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These two pages are notes by June Guyot Good about her Swiss
ancestry. They show a connection with the Huguenin Family.
1
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2
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The first page has Millie's annotations of her mother's notes. On the
second page, the annotations are gone, and Millie has written her
mother's name as the author of the notes.
Guyot History
The following is my interpretation of June and Millie's notes. It
is essentially the same as my original 2002 Apr 11 version.
-- dg 2011 Nov 22
- Millie and June's ancestry
1 Samuel Henri Guyot
Susanne Marie Perregaux
..2 Samuel Henri Guyot
Elmire Eugenie Majon
... 3 Albert Henri Guyot
??
......4 June Pearl Guyot
Archie Good
........5 Mildred Maurine Good
Merle Wayne Croy
- There was a marriage between Marie Louise Huguenin and Pierre
Frederic Majon, a brother of Elmire Eugenie Majon. (June's
"Huguenin" is a little hard to decipher.)
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..2 Elmire Eugenie Majon
Samuel Henri Guyot
..2 Pierre Frederic Majon
Marie Louise Huguenin
- The Samuel Henri and Elmire Eugenie Guyot family (June's grandparents)
immigrated through the port of New Orleans in 1855. Their son Fritz
Alphonso died while in quarantine there.
- My great grandfather Ulysse Huguenin brought the orphan
Ed Weisinbach from Switzerland to Peabody, KS. My mother,
Jane Huguenin Good, tells the same story, although she spells
his name a little differently.
"My paternal grandparents, Henry Ulysse and Louise Eugene' Perret
Huguenin and their three older children Paul, Robert and Emma came
to America from Switzerland in the late eighteen eighties and
settled in Kansas, living in Newton, El Dorado and Peabody. While
they were living in Kansas Rose, Oscar and Ed were
born. Grandfather operated a horse-drawn kerosene wagon and made
house to house deliveries over town. He was a restless unsettled
sort of person and it was because of this that he made several
trips back to the old country, leaving his family in Kansas. On
his return from one of these trips he brought with him a young
Swiss boy by the name of Ed Wyssenback. Ed was raised with the
Huguenin children from then on although he retained his own
name." (1 p3)
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