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Our Family Genealogy Pages

Notes


Matches 701 to 800 of 1,973

      «Prev «1 ... 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 ... 20» Next»

 #   Notes   Linked to 
701 Died in Infancy Destrehan, Etienne (I1203)
 
702 Died in Infancy Stewart, infant (I1910)
 
703 Died in infancy Stewart, Mary Elizabeth Hermania (I1127)
 
704 Died in infancy. Borden, Hannah (I4160)
 
705 Died in infancy. Heale, daughter (I4365)
 
706 Died in infancy. Heale, son (I4358)
 
707 Died in infancy. Heale, son (I4359)
 
708 Died in middle of 1999 on table from brain bleed, broken vein. Carver, Edwin Norman (I4708)
 
709 Died in New Orleans but her body was transported by steamboat to St. Charles Parish Bernoudy, Melanie Alexandrine (I2095)
 
710 Died in Port-au-Prince in his house on the Place d'Armes on 13 Sep 1793 at the age of 76. Durand de St. Romes, Charles (I1817)
 
711 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mount Pelée in the city of Saint Pierre, Martinique de Jaham, Louis (I3208)
 
712 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mount Pelée that destroyed the city of Saint Pierre, Martinique de Jaham, Gabrielle (I3207)
 
713 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mount Pelée that destroyed the city of Saint Pierre, Martinique. de Jaham, Aline (I3203)
 
714 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mount Pelée, which destroyed the city of Saint Pierre, Martinique. de Jaham, Ferdinand (I3206)
 
715 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mount Pelée on 8 May 1902 in St. Pierre, Martinique. de Jaham, Henri (I3205)
 
716 Died in the calamity of the eruption of Mt. Peleé in 1902.

Edgard de Jaham, fils de Gaston de Jaham, morte à la catastrophe de 8 Mai 1902 avec sa femme, Gabrielle de Laguigneraye et cinq enfants, a épousé Yvonne Littée Ils viennent d’avoir un fils Yves. (Gaston était le fils de l’oncle Ferdinand)  
de Jaham, Marie Louis Gaston (I3197)
 
717 Died in the catastrophe of 8 May 1902. de Jaham, Louise (I3547)
 
718 Died in the catastrophe of the 1902 Earthquake in St. Pierre, Martinique Cottrell, Joseph Michel (I1503)
 
719 Died of a heart attack on the way to the doctor. Brisolara, Marjorie (I4715)
 
720 Died of Cancer in the esophagus and the artery in his neck. Johnson, Milton Gustave (I1681)
 
721 Died of Cerebrel Hemmorage Stewart, Alcée William (Jr.) (I1829)
 
722 Died of Infantile Debility Harvey infant (I135)
 
723 Died on 4 Jun 1808 in Philadelphia, body transferred to New Orleans and buried interred on 4 Aug 1808. Jones, Maria Ann (I2699)
 
724 Died on Last Island in Louisiana from a hurricane in 1856 that wiped out everything on the island. Stewart, Seymour Alexander (I1126)
 
725 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living (I2509)
 
726 Died shortly after birth. Harvey, Gerald (I746)
 
727 Died shortly after the birth of their only child, Catherine Mason, who was born 21 Jun 1707. Waugh, Elizabeth (I7924)
 
728 Died Suddenly Fazende, Louis Cyrille (I1527)
 
729 Died testate 1748 Mason, French (I7871)
 
730 Died unmarried (Elle mourut sans alliance). d'Orange, Geneviève (I7418)
 
731 Died Unmarried. Harvey, Magdaline Louise (I1764)
 
732 died unmarried; lived at the expense of his brother, Jean Noel d'Estrehan Destrehan de Beaupré, Jean Baptiste Louis (I1951)
 
733 Died without issue. Stewart, Sylvester Chouteau (I100)
 
734 Died without issue. Downman, Robert (I7949)
 
735 Died without issue. Mason, Nicolas (I7870)
 
736 Died without issue. Mason, Francis (I8008)
 
737 Died young Fowke, Adam (I7881)
 
738 died young. de Montaigne, Simon Alembert (I5942)
 
739 Died young. Peyton, William (I7387)
 
740 Died young.  Peyton, Margaret (I7391)
 
741 died young. Ball, Richard (I8189)
 
742 Died young. Washington, Butler (I8197)
 
743 died young; unmarried. Warner, George (I8097)
 
744 died young; unmarried. Warner, Robert (I8098)
 
745 Died, On Sunday night, at 9 o'clock, after a severe illness, Madem J. B. Giquel, (born Marie Elizabeth de St. Romes.)

--Weekly Picayune (New Orleans, Louisiana) August 15, 1842 
Durand de St. Romes, Elizabeth Marie (I1152)
 
746 died, unmarried. Warner, Augustine III (I8096)
 
747 Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Records states: Marie Esther Bernard (Louis Bernard, decd. and Eulalie BLANCHARD) m. 5 June 1856 Andre LEBLANC (Etienne LeBlanc and Oside LEBLANC, both decd.) wit. Nathan Webster; Aristide LeBlanc; J. M. Bourg; Chs. A. Besse; Desire LeBlanc; J. Raton; Pierre Blanchard; Alfred Tete; P. Rizan (SEZ-7, 114)

I'm not sure if this is the proper child of Felix Louis Bernard and Nathalie Blanchard so this relation may be incorrect. 
Bernard du Montier, Marie Esther (I2367)
 
748 Diocese of Baton Rouge Sacramental Records
Volume 1A, page 160: Francois DELATTE (Louis & Catherine STEGER) (Implying a male child)
Volume 1B, page 53: Françoise Delattre (Louis Delattre and Catherine STEIGER) (Implying a female child)
Based on other records, assumption is the latter is correct. 
Delatre, Françoise (I7774)
 
749 Diocese of Baton Rouge Sacramental Records, Volume 1b page 53 lists the name as Françoise Delattre, the exact same birth and baptismal dates as listed in Volume 1, page 160 for François Delatte. I believe this to be an error since all other records purport this person to be male. Delatre, François Martin (I3397)
 
750 Diocese of Baton Rouge Sacramental Records, Volume 3, page 66, lists Celina (J.B. and Juana DELATE of Pointe Coupee) married 20 May 1804 Luis Santiago VIALES (Luis and Cathalina FAVRE of Herauet, France) witnesses: Don Antonio Grass; Juan Batista Bara; Luis Delate Note: Child Luis Theophilo, age 3 yrs. presented at this marriage (SJO-3, 40).

Could Celina be a different child or one of the others remarrying? 
Family (F1147)
 
751 Disappeared from New York City in 1937 Roger, Horace Harvey (I759)
 
752 Discrepancy in month (Feb/Sep) between the two sources. Borden, Richard (I4169)
 
753 Disinterred on 11 Nov 1799 and ensepulchred in St. Louis Cathedral:
"By order of His Catholic Majesty, el Senor Don Carlos IV (whom may God preserve) and at the solicitation of the Most Illustrious Senor Diocesan Don Luis Penalver y Cardenas, most worthy first bishop of this province of Louisiana and the Floridas, there was disinterred from the common cemetery of the Faithful, the body of the distinguished benefactor of this Holy Cathedral Church of New Orleans, Don Andres Almonester y Roxas, founder of the three churches in said city; whose very pious works are not only useful to religion but also to humanity.
"He was a native of Mayrena de Alcor, province of Andalusia in Spain, in the Archbishopic of Seville; he died on the twenty-fifth of April of last year, ninety eight, and today, the eleventh of November, ninety-nine, in the presence of the aforesaid Most Illustrious Prelate, and all his clergy, there was given honorable sepulture with all possible funeral pomp to the revered remains of the aforementioned deceased; which are buried at the foot of the marble step of the altar of the Most Blessed Virgin of the Rosary of this Holy Cathedral Church."
Source 
Almonester y Roxas, Andres (I5692)
 
754 dispense de consanguinité et affinité du second degré accordé par le Pape Roy Courpon veuve de Mathieu Pouquet sieur de Puythery, écuyer capitaine dans le régiment de la Tour Dupin Ils déclarent et reconnaissent une fille de 18 mois, née le 27 11 1761 "ils le font en s'humiliant profondément devant Dieu et devant l'église de tout ce qu'il y a de leur part dans la naissance de cet enfant contraire à la loi divine et au bon ordre de la société . . . " Family (F2644)
 
755 dit Fernand Jaham de Saint-Frémont, Ferdinand (I1402)
 
756 dit L'Achoncher Favre d'Aunoy, Nicolas Charles (I2205)
 
757 dit Monlouis Hardy, Jean Louis (I5967)
 
758 dit Monlouis Hardy, Louis (I5966)
 
759 dit Napoléon  Louveau de La Guigneraye, Louis Alexis (I6261)
 
760 dit Recontre Molaison, Gabriel (I4177)
 
761 dit Saint Louis Leconte Marsilly, Jean François (I5619)
 
762 dit Saint-Ange Sinson de Sainville, Jean François Marie (I3226)
 
763 dit Saint-Michel Bénéteau Desmornières, alias Bénéteau La Prairie, Michel (I6039)
 
764 dit Sainte-Marie Duval La Branche, Bernard (I5922)
 
765 dite Lise Ruire, Marie Jeanne Élisabeth (I7062)
 
766 dite Catherine Renée Le Curieux, Catherine (I6229)
 
767 dite Irma Saulger de Saint Maurice, Marie Reine Catherine (I3227)
 
768 dite Marguerite Caroline Lalung Saint-Hélène, Marguerite (I6251)
 
769 dite Marie Jeanne Bénéteau La Prairie, Marie Luce (I5617)
 
770 dite Marie Magdeleine Rose Émilie Laguarigue de Survilliers, Marie Magdeleine (I5984)
 
771 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family (F339)
 
772 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family (F3)
 
773 Doc. # None
Page #55380-81-82

Year 1758 November 4th
3 pages

Procuration.

Before royal notary and in presence of witnesses Sieur Antoine Fazende, son of the late Sieur Jacques Fazende, former Councillor and the late Dame Helene de Moriere, about to leave the colony for (blank) in the service fo the king, grants a procuration to his eldest brother Sieur Gabriel Fazende to whom he gives power and authority to manage and administer all his affairs, pay all debts, colelct all monies due him, and to represent him in the inventory and succession of his late father and monther.

Above procuration to stand until revocation of same.

Witnesses: Fazende, Songy, Chamtalou, Tomassin, Notary 
de Morière, Hélène (I1559)
 
774 Docteur en médecine de la Faculté de Paris de Massias de Bonne, Dr. Louis Marie (I1485)
 
775 Docteur en Médecine. Deville, Dr. Joseph (I7545)
 
776 Document #1741 in box 5: Jean Baptiste Honore Destrehan called de Beaupre
Died June 5, 1775, at St. Louis Parochial and after his death there was no inventory of his property, left sole heirs his daughter, who was not even baptized as proposed name Marie Elizabeth Faustina Adelaid Destrehan, daughter of this union with Marie Felicite de St. Maxent.
Deceased Husband of Marie Felicite de St. Maxent. 
Family (F374)
 
777 Document from the Register of Baptism

Parish of Fort St. Pierre

Act of Baptism of Josephine Catherine, daughter of George Louis Cottrell, a merchant of the city, and Lady Emilie Francoise Victoire de Luppe. She had as godfather Joseph Cottrell, her grandfather, and as godmother, Lady Andrea Claire Catherine Roberine Adel Locquet de Tuilhry, widow de Luppe, her grandmother. And they signed this document as well as the father and the uncle. They all signed the registrar. Cottrell, Pocquet, de Luppe, Cottrell, Cottrell, and the parish priest.

All was in conformity and so the parish priest of Fort St. Pierre, Isle of Martinique, 3 Feb, 1830  
Cottrell, Marie Joséphine Caroline (I1356)
 
778 Domiciliés aux États-Unis d'Amérique. Lejeune de Clermont, Marie Élie Anne Joseph (I6743)
 
779 Dominique Le Pelletier Dugant, alias Le Pelletier Darragon Le Pelletier d'Arragon, Dominique (I4867)
 
780 Don Juan Antonio Gayarré distinguished himself second only to his brilliant commander-in-chief, Galvez, in the glorious little campaign against the English in 1779, which resulted in the conquest of Manchac, Baton Rouge, Natchez, Mobile and Pensacola, or the whole English Province of West Florida. In the distribution of honors and rewards that followed the successful termination of the war, Don Juan Antonio Gayarré was appointed Contador Real of the rich post of Acapulco. He died there and his wife returned to her birthplace, bringing her three sons with her. Gayarré, Juan Antonio (I4456)
 
781 dorma guillance de le do il sa femme en 1499 Family (F1737)
 
782 DOROTHY (DOLLY) MARIE FARNET STAKELUM died quietly at home surrounded by family and friends on December 29, 2012. A native of New Orleans, she was born July 29, 1925 and grew up on LePage Street and Esplanade Avenue. Dolly was the eldest daughter of Marcel Joseph, Sr. and Dorothy Louise Stewart Farnet. She is survived by four siblings including Corinne (Jimmy) Villarrubia, Yvette (Henry) Gonzales, Marcel (Madeleine) Farnet, Jr., and Stewart (Aimee) Farnet.
She met the love of her life Patrick Paul Stakelum (deceased) while working as an Assistant Editor for Louisiana Power and Light Company and they married and had seven children. Children and spouses include Sr. Kathleen Stakelum, MSC, Mitch and Peggy Stakelum Daniels (deceased), Patrick Joseph Stakelum, Richard Allen and Jody Andrews Stakelum, Rev. Ron and Mary Ann Stakelum Langford, Sonny and Rita Stakelum Schaubhut, and Kevin Joseph and Deborah Bailey Stakelum. She loved her seven grandchildren: Derek Stakelum, Zach and Becca Schaubhut, Anna Marie Langford (Joshua) Cole, and Brigid, Edward, and Caelan Stakelum.
An avid artist, Dolly?s paintings hang in some of the finest homes, restaurants, and offices in the New Orleans area. She was a charter member of the Westbank Art Guild, and was an active member of the New Orleans Art Association, Artina, Louisiana Watercolor Society and the Westbank Plein Aire Group. She was awarded the Mildred Lewis Award from the Westbank Art Guild for promoting the Arts. She also taught art to elementary students in grades one through eighth at Arden Cahill Academy for nineteen years.
A devout Catholic, Dolly was an active member of St. Julian Eymard Parish and more recently Holy Spirit Parish. She was a member of the Catholic Daughters of the Americas and the Third Order of Mary. The Archdiocese of New Orleans awarded Dolly and her husband Pat the Order of St. Louis IX Medallion for outstanding service to the Archdiocese.
Dolly enjoyed taking classes with the People?s Program at Holy Spirit Parish.
The family extends much gratitude to Elysia Recasner and other sitters from the ?Always There Sitting Services?. Elysia was a vigilant caretaker to Dolly in her recent illness. Thanks also to Eagan Hospice for making it possible for the family to fulfill Dolly?s wish to be home for Christmas surrounded by her family.  
Farnet, Dorothy Marie (I228)
 
783 Dr. Dudley Marcus Stewart, Jr. passed away Sunday, December 13, 2009 in New Orleans, Louisiana after a lengthy battle with Lymphoma. He was 68 years old. He was born on December 12, 1941 in Toledo, Ohio to Mary Cabrera Stewart and Dudley Marcus Stewart, Sr.

Dr. Stewart earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Springhill College, Mobile, AL in 1963 and went on to receive his Doctorate of Medicine from the University of Mississippi School of Medicine in Jackson, MS in 1967. He completed his internship at St. Joseph's Hospital in Houston, TX in 1967-68. And in 1970 his residency at Tulane University School of Medicine in the department of Psychiatry and Neurology, where he also was awarded a Fellowship at Tulane University Division of Post Graduate Education for Psychoanalytic Training from 1970-1980. From 1971-1973 he served in the U.S. Army as a Major in the U.S. Medical Corps and completed his military duty at Fort Polk, LA as the Chief of the Department of Psychiatry and Neurology.

As a board certified psychiatrist, Dr. Stewart was committed to improving the mental health of the patients he treated over his 40 years in private practice in New Orleans. In recognition of his efforts, his colleagues in the Louisiana Psychiatric Medical Association voted him the "Psychiatrist of the Year" and awarded him the Edward H. Knight MD Lifetime Achievement Award. He was elected to the Hall of Fame of the LA Psychiatric Association. He was also awarded the Ronald A. Shellow Award from the American Psychiatric Association and the Psychiatric Leadership Award. He was the first Psychiatrist to be elected as President of the Orleans Parish Medical Society, and went on to be elected to the office of President of the Louisiana State Medical Society. He served as a Delegate to the American Medical Association House until his election to the Council on Ethics and Judicial Affairs in 2003, a position he held until his death. Also at the time of his death he served in the Assembly of the American Psychiatric Association.
Throughout his life Dr. Stewart had a passion for fishing, enjoying the peace of the water and the thrill of the catch with friends and family. He relished a challenge and used his talents to foster justice wherever he could.

Dr. Stewart is survived by his devoted wife, Caroll Pray Stewart, who he married in 1996, along with his two loving daughters, Melora Stewart Parish and her husband Joshua Parish of Frederick, MD; and Katherine Stewart Nicholson and her husband James Nicholson of San Francisco, CA. He is also survived by his stepson Addison Thompson and his wife Tracy Thompson of New Orleans, LA. He has four grandchildren: Logan Parish, Evelyn Parish, Sophie Nicholson and Antonia Thompson.

Above all, he will be remembered for his impish smile and quick wit, as a man who could be counted on to state the truth, and for his unwavering dedication to be exactly who he was.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend the Funeral Service at LAKE LAWN METAIRIE FUNERAL HOME CHAPEL, 5100 Pontchartrain Blvd. at 11:00 AM. on Friday, December 18, 2009. Interment will follow at Lake Lawn Cemetery.
Online Obituary 
Stewart, Dudley Marcus Jr (I183)
 
784 Dr. Floyd Stewart, formerly connected professionally with the United States army and navy for several years, is now engaged in the private practice of medicine in St. Louis, making a specialty of genito-urinary diseases. A native of Georgia, he was born at Thomaston, October 20, 1873, a son of the late Alcee W. Stewart, who was born in Louisiana and was of Scotch descent. His grandfather was Samuel Stewart, who was born in County Down, Ireland, and was a lineal descendant of the family of Stewart that formerly reigned in Scotland and England. Samuel Stewart came to America in 1816. He was an architect by profession and was married in New Orleans in 1833, continuing a resident of this country until his death, which occurred in 1868. His wife bore the maiden name of Marguerite Nisida Giquel and was a daughter of J. B. F. and Elizabeth (de St. Romes) Giquel, the latter's father being Colonel de St. Romes, who was engineer in chief of the French colonies of the West Indies and was made chevalier of the Order of St. Louis in 1755 by order of Louis XV.

Alcee W. Stewart, son of Samuel Stewart and father of Dr. Floyd Stewart, was reared and educated in New Orleans and at St. Timothy's Hall, Catonsville, near Baltimore, Maryland, and was valedictorian of his class in 1858. Prior to the Civil war he was a lieutenant in the Louisiana Militia, resigning to become active with the Confederacy as a private. He was afterward made second lieutenant and finally first lieutenant in the Twentieth Louisiana Regiment. After the war he was a commission merchant in New Orleans but moved to St. Louis in 1873 and dealt In naval stores. He was a democrat in his political views and an Episcopalian in religious faith. He married Floyd Elizabeth Greene, a native of Georgia and a representative of an old family of both Virginia and Georgia, descended through the maternal line from the Stewart and Floyd families of England and Wales. The death of Mrs. Stewart occurred in St. Louis in 1892, when she was in her forty-seventh year, and Alcee W. Stewart passed away May 2, 1917, at the age of seventy-five years and five months. They were the parents of four sons and a daughter, including Dr. Floyd Stewart, who was their fourth child.

In the maternal line Dr. Stewart is descended from an old southern family. His mother was the daughter of Judge James W. Greene, of the superior court of Georgia. and his wife, Sarah Evelyn Greene, who was the daughter of Raleigh and Elizabeth (Floyd) Greene, the latter a daughter of Colonel John B. and Anne (Stewart) Floyd of Georgia. The wife of Colonel John B. Floyd was a sister of General John Stewart, who commanded the army of Georgia in 1813. Judge James W. Greene, the maternal grandfather of Dr. Stewart of this review, was the son of Thomas Bass and Patience Clark (Wyche) Greene and a grandson of James Greene, who was a soldier of the Revolutionary war.

Dr. Floyd Stewart was educated in private and public schools of St. Louis, in the University of the South at Sewanee, Tennessee, and in Washington University, In which he completed his professional course, winning his M. D. degree April 25, 1896. Following his graduation he served in the Charity Hospital at New Orleans for two years and afterward spent a similar period in the New Orleans Polyclinic. He later joined the Louisiana Naval Reserves, with which he served for a year and then became connected with the United States army as a surgeon with the rank of major, serving in the latter connection for more than a year In Cuba during the Spanish-American war, being at various military points on the island. In 1900 he returned to St. Louis, where he entered upon general private practice but gives special attention to genito-urinary diseases and in the membership list of the American Medical Association is classified as a urologist. He belongs to the St. Louis Medical Society, the Missouri State Medical Association, the American Medical Association and the American Urological Association, also to the organization known as United States Military Surgeons. He has won prom. inence and distinction in the educational Held, having formerly been professor of medicine in the American Medical College, professor of urology in the National University and professor in the dermatological department of Washington University. At one time he was surgeon general of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and he is well known as a contributor to medical journals, having written many articles of recognized value upon professional questions and problems.

On the 25th of July, 1898, in New Orleans, Dr. Stewart was married to Miss Ada May Rowley, a native of the Crescent City and a daughter of Walter Livingston and Catherine Ann (Mortee) Rowley, both now deceased. Her father, who was born in New York in 1834 and died in New Orleans in 1891, was a son of Rufus and Charlotte (Stockman) Rowley and was a grandson of Richmond Rowley, who lived at Richmond, Massachusetts, near Pittsfield, the place being named in his honor. The mother of Walter L. Rowley was a daughter of Dr. Stockman, of Utica, New York, and Caroline (Richie) Stockman, whose father was an Episcopal minister of Philadelphia. Mrs. Stewart's mother, who in her maidenhood was Catherine Ann Mortee, was born in 1841 and died in 1916. She was the daughter of William P. and Judith Catherine (Penn) Mortee, of Patrick County, Virginia. Her grandmother was Sarah Gordon, of Richmond, Virginia, who became the wife of George Penn, the son of John Penn, one of the signers of the Declaration of Independence and related to the distinguished Penn family of Pennsylvania. An uncle, Alexander Gordon Penn, of Patrick county, Virginia, was a prominent congressman, serving in the national halls of legislation in 1851 and again in 1853.

Dr. and Mrs. Stewart have had three children: Seymour Floyd, Catherine Penn and one who died in infancy. The family resides at No. 5266 Washington boulevard in St. Louis. During the World war Dr. Stewart served on the medical examining board, also in connection with volunteer medical service and was actively identified with Red Cross and other interests that had to do with the successful prosecution of the war. He belongs to the Washington University Alumni Association, is a member of Missouri Lodge, No. 1, A. F. & A. M., and is a communicant of St. George's Episcopal church, while his political endorsement is given to the democratic party. Thoroughness and earnestness characterize him in every relation of life. He is loyal to any cause which he espouses and feels that he is responsible for the wise use of his time, talents and opportunities, being particularly conscientious in the performance of all of his professional duties.

This article originally found at Access Genealogy

Centennial History of Missouri 
Stewart, Dr. Floyd (I1873)
 
785 Dr. Thomas, 3, born 1600, at Linkenholt, was admitted scholar at New College, Oxford, December 10, 1624; Fellow January 15, 1626; L.L. D. 1638; Principal of Magdalen Hall, Oxford, 1643. In 1642 he volunteered in the King's Army, and upon the overthrow of Charles he went to France and became a Catholic Priest, an din 1659 published in Paris a work in defense of Catholicism. Returned to England upon the Restoration, and d. 1669. Reade, Dr. Thomas (I8150)
 
786 Dropped the apostrophe and the H in his name, writing it Derbigny after he settled in New Orleans. Bourguignon d'Herbigny, Pierre Auguste Charles (I5656)
 
787 Drowned Stewart, John (I1145)
 
788 Drowned in Lake Pontchartrain McIntyre, Lawrence H. III (I5312)
 
789 Drowned in the Potomac River, 5 Mar 1735/6 Mason, Colonel George III (I7869)
 
790 dsp (died single person), no issue. Mason, Francis (I7927)
 
791 dsp (died single person); no issue. Mason, Thomas (I7928)
 
792 du Chastel de Bruillac du Chastel de Parcary, Louis (I7445)
 
793 Duchastel de Parcary du Chastel de Parcary, Louis (I7445)
 
794 Early in young manhood, Nicholas Noel lost his right hand. On December 31, 1831, he was working in his sugar house. He was dressed in a flowing cabeau, a type of long cape with wide sleeves worn those days.. The sleeve of the cape caught in a piece of machinery, dragging his hand and arm. Seeing the danger of being pulled into the machine, he called to a workman nearby who had a hatched to chop his hand off. It was a tragedy he later adjusted his life to. After that he always signed his name: "Destrehan, Maimed." Destrehan, Nicholas Noël Theodule (I1101)
 
795 Earned the enmity of Gov. Kerlerec for aiding the Commissaire de Rochemore. Expelled from the colony by the irate Gov. who declared that he was too wealthy and dangerous a man to remain in LA.

The true cause, was said to be that he supported Rochemore, the French Government Indtendant, who was close friend of Destrehan. Further study indicates that he came into conflict with Gov. Kerlerec over a French edict of March, 1724 that had been extended to LA, declaring Jews the enemies of the christian name who should not be allowed to reside in LA. If they stayed in spite of the edict, their goods and persons should be confiscated.

A Jew from Jamaica, Diaz Anna came to New Orleans on a trading mission and Rochemore had the vessel and cargo seized in keeping with the edict. Kerlerec sent soldiers to drive away the guard and restored the property to Anna. He also had Belot, Rochemore's secretary, and Marigny de Mandeville, Destrehan, de Lahoupe, Bossu and other officers arrestedand, within days, shipped them to France under the watch of Grandmaison.

As the vessel approached the coast of France, she was driven by a storm on that of Spain and entered the port of St. Sebastian. Grandmaison, according to Kerlerec's instructions, went to deposit the dispatches in the hands of the consul of France. Belot and his companions in misfortune accompanied the messenger to the consulate. The dispatches being delivered were placed on a table, from which it is supposed they were purloined by one of the consul's visitors, while he was attending on the others, whose attention had been drawn to some fine engravings on the waifs of the apartment.

On their arrival in Paris, Belot and his associates filled the court with their complaints of Kerlerec's arbitrary proceedings. He was universally blamed, dismissed, returned to France and jailed. The rest of the party returned to the Colony and resumed their lucrative occupation.

 
Destrehan de Beaupré, Jean Baptiste Honoré (I1107)
 
796 East Feliciana and West Feliciana Parishes are named after her. de St. Maxent, Marie Felicité (I1189)
 
797 Ecclesiastical Burial by Friar Joaquin de Portillo, St. Louis Cathedral de St. Maxent, Gilbert Antoine (I1948)
 
798 écuyer Dubuc de Bellefonds, Balthazar (I7736)
 
799 Écuyer, lieutenant au régiment du Dauphin qu'il quitta pour entrer dans les gens d'armes de la garde et alla habiter ensuite la Martinique. Parti pour cette île sur le même navire que son frère Marc Yves François. Capitaine d'infanterie de milice à Saint-Pierre des Hayes, alias des Hayes de Bonneval, Charles Antoine (I6238)
 
800 écuyer, passé à la Martinique vers 1728, lieutenant de juge à Trinité, C. C. S. Martinique Rampont, alias Rampont d'Haudremont, Charles (I7150)
 

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