Evelyn in Montreal: Ascendancy of Louis Vincent (m. Chevrefils, Marie Eulalie) | Pt.2
1881
As a follow-up to the previously published ascendancy of Louis Vincent (m. Chevrefils, Marie Eulalie), this would appear to be the household of your great-great grandparents Seraphin Vincent and Henriette Lacoste in Ste-Urbain. (Chateauguay) in 1881. I would suggest that the married couple that is living with them is probably their son Louis Vincent and daughter-in-law Marie Eulalie Chevrefils.
| Name | Marital Status | Gender | Ethnic Origin | Age | Birthplace | Occupation | Religion |
| Seraphin VINCENT | M | Male | Canadian | 63 | Quebec | Cultivateur | Catholique |
| Henriette VINCENT | M | Female | Canadian | 61 | Quebec | Catholique | |
| Delphine VINCENT | Female | Canadian | 39 | Quebec | Catholique | ||
| Louis VINCENT | M | Male | Canadian | 33 | Quebec | Cultivateur | Catholique |
| Marie VINCENT | M | Female | Canadian | 26 | Quebec | Catholique | |
| Hormida VINCENT | Male | Canadian | 26 | Quebec | Cultivateur | Catholique | |
| Cleophas VINCENT | Male | Canadian | 22 | Quebec | Cultivateur | Catholique | |
| Marie VINCENT | Female | Canadian | 4 | Quebec | Catholique | ||
| Zulma VINCENT | Female | Canadian | 1 | Quebec | Catholique |
1871
Seraphin Vincent and Desanges Riendeau in the 1851 census in St-Antoine (Longueuil). Read more »
Eglise St-Joachim (1/2) | Chateauguay Today
St-Joachim Church of Chateauguay
This St-Joachim church (with its two central symmetrical windows, bell tower and oval window) dates back to the 1770s. The Chateauguay area had already been settled for 100 years. Charles Lemoyne had been granted the seigneury of Chateauguay in 1673. We know that in that earliest period there had been a St-Joachim chapel on Ile-Ste-Bernard and that by the 1730s there was a wooden church built near the present site on Youville Blvd.
Further Reading:
The Church of Saint-Joachim in Châteauguay
Eglise St-Joachim (2/2) | Chateauguay Today | Quebec
Our Lady Of Perpetual Help Church | Chateauguay Today | Quebec
This is a January 2010 photograph of Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church which serves the English-speaking Catholics of Chateauguay, Quebec. The latest generation of children on both sides of our family were baptised in OLPH parish.

Related Posts:
Chateauguay, Depanneur Couche Tard, Car Accident (23.08.09) | Chateauguay Today
One Family Historian And Her Local Library

Research at my local library in Chateauguay
When I started tracing my family roots about a decade ago, online genealogy and family history sites were still in their infancy. I remember that as a beginning genealogist the most useful sites were the forums – especially Rootsweb.com and Genforum, as well as the Canadian census sites.I got a lot of direct help in the way of information about my own ancestors but I also learned a lot about the research process just by watching others collaborate on my computer screen! Most importantly I met some great researchers like Fidele Theriault who set me on my way with good, solid information. In spite of this, most of my early work was done in “real world” librairies like the Montreal Library, McGill University and, most importantly, my local library.
I have fond memories of the Bibliotheque de Chateauguay. This was where I first came across Stephen A. White’s
Dictionnaire and scoured the blue and red Drouins and Tanguay for my Quebec roots. I can also remember the first time I saw my grandparents’ names in a parish marriage index – it was so exciting to run my hands over the index and see familiar names! So why did I stop going to the library?
One reason for this is that I now have online access to many primary documents and of course that’s preferable to working with compiled indexes. Another reason is that I’m a newcomer to Chateauguay. I’ve only been here for about 20 years so it I didn’t feel it would be too useful. Nevertheless, as part of a personal improvement program ( 52 weeks to better genealogy) I- and to help others I decided to drop by my local Bibliotheque de Chateauguay – and the Societe genealogique de Chateauguay.
The Chateauguay Library
The genealogy collections are housed on the 2nd floor mezzanine in Chateauguay’s modern, state-of-the-art library. You reach that section through a narrow corridor that opens up onto a well-lit but cozy little study hall with tables that are
ample enough to take an outsized blue Drouin! All the books on these shelves are open to the general public – and they include birth, marriage and death indexes, family histories, collections of notarial documents etc.

The Chateauguay Genealogical Society
As you browse through those bookshelves you might notice something strange – a glass-walled internal room that houses computers, books and some very studious looking people. What have you found? It’s the
Accueil|Societe de genealogie de Chateauguay
(Genealogical Society of Chateauguay) - an organization that was founded in 1999 to promote genealogy and to “gather and preserve documents relating to genealogy”. For only $20 you have access to this organization which serves as a fellowship of like-minded people, offers assistance to beginners, holds courses on topics such as paleography, provides access to extra genealogical resources such as PRDH and, finally, promotes and supports the production of original local history publications.

Special Collections
Something else that would be of special interest to family historians is the collection of several local newspapers that goes back decades. I’ve made a resolution to go through them and see whether I can find historic images of schools and churches that family members have attended. And this is something that I would never have found in cyberspace!

DEWEY 929 ROCKS!

Inspired by We Tree: 52 Weeks to Better Genealogy























