Misc. Notes
In 1861 he lived with his parents in Bathurst, New Brunswick.
®10095 In 1871 james Arcineau [sic] was 8 and lived with his parents and siblings in Bathurst.
®10096 In 1881 James, 19 and single, lived with his parents and Charles, 21 and Mary 23 on his parents farm in Bathurst, New Brunswick.
®10095On 24 April 1891 James Arseneau, 30, born in New Brunswick lived with his father Domnic, 72, his mother, Olive, 70, his wife Mary, 31 and his children Felius, 4, Mary Agnes, 2, and Joseph Alex, 1, in Bathurst, New Brunswick.
®5403James and Mary Arseneau had 7 children before they emigrated from Bathurst, New Brunswick to Bayfield, Wisconsin in 1898
®5372 or 1900.
®3086 On 1 June 1905 James D. Arseneau, a 42 year old day laborer lived in a house he rented in Ward 2 of the City of Washburn, Wisconsin. He lived with his wife Mary, 44, and children Phillip, 19, Alec, 15, Mary, 13, Frederick, 10, Vina, 8, Charles, 6, and Florence, 11 months of age.
®8176 On 15 April 1910 James Arseneau, a 47 year old laborer in a box factory lived in a house he owned on Roy’s Point Road in the Township of Bayfield, Wisconsin. He lived with his wife Mary, 47, to whom he had been married for 26 years, and with children Alex, 20, Fred, 17, Melvina, 15, Charles, 12, Florence, 6, and Gilbert, 3.
®8164 Mary had married George Fortin ca 1904 and Phillip had married Catherine Grant in 1909 and so neither lived with their parents and siblings in 1910. On 1 January 1920 James, 58 and his wife Mary, 57 lived in a house he owned on Red Cliff Road in the Township of Bayfield. James had emigrated from French Canada [sic] in 1898, worked as a laborer in a logging camp and was not a naturalized citizen. No children lived with them.
®5372 On 1 April 1930 James, 65, a street laborer and Marie, 64, lived on Fourth Street in Bayfield, Wisconsin. They had emigrated in 1900. Their son Charles, 31 and single, lived with them. James had been 23 and Marie 22 at the time of their marriage.
®3086 Perhaps James worked in the same logging camp as Fred Hebert and felt sorry for Fred’s widow and seven children when Fred died in 1924. That may be why he allowed Maggie Hebert and her children to live in the bottom floor of James’ house on Sweeney Avenue in Bayfield after Fred died in 1924.
®5374