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Henry David Dulac

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Henry David Dulac Veteran

Birth
Fairfield, Somerset County, Maine, USA
Death
14 Sep 1986 (aged 89)
Warwick, Kent County, Rhode Island, USA
Burial
Brookline, Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, USA Add to Map
Plot
P291-2
Memorial ID
View Source
US Navy WW I VETERAN
CONTRIBUTING RESEARCH OF MAGGIE SMITH, #48118371
Henry David Dulac hailed from Fairfield, Maine. He married his sweetheart, Marie Melida Duquette on Feb 5, 1919 in Fairfield. Together they raised a son, Raymond Henry Leo Dulac, born in 1919 in Maine, who married Mary Louise Campbell in 1942.
Much remains to be discovered about Henry's life and work. We do know that as a lodger living on Plenty Street in Warwick, he was considered "family" to Agnes Welch and her children. During the Depression of the 1930's, Agnes remained a widow with 3 young children. She reluctantly permitted her boys to stay with their grandparents in Rutland, MA, while she cared for infant, Mary in Warwick. Eventually she found work as an "invisible mender and weaver" in a R.I. textile mill. Accepting lodgers into her home to help support the family, allowed her to reunite with her sons, Bernard and James. For decades during Agnes' life (1894-1958) and beyond, the Welch's, Murphy's, and other extended family praised Henry Dulac for the generous and kind man he was, contributing to Agnes and her family's welfare. Employed as a "loom fixer" in Rhode Island's woolen mills, he was more than a lodger, but a partner in managing their household and a true companion when his support was most needed.
Parents: Joseph Dulac (Canada) & Marie A. Tremblay (Canada)
US Navy WW I VETERAN
CONTRIBUTING RESEARCH OF MAGGIE SMITH, #48118371
Henry David Dulac hailed from Fairfield, Maine. He married his sweetheart, Marie Melida Duquette on Feb 5, 1919 in Fairfield. Together they raised a son, Raymond Henry Leo Dulac, born in 1919 in Maine, who married Mary Louise Campbell in 1942.
Much remains to be discovered about Henry's life and work. We do know that as a lodger living on Plenty Street in Warwick, he was considered "family" to Agnes Welch and her children. During the Depression of the 1930's, Agnes remained a widow with 3 young children. She reluctantly permitted her boys to stay with their grandparents in Rutland, MA, while she cared for infant, Mary in Warwick. Eventually she found work as an "invisible mender and weaver" in a R.I. textile mill. Accepting lodgers into her home to help support the family, allowed her to reunite with her sons, Bernard and James. For decades during Agnes' life (1894-1958) and beyond, the Welch's, Murphy's, and other extended family praised Henry Dulac for the generous and kind man he was, contributing to Agnes and her family's welfare. Employed as a "loom fixer" in Rhode Island's woolen mills, he was more than a lodger, but a partner in managing their household and a true companion when his support was most needed.
Parents: Joseph Dulac (Canada) & Marie A. Tremblay (Canada)


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