happy 14th birthday Camden!

Happy 14th birthday Camden Paul Beaupre!

I’m the luckiest Papa in the world having you as my grandson.

You’re funny, smart, handsome, kind, curious and a young “renaissance man,” with a wide variety of talents and interests.

Learning new things is right up your alley because you’re self motivated, naturally pushing yourself to excel.

The latest example? Deciding to learn how to be a hockey ref. You’ve pursued this on your own, learning what it involves, going to classes and ice time, taking tests.  You’ll make your debut soon and will get paid for it when you do!  Such a perfect Camden Beaupre example of self motivation.

Ditto with your math achievements this year – you’re taking Freshman Algebra as an eight grader.  So proud of you.

Even though you’re always tying new things and pushing the envelope to be and do more, at the same time, you’re easy going, are a kind friend to many. Watching your friendship with Eli blossom has been fun.  I’ve been on the receiving end of this many times, including when the two of you wanted to show me the cool bike path you had made in the woods.

I love your sense of humor. You do funny things to keep the mood light and invite laughter.

It’s been a blast doing cool things with you over the years, from snowball fights and swimming to concerts and zip-lining to indoor skydiving and playing Risk and Stratego. These are the best times of my life and I appreciate every single moment I’m around you.

Happy birthday Camden, love you lots.IMG_3151 IMG_3148 IMG_3153 IMG_3158

Vampire Weekend!

What a blast going to your second concert with you!

I’ve seen nearly 200 concerts (should hit that number in 2020), but I’ll always fondly remember your first (Foo Fighters at Fenway Park) and tonight.

Rock on!

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Awesome August Adventure

August 13, 2019 was an epic day.  We took two cars to Nashua, NH to experience a day loaded with new kinds of fun & adventure including:

Red Robin in Nashua for lunch – yummy

Indoor skydiving at Sky Venture NH SkyVenture – flying without having to pack a parachute, pull a ripcord, or jump out of an airplane.

Indoor boogie boarding on the “endless wave” at Surf’s Up NH, the largest Indoor Surfing facility in North America.

Indoor rock climbing

Drinks and treats at the pool snack bar.

You guys had a blast – I was so proud of your bravery and determination.  No one quit, no one backed down!  Grammy, Nicole & yours truly enjoyed seeing you go from nervous and tentative to bold and amazing.  I would have joined you if not for my broken shoulder. Next time!

We missed you Ben!!

What an awesome August Adventure.

summer shoulder surgery

On June 19 Grammy and I drove to Patriot’s Place in Foxboro.  Sounds like fun, right? Unfortunately I was there to have surgery on my rotator cuff – not watch a football game.  My shoulder has been hurting for 8-10 months and I’ve been getting weaker, so it was time to get ‘er done.

The surgeon who worked on me – Dr. Oh – is one of the talents in the world of shoulder surgery.  He’s worked with Patriots and Red Sox players.  I was in good hands, and within a few hours of getting to Mass General/Brigham & Women’s hospital, we were on our way back home, Grammy taking over the driving duties.

I’ll feel crappy for 4-6 weeks, sleeping in a recliner, wearing a sling day and night, not being able to drive or use my right hand for anything. But you gotta do what you gotta do and suck it up to get to a better place.  I’ll do lots of physical therapy, but in 6-9 months I’ll be back in the game.

It’s weird – last year Grammy was down and out with her hip surgery; this year it’s my turn with shoulder work.  Sometimes in life you have to go through challenging times to get to a better place.

I was so happy and a little emotional seeing your drawings, cards and balloons when I got home. You made my day!  I’m so lucky to have you in my life.  Love you lots & lots forever.

photo below: Papa is obviously not pleased to be in this situation. Lefty better step up his game, he’s got a lot to do with righty out of commission.

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remembering a magical time

June 19 was a special day for you & your siblings – the last day of school in Durham.

Epic!

I still remember what it felt like as a kid when summer arrived. In those days we would have said Groovy!

As the final week of school wound down, our teachers (nuns in my case) backed off a little bit on the homework.  Classrooms were hot and we had a hard time paying attention to anything. Freedom was upon us.  Freedom to not go to school for an incredible two and a half months. Feedom to not have to study, take tests and sit still without moving at  our wooden desks. Freedom to be a kid, relax and have a little fun.

I hung out with my friends during summer, read books, swam in my above-ground pool, climbed trees, made models, listened to rock and roll on my transistor radio, read comic books, went to the Pines recreation center, played baseball, shot baskets, and made slingshots out of Y tree branches.

Summer sunlight lasted way later, until 8:30-9pm.  I remember the loud sounds of crickets in the woods at night outside my open bedroom window.

Several times during the summer, we’d visit my Grandmother at her cottage at Wells, Beach, often sleeping over.  She’d bake bread and her husband (not my real paternal grandfather) would bake pies.  I loved playing with my army men on the beach, throwing the frisbee, digging holes and going in the water.

Relatives on my Mom’s side came down from Berlin, NH (where she was born and went to school). I liked hanging out with favorite cousins, Paul & Marc Montminy (twins), who were two years older than me. On warm summer nights, we’d gather on our screened in porch at 7 Lord Court in Somersworth, eating sliced canned ham and potato salad my Mom inevitably served along with her trademark Oh Henry rice krispie treats with peanut butter chocolate icing.

Below: first photo: at Echo Lake in North Conway…me in the middle, Paul left with boat, Marc to my right, sister Fran to my far right. Second photo: Fran and me in front of our garage at Lord Court, Somersworth, posing with our new Schwinn bikes.  Third photo: Fran and me at Wells Beach during one of our visits at Memere’s cottage.

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At least once during the summer wed reverse roles and my family would drive up to Berlin or we’d meet up at Echo Lake or White Lake State Parks for the day, having picnics, hiking around the lake, swimming and eating.  I loved those days most of all.

My favorite summer foods?

I loved fruit. Nectarines, plums, peaches, watermelon.   I ate plenty of stuff that – looking back – wasn’t good for me like ring dings, funny bones, devil dogs and twinkies.  There wasn’t a single candy I didn’t like as a kid. I also ate a lot of summer veggies including cucumbers, radishes, tomatoes and scallions.

Fave drinks? White milk, chocolate milk, Hawaiian punch and Zarex (a fruit concentrate I’d mix with water).

When my sister Fran and I were too young to stay home by ourselves, my Dad worked second shift at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard to be with us during the day when my Mom worked at the same place.  We always liked the fried spam sandwiches he’d make.  He’d slice up the “ham,” melt american cheese on it, place it in between two slices of bread and add lettuce and mayo.  We hung around him while he ate it, hungry eyes begging for a bite. He never disappointed us.

Another summer memory is my sister and I eating potato chip sandwiches – Wise chips, mayo and white bread.  Definitely not healthy, but we loved it!

Sometimes Dad would take us to a nearby lake before he went to work.  He taught me how to swim when I was young. He loved the water.

I went to summer camp several years – Camp Carpenter in Manchester -run by the Boy Scouts. I learned how to start a fire without a match, swam a mile in the lake without a life preserver, went on canoeing expeditions and learned new things so I could become a Life Scout (one notch below Eagle Scout, the ultimate peak of Boy Scoutness.)

I often went up to Berlin for a full week, staying with Paul & Marc, sleeping there every night, going to drive-in movies and walking around what seemed like a huge city, compared to Somersworth.  One time my cousin Paul grabbed a cat by the tail and twirled it around and around. The cat was not pleased.  Paul ended up becoming a priest when he grew up, too funny!  So did his twin brother Marc.

Summer lasted forever.  When it was time to go back to school, I always felt like I had changed tremendously, wasn’t the same kid, and a new world of possibilities would open up for me as a new school year unfolded. I was convinced everyone would notice how different I was, but no one ever did. They probably felt the same way.

When you’re older, time feels different, flying by way faster.

I’m so happy summer vacation is here for you.  You’ve got time and freedom to fully relax, be young and free, have fun in an uncomplicated world, sleep late, laugh all the time and live 100% in the moment.  All the summer adventures we’ve had together over the years are with me always, keeping me young in spirit.  What a gift you’ve given me.

When you’re older you’ll look back on the amazing time known as summer vacation and smile, your own memories flowing back like a spring waterfall.

Enjoy every second Camden, these are special days.

 

Grammy and I visit Fecamp, home of Nicolas Bonhomme, our famous descendant

This is my third blog about our Beaupre ancestry. They can all be found in your blog dateline summary on the landing page.

The first blog, published October 2018, revealed that our original surname wasn’t Beaupre, it was Bonhomme!  The second surprise was that the name you selected for your French class was “Louis,” which turns out to be our very FIRST descendant who used the Beaupre name – Louis-Claude Beaupre.

My second blog, posted April 4, 2019, was filled with fascinating facts including that we’re descended from Vikings in Norway.

This blog completes my trilogy.

After four days of spectacular city living in Paris, Grammy and I were looking forward to seeing Monet’s beautiful, super-famous gardens in Giverny.  Talk about living up to a global reputation; we could have stayed there for days.

Afterwards, our driver brought us 125 miles Northwest to visit the Alabaster Coast which includes Fecamp and Etretat, the latter home of the famous oceanside white chalk cliffs painted by Monet (more below).

Fecamp, as you’ll recall from my April 2019 blog, was home to Nicolas Bonhomme, our descendant who started it all.  He was born in 1620, the same year the Pilgrims landed in Plymouth, MA and lived in Fecamp, an important port along the English Channel, directly across from Portsmouth, England.

As we got closer to Fecamp, the landscape was spectacular, especially the bright yellow canola fields which extended for miles.

IMG_0876 (1)Shortly after seeing wind turbines, signs appeared for Fecamp

IMG_0883 (1)First stop? Eglise St. Etienne, located in the center of Fecamp (population 19,000) and overlooking the harbor.  This church dates back to the Renaissance period and features several pretty stainglass windows.

IMG_0887IMG_4486 (1)IMG_4492The feeling Grammy and I got about our ancestral city is that it’s very much a hard working, blue-collared kind of town, a no bullshit place where people have lived, played and died for generations.

IMG_4493 IMG_4502 (1)The ocean and fishing have always been the centerpiece of Fecamp’s economy and it’s still true today. There’s a little harbour and a long stretch of coastline that defines “rocky beach.” This isn’t a lie on your towel or sit on  your beach chair kind of place and it’s virtually impossible to walk on (I brought several Fecamp beach stones home as ancestral keepsakes). Grammy and I walked the Promenade instead, which I’m guessing is the most frequented section of Fecamp, especially during the summer months,

IMG_0925A lighthouse marks one end of the promenade. Just over it is Cap Fagnet, a cliff that offers nice views of the port, town, and English Channel (called La Manche in French). At the other end of the beach are curving cliffs.

IMG_4510IMG_4511After Fecamp, our driver brought us 10 miles south to see the beautiful white cliffs of Etretat (photo below).  Etretat and Fecamp have similarities but Etretat is more spectacular. No wonder it caught Monet’s eye so many times (see next paragraph).

IMG_4562 (1)Following text from The Metropolitan Museum:

Monet spent most of February 1883 at Étretat, a fishing village and resort on the Normandy coast. He painted twenty views of the beach and the three extraordinary rock formations in the area: the Porte d’Aval, the Porte d’Amont, and the Manneporte. The sunlight that strikes the Manneporte has a dematerializing effect that permitted the artist to interpret the cliff almost exclusively in terms of color and luminosity. Most nineteenth century visitors were attracted to the rock as a natural wonder. Monet instead concentrated on his own changing perception of it at different times of day.IMG_4537IMG_4557 (1)

 

IMG_0931 IMG_0940Our Etretat highlight? The amazing white cliffs and picturesque rock arches on both sides of the long beach.

The lowlight?  The aggressive seagulls who attack people for food – one of them fly down fast, hit my head and stole my ice cream cone!  Damn you Etretat bird, that was tasting good!

IMG_4546After Etretat, we made our way to beautiful Honfleur (what a gorgeous harbour) where we stayed overnight in Claude Monet’s bedroom at the lovely Saint Simeon Farmhouse Inn.  In the morning, we traveled to Bayeux, our destination while touring the famous WW2 D-Day beaches and 1,000 year old Mont St. Michel fortress in Normandy.

I hope you get to visit France one day – if you do, don’t forget to check out Fecamp and Etretat and say hello to Nicolas Bonhomme if you can find his burial place. We researched cemeteries but had no luck figuring out where he is.  You’re so smart I know you’ll solve the mystery!

 

 

epic school vacation adventure day

April 23 was a superduperepicday because I got to spend an entire day with you.

School vacation week… you were bored and wide open to do something fun.  Off we went on a cool triple bill: two places we had already been; one a brand new adventure.  It was a winning combination.

First up, our favorite inside fun place: Dave & Buster’s in Woburn, MA. They added games since last time we were there; it was a blast. They have the best prizes.

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Next up – lunch at Fuddrucker’s. Cheeseburgers, fries, chocolate or vanilla shakes and my favorite, the pickles!

IMG_9955Belly’s full, we ventured a couple exits south to try our new location: King’s Bowl in Burlington.  It’s a new bowling experience with dark lightning, neon, cool wall graphics, restaurants, food served while you bowl and a game room.

You shook your heads in disbelief when I told the check-in bowling dude my name was “Dre.”  Hey – it’s in my name, Andre!

We battled hard across three strings of bowling for a couple hours.  As the games heated up and the afternoon wore on, you were doing great with several strikes. Not the case with me! I had none.

Soon it was the last frame… time to head back home… and my last chance to knock down ten pins in one shot.  You started chanting, “Dre, Dre, Dre, Dre!!” I cracked up.  It was the inspiration I needed because on the last shot of the day, I finally got my 10 pin knock down. Thanks for the encouragement!

You were quiet as we headed back home, but the music of Emma’s favorite band filled the air, and the winnings from Dave & Buster (candy!) kept you chomping away.

 

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happy hoppy Easter 2019

IMG_9787it was fun being together on Easter Sunday. We had a two level egg hunt and certain grandchildren (ALL) pounded down the chocolate and candy. Each egg had at least $1.00- and some had $5 and $20. Understandably, not a lot of ham and mashed potatoes were eaten! Hey! Two people in this photo have their eyes closed… are they tired… sleeping?

Vikings, courageous settlers and entrepreneurs, oh my

My October 2018 blog was about our ancestors, their roots in Normandy, France and how our original surname “Bonhomme,” later became Beaupre in the early 1600’s.  We had some fun discussions about that Louis!

Update!!

A few weeks ago my geneology loving friend Richard LeHoullier (who I went to elementary and high school with) discovered a book entitled “A genealogy of the Bonhomme family,” published June 1995 by Paquette Press.

Goldmine! 

It’s filled with fascinating background about our descendants.  With Grammy and I visiting France in May, his timing couldn’t be better.  After Paris, we’ll be visiting the Normandy region to walk the ground of my ancient ancestors.

Some of the book facts:

  • While we’re descendants of “the Normans,” who lived in Normandy (the northern coast of  France), there’s a new revelation: we’re also descended from Vikings in Norway!  The Vikings (also called Norsemen) were famous explorers, conquerors and traders who many believed discovered America (way before Christopher Columbus).
  • The book says, “They moved out of Norway in search of new lands to settle because they had a surplus population… The Norsemen established themselves in France and became the Normans.”  This happened (or began to happen) in the early 900’s, over one thousand years ago. In 1204 the Norman Kingdom became part of France. Norwegian Viking blood runs in our veins.
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  • The pioneer who started it all for us was Nicolas Bonhomme. He was born in 1620, the same year the Pilgrims landed in Massachusetts.  He came from the parish of Ste. Croix in Fecamp. “Normandy was the “alma parens of Canada,” the book explains, meaning it was the “nourishing parent” of “New France,” later known as Canada.  Fecamp located along the English Channel, was an important port… “many fishing vessels left from Fecamp.”
  • Amazing facts: “the city of Fecamp was right on the sea, across from Portsmouth, England.”  No wonder I’m drawn to Portsmouth, NH!  Fecamp is in the Caux region which means “chalk” – the coast there resembles the famous Cliffs of Dover with its white chalk cliffs.  In 1067, William the Conquerer, returning to Normandy, “received a triumphant welcome and then went to Fecamp to celebrate Easter.”
  • Some historians believe the Holy Grail (subject of Raiders of the Lost Ark, the First Indiana Jones movie) was brought to Fecamp “transported there from King Arthur’s England” (source: The Holy Grail by Norma Lorre Goodrich, Perennial Library, Harper, New York, 1992).
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  •  Samuel Champlain, the famous French explorer first arrived in New France in 1608, going to a place the Indians called Kebec. (Lake Champlain is named after him; it borders New York state and Vermont).  He set up a trading post for furs and “in doing so, he founded the City of Quebec.” His first colonizing expedition (bringing pioneering Norman settlers from France to New France) was in 1628.  On March 23, 1633 he left Normandy with three Norman ships, 200 people and two Jesuit priests.  Nicolas Bonhomme was on one of those ships.  Note: 1633 was the same year Edward Winslow became Governor of the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts.

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  •  The Normans who made this voyage were courageous, “with the pioneer spirit that runs so clearly through the family’s blood, with the entrepreneurial spirit that is a mark of the Bonhomme.” It continues, “We can imagine the type of men these must be, to be one of the first boat load of people to come to Canada with the purpose of building a country.  What pride we can feel to know this same blood runs in our veins today.”
  • Catherine Goujet, the wife of Nicolas the pioneer came from Bayeux in Normandy.  “We are told she is the daughter of a “bourgeous” member of the growing middle class, probably a merchant.”
  • The book tries to clarify our name change from Bonhomme to Beaupre.  “Many people, including our ancestors, began having an appellation after their names, the word “dit” followed by a name.  This is true of the Bonhommes.  This probably became necessary for the Bonhommes after the birth of the third generation with its proliferation of Nicolas and Ignace in each generation.”

The Canadian Library blog says, “In France, nicknames were added to surnames to distinguish between families with similar names living in the same geographical area. When immigrants coming from France settled in New France, this custom continued.  “Dit names” were created by taking a person’s family name, adding a nickname that described one of the individual’s unique characteristics, and connecting the two with the word “dit.”

  • Cote de Beaupre –  In the case of Nicolas Bonhomme and his wife Catherine Goujet, they took on the dit name of Cote de Beaupre, the geographical area outside Quebec where they had settled.  As legend has it, when explorer Jacques Cartier first caught sight of the north shore of the St. Lawrence River in 1535, he exclaimed, Quel beau pré!” (“What a lovely meadow!”), because the area was the first inviting piece of land he had spotted since leaving France. Today the Côte-de-Beaupré (Beaupré Coast), first settled by French farmers, stretches 40 km (25 miles) east from Québec City to the famous pilgrimage site of Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré. Historic Route 360, or avenue Royale, winds its way from Beauport to St-Joachim, east of Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré. The impressive Chute Montmorency (Montmorency Falls) lie between Québec City and Ste-Anne-de-Beaupré.

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interior view of Basilica Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré
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 exterior view of Basilica

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Montmorency Falls, Cote de Beaupre