
Bienvenue sur le portail français de Geni !====== For an introduction in English, please go to the International French Portal =====.==Objectif==L’objectif du portail se résume en quatre points…* Faciliter la coopération entre francophones dans la recherche généalogique* L’amorce de nouveaux projets communs qui concernent la communauté francophone* L’ identification de sources permettant aux no...
Settlers of Pensacola, Florida during the Colonial Era, 1699 to 1819 (1st generation).
Primarily for early colonists of French and Spanish Louisiana and British and Spanish West Florida who have descendants throughout the Gulf Coast.One goal is to develop standardized surname spellings to allow for easier matching and merging in Geni.Includes people mentioned in Winston De Ville's "Gulf Coast Colonials," Stanley Clisby Arthur's "Old Families of Louisiana," Grace King's "Creole Fa...
The Ethnic Qarsherskiyan Tribe is a triracial isolate group originating in Eastern North America, primarily in an area of land between the Southern Shores of Lake Erie and the Chesapeake Bay and Tidewaters Region of North Carolina and Virginia, which includes parts of Ohio, Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina. Ethnic Qarsherskiyan people are a Sweetgum Kriyul gro...
Creoles of Color - families of mixed European, African or Native American descent in Mobile and French and Spanish Alabama.Profiles are of the first generation progenitors of Creole of Color families, although they may be solely of European, African or Native American descent themselves.Location: Cajans in the hilly areas of Washington, Mobile, and Clarke counties as well as adjoining parts of ...
Residents of Mobile, Alabama and nearby areas during the French, British and Spanish Colonial Period, 1702-1813. This includes it's time in French Louisiana, British and Spanish West Florida.Creole herein refers to people of French or Spanish descent born in the New World colonies, particularly in the Caribbean and Gulf of Mexico. Also included are British and early American immigrants. Focus i...
From Louisiana Creole people .As a group, the mixed-race Creoles rapidly began to acquire education, skills (many in New Orleans worked as craftsmen and artisans), businesses and property. They were overwhelmingly Catholic, spoke Colonial French (although some also spoke Louisiana Creole), and kept up many French social customs, modified by other parts of their ancestry and Louisiana culture. T...
Return to USA Black Heritage Portal Blacks born in Louisiana prior to 1810 from the 1850 census of Louisiana, 647 People Return to the State of Louisiana Project , Sophy, , Adlam, New Orleans Municipality 2 Ward 2, Orleans, Louisiana, 1810, Louisiana, Female , J, B, Aimi, New Orleans Municipality 3 Ward 2, Orleans, Louisiana, 1805, Louisiana, Male , Francoise, , Alcantarat, New Orleans...
Settlers of Mississippi from 1699 to 1817
First-generation European and African or Native American progenitors of Creole of Color families in Louisiana. Online Resources * “Free People of Color in Louisiana: Revealing an Unknown Past” - LSU Libraries * frenchcreoles.com Print Resources * Jennifer M. Spear, Race, Sex and Social Order in Early New Orleans , Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2009* Elizabeth Shirley Thompson, Exil...
Creole herein refers to people of French or Spanish descent born in the New World colonies, particularly in the Caribbean and French and Spanish Louisiana and West Florida, including those of European and mixed ancestry. Profiles are the immigrant ancestors of these families which primarily resided in New Orleans and surrounding areas (1st and 2nd generations). One goal is to develop standardiz...
Jamaican Creole traces the connections between early families from the British island whose port cities of Black River, St. Ann's Bay, Port Antonio and Kingston formed the basis for international trade, commerce and cultural exchange. * Mary Seacole, Jamaican nurse
Allibamonts (or Alibamons), as they were called by their fellow colonists, came to Louisiana from present-day Alabama at the end of the French period. Most had served as French soldiers at either Mobile or along the Alabama River when France controlled the region. At the end of the Seven Years' War, the Treaty of Paris of February 1763 awarded all of French Louisiana east of the Île of Orleans ...