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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:32:45 GMT -5
thomas edworthy After Tamara informed me of this I am posting her reply - it would appear that alot of the renville genealogy that is referred to in this tree is taken from the thomas edworthy database. fantastic work but based on other references. I have seen in the thomas edworthy database on the renvilles, some reference to dr buttes claims against their mdewakanton bloodline taken from her manifesto Identity Heist. So be careful with the given source information Angelique Renville (b. 1813, d. January 02, 1890) link below- familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/n/e/l/Erik-A-Nelson/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-1012.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:39:23 GMT -5
Angelique Renville (Dakota Name: Agatha We Oui Nar Xha [Red Woman] ) was the daughter of missionary Joseph Renville and his Dakota wife, Marie (Mary?), who was the sister of Wakoyantake (Big Thunder), chief of the Kaposia band of Dakota. link below- wigley.us/
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:41:07 GMT -5
Angelique Renville (b. 1813, d. January 02, 1890) link below- familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/n/e/l/Erik-A-Nelson/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-1012.html it would appear that alot of the renville genealogy that is referred to in this tree is taken from the thomas edworthy database. fantastic work but based on other references. I have seen in the thomas edworthy database on the renvilles, some reference to dr buttes claims against their mdewakanton bloodline taken from her manifesto Identity Heist. So be careful with the given source information.
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:41:59 GMT -5
Angelique Renville Go to that website send them that information see what they say. It be interesting to hear ... What they say ... There is a address there to do this if you want too .. I send you the address Sept 4, 2006, 5:48pm, tamara wrote: Sept 3, 2006, 11:03pm, denney wrote:Angelique Renville (b. 1813, d. January 02, 1890) link below- familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/n/e/l/Erik-A-Nelson/WEBSITE-0001/UHP-1012.html it would appear that alot of the renville genealogy that is referred to in this tree is taken from the thomas edworthy database. fantastic work but based on other references. I have seen in the thomas edworthy database on the renvilles, some reference to dr buttes claims against their mdewakanton bloodline taken from her manifesto Identity Heist. So be careful with the given source information.
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:49:30 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:53:54 GMT -5
Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance, Sylvester Long at Carlisleon the other side, men walking around with large holes in their ... wigwam of the Great Chief of ani- mal and bird kingdom. On discover- ... www.epix.net/~landis/long.html - 35k - Cached - Similar pages They decided for the negative. The ofllc- ial visitors were Professor Whitwell and Mr. Denny. home.epix.net/~landis/long.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 20:59:53 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 21:14:36 GMT -5
Jean Baptiste LePage and Toussaint Charbonneau Two French-Canadian fur traders, Jean Baptiste LePage and Toussaint Charbonneau, were enlisted at Fort Mandan to replace Newman and Reed. LePage held the rank of private, and Charbonneau, together with his Shoshone Indian wife, Sacagawea, who would be burdened with their infant boy, Jean Baptiste, were recruited as interpreters. The Fort Mandan-to-Fort Clatsop personnel were of white, black, and red racial origins, plus mixtures of the three. The oldest among the men was Charbonneau, who was 47 years old. Sacagawea was a teenager thought to be approximately 17. Jean Baptiste Charbonneau, whom Captain Clark affectionately nicknamed “Pomp” and “Pompy” for his “little dancing boy” antics, was only 55 days old when the explorers departed Fort Mandan on April 7, 1805, bound for the Pacific Ocean. www.pbs.org/lewisandclark/inside/idx_corp.html
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 21:19:52 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 26, 2007 23:07:38 GMT -5
Cordelia R. Dean, daughter of Rev. Samuel W. Pond and wife of William J. Dean, was born at the mission station of Oak Grove, now Bloomington, Hennepin County, Oct. 10, 1844, at which place her parents were then missionaries to the Dakota Indians. Later the family moved to Shakopee, where her father built, in 1847, the first frame house in the Minnesota Valley. It was near this house that a battle occurred in 1857 between the Chippewa and Sioux Indians. Charles E. Flandrau was born in New York City on July 15, 1828. Came to Minnesota in November, 1853, in company with Horace R. Bigelow. Judge Flandrau landed in St. Paul and formed a partnership with Mr. Bigelow under the firm name of Bigelow & Flandrau. He soon determined to settle in the village of Traverse des Sioux. He was a member of the Territorial Constitutional Convention of 1857. In 1856 he was appointed by President Pierce agent of the Sioux Indians. While in this position he took an active part in the punishment of the Indians who participated in the Spirit Lake and Springfield massacres, and was instrumental in the rescue of the captive women taken by them on that occasion. He was appointed judge of the supreme court of the Territory of Minnesota by President Buchanan July 17, 1857. During the same year he was elected associate justice of the supreme court. Judge Flandrau was in command of the forces in defense of New Ulm in August, 1862, when the Sioux massacre was in progress, having volunteered with a company and went to the most exposed town in the region on hearing of the outbreak. In 1864 he resigned his position on the supreme bench and commenced the practice of law in Nevada, but returned to Minnesota inside of one year and formed a partnership with Judge Athingyer at Minneapolis. In the same year he was elected city attorney of that city. In 1870 he moved to St. Paul. In 1867 he was Democratic candidate for governor, but was defended by William R. Marshall. Judge Flandrau has been twice married. His first wife was Miss Isabella R. Densmore of Kentucky, to whom he was married in August, 1859, Mrs. Flandrau died June 30, 1867, leaving two daughters, Mrs. Tilden R. Selmes and Mrs. F. W. M. Cutcheon. On February 28, 1871, Judge Flandrau married Mrs. Rebecca B. Riddle, daughter of Judge William McCluer of Pittsburgh. They have two sons, Charles M. and William Blair McC. Flandrau She was married to Mr. Dean at Shakopee, Dec. 24, 1867. link below- www.pressenter.com/~gregboe/minnesota_territorial_pioneers_biographies.htm
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Post by mdenney on Jan 29, 2007 0:42:36 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 29, 2007 0:45:34 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 29, 2007 0:47:02 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 29, 2007 0:58:25 GMT -5
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Post by mdenney on Jan 29, 2007 1:03:16 GMT -5
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