Oh well, consider my message a shoutout to all the Legere, McBride, et. al. cousins out there! :) Happy to share info. Liz ________________________________ From: "KATheriot@aol.com" <KATheriot@aol.com> To: acadian@rootsweb.com Sent: Mon, March 8, 2010 2:26:54 PM Subject: Re: [ACADIAN] Landry, Valentin tree questions First Generation 1. Barthelemy BERGERON dit d'Amboise was born1 about 1663 in Amboise, Touraine, Indre-et-Loire, France. He was christened2,3,4,5 on 23 May 1663 in Amboise, Touraine, Indre-et-Loire, France. He died6 before 1737 in Ste-Anne-des-Pays-Bas, [Fredericton], New Brunswick, Canada. Barthelemy immigrated7,8 in Sep 1684 to Quebec, , Quebec, Canada. He signed a will9 on 7 Jan 1690 in Quebec, , Quebec, Canada. He resided10 in 1694/1704 in Boston, , MA. He was counted in a census11 in 1707 in Port Royal, , , Acadia. He was counted in a census12 in 1714 in Port Royal, , , Acadia. He was employed13,14 as Merchant. He was counted in a census15 in 1731 in Pointe St-Anne, , New Brunswick, Canada. BIRTH-OCCUPATION-MARRIAGE-CHILDREN: Stephen A. White, DICTIONNAIRE GENEALOGIQUE DES FAMILLES ACADIENNES; 1636-1714; Moncton, New Brunswick, Centre d'Etudes Acadiennes, 1999, 2 vols.; p. 122; own copy. #1: [No parents are given for him.] BIRTH: Article "Bergeron dit d'Amboise" on Internet web site by Aline Cormier at www.acadian-roots. com/genealogy-bergeron.html There was a birth record found by a genealogist in France named Jean Marie Germe of one Barthelemy Bergeron baptized May 23, 1663 in St-Denis in Amboise, France, son of Rene Bergeron and Anne Dugault. Again there is no proof that Rene and Anne Dugast were our Barthelemy's parents, although Anne Dugast's parents came from Nantes and Barthelemy's son took the dit name of Michel dit Nantes." PARENTS: Posting by Larry Bergeron at website on Bergeron descendants, at: http://groups.google.com/ group/bergeron-damboise/browse_thread/thread/f7ee51987aa54144 I do not think that his parents are Antoine and Claudette Scarron mainly because of the lack of a birth/ baptism record. When the baptism record was found naming Rene and Anne Dagault as the parents of Barthelemy Bergeron I felt that our search was over we have found his true parents at last. But now we have to prove that this Barthelemy is the one that married Genevieve Serreau dit St Aubin and therefore our true ancestor. I agree with Aline Cormier in that we must go to any length to find the true facts. We have checked with the Archives at Amboise and had no luck there so our next step is Nantes. We also want to try and find some kind of Military record where Barthelemy joined the "Troupe de la Marine" that should also tell us who his parents were. Posting by "Marius" (marius.damboise@gmail.com) in Nov 2007: In 1720-1760, Ste-Anne-de-la-rivière-St-Jean, to-day Fredericton, was the center of French Acadia. The old Acadia was under English domination since the Utrecht treaty (1713). Our ancestors were in based in Old Acadia, mainly Port-Royal for Barthelemy's family for about 20 years. Then, we have to understand that Barthelemy's family refused the allegiance oath and moved on the other side of what is today Fundy bay, in Ste-Anne. Ste-Anne-de-la-rivière-St-Jean (also known as Ste-Anne-des-Pays-Bas) was "founded" by Gabriel Godin-Bellefontaine, and the Bergeron family was one of the first families to join the Godin's. Those families were closely associated for about 100 years. Three of the daughters of Barthelemy and one of his sons married four children of Gabriel Godin. These families lived in peace in Ste-Anne and so far as we can judge, were relatively wealthy. But the village was atrociously destroyed in 1759. Many inhabitants were killed or made prisoners. This episode has been vividly described by Fidèle Thériault in "Le Petit Courrier" vol. 11, no. 1 (1995). Rich Bergeron has nicely translated the text into English. !PARENTS: E-mail posting at <ACADIAN-CAJUN-L@rootsweb.com> #190 on 27 Apr 1999 by Tomlin (boandbg@pancomlnet). Barthelemy's parents were Antoine [sic] BERGERON married Claudette SCARRON [sic]. (Reference: Adrien Bergeron, LE GRAND ARRANGEMENT DES ACADIENS AU QUEBEC). [Stephen WHITE notes that this article has certain "imprecisions."] BIRTH-IMMIGRATION-RESIDENCES-MARRIAGE-CHILDREN: Bona Arsenault, Histoire et Généalogie des Acadiens, pp. 427-429 (Port Royal). See long note there. Arrived in Canada in 1685 as "volontaire de la marine" (volunteer seaman). Lived in the lower part of Québec from 1685 to 1690, at Pierre LEZEAU's, the shipmaster. He accompanied Pierre LeMoyne d'Iberville on most of his campaigns "dont celle de" Hudson Bay. Arrived in Acadia with d'Iberville in 1696. Married around 1695 [?] to Genevieve SERREAU dit Saint-Aubin, born in Québec, the widow of Jacques PETITPAS. In 1704 he was made prisoner with all the members of his family, at the time of the attack of Colonel Church against Port Royal, and was taken away into captivity at Boston, where he was kept as a hostage. After his liberation he returned to Port Royal where he lived in the sector "du Cap," near the fort, and navigated for his living. He owned a schooner, and made trading trips between Port Royal, Les Mines (Grand Pré and Pisiguit), Beaubassin, Chipoudy, Petitcoudiac and Sainte-Anne-du-Pays-Bas. Around 1730 he moved to settle at the riviere Saint-Jean, in New Brunswick, where he was one of the pioneers of Sainte-Anne-du-Pays-Bas, today known as Frédericton. Several of his descendants tooks the name of DAMBOISE. BAPTISM-SPONSOR: PRDH, http://www.genealogie.umontreal.ca/en/member/Acte.asp?33626 Barthelemy BERGERON acted as godfather at L'Ange-Gardien, Quebec, Canada, on 15 Feb 1691 at the baptism of Anne GARNAUT, born 13 Feb 1691, daughter of Francois GARNAUT & Louise KAREAU. Anne BRISSON was the godmother. C. GAULTIER was the Curate (record No. 33626). MILITARY: Adrien Bergeron, "Aux origines acadiennes: Barthelemy Bergeron, héros méconnu," [part 1] in LES MÉMOIRES DE LA SOCIÉTÉ GÉNÉALOGIQUE CANADIENNE-FRANCAISE; vol. XX, no.3 (Jul- Aug-Sep 1969, issue 101); pp. 158-173. In French, details the history of this man in Acadia, including his incarceration with his family in Boston in 1704. Continued in part 2 in same journal, vol. XX, no. 4 (Oct-Nov-Dec 1969, issue 102); pp. 201-219. MILITARY: The Schenectady (Corlaer) New York Massacre 8 February 1690 <http://www. schenectadyhistory.org/resources/patent/09.html> On the night of 8 February 1690, Barthelemy Bergeron D'Amboise was one of the surviving 114 frenchman and 96 native-american "Injuns" that descended from Quebec in a murderous raid upon this fortified but unguarded New York village. They also planned to attack Fort Orange (Albany NY) but decided not to split their forces. MARRIAGE: Janet Jehn, CORRECTIONS & ADDITIONS TO ARSENAULT'S HISTOIRE ET GENEALOGIE DES ACADIENS; 1550-1850; Covington, KY, author, 1988; p. 3 (reference to p. 428); own copy. Barthelémy's wife Genevieve SERREAU dit SAINT-AUBIN was not the widow of Jacques PETITPAS [sic]; this was her sister Marguerite. (Reference "Coll. des Documents Inedits" published by LE CANADA-FRANCAISE, vol. 3; Quebec, 1890; p. 167.) [Stephen A. White's Dictionnaire disagrees with this.] Barthelemy married16,17 Genevieve SERREAU de Saint-Aubin daughter of Sieur Jean SERREAU de Saint-Aubin and Marguerite BOILEAU de la Gouppilliere about 1695 in Port Royal, , , Acadia. Genevieve was born18 on 7 Aug 1667 in , , Quebec, Canada. She was christened19 on 9 Aug 1667 in Quebec, , Quebec, Canada. She died20 after 1739. Second Generation 2. Rene BERGERON II was born21 on 4 May 1642/1643 in , , , France. He married Anne DAGAULT about 1662 in , , , France. 3. Anne DAGAULT was christened on 6 Aug 1646 in Amboise, Touraine, Indre-et-Loire, France. She died22 in 1701. Third Generation 4. Rene BERGERON .Rene married Denise PHILBERT. 5. Denise PHILBERT . 6. Jean DAGAULT .Jean married Martine HABERT. 7. Martine HABERT . Appendix A - Sources 1. Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes (2 vols., Moncton, New Brunswick: Centre d'Études Acadiennes, 1999), p. 122, BERGERON #1, Karen Theriot Reader, 2045 Green Valley Road, Corralitos CA 95076-8618 USA."Born in Amboise [France, no parents given], a "commerçant" (merchant)."No date given for birth. 2. BMS & NMD de Sauzon 1617 - 1901, Internet, http://www.escompte.fr/denis/sauzon/index.html."Baptism at the Church of St-Denis, son of René BERGERON & Anne DAGAULT. His grandparents are listed here [in my genealogy] as René BERGERON & Denise PHILBERT; Jean DAGAULT & Catherine AUBERT."I found the baptism of Barthelemy Bergeron in 1974 in the library of Amboise. I spent many days searching through their records before I finally, on a bright sunny morning, turned the page to the baptism act on left, top of the page. I examined the records from 1600 roughly to 1710 and I did not find any other Bergeron (or D'Amboise, by the way) named <<Barthelemy >>. Furthermore, the time bracket that I first considered for Barthelemy's birth was 1655-1665 based on the time of his arrival in Canada and the supposed age for his marriage according to Father Adrien Bergeron. I have examined the records of all of the parishes in Amboise and none but St-Denis contained an act for Barthelemy. I was therefore and still am convinced that the act found was that of Barthelemy, our ancestor. The act is that of his baptism, not of his birth. However, it is very likely that he was born around the day he was baptized, since this was the common practice at the time ."In the document "Histoire et généalogie des Bergeron-D'Amboise en Amérique (1684-2001)" Marius D'Amboise states that during a search in the library at Amboise in Jul 1989 he found the "Répertoire des naissances de la paroisse St-Denis d'Amboise 1626-1740." On p. 120 it indicated that the father of Barthélemy was René Bergeron. This document, classified GG176B, mentioned the birth [sic, baptism] in May 1663 of Barthélemy Bergeron, son of René and Anne Dagault. Examining this repertoire gave no other child called Barthélemy Bergeron. Moreover, his examination of the baptismal acts from the other parishes of Amboise (le Bout-des-Ponts, Notre-Dame-en-Grèves, and St-Florentin) did not show any other baptism of a Barthélemy Bergeron from the beginning of the 17th century to the beginning of the 18th."At <www.damboise.net/fiches/fiche50.html#1258>. 3. BMS & NMD de Sauzon 1617 - 1901."A genealogical researcher in France by the name of Jean-Marie Germe has actually found a baptismal certificate for Barthélemy Bergeron d’Amboise, <http://www.blogger.com/post-edit.g?blogID=24018881&postID=4239769750458990356> who was baptized at Saint Denis church in Amboise on May 23, 1663. He was the son of René Bergeron and Anne Dagault and his godparents were Barthélemy Bertail and Gabrielle Saicher. (Cites: AGCF98c, p. 13 (which has a photocopy of the baptismal certificate), and AGCF99, p. 3.)Note: AGCF= Arrêté du Gouvernement de la Communauté Française (Decree of the Government of the French Community, Belgium).""Three Acadian Generations" by Richard J. Bergeron, at <http>//3ag.blogspot.com/. 4. Bergeron-damboise@googlegroups.com, http://groups.google.com/group/bergeron-damboise?hl=en."Concerning Barthelemy, some of you have mentioned the existence of "two" Barthelemy born in Amboise. I can assure you that there is only one, baptized May 23, 1663, son of René and Anne Dagault. I spend many days searching the old registers of Amboise in 1974, 1976, 1984 and 1989. I found the "baptistère" of Barthelemy in 1974 and although I searched the registers of all parishes of Amboise between 1640 and 1710, I found no other Barthelemy. There is no Barthelemy, son of Antoine. In addition, in 1989, I found a register which gave an index of all "baptistères" registered in Amboise. This index, according to the librarian was probably established at the time of the French Revolution. In this index, there is only one Barthelemy, son of René and Anne Dagault. Therefore, based on the most likelihood principle, one must assume that our ancestor was the son of René and Anne Dagault. Finally, note that in France, before the Revolution, as well as in Québec until recently, the "baptistères" acts were the official birth acts and there is no other official acts. The priest had to write two acts: one for the Church, the other one was registered every year with the state. I believe, although I have not yet been able to establish it, that Barthelemy was linked to Antoine, a distant cousin... They are in my plans for my next visit in Amboise. I think it would be interesting to find an act for the engagement of Barthelemy as a "volontaire de la marine" however, I doubt that this would provide information so far as who were his parents. I have read many engagements contracts and very few of them give this information. But, one never knows... The one act that every one would wish to have is the marriage. Unfortunately, no one has been succesful in finding this act between Barthelemy and Genevieve. At this point, we have been looking in Québec and in Acadia. But my recent thought brings me to think that they may have married in Boston. This idea is shared by our cousin Joseph, from NH. I have no idea, however, where that information could be in the USA. I also have another hypothesis: they could have married in Nantes. In fact, it was not uncommon that some Acadians went to Nantes to marry."Posted by "Marius" (marius.damboise@gmail.com) on the BERGERON newsgroup in Oct 2007. 5. D'Amboise, Marius, "Histoire et généalogie des Bergeron-D'Amboise en Amérique (1684-2001)", 2009, Internet, www.damboise-gen.ca/documents/BarthelemyBergeron.pdf."Contains a copy of the actual baptismal document found in Amboise by the author in 1974. Barthélemy Bergeron, baptized on 23 May 1663, son of René Bergeron & Anne Dagault. Sponsors: Barthélemy Bairau [sic] & Gabrielle Saiches, who both signed." 6. Bergeron-damboise@googlegroups.com."From: B.-M. Thériault To: larrybergeron@earthlink.net Cc: Yvonne McLaughlin Sent: 10/29/2007 2:16:26 PM Subject: Pointe Sainte Anne Cemetry Mr. Lawrence, I was pleased to read from a descendant of the Bergeron family from Pointe-Sainte-Anne. Your timing of requesting information on the site of the cemetery is somewhat appropriate since the Société d'histoire de la rivière Saint-Jean (SHRSJ) wants to commemorate the 250e ann. of the destruction of the village in 2009. Over the years, the Société d'histoire has tried many times to have the site recongnised in a variety of ways. As part of our plan of activities for the year we want to examine, again, the feasability to have the site of the village recognized as a protected site either by the provincial government or by the federal government. I'll get back to you with more details on the activities the Société d'histoire has undertaken regarding the site of the village & its cemetery. In 1993, the Société d'histoire produced a small booklet dedicated to the history of Pointe-Sainte-Anne since there was, and still are, disagreement on who now owns the land. If you provide me with an address we could send you a copy (an English version) of that booklet which I think you would find most interesting. Meanwhile you could also, if you can, provide us with more details on your ancesters at Pointe-Sainte-Anne. If you do visit Fredericton next summer, we could arrange for a meeting. Bernard-M. Thériault President Société d'histoire de la rivière Saint-Jean." 7. BMS & NMD de Sauzon 1617 - 1901."Barthélemy arrived in New France between 1680 & 1684, with the first traces of him at Québec in 1684. The marquis de DENONVILLE arrived in Canada with 600 soldiers in 1684 as Governor, replacing M. de LA BARRE.On 11 Jul 1684 COLBERT wrote that the king was sending 300 soldiers on "L'Émérillon," which embarked on 13 Aug, forming five companies of 60 men each. They arrived in Québec around the end of Sep 1684."http://www.damboise.net/fiches/fiche50.html#f1258. 8. Mémoires de la Société-Généalogique Canadienne-Française , vol. 20, no. 3 (1969), p. 160 , Margaret Walker, Santa Cruz CA 95060."Article by Father Adrien Bergeron. Barthélemy would have arrived in Québec in Sep 1684 as a member of the first company Franche de la Marine, associated with D'Iberville. On 5 Nov 1684 the notary Michel Fillion wrote the terms of the contract, at the home of Jean Picart, merchant of Quebec. Barthélemy bergeron was listed as a "boullanger" (baker). He would be part of an association for five months, until 1 Jun 1685, when profits would be shared, He would have been a "voluntaire du Roy" rather than a soldier."Also vol. 20, no. 4 (1969), p. 201. 9. D'Amboise, Marius, "Histoire et généalogie des Bergeron-D'Amboise en Amérique (1684-2001)", p. 5."In 1690, before a risky expedition "aux anglois" (to the English), Barthélemy Bergeron, a "vollontaire" living in Quebec, made a will before the notary Gilles Rageot. Item: give to Pierre LEZEAU, ship's master, living in Quebec, the sum of three hundred livres (pounds), for the good friendship he has for him;Item: give to the poor of the general hospital of this city another sum of three hundred pounds. Pierre Lezeau had eleven hundred fifty pounds on hand. The surplus was to be given to make prayers to God for the repose of his sould after his death." 10. ACADIAN Digest, www.acadian@rootsweb.com."Barthelemy was captured twice: 1694 and 1704-06. The latter time was when he had his whole family with him and during this time a daughter was born."Posting by Richard Bergeron in Mar 2008. 11. Margaret C. Melanson, Melanson Story, The: Acadian Family, Acadian Times, Toronto: Author, 2003, p. 87, Karen Theriot Reader, 2045 Green Valley Road, Corralitos CA 95076-8618 USA."The house of Barthélemy BERGERON is shown on the map of the 1707 census, just southwest of the village of Port Royal, next door to Abraham DUGAS." 12. ACADIAN-CAJUN@rootsweb.com , Internet."DAMBOUC [sic, this is a mistranscription, should be DAMBOISE], living with a wife, three sons and three daughters."Posting by Rich Bergeron (rgergeron1@mn.rr.com) in Dec 2004. 13. Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes , p. 122."Commerçant (he was a merchant)." 14. Thomas J. Laforest, Our French-Canadian Ancestors (various), vol. XIX."Barthélemy BERGERON was a soldier in the first Compagnie Franche de la Marine, a companion of Iberville. Navigator, ship's captain and privateer, he sailed all of his life in the area of the Bay of Fundy."Covers many names, including Andre BERGERON, in Chapter 5. 15. Bergeron-damboise@googlegroups.com."He was mentioned in the 1731 census as "The old Bergeron d'Amboise" (he would have been about 65 then)."Posting by Aline in Sep 2007. 16. Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes , pp. 122 & 1463."Geneviève was a widow of Jacques PETITPAS."No place given for marriage. 17. ACADIAN Digest."We do not know for sure how Barthélémy first met Geneviève, the younger daughter of Jean Serreau de St-Aubin and Marguerite Boyleau, but we can weave together some intriguing strands of information. Fr. Bergeron wondered if Barthélémy and Geneviève might have met at the time of delivering Jean Serreau's family from their captivity in Boston. We have no idea when they first met or what transpired on those meeting(s), for Geneviève was probably married at the time to Jacques Petitpas. She had given birth to two sons, Jean (born 1691) and Nicolas. But Petitpas had died in 1694. Fr. Adrien Bergeron wrote: "the wife of Barthélémy was certainly Geneviève Serreau de Saint-Aubin, but, contrary to what Bona Arsenault erroneously tells, not the widow of Jacques Petitpas; the latter, in fact, had married the older sister of Geneviève, Marguerite." On the other hand, Stephen White, acclaimed genealogist at the Centre d'Etudes Acadienne at the Université de Moncton, who supposedly double- and triple-checked every fact before publishing his two-volume Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes, insists that Geneviève was indeed the widow of Jacques Petitpas. So, who are we to believe? We stared at a crucial piece of information for years until Joe Damboise of Grafton, NH, pointed out that in the diaries of his expedition in 1704, Colonel Church mentions finding "De Boisses' wife, who had formerly been Colonel Church's prisoner, and carried to Boston, but returned; who seemed very glad to see him. She had with her, two sons, that were near grown men." Joe pointed out what should have been obvious to us: these "two sons, that were near grown men" had to be her sons Jean and Nicolas Petitpas, now in their early teens, nearly grown men in those days. About 1695 D'Iberville was set to lead another expedition against Newfoundland, but royal bureaucracy balked at his military expenditures. He had to go to France to argue his cause, and even then funding was not quick to come. As Fr. Bergeron wrote, he could no longer keep around him his 18 to 20 favorites. But as far as Barthélémy was concerned, he was no longer associated with D'Iberville. Besides, at this time he was being held in a prison in Boston. Fr. Bergeron wrote that in 1695, "without doubt, his betrothed Geneviève Serreau de Saint-Aubin had taken the opportunity of the 'difficulties of d'Iberville' to finally convince Barthélémy that the hour had come!" We do not know if Barthélémy continued to sail with Baptiste after his marriage. Joe Damboise brought another very interesting point to my attention. In analyzing the governor's letters, we see that Villebon was notified on December 9, 1694 that the English wanted to exchange a sailor of Baptiste's crew for an English ship-master that Villebon was holding. The exchange actually occurred on June 24, 1695. Thus it is firmly established for us that Barthélémy Bergeron D'Amboise was in prison in Boston, at the very minimum, for almost seven months. We also know that Benjamin Church captured members of the Serreau de St.-Aubin family in 1692. According to the Dictionary of Canadian Biography: "in a letter that Saint-Aubin sent to Boston in 1695 mention is made of a ransom of 30 livres for his daughter." The most logical daughter would be Geneviève, captured in 1692 with her husband at the time, Jacques Petitpas. Thus we have Barthélémy and Geneviève, the widow of Petitpas, in prison in Boston at the same time. How do we know they were together? Their first child was Barthélémy II, baptized at Île d'Orléans (Québec) on 1 January 1696. (The baby's godparents were Michel Chartier and his grandmother, Marguerite Boisleau.) We have no idea why the family was in Québec at this time. We do know for facts that: 1.) Petitpas had died in 1694, 2.) Barthélémy Bergeron D'Amboise was not freed from Boston until late June of 1695, and 3.) Barthelemy II was baptized on 1 January 1696, meaning, of course, that he had been born before then. Calculations easily made show that Barthélémy and Geneviève HAD to have been together for Barthélémy II to be conceived and born before the following New Year's Day. And both Barthélémy and Geneviève were in Boston prisons when son Barthélémy had to have been conceived. Logically they must have been together in the same prison. Fr. Bergeron believes that Barthélémy and Geneviève were almost certainly married at Port Royal. There were no chapels or missions yet at any of the places where they would later live. Their marriage date was probably some time in 1695. Fr. Bergeron believed that no marriage certificate survived the later wars and deportations: "For, if my 'historical notes' are exact, the first parish Régistre of Port-Royal, ... covers only the years going from 1702 to 1715...." But the fact that they were in Québec for the baptism..." 18. Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes , pp. 122, 1299 & 1463."Geneviève SERREAU de SAINT-AUBIN, daughter of Jean & Marguerite BOILEAU, born/baptized (Register of Québec) on the 7/9 Aug 1667. Sponsors: Xyste CHARRIER dit Mignard & Genevieve MACARD (wife of Charles BAZIRE)." 19. Programme de recherche en démographie historique , No. 58172, Internet, http://www.genealogie.umontreal.ca/en/leprdh.htm.Individual information."Genevieve SERREAU, daughter of Jean SERREAU STAUBIN & Marguerite BOISLEAU, born 7 Aug 1667, baptized at Québec on 9 Aug 1667 by Henri DEBERNIERES, priest. Sponsors: Xiste CARIER MIGNARD, officer of the Carignan Regiment, & Genevieve MACOART, wife of Charles BASIRE." 20. Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes , pp. 122, 1299 & 1463."Genevieve died after the 1739 census." 21. D'Amboise, Marius, "Histoire et généalogie des Bergeron-D'Amboise en Amérique (1684-2001)", p. 2."Cites a document from the library of Amboise, classified GG59." 22. D'Amboise, Marius, "Histoire et généalogie des Bergeron-D'Amboise en Amérique (1684-2001)", p. 2. ------------------------------- To check our Archive http://archiver.rootsweb.com/th/index/acadian/ ------------------------------- To subscribe to the list, please send an email to ACADIAN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'subscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message. You will receive a confirmation e-mail to try & stop "machine" enrollment spam. Give it the "Name" you would like us to call you. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ACADIAN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message