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''[[Canada Genealogy|Canada]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]] [[New Brunswick Genealogy|New Brunswick]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]] [[New_Brunswick_Emigration_and_Immigration|Emigration and Immigration]]'' | ''[[Canada Genealogy|Canada]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]] [[New Brunswick Genealogy|New Brunswick]] [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]] [[New_Brunswick_Emigration_and_Immigration|Emigration and Immigration]]'' | ||
===Online Resources=== | |||
*[http://legacy.newirelandnb.ca/People-genealogies/Irish-NB-Genealogies.html Online Listing of 1500 of the first families to arrive in New Brunswick.] | |||
== Loyalists == | == Loyalists == | ||
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=== Women’s Lives === | === Women’s Lives === | ||
For a glimpse of the lives of women connected with ships and shipbuilding, look for Helen Petchy’s little booklet, ''Signal Sea Changes'' (1997) which tells of two Dorchester “daughters of the shipyards,” Emma Chapman O’Neal and Sarah Palmer Ryan. Donal M. Baird’s ''Women at Sea in the Age of Sail'' (Halifax, Nova Scotia: Nimbus, 2001), 226 pages with map and illustrations, among other stories, tells that of Captain Daniel Smith Cochrane, born in St. Martins, New Brunswick, and his wife Annie Meldrum Parker, born in Tynmouth Creek, Saint John, New Brunswick, who accompanied his many voyages on the ''Prince Lucien'' of the Moran-Galloway fleet. It is important to note that they were married in Liverpool in 1866, and ended their days in England where they are buried. With seafaring families, this is always a possibility to watch out for.<ref>Douglas, Althea. "New Brunswick Ships and Shipowners (National Institute)," ''The National Institute for Genealogical Studies'' (2012), https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/New_Brunswick_Ships_and_Shipowners_%28National_Institute%29.</ref> | For a glimpse of the lives of women connected with ships and shipbuilding, look for Helen Petchy’s little booklet, ''Signal Sea Changes'' (1997) which tells of two Dorchester “daughters of the shipyards,” Emma Chapman O’Neal and Sarah Palmer Ryan. Donal M. Baird’s ''Women at Sea in the Age of Sail'' (Halifax, Nova Scotia: Nimbus, 2001), 226 pages with map and illustrations, among other stories, tells that of Captain Daniel Smith Cochrane, born in St. Martins, New Brunswick, and his wife Annie Meldrum Parker, born in Tynmouth Creek, Saint John, New Brunswick, who accompanied his many voyages on the ''Prince Lucien'' of the Moran-Galloway fleet. It is important to note that they were married in Liverpool in 1866, and ended their days in England where they are buried. With seafaring families, this is always a possibility to watch out for.<ref>Douglas, Althea. "New Brunswick Ships and Shipowners (National Institute)," ''The National Institute for Genealogical Studies'' (2012), https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/New_Brunswick_Ships_and_Shipowners_%28National_Institute%29.</ref> | ||
== References == | == References == | ||
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{{New Brunswick}} | {{New Brunswick}} | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:New_Brunswick_Emigration_and_Immigration]] |
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