Monday, November 11, 2019

Seven Come Eleven - Joseph A. Bray's Cigar Box

Kathleen Elizabeth (Bray) Cray passed on September 30, 2018. She was the daughter of Maurice Bray (1896-1969) and Mary K. Donovan. I had been in correspondence with Kathleen for a couple years regarding the family genealogy. She had urged me to visit her in Newport Beach, California. I was making arrangements to visit San Diego that December for the i4GG conference, and thought I could connect up with Kathleen then. But after several attempts failed to reach her, I contacted her friend, Lissa.  Lissa informed me of Kathleen’s unexpected and sudden death just a couple weeks earlier and invited me to visit. She also invited Kathleen’s nephew Gary to meet us at the same time. Gary and Lissa permitted me to keep several of the ancient postcards and photos that relate to the Bray side. I am so grateful to Lissa and Gary for the opportunity to present and preserve the items shown here. 

Kathleen kept some of the most precious artifacts in an old cigar box that had been among her father Maurice Bray’s possessions. The cigar box was made by or for Maurice’s father, Joseph A. Bray (1867-1912). Joseph ran the O.K. Saloon in Red Lake Falls, Minnesota in the late 1890’s, and by 1904 he’d moved up to the new town of Blackduck, Minnesota, where he was a proprietor of a "refreshment parlor" until his death in 1912.

The top of the closed cigar box showing the stamped logo

The cigar box bears a partial seal (torn) from the Cigar Makers International Union of America. A second fragmentary seal, on the opposite side of the box, has a portrait and the number 12, and the letters CIG from Cigar but is too incomplete for me to identify. The box is wooden, and stamped with a filigree design featuring the words “J.A. BRAY’s BUNCH,” below which appears “FACTORY NO 418 DIST MINN 12”.

Did everyone who bought cigars at Bray’s establishment receive them in a box just like this?  We suspect so! You can read more about Joe and his other saloon operations in Alberta, Canada here.

An example of a complete CMIU seal
On the end, pasting over to the back, is another colorful sticker bearing the words “J.A. BRAY’S BUNCH.”

On the back is the sticker of the Black Duck Cigar Company, including an image of a tobacco farm and the words “TABACOS SUPERIORES” and a notice from the Factory 418 denoting the proper manufacture of the cigars.

The underside and end of the cigar box
A newspaper article from The Pioneer, Bemidji, Minnesota, indicates that one H.C. Mickey “returned from Minneapolis last night, where he has purchased the necessary fixtures and stock for his cigar factory. He will occupy rooms over Bray’s saloon.” Was that Factory Number 418, directly above the saloon? Possibly not, because the photo in our cigar box likely dates to late 1904 – early 1905, as we will see below.

Bemidji Daily Pioneer, May 17, 1907

Pasted to the cover inside is a photo of the seven eldest children of Joe and his wife Rebecca Brunelle, the same photo shown here.  The photo is stamped with the words “J.A. BRAYS BUNCH.” The photo is surrounded by a border in a beautiful art-deco style featuring some gold-colored foil accents. Below the photo is pasted what appears to be the bottom two-thirds of a cigar band, bearing the text “Seven, come Eleven.” Perhaps this band was on every cigar sold in Joe’s saloon!

The inside of the cigar box showing the J.A. Bray’s Bunch photo and the “Seven, come Eleven” cigar band.  The crown-shaped seal has nothing to do with cigars and is thought to have been pasted in many years later.
Seven Come Eleven is an old jazz standard. Internet searches attribute one version to Charlie Christian, who played with Benny Goodman and recorded an instrumental jazz song by that title in 1939. A country song by the same name has lyrics attributed to Johnny Horton, a 1950’s country/honky-tonk artist. Both of these are far too late - Joe died in 1912. Perhaps these lyrics did not originate with Horton? They seem very relevant to Joe! (see below).

In any case, it looks to me like Joe Bray was very much hoping for eleven children. He would eventually have nine altogether but one, Rebecca, named for her mother, died in 1910 at age eleven from diphtheria. Joe was so proud of his children that he sent their picture to President T.R. Roosevelt. When Joe received a letter back from the Roosevelt along with Roosevelt’s signed selfie, Joe alerted the Minneapolis Tribune, who printed his story and the children’s photo in a two-column spread, but twice mocked his propagative pretentions. The Bemidji paper then followed up on the Tribune story, pronouncing the children “bright intelligent looking.”

The February 12, 1905 Minneapolis Tribune article
Brays, some questions: Have you ever seen another example of a cigar box from J.A. Bray’s saloon? Does anyone know the name of the Blackduck, Minnesota establishment?  It is much mentioned in the Bemidji Daily Pioneer, but never named. Whatever became of Joe’s prized photograph of Teddy Roosevelt, signed by the president himself?

And everyone: What do you know about Seven, Come Eleven? When did the phrase first originate? How about the lyrics below, are there any instances of these words before Horton?

Let me hear from you in the comments below!


Seven, Come Eleven
lyric attributed to Johnny Horton

Seven come eleven this is my lucky day
Now baby won’t you fade me cause love is on the way
With you here close beside me I’ll rattle and I’ll roll
Seven come eleven I know I’ll make my goal

Oh baby you’re a natural a specialty of mine
Come on and play the odds now I’m gonna play the line
Seven come eleven I think I’ll let it ride
I won’t see Little Joe now if you will be my bride

Just tell me that you love me I’ll put these bones away
You’ll be my only natural we’ll plan our weddin’ day

Oh baby you’re a natural a specialty of mine
Come on and play the odds now I’m gonna play the line
Seven come eleven I’ll never seven out
Don’t be an acey ducey don’t keep my mind in doubt

Just put your arms around me and say you’ll be my spouse
Cause seven come eleven and now I’ve broke the house

Sunday, November 3, 2019

Herminie DeGuire, 1846 - 1899

The DeGuire Family of St. Laurent, Montreal

Herminie Deguire was born to Jerome DeGuire and Cecile Groulx (also spelled Groux) on October 6, 1846 and christened “Marie Herminie Leonile Deguire” at St. Laurent the next day. As is typical for French-Canadians, she went by her second given name, Herminie. The name derives from both the Germanic “Herman” in feminine form, and from the French word “hermine” for ermine, the small fur-bearing mammal. Because we never see it spelled with an O, it’s unlikely that the Greek name Hermione was intended. Herminie’s godparents were Antoine Serre, and Herminie’s maternal grandmother, Cecile Richer.

Herminie was her father’s 7th child, yet he was only 34. Jerome was first married to Sophie Joron dite LaTulippe. Of Sophie’s five children, one was stillborn, but three boys and a girl, Philomene, appear to have survived their early childhoods. Sophie died five days after the birth of her youngest child, Ferdinand Alphonse, in June of 1843. She was just 25 years old. We imagine she died of childbed fever.

With small children to raise, Jerome needed to remarry. He did so within a year, to 27-year-old Cecile Groulx on April 29, 1844. The second marriage resulted in six children, three boys and three girls. Sadly, none of the sons lived to see their first birthday. The girls, however, seemed to be thriving when their mother Cecile died on August 15, 1853 at age 37. Jerome was just 42. He did not know then that his own days were numbered. But on July 23rd, 1854, a terrible tragedy occurred: Jerome and Cecile’s eldest daughter, baptized Marie Cecile her honor, aged nine on this fateful day, both died. The church records from the parish of St-Laurent in Montreal (also called Pierrefonds), where all the DeGuire marriages, baptisms and burials took place, do not tell us if death if this double tragedy was by disease or accident.

The motherless, grieving children were now orphans. Of the six children from the second marriage, just Herminie and her younger sister Cordelia, baptized Marie Cornile, remained. Herminie was nine and little Cordelia, not yet four. Their older half-sister, Philomene, 15, surely looked after the girls in the immediate aftermath of Jerome’s death. But the situation probably didn’t last long, as the young people from Jerome’s first marriage—if any survived besides Joseph Benjamin and Philomene is unknown—would surely have had to focus on establishing themselves, first and foremost. Not surprisingly then, Philomene married young, at age 16, in November of 1855, to Joseph Groux (he was 3rd cousin to his wife’s stepmother on their surname line).

A permanent situation was needed for Herminie and Cordelia. A correspondent of this writer, one Claude LaMarche, tells me that Herminie and Cordelia “grew up in an orphanage.” More likely than not, it would have been nuns who saw the girls through their remaining childhood and early teen years. By 1861 however, when Herminie was 15, she was residing with Philomene, Joseph, and their three young children. (this time, her name was transcribed as "Hermangilde"). Herminie was likely now done with school and assisting her half-sister with the childcare. Cordelia, just 11, was likely still in the orphanage and attending school. I am still seeking to find the orphanage and the 1861 census entry for Cordelia.

1861 Census, St Laurent, Jacques Cartier County, Lower Canada, Ancestry.com

Joe and Herminie’s Somerville, Massachusetts Years

The mill towns in New England were actively recruiting young French-Canadian women to work in the textile factories during this period. Looking to start on her own, Herminie likely took a position in the mills in Somerville, Massachusetts, a new suburb just outside Boston. There she met Joe Dupont, baptized Joseph Andre Nazaire Dupont, a fellow French-Canadian who had first come to Boston in 1866 to seek his fortune. Joe and Herminie married on November 1, 1869 at St. Francis de Sales Catholic church in nearby Charlestown. The witnesses to the wedding were George Guenett and Eliza Vanile. Joe was 25 and Herminie, 23. Herminie’s sister Cordelia arrived soon after, probably about 1870. Cordelia would go on to marry Stanislaus Gervais in 1872, remaining in Boston to raise a large family and live a long life.

Herminie and Joe are not found under “Dupont” in the 1870 census for Somerville. However, a couple named Joseph and Armenia Bridge are listed. Because “Armenia” is a common misspelling of Herminie, and Dupont is French for “of the bridge,” is it appears that for a short while the couple considered Anglicizing their name to better fit in with their WASP neighbors. The Joseph of this census is working as a potter, and a city directory for 1871 lists a Joseph Dupont, also a potter, in Somerville on “Winthrop near Broadway.” The next directory, published in 1873, lists the Joseph Dupont of “Winthrop n. Broadway” as working as a Grocer, an occupation that Joe would return to in some of the last years of his life.

Joseph and Armenia Bridge in the 1870 census for Somerville, page 495. Ancestry.com. 


The couple soon began having children. The civil registries record the births of two babies named Joseph A. Dupont, both to Joseph and Minnie Dupont of Somerville. The first is born November 19, 1870 and the second, precisely one year later on November 19, 1871. The birth place is listed as Cross St. in 1870 and on Dane St. in 1871. Next, the St. Francis records record the birth and baptisms of “Joseph George Dupont” (13 and 17 March 1872) and “William Arthur” (19 and 20 December 1874). These are the sons who lived to adulthood, who we know as George and Will.

Joseph A. Dupont in the Somerville Civil Register 19 Nov 1870, NEHGS.


One year later: Joseph A. Dupont in the Somerville Civil Register 19 Nov 1871, NEHGS

George's 13 March 1872 baptismal record. St Francis de Sales, Charlestown MA, NEHGS
William's 20 Dec 1874 baptismal record, NEHGS

The November 19, 1871 entry is problematic. Joe’s obit informs us that the couple had four children, and we have found four entries. But it is impossible for a woman to have a baby in mid-November of 1871 followed just four months later by a surviving baby in mid-March of 1872. We believe that somehow Joseph A. Dupont’s 1870 birth was erroneously re-recorded in 1871 and that another child has yet to be found. The 1870/1871 baptismal record(s) have not been found – was the baby possibly a stillbirth, baptized at home? As of this writing [2019], the St. Francis burial records, which might provide more information, are not yet available .

Joe is not found in any of the Somerville city directories after 1873. Many newly arrived Roman Catholic French-Canadians became disenchanted with the chilly reception that so many received in Protestant New England and soon departed for friendlier climes in the lesser-established Midwestern states. That the Dupont family listed themselves under the name “Bridge” instead of Dupont in the 1870 city directory may be an indication of pressures they felt. In any case the family left Somerville sometime between 1875 and 1880.

Somerville / Charlestown Data, Chronological Order  

Date
Adult(s)
Child
Occupation / Address / Witnesses
Source
1 Nov 1869
Josephus Dupont,
Hermenia Deguire

Georguis Guenett, Eliza Vanile
SFdS marr rec
14 Jul 1870
Bridge, Joseph 25 [he’s 26]; Armenea 23, both b Canada

potter, married Sept 1869 [it was Nov]
census
19 Nov 1870
Joseph and Minnie both b Canada
Joseph A. Dupont
laborer, Cross [St.], Somerville
Civil BR
1871
Dupont Joseph

potter, house Winthrop near Broadway, Somerville
City dir
19 Nov 1871
Joseph and Minnie both b Canada
Joseph A. Dupont
laborer, Dane [St.], Somerville
Civil BR
13 Mar 1872
Joseph Dupont, Armenia Deguire
Josephus Georgius Dupont
Bp 17 Mar. Stanislaus Jarvis, Cordelia Deguire
SFdS bpt
1873
Dupont Joseph

grocer, h. Winthrop, n. Broadway, Somerville
City dir
19 Dec 1874
Joseph Dupont, Harmanie Deguere
William Arthur Dupont
Bp 24 Dec. Felix Ethier, Agnes Baptiste
SFdS bpt
SFdS: St Francis de Sales Catholic church in Charlestown.  In the civil birth registers for Somerville, (“Civil BR”), the address is for the place of birth, not necessarily the residence of the parents. There are no men named “Joseph Bridge” in the 1869, 1871 or 1873 directories for Somerville. City directories are available at Ancestry.com.


Allouez, Michigan


The family cannot be conclusively located after December, 1874 until the 1880 Federal Census taken on June 12. At this time they are living in Allouez, Michigan – high up on the Keweenaw Peninsula, the northward spike off the main portion of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The township is named for Father Claude-Jean Allouez (1622-1689), a Jesuit missionary and French explorer of North America. Commercial copper mining in the Keweenaw Peninsula began in the mid-1840s. Joe is listed as a “Com[mon] Laborer” and “Armenia” is keeping house. Just two children are living at this time. The boys ages are correctly noted as 8 and 5 for George and William, and the birthplaces are listed correctly. If a 4th child was born after the Duponts left Massachusetts, but died before the 1880 census (as must be the case), the child will be difficult to locate unless perhaps the Allouez church records (Marquette archdiocese) can be obtained.



1880 Census, Allouez Township, Keweenaw Co, MI

The Duponts left Allouez within a couple years after the 1880 census. Per the 1895 Minnesota census, they were already in Minnesota by 1882; corroborating this, the Duponts do not appear in the 1884 every-name Michigan census. City directories for the towns on the Upper Peninsula are few; its unlikely little Allouez had a directory during this period.

Terrebonne, Minnesota


By 1882, the family was settling into Terrebonne, Minnesota, located in Minnesota’s far north in Red Lake County. The 1885 state census finds Joe and Minnie living in a household with an August Dupont, age 20, and with their sons George, 12 and Will, 10. August’s relationship to the family is unknown. The village of Terrebonne was never large; today it is nearly a ghost town with just a couple houses occupied near the site of the now-closed St. Anthony de Padua Catholic Church and cemetery. But here Joe and his sons ran Dupont and Sons Grocery Store.


The family was much the same in July of 1895 when the next Minnesota census was taken. Joe is listed as a farmer, “Ermina,” George and William are all listed together. George, age 23, is clerking at the store; William is listed as a laborer. In between the listing for the Duponts and the next adults is a 5-year-old boy, Philip Chagel, born in Minnesota. The census does not list relationships or distinguish individual households, but because he’s listed below the Dupont sons and above the next adult, its quite possible he was being cared for by the Duponts.


Changes came shortly after 1895. On December 28, 1896 Will married Rosealba Juneau, daughter of Edouard and Marcelline (Sauve) Juneau. In 1898, George married Zelia Juneau, Rosealba’s sister. For about a year, things went well.


Tragedy struck Joseph first on July 26, 1899, when Herminie died. She was only 52 years old. Will and Rose had a productive union, with children Rosealma M, Philippe, Luc Ovide, and Walter Joseph born in Terrebonne between November 1897 and May 1902. George and Zelia had a daughter Emma Frances born in 1898. Then Zelia took sick and died on Jun 15, 1900. The same sad fate was to end Rose’s life too soon: she passed on Dec 3, 1902. The Juneau sisters Rose and Zelia were tragically young at the time of death, at ages 25 and 24 respectively. All three of the Dupont men of Terrebonne, widowed in a timespan of less than three years! Their wives were buried in the churchyard of St. Anthony of Padua in Terrebonne. Will had Rose’s stone inscribed in French.



All three of the men remarried. Joseph married Odelia “Delia” Berthiaume in 1902. George married Anna Mary Perra in Waverly, Minnesota on April 19, 1903. Louisa Poirier was recruited to help Will with the children. In February, 1904. Will and Louisa would have nine children of their own together; George and Anna would have eight. The story of Will’s life with Louisa has already been told by Jeannette.


Tired of the harsh winters and not-so-good land around “Terrebonne,” in 1911 Joe and Delia departed Minnesota for Selah Heights, Yakima County, Washington. Delia passed on December 13, 1925 in Selah. In 1929 Joe, now 87, returned to Terrebonne to live out his last days with his son George. Joseph Andre Nazaire Dupont passed this life on January 10, 1933. He had made it all the way to 90 years old.


Correction posted 20Jan2020: "If a 4th child was born after the Duponts left Massachusetts, but died before the 1880 census (as must be the case)," originally appeared erroneously as ...before the 1870 census...