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Bouchers - the Huguenot connec - Genealogy. com Bouchers - the Huguenot connection By Bernard Boucher July 25, 2004 at 11:43:12 Boucher is a Huguenot name, but not every Boucher is of Huguenot descent I am a member of the Huguenot Society who is researching my family's Huguenot connections in London and Worcester (UK,)as well as Australia, and would like to share information already obtained with others interested in the search
MAZE, MASE: Huguenot Surnames - Genealogy. com MAZE, MASE: Huguenot Surnames in London Church Records By Craig Horlacher January 24, 2004 at 06:16:24 Regarding the cultural origin of the MAZE, MASE surnames, the readers may be interested in the following information summarized from Andrea Vogel's posting to the RootsWeb Huguenot-Walloons-Europe Board (HWE Archives, 19 Sept 2001) MAZE, MASE, MASSE, MAY occur in the surname list extracted
Huguenot Hypothesis:Legend of - Genealogy. com Huguenot Hypothesis:Legend of Abram Saye By Hugh Seay, Jr October 21, 1999 at 10:28:57 The Huguenot Hypothesis and the Legend of theHuguenot Immigrant Abraham Saye I would like to clarify and amplify Sandy Seay's recent discussion of the Huguenot hypothesis by stating at the outset that we must distinguish between two kinds of published information; first, those accounts in which Seay is
Huguenot origins of Van Duyne - Genealogy. com Huguenot origins of Van Duyne By genealogy com user December 05, 1999 at 05:40:24 My family tradition claims that the Van Duynes were originally Huguenots in France, and that their name was originally “de Duyne” (or some variant) after the French town of Duyne (or such)where they resided It claims they fled to the Netherlands to escape persecution, and subsequently changed the name to Van
Huguenot origin of Hutto? S - Genealogy. com Huguenot origin of "Hutto"? Some evidence By David Agricola June 07, 2004 at 01:14:18 Origins of the Hutto Family The earliest settlers of Orangeburg were Germans from the Lower Palatinate (Pfalz), and Swiss from several mountain cantons When the family first arrived here the family name was spelled “Otto” as seen in the early entries in the Book of Record kept by the two Reverends
Jean Gaston, The Huguenot - Genealogy. com Jean Gaston, "The Huguenot" By genealogy com user February 08, 2001 at 12:08:48 The General Record Office of Scotland [GROS] has no documentation of a 17th-century Jean or John Gaston with three sons named John, William and Alexander There is a Johne Gaustoune who married Jeane Wackinshaw in 1655, but this seems a bit late for "our" Jean Additionally, no children of the marriage are listed
Descendants of Abraham LeSueur, Huguenot - Genealogy. com Gary Schlager 1 07 01 The full title of this book is Descendants of Abraham LeSueur, the Huguenot:Lasher-Lasure-Lesure-Lazear-Leasure-Leisure-LeSueur and Allied Families of America It was written by Thelma Leasure Marshall and published in 1991 by Licinis Printers in Great Falls, MT It is OUT-OF-PRINT Supposedly, Thelma is working on a second edition, but she does not have a computer, so no
French Protestant (Huguenot) O - Genealogy. com A Huguenot named Plymale was among the first French settlers to come to America in the year 1625 and landed in Virginia A printed article suggests that the Plymale brothers who emigrated to the new world were from Bretagne or the area around Lyons, France The actual name may have been PLY, and they were listed as “male” (gender) on the ship
Pettit - Huguenot (Fr. Protest - Genealogy. com This is an archival collection of manuscript materials from early French Huguenot, Dutch, English and German families of New Paltz and Ulster County (1660-present)