Feature – - Brick Walls Can Bring Delight (Pt.1) Guest Post by Peter Lagasse
The title of this post may seem odd at first glance. You have been working on your family tree and then a wall blocks your path. There seems no way around it, let alone through it. That family branch extending further into the past can even appear hopeless when the days become years and still nothing. Read more »
Paulie “Cat” Lagasse – New Canadian Flash! (3/3)
Paulie “Cat” Lagasse
The Fans Know Him
———————-
Never On The Floor!
Has fought such battlers as Jerry Mazza, Al Casimino, Ernie Robinson, Al Wells, Artie Murphy, Arthur Primrose, the Canadian Crack; Harry Oberman, Jimmie Barnholly, Bernie Vulgur, Young Laske, Benny Arrows, Sol Uba, Caspar La Rosa, Harry Tedasco, Jack Morant, Al King.
Anxious To Meet Any And All Lightweights
——————–
A Natural Fighter
Always aggressive – always a favourite with the crowds
Managed by
Barney Downes and Jim Burns
Baldwin, Long Island Telephones Freeport 687, 1671R
Lagace/Mignier Marriages – A Canadian Family Tree (2) | Lagace/Mignier, Calixte to Evariste
This is the 2nd in a series of posts in which I share marriages extracted from my database (A Canadian Family) where the groom was a Lagace/Mignier who descended from the Quebec pioneer couple Andre Mignier dit Lagace (Soldier of the Regiment Carignan) and his wife, the “fille du roi” – Jacquette Michel.
First visit? Please see Lagace/Mignier Marriages – A Canadian Family Tree (1) for important notes and an index.
A Canadian Family Tree (2) | Lagace/Mignier, Calixte to Evariste
Lagace / Mignier, Calixte | Caron, Anna
Married: 27 May 1913 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies L’Islet Chaudiere-Appalaches QC CAN
Lagace / Mignier, Calixte | Gauvin, Tajance
Married: 13 Nov 1876 Ste-Perpetue L’Islet Chaudiere-Appalaches QC CAN
Lagace / Mignier, Charles | Dionne, Flavie
Married: 13 Aug 1878 St-Pascal Kamouraska Bas-St-Laurent QC CAN
Lagace / Mignier, Charles | Racicot, Lucie
Married: 11 Nov 1868 Montreal QC CAN
Lagace / Mignier, Charles | Lizotte, Marie
Married: 28 Jul 1884 St-Pacome Kamouraska Bas-St-Laurent QC CAN
Lagace / Mignier, Charles | Miville / Deschenes, Philomene Read more »
A Strange Thing Happened On The Way To Lewiston, Maine
Peter Lagasse is joining us once again today to share his information on a line of Lagaces who descend from Basil Mignier/Lagace and his first wife Madeleine Leclerc/Francoeur. This time the accent is on the Lagasse/Ross connection!
Guest Post 4: Peter Lagasse
A Strange Thing Happened on the Way to Lewiston, Maine
As I have shared in an earlier post my father, Roland Paul Lagasse, was not born in the United States as he had thought. He had been born in St-Paul-des-Capucins, Les Mechins, Quebec, Canada and had been given the name Joseph Gaudiose Rolland Lagacé. At the age of 8 months his parents decided to return to the United States. However, instead of going to Manchester, New Hampshire, where they had been married, they decided to go to Lewiston, Maine, in July of 1910. Read more »
The Grave Could Not Keep His Real Place of Birth by Peter Lagasse
This is one of a series of Guest Posts by Peter Lagasse, a descendant of Andre Mignier dit Lagace and Jacquette Michel through Basil Mignier/Lagace and his first wife Madeleine Leclerc/Francoeur. In today’s article Peter doesn’t only give us more information about his American Lagasses; he also lets us “look over his shoulder” as he unravels a family mystery.
Guest Post 3: Peter Lagasse
The Grave Could Not Keep His Real Place of Birth
My father, Roland Paul Lagasse, pictured here around 1910, had always been told he, along with his mother Agnes Louise Ross, were born in Flint, Michigan, USA. It was stated September 11, 1909, Flint, Michigan, on his Social Security form and on his obituary years later. His mother never had an actual birth certificate for my father since there had been a fire destroying the vital records in Flint, Michigan. At least, that was the story shared by his mother and we had no reason to question her.
I, therefore, began in Flint, Michigan to find any evidence of my father’s birth. I began seeking for border crossings
from Canada of the Ross family heading to Michigan. I knew Canada had been my grandmother’s ancestral home and expected to find her parents coming to Michigan. The search hit a brick wall. My next stop would be Flint, Michigan City Hall.
I wrote to the city clerk stating who I was looking for and also the information that we had been told about the fire destroying some early vital records. I waited with anxious anticipation. I, finally, received the long awaited email. The Flint, Michigan, city clerk shared there had been a fire but could not verify if it had effected my father’s records. Then came a complete surprise. All Michigan birth records were protected from the public until the record was 110 years old. I would have to wait until 2019 to even learn if Michigan even had a birth certificate of my father. Another brick wall raised before me, but I would not be hindered in my search. I, instead, went to my genealogy helpers.
I contacted various forums on genforum.genealogy.com. Emails came flooding in about various leads. There was information on a Manifest of Alien Passengers of a Lagasse family of three coming into the United States on July 1910 through Newport, Vermont. They were coming from St Flavian, Quebec, after visiting the father of Joseph Lagasse. St Flavian was the birth place of my grandfather, Joseph Guadias Lagacé, and his place of burial. What was intriguing in this border crossing manifest was the information about the son, also called Joseph Lagasse. It stated he had been born in 1909 in Cap Chat, Quebec! Could this really be my father?
Another Manifest of Passenger list dated December 1911 shared of a Roland Lagasse accompanied by his mother returning from Mechen, Quebec after visiting his grandfather and heading to Portland, Maine, to his father Goudias Lagasse. This seemed possible since my father’s dad was know as Goudias as well as Joseph and had lived in Portland, Maine. However, unlike the earlier manifest, my father’s birth place was stated as Portland, Maine. Read more »
Historical Document: Joseph Gaudias Lagace – Baptism, 1885
Baptismal Record of Joseph Gaudias Lagace (Lagasse)
Related Posts:
Gaudiose Lagace (Lagasse) and Agnes Ross of Manchester, New Hampshire (USA)
Joseph Gaudiose Lagace/Mignier (Joseph 4, Jean Baptiste 3, Joseph Paul 2, Basile 1) b. 25 Nov 1885 in St Flavien,(Lotbiniere),Quebec, Canada, d. 11 Dec 1926 in Lowell, Massachusetts, United States (buried in St-Flavien), married Marie Agnes Ross (daughter of Auguste Ross and Marie Euphemie Gagnon) in Ste-George Parish, Manchester, New Hampshire on 3 May 1909. They had one child + 21 M I. Joseph Gaudiose Rolland Lagace/Mignier.
This photograph and information come from research provided by Peter Lagasse.
Related Posts:
My Grandfather’s Unexpected Train Ride by Peter Lagasse
Peter Lagasse can be contacted at:
My Grandfather’s Unexpected Train Ride by Peter Lagasse
As regular readers of this blog know, Peter Lagasse and I are both descendants of Andre Mignier dit Lagace and Jacquette Michel through Basil Mignier/Lagace, though Peter descends through his first wife Madeleine Leclerc/Francoeur while I descend from the second wife Catherine Dube. You can read some of Peter’s initial information in the Lagasses of Maine/Massachusetts/New Hampshire and his first Guest Post “Some French Canadian Lagasses (Lagace) from Quebec to New Hampshire”. Today Peter continues his Lagasse series with a recounting of research related to his grandfather Gaudias Lagace.
Guest Post 2: Peter Lagasse
My Grandfather’s Unexpected Train Ride
+16 M i. Joseph Gaudias Lagacé son of Joseph Lagacé and Emma St-Hilaire
During my research for my grandfather, Joseph Gaudias Lagacé, I discovered his birth certificate that stated his name and his birth of 25 Nov 1885 in St-Flavien, Lotbiniere, Quebec, Canada. The point of my intrigue was where was my grandfather buried?
My father, Roland Paul Lagasse, had lost his father when he was only 17. I can remember my father sharing how his father had died in his arms from an apparent heart attack. In the back of my mind I can remember only two places when my grandfather was ever mentioned; one was Manchester, New Hampshire and the other Lowell, Massachusetts. The search was to find my grandfather’s place of burial.
On his memorial card the city of Manchester, New Hampshire was mentioned at the bottom of the card. I, therefore, went searching for information about the possibility of Joseph Guadias (Goduise, Godias, and other spelling variations) Lagacé being buried in Manchester, New Hampshire. There was some logic to this since other family members of my grandfather was living in that area of New Hampshire and he had married Marie Agnes Ross on 3 May 1909 at Saint George Parish in Manchester, New Hampshire. My research for vital statistics from Manchester, New Hampshire showed no death or burial of a Joseph Gaudias Lagacé. My research had to turn to Lowell, Massachusetts.
There was a World War I Draft Registration card that showed my grandfather living in Lowell, Massachusetts in 1918. Could he have died and been buried there? I began my trip of research via the computer to vital statistics. My research led me to the Center of Lowell History. I wrote to them sharing my dilemma. This contact was going to take me on a virtual train ride to a city not even in the United States. They had a copy of the Lowell Sun, 13 Dec 1926 issue with my grandfather’s obituary.
The answer of my grandfather’s place of burial was a trip to another city 360 miles from the place of his death. My grandfather was placed on a train to be taken to his place of birth St-Flavien, Lotbiniere, Quebec. There he would be buried with a full Christian Mass and buried as to the traditions of the Catholic Church.
I wrote that last sentence for a specific reason. It will be noted that on both omy grandfather’s memorial card and his obituary it states he was survived by his wife Agnes Louise Ross. My grandmother had divorced Joseph Guadias Lagacé and then had remarried in December 1916. They were not still married, but we believe, to make sure my grandfather had an appropriate burial, information was included in these sources to avoid any form of embarrassment for my dear grandfather who had never remarried after the divorce.
Transcript:
Lowell Sun December 13, 1926
DEATHS
LAGASSE- Guadias Lagasse died suddenly Saturday evening at his home, 640 Middlesex Street, ages 41 years 21 days. He is survived by his wife Louise Lagasse; one son, Roland Lagasse of this city, and four sisters Mrs. Lucien Lemay and Mrs. Joseph Lafrance, both of Manchester, New Hampshire, Mrs. Alfred Berthiaume and Mrs. Joseph Lemay, both of Canada. He was a member of Lowell Lodge of Moose, Lowell Aerie of Eagles and the Artisans. The body was sent last evening to St. Flavien, Province of Quebec, where funeral mass will be celebrated and burial will take place. A delegation from the Lowell Aerie of Eagles, consisting of John B. O’Loughlin,
Alfred J. St. Onge, Oscar Champagne, Harvey Leger, Louis Emond, Ferdinand Riche and Arthur Brodeur escorted the body to the train. There were many beautiful flowers. Arrangements were in charge of Funeral Director Joseph Albert.
Related Posts:
Peter Lagasse can be contacted at
http://www.contactify.com/5930f

























