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    1. Re: [ NB ] Railroad
    2. Hi; Did you fine a site for NB Railroad? I'm looking for railroad records for the Patriquen Family. Thanks. John In a message dated 1/27/2011 2:47:08 P.M. Eastern Standard Time, comsan29@nbnet.nb.ca writes: Does anyone know if there is a site where NB Railroad records can be found? Thanks.

    01/28/2011 07:14:49
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Kim Mills
    3. Ok I heard back from the hospital alumni from Boston U. The one that had the Robinson Memorial building built around the right time. They have no record of my grandmother attending there. So I'm still pretty sure it's got to be close to home. Thanks, Kim ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3408 - Release Date: 01/28/11

    01/28/2011 04:41:40
    1. [ NB ] Fw: Re: New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. ToWhomItMayInterest: My mother, back in 1909, from Littleton/Houlton ME & 2 of her pals from PEI all together graduated from the Boston City Hosp School of Nurseing, Boston MA, Boston may have been a drawing card for nurseing students, then, as follows: "Martha Haggerty graduated RN/BosCityHosp School of Nursing, 1909, & is so noted in the 1910 national census as a nursing student living at the BosCityHosp. Two of her lifetime pals: Minnie Fraser & Fan Alberta Page also graduated with her, both came from PEI Canada. Minnie (aunt) stayed in Boston as a single women & lifetime RN. I remember when GEORGE VI was crowned, she was in ecstasy. Fan migrated to HI, later became an extensive landowner there; as a Royalist, I dont know." All The Best Evelyn & Ed Costello Website: <freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~ed1009> 1009 Blenheim Dr Raleigh NC 27612 USA HAGGERTY*LAVERTY*COSTELLO*JOYCE ____________________________________________________________ Obama Urges Homeowners to Refinance If you owe under $729k you probably qualify for Obama's Refi Program http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL3141/4d42e6234a4061b070fm07vuc

    01/27/2011 11:28:24
    1. [ NB ] Railroad
    2. comet
    3. Does anyone know if there is a site where NB Railroad records can be found? Thanks.

    01/27/2011 08:45:22
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Kim Mills
    3. Yes that's very possible. I was talking about this with a cousin who's wife was a nurse in the same area. Although she is younger then my grandmother. She trained and worked at the Victoria Public hospital and said the uniform my Grandmother is wearing doesn't match theirs. The training uniforms there were candy stripped. Unless they changed them between when my grandma was in school and she was. My Grandma was raised Catholic and perhaps she went to a smaller Catholic nursing school. I know her grade school was a Catholic one. I wish I had asked her what one years ago. (sigh) Anyway my cousin told me that there was a hospital and nursing school in Chatham, NB run by the St. Josephs. It eventually became St. Thomas College and moved to Fredericton. Some info here http://w3.stu.ca/stu/about/history/default.aspx I've emailed them to see if the building might have been part of their school. Kim > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Jared Handspicker" <jedh@jedh.com> > To: "Kim Mills" <kim.mills@wightman.ca> > Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2011 12:14 PM > Subject: Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's? > > >> Kim, >> >> Well, in fact, since this was a "sub-building" of the Massachusetts >> Memorial Hospitals, the same MIGHT be the case for one of the hospitals >> in >> the Fredericton area. > ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3406 - Release Date: 01/27/11

    01/27/2011 07:02:01
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Kim Mills
    3. Thanks! I don't know if my Grandmother ever was outside Canada. But it is possible that she might have gone to Mass as it's not very far from NB. I did find a photo of the building online but it looked like a brick building. The one in my photo is wood siding. But it could have been an add on or an older building perhaps... Kim ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jared Handspicker" <jedh@jedh.com> To: <newbrunswick@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, January 26, 2011 2:08 PM Subject: Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's? > In Boston, MA, USA: > > Massachusetts Memorial Hospital(s), houses the Jennie M. Robinson Memorial > maternity building. ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3406 - Release Date: 01/27/11

    01/27/2011 04:58:34
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Beverley Clarkson
    3. Ill bet it would be worth contacting the hospital ans seeing if there is a record of her attendance. Many New Brunswickers did go to the States for education and work. Of course as the war approached many trained in NB. My aunt was a nursing sister from Fredericton who was trained in Moncton and held officer status on the front lines in France. On Wed, Jan 26, 2011 at 3:08 PM, Jared Handspicker <jedh@jedh.com> wrote: > In Boston, MA, USA: > > Massachusetts Memorial Hospital(s), houses the Jennie M. Robinson Memorial > maternity building. > > > 1916 - The Jennie M. Robinson Memorial Hospital completed to accommodate > the increase in maternity and children's work. Thus the Clark Ward closed. > The Robinson was the largest Maternity hospital in New England at the > time. > > Other dates show 1917 or 1918, which would match the number on the > building in your picture. It's not absolute, but it could well fit. > > Have seen a picture of a different door on the KNOWN building in Boston, > which shows ROBINSON MEMORIAL, but no date, so may have been a different > door, or a side door. > > Jared > > > > > Kim: There was a Robinson Memorial Nursing School in Boston MA, active in > > the 30s, and it is quite likely New Brunswick girls went there for > > training. > > > > See: > > > http://books.google.ca/books?id=1XEXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&dq=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&hl=en&ei=dV9ATaTQBIH88AbYu8CFBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAg > > > > Hope this helps. > > > > Jay Underwood > > Elmsdale NS > > > > Coming soon: > > "Fleming's Army: The civil engineers who built the Intercolonial Railway" > > From Railfare*DC Books. > > Contact author for details > > Also from Railfare: > > "Ghost Tracks" supernatural stories from Nova Scotia's Railways. > > http://www.railfare.net/Ghost%20Tracks.html > > http://www.railfare.net/FromFollyToFortune.html > > http://www.railfare.net/builtforwar.html > >>From Pennydreadful Publishing: > > "Confederation Conspiracy: The curious career of a civil engineer" > > Coming soon: "Kings of the Iron Road: The men who made Nova Scotia's > > railways work" > > See author for details > > www.Pennydreadfulpublishing.com > > > > ---- Kim Mills <kim.mills@wightman.ca> wrote: > >> Does anyone have any info on what nursing schools were in New Brunswick > >> in > >> the 1930's? I have a photo of my grandmother Hilda Laws (nee Anderson) > >> from > >> before she was married. She's standing out side a building called > >> Robinson > >> Memorial 1819 (might also be 1918 hard to read). I was told she's > >> wearing a > >> training uniform. > >> She was born in Chatham, NB and the family moved to Marysville, NB when > >> her > >> mother was widowed and remarried. > >> After graduating I believe she was working in the hospital in > >> Fredericton. > >> So I'm thinking that it should be in that area maybe... > >> > >> I have the photo up on my blog if it helps. > >> > http://footstepspast.blogspot.com/2011/01/almost-wordless-wednesday-grandma-laws.html > >> > >> Thanks, > >> Kim > >> > >> > >> > >> ----- > >> No virus found in this message. > >> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > >> Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3404 - Release Date: 01/26/11 > >> > >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > >> List Announcements can be found at > >> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > >> ------------------------------- > >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > >> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > >> the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > List Announcements can be found at > > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > > ------------------------------- > > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > > NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without > the > > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > > > ------------------------ > Jared "Jed" Handspicker > jedh@jedh.com > > "If you think you've lost your mind, then you must have found it again, > else you'd have no idea you'd lost it in the first place." - JWH > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > -- Beverley Clarkson Sambro Head, Nova Scotia

    01/27/2011 03:55:37
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. David Reed
    3. I'm not sure I can help you with the 1930s, but my grandmother, mina Colwell, is recorded in the 1901 census as a pupil at Victoria Hospital in Fredericton. Even in the 1960s, student nurses trained in hospital. David Reed (dreed@ca.inter.net) Toronto, Ontario, Canada On 26 Jan 2011 12:33 PM, Kim Mills wrote: > Does anyone have any info on what nursing schools were in New Brunswick in > the 1930's? I have a photo of my grandmother Hilda Laws (nee Anderson) from > before she was married. She's standing out side a building called Robinson > Memorial 1819 (might also be 1918 hard to read). I was told she's wearing a > training uniform. > She was born in Chatham, NB and the family moved to Marysville, NB when her > mother was widowed and remarried. > After graduating I believe she was working in the hospital in Fredericton. > So I'm thinking that it should be in that area maybe... > > I have the photo up on my blog if it helps. > http://footstepspast.blogspot.com/2011/01/almost-wordless-wednesday-grandma-laws.html > > Thanks, > Kim > > > > ----- > No virus found in this message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3404 - Release Date: 01/26/11 > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > >

    01/26/2011 10:33:08
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Jared Handspicker
    3. In Boston, MA, USA: Massachusetts Memorial Hospital(s), houses the Jennie M. Robinson Memorial maternity building. 1916 - The Jennie M. Robinson Memorial Hospital completed to accommodate the increase in maternity and children's work. Thus the Clark Ward closed. The Robinson was the largest Maternity hospital in New England at the time. Other dates show 1917 or 1918, which would match the number on the building in your picture. It's not absolute, but it could well fit. Have seen a picture of a different door on the KNOWN building in Boston, which shows ROBINSON MEMORIAL, but no date, so may have been a different door, or a side door. Jared > Kim: There was a Robinson Memorial Nursing School in Boston MA, active in > the 30s, and it is quite likely New Brunswick girls went there for > training. > > See: > http://books.google.ca/books?id=1XEXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&dq=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&hl=en&ei=dV9ATaTQBIH88AbYu8CFBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAg > > Hope this helps. > > Jay Underwood > Elmsdale NS > > Coming soon: > "Fleming's Army: The civil engineers who built the Intercolonial Railway" > From Railfare*DC Books. > Contact author for details > Also from Railfare: > "Ghost Tracks" supernatural stories from Nova Scotia's Railways. > http://www.railfare.net/Ghost%20Tracks.html > http://www.railfare.net/FromFollyToFortune.html > http://www.railfare.net/builtforwar.html >>From Pennydreadful Publishing: > "Confederation Conspiracy: The curious career of a civil engineer" > Coming soon: "Kings of the Iron Road: The men who made Nova Scotia's > railways work" > See author for details > www.Pennydreadfulpublishing.com > > ---- Kim Mills <kim.mills@wightman.ca> wrote: >> Does anyone have any info on what nursing schools were in New Brunswick >> in >> the 1930's? I have a photo of my grandmother Hilda Laws (nee Anderson) >> from >> before she was married. She's standing out side a building called >> Robinson >> Memorial 1819 (might also be 1918 hard to read). I was told she's >> wearing a >> training uniform. >> She was born in Chatham, NB and the family moved to Marysville, NB when >> her >> mother was widowed and remarried. >> After graduating I believe she was working in the hospital in >> Fredericton. >> So I'm thinking that it should be in that area maybe... >> >> I have the photo up on my blog if it helps. >> http://footstepspast.blogspot.com/2011/01/almost-wordless-wednesday-grandma-laws.html >> >> Thanks, >> Kim >> >> >> >> ----- >> No virus found in this message. >> Checked by AVG - www.avg.com >> Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3404 - Release Date: 01/26/11 >> >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> List Announcements can be found at >> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without >> the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ------------------------ Jared "Jed" Handspicker jedh@jedh.com "If you think you've lost your mind, then you must have found it again, else you'd have no idea you'd lost it in the first place." - JWH

    01/26/2011 07:08:35
    1. Re: [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Kim: There was a Robinson Memorial Nursing School in Boston MA, active in the 30s, and it is quite likely New Brunswick girls went there for training. See: http://books.google.ca/books?id=1XEXAQAAIAAJ&q=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&dq=%22Robinson+memorial%22+nursing+boston&hl=en&ei=dV9ATaTQBIH88AbYu8CFBA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDcQ6AEwAg Hope this helps. Jay Underwood Elmsdale NS Coming soon: "Fleming's Army: The civil engineers who built the Intercolonial Railway" From Railfare*DC Books. Contact author for details Also from Railfare: "Ghost Tracks" supernatural stories from Nova Scotia's Railways. http://www.railfare.net/Ghost%20Tracks.html http://www.railfare.net/FromFollyToFortune.html http://www.railfare.net/builtforwar.html >From Pennydreadful Publishing: "Confederation Conspiracy: The curious career of a civil engineer" Coming soon: "Kings of the Iron Road: The men who made Nova Scotia's railways work" See author for details www.Pennydreadfulpublishing.com ---- Kim Mills <kim.mills@wightman.ca> wrote: > Does anyone have any info on what nursing schools were in New Brunswick in > the 1930's? I have a photo of my grandmother Hilda Laws (nee Anderson) from > before she was married. She's standing out side a building called Robinson > Memorial 1819 (might also be 1918 hard to read). I was told she's wearing a > training uniform. > She was born in Chatham, NB and the family moved to Marysville, NB when her > mother was widowed and remarried. > After graduating I believe she was working in the hospital in Fredericton. > So I'm thinking that it should be in that area maybe... > > I have the photo up on my blog if it helps. > http://footstepspast.blogspot.com/2011/01/almost-wordless-wednesday-grandma-laws.html > > Thanks, > Kim > > > > ----- > No virus found in this message. > Checked by AVG - www.avg.com > Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3404 - Release Date: 01/26/11 > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/26/2011 06:55:00
    1. [ NB ] New Brunswick Nursing schools 1930's?
    2. Kim Mills
    3. Does anyone have any info on what nursing schools were in New Brunswick in the 1930's? I have a photo of my grandmother Hilda Laws (nee Anderson) from before she was married. She's standing out side a building called Robinson Memorial 1819 (might also be 1918 hard to read). I was told she's wearing a training uniform. She was born in Chatham, NB and the family moved to Marysville, NB when her mother was widowed and remarried. After graduating I believe she was working in the hospital in Fredericton. So I'm thinking that it should be in that area maybe... I have the photo up on my blog if it helps. http://footstepspast.blogspot.com/2011/01/almost-wordless-wednesday-grandma-laws.html Thanks, Kim ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1202 / Virus Database: 1435/3404 - Release Date: 01/26/11

    01/26/2011 05:33:14
    1. Re: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown
    2. bgm
    3. Shirley, thanks so much for your help and suggestions. I've gained more insight and information. The 1861 census was a mistake as happens - he was his son by his 2nd wife. Anyway with all the hints and suggestion it is coming together, so thanks so much. Beryl On 1/19/2011 6:37 PM, S. Olfert wrote: > The NB Archives has a James Frederick Brown who d. 01 Jun 1848 Saint John - > same year. If the 1861 census listed him as a grson, then he may have been > illegitimate OR been raised by the grandparents for other reasons. You > would > probably need to search the other children of James Brown& Emily Flewelling > and, if possible, to see if there are Church records for the area for > baptism, > marriage. He is recorded as their son on the burial record below. > It does give an obituary for him in the Times& Telegraph newspaper - > how to obtain a copy is also below. > > NB Archives "Brenan's Funeral Home" records shows the following record: > http://archives.gnb.ca/APPS/PrivRecs/MC793/Details.aspx?culture=en-CA&record=18016 > > Brenan's Funeral Home [MC793] > > Date 1948.06.01 Name of deceased Brown, James Frederick Age 88 Sex M Marital > status Widowed Spouse Brown, Sheila Elmira Residence 15 Orange Place of > Death Place of Birth New Jerusalem NB Date of Birth Occupation > Mother Flewelling, > Emily Place of Birth Kingston NB Father Brown, James Place of Birth > Interred Fernhill Cemetery Physician Leggitt, Dr. Length Notice Times and > Telegraph Clergy Langley,Rev. Comment Ord./Mrs.G.M. McKeil 15 Orange St. / > Daughter Cause of death > > The Saint John Free Library http://www1.gnb.ca/0003/library.asp?Code=FM > will do a free obituary lookup - left side of main page "ask us a question" > - after > filling out the form, at the end it will ask if the question can be referred > to another > branch - click NO. They're very helpful and it might give some more > information. > Also, death records can be ordered from the Archives for $8 OR there's > Random > Acts of Genealogical Kindness www.raogk.com where someone will offer to do > lookups. Here's the link for someone who has added their name for Saint > John > & is will to do Public Records lookups. > http://www.raogk.com/newbrunswick.htm > Just click on the highlighted name& fill out your request. > > There are also 2 birth records for George Wentworth Brown in 1883 on the NB > Archives website: > Father: James Frederick Brown > Mother: S. Elmira Webb OR Sheloah Almira Webb > http://archives.gnb.ca/APPS/GovRecs/VISSE/Search.aspx?culture=en-CA&guid=19f0fc92-0918-4a97-a000-9e2700df0adc > > There may be other records on the Archives site to help in your search. > > Good luck! > Shirley > > > > On Wed, Jan 19, 2011 at 3:59 PM, bgm<berylgm@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Thanks for calling this to my attention. I really goofed he d. 19 dec >> 1948 - some how I typed in his dad's death date. >> >> On 1/19/2011 3:06 PM, Duane E. Crabtree wrote: >>> If he died at age 5, he probably did not marry! >>> >>> >>> ----- Original Message ----- >>> From: "bgm"<berylgm@gmail.com> >>> To:<newbrunswick@rootsweb.com> >>> Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 4:38 PM >>> Subject: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown >>> >>> >>>> Hi, I'm trying to find some inf on James Fredrick Brown (abt 1860 NB >>>> d. 10 Dec 1865) gson of James M Brown and Emily Jane Flewelling. Who >>>> are his parents, did he marry? Thanks for any help. The 1861 Census >>>> lists him as gson. >>>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >>>> List Announcements can be found at >>>> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >>>> ------------------------------- >>>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >>>> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without >> the >>>> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >>>> >>> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >>> List Announcements can be found at >>> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >>> ------------------------------- >>> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> List Announcements can be found at >> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    01/25/2011 02:54:48
    1. [ NB ] Aquash, a member of the Mi'kmaq tribe of Nova Scotia,
    2. edd73
    3. Recent AP release: for the complete areticle Edd Sinnett in Florida http://www.centurylink.net/news/read.php?id=18277731&ps=1011&srce=news_class&action=9&lang=en&_LT=UNLC_USNWU00L9_UNEWS&page=1

    01/25/2011 08:24:26
    1. [ NB ] Aquash, a member of the Mi'kmaq tribe of Nova Scotia,
    2. edd73
    3. RAPID CITY, S.D. (AP) — A man convicted in the 1975 slaying of an American Indian Movement activist will serve life in prison without parole, a judge decided Monday, closing a major chapter in an investigation that has spanned more than three decades. Prosecutors aren't saying if other chapters are to come. John Graham was found guilty last month of felony murder for participating in a kidnapping that ended in Annie Mae Aquash's death. He's the second person convicted in Aquash's death, which garnered international attention and remains synonymous with the 1970s clashes between AIM activists and federal agents. State law from the time of the incident, which prescribes a life sentence for felony murder without mentioning parole, requires a sentence of life without parole, state Attorney General Marty Jackley argued Monday. A South Dakota jury found Graham not guilty of premeditated murder. Judge John Delaney agreed with Jackley but said arguments made by Graham's attorney, John Murphy, had "some merit." "The sentence is preordained at this point," Delaney said, adding that he expected higher courts to make a final decision on what the law means. "The Supreme Court will decide this issue, not I." Authorities believe AIM leaders ordered her death because they thought she was helping the government, which officials have denied. No AIM leader has ever been charged in her slaying, and several people involved with AIM have denied their own involvement. Federal and state prosecutors have confirmed that they continue to discuss the case, and the investigation remains open. On Monday, Jackley refused to say if more charges are forthcoming. Aquash, a member of the Mi'kmaq tribe of Nova Scotia, was active in AIM and close to several of its leaders. By late 1975, however, she started to fear for her life due to circulating rumors that she was an informant, witnesses testified. Graham did not testify at his trial, but spoke Monday before he was sentenced. Graham, wearing a striped jail uniform and chains around his waist and ankles, stood and turned to look at Aquash's daughters as he spoke. He accused witnesses of speaking in "half-truths." a.. 1 b.. 2 c.. Next

    01/25/2011 08:14:08
    1. [ NB ] Pennfield Parish website updated
    2. G. Christian Larsen
    3. Greetings, This update is dedicated to Dr. Lionel E. (Hank) Hastings who died 27 September 2010. Hank was part of Course No.18 (Navigators), Pennfield Ridge where he crewed up with F/L J.L. "Joe" Knowlton. After completion of their course at "the Ridge", Knowlton and crew flew a tour of duty overseas with 98 Squadron (50 ops). After their tour ended Hank went onto serve with Group Support Unit 2 flying "ferrying missions". It was during one of these missions that Hank qualified for the Guinea Pig Club, the only known airmen from "the Ridge" none to belong to this club. We're going to miss you Hank! The Pennfield Parish website has been updated once again. Here is the listing of what is new: What's new, January 21, 2011 Church & Cemetery Record Pennfield Rural Cemetery - added obit. for Wesley Leavitt. Military History Pennfield Ridge Air Station (Newspaper Stories) - "An Ontario veteran shares memories of Moncton in 1943" added. No.2 Air Navigation School (Accident and/or Mishap Reports) - updated one (1) report with additional information. No.2 Air Navigation School (Nominal Roll - Air Observers Courses) - added partial class listings for Air Observers Courses 26 through 29. No.2 Air Navigation School (Nominal Roll - Regional Control Courses) - added partial class listings for Regional Control Courses 1 through 8. No.2 Air Navigation School (Remembering Those Who Served) - added ninety-two (92) names and updated sixteen (16) names with additional details for those stationed at the base. No.2 Operational Training Unit (Remembering Those Who Served) - updated one (1) name with additional details for those stationed at the base. No.34 Operational Training Unit (Accident and/or Mishap Reports) - added two (2) reports and updated two (2) reports with additional information. No.34 Operational Training Unit (Remembering Those Who Served) - added thirteen (13) names and updated eleven (11) names with additional details for those stationed at the base. RCAF Station, Pennfield Ridge (Accident and/or Mishap Reports) - added one new report. RCAF Station, Pennfield Ridge (Remembering Those Who Served) - added one (1) names and updated three (3) names with additional details for those stationed at the base - thanks PPMHS. Vital Statistics Pennfield Parish Strays (Who Are Buried Elsewhere) - added obit. for Edna Matheson. To find additional information and/or links please see "What's New" section on the main page. Regards, G. Christian Larsen President - Pennfield Parish Military Historical Society Member of 250 RCAF (Saint John) Wing, AFAC Member of 2nd TAF Medium Bombers Association (Canadian Wing) Coordinator for Pennfield Parish website Coordinator for Lepreau Parish website Research Projects: Pennfield Ridge Air Station, A-30 Canadian Infantry Training Centre, CA (Camp Utopia) & Pennfield Parish veterans http://pennfieldridgeairstation.blogspot.com/ http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nbpennfi/ http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nbleprea/

    01/21/2011 06:26:40
    1. Re: [ NB ] Susan Bentley Wilmot d/o Wm Willmot & Nancy Smith Wilmot
    2. S. Olfert
    3. Hi Betty, The 1851 New Brunswick Census shows a Susan Wilmot, 17, New Brunswick, Sister-in-law; enumerated with Ephraim Steeves & his wife Caroline A. Steeves, 25. The Steeves Descendants by Esther Clark Wright shows the following: EPHRAIM4 STEEVES (Joel3, John2) b. 1825?, d. 9.8.86; 6.12.46 m. Caroline Wilmot b. 1827? d. - dau. of William and Ann Wilmot? Elizabeth Steeves b. 1848 m. George Wilmot, son of John and Martha Wilmot William H.E. Steeves b. 1850, d. 1932 "Long Will" (must be nickname) m. Charlotte Ann Steeves5 Gilbert C. Steeves b. 1852, d. 1937 m. Nellie Drew Ephraim Steeves m. 2) Naomi Stiles 3) Lucinda R. Hoar FamilySearch shows Caroline's death date as 24 Jul 1859 Gray's Island, Albert, New Brunswick. There might be other family records here: New Brunswick Cemeteries - Albert Co. http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~mhlewis/new_brunswick_cemeteries.htm Good Luck... Shirley On Fri, Jan 21, 2011 at 6:37 AM, Betty <puclik@nbnet.nb.ca> wrote: > Looking for information on Susan Bentley Wilmot who married John Lighton > Gregory august 1858. Her obit June 4 1930 indicated that she was the last > surviving member of her immediate family of 11 children of Wm Wilmot and > Nancy Smith. She born in Lower Coverdale and died in Saint John. Having > difficulty locating her 11 siblings.. would love to know who they are.. any > information on this family would be greatly appreciated.... thank you Betty > Kilcup > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    01/21/2011 03:31:27
    1. [ NB ] Susan Bentley Wilmot d/o Wm Willmot & Nancy Smith Wilmot
    2. Betty
    3. Looking for information on Susan Bentley Wilmot who married John Lighton Gregory august 1858. Her obit June 4 1930 indicated that she was the last surviving member of her immediate family of 11 children of Wm Wilmot and Nancy Smith. She born in Lower Coverdale and died in Saint John. Having difficulty locating her 11 siblings.. would love to know who they are.. any information on this family would be greatly appreciated.... thank you Betty Kilcup

    01/21/2011 02:37:35
    1. Re: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown
    2. Jim Roaix
    3. Can we assume he would be part of the BROWN group that married into the GILMORE group from York County NB? James BROWN b. abt 1739 | Margaret BROWN | & Joseph GILMORE | m. abt 1791 | | Grace GILMORE | | b. 13 Nov 1796, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | | & Alexander BROWN | | b. 4 Feb 1793, New Brunswick, Canada | | m. Oct 1820, Kingsclear, York Co, New Brunswick | | James Brown GILMORE | | b. 13 Oct 1800, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | | d. 7 Nov 1867, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | | & Mary E. FLEWELLING | | b. 1807 | | Mary GILMORE | | b. 1804, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | | d. 1878 | | & Amos ARNOLD | | b. 1797 | | Ann GILMORE | | b. 1812, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | | & Cornelius ARNOLD | | b. 1803 Seems like he would be a son of a sibling of the Margaret above. Although, the other main Loyalist BROWN group settled in Queens County and married into a few families of York County. David BROWN b. 1768 d. 1833, St. Mary's Par., York Co., New Brunswick, Can. & Dorothy RICE b. abt 1767 m. 1783, Canning, Queens Co, New Brunswick | Alexander BROWN | b. 4 Feb 1793, New Brunswick, Canada | & Grace GILMORE | b. 13 Nov 1796, Penniac, York Co, New Brunswick | m. Oct 1820, Kingsclear, York Co, New Brunswick | | James BROWN | | b. 1 Jan 1822 | | William BROWN | | b. 27 Feb 1823 | | d. 1895 | | & Eliza PRIEST | | m. 8 Sep 1850 | | Charles BROWN | | b. 5 Dec 1824 | | Maragret BROWN | | b. 22 May 1826 | | d. 1912 | | & James LOGAN | | b. 1821 | | m. 5 Jul 1849 | | Philip BROWN | | b. 15 Jan 1828 | | & Sarah UNKNOWN | | b. abt 1819 | | Rhoda BROWN | | b. 15 Nov 1829 | | & Thomas GOODSPEED | | b. 1830 | | m. 3 Jul 1851 | | Joseph BROWN | | b. 22 Jun 1832 | | Amanda E. BROWN | | b. 31 Mar 1834, NB, Canada | | & John Lexington ROGERS | | b. Sep 1838, ME | | m. 11 Aug 1878, Ft. Fairfield, Aroostook, ME | | Mary Jane BROWN | | b. 10 Jan 1836 | | & John E. BROWN | | Alexander BROWN | | b. 5 Aug 1838 | | d. 1922 | | & Margaret WADE | | b. 1846 | | George Frederick BROWN | | b. 10 Dec 1843 | | d. 1922 | | & Francis ESTABROOKS | | b. 1850 | William BROWN | b. 1784, Canning Par., Queens Co., New Brunswick, Canada | d. bef 1851 | & Hannah BUBAR | Thomas BROWN | b. 1785, Canning Parish, Queens Co., New Brunswick, Can. | d. aft 1871 | & Susan COCK | | Thomas BROWN | | b. 1816 | | George BROWN | | b. 1818 | | Galvin BROWN | | Levi BROWN | | Hiram BROWN | | Susanna BROWN | | Alfred BROWN | | Charlotte BROWN | Mary Ann BROWN | b. 1788, Canning Parish, Queens, NB, Can. | & James BUBAR | | Henry BUBAR | | & Lavinia HANSEN | | Joseph Alexander BUBAR | | Thomas BUBAR | | b. 1807 | | Stephen BUBAR | | b. 1809 | | d. 2 Nov 1892, Orient, Aroostook, ME | | James BUBAR | | b. 1813, NB | | d. 12 Feb 1882, Orient, Arootook, ME | | Mary Ann BUBAR | | b. 1819 | | John W. BUBAR | | b. 25 Dec 1822, 12 May 1904 | | Samuel BUBAR | | b. 1823 | | d. 28 Aug 1872, Parish Of St Marys, York, NB | | Charity BUBAR | | b. 9 Oct 1828, Durham Settlement, St Mary¹s Parish, York, NB | | d. 31 Mar 1893, Marysville, NB | | & David BANKS | | m. 1846 | Isaac BROWN | b. abt 1789, New Brunswick, Can. | David BROWN | b. 1791, New Brunswick, Can. | d. aft 1871 | & Margaret GILMOUR | | Malcolm BROWN | | Villian BROWN | | James BROWN | | David BROWN | | Jane BROWN | | Almarine BROWN | | Grace BROWN | | Catherine BROWN | John BROWN | b. 1796, New Brunswick, Can. | d. 1877 | & Hallie POND | | They Had Children BROWN | Samuel BROWN | b. 1797, New Brunswick, Can. | d. 18 Jul 1863, Portage Lake, ME | Jacob Barker BROWN | b. 1798, New Brunswick, Can. | d. aft 1871 | & Unknown FRENCH | | Charles BROWN | Benjamin BROWN | b. 1801, New Brunswick, Can. | & Unknown BUBAR | Elizabeth BROWN | b. 1801, New Brunswick, Can. | d. 2 Nov 1802 | Elizabeth BROWN | b. 1803, Of Nashwaak, York, Nb | d. 1892 | & Samuel MILLER | | Villian MILLER | | Elizabeth MILLER | | Margery MILLER | | Sarah MILLER | | Martha MILLER -- Jim Roaix 605 W Shawnee Street Tahlequah OK 74464 918-207-0093 jerx42@hughes.net http://web.me.com/jerx/Neolithic_Sculpture/About_the_Artist.html

    01/20/2011 01:36:31
    1. Re: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown
    2. Bev Guy
    3. He can't have married. he died at aged 5. Bev On Thu, Jan 20, 2011 at 8:20 PM, Stacey Hughes <sars4@telus.net> wrote: > What county in New Brunswick?? > > -----Original Message----- > From: newbrunswick-bounces@rootsweb.com > [mailto:newbrunswick-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of bgm > Sent: January-19-11 2:39 PM > To: newbrunswick@rootsweb.com > Subject: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown > >  Hi,  I'm trying to find some inf on James Fredrick Brown (abt 1860 NB > d. 10 Dec 1865) gson of James M Brown and Emily Jane Flewelling.  Who > are his parents, did he marry?  Thanks for any help.   The 1861 Census > lists him as gson. > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >

    01/20/2011 01:27:50
    1. Re: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown
    2. Stacey Hughes
    3. Here is the email I was referring too. -----Original Message----- From: newbrunswick-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:newbrunswick-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of bgm Sent: January-19-11 3:59 PM To: newbrunswick@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown Thanks for calling this to my attention. I really goofed he d. 19 dec 1948 - some how I typed in his dad's death date. On 1/19/2011 3:06 PM, Duane E. Crabtree wrote: > If he died at age 5, he probably did not marry! > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "bgm"<berylgm@gmail.com> > To:<newbrunswick@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Wednesday, January 19, 2011 4:38 PM > Subject: [ NB ] James Fredrick Brown > > >> Hi, I'm trying to find some inf on James Fredrick Brown (abt 1860 NB >> d. 10 Dec 1865) gson of James M Brown and Emily Jane Flewelling. Who >> are his parents, did he marry? Thanks for any help. The 1861 Census >> lists him as gson. >> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ >> List Announcements can be found at >> http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm >> ------------------------------- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >> NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >> quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> > > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > List Announcements can be found at > http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Announcements can be found at http://www.rootsweb.com/~nbcharlo/nblistann.htm ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to NEWBRUNSWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message

    01/20/2011 11:36:43