Difference between revisions of "Alexandre Gagnon (1865)"

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|name=Alexandre Gagnon
 
|name=Alexandre Gagnon
 
|image=Aleck.jpg
 
|image=Aleck.jpg
|nationality=
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|nationality=[[File:Usflag.png]] American
 
|born=December 28, 1865<br>Frenchville, Maine
 
|born=December 28, 1865<br>Frenchville, Maine
 
|died=November 20, 1933<br>Lewiston, Maine
 
|died=November 20, 1933<br>Lewiston, Maine

Revision as of 21:30, 12 April 2016

Alexandre Gagnon
Nationality: Usflag.png American
Born: December 28, 1865
Frenchville, Maine
Died: November 20, 1933
Lewiston, Maine
Father: Alexandre Gagnon
Mother: Marie Elise (Emma) Gagnon
Spouse: Sophia Labbé
Married: September 23, 1889
Fort Kent, Maine
Children: Onesime Gagnon
Odelie Gagnon
Adelard Gagnon
Johnny Gagnon
Dolore Gagnon
Religion: Roman Catholic
Residence: Frenchville, Maine
Wallagrass, Maine
Lewiston, Maine
Profession: Farmer


Overview

Alexandre Gagnon married Sophie Labbe on September 23, 1889 in Fort Kent. Sophie was born in Wallagrass, Maine, on April 1, 1867, the daughter of Registre and Flora Guimond Labbee. Alexandre and Sophie had the following children during this marriage: Onesime born on March 25, 1892, Odelie born September 7, 1894, Adelard born September 7, 1896, and Johnny born August 24, 1898; Dolore must have died as an infant, as he is not mentioned in any account after this time.

28 Years Later

Alex and Sophie in 1918, now married for 28 years. Please note the remarkable resemblance between Alex and Onesime.

Odelie

Odelie, Onesime’s sister, married a man named Charles Goupil. In 1920, Odelie became crippled and began having to live in a wheelchair. In 1925, Charles was training a man in Insurance in Rumford, Maine, when he became very sick. He died a day later at 39 years old, on August 25. Onesime’s sister was unable to care for herself, so her parents went to live with her.

On April 8, 1927, Odelie died, she was only 32. It was less than two years after her husband passed away. By then, she had been crippled and living in a wheel chair seven years. When Odelie died, Onesime’s parents came back to live in Chisholm.

Sophie Passes Away, with a Little Drama

Not long after, Onesime’s mother became ill with cancer of the liver. At one point, it was thought that she had died. The custom at the time was to lay out the body of a family member in the house, where friends and other family members would visit, pray and grieve. Common people could not afford to have a funeral home provide services, and this meant that bodies were often not embalmed. Albert remembered the time his grandmother was laid out in the house, and the wake being in progress. His grandmother, however, was not dead, but only in a coma. She abruptly sat up and wanted to know why everyone was there. The children ran from the house, thinking they had seen a ghost. It certainly caused quite a commotion. She did eventually die on January 26, 1928 in Onesime’s home.