops, and fishermen as prisoners; the remaining inhabitants of the islands were deported to Nova Scotia and the Channel Islands the next year. On 12 Oct. 1793 Ogilvie was advanced to major-general by the normal process of seniority. »

    http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=2584&interval=25&

    Go to comment
    2010/10/09 at 12:59 am
  • From Marc Cormier on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    From http://www.acadian.org/miquelon.html

    The French Revolution erupted in 1789, and events on Saint Pierre and Miquelon were not immune to the twists and turns that ensued. In the early spring of 1793, news of the trial and execution of Louis XVI reached the islands. All royal symbols were subsequently removed from Saint Pierre and Miquelon. The Acadian population of Miquelon were loyal to French royalty, and decided to leave the colony for the Magdalen Islands, a small archipelago just north of Nova Scotia.
    Then in May of 1793, British hostility to the French Revolution and the fact that France had declared war on the United Kingdom as part of the War of the First Coalition, led to another British attack on the islands under Captain William Affleck of Halifax. The seasonal fishermen and French military forces were deported in 1793, followed by the 950 residents in 1794, who were shipped to Halifax and held for two years.
    British fishermen took possession of the islands. Only 2 years later, French forces under Rear-Admiral de Richery attacked the islands in 1796, sinking 80 British vessels. The British abandoned the islands, and the French destroyed the town. After this, the islands remained deserted until 1816.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/09 at 12:54 am
  • From Marc Cormier on 1793 - Letters from Brigadier General Ogilvie and Captain William Affleck about the surrender of St Pierre and Miquelon

    En savoir plus sur le HSM Alligator : http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HMS_Alligator_%281787%29

    From February 1793 her commander was Captain William Afleck, who served briefly in the North Sea, achieving success against French privateers in the region. On 12 February 1793 he captured the Sans Peur, followed by the Prend Tout on 21 February.[1] Afleck left Britain bound for the Leeward Islands on 18 March 1793, and arrived in time to be present at the capture of St Pierre and Miquelon on 14 May that year.[

    Go to comment
    2010/10/09 at 12:52 am
  • From Richard McIntosh on English

    In August 1948 First flight letters with a cachet « premier laison postale aerienne 31 aout 1948, St Pierre et Miquelon, Canada,France, USA » in red. What were the flights involved? Did a plane from Paris land on St. Pierre?
    Thanks

    Go to comment
    2010/10/01 at 10:45 pm
  • From Michelle on Généalogie : Miquelon

    I have some additional information on this family. My mother’s maiden name is Lethiecq. Her father Adrien came to Massachusetts around 1907. The farthest I go back so far in this family is Allain Letiecq married to Francoise Clin in France. Email me if you want additional info.

    Go to comment
    2010/10/01 at 7:13 pm
  • From Lapeyre Catherine on Noms d'origine basque

    Je recherche un nom basque pour notre nouvelle maison située à Jatxou, sa particularité est qu’elle a beaucoup de baies vitrées de tous côtés donnant sur un beau jardin fleuri et sur un petit bois, et donc je pense que nous pourrions l’appeller : la maison ouverte… sur la nature, sur le jardin, sur le bois; l’idée d’ « ouverture » est très importante et sur la nature qui l’entoure…
    merci pour vos suggestions de traductions

    Go to comment
    2010/09/13 at 6:42 pm

Social Widgets powered by AB-WebLog.com.