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bullet Joseph BELCOURT was born on 25 Nov 1823 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He was baptized in 1844. He died in Feb 1879 in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. He was a Fur Trapper. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Catherine LIRONDELLE.

He was married to Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION) on 25 Feb 1846. Children were: Alex BELCOURT, Adelaide BELCOURT, Arkansas BELCOURT, Peter BELCOURT, Daniel BELCOURT, Veronique BELCOURT, Julian BELCOURT, Maris BELCOURT, Infant son BELCOURT, William (twin) BELCOURT, Mary (twin) BELCOURT, Aleef BELCOURT.


bullet Joseph BELCOURT

He was married to Catherine LIRONDELLE in 1818 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Joseph and Catherine were officially married on 4 Dec 1844, but had obviously been married according to the custom of the country since 1818. Children were: Julie BELCOURT , Jean Baptiste BELCOURT, Joseph BELCOURT, Mie Amable BELCOURT, Alexis BELCOURT, Elizabeth BELCOURT, Josette BELCOURT, Archange BELCOURT, Petit Jean BELCOURT.


bullet Josette BELCOURT was born in 1832 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Catherine LIRONDELLE.

She was married to J.B. COURTEPATTE on 26 Dec 1849.


bullet Julian BELCOURT was born in 1861 in Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada. He died in 1882. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).


bullet Julie BELCOURT was born in 1819 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Catherine LIRONDELLE.

She was married to Carlton THIBERT on 1 Jun 1842.


bullet Maris BELCOURT Photo was born on 15 Sep 1864 in Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada. She died on 28 Aug 1941 in Great Falls, Cascade Co., Montana. She was also known as Marias.
Written by Etta Adelia Monroe Moody
Feb 5, 1957 at St. George, Utah

Maris Belcourt was born Sep 15, 1864 in Edmonton, Canada, Her Father Joseph Belcourt was born in Edmonton also about 1824. There he met Madeline Campion, a French Indian girl,who was born about 1828 in Edmonton, Canada. when Joseph asked Madeline to marry him she told him she would not until he cut off his long black hair, so he did. He had a younger brother who had such long auburn hair that hung below his knees that he was so proud of that Mother never knew if he ever did cut it off. Carlos, Wallace and Hilda Monroe got their lovely auburn hair from the Belcourt side,

Uncle would tease the Indians as they wanted to scalp him for his long beautiful auburn hair, He would take his canoe and cross the Frazier River to the opposite side where the Indiana were camped. He would hide his canoe then go down the river bank wbers the Indians could see him. He would then take down his long hair, unbraid it and comb it out, run up and down the river bank with his beautiful hair flowing behind him. He was a very fast runner and no Indian could ever out run and catch him. When the Indians would see him they would howl and yell, get into their canoes, cross the river and try to catch him, He would run like a deer, get his canoe where he had cached it and away he would go. Grandpa Joseph and folks would warn him if he didn't quit teasing the Indians they would catch and scalp him, but they never did.

When Mother was 8 years old, she and her brothers and sisters took smallpox. They had received word that a band of Indians from Montana were an their way to Edmonton, and had been exposed to smallpox and for all the people to get vaccinated, Some of the families who got it last was the Belcourt Family and the vaccine had not taken effect when the Indians got there. They had just started to break out and were burning up with fever, The poor Indians would go into the Frazier River to cool off and they would come out and die like flies by the hundreds on the river bank, So many dying they couldn't bury their dead.

Peter, who was 18 years old, was out hunting buffalo an the prairie when he came
down with the smallpox, and was too sick to ride hone, So one of his companions took word to Grandma Belcourt so she went to him. She was a good nurse and herb doctor, but she couldn't save Peter as he was too far gone when she got to him, She said if she had had him home she could have saved him like she did all the rest of her children, She had saved Uncle Daniel who had the black smallpox which was far more deadlier than the red smallpox,

Mother and none of her brothers and sisters ever learned to read or write. Grandpa Belcourt wasn't a poor man as he had cattle and horses and raised all their vegetables and made all their maple syrup, also pigs and chickens. And in those days all the buffalo, elk, moose, deer for wild meat and all kinds of birds and fruit,

Grandpa helped build the Catholic church and school in Ednonton, anf bought what
few books that could be had in those days for his children, Mother said when she raised her little hand to ask the Sister to tell her what the word was in her reader the teacher would hit her hand hard with a ruler, No children learned to read or write only those who they wanted to make Priests and Sisters, All the others were just taught their Catholic Catachism by heart and no more. Why didn't Grandpa and Grandma Belcourt teach their children to read and write? My idea is, because they had such a large family and worked so hard to care for them they just didn't have time, Grandpa Belcourt wasn't allowed to sit in any of the pews in church because he refused to pay for it when he had given so much and helped to build the church and school, so he stood up in church.

When Mother was about eleven years old her baby sister Alief who was 5 was burned to death. Her dress caught on fire from a camp fire and all her clothes were burned off of her and also her hair, She never cried as she told them she had no pain. The Angels had come for her and she died with a smile on her face.

Grandpa Belcourt wasn't very old when he died the first part of February 1879. Mother thought it could have been tuberculosis as he got so weak, and it could have been heart trouble also. He was only 55. Grandma Belcourt died the last of February 1879 -- the same month. Mother said she was so swollen for months, and that sounds like a heart condition that goes into Dropsy. So Mother was left an orphan at the age of 15. She went to live with her sister Verona Simmons. Mother had such long hair that was below her knees and she wore it in two long braids. Her hair was very thick and she couldn't comb it herself. Aunt Verona said it was too much trouble to take care of herself so she cut it off short. Mother said there was only one girl who had longer hair which reached to her knees.

Uncle John and Aunt Verona Simmons decided to make a trip to the United States the same year their parents died. They came upon a battle between two large Indian Tribes, that they camped on a hill covered with brush and trees. So fierce was the battle their war cries and yells so terrifying they could be heard for miles. They were there for days and didn't dare light a fire or make any noise. They fixed their horses so they couldn't make ariy noise. One day an Indian scout who happened to be of the victorious tribe was scouting around to find any of the Indians of the other tribe to kill, and came upon the Simmons Camp. Luckily Aunt Verona could speak this Indians tongue and that is what saved their lives. He warned them to keep out of sight because the Tribe who had lost the battle had lost their Chief and they were in a madden rage and would kill any one they came upon no matter who they were. When the Indian Chief was killed the crying and lamenting of that tribe was just terrible. When the Indians had left and it was safe they went on their way and camped at Fort Macleod. Mother met Colonel McCloud and wife there and went to work for them for room and board. They tad 2 little girls and had started to teach Mother to read and write andi give her an education when they moved to Fort Benton, Montana. Mother met Dad at Fort Benton when she was 18 years old and they were married Oct.l, 1882. When Carlos was born June 23, 1883 in Fort Benton Mrs. McCloud had a baby boy and not enough milk so the baby was starving to death. Mrs. McCloud came to Mother and begged her to nurse her baby and save him. She did as she had enough for 2 babies. She paid Mother but I forgot what she paid her. Then in the summer of l881, when Carlos was a year old, Mother and Dad moved to Willow Creek 25 miles west of Choteau in a covered wagon. It took them a week to make the trip. Dad took up a homestead and built a log house in the summer of 1884, which stands today and is in good shape (Sept. 10, 1956). Eight of the Monroe children where born there. The second winter they were there was one of the hardest winters that was known in Montana history. I was only a little baby, and that winter the snow was up to 5 feet deep. The terrible blizzards and freezing weather killed thousands of cattle and sheep, starving and freezing them to death. It wiped out many wealthy cattle and sheep men. Mr. Collins told Dad if he could find any of his cattle he could have them, Dad took his sleigh and looked and found two cows alive. He had enough hay as he only had 2 horses to feed, so that is now Dad and Mother got started in the cattle business.

Mother was a wonderful woman to raise a family of ten children, making all of our clothes, even our stockings. I never had a boughten dress until I was 11 yrs. old. Mother grew big gardens and all the help she got was from what we little kids could help her. All Dad did towards the garden was to plow and rake it and put in the potatoes with us kids helping and digging them. Mother was a marvelous cook, anrl known as the best cook around the country and in Choteau, where she all alone put on big dance dinners for 100 people.

Our meadow was full of large wild strawberries. Sesi~es she put up gallons of wild gooseberry jelly and jams, wild rassberries, blueberries, ctockcherry jelly, and jam and buffalo berries, savorous berries, wild currents, red, yellow and black wild Oregon grapes, and wild rose berry jam. Mother was a wonderful companion with her children and always took us with her berry picking, and how we loved it,

Mother would sit by the kitchen stove and the stove would be red hot as the hard white pine wood made such good red coals that would give light through the long slide damper in front. All of us kids would sit close to her and how snug and warm the log cabin was with snow deep and freezing cold outside, Mother would tell stories of her girlhood days, sing songs to us in the Cree language,

Another time when I was about 15 or 16, Dad was thrown from a bronco, and was unconscious for 17 days. 3r. Brooks, our family doctor, never expected him to ever come to. He had a bruised skull fracture.

I never forgot the trip to Lethbridge, Canada. Mother had to go to Canada to get her Canadian Script as it was called before it was outlawed as she was entitled to so much land or money. She choose the money which was $500.00. Dad, Mother, her 'two brothers, and their wives and children, none had more than 1, 2 or 3 children, and we went in a big wagon with about 11 people (6 grownups and 5 children). This was the fall of 1891 -- Christian Eve was the baby. How long it took us I do not remember but no doubt a month or more.

When we got to Lethbridge we saw an Indian camp and a squaw nursing a big girl who looked to be 5 or 6 years old. Mother said she was that old as she talked Cree to them. That was where Archie and I was baptized by a Catholic Priest. I can see Archie as plainly, he was not 3 years old and so chubby and scared I held on tight to his little hand. When the Priest poured water on our heads the water ran down our faces and Archie started to cry. I told him not to cry and be afraid. How dearly I loved my baby brother and that picture is so clear in my mind to this day after 65-1/2 years as I was only 5 years at that time.

Maris is our Great Grandmother Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).

She was married to Carlton Leroy MONROE on 1 Oct 1882 in Fort Benton, Choteau Co., Montana. Children were: Carlos Lloyd MONROE, Etta Adelia MONROE, Archie Harmon MONROE, Christian Eve MONROE, Silas Leslie MONROE, Wallace Wesley MONROE, Hylda Maria MONROE, Florence Bell MONROE, Francis Eugene MONROE, Ethel Margaret MONROE.


bullet Mary (twin) BELCOURT was born in 1870 in Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada. She died in Dec 1910. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).


bulletMie Amable BELCOURT was born in 1825. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Catherine LIRONDELLE.

She was married to Jex. GLADEU on 22 Nov 1852.


bullet Peter BELCOURT was born in 1856 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. He died in 1874. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).


bullet Petit Jean BELCOURT was born on 11 Mar 1844 in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Catherine LIRONDELLE.


bulletVeronique BELCOURT was born on 26 Jan 1860 in Lac Ste. Anne, Alberta. She was also known as Verona. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).


bulletWilliam (twin) BELCOURT was born in 1870 in Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada. He died on 1 Jul 1947. Parents: Joseph BELCOURT and Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION).


bullet Marion BLACKIE was born about 1716 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: George BLACKIE and Helen LOW.

Children were: John SMART .


bulletAgnes BRIGGS was born about 1721 in Edinburgh, Mid-Lothian, Scotland.

She was married to Robert FALCONER on 1 Jul 1742 in Edinburgh, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Children were: Alexander FALCONER , Ann FALCONER, William FALCONER .


bullet Mary BRIGGS died post 1824 in Richland Co., Ohio. She was born in Holland.

Children were: James LEVERICH, Nathaniel LEVERICH, William LEVERICH, John LEVERICH, Benjamin LEVERICH III, Martha LEVERICH, Elizabeth LEVERICH, Charity LEVERICH.


bulletCharlotte BRIMLEY. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary JONES.


bulletElizabeth BRIMLEY was born on 23 Dec 1789 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bullet George BRIMLEY was born on 31 Aug 1802 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bullet Joel BRIMLEY was born on 5 Apr 1796 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bulletJohn BRIMLEY died on 4 Jul 1844. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary JONES.

He was married to Mary SMITH on 23 Dec 1783 in Cople, Bedsford, England. Children were: Samuel Smith BRIMLEY, John BRIMLEY, Elizabeth BRIMLEY, Joseph BRIMLEY, Sarah BRIMLEY, Joel BRIMLEY, William Smith BRIMLEY, George BRIMLEY, Letty BRIMLEY, Thomas BRIMLEY.


bullet John BRIMLEY was born on 9 Feb 1787 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bullet John BRIMLEY was born about 1728 in Cople, Bedsford, England.

Children were: John BRIMLEY, Sarah BRIMLEY , Shadrick BRIMLEY, Charlotte BRIMLEY.


bulletJoseph BRIMLEY was born on 30 Dec 1792 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bullet Letty BRIMLEY was born on 21 Jan 1804 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bullet Samuel Smith BRIMLEY was born on 2 Feb 1785 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH.


bulletSarah BRIMLEY was born on 30 May 1793 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. She died on 18 Jun 1862 in Slaterville, Weber Co., Utah.
Sarah Brimley was born 30 May 1793 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England, the second daughter and fourth of nine children of John Brimley and Mary Smith, both of whom had their roots in Bedfordshire.

William and Sarah married on 18 December 1815 in North Crawley. They were the parents of 11 children, eight boys and three girls:

· William Smith (who emigrated to Utah in 1853 and returned on a mission to England in 1884), Amelia, Joel, James and Naomi (who was deserted by her betrothed shortly before the scheduled marriage date and left to rear a young son) were born between 1816 and 1823/4, while the family lived in North Crawley.
· Josiah (who emigrated to America in 1881 with his wife Ellen), Jesse, John Brimley and Tryphenia (who died in England in 1851 at age 19) were born between 1825 and 1832 while the family was living at Cranfield, Buckingham-shire.
· Ezra and Joseph Paul (who died as a young child in England) were born in 1836 and 1839 after the family had moved to Marpole, Cheshire.

William’s profession was that of a butcher. At the time of the 1851 British Census, William and Sarah were living in North Crawley; William, age 56, was working as an agricultural laborer.

Sarah was baptized a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in approximately 1844. William and Sarah were received in the Raunds Branch of the church in April 1852 from North Crawley. While in the branch, their son-in-law, Henry Bailey (Amelia’s husband), baptized or confirmed several of their children; ordained one of their sons a priest; and in 1854 ordained his father-in-law William an elder.

The Reads’ oldest son, William Smith Read, had joined the L.D.S. Church and emigrated to America in 1853, arriving in New Orleans and traveling up the Mississippi River to St. Louis, where he married and then arrived in Utah on 6 October 1853. Likely encouraged by their son’s letters, William and Sarah decided to emigrate.

On 16 April 1856, William, Sarah and a son left England on the steamship Thornton, with 764 Mormons aboard. The group arrived in New York and then traveled west by train through Albany, Buffalo and Chicago, reaching Iowa City on 26 June 1856.

The emigrants from the Thornton have been described thus: "They were not colorful—only improbable. Looking for the brown and resolute and weather-seasoned among them, you would have seen instead starved cheeks, pale skins, bad teeth, thin chests, all the stigmata of unhealthy work and inadequate diet. One in every ten was past fifty. Most of them, until they were herded from their crowded immigrant ship and loaded into the cars and rushed to the end of the Rock Island Line and dumped at the brink of the West, had never pitched a tent, slept on the round, cooked outdoors, built a campfire. They had not even the rudimentary skills that make frontiersmen. But as it turned out, they had some of the stuff that makes heroes. Mainly Englishmen from the depressed collieries and mill towns." (Stegner)

The group arrived in Iowa late in the season, and the church agents struggled frantically to provide handcarts and supplies. The Fourth Handcart Company was organized from the Thornton passengers under the direction of Captain James G. Willie, a returning missionary: 120 handcarts, 5 wagons, oxen and cows. The company was divided into hundreds, each of which had five round tents (twenty persons to a tent) and one wagon.

The Fourth Company roster included as members "William Reed (62) with family, Sarah Reed (62) (wife) and Joseph (14)." (Hafen, Appendix M)

The company paused at Florence, Nebraska to repair axles on the handcarts, which were constantly breaking. A local newspaper article reported a butcher "dealing out a splendid beef" to the pioneers; perhaps William Read assisted. The leaders were divided whether to winter in Nebraska or to push through. The company continued, leaving Florence on 18 August 1856 and averaging fifteen miles per day.

An unfortunate loss of oxen and cattle in a stampede forced the company to transfer an additional 100 pounds of flour to each handcart and resulted in the loss of use of milk cows and a stop to beef rations. President F.D. Richards, returning from the European Mission, passed the company on his way to Salt Lake and promised to send back supplies "with all possible dispatch."

On 28 September news was received that a party of three had been killed by Cheyennes. Two days later the company camped west of Fort Laramie. By this time deaths in the camp averaged one or so every few days, mostly elderly and infants. The next day, the clerk of the camp made this record:

"Wednesday 1 Oct. [1856]. Capt. Willie with some brethren returned to Fort Laramie with the mule team on business. W. Woodward had charge of the company during the day. Rolled about 7 miles and camped on the banks of the river Platte. William Read died coming to camp in a wagon—he was born at North Crawley, Buckinghamshire, England, aged 63. Capt. Willie & the Brethren returned to camp. Some missionaries from Salt Lake passed by our camp & informed us that Brother P.P. Pratt & other missionaries were camped about 4 miles from us up the river."

The following day rations were cut again. (Willie Company Journal)

Sarah Read, age 63, and her son buried husband and father by the side of the trail and continued the trek.

Not far up the Sweetwater River, "the nights, which had gradually been getting colder since the company left Laramie, became very severe. The mountains were mantled nearly to their base in snow. Nearly all suffered more or less at night from cold. Instead of getting up in the morning strong, refreshed, vigorous and prepared for the hardships of another day of toil, the poor Saints were to be seen crawling out from their tents haggard, benumbed and showing an utter lack of that vitality so necessary to our success. Cold weather, scarcity of food, lassitude and fatigue from over-exertion, soon produced their effects. The old and infirm people began to droop, and they no sooner lost spirit and courage than death’s stamp could be traced on their features. At first the deaths occurred slowly and irregularly [as in the case of William Read], but in a few days at more frequent intervals." (Chislett in Hafen)

By 19 October 1856 the Willie Company was pressing on in the midst of snow and a howling wind. The last ration of flour was issued. The next morning four inches to a foot of snow fell. A barrel or two of hard bread was distributed and two broken-down cattle were killed; there were no more supplies until relief from the valley arrived. Captain Willie and another left camp to meet the promised "relief train" that had been sent from the valley.( Chislett in Hafen; and Smith)

On the evening of 20 October, the relief train, coming from the west, had turned off the main trail to find a sheltered place on the Sweetwater River. That night Captain Willie and his companion, "frostbitten and exhausted and riding two worn out animals appeared out of the blizzard with news that their company, east of Rocky Ridge, was in a freezing, starving condition, and would perish unless immediate relief was given." The Willie Company had not eaten for forty-eight hours and were freezing and starving. (Smith)

Three days had passed since Captain Willie had left. Leaders visited "the sick, the widows whose husbands died in serving them [this would included Sarah Read], and the aged who could not help themselves." (Hafen).

"On the evening of the third day (21 October 1856), just as the sun was sinking beautifully behind the distant hills, on an eminence immediately west of the camp, several covered wagons, each drawn by four horses were seen coming towards the company. The news ran through the camp like wildfire, and all who were able to leave their beds turned out en masse to see them. A few minutes brought them sufficiently near to reveal faithful Captain Willie slightly in advance of the train. Shouts of joy rent the air; strong men wept till tears ran freely down their furrowed and sun-burnt cheeks, and little children fairly danced around with gladness." (Chislett in Hafen)

The rescuers were soon dragging in wood from the hills; fires were made and food cooked to allay starvation. Nine more died that first night. However, for the first time in quite a period, the songs of Zion were heard in the camp. "The change seemed almost miraculous, so sudden was it from grave to gay." (Chislett in Hafen) W. H. Kimball and about half the rescue party stayed with the Willie Company and helped it move westward to the Salt Lake Valley. The rest of the party continued east to help the stranded Martin Handcart Company.

President F.D. Richards had arrived in the Salt Lake Valley in early October 1856 and advised President Brigham Young of the dire circumstances of the handcart companies still on the trail. At the Sunday morning session of October general conference, the Prophet Brigham Young stood before the saints and said, "I will now give this people the subject and the text during the conference. It is this. Many of our brethren and sisters are on the plains with handcarts, and probably many are now seven hundred miles from this place, and they must be brought here; we must send assistance to them. The text will be, ‘to get them here.’ Go and bring in those people now on the plains." (Hafen)

The response for help was immediate. Within days, sixteen good four-mule teams and 27 young men were headed eastward with the first provisions. This included W.H. Kimball, who first reached the Willie Handcart Company.

The Willie Company continued west; those who were unable to walk were allowed to ride in the wagons; progress was slow. Leaders tried to arouse those who had lost physical and mental energy and sunk into apathy. The weather grew colder, and many were badly frozen. A snowstorm with a severe wind followed on the day the company crossed the Rocky Ridge. Stragglers were strung out behind the company. Thirteen more died that night at Willow Creek, a tributary to the Sweetwater. Finally the company crossed South Pass, and the weather moderated. Relief trains from the valley were now being met continuously. From Fort Bridger, the entire company rode, for the first time on the journey. The company arrived in Salt Lake City on 9 November 1856, having lost one-sixth of its number on the journey.

Sarah Read made her way to Ogden, Utah, to the home of her son William Smith Read. She "recovered from her terrible experience and lived in Weber County, doing good and nursing the sick for six years. Her son John lived in Weber County also (he married Mary Slater of Slaterville and had built a cabin at Slaterville." (Payne letter)

On 17 August 1861, Sarah was endowed in the Endowment House in Salt Lake City. Apparently she was sealed to her husband at the same time, with her son-in-law, Henry Bailey, acting as proxy for William.

"Sarah decided to visit her son John at Slaterville, which was a distance of eight or nine miles. She walked the entire distance and arrived at John’s home in the evening. John’s wife had baked some potatoes in the open fireplace, and she fixed a supper of baked potatoes for [Sarah], who enjoyed them very much after her long walk. A short time later, Sarah complained of intestinal pains. John and his wife got up to see what they could do for her, but she said ‘Only give me a quilt and let me roll on the floor in front of the fire here, and I’ll get good and warm and soon feel better; so go back to bed." They gave her the quilts; after a time, she was so still, [John and his wife] got up to see how she was. She had died when the gastritis had struck her heart." (Payne letter)

Sarah died 18 June 1862 in Slaterville, Weber County, Utah and was buried at Slaterville.

Sarah is our 3rd Great Grandmother Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH.

She was married to William M. READ Jr. on 18 Dec 1815 in North Crawley, Buckinghamshire, England. Children were: William Smith READ, Amelia READ, Joel READ, James READ, Naomi READ, Josiah READ, Jesse READ, John Brimley READ, Tryphena READ, Ezra READ, Joseph Paul READ.


bullet Sarah BRIMLEY Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary JONES.


bullet Shadrick BRIMLEY Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary JONES.


bullet Thomas BRIMLEY was born on 23 Oct 1807 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH .


bulletWilliam Smith BRIMLEY was born on 30 Sep 1798 in Kempston, Bedfordshire, England. Parents: John BRIMLEY and Mary SMITH.


bullet Comfort BURLEIGH

Children were: George Washington TAYLOR .


bulletJean BURTON was born on 12 Jan 1701 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: Thomas BURTON and Margaret BURTON.

She was married to William LOCH on 8 Jan 1724 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Children were: Robert LOCH, Jean LOCH , Katherin LOCH, Elizabeth LOCH.


bullet Alexis CAMPION was born in 1853 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.


bulletCaroline CAMPION was born in 1848 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.


bullet Genevieve CAMPION was born in 1834 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.

She was married to Paul CHALIFOUX in 1857.


bullet Joseph CAMPION was born in 1796 in Alberta, Canada. He was also known as Compion, Campeau, Campule.

Children were: Magdeleine (Madeline) SAPIN (CAMPION), Nancy CAMPION, Genevieve CAMPION, William CAMPION, Louis CAMPION, Julie CAMPION, Caroline CAMPION, Mathilda CAMPION, Alexis CAMPION.


bulletJulie CAMPION was born in 1848 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.


bulletLouis CAMPION was born in 1845 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.


bullet Mathilda CAMPION was born in 1850. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.


bullet Nancy CAMPION was born in 1831 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.

She was married to Noel COURTEPATTE in 1848.


bulletWilliam CAMPION was born in 1838 in Alberta, Canada. Parents: Joseph CAMPION and Marie NIPISSING.

He was married to Philomene CHALIFOUX in 1857.


bullet Alexander CARMICHAEL was born on 22 Apr 1751 in Dalkeith, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet Andrew CARMICHAEL was born on 6 Mar 1755 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bulletChristian CARMICHAEL was born on 5 Nov 1747 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet Ebenezer CARMICHAEL was born on 4 Sep 1758 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet Henry CARMICHAEL was born on 1 May 1761 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet James CARMICHAEL was born on 6 Mar 1707 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and Christian HUME.

He was married to May Or Marion PEAT on 9 Sep 1734 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Children were: Margaret CARMICHAEL, James CARMICHAEL, John CARMICHAEL, Marjorie CARMICHAEL, Janet CARMICHAEL, Christian CARMICHAEL, William CARMICHAEL, Alexander CARMICHAEL, Andrew CARMICHAEL, Ebenezer CARMICHAEL, Henry CARMICHAEL.


bullet James CARMICHAEL was born on 4 Jan 1740 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet Janet CARMICHAEL was born on 31 Oct 1745 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.


bullet John CARMICHAEL was born on 21 Jun 1742 in Inveresk, Mid-Lothian, Scotland. Parents: James CARMICHAEL and May Or Marion PEAT.

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