Showing posts with label dupre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dupre. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 6, 2012

Gravestones 9 to 12 - Ridgewood Cemetery in Wellston Ohio

 
My great grandmother Calfernie (nee Braley) Fink. Also known as Granny or Grandma Fern. She's the original owner of my sewing machine and the reason it's named Fern.

 
Fern's parents: Cora (nee Gleason, daughter of Levi and California) and Ripley Braley, my great great grandparents on the Fink-Braley line. 

 
William and Minerva (nee Dupre) Fink, my great great grandparents. 

 
My great aunt Esther Jo, my grandpa Bill's older sister. Not a direct ancestor, but a favorite relative and probably the one that I got my obsession with genealogy from. 

All of these graves are in the Ridgewood Cemetery in Wellston Ohio. 

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Gravestone #4: Abraham Franklin Dupre and Minerva A Clark

 Abraham Franklin Dupre and his wife Minerva A (nee Clark), my third great grandparents on the Fink-Dupre line. Mount Tabor Cemetery, past his parents' obelisk.

Also buried in Mount Tabor are Minerva's parents, Jeptha Clark and Mary (nee Null) Clark, but we couldn't find their graves. We did find two small square markers inset in the ground that read "Clark". Our thoughts were that the gravestones had been destroyed and replaced with these so that the graves wouldn't be lost. 
 


Gravestone #3: Abraham Dupre and Mary Deckard

Entrance to Mount Tabor Cemetery. It's right down the road from Brush Cemetery, near a little church.

 Obelisk for Abraham Dupre and his wife Mary Deckard called Polly, my 4th great grandparents on the Fink-Dupre line. Mount Tabor Cemetery, Gallia County OH. Close to the center, to the left of the entrance. This is the Abraham that was seven years old when his family immigrated to America.

 Close up of the Dupre carving.

 Close up of Abraham's details

Close up of Mary's details



Gravestone #2 Richard Deckard and Hannah Eagle


Richard Deckard and his wife, Hannah (nee Eagle) Deckard, my 5th great grandparents on the Fink-Dupre line. They are buried in Brush Cemetery in Gallia County, Ohio. If I remember rightly, they're over to the left side, surrounded by a bunch of other Deckard graves.
 
Close up of the grave.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

The Dupre Family


My maternal grandfather William Fink was the son of Homer Dupre Fink. Homer was the son of Minerva Jane Dupre, who was the daughter of Abraham Francis Dupre and Minerva Alice Clark.
Abraham Francis Dupre was born Sept 1834 in Huntington Ohio and married Minerva on the 20th of Sept 1855 in Gallia Co Ohio. He died in 1912 and was buried at Mount Tabor Cemetery in Huntington Twp Gallia Co. OH. He was the son of Abraham Dupre and Polly Deckard.
Abraham Dupre was born around 1810/11 on the Isle of Jersey in the Channel Islands. He married Polly on December 5, 1833 in Vinton, Gallia Co. OH and died on September 25, 1894 in Sciotoville, Gallia Co. OH. He's also buried at Mount Tabor Cemetery. The son of Abraham Dupre and Marie DuMaresq, he was seven years old when his family immigrated to America.
Abraham Dupre was born May 5 1774, married in 1808 and died March 14, 1869. He was the son of Abraham Dupre and Jane Lacouter. Marie DuMaresq was born June 5 1787 and died July 12 1852. They had eleven children: Abraham, Mary, Jane, Mancy, Eliza, Philip, Susan, Elizabeth, Ellen, Rufus, and one that died young. When Jane, their third child, was just four days old, they left Jersey for America. The crossing took nine weeks.
Abraham Dupre was the son of Philip Dupre, who was the son of Charles Dupre. Around 1720, Charles and his family left France for the Isle of Jersey. He owned a farm in France, but the only property his family could take with them was what they could carry because of the persecution of Protestants in France. They traveled through the countryside by night and hid in the woods during the day until they reached the Channel, where they found a boat. The boat was chained to a rock, but they broke the chain and rowed to the Isle of Jersey.
My assumption is that the Dupres were French Huguenots. My great aunt Esther Josephine always said that they were the only family line with naturalization papers because everyone else was already here when the United States became a country.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

New Information (?) and other news

My grandmother is moving to Florida soon with her son and so has been cleaning out her home. This past weekend, she passed yet another bag to me full of sewing things and other random items, including some genealogy information. I'll have to double check, but I believe that some of the information she gave me is information that I don't currently have in my research, on the Dupre and the Curtis lines.

She also gave me a huge, blank family tree. It's meant to be filled in to the great grandparent level and has lots of blanks for siblings and cousins. I'm going to see if I can alter it to take it out farther than my great grandparents. The alteration was Mama's idea.

I can't wait to start filling it in. If I'd had an acid free pen with me, I would've started while at my parents' over the weekend.