Thank you, Roberta Estes, for your kind mention of our Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA Project, the Haplogroup A Project, and Anne Marie Rimbault in your latest blog post about mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) testing! Thank you three times over! Anne Marie Rimbault's matrilineal descendants belong to the A2f1a mtDNA haplogroup mentioned in your article, verified through FTDNA's full genomic sequence testing and we all match! Anne Marie, her history, and her lineage, and these results, have guided all who belong to her vast, and geographically dispersed, extended Acadian Amerindian family home.
Visit Roberta's blog to read her post about mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) testing dna-explained.com/2019/05/16/mitochondrial-dna-part-1-overview/ Visit here to learn more about the Acadian Amerindian Ancestry DNA Project: https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/acadian-amerindian/about/background Visit here to learn more about the Haplogroup A Project: https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/haplogroup-a-mtdna/about For the full story about Anne Marie Unknown of Port Royal, Nova Scotia (who was first married to the unknown Pinet and then to Rene Rimbault), her extended family's wide-ranging history and genealogy (with extensive references!) before and after the Acadian Expulsion from Nova Scotia that began in 1755, order Revisiting Anne Marie and Cajun By Any Other Name. Acadians Were Here Maryland Historical Trust 2018 Excellence in Media and Publications Acceptance Speech delivered by Marie Rundquist mrundqui@shentel.net February 1, 2018 at the Maryland Senate Office Building in Annapolis, Maryland. Reference: http://acadianswerehere.org for Dr. R. Martin Guidry, Contributor and Historian, Greg Wood, Author, Contributor and Historian, Marie Rundquist, Author, Contributor and Website Developer "The website, Acadians Were Here, which receives today the MHT award for Excellence in Media and Publications, delivers the lesser-known history of Acadians in Maryland to new audiences: tourists and tour guides, researchers, historical societies and organizations, journalists, documentary producers, family genealogists, and regular people interested in traveling to the places where over 900 Acadians were exiled after being forcibly removed from their lands in Nova Scotia in November of 1755. They travel by bus, by car, by bicycle and on foot to visit the areas around the Chesapeake Bay where Acadian families lived – and they connect to the Acadians Were Here website from the US and Canada to plan their trips. Thank you, Maryland Historical Trust for this excellent recognition of the Acadians Were Here organization and thanks to all whose support and endorsement we are so grateful to have received, and thanks to our guests today, Lynn Wood, Sean Carney, and my husband Edward Nowicki for their support. We honor Nell Ziehl and the Maryland Historical Trust Program staff for elevating the vital role of Acadians In Maryland’s history to the mainstream, and through this MHT award, recognizing our project, and that Acadians Were Here." About the Maryland Historical Trust 2018 Awards: https://mht.maryland.gov/awards_2018.shtml Press Release: 2018-0201-press-release-2018-md-preservation-awards.pdf Slideshow: mht.maryland.gov/awardsphotos2018.shtml For information about the sash worn by site developer and contributor, Marie Rundquist, pictured here (https://acadianswerehere.org/about-the-authors.html) on the Acadians Were Here website, please visit the following website: http://acadiens-metis-souriquois.ca/index.html where you will find the history and culture of an acadien-metis people discussed at length. |
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