This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/JRi.2ACEB/509.2.1.1.1 Message Board Post: It says here that George Henry was married twice. After his wife Hanna died he married Taundoqua from Michigan. I don't know if there was any issue from this marriage in Michigan I donot have any of those surnames in my family tree Sorry I can't help you further Maungwudaus / mankotta-ss / courageous / Pemikishigon / George Henry [born at 40 Mile Creek in 1811; fl. 1825-1854], Ojibwa Nation, missionary / interpreter / impresario, 6'1" tall, son of Chief Mesquacosy and Tuhbenahneequay / Sarah Henry [mother of Kahkewaquonaby], half brother of Kahkewaquonaby, father of John Tecumseh Henry / Awunnewabe, and George Henry Junior / Saigitoo?; married to (1) Uh-wus-sig-gee-zhig-goo-kway / Hannah Henry and (2) Taundoqua [born near the Selkrig Mission, Michigan c.1825; fl. ?]; converted to Christianity around 1825; attended the Methodist mission school at the Credit Mission in the late 1820s; George Henry served at several different missions during the 1830s, including Munceytown and Sarnia; George Henry was made third chief of the Credit Reserve in 1837; he moved to Walpole Island where he was the Indian language preacher; he was a government interpreter at the St. Clair mission in 1840 and resigned from the Methodist church in that year; in! 1844 Maung-gwud-daus organized a dance troupe of Walpole Island Ojibwa that toured Europe in 1845; he joined the Roman Catholic church in England; George Catlin sponsored Maungwudaus' tour of France; his wife and three of their children died in the U.K. on the tour; he met U.S. President Taylor in April 1850; in June 1850 or 1851 Maungwudaus visited Gull Corners, Michigan where he met and married Taundoqua, Ojibwa Nation and part French; in the spring of 1851 his troupe performed at St. Lawrence Hall, Toronto; settled at the New Credit Reserve in 1854; Frank Little in Michigan Pioneer Society vol. XXVII states that Maungaudaus' native home was in Northern Michigan and that he was an Ojibwa chief, Methodist minister, impresario, translator, he toured Europe with a theatrical troupe in 1835, married Taundoqua, he visited Little at Richland, Michigan in June 1850 or 1851 and c. 1855 (Maugwudaus 1848; Petrone: 48-49; Rogers: 767; Smith 1976; 1987: 187-188, 200-203, 217-219, 22! 9, 317, fig. 23; MPHSC vol. XXVII: 336-338). 'After the two great chie fs [the presidents of Belgium and France] and their great chief women had much talk with us, they thanked us, got into their carriages covered with gold, drawn by six beautiful horses, and drove back to the wigwam of the great chief of France. We followed them, and the great chief's servant, who wears a red coat, and much gold and silver, and a hat in the shape of a half-night sun, took us into one of the great rooms to dine. Everything on the table was gold and silver; we had twelve clean plates. Many came in while we were eating, and it was great amusement to them all'—France, October 19, 1845.