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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Letter From Donald W. Webber Of The State Of Maine Supreme Judicial Court To Charlotte Michaud, State Of Maine Supreme Judicial Court
Letter From Donald W. Webber Of The State Of Maine Supreme Judicial Court To Charlotte Michaud, State Of Maine Supreme Judicial Court
Correspondence 1970-1973
October 19,1970: Letter from Donald W. Webber, Associate Justice of the State of Maine Supreme Judicial Court, to Charlotte Michaud.
Letter From Camille L. Bissonnette To Charlotte Michaud, Camille L. Bissonnette
Letter From Camille L. Bissonnette To Charlotte Michaud, Camille L. Bissonnette
Correspondence 1970-1973
Handwritten letter from Camille Lessard Bissonnette to Charlotte Michaud. Also included: Envelope front and envelope back.
Letter To Louis-Philippe Gagne From Charlotte Michaud, Charlotte Michaud
Letter To Louis-Philippe Gagne From Charlotte Michaud, Charlotte Michaud
Correspondence 1970-1973
June 27, 1970, letter from Charlotte Michaud to Louis-Philippe Gagne recounting the week's work and plans for her and her team's current article.
Maurice Gagnon Photograph, Franco-American Collection
Maurice Gagnon Photograph, Franco-American Collection
Franco-American Music Traditions Exhibit
Ethnomusicologist Bau Graves has written about Maurice Gagnon (1927-1973): “Maurice Gagnon is remembered as a dynamic performer by those who him play. At the age of ten, he was already an ace harmonica player and could attract an audience and earn money playing in clubs. He played a repertoire of jigs and reels and also composed a number of tunes some of which he recorded as 45’s and one LP album. These recordings, released between 1964 and 1970, are a historical scarcity: only a relative handful of disks of traditional Maine Franco-American music have ever been available to the public.”
The Mountain Dews Photograph, Franco-American Collection
The Mountain Dews Photograph, Franco-American Collection
Franco-American Music Traditions Exhibit
Chuck Frechette, Bill Beauchesne, and Marcel Larrivee [L to R] have performed together since 1965. They began playing for Le Club Musicale Literaire, and after adding more members, became The Mountain Dews. Their repertoire includes western and bluegrass music. Bill first heard a bass washtub on the Ted Mack Amateur Radio Hour. He figured out how to make one and how to play it. Bill was 12 when he got together with a group of neighborhood friends playing guitar, harmonica, and washboard. Their gigs included bean suppers in church basements. Other members of the Mountain Dews have been Roland Boileau, …