02022cam a2200265u 450000100100000000300080001000500170001800700030003500800410003802000190007904000080009810000220010624501090012825000180023726000450025530000110030050511250031160000310143665000490146765000570151665000640157365000540163765100540169170000110174552871722 MeVbMML20200128155024.0ta020312b ||||||||||||||||||||eng|u a978-1089200093 cJRM1 aFindlen, George L10aOur Acadian Martin Family HistorycGeorge L. Findlen, C.G., C.G.L.bThe First Four Generations 1650-1800 aFirst Edition aMadison, WIbBooks for Generationsc2019 a335 p. aThe story of Barnabe Martin and Jeanne Pelletret, son Rene, Grandson Jean-Baptiste, and Great Grandson Simon is the story of an Acadian family who developed a productive farm they left to escape the 1755 deportation. The family sought shelter along the lower Saint Lawrence during the French and Indian War, resettled on the central Saint John River until the arrival of the Loyalists after the American Revolutionary War, and resettled along the upper Saint John River. The work of 20 years, Our Acadian Martin Family History describes details of their daily lives and historical events impacting the family directly. Findlen takes readers to a richer understanding of an Acadian family's perilous journey from Acadia (Nova Scotia) to Northern Maine and New Brunswick, Canada. The book's genealogy not only supplies the genealogy of the Martin family but also provides the names of Acadians who served as godparents of baptized Martins and as witnesses to Martin marriages. Family historians and genealogists tracking their own Acadian families will find invaluable resources and leads for discovering their stories. aMartin Familyv1650 - 1800 0aAcadianszMainezAroostook CountyvGenealogy 0aFrench AmericanszMainezAroostook CountyvGenealogy 0aMainezAroostook CountyxGenealogyvHandbooks, manuals, etc 0aNew BrunswickxGenealogyvHandbooks, manuals, etc 0aSaint John River Valley (Me. and N.B.)vGenealogy aMartin