Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

Monday, 19 March 2018

Annales Maritimes et Colonials - Annals of the Navy and Colonies of France



There is a series of volumes called "Annales Maritimes et Colonials" published in Paris for the French Minister of the Navy and the Colonies. 



Laws, ordinances and decrees to do with the navy and with France's colonies. Volume 1 starts at 1809. Canada was no longer under French rule by this time, but you get an idea of life in the navy. The islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, off the coast of Newfoundland, is a still a territory of France, among many others.

From description at Internet Archive:
"Issued in 2 parts: ptie. officielle (Lois et ordonnances); ptie. non officielle (Sciences et arts) Each part has separate t.-p. and paging. (Lois et ordonnances form 1 v. (in 1827 and 1830, 2 v.) annually; Sciences et arts form 1 v. annually, 1816-21, 2 v. annually, 1822-47) Beginning with July 1843 an additional section was added to the non-official part, entitled Revue coloniale (forming 1 v. in 1843, 2 v. annually, 1844-47) Revue coloniale was also issued separately.
Publication was suspended by ministerial decree in Dec. 1847. The official part was continued in Bulletin officiel de la marine. The section Sciences et arts was replaced by Nouvelles annales de la marine. The Section Revue coloniale was continued in the separately issued publication Revue coloniale, 2d series"

 If your ancestor was in the French navy, there are some sections you will find interesting... the makeup of a regiment, what their wages were, navy school, what clothing and equipment they were furnished with, what kind of food they ate, etc. There are names of officers that are stationed at the different colonies.



Uniform clothing, pg


You will also find death notices...




As with most lists of publications, at Internet Archive you can change from Date Archived to Date Published to get the years in order. 



Relevant Links

Annales Maritimes et Colonials






Monday, 22 August 2016

Ancestors in France


My readers must know by now that I love just googling around to see what pops up. Truth be told, that is how I get some of my inspiration for writing my blog posts. Sometimes I type in a name and an interesting topic will come up, so I try the same topic with another name and I get something completely different.  That's how it works for me.
Fluke!  Hahaha.

So I was trying out "Guimont(/d)", the ancestor of my children, and the name was mentioned in a book called Tourouvre et ses Souvenirs, 1912.



Tourouvre is where these Guimont ancestors immigrated from, so that piqued my interest right away. Near the bottom it states:
Antoine Le Fort, son of Jean and Francoise Creste, was baptized the 19 January 1624 at Eglise Saint-Aubin de Tourouvre, and he had for a godmother Mathurine Guimond. He was second to depart, but we lose track of him from that time.
Then trying out other areas in France where ancestors from my database were known to live, and using a variety of keywords, I came up with a few more publications. One of the searches took me to the BNF (Bibliothèque Nationale de France) where you may find more information and publications.

Maybe you will find some of your French ancestors in these pages.


Relevant Links



Dictionnaire historique et généalogique des famillesdu Poitou, France, Vol 1

Dictionnaire historique et généalogique des famillesdu Poitou, France, Vol 2

Dictionnaire historique et généalogique des famillesdu Poitou, France, Vol 3

Monographie sur la Commune de Coulimer, Orne, France 1900















Once in Canada check the Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Canadiennes.
Note: Always check the actual records against what is written in these books. 

Monday, 22 September 2014

Fashionably Early...


 

When I was a teenager I loved looking at all the fashions in the Eaton's Catalogue and daydreaming of what I would buy.  As a young adult my favourite was the yearly Neiman Marcus "Christmas Book" for the well-to-do. It has outrageous his and hers gifts, like his and hers airplanes, or a Russian white mink jacket that is reversible to white leather. Here you will see a list of some of their past gift ideas for the wealthy.

When I was a Girl Guide leader, I saw a notice that there was a fashion exhibit at the McCord Museum in Montreal and I thought the girls would enjoy seeing beautiful and elaborate the old gowns.  We all loved it! Living in the country some of the girls had never been to the city, so we made a full day of it.  Fashions in the streets were just as interesting as the ones in the museum!

 

I thought of this when I came across this old 1899 Eaton's Catalogue at Internet Archive. Not quite what I would have worn in the 1960's, but definitely something my ancestors would have dreamed of buying.


 
T. Eaton Co, Toronto, Canada 1899 - 1900


The establishment of a national postal service, faster ships and updated railway systems all helped in the starting of the mail-order business of the early 1800's. Great for our ancestors that lived far from the cities. You can also find catalogues for furniture, seeds, school supplies, machinery, appliances, tack, carriages, beds, gifts, etc... just about everything! 

Before there were catalogues, there were Fashion Books with plates (illustrations) of the latest designs that a seamstress or tailor could make for their clients. My great grand aunt Cora Porter was a seamstress that lived in peoples homes all winter to make clothes for the family.  She probably used designs from fashion books or catalogues that her client procured. She also made all the linens, and took care of any mending that needed doing. There is also a master tailor in my ancestry, my 2x great grandfather Andrew Tait, who started his apprenticeship at the age of 13 in Glasgow. After he married he moved his family to Lancashire and, once gaining a few years experience and becoming a Master, Andrew opened his own shop on the corner of Broad and Green Streets in Bath sometime before 1881. I can imagine Andrew showing men's style books to the clients that frequent his shop.


 
 
 
Search Internet Archives using keywords:  catalogue + what you are looking for. Also look for other catalogues of the same sort by clicking on the subject link, or the same company by clicking on the publisher or author link, on the opening page.

Following are links to some fashion books and catalogues, and at the end I added a couple for jewelry. The first 2 are links to a video of the permanent ladies fashion exhibit at the McCord Museum.  If you poke around there, they have some interesting photos, and they also have an exhibit entitled "Clothes Make the Man".


Relevant Links:

McCord Museum "Form and Fashion" video in Flash

McCord Museum "Form and Fashion" video in QuickTime

T. Eaton & Co - Spring and Summer Catalogue - Toronto 1894 

T. Eaton & Co Catalogue - several issues

Simpson's Catalogue, Fall & Winter 1918-19 - Toronto

Les Robes de Paul Poiret - Paris designer fashion book 1908

The London & Paris ladies' magazine of fashion 1866

The World of Fashion and Continental Feuilletons - London 1829, 1833, 1836

Fashion Book: novelties, costumes, mantles, millinery, etc - London 1874

English costume and fashion from the conquest to the regency (1720-1820) 1884

Corset waists and brassieres: H & W Co, New Jersey 1914

Fox & Kelly's fashion catalogue illustrated: fall & winter 1888-89, NY

Fall and Winter, 1890-91 Fashion Catalogue / H. O'Neill and Co, NY

Bloomingdale's Illustrated fashion catalogue - summer 1890.  NY

Spring & Summer fashion catalogue 1898 / H. O'Neill & Co, NY

Frear's Troy Cash Bazaar (Troy, NY) - Spring & Sumer 1894

Puritan Garments - Gordon Mackay - Toronto 1900 

The Silent Salesman - Gordon Mackay - Toronto 1900

The Style Book - Gordon Mackay - Toronto 1914

Catalogue of infant's outfits and misses' and children's muslin underwear 1895, NY

Royal Canadian rubber footwear : supreme style : illustrated catalogue 1906

Guiterman Bros - Summit clothing for outdoor wear -  St Paul, MN 1915

Joseph H Rowe, Catalogue of genuine Cape Ann oiled clothing: Mass 1892

Jordon Marsh, Boston - Fall and Winter 1893-94

Dress: a magazine or men illustrating the styles for fall and winter: 1910-11

Illustrated almanac of fashion:  Charles Stokes & Co 1863 (also uniforms)

Men's Style Book - Hart Schaffner & Marx , US: fall & winter, 1905
 
Makeovers from Men's Suits  1943

Styles for men, NY : a book issued to show authoritatively what is fashionable and correct for fall and winter 1907-'08

Godey's Lady's Book (several volumes) 

Costume Institute Fashion Plates (pick a year on the left)

Women's Fashion Game - McCord Museum of Montreal

Royal Tailors junior sample book - 1916

Origin and History of the Fashion Plate, Project Gutenberg


JEWELRY

Tiffany's Blue Book

Ryrie year book, 1922:  Henry Birks & Son

Peace year catalogue 1919-1920 - A. W Smith & Sons, Ontario







Wednesday, 4 June 2014

WW I - The Great War


Original post date: 5 Jun 2014







 Military Week – 4

I grew up listening to my Grampa, Herbert James Mavor, sing songs from WWI with my Mom, while my Granny played the piano. The only thing he ever said about the war was that the scar on his neck was from an enemy bullet. The rough talk he saved for his buddies at the Legion. They understood. His family were Salvation Army and before the war it was unheard of for Herbie to use foul language, drink or smoke.  When returned from the war he did all those things and had not much use for the church. I can’t imagine the horrific things he saw in Europe. Herbert saw action at the Second Battle of Ypres in 1915, the Somme in 1916, Vimy Ridge and Passchendaele in 1917, and the Pursuit to Mons in 1918.

Herbert had had some training with the cadet corps at his school in 1910, and also spent 1 year with the Canadian Army Service Corps, 6th Company, Montreal. At the start of WWI Herbert signed his attestation papers November 15, 1914 with the Black Watch, while his older brother Alexander had enlisted 2 weeks before on October 31, 1914. Herbert was transferred to the 42nd Battalion Royal Highlanders after training and he was shipped to England September 1915. On arrival the men were given 7 days leave.  Old Gramps (or I guess young Gramps at that time) met a girl and was late getting back to his unit, for which he was docked a day’s pay.

After leave they were shipped from Folkestone to Boulogne. On March 20th the Battalion marched to Poperinghe and were billeted in a convent. The next day they were taken by train to a point near Ypres, then marched to the trenches of the front lines. Up to March 25th, last day of their tour, they had 8 casualties. They received heavy shell fire that day, with 7 more casualties, then they marched back to Camp F. On April 4th his battalion marched through Ypres amid heavy shelling and suffered 4 casualties, going to the Zilleheke Dugout. The next day they moved from the Zilleheke Dugout to the front line trenches for 4 days before they were relieved and moved back to the Zilleheke Dugout.
 

Meanwhile, after experiencing heavy artillery fire and blowing snow at the Wulverghem trench, Alexander moved with the 4th Batallion to the Tea Farm, a trench near Ypres. It had been quiet on the balmy March evening of the 20th when, at relief change near 7 pm, the enemy fired 2 undetonated rifle grenades with cloth streamers into their trench.  Attached were post cards that read: “Thanks for your invitation we shall come but never without arms, we the Huns should be very glad to accompany you to Doberitz near Berlin, your cousin on the other side of the channel, Michael.” The next few days saw alternate heavy and light artillery fire and sniping. They then marched to the Reserve Billets at Dranoutre to rest up, and also to get inoculated against typhoid. They marched north, stopping here and there until April 9th when they relieved the 1st Battalion in the trenches at “The Bluff”. On April 10th the commander wrote in his diary: “Enemy very active and aggressive both in in sniping and artillery fire. The Huns are using a new form of trench mortar or serial torpedo which is very effective in blowing down parapets.”  That day Alexander was hit by a bullet that glanced off a periscope and hit him in the stomach.  They took him to the No 17 Casualty Clearing Station at the Remy Siding near Poperinghe, where he died the next day of his wounds, at the age of 24. Herbert was still at the Zilleheke Dugout on April 11th just a few kilometers down the road.



Alexander was buried at the Lijssenthoek Cemetery in Belgium. Herbert was hospitalized 3 times over the next 2 years, for gunshot wounds to the arm, shoulder and neck, and each time patched up and sent back to the trenches. As the war ended he was sent home on the vessel Carmania which docked at Halifax on December 30, 1918. Herbert was formally discharged in Montreal on March 17, 1919. Herbert was awarded a medal for bravery in the field, when he saved the life of a fallen soldier.
You can tell your ancestor’s story with the help of the war diaries, trench maps, and the soldier’s service records. Also go to the website of the Great Canadian War Project and search for your ancestors record.  If you register, you can upload photos and add information and stories.

For additional information about WWI (locations of hospitals, mapping, etc) and tremendous help in deciphering CEF service records I highly recommend the website The Regimental Rogue.


At Internet Archive search using keywords: roll of honour (or honor), roll of service, nominal roll, name of battalion or regiment, etc



Relevant Links:





Canada Veterans Death Cards WWI  (only those deaths reported to Veterans Affairs up to the 1960s. The collection does not include those who died overseas during the war.)


CEF 29th Infantry Battalion, Nominal Roll 1915 (search archive.org for your ancestor's battalion)

CEF 244th Infantry Battalion, Nominal Roll 1917





British WWI Service Records – most damaged by bombing



WW I Trench Maps - McMaster University
















A Nation's Chronicle: The Canada Gazette – database (search "military")














NOTE: Website authors doing updates to their sites may change their URLs. You can probably find it again by googling the subject.

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