Find joseph o perreault family tree

Mother given name surname year. Anne Perreault. No publicly available LifeStory events. Spouse Jacques Lacroix. Leo Perrault. Leo Perrault from tree Hemenway Family Tree. Death year Florida USA. Antoinette Lynn Perrault found in 1 tree View all.

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Antoinette Lynn Perrault from tree nicholes Family Tree. Laurent Perrault. Laurent Perrault from tree Perrault Family Tree. Blanche Perrault. Blanche Perrault from tree Reckard Family Tree.

Charles Denney (Metis genealogy)

Death year Oklahoma USA. Spouse Lucien Maurice. Joseph Perrault. Joseph Perrault from tree Jones Family Tree. Death year.


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Doris Perrault. Doris Perrault from tree Martin Family Tree. Father given name surname Died year. Father given name surname Died year Record information. Historically, perhaps his greatest achievement was keeping Red Lake from allotment. He was also given a flag with 38 stars on it by Abraham Lincoln.

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Family legend has it that among other children he had a son. I suppose that is why pop always had an affinity for those lakes and spent a lot of time hunting, fishing, and logging around them. This was also when the Episcopal missionaries first contacted him and his wife and his name Jacob Littlecreek came about. That is why I mentioned not to quote me in the second paragraph. This is a key point in the differences between oral tradition and written records. His first marriage was to a woman named Kahmajebeeget. They had two kids named Ogubayowon and Quayzence.

These two kids would be half relatives but trying to tie them in is difficult. Subsequent censuses listed her as Louise Littlecreek. I believe Magabow was the one who dreamed and prophesied that he would grow up to travel and visit heads of state. Here is my favorite picture of him with one of those important people at least I think so!

Yes, I know Bob Hope was not a head-of-state; but he was cool. I actually have a letter from Bob Hope replying to a request about more information about this picture! In his lifetime, Ben set up a trading post in Itaska State Park at the headwaters of the Mississippi. With the money that he made during the summer, he would travel to other countries and again family legend has it, he did meet heads of state.

Where smiles bloom!

Here is a picture of him with said drum. There was a Chief named Kaybayahmahjewaib who was born in Mahnomen.


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  • He was also known as Chief James Mason. He married Ogubaince. Her maiden name was Mountain. She was born in in White Earth. Lizzy as a 14 year old visitor with dad and sibs at the July meeting of the "Chippewa Indians of Minnesota Incorporated" at Ball Club Minnesota.

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    You can see her with her father in this group picture at the time. I found it in her shed after Lizzy died. Elisabeth was an imposing and interesting woman. She struck me as the strong silent type. She did a lot of beadwork, smoked like a chimney, and kept her house so warm that you started to sweat as soon as you walked into it. One day she met Kaywinini Ben and they were married she for the 3rd or 4th time, he for his first time.

    And just like that, many of those connections to the past, religion, family history, and culture, were impaired.

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    Ajiidamo would join the army and go on to marry a woman whom he met while roller- skating on Army leave in New York City in So my impression of him was that anything that he learned about being one of the Anishinabeg he probably picked up on his own or from Red Lakers when he lived on the reservation, or at the American Indian Center when he lived in Chicago. My experience with him was that he learned things as he went along. Take this with a grain of salt. Something always rushes in to fill a vacuum. I think this is true about cultural experiences. One of the ways pop used to fill his cultural vacuum was to research his family history, a way that I like as well and which I took up where he left off.

    That is, kaput, owari, dead. As Anishinabeg, we all have a story. It is what makes us Anishinabeg. Some stories are about Red Lakers blessed to have the most unbroken lines in their history. A few are about Red Lakers who have no apparent history. Many stories, like mine—rest somewhere in between with varying degrees of misery and happiness.