, November 2, 2014 3:14:24 PM UTC-8, Mara wrote:
The Priest wrote verterano catropa de linha
Translation: veteran of the front line troops.
Margaret Vicente
On Sun, Nov 2, 2014 at 2:25 PM, IslandRoutes island...@gmail.com
javascript: wrote:
I have found my 3rd great grandfather's obito in Maia
Thanks Rosemarie! And it is very true. It pays to check all villages
associated with a family because you just don't know where a record might
appear.
On Sunday, November 2, 2014 1:06:54 PM UTC-8, rcapodc wrote:
Congrats Mel! Just takes looking at everything!
R.
Rosemarie
Thank you for locating this record, JR. It adds Francisco da Rocha and
Maria Correia of Maia and Pascoal Pacheco Janeiro and Antonia Tavares of
Estrella to my tree.
I will have to see how far this Rocha line spreads out in Maia.
On Monday, November 3, 2014 7:57:02 PM UTC-8, JR wrote:
I have a confusing problem. I've written before about my line Pacheco de
Resendes. In 1799, they had a son, Remigio Pacheco. Remigio's descendents
went by Pacheco Remigio, Remigio Pacheco, Pacheco, and Romiza (after 1900
in the US). The family is in Maia, Ribeira Grande, and there are no
Thanks for your responses, Maryann and JR! This establishes Remigio as a
first name. But, it seems as a last name not so common--and the
combination Pacheco Remigio (or Remigio Pacheco) as a surname even more
rare.
I can't get into the CCA website right now to see the records. So, I
CCA should know that their work is very much appreciated! As someone who
has become disabled and can't go to the local FHC to research, having the
records online and ready to use has really been a blessing.
On Monday, November 17, 2014 1:27:19 PM UTC-8, João Ventura wrote:
Hello, everyone
I haven't posted here in awhile as I have really worked on my Azorean lines
in a couple of years. But, now the records for my village, Achada, are
online, I've been at it again. I've been working on my Pacheco-de Mello's
exclusively. I've redone some work I did years ago, pieced it together
Cheri/Doug,
I do see the migratory nature that you mentioned, Cheri. Many of my lines
start somewhere else before coming to Achada. And, there seems to be quite
a bit of marrying between villages on my lines.
The frustrating thing is my Mello's appear to have stayed in Achada, at
least up
John,
I remember the work you and Shirley did for me (and appreciated it very
much!) Since I started working in the digital records, I found Anna
Jacinta de Mello's baptismal record. She was born 30 Jan 1835 in Achada.
I also found she had siblings (Maria, Manoel, Roza, and Joze) born from
John/Dan,
Thanks for the help. But, I think there is some confusion on the
information. First, my de Braga/de Mello (aka de Mello Castanho) line is
from Maia, not my Pacheco/de Mello line.(I have two distinct de Mello
lines). They don't marry each other until 1895, St. Sylvester's
*IMPORTANT MESSAGE 19 March 2009*
The Portuguese Hawaiian Genealogy and Heritage Website has a new
home!
Our new web address is http://www.yourislandroutes.com
That’s YourIslandRoutes.com…Same great genealogy resource…New URL
The Research Journal Blog has a new home too!
The new
Elaine,
If you want to find those entries, the San Francisco Call Monitor,
1895-1910 is available online at the Library of Congress and the
California Newspaper Project:
http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/newspapers/
http://cbsr.tabbec.com/browse/titles
Fool around with the search as each
Good luck! I've found quite a few things there. As I said, the
searching is tricky. Try different things and you should be able to
pull up the entries.
On Sep 15, 10:27 am, bellema...@gmail.com wrote:
Mel,
Thank you for the newspaper info.
I did find out he married in 1894, his wife died
Jacki,
I see someone answered your question. Yes, all ships first went to
Honolulu where the people were process. The Portuguese immigrants
went through the Portuguese Consulate and were recorded in those
logs. Those logs are on microfilm with the LDS church. The consulate
logs are a good
was
put on oxygen last year, I helped him learn the equipment and
remembered the things that were too much for him to deal with.
I am not with the program right now. I am sort of checking the group
and the IslandRoutes (Portuguese Hawaiian google group). Cheri is
normally in charge of this group
I wanted to thank you all for your condolences. I am sorry if I have
not acknowledged everyone personally. At some point in the last few
weeks, things got overwhelming.
Know that I read every email and that I appreciate everyone's words.
Things are getting a little easier. We had a wonderful
I am not sure if I can add to wat you have, but I've done some
research on these lines. I came up with similar confusing
information.
One question I have. Was the Consulado Geral...i.e. the Consulate
logs in Hawaii consulted for the passage on the Monarch and the
passage on the City of Paris.
Just a little background on birth records. Although official
recording in California became mandatory in July 1905, it appears that
many people did not adhere to the policy until the late 1920s and
early 1930s.
At that time, many women were still giving birth at home, which might
attribute to
The newspapers were the San Francisco Chronicle, The Examiner, The
Call Bulletin (this had a few different names). The Daily Alta died
out before 1900, I believe. I've found some family in the San Mateo
Times, as well.
On Jul 22, 9:53 am, Cheri Mello gfsche...@gmail.com wrote:
What is the name
This is interesting because it is a different interpretation than what I was
given years ago. It pops up in records for my ancestor Felicianno de Mello.
He was gone from his village for a few years because he was in the military.
He then starts to appear as a godparent with thisphrase after
Hello Raymond,
I don't have Pereira in Maia as yet. However, I have ancestry in that
village going back many generations. I can also trace some current lines
to Hawaii (and then California) and to Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
If you come up with more information on ancestry in Maia, please
Hi Shirley,
I do have the birth info. I made a mistake and called her Rosa, it should
be Jacinta Rosa:
b. 1 May 1834, Maia
1st m. Jose Rapoza
2nd m. Antonio Furtado dos Santos (m. 31 Jan 1883, Maia)
She had at least one daughter by her first marriage: Maria Gloria Rapoza.
Maria married a
I've made a really neat discovery and wanted to share!
About a year ago, my cousins in Massachusetts found a woman who has the
surname Remigio Pacheco. Her roots are in Brasil. But, in the 1890s a
female ancestor went to Maia, Ribeira Grande, Sao Miguel Island. A few
decades later, her
JR,
This really is a rarity. The amount of people who went to Hawaii then
returned to the Azores is very slim. When they left, they left for good.
It is very rare that I meet a Portuguese Hawaiian researcher whose
ancestors returned even for a trip.
I think the city is Hilo (Hilo na ilha
Hi Paul,
Yes, it was me that posted about Miguel do Monte. Thanks to collaboration
between the folks here we were able to straighten out the confused lines of
Miguel do Monte I and his son, Miguel do Monte II.
This is what I have Anna do Monte was the daughter of Miguel do Monte and
his
I'm glad to see others are having the same problem. I used to be able to
switch between pages easily, but it hasn't worked for awhile.
On Monday, July 13, 2015 at 2:10:22 PM UTC-7, IslandRoutes wrote:
This is the database I'm referring to:
http://lib.umassd.edu/PAA/portuguese-american
Bill,
Okay...I don't use the browser buttons. I know about the page 1-25 button
and I use the Show previews/Show Document toggle.
I believe there is some sort of delay going on. Because I am having the
same problem.
I click on a document
I view the PDF
I toggle back to the previews
I
there were sugar cane workers from the islands in Louisiana
one generation earlier.
On Monday, July 13, 2015 at 2:31:46 PM UTC-7, IslandRoutes wrote:
Another researcher asked me about something that I'd never seen before,
so I thought I'd ask here. His female ancestors was born in 1885
Hi Sonia,
Yes, it was me who posed the initial question. You might have missed my
follow up post. I don't use the browser buttons when in the database. I
use the controls in the top menu.
Yesterday, I did a test using both Firefox and Chrome. What I found was
there was a long delay after
I asked the researcher if I could show a copy of the tattoo to this group
and they gave their permission. This is what it looks like. The woman was
born around 1885 and I think she migrated as a child to Hawaii.
This is the database I'm referring to:
http://lib.umassd.edu/PAA/portuguese-american-digital-newspaper-collections
Every time I search the database I can only do one search and look at one
page. I go back to the result list and it won't open a new page for me.
It always opens the first page
Another researcher asked me about something that I'd never seen before, so
I thought I'd ask here. His female ancestors was born in 1885 and migrated
to Hawaii with her parents. She had a tattoo on her arm which looks like w
w and then 3 or 4 symbols.
I'm curious if anyone has seen this
It may be they've been playing with the old design as part of the
troubleshooting process. Sort of "this used to work here, can we replicate
it there" type of thing.
I hope they resolve it soon.
--
For options, such as changing to List, Digest, Abridged, or No Mail (vacation)
mode, log
Barb,
I haven't had a lot of opportunity until recently to find online family
trees. Not many seem to be working on similar lines. But, recently more
of my lines are appearing in Ancestry Family Trees.
Some of the work is just awful. I'm amazed at how little critical thinking
and analysis
Linda, Nancy Jean, mnk, and Angela
Thank you for your responses on the name Adriano. Now I can go back to the
Hawaiian records to see if I can find the name in some sort of variant
form. It is probably misspelled in some way that I haven't uncovered yet.
Thanks for your help!
--
For
Tammy, Thanks for the offer! I would like to have a copy of the Lomba da
Maia indexes when you are finished.
Mel
--
For options, such as changing to List, Digest, Abridged, or No Mail (vacation)
mode, log into your Google account and visit this group at
I'm working with a distant cousin with her Martin(s) line. The patriarch
is supposed to be from Portugal and the matriarch from Sao Miguel. She
says they were married on Sao Miguel which I am skeptical of. The couple
was in Hawaii in the 1890s.
The patriarch's name is Adriano Martin. Is
I have come across what may be important information for Portuguese
Hawaiian researchers who lived in the Punchbowl area. It appears to be a
list of land requests with names, whether there applications were honored
or denied. It appeared in the O Luso newspaper.
I will be transcribing the
I was told some time ago that Remigio Pereira of the Canadian Tenors fame
is a descendant of my ancestor Antonio Pacheco de Rezendes and Anna Pacheco
de Medeiros of Maia, Ribeira Grande. He is supposed to descend from their
son, Remigio Pacheco, whose descendants took on the surnames Pacheco
Eliseu,
Thanks! This does help. It appears that several hundred people were
allowed to apply for land ownership. The newspaper includes lists of those
who were approved, those who needed to submit more information, and those
rejected. Your translation tells me that there was a meeting where
LOL Cheri! Am I sucking up all the famous people? Now if I could only get
someone to match my DNA ;)
On Thursday, October 8, 2015 at 8:57:48 PM UTC-7, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> Geez, Mel, it's not enough for you to be related to a famous Nobel Prize
> winner, now you have to be related to famous
The Portuguese Bakery, San Jose, has a website (portuguesebakery.com) but
it looks like they are rebuilding it. They take orders and deliver to your
home (the shipping is a bit expensive, we had malassadas delivered to my
mom for her birthday). They also have Portuguese stores around the Bay
I am assuming your people went to Hawaii during the sugar plantation migration.
Intermarriage was known before 1900, but was even moreso in the period right
after 1900. I found intermarriage between my Portuguese relatives and
Hawaiians, Japanese, and Filipinos starting in 1905.
One thing to
I am assuming your people went to Hawaii during the sugar plantation migration.
Intermarriage was known before 1900, but was even moreso in the period right
after 1900. I found intermarriage between my Portuguese relatives and
Hawaiians, Japanese, and Filipinos starting in 1905.
One thing to
Can someone help me make sense of this record?
http://culturacores.azores.gov.pt/biblioteca_digital/SMG-RG-FENAISAJUDA-B-1860-1869/SMG-RG-FENAISAJUDA-B-1860-1869_item1/P89.html
I am interested in Fenais Ajuda, 1862, page 26, no 50. The child is
Luciano. In the margin it appears to be naming
the extra details there.
Thanks for the help!
On Sunday, January 29, 2017 at 3:08:10 PM UTC-8, IslandRoutes wrote:
>
> Can someone help me make sense of this record?
>
> http://culturacores.azores.gov.pt/biblioteca_digital/SMG-RG-FENAISAJUDA-B-1860-1869/SMG-RG-FENAISAJUDA-B-1860-1869_it
Rosemarie,
Thanks! I have since tied it all together. I found Manuel Melo Castanho's
baptismal record. He was born 22 Mar 1904, Maia. The notes in the side
margin name his wife, Maria da Gloria Moniz da Costa. They were married in
1931.
Now I have the proof that it all fits together!
Mel
I have a couple of questions for my cousin. She's trying to solve some
family mysteries which may revolved around a piece of property in Maia,
Ribeira Grande.
As the story goes, her grandmother went back and forth between Fall River,
MA and Maia a couple of times. She had a home in Fall
:
>
>
>
> On Saturday, September 3, 2016 at 1:33:23 PM UTC-5, IslandRoutes wrote:
>>
>> I have a couple of questions for my cousin. She's trying to solve some
>> family mysteries which may revolved around a piece of property in Maia,
>> Ribeira Grande.
>
I was going through the Fiche de Immigration for Maia, Ribeira Grande
(thanks to the member who posted the link! It's so helpful!)
I came across this entry for Manuel Melo Castanho, who was the son of
Francisco Melo Castanho and Rosa Monte Bastos. I don't have Francisco and
Rosa in my
I have another update on this research. I post a link to the Fiche de
Emigrant for Manuel Mello Castanho on my FB wall last night hoping one of
my cousin's cousins might recognize them. It worked! A cousin in MA has
confirmed that she knew them and went to school with the children.
And,
This is an update on the Mello Castanho/Monte Bastos post I made earlier
today. Since then, I have figured out the connection to the Mello Castanho
tree for the man in the passport record.
Manuel Melo Castanho was the son of Francisco Mello Castanho and Rosa Monte
Bastos. I found Francisco
I'm trying to contact a researcher whose first name may or may not be Jim.
He contacted me several years ago about the Braga line in Maia, Ribeira
Grande. Mine is Braga and his is Braga Serra. (I believe the Braga may
have been added to his family name) I've never found a link between the
Julio,
Thanks for your response and the information on the Moniz Tracado. I can
see that you have more children for Francisco and Francisca than we have
(Jose and Ludovina). Are you related to this line? If so, I think my
cousin would like to contact you. She is a direct decendant of the
Thanks for doing this, Kathy!
--
For options, such as changing to List, Digest, Abridged, or No Mail (vacation)
mode, log into your Google account and visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/Azores. Click in the blue area on the right
that says "Join this group" and it will take
My cousin and I have been working on her Moniz Thomas (aka Muniz, Moniz
Tracado, etc.) of Maia, Ribeira Grande. We've made contact with a man in
Canada who is also research Moniz Thomas from Maia. He is related one way,
but it appears he will also be related through this surname as well. The
Thanks for the responses! I had a feeling it wasn't the country, but the
wording threw me off. I've the Rua da... and understood it to be street,
etc. But, I've never seen it followed with a person's name. So, a canada
is a narrow street/lane.
Always learning something new!
Thanks
Mel
I'd appreciate if someone could take a peek at this one and let me know
what this means. On this page no. 3 (right hand side bottom)
http://culturacores.azores.gov.pt/biblioteca_digital/SMG-RG-MAIA-B-1870-1879/SMG-RG-MAIA-B-1870-1879_item1/P234.html
It says "moradores na Canada de Joao
Could someone take a look at this baptismal in Fenais de Vera Cruz (Ajuda).
Image Page 29 no. 53 for Jose,son of Joao Pacheco Grande and Maria de
Jesus? After their names it says "moradores na Pico"
Well done!
On Sunday, November 6, 2016 at 1:08:22 PM UTC-8, Jeremy G. B-C -
Researching: Sao Jorge & Pico wrote:
>
> Hello,
> We have put the council of Calheta on Sao Jorge on Findagrave
>
> *** The Council of Velas on Sao Jorge is expected to be completed by May
> of 2017, the entire Island
Thank you all for your responses. Another researcher found some
information that is pertinent to this discussion. I'm still mulling it
over. There is another newspaper article that he found dated after the one
that I noted. I don't have the link handy at this moment.
This article is
I was doing some research for an article for my blog and came upon a really
interesting article in an old Hawaiian newspaper. It made me realize that
after all these years I didn't fully understand the route that the Azorean
and Madeiran sugar plantation contract laborers took to Hawaii.
The
e materno do Antonio Cabral Pacheco, e
>> Maria de Jesus..."
>>
>> JR
>>
>> On Monday, November 14, 2016 at 3:05:06 AM UTC-5, IslandRoutes wrote:
>>>
>>> Could someone take a look at this baptismal in Fenais de Vera Cruz
>>> (Aju
Cheri,
That gives me a little bit of a time frame to work with. I'm slowly
piecing together my mid to early 1700s for the Pacheco line.
Unfortunately, my direct Pacheco line end in a Pai Incognito, so if it's
that line, then I will never know.
It's interesting how DNA works out. I have
igration from Santa Maria to Sao Miguel. Most
> came after 1700.
>
> JR
>
>
>
> On Wednesday, August 9, 2017 at 5:15:59 PM UTC-4, IslandRoutes wrote:
>>
>> John,
>> I can't seem to find your email address right now. I know that you and
>> others are inter
I finally found my ancestor, Antonio Moniz's baptismal record, in 1753,
Maia. Unfortunately, it's so faded that it's hard to make out.
Would someone give it a once over to see if I've got it right? I'd
appreciate it. It's image 0040, the one in the upper left hand corner.
JR and Margaret,
Thanks so much for the help! I have gotten better an translating but this
one was a challenge.
I can see where I got confused on the godparents. Abbreviated
names...G!
Thanks,
Mel
On Friday, August 11, 2017 at 3:10:35 PM UTC-7, IslandRoutes wrote:
>
> I finally fo
Cheri,
On the plus side, I know my newly identified 5th cousins is from the
Achada/Mello side of the tree. He is not related to the Pacheco line of
FVC. That's got to account for something :)
Mel
On Wednesday, August 9, 2017 at 8:55:39 PM UTC-7, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> They don't HAVE TO have
Pam,
What island are you talking about? I might be able to find other sources
if I know the island.
The Hawaii State Archives websites has the index for marriages that covers
all island, but I think it's only 1900-.
Then, they have Kauai, Hawaii, and I think Maui marriage
John,
I can't seem to find your email address right now. I know that you and
others are interested in Braga's of Sao Miguel.
I was going through Estrela for another family. I found this entry in 1754
that I thought might interest those researching the line. I didn't see any
other Braga's
Over the last year, I've been noticing 4th to remote cousin DNA matches
whose trees are entirely on Pico. I pretty much ignored them because my
tree several generations back is entirely on Sao Miguel Island. I didn't
really think much of it and thought maybe they are identical by state,
This is a neat little discovery for me that I had to share. I think some
others are also interested in the de Braga family of Maia, Ribeira Grande.
Jacintho Jose de Braga, (b. 21 Sep 1806), Maia m. 26 Aug 1829, Maia to Rosa
de Medeiros Pacehco (b. 4 Mar 1810, Maia) had 10 known children.
Cheri,
That's how I read it. But, if so, why? Could it have something to do with
him being the oldest surviving son and moving away from Maia to Ponta
Delgada to get married?
On Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at 11:25:52 AM UTC-7, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> I read that (with my limited Portuguese) as
istowner, Azores-Gen
>> Researching: São Miguel island: Vila Franca, Ponta Garca, Ribeira Quente,
>> Ribeira das Tainhas, Achada
>>
>> On Tue, May 23, 2017 at 10:44 AM, IslandRoutes <island...@gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>
>>> This is a neat little dis
Mara and JR,
I'll answer you both here.
JR, no, I haven't looked for Emilia's parents in Faja de Baixo yet. I only
started my search Sunday starting with the records in Sao Sebastiao. So, I
have more work to do!
Mara,
This information is interesting. So, emancipation does have to do with
Thank you so much for your responses! It's helped me get a little bit of
an idea of why he asked for emancipation. We can rule out that his father
recently died. He lived until 1888.
I will be following Emilia's trail. Then I want to go back to the obitos
for Maia and make sure that these
Before I got involved with my de Braga discovery, I was working on the
Mello/Mello Castanho's of Maia, Ribeira Grande. One thing that had
confounded me was I could not locate information on my ancestor, Joao de
Mello's parents or siblings. I was able to solve part of the mystery this
month.
gt; 1 iii.Domingos Pereira Luis, born 10 Jul 1707
> in Povoacao- Mae de Deus; died Bef. 10 May 1749; married Maria de Medeiros 16
> Feb 1738 in Povoacao- Mae de Deus.
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thursday, May 25, 2017 at 1:32:39 PM UTC-4, IslandRoutes wr
C-7, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> (Cross posted to Azores, Madeira, and IslandRoutes)
>
> Blaine Bettinger, author and DNA blogger, is asking for submissions for
> the Shared CentiMorgan Project.
>
> It works like this: For the DNA matches you have identified as your
> cousins
Hi Julio,
I found the marriage of Domingo Luis Pereyra and Maria de Medeiros,
Francisco Luis de Medeiros parents. They were married in Mae de Deus in
Feb 1738 (I couldn't make out the day)
JR-
This is what the baptismals showed:
Toribio's maternal grandparents: Agostinho de Medeiros and Mafalda de
Medeiros
Jose's maternal grandparents: Agostinho de Medeiros and Mafalda Assumpcao
On Tuesday, May 23, 2017 at 9:23:59 PM UTC-7, JR wrote:
>
> There is a conflict with the
Thanks for posting a link to my article, Cheri!
I have been fortunate that a good portion of this line stayed in Maia for
many generations. So, you can imagine that the further you go back the
more you marry into families and the more people you collect.
It really wasn't until a cousin in
Kathy,
Thanks for the email address! I've sent an email. I will report back if I
get a response. This would be very exciting to my research if my gr gr
grandfather had been living elsewhere.
Mel
On Sunday, September 10, 2017 at 1:17:12 PM UTC-7, Kathy Cardoza wrote:
>
> What an
in December 1737:
http://culturacores.azores.gov.pt/biblioteca_digital/SMG-RG-MAIA-B-1731-1743/SMG-RG-MAIA-B-1731-1743_item1/P110.html
Thanks!
Mel
On Thursday, August 24, 2017 at 11:58:44 AM UTC-7, IslandRoutes wrote:
>
> Over the years, I've gotten information from various quarters but
; I have him as Manoel, born- Dec 8-1737, bap- Dec 13- 1737, Pad- Rev da
> Lomba, Pedro da Costa Leite e madrinha, Maria Margarida do Sacramento filha
> de Thome da Costa Pimentel e Maria da Costa moradores nesta lugar de Maya.
>
> JR
>
> On Tuesday, September 12, 2017 at
Kathy,
Thank you for posting this! I found my 4th great grandfather, Felicianno
de Mello listed.
I have a question about the place information. Is that birth or
residency? I ask because I found something more surprising. There are 3
entries for Jacinto Pacheco. All of them son of Joao
Over the years, I've gotten information from various quarters but lately
I've been going back over the research, finding the records, and filling in
the blanks. In doing so, I found an error in the parentage of one of my
ancestors that changes the maternal line.
The problem started when I
Eliseu,
Let me know if you find any discrepancies so I can fix what I have. Do you
have the two Margarida daughters...one for each marriage?
Cheri,
Whole family research is so important. It is too easy to get crossed up on
similar names. I've done it on occasion. I didn't do the initial
Margaret and Julio,
Thank you for your additions to the information that I had. I was missing
the other two children from the first marriage.
I haven't gone over this completely, but I have a couple of questions.
*6. Manuel Pacheco De Resendes [16978]* 3 (*Manuel Pacheco de1*) nasceu em
For those interested, I found three children for Andre da Costa and Beatriz
da Souza, parents of Josefa da Costa (2nd wife of Manoel Pacheco de
Rezendes:
1. Clara da Souza m. Joao da Costa, 20 Jul 1721, Porto Formoso. Joao was
the son of Miguel Marques and Anna da Costa (online image no.
Kingmedicalarts,
Can you supply more information on your Tracado family? I am tracking my
cousin's family who were originally Moniz from Maia, Ribeira Grande. By
the mid 1850s some were using Moniz Thomas, Moniz Tomas, and Moniz
Tracado. One group stayed in Maia, but one line splintered off
This is an update as to what's happening with the upgrade of my
YourIslandRoutes.com website (I'm moving the entire website into WordPress
so it can be mobile friendly and up-to-date)
I'm now working up updating the descriptions of the voyages to Hawaii.
These originally were one article for
Judy, I think your best bet would be to first check the Portuguese
Consulate logs Consulado Portuguese Geral em Hawaii, I believe they are
called) When the ships came into port, each passenger and family group was
processed. If a person died aboard ship, it was noted in the consulate
logs.
found out the first Roia's landed in America circa
> 1878-1883. Some of our folklore turned out to be true.
>
> JR
>
> On Wednesday, October 18, 2017 at 9:36:12 PM UTC-4, IslandRoutes wrote:
>>
>> This is an update as to what's happening with the upgrade of my
>>
Many of you may have known Margaret from AOL's genealogy chat years ago.
She was active with both Azores and Madeira research. I think she was a
member of this group at one time. She had been slowly down with research
the last couple of years and using her computer less and less.
I got word
I am working with a DNA match and I'm perplexed. Her great grandparents
were Jacintho Botelho Feleja and Maria da Gloria Leocadio (aka Leocadio da
Ponte, Pacheco Leocadio). I'm very familiar with the Leocadio as I connect
with them on the Mello Castanho side and know one of the descendants.
I don't have access but they are probably in either the Oakland Tribune or
the Hayward Daily Review. My bet is the Oakland Tribune which was more
widely used in the 1940s.
On Saturday, February 17, 2018 at 7:23:57 PM UTC-8, Cheri Mello wrote:
>
> I have a DNA person who needs help making a
gt;
> Madalena a seguir casou com *Desconhecido* [34700] [MRIN: 18335].
>
>10 Fix. *Francisca De Jesus Botelho [35753]* nasceu em 1837 em
> Porto Formoso.
>
> Francisca casou com *António Pacheco De Aguiar* [35741] [MRIN: 18823],
> filho de *Manuel Pacheco De Agui
Eliseu,
Are you still looking for information on this couple? The reason I ask is
I've come across a link between my Pacheco Grande's of FVC married to Moniz
Catunto. I believe that the couple I am tracking may have come to
America. I believe Serafim did also and may related to them. I have
On Sunday, November 11, 2018 at 4:03:21 PM UTC-8, Wes Teixeira wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> Malinda is my great grandmother. Her daughter, Violet Nunes my
> grandmother, and Jeanette Teixeira my mother. Interested in any records you
> have on Malinda's family. I lost contact with many family members
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