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Notes for Rosa Loraine AUGUSTINE


!NARA_RG_75, Series M-595, Films #243-245, 418-424 and 649-654, Red Lake BIA
Enrollment, 1920:79/81
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Notes for Shayshahwubaushe AUGUSTINE


!NAME: }:},',<,}:\ (1880) Shay shah wub aush eak [1885, 1887]

!NAME: -:',',<,}:\ (1881) Say suh wah bash eak [1886]

!NAME: }:},',<,}:\ (1880) Shay shuh wub aush eak [1888]

!NAME: }:},',<,}:\ (1880) Shay shah woub aush eak [1889, WELSA]

!NAME: }:}:',<,}:\ Shay shay waub aush eke [45:9] (O-3208) [Powell 10/0248]

!NAME: }:}:',<,}:\ (1880 - APR, 1898) Shay shay woub aush eke [Powell 14/0081]

!GENEALOGY: Minnesota Historical Society, R.J. Powell Papers, Microf. M-455,
Roll 10, Powell Genealogies, families #45:2, #45:5
Powell 14/0081, White Earth Allotment O-3208: NW 1/4  SE 1/4  and SW 1/4  NE 1/4
12-144-42

!NARA_RG_75, Series M-595, Films #243-245, 418-424 and 649-654:
Pembina White Earth B.I.A. Enrollment, 1885:33 "Shay shay we ke shig's Band";
1886:92; 1887:239; 1888:240; 1889:16 "Way ke che ge shig's Band"

!WELSA Genealogy Sheets, abt 1991, married Fred Marchand "or died
unmarried"
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Notes for Susan Ahshewausheak AUGUSTINE


!NAME: Augustin, Susan (1882 - APR, 1900) [45:16] (O-3214) [Powell 10/0248,
14/0081]

!NAME: ,}:',}:\ (1882 - Apr, 1900) Ah-she-waush-eak [WELSA]

!GENEALOGY: Minnesota Historical Society, R.J. Powell Papers, Microf. M-455,
Roll 10, Powell Genealogies, family #45:5
Powell 14/0081, White Earth Allotment O-3214: W 1/2  NE 1/4  25-144-42

!WELSA Genealogy Sheets, abt 1991, listing her parents as Augustin and
Nay-ge-chau-ge-beak, and listing her a second time as the daughter of
Augustine
Return to Susan Ahshewausheak AUGUSTINE










































Notes for William AUGUSTINE


!NAME: Augustin, William (1892 - SEP 16, 1906) [45:18] (O-3216) [Powell 10/0248,
14/0081]

!GENEALOGY: Minnesota Historical Society, R.J. Powell Papers, Microf. M-455,
Roll 10, Powell Genealogies, family #45:5
Powell 14/0081, White Earth Allotment O-3216: W 1/2  NW 1/4  11-144-42

!WELSA Genealogy Sheets, abt
1991
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Notes for John AULT


!NAME: AULT, John (1819) [1860 U.S.]

!CENSUS: U.S. Census, Morrison County, 1860, family 54/54, Hotel
Keeper, Land $7000   Estate $350
(also listed: Hutchinson, Leonarde, Wade, Bruttley, Monroe, O'Key,
Russel)
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Notes for David AUSBURN


!U.S. CENSUS: Becker County, 1870, (listed under #19, Henry Way, farmer)
white laborer male citizen over age
21
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Notes for Augustin AUSELIN


!SOUR: The Fur Trade in Minnesota, Bruce White (1977), ISBN Number: 0-87351
-121-2, published by the Minnesota Historical Society: Hired by Jean B.
Berthelot on July 7, 1816 to winter on the Mississippi River for 900 livres
CITATIONS: [manuscript at the M.H.S.] Abbott, Samuel. Notorial Records,
1806-18
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Notes for Beatrice (King) AUSHING


!NAME: Aushing, Beatrice [1958 R.L. "Basic Roll"]

B.I.A._1934_INDIAN_REORGANIZATION_ACT: I.R.A. Council "Red Lake Reservation
Basic Roll," [NOV 10, 1958], Resolution No. 70-60, White [transcription by
Virginia
Rogers]
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Notes for Andrew AUSTIN


!NAME: Austin, Andrew (1839) [1860 U.S.]

!CENSUS: U.S. Census, Crow Wing County, 1860, (listed under #7, Daniel Burman,
merchant), stage
driver
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Notes for Daniel Harmon AUSTIN


!SOUR: Letter (October 12, 1987) from Dorothy Requa Peterson of Boise, Idaho
     I am happy when anyone asks me anything about my family.  My great
grand-father George Requa, then 22 years old (#22 James Branch), and his cousin
William Comb Requa (#53 James Branch) were members of the group of 21
missionaries and workers who started for Arkansas Territory in 1820 to
establish a misison school for the Osage Indians, located in what is now
northeastern Oklahoma, and believed to be the first school of any kind and the
first protestant church to be established in the state of Oklahoma.  In 1821,
another group of r1 peole established Harmony Mission in southwest Missouri
under the same auspices, about 100 miles northeast of Union Mission.  In this
latter group were Daniel Harmon Austin and his family from Vermont, including
his 20 year old daughter Mary Harmon Austin whi in 1827 married George Requa
and served with im at Union Mission.  George and Mary's youngest son Cyrus J.
Requa (#108 James Branch) was my grandfather, and his son Cyrus Bruce Requa
(#207) was my father.
     There were no white people for miles in any direction and the missionary
famioy had to cut timber and float it from 290 miles up stream from the Grand
(Neosho) River to provide permanent housing for the family and animals, and
eventually for other buildings and a schoolhouse; clear and plow land and plant
crops; erect fences; make bricks from the river bank clay; make slat from the
nearby salt spring; kill wild animals for food; construct a mill for sawing
wood and grinding grain; make and repair their own clothing and shoes, etc.
Incredibly the Osage Indians who had villages nearby were never hostile to the
missionaries, but spent a lot of their time fiercely fighting and defending
themselves against the Cherokees.
     Many of the missionaries including the two Requa men and the Austins and
their families settled in or near Bates County, Missouri, after the Missions
were abandoned in the 1830's (no money and no place to go!).  The United States
War Depat. had moved the Osage INdians further west, so that the mission
establishments were then in Cherokee
territory.
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Notes for Mary Harmony AUSTIN


!this is apparently the same person as (AFN:BX58-XP)

!SOUR: History of Bates County, Missouri, p. 383
     The parents of Mary Harmony Austin were missionaries who had left their
native state of Vermont to engage in mission work among the Indians of the
West, teaching among the Osage Indians for a number of years.  She was a cousin
of Rev. R.R. Stoors, of Brooklyn, New
York.
Return to Mary Harmony AUSTIN