Cunha in Graciosa search
To Colleen Wright,
I notice here that you are searching Cunha from Graciosa.  My family
may be connected:  grandfather was Joao Cunha Dias, b1858, grandmother
was Maria Jesus Cunha, b 1864, father Jayme Cunha Dias, b 1890,
father's first wife Maria Tomas Cunha, b 1890.  All born in Barro
Branco section of Graciosa.
Lorraine Price

On May 27, 6:25 pm, Ralph Sellars <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hello Listers:
>
> I too have purchased this book based on the great reviews on this list.
>
> I am up to page 129 of 188, not to shabby for a non reading engineer,  and I 
> will agree that  it is a well done unusual book, an easy read, and a pleasant 
> read.
>
> I bought the book because my mothers maiden name was  LEWIS.  Her grandfather 
> Manuel, my G Grandfather Lewis, also came from FLORES, AZORES as did the 
> author!  The earliest record I have found for my Manuel is as a member of the 
> crew on the Whaling ship "Ocmulgee" docked at Edgardtown Harbor on 
> Martha's Vineyard Island  off the Massachusetts coast in the 1860 census.
>
> Starving for information on the Lewis line, and particularly on the Island Of 
> Flores Azores and the reviews indicate that the book is an autobiographical 
> novel, I was sort of hoping, and expecting mention of family members such as 
> names, ages, locations etc, of siblings, aunts/uncles nieces/nephews grand 
> parents etc that came and went around family gatherings etc., would be noted 
> in the book.
>
> Unfortunately, so far, I have not found  that is  the case.  It goes into 
> detail of a boys dreams, hopes, fears, joys, sorrows, anticipations, etc, 
> school, teachers, church, the color of the sea, or trees, the moon , the 
> sun etc. but not about family or relatives.  He mentions his mother and 
> father often , punishments, encouragements, and difference in approach 
> between his mother and dad etc. but so far genealogical type of data of 
> names, relationships, dates or locations are not featured. .
>
> Again,  it is a well done unusual book, an easy read, and a pleasant read.  
> It does what the reviewers have said it does.  It provides documentation and 
> the development of the society at the time as seen through the eyes of a 
> frank and honest person who lived it and has shared it.   But it would be 
> misleading to hope or anticipate a trove of genealogical information.
>
> Ralph
>
> ________________________________
> From: Steve Wright <[email protected]>
> To: [email protected]
> Sent: Saturday, May 26, 2012 1:44 PM
> Subject: Re: [AZORES-Genealogy] Home Is An Island
>
> I am also reading this book and thoroughly enjoying.  Yes, it does help in 
> understanding why my grandparents left the Azores and came to America. My 
> grandparents left Teceira and never returned.  I highly recommend.  Thank you 
> for your other book recommendation.
> I wish I had spoken with my grandparents more about how, why.  It is amazing 
> to me how they left family and came to America not knowing anyone or the 
> language.  What brave people they were.
> Thanks for sharing.
>
> Colleen Wright
> Researchng Silva, Goncalves from
> Teceriia and Pico and  Rosa, Cunha from Graciosa
>
> On Sat, May 26, 2012 at 5:26 AM, John Raposo <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Earlier this week I started reading "Home is an Island" by Alfred Lewis 
> (Tagus Press at UMass Dartmouth: 2012) which was published last month. Alfred 
> was born in Flores (1902) and became prominant in California where he died in 
> 1977. The book is an atobiographical novel and it is an absolute must read 
> especially for 3rd and 4th generation Azorean Americans who are trying to 
> understand why people in a tiny island would leave everything and everybody 
> they ever knew and loved and sail off on whaling ships for the great and vast 
> unknown, possibly never to return. Some did return many years later, loaded 
> with treasure, becoming celebrities in their village; others returned quietly 
> with empty pockets, pitied by someand ridiculed by others. Some died at sea, 
> some just disappeared; others just never saw the familes left back on the 
> island again. Their great grandchildren in America are trying to discover who 
> "Frank Marshall" of the Wester Islands was before he
>  became "assimilated and acculturated" into the melting pot and married their 
> great-grandmother Mamie Murphy in California.
>
> >Lewis's novel is lyrical and has a beautiful poetry like feeling about it.
>
> >Another great read, along the same lines is "Dark Stones" by Dias de Melo 
> >(from Pico) published by Gavea Brown:1988--
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