
Marie Josephine Parker (Carrier) was a Métis woman probably of Saulteaux (aka Plains Ojibwe) Chippewa-Cree ancestry. She married a Northern Cheyenne man in Montana.
Anishinaabe, Nakawē ᐊᓂᔑᓈᐯ, ᓇᐦᑲᐍ
Regions with significant populations: Canada (Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta, British Columbia)
United States (Michigan). The Saulteaux are a branch of the Ojibwe Nations within Canada who pushed west. They formed a mixed culture of woodlands and plains Indigenous customs and traditions. The Central Saulteaux, better known as Manitoba Saulteaux, are found primarily in eastern and southern Manitoba, extending west into southern Saskatchewan. During the late 18th century and early 19th century, as partners with the Cree in the fur trade, the Saulteaux migrated northwest into the Swan River and Cumberland districts of west-central Manitoba. there are a number of historical bands of Saulteaux from the Manitoba area from which Marie could have descended.
Throughout much of their history on the Plains, the Ojibwe developed a Plains-oriented identity and way of life in tandem with their Cree and Nakoda neighbors with whom they traded, intermarried, and fought against common enemies, particularly the Lakota and Gros Ventre.
The Rocky Boy Reservation is one of seven Native American reservations in the U.S. state of Montana. Established by an act of Congress on September 7, 1916, it was named after Ahsiniiwin (Stone Child, incorrectly originally translated as Rocky Boy), the chief of the Chippewa band, who had died a few months earlier. It was established for landless Chippewa (Ojibwe) Indians in the American West, but within a short period of time many Cree (nēhiyaw) and Métis were also settled there. Today the Cree outnumber the Chippewa on the reservation. The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) recognizes it (and the tribe) as the Chippewa Cree Reservation.
(Curator Note: a review of the census from the rocky boy Reservation in 1919 and 1920 do NOT identify Marie Parker. As noted in the comment above, it was recognized that Métis also resided on the reservation. This leads to the conclusion that reinforces the theory that Marie was Métis and not Chippewa.)
Some Chippewa leaders refused to recognize treaties with the United States brought about the problem of landless Chippewas in Montana. As a result, the United States refused to recognize them and forced them off of reservation rolls, as well as claiming that they held no jurisdiction over them.
Source: Wikipedia contributors. Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 1 Jan. 2025. Web. 26 Mar. 2025. (multiple pages)
The Métis are a distinct Indigenous people with both First Nations and Euro-Settler ancestry, often arising from relationships between First Nations women and European fur trade employees, with the Ojibwe (also known as Chippewa or Saulteaux) being one of the First Nations groups involved in this history. The Métis are the descendants of Cree and Assiniboine women who joined with French and Scottish men to raise children and shape a hybrid culture in the heart of Canada.
The Red River Settlement was a colony built at the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers long before Confederation. Winnipeg was once called Red River Settlement, it would become the city of Winnipeg. St. Boniface, a historical district of Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, is the site of the Red River Settlement, founded in 1812 by Thomas Douglas, 5th Earl of Selkirk, and a crucial location for French-Canadian and Métis culture and history, including the birthplace of Louis Riel.
Saint-Boniface is located on Treaty 1 land, the land is the traditional territory of Anishinaabeg (Ojibwe, Odawa, Potawatomi, Mississaugas, Nipissing, and Algonquin), Cree, Oji-Cree (a distinct nation with mixed Ojibwe and Cree traditions), Dakota (Dakota, Lakota, and Nakoda), and Dene (Athabaskan) Peoples, and the homeland of the Métis Nation.
St. Boniface, Red River Settlement: Artist: Napier, William Henry Edward, 1828-1894 (Source: Source: Library and Archives Canada/MIKAN)
...
Additional Reading:
1) Sutherland, Donna. “First Nations and Métis People of Red River Settlement (Pre and Post Confederation) - Red River North Heritage.” Red River North Heritage, 15 Jan. 2012, redrivernorthheritage.com/first-nations-and-metis-people-of-red-river-settlement/.
2) “Indigenous Peoples | Société Historique de Saint-Boniface.” Shsb.mb.ca, 2025, shsb.mb.ca/your-history-overview/prairie-heritage/indigenous-peoples/?lang=en. Accessed 25 Mar. 2025.
3) “Russborough.com:Winnipeg-Western Expansion.” Russborough.com, 2025, russborough.com/antique_prints/canadiana/winnipeg-western%20expansion/winnipeg-western-expansion.html. Accessed 25 Mar. 2025.
4) “From the Red River Settlement to Manitoba (1812—70) – Dictionary of Canadian Biography.” Dictionary of Canadian Biography, 2025, www.biographi.ca/en/special/70?p=1. Accessed 2 Mar. 2025.
5) “The French-Canadian Genealogist.” The French-Canadian Genealogist, www.tfcg.ca/.
6) “Manitoba History: Red River Resistance.” Www.mhs.mb.ca, 1995, www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/mb_history/29/redriverresistance.shtml.
Biography:
Born Marie Josephine Carrier on March 1, 1884 in French (Winnipeg), Manitoba, Canada to father Alphonse John Andre Carriere and mother
Angelique Grant LaRocque LaRock, a woman of French and Indian blood
Mrs. Stella Armstrong of Kalispell, Mrs. LaRocque of Roy and Mrs. Marie Parker of Busby are daughters.
According to records Marie had six (6) half siblings and three (3) full siblings. She also had two children of her own from her marriage to Charles A. Parker.
Marie's grandfather Moïse Carrière is confirmed Métis by virtue of holding a Scrip affidavit. Pierre aka Peter Grant Jr., brother of Maries mother, and his wife Marie, were were enumerated in the Turtle Mountain Band census of 1884. In 1892 Pierre Grant, wife Marie and children William, Daniel and Julia were living on the Turtle Mountain Reservation in North Dakota. Scrip was Issued under Red Lake & Pembina Treaties, and both tribes were under the jurisdiction of the Turtle Mountain Agency in the US. It is likely through this ancestor relationship with the Turtle Mountain Mixed-Blood Chippewa that Marie is cited as a Chippewa woman by the BIA and Canton Asylum., even though she had resided in Montana since c. 1886. Marie's great-great-grandmother was a half-blood Chippewa woman, the product of a Sioux father and Chippewa mother.
Marie moved with her family from Winnipeg, probably the St. Boniface ward, to Montana at the age of one with her parents, c.1885. She married Charles Parker on March 9, 1909 at Choteau, Teton County, Montana in a private ceremony in the home of friends Mr. and Mrs. Nat Collins. Charles died on April 12, 1960. They had two children, Theresa Marie Eastman (Parker) and Gabriel Arthur Parker. (Curator Note: If she were chippewa she should have been listed in the Turtle Mountain census under the name Parker, but she is not probably because she had been in Montana for 25 years she was no longer in Chippewa records.)
Marie attended school in Montana, first at St. Peter's Mission in Hayes, Cascade County,
Source: Photographer unknown. Porter, Francis Xavier and Scott, Kristi D. Ursuline Sisters of Great Falls. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing, 2012, p. 25.
then at St. Paul's Catholic Mission school in Conrad (Hays), Fort Belknap Indian Reservation
Source: Prando, Peter Paul, Father, 1845-1906, St. Paul's Mission. (Circa 1905). Montana History Portal, accessed 26/03/2025, https://www.mtmemory.org/nodes/view/74714
According to the book Vanished in Hiawatha, author Carla Joinson advised that Marie was committed on April 5, 1919 (Marie would have been living in Montana on this date) and discharged on November 6, 1921. No diagnosis was given. Given the mixed blood background of Marie, its hard to tell exactly why the BIA considered her a chippewa Indian and authorized her commitment to the Canton Asylum. But paperwork from the asylum shows her as a patient/inmate between 1919 and 1921.
"Mrs. Parker Is Buried Marie J. Parker, 90, who died in a Billings nursing home, was buried in the Lame Deer Cemetery Dec. 4. Mother of Theresa Eastman of Lame Deer and Gabriel Parker of Busby, Mrs. Parker was widowed in 1960; her late husband, Charles A., was an old - time team and wagon freighter in the Choteau, Conrad and Great Falls area. The Parkers moved to Lame Deer in 1918 and, in 1922, took out a homestead on Parker Creek near Busby. They moved the following year to Davis Creek. They were married in 1909 in Choteau. Mrs. Parker was born Feb. 29, 1884, in Winnipeg, Can. She came to Montana at the age of one with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfonse Carrier. Services were held in the Lame Deer Catholic Church. Jack's Pharmacy Hardin, Montana 59034"
A'tome (The Northern Cheyenne Press)
Dec 19 1974 • Lame Deer, Rosebud County, Montana, USA, page 2.
Her profile is part of the https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Space:Canton_Asylum.
Curator Note: Conclusion regarding Marie being Métis of Saulteaux (aka Plains Ojibwe) Chippewa ancestry is based on the following points of consideration:
1) Marie Parker was a patient/inmate in the Canton Asylum for Insane Indians. One must be an Indian to be committed there. She is identified as a Chippewa! Based on the fact that both her mother's parents were Métis that she was likely Métis
2) In her marriage license her husband Chas.A is called "white" and she is called "white". But her husband is found in the Indian census roll for the Tongue River Reservation in Montana, making him a Northern Cheyenne. If Marie was white and her husband Indian, even then she would not have been allowed into the Canton Asylum, so she was Indian of some tribe.
3) Her mother's maiden name is Ducharme and married name is LaRoque, her mother used the name of her step-father, LaRock, are both French and Chippewa names as seen in the census of the Turtle Mountain Agency. She could have those names and still be Métis.
4) There were no Chippewa Reservations identified in Montana, but her mother seems to have a relationship with the Devils Lake Chippewa Reservation in North Dakota. Devils Lake is one of the tribes that was part of the Turtle Mountain Reservation which also included Métis families.
5) There is an old undated photo of Angelique that is obviously Indian...
6) The tree development indicates that BOTH the father and mother of Maria were Métis. Marie was likely born in St. Boniface which became the city of Winnipeg where she is indicated in documents as being born. Winnipeg was once called Red River Settlement, the original Métis settlement.
7) Her grandfather Moïse Carrière is confirmed Métis by virtue of holding a Scrip affidavit. Her mother is defined as "a woman of French and Indian blood" in her obit, which would likely make her Métis.
Research Notes:
-Collaboration from FamilySearch @ https://www.familysearch.org/en/tree/person/collaborate/LZ2M-FFB
-IMPORTANT RELATIONSHIPS
ANGELIQUE GRANT/aka LAROCQUE/LaROCK/ROCK, DAUGHTER OF JEAN BAPTISTE GRANT AND JULIE DUCHARME
[note on her burial record: "She went by the name of LaRock as that was her step-father's name"]
MARRIED 2nd: ALPHONSE JOHN ANDRE CARRIERE, SON OF MOISE CARRIERE AND JOSEPHTE BEAUGRAND DIT CHAMPAGNE. (died 13 March 1917, Montana)
MARRIED 1st: LOUIS PETIT THOMAS, SON OF LOUIS THOMAS OR PETIT AND MARGUERITE FREDERIC OR PAUL.
-METIS SCRIP RECORD
Petit, Angèlique - Concerning her claim as a child - Address, Battleford, P.O. [Post Office] - Born, 1867 at Pembina, USA - Father, Louis Petit, (Métis) - Mother, Angèlique Larocque, (Métis) - Married, 1884 at Battleford to Joseph Huppé - Children living, one, Francois born 1884 - Scrip for $240 - Claim 1250 = 19uu. File.
RG15-D-II-8-b. Volume/box number: 1331. Copied container number: C-14940.
Textual material. [Access: Open]. Government.
Finding aid number: 15-20
(Métis scrip records, held by Library and Archives Canada, are crucial for genealogical research and understanding the Métis people's history, documenting land rights and compensation offered by the Canadian government.)
-CHOTEAU CEMETERY, CHOTEAU MONTANA, BURIAL RECORD
ANGELINE GRANT (LaRock), interned 18 Oct 1937
Married 2x
1) Louis Thomas
2) Alphonse Carriere
"She went by the name of LaRock as that was her step-father's name"
Petit, Angèlique - Concerning her claim as a child - Address, Battleford, P.O. [Post Office] - Born, 1867 at Pembina, USA - Father, Louis Petit, (Métis) - Mother, Angèlique Larocque, (Métis) - Married, 1884 at Battleford to Joseph Huppé - Children living, one, Francois born 1884 - Scrip for $240 - Claim 1250 = 19uu. File.
RG15-D-II-8-b. Volume/box number: 1331. Copied container number: C-14940.
Textual material. [Access: Open]. Government.
Finding aid number: 15-20
-BURIAL - FIND A GRAVE
Birth: Apr. 1, 1841 Virginia City, Madison County, Montana, USA
Death: Oct. 13, 1937 Choteau, Teton County, Montana, USA
Choteau Acantha (MT), 21 Oct 1937
Obit
Find A Grave Memorial# 33526347
-Lame Deer (Meaveʼhoʼeno in Cheyenne) is a census-designated place (CDP) in Rosebud County, Montana, United States. The community is named after Miniconjou Lakota chief Lame Deer, who was killed by the U.S. Army in 1877 under a flag of truce south of the town. It was the site of a trading post from the late 1870s. It is the tribal and government agency headquarters of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation.
-Winnipeg is located in the traditional territory of the Anishinaabe (Ojibwe), Ininew (Cree), Oji-Cree, Dene, and Dakota.
-Chas. A Parker (White) first shows on the roll in June 30, 1918. Marriage license with Marie J. Carrier (also indicated as White) dated March 6, 1909. According to the fact that Chas. A Parker is indicated in the Northern Cheyenne Indian census records for the Tongue River Reservation suggests that the marriage license is in error. According to the facts of the ancestors and descendants of Marie of Saulteaux (aka Plains Ojibwe) Chippewa suggests that she was also Indian. given that she was in fact committed to the Canton Asylum with approval of the BIA suggests that they too considered her an indian.
-Mother is Angelique Pasangwap Thomas (born Grant), https://www.myheritage.com/research/record-40001-487498880/angeliqu...
-Charles and Marie were not listed in the Tongue River Reservation census until 1918, and then Marie is no longer listed beginning in 1928. After 1928 the two children are listed with father Charles, but we know she did not die until 1974, he in 1960, and there is no indication of a divorce or separation, and the obit makes noo reference to a seperated husband, so the explanation seems to be she was just not an enrolled Cheyenne so why show her.
__________
Sources:
Basic FamilySearch starting point:
https://www.familysearch.org/en/tree/person/details/LK3B-KSJ
1909 Mar 7 - The Choteau Acantha: Mar 11 1909 • Choteau, Teton, Montana, United States
1909 Mar 9 - "Montana, County Marriages, 1865-1950", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F373-PJ4 : Sat Jan 18 06:11:30 UTC 2025), Entry for Charles A. Parker and Charles C. Parker, 07 Mar 1909, pg. 228/978, marriage license #365, married at Ministry of the Gospel, Choteau, Teton County, Montana
(Curator Note: the marriage license says that the father's name was Dan Carrier, yet the tree on FamilySearch shows no such person. Dan is elsewhere shown as an aka))
1915 - "South Dakota, State Census, 1915", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:MMHV-DYV : Wed Jul 10 22:32:30 UTC 2024), Entry for Marie Parker and , 1915, pg. 503/2092, card #102 (age 28), South Dakota state census.
1918 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll576unit/page/n446/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 447/595, line 764+ "wife not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Mont.
(Curator Note: Chas is listed in his first appearance in 1918 (why?0, and wife is suggested but not listed. name of daughter Theresa Marie (March 1912) confirms wife Marie who is implied but not listed because she is not an enrolled Cheyenne Indian.)
1919 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll576unit/page/n501/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 502/595, line 721+ "wife not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Mont.
(Curator Note: see note for 1918 above)
1920 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll576unit/page/n501/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 564/595, line 715+ "wife not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Mont.
1920 Jun 30 - Camp Verde School: 1910-27; Canton Insane Asylum: 1910-22, Series: Superintendents' Annual Narrative and Statistical Reports, Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, 7th and Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, DC, 20408 @ https://catalog.archives.gov/id/155854182?objectPage=899, line 20, female census of the Canton Asylum
1920 Jan 30 - "United States, Census, 1920", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:M6J7-KMW : Sat Jan 18 07:00:02 UTC 2025), Entry for Marie Parker, 1920, pg. 652/1130, line 89 (age 36), census of the Asylum for Indians, Canton Township, Lincoln County, South Dakota
1921 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, archive.org/details/indiancensusroll138unit/page/n137/mode/1up?view=theater. Accessed 29 Feb. 2024, pg. 507/519, line 28, female census of the Canton Asylum
1922 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n45/mode/1.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 46/715, line 721+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Mont.
1923 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n45/mode/1.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 128/715, line 713+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1924 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n209/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 210/715, line 723+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1924 - "United States, Native American, Census Rolls, 1885-1940", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:8B7M-6RMM : Tue Jan 21 05:46:23 UTC 2025), Entry for Marie Parker, 1924, pg. 212/718, line 723+ (age xx), census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1925 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n292/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 293/715, line 715+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1926 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n376/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 377/715, line 757+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1926 Oct 22 - "Montana, Rosebud County Records, 1878-2011", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QGLJ-T748 : Sun Mar 10 14:34:36 UTC 2024), Entry for Gabriel Parker and Charles A Parker, 22 October 1926, pg. 89/139, line 24 (b=10.22.1926), marriage license of Gabriel Parker, married at Busby, Big Horn County, Montana
(Parents were Charles A and Marie Parker)
1927 Jun 30 - "United States, Native American, Census Rolls, 1885-1940", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:8BSD-LW6Z : Sat Jul 13 14:04:35 UTC 2024), Entry for Marie Parker, 1927, pg. 466/718, line 772+, census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
1928 Jun 30 - “Indian Census Rolls, 1885-1940 [Microform].” Internet Archive, Washington : National Archives and Records Service, 1965, https://archive.org/details/indiancensusroll577unit/page/n549/mode/.... Accessed 29 Feb. 2024 pg. 550/715, line 773+ "wife Maria not on roll", census of the Northern Cheyenne Indians, Tongue River Agency, Montana
(Curator Note: this census suggests Marie is 1/4 blood? Her mother is describe in documents as "a woman of French and Indian blood" suggesting her father was French and her mother Indian, therefore her mother, GM Julie Grant (Ducharme) was a Cree or Chippewa Indian. If Chippewa, then Marie could be 1/4 mixed-blood Chippewa.)
1934 Apr 15 - "Montana, County Marriages, 1865-1950", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F34M-WRK : Sun Jan 19 01:14:30 UTC 2025), Entry for Robert T. Eastman and Myron G. Eastman, 15 Apr 1934, pg. 174/584, marriage certificate #1785, State of Montana, County of Rosebud
1940 Apr 11 - "United States, Census, 1940", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:VYGY-DLD : Sun Jan 12 22:36:13 UTC 2025), Entry for Charles Parker and Marie Parker, 1940, pg. 456/1062, line 35 (age 54), census of School District 17K Kirby Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation (part), Big Horn County, Montana
1949 Mar 17 - "Montana, County Marriages, 1865-1950", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:F371-LY5 : Sat Jan 18 17:53:44 UTC 2025), Entry for Gabriel Parker and Charles A. Parker, 17 Mar 1949, pg. 308/332, Marriage Record #5930, State of Montana, County of Big Horn
1974 Dec 1 - "Montana, Big Horn County Records, 1884-2011", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVCS-T41F : Mon Jan 06 18:57:05 UTC 2025), Entry for Marie Josephine Parker and Alfonso Carrier, 01 Dec 1974, pg. 254/542, certificate of death #785, death at Billings, Yellowstone, Montana, Montana, United States
(Curator Note: note that the father is listed as Alfonso Carrier, mother is listed as Angelic Unknown))
1974 Dec 19 - A'tome (The Northern Cheyenne Press) Dec 19 1974 • Lame Deer, Rosebud County, Montana, USA, page 2.
"Mrs. Parker Is Buried Marie J. Parker, 90, who died in a Billings nursing home, was buried in the Lame Deer Cemetery Dec. 4. Mother of Theresa Eastman of Lame Deer and Gabriel Parker of Busby, Mrs. Parker was widowed in 1960; her late husband, Charles A., was an old - time team and wagon freighter in the Choteau, Conrad and Great Falls area. The Parkers moved to Lame Deer in 1918 and, in 1922, took out a homestead on Parker Creek near Busby. They moved the following year to Davis Creek. They were married in 1909 in Choteau. Mrs. Parker was born Feb. 29, 1884, in Winnipeg, Can. She came to Montana at the age of one with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alfonse Carrier. Services were held in the Lame Deer Catholic Church. Jack's Pharmacy Hardin, Montana 59034"
1995 Jun 25 - "Montana, Big Horn County Records, 1884-2011", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVCS-TK56 : Tue Jan 21 16:27:11 UTC 2025), Entry for Gabriel Arthur Parker and Charles A Parker, 25 Jun 1995, pg. 395/542, certificate of death #53, Big Horn County Courthouse, Hardin, Montana.
1995 Jun 25 - "United States, Social Security Numerical Identification Files (NUMIDENT), 1936-2007", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6KWJ-8QF2 : Tue Feb 25 12:23:30 UTC 2025), Entry for Gabriel Parker and Charles A Parker, no image
Name Gabriel Parker
Sex Male
Birth Date 22 Oct 1926
Birthplace Busby Big Ho*, Montana, United States
Social Program Application Date Jul 1943
Residence Place Billings, Yellowstone, Montana, United States
Death Date 25 Jun 1995
Race White
Father's Name Charles A Parker
Father's Sex Male
Mother's Name Josephine Currier
Mother's Sex Female
Event Type Social Program Correspondence
1995 Oct 18 - "Montana, Big Horn County Records, 1884-2011", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:QVCS-TF1N : Wed Jan 08 12:03:28 UTC 2025), Entry for Theresa M Eastman and Charles A Parker, 18 Oct 1995, pg. 125/172, death certificate #74, Big Horn County Courthouse, Hardin, Montana.
1995 Oct 18 - "United States, Social Security Numerical Identification Files (NUMIDENT), 1936-2007", , FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:6KWK-CXJC : Tue Feb 25 14:57:21 UTC 2025), Entry for Theresa M Eastman and Charles A Parker, no image
Name Theresa Marie Eastman
Alias Theresa M Eastman
Sex Female
Birth Date 1 Mar 1912
Birthplace Choteau Teto*, Montana, United States
Social Program Application Date May 1948
Residence Place Lame Deer, Rosebud, Montana, United States
Death Date 18 Oct 1995
Race Other
Father's Name Charles A Parker
Father's Sex Male
Mother's Name Marie J Carrier
Mother's Sex Female
Event Type Social Program Correspondence
1884 |
February 29, 1884
|
St. Boniface, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
|
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1974 |
December 1, 1974
Age 90
|
Western Manor Nursing Home, Billings, Yellowstone County, MT, United States
|
|
???? |
Lame Deer Cemetery, Lame Deer, Rosebud County, MT, United States
|