Welcome to The Charest Family... on the Web
Search   in    Advanced Search

 Create an AccountTranslation Into:  

Our Site
 Home
 News
 Top 10
 Submit News
 News Archive
 Topics
 Family
 Feature Articles
 Genealogy
 Photo Gallery
 Extra Stuff
 Web Links
 PDA Friendly
 Recommend Us
 FAQ
 Members Area
 File Uploader
 Members List
 Journal
 Feedback
 Private Messages
 Guestbook

Affliates Box

Featured Product



All purchases made at Amazon through our Affliates Box help support this site. We appreciate your patronage.


  
The Memoirs of Armand Charest Part I
The Charest-Frenchette Family in America: A Success Story

(Page: 1/5)


Editors Note: Shortly before my father had his stroke which ultimatley was fatal, I managed to convince him to write some stories and family history. I promised him I would get them at least published on a family website if he did. Well, with a lot of "encouragement" from myself and possibly my brother Howard, Dad did write some of the family stories.

I have taken the liberty of re-formatting Dad's writings to be suitable for this website. Otherwise, I have posted them as written. I may on occasion add some editorial comments of my own; these will be clearly marked when I do.

Ron Charest






Part I - Growing Up in Rhode Island


Chapter 1

The Charest family traces its ancestry with any definite knowledge to Canada as early as 1812. The ancestral home in France has never been definitely established. Some family members feel that the earliest settlers in Canada came from Central France; others feel that Normandy is the likeliest home; others say that the first Charest came form Lacadie, France.

In any event it is most likely that the Charests came to Canada before 1763 since, in that year of the English conquest, the British government forbade immigration from France. Therefore, we can say with a certain amount of truth that the Charests arrived in Canada in the early or the middle of the 1700s or possibly in the 1600s. However, we must also say in all honesty that since the territory contained few French females, the probability exists that the first Charest males might have taken Indian women as wives. This statement might offend some descendants, but the possibility is there, nonetheless.

We have been able to trace the Frechette family as far back as the late 1600s in Canada. We have no way to know where they came from in France However, we must limit this story to the exploits and lives of Alphonse and Emilie Charest, a prolific and energetic couple.

Alphonse was born in the village of St. Gabriel, in Quebec province. Not much is known about his early years. Emilie was born on a farm in St. Didace, also in Quebec province. We do know that she received a fairly good education from the convent nuns. She read books and did receive a daily newspaper from Montreal when the family lived in Woonsocket. I and my children inherited the love of reading from her. She and I spent many evenings discussing world politics and the approaching war.

They first met in the year, 1912, on the road to Lincoln Park, an amusement park somewhere between Fall River and New Bedford, Mass. According to the popular belief, Alphonse and his brother, Armand, were two men about town who enjoyed flirting with the ladies who traveled on the streetcars between the two cities. It so happened that Armand knew the lady who accompanied Emilie on that particular day and she introduced Emilie to Alphonse and the rest is history, as people tend to say.

Due to a health problem Alphonse's doctor advised him to travel out West where the pure air might cure him. Subsequently, Alphonse became a cook on the Canadian Railroad somewhere in Manitoba or in one of those Canadian provinces where no one can say whether it is east of British Colombia or west of Ontario. He also found work in the lumber camps.

He returned sometime in 1914 and promptly signed on with the Canadian government as a cook on the icebreaker, the Laurier, that according to tradition or rumor had picked up survivors from the Titanic.

By 1916 Emilie is supposed to have stamped her foot and demanded, yes, demanded that Alphonse choose the care-tree life or marry her. According to family legend the young man is supposed to have scratched his head, mumbled something about freedom, walked the floor, argued about the demand but he finally gave in.

So Emilie and Alphonse were married in Joliette, Quebec on October 4, 1916 by the Reverend Msgr. Forbes. According to family legend the couple took up residence in Quebec City where, and this information cannot be verified, Alphonse found employment at the famous Hotel, the Chateau Frontenac. Emilie spent one winter on that iceberg and gave Alphonse another ultimatum.

So the couple moved to a city called Grandmere (grandmother). The first Charest children were born there: Marguerite Albina on Sept 19, 1917 and Louis George on October 4, 1918. The couple's need for milder weather eventually made it relocate to Pawtucket, Rhode Island in 1919. Two more children made their debut: Therese Jeanne D'arc on June 9, 1920 and Rita Edmire on Sept 21, 1922.

At that time Alphonse won the food concession at the new factory built by the J.P. Coats Thread company. It was a prosperous time for Alphonse and Emilie who were able to furnish an apartment with the latest appliances including an electric sewing and washing machine. At the expiration of the contract Alphonse opened a restaurant in Pawtucket.

We have no explanation why the couple then decided to move to a bustling textile manufacturing city called Woonsocket where two more little ones joined the growing clan: Lucille Evelina on Dec. 13, 1922 and Armand Gabriel on August 16, 1924. I believe that Alphonse still kept his restaurant open with the help of two brothers.

A business opportunity presented itself so Alphonse moved the family to a small town called Manville where he bought a country house and opened his second restaurant at a busy intersection in the village. It was also a happy and prosperous time for the family. I remember distinctly the house that sat next to a bubbling brook and the swamp to its rear where Alphonse raised his pigs. The final three children came into the world in that house: Claire on November 2, 1925, Noella on Dec 15, 1927, Rosaire on November 7, 1930.



Options

Printer Friendly Page Export PDF Send to a Friend
  
Login
Nickname

Password

Don't have an account yet? You can create one. As a registered user you have some advantages like theme manager, comments configuration and post comments with your name.

Our Photo Gallery

Feature Articles
· The Cars
· My Encounter with Robert Garwood, Part II
· My Encounter with Robert Garwood, Part I
· Eyewittess to 1984, Part Two
· The Long Wait
· Our Internet Romance
· Moving to Virginia
· The Year of Hurricane katrina
· The Memoirs of Armand Charest Part III
· The Memoirs of Armand Charest Part II
· The Memoirs of Armand Charest Part I
· Eyewitness to 1984

News Archives
Saturday, November 28
· About Taxes
Thursday, November 26
· A Happy Thanksgiving to All - 2009
Wednesday, November 25
· 80 Percent OK With Discrimination
Saturday, November 21
· This and That - 2009 Catching Up Edition
· The Birds
Sunday, February 08
· A Bittersweet Homecoming
· Changing the Tone of Discussion
Thursday, January 01
· Charest Answers James Simpson
· Happy New Year 2009!
Tuesday, September 30
· This and That, September Edition
Saturday, September 06
· This and That, Summer Edition
Monday, July 14
· Rescue on the Potomac
Friday, July 11
· My July LTE - Backing Up Obama
· My June LTE
Saturday, July 05
· Winnies Gardens
Friday, July 04
· Happy 4th of July!
Wednesday, July 02
· The New Age of Mom and Pops
Monday, June 30
· Journeying through Journey to the West
Sunday, June 29
· A well-Earned Reward
Tuesday, June 17
· Winnie Returns!
Tuesday, May 27
· This and That, May Edition
Sunday, May 25
· It's The Cows
Wednesday, May 14
· Winnie Goes to China
Monday, May 12
· The Anatomy of an On-Line Discussion Thread
· A Shaman Spirit Watches Over Me
Sunday, May 11
· On Living in UFO Hotspots
· Happy Mother's Day!
Friday, May 09
· Who Really Supports Our Troops?
Tuesday, May 06
· Rest in Peace, Mildred Loving
Friday, May 02
· Christopher Walken, Can He Govern as Well as He Can Dance?

Older Articles

 All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2005 by Webmaster, The Charest Family on the Web.


 You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php or ultramode.txt


PHP-Nuke Copyright © 2005 by Francisco Burzi. This is free software, and you may redistribute it under the GPL. PHP-Nuke comes with absolutely no warranty, for details, see the license.
Page Generation: 0.81 Seconds