Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Joe LaFont Port Sulphur, Louisiana: 1–3 and 6 Junior Edwards Bayou Sorrel, Louisiana: 1–6 and 12 Kenwood Knight Morgan City, Louisiana: 1 Malcom McQuiston Bayou Sorrel, Louisiana: 1–3 Mike Kliebert Hammond, Louisiana: 1 Randy Edwards (deceased) Bayou Sorrel, Louisiana: 1 and 3–6 T-Mike Kliebert Hammond, Louisiana: 1 Tommy Chauvin Port ...
Also: master hunter Junior Edwards and his older son, Willie, make their special hunting weapons, specially designed hooks. Another father and son team, Trapper Joe LaFont and his stepson Tommy, also hit the marshlands, where careless Tommy puts his life at risk.
Meek as a young man The old Joe Meek, as depicted in Frances Fuller Victor's Eleven Years in the Rocky Mountains and a Life on the Frontier, seeks employment with William Sublette. Joseph Meek was born on February 9, 1810, to James Meek and Spica Walker in Washington County, Virginia , near the Cumberland Gap .
Barclay was a British-born frontiersman of the American West. After working in St. Louis as a bookkeeper and clerk, he worked at Bent's Old Fort. He then ventured westward where he was a trapper, hunter, and trader. [1] Beckwourth, Jim: 1798–1866 1824–1866 United States Bent, Charles: 1799–1847 1828–1846 United States Bent, William
General Lafont in 1926. General Michel Laurent Marie Joseph Lafont (1874–1961) was the third Chief Scout of Scouts de France from 1936 to 1948, the first and only Chief Scout of Scoutisme Français from 1940 to 1948, [1] and member of the International Committee of the World Organization of the Scout Movement (WOSM). he is buried in Saint-Étienne Cemetery in Bayonne.
That article states that Joe Labelle found an empty Eskimo camp with 6 tents and that 25 men, women and children had vanished. The story also appears in Frank Edwards 's 1959 book Stranger than Science ; other versions appear in Whitley Strieber 's science fiction novel Majestic and Dean Koontz 's horror novel Phantoms .
In his time, he was a sailor, scout, soldier, gold seeker, hunter, trapper, woodhawk, whiskey peddler, guide, deputy, constable, and log cabin builder, taking advantage of any source of income-producing labor he could find. His final residence was in a veterans’ home in Santa Monica, California, where he died on January 21, 1900.
Joseph Gervais (October 21, 1777 – July 14, 1861) was a French-Canadian, later American, pioneer settler and trapper in the Pacific Northwest. He is the namesake for the town of Gervais, Oregon . [ 1 ]