Simon, Hurd, Dolan, and Related Families
The Genealogy of the Following Families:
The Simon Family of Willebadessen, Germany, and its Descendants in America
The Barcant, Krogh, d'Abadie, and Related Families of Trinidad and Tobago
The Hurd and Clark Families of Kent County, Delaware and Caroline County, Maryland
The Dolan and Carr Families of County Tyrone, Northern Ireland; County Donegal, Ireland; and America
The McGillin Families of County Tyrone, Northern Ireland and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Louisa Camille Tardieu
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Name Louisa Camille Tardieu Gender Female Siblings 8 siblings Person ID I8862 Simon and Related Families Last Modified 20 Dec 2020
Father Charles Dominique Tardieu, b. 1780, Marseille, Bouches-du-Rhône, France , d. Bef Oct 1843, Trinidad and Tobago (Age 63 years) Mother Jeannine (aka Adelaide) "Clotilde" Charbonné Married 1802 Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago Family ID F2726 Group Sheet | Family Chart
Family Edward O'Brien Children + 1. Rosema (aka Rose Emma) O'Brien, b. Abt 1841, d. 17 Apr 1919, Port of Spain, Trinidad and Tobago (Age ~ 78 years) Last Modified 27 Nov 2018 Family ID F2771 Group Sheet | Family Chart
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Documents Tardieu and Gauthier Families - Composite Image of 1850 Sale of L'Hermitage Estate
Composite image of an entry for the sale of 100 quarées (320 acres) of L'Hermitage Estate in the Quarter of Caroni to Gustave Borde on 30 December 1850. The entry begins at the bottom of one page in the register of land transactions and continues at the top of the next page. The sellers are the heirs of Charles Dominique Tardieu. They include his living children and their husbands (in the second group) and the heirs of Tardieu's daughters Adele Tardieu Gauthier and Rose Tardieu Gauthier, both of whom who had apparently died and whose children jointly inherited their shares of the land. This record is a valuable list (in apparent chronological order) of the living children of these two families in 1850. The last name on the first page is repeated to begin the continuation of the record on the second page, which can be ascribed to this being a rare record that extends across two pages of the register. In old legal documents, the repetition of the last and first word of subsequent pages was sometimes used to establish such continuity. This transaction is recorded in a list of land transactions in that Quarter from 1810 to the early 1860s, photocopied by Geoffrey Barcant and reproduced in Robert M. Simon, Selected Trinidad Land Transactions From 1810 to the Early 1860s (College Park, MD: self-publication, 2020), page 119, available at https://www.academia.edu/49406726/Selected_Trinidad_Land_Transactions_From_1810_to_the_Early_1860s.