 |


Welcome to
my web site dedicated to French genealogical research. I am interested
in Acadian (also known as Cajun) and French Canadian genealogical research,
but I am also interested in Creole, Métis, Huguenot, Foreign French, French,
Belgian, and Swiss research as well. Specifically, this web site offers
the following topics:
Genealogy Topics
Family Research Projects
 |
BAILLON: Catherine Baillon Royal
Connection Research Association
|
 |
CADOTTES: The Cadottes: A Métis Fur Trade Family of Lake Superior |
 |
CORDAY: Royal Gateway from Catherine de Corday to Louis VII, king of France |
 |
CORSE: The Origins of James Corse,
ca. 1665-1696, Deerfield, Massachusetts
|
 |
COUVENT: Anne Couvent: Seven Royal Lineages with Arms |
 |
D'AOUST: Gagné's Research on the Origins of Guillaume D'Aoust (This is my friend's project which I followed closely.) |
 |
DULONG: The DuLong Family |
 |
DULONG: Ancestry
of John P. DuLong
|
 |
DUMONTET: Origins of Jean Dumontet
dit Lagrandeur, Husband of the Captive Elizabeth Corse
|
 |
FOREST: The Origins of the Acadian
Michel Forest
|
 |
JOYEUSE: Joyeuse de Champigneulle Family, a defense of the research done by Gagné and Kokanosky |
 |
LE NEUF: Le Neuf Family Research
Project (Includes a royal gateway through Jeanne Le Marchant.)
|
 |
LONGUVAL: Gagné and Kokanosky's Research on the Amiot, Couvent, Longueval, and Joyeuse Families (This is my friend's project which I followed closely and it includes another royal gateway through Anne Couvent.) |
 |
McGUINNESS: The McGuinness
Family (This is my wife Patricia's web site that I help her
produce.)
|
 |
McNELLIS: The Death of Dennis McNellis |
 |
STANTON: Tracing the Irish Ancestors of John F. Stanton: Concerning the Stanton, McNellis, and Carr Families |
Royal Gateway Ancestors
To view my royal ancestors through Catherine de Baillon, Jeanne Le Marchant, or Anne Couvent please point your browser to Leo van de Pas' Genealogics website.
Book Announcement
My
booklet on French Canadians in Michigan, part of the Discovering
the Peoples of Michigan series published by Michigan State University
Press, is now available. This is an historical work that traces
the two distinct waves of French Canadian immigrants to Michigan during
the colonial period of the eighteenth century and the industrial period
of the nineteenth century. It can be ordered from the following
address:
Michigan State University Press
1405 South Harrison Road
25 Manly Miles Building
East Lansing, MI 48823-5202
Tel.: (517) 355-9543
Fax: (800) 678-2120 |
For more information, and to order online, point your
browser to http://msupress.msu.edu/ethnic/frencan_mich.html. The ISBN number is 0-87013-582-1.
Other Topics
Why Habitant.Org?
I have selected the domain name habitant.org for a number
of reasons. I like the word habitant because of its historical connections.
In Canada, the early French settlers who cleared the land
and farmed it were known as habitants. They did not take kindly to being
called peasants. Humble farmers and fur traders though they may be,
they were still a step up from peasants and actually lived quite well
in comparison to their cousins back in France. In addition, I find the
term some what ironic for this web site since I dedicate several pages
to families with noble and royal connections. Despite my interest
in this topic, I have found that most of the nobles and royals I trace
back to had more character flaws and less admirable traits than my simple
habitant ancestors. The domain name habitant.org ties in well with Michigan's
Habitant Heritage, the journal of the French Canadian Heritage
Society of Michigan, which I have published in several times. Lastly,
I like the term habitant because it would be recognized, at least in
the sense of a common farmer inhabiting the New World, in colonial Acadia,
Louisiana, and even the French Caribbean islands.
Thank you for visiting. Please visit again to view updated information.


This page, and all contents, are Copyright © 1995 by John P. DuLong, Berkley, MI. All Rights Reserved.
Created 23 November 1995. Last modified 21 January 2023.
The coordinated graphics for this site come courtesy of
Jelane Johnson. |