- Acadian-Cajun Family Trees
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(CD-rom - Amazon.com) : Discover Your Acadian Roots! This lineage-linked database contains over 600,000 family history records from 2,500 family names, including all of the major Acadian-Cajun names. The unedited ancestral records compiled on this CD were submitted to Yvon Cyr, host of the Acadian-Cajun web site. They are lineage linked so you can trace your family history from modern day Acadian and Cajun families to generations past. -
- Acadian-Cajun Genealogy : Step by Step
- (Book - Amazon.com) : Most genealogy how-to books cover a wide area. Although this book covers basic genealogy, it specifically aims at genealogy pertinent to the Cajuns of south Louisiana (and displaced Cajuns) and their Acadian ancestors from Canada. -
- Census Tables for the French Colony at Louisiana from 1699 Through 1732
- (Book - Amazon.com) : This is a compilation of the 28 earliest census records of Louisiana. These particular census records cover, at one period or another, Fort Maurepas, Biloxi, Mobile, Natchez, New Orleans, and other locations. The records are both civilian and military, mainly the former. Besides census records, the reader will find lists of 1,704 marriageable girls, a 1726 list of persons requesting negroes, landowner lists, and a list of persons massacred at Fort Rosalie in 1729. -
- Deportation of the Prince Edward Island Acadians
- (Book - Amazon.ca) : The deportation of approximately three thousand French settlers from Prince Edward Island in 1758 is a story which has been largely overshadowed by the removal of six to seven thousand Acadians from Nova Scotia in 1755. The research of historian Earle Lockerby has shed a great deal of new light on the deportation from Prince Edward Island--the management and implementation; the poignant personal accounts of captives; the disastrous loss of life; and the successful escape of close to 1,500 settlers who eluded their would-be captors. This book is well illustrated by portraits of the key players, maps, and excerpts of original documents. -
- French Colonists and Exiles in the United States
- (Book - Genealogical.com) : The focus of this volume, published originally in 1907, is not on French colonization of North America (which is indeed surveyed in the first chapter); rather, it is an attempt to gather together accounts of the various French pioneers and settlements established in the United States during the latter part of the 18th and early 19th centuries. -
- French Migration to North America = Emigration Francaise en Amerique du Nord
- (Book - Amazon.ca) : Everyday life descriptions of the French early settlers to North America describing everything from the turbulent wars of France in the late 1500's and early 1600's to the dominance of these French descendants in Quebec culture today and their integration into many eastern and Midwestern United States towns.
Also available from Amazon.com (United States) -
- Pioneers of France in the New World
- (Book - Amazon.com) : In the sixteenth century, Spain claimed the fabled New World, and a rash of explorers sailed there seeking riches and, most famously, a fountain of youth. Although France made inroads into Florida, ultimately the French, like the Spanish, failed to establish dominion over North America. Francis Parkman tells why.
Also available from Amazon.co.uk (United Kingdom) and Amazon.ca (Canada) -
- The Descendants of Louis XIII
- (Book - Amazon.com) : In this very detailed, liberally illustrated volume Mr. Willis has endeavored to trace out every line of descent from Louis XIII, both male and female, legitimate and illegitimate. The various Bourbon lines are organized into chapters corresponding to each country or duchy controlled by the Bourbons, and the information is presented in outline format. The author has made every attempt to include the following information about each descendant of Louis XIII: his/her date and place of birth, date and place of death, full names and titles, and dates and places of all marriages. Spouses of descendants are identified by full name and title, date and place of birth and death, parents' names, including the mother's maiden name, and additional spouses, if any. In the case of illegitimate children numbered among Louis XIII's descendants, Mr. Willis includes all children who were recognized either by the parent in question, the courts, or other family members. Besides providing a surname reference to the roughly 100,000 descendants, Mr. Willis has devised an extensive cross-referencing system to connect descendants who intermarried. The author has also included a bibliography and an appendix to the lineages, which shows the connections between Louis' descendants and other sovereign houses. In conclusion, The Descendants of Louis XIII, King of France is a stunning new contribution to the field of royal genealogy. -
- The French Blood in America
- (Book - Genealogical.com) : The purpose of this work is to give a true estimate of the Huguenots as a factor in American life. Separate chapters deal systematically with the Huguenots in Canada and the settlements at Oxford, Narragansett, New Amsterdam, New Rochelle and New Paltz, and in the states of Maine, Pennsylvania, Delaware, South Carolina, and Virginia. Also included are sketches of Huguenot founders, soldiers, statesmen, churchmen, artists, and writers. Valuable appendices include a list of "Some English Surnames of French Origin" and a list of the "Present Members of the Huguenot Society of America" (1906). -
Religious Groups : Huguenot
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