My Paternal Grandfather’s Military Career (1) Rosaire Theriault
Excerpt from family history interview
Subject: Rosaire Theriault
Date: Late 1940s

World War I Registration Papers (1918)

My grandfather spent his last years at the Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue Military Hospital for Veterans

This black and white vintage postcard of the Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue Veterans’ Hospital was published by PECO (Ottawa).
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Kahnawa:ke – Home of the Haudenosaunee
71st Carnival of Genealogy – Topic:Local History

This vintage postcard of the Iroquois village of Kahnawake/Caughnawaga really appeals to me. First, for aesthetic reasons - I love the soft colours, the play of shadows and the way I can pick out architectural details such as the timber siding on the homes. Secondly, I live and teach in the area, so I’ve had friends and students who came from Kahnawake. The last reason is a bitter one, because the Iroquois/Haudenosaunee of Kahnawake and my ancestors are connected in an unhappy way. As I’ve related elsewhere, my Quebec ancestor Andre Mignier dit Lagace came to Quebec in the early 1600s to help in the war against the Iroquois. The Iroquois nations (Cayuga, Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Seneca, Tuscarora) had sided with the British and were attempting to regain lands which were originally theirs, but were now part of La Nouvelle France. It’s unfortunately the way of the world that my ancestors often seemed to have been displacing others – or were themselves being displaced.
Nowadays, Kahnawake is a modern, thriving community and over the last twenty years it’s witnessed a true renaissance of Kanien’keha:ka (Mohawk) culture – along with the other Canadian Mohawk settlements of Kanesatake, Akwesasne, Tyendinaga and Watha, as well as the American settlements of Ganienkeh and St-Regis in New York.
This recent electoral map shows the present distribution of land between Chateauguay and Kahnawake. To the north of the map you see part of the island of Montreal. Chateauguay and Kahanawake are both on the south shore but as you can see from both the map and postcard, Kahnawake is nestled next to the waters of the St-Lawrence River. The bridge in the background of the postcard is the CPR train bridge which was built before the Mercier Bridge which now connects us all to the Island of Montreal. The CPR bridge runs roughly parallel to the Mercier (Thanks to Peter Lenihan for extra correction)

As I said, this is the land distribution today – but in fact, an injustice was done because much of the surrounding land (including where my house now sits) should actually have stayed in Mohawk hands. You can read the full story of how the Mohawk lost as much as 2/3 of their land at the Kahnawake Band Council site below.

Land Grant by King Louis (France)
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Further Reading:
http://www.mccord-museum.qc.ca/scripts/explore.php?Lang=1&tableid=11
http://www.accessgenealogy.com/native/tribes/nations/caughnawaga.htm

Carnival Host:
Donna Pointkouski
http://pastprologue.wordpress.com/2009/05/03/carnival-of-genealogy-71st-edition/
Please do not republish images from my Vintage Postcard Collection without first informing me. So far, I’ve never refused permission for fair, non- profit use with attribution and link back to http://acanadianfamily.com
Black Sheep and Moonshine: Rosaire Theriault

It's said that the term "moonshine" comes from the fact that the alcohol was distilled under cover of darkness.
When I heard that the latest topic for the Canadian Carnival of Genealogy was Black Sheep Canadian Ancestors – I was sure I’d have to sit this one out. Almost all of my ancestors have been hard-working farmers with gigantic families and very little free time for getting into mischief. But as I thought about it a little more I realized that I had once seen something interesting in a short family history paper my father wrote for an anthropology course back in the late 1940s. He was interviewing his parents about their early married life during the depression years and there were two short references to something my grandfather did to make a little extra cash on the side.
By way of background , I’d like to mention that my grandfather was Rosaire Theriault and his father was the Phlippe Theriault whose difficult life I discussed in Smile For The Camera – The Noble Life Unfortunately my grandfather’s life was, if anything , even more difficult. Rosaire was the fifth of 11 children born to Philippe and his first wife Tharsile Plourde and he was orphaned at the age of only 6 years old. Rosaire grew up in the household of his father and step-mother Mathilde Theriault who went on to have ten more children. by all accounts his father, mother and step mother were all hard working people, but times were hard and Rosaire spent his childhood travelling from mill town to mill town throughout northern Quebec and northwestern new Brunswick, as his father looking for work in the lumber industry. At the young age of 13, Rosaire left home and spent years in the lumber camps and mills, until he was sent overseas for World War I. Evidently he had learned about more than lumbering and soldiering during his youth. Here’s what he has to say about how he made a living between 1918 and 1921. Read more »
Scenes of St-Catherine Street: (5/10) Montreal, Quebec

A vintage postcard depicting the “shopping district St. Catherine St.West, Montreal, Que.”

Related Posts:
Index: Vintage Postcards of Quebec
Scenes of St-Catherine Street (4/10) Montreal, Quebec

This is the fourth in a series of vintage postcards of
St-Catherine Street in Montreal, Quebec.
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Early Quebec Couples from the Channel Islands: Luce
Philippe Luce (son of Elie Luce and Elizabeth Sorsoleil, husband of Anne Ward) was not the only Channel Islands Luce who settled in Quebec. Here are some other early Luces that I know of.
Luce, John M. | Agnes Frances Hyman
July 25th, 1873
Luce, Walter George | Julia Ann Edith Mauger
October 4th, 1916 Cape Cove/Perce (Gaspe, Quebec) Read more »
Scenes of St-Catherine Street: (3/10) Montreal, Quebec

This is a 20th century vintage postcard of St-Catherine Street in Montreal, Quebec. St-Catherine Street
is Montreal’s traditional “main street” and major shopping area.
Text:
Artere principale des magasins a rayons, rue Ste. Catherine Ouest, Montreal, St. Catherine Street.
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