Caroline married, at age 17, to Cleophas Dufour on December 23, 1875 at St. Paul's in Mansura, LA. They had five children before Cleophas' death (probably about 1892 but certainly before 1894). They were Jules Dufour (1876-UNK), Maria Alida (1878-1913), Annie Lou (1881-1941), Marie Aline (1883-1952), and Jean Baptiste Wilmore (1889-1938). The family farmed on Tassin land in Voorhies, not far up the Bayou des Glaises from Moreauville, LA. Cleophus died about 1890. A widow in her early 30's with a family of eight, Caroline hired farm help to supplement what her elder son Jules could provide; her other children were girls ranging in age from about 14 to 6 and one other son, only 2 or 3 years old.
Stephen Edward Segrue (1858-1901), born in New Orleans, had remained in the city working as a carpenter and boarding in a house with his brother Thomas. We last see him in the city directory of 1878, as a 20-year-old. By the time of the 1880 census, however, he had moved to the 2nd. Ward in Pointe Coupee Parish, in or near Denham Springs, and was boarding with a farm family and working as a laborer. Like his brother James Thomas, he left New Orleans, probably in response to the devastating Yellow Fever epidemic that peaked there in 1878.
By 1894, the year he married Caroline Tassin Dufour, Edward had migrated to Avoyelles Parish. They were married on Oct. 31 by J. F. Coco, Justice of the Peace, who was the bride's son in law. Witnesses were P. D. Mayeux, W. S. Mayeux, and A.B. Mayeux (Caroline's half brother Anatole Baptiste). The groom spoke English and the bride spoke only French. They had four children between 1894 and 1900. Three survived to adulthood and one died a week after her birth in 1899. They were: Thomas Arthur (1894-1966), Edna Florence (Maggie, 1897-1982), Marie Anne (1899-1899), and Lescietta Mary (Etta Lessie, 1900-1989). The 1900 census lists Edward as Head of Household, with his wife Caroline, and identifies him as a farmer. He is now working the Tassin land of Caroline's ancestors.
Edward died in June 1901 so suddenly that the priest records he was unable to see the paperwork at the time of burial. Family story says he died in a hunting accident while far from the house, in neighboring woods. He had accidentally shot his leg and could not make it back. By the time he was found, gangrene had set in. Caroline became a widow again, at the age of 42.
This resilient woman's troubles did not end with her second marital tragedy. She remained on the farm another quarter century, working it with her son Wilmore Dufour (who was only 12 when his stepfather died) until his marriage in 1915, and also with her son Thomas Arthur Segrue, (who was only 6 at his father's death but who remained on the farm until his own marriage in about 1922). Caroline left only when a regional disaster forced her off and destroyed her farm - the Great Flood of The Mississippi River in 1927.
Caroline's daughter Annie Lou Dufour had married Fulgence J. Coco (1880-1951) and in 1927 the pair took her mother in. They had children still at home, so Caroline could help her daughter, as well. Caroline lived with them until the last few months of her life, and she died of pneumonia at the state hospital in Pineville, LA, where the attached photo of her was taken in the summer of 1934. It is the last image ever made of her. Her memorial image is the first one we have - on the back, in the handwriting of her daughter Edna Segrue Yarborough, is written "Mother as a young girl of 17 years." This image was made in 1875, the year she first married.
Stephen Edward and Caroline Tassin Dufour Segrue were my great-grandparents, and I wish for them in death the peace that their lives seldom afforded.
Caroline married, at age 17, to Cleophas Dufour on December 23, 1875 at St. Paul's in Mansura, LA. They had five children before Cleophas' death (probably about 1892 but certainly before 1894). They were Jules Dufour (1876-UNK), Maria Alida (1878-1913), Annie Lou (1881-1941), Marie Aline (1883-1952), and Jean Baptiste Wilmore (1889-1938). The family farmed on Tassin land in Voorhies, not far up the Bayou des Glaises from Moreauville, LA. Cleophus died about 1890. A widow in her early 30's with a family of eight, Caroline hired farm help to supplement what her elder son Jules could provide; her other children were girls ranging in age from about 14 to 6 and one other son, only 2 or 3 years old.
Stephen Edward Segrue (1858-1901), born in New Orleans, had remained in the city working as a carpenter and boarding in a house with his brother Thomas. We last see him in the city directory of 1878, as a 20-year-old. By the time of the 1880 census, however, he had moved to the 2nd. Ward in Pointe Coupee Parish, in or near Denham Springs, and was boarding with a farm family and working as a laborer. Like his brother James Thomas, he left New Orleans, probably in response to the devastating Yellow Fever epidemic that peaked there in 1878.
By 1894, the year he married Caroline Tassin Dufour, Edward had migrated to Avoyelles Parish. They were married on Oct. 31 by J. F. Coco, Justice of the Peace, who was the bride's son in law. Witnesses were P. D. Mayeux, W. S. Mayeux, and A.B. Mayeux (Caroline's half brother Anatole Baptiste). The groom spoke English and the bride spoke only French. They had four children between 1894 and 1900. Three survived to adulthood and one died a week after her birth in 1899. They were: Thomas Arthur (1894-1966), Edna Florence (Maggie, 1897-1982), Marie Anne (1899-1899), and Lescietta Mary (Etta Lessie, 1900-1989). The 1900 census lists Edward as Head of Household, with his wife Caroline, and identifies him as a farmer. He is now working the Tassin land of Caroline's ancestors.
Edward died in June 1901 so suddenly that the priest records he was unable to see the paperwork at the time of burial. Family story says he died in a hunting accident while far from the house, in neighboring woods. He had accidentally shot his leg and could not make it back. By the time he was found, gangrene had set in. Caroline became a widow again, at the age of 42.
This resilient woman's troubles did not end with her second marital tragedy. She remained on the farm another quarter century, working it with her son Wilmore Dufour (who was only 12 when his stepfather died) until his marriage in 1915, and also with her son Thomas Arthur Segrue, (who was only 6 at his father's death but who remained on the farm until his own marriage in about 1922). Caroline left only when a regional disaster forced her off and destroyed her farm - the Great Flood of The Mississippi River in 1927.
Caroline's daughter Annie Lou Dufour had married Fulgence J. Coco (1880-1951) and in 1927 the pair took her mother in. They had children still at home, so Caroline could help her daughter, as well. Caroline lived with them until the last few months of her life, and she died of pneumonia at the state hospital in Pineville, LA, where the attached photo of her was taken in the summer of 1934. It is the last image ever made of her. Her memorial image is the first one we have - on the back, in the handwriting of her daughter Edna Segrue Yarborough, is written "Mother as a young girl of 17 years." This image was made in 1875, the year she first married.
Stephen Edward and Caroline Tassin Dufour Segrue were my great-grandparents, and I wish for them in death the peace that their lives seldom afforded.
Family Members
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Jules Dufour
1876 – unknown
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Maria Alida Dufour Coco
1878–1913
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Annie Lou Dufour Coco
1882–1941
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Aline Marie Dufour Bordelon
1883–1952
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Jean-Baptiste Wilmore Dufour
1889–1938
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Thomas Arthur Segrue
1894–1966
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Edna Florence Segrue Yarborough
1897–1982
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Marie Anne Segrue
1899–1899
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Lescietta Mary Lessie "Etta" Segrue Lee
1900–1969
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See more Segrue or Tassin Dufour memorials in:
- Sacred Heart Catholic Church Cemetery Segrue or Tassin Dufour
- Moreauville Segrue or Tassin Dufour
- Avoyelles Parish Segrue or Tassin Dufour
- Louisiana Segrue or Tassin Dufour
- USA Segrue or Tassin Dufour
- Find a Grave Segrue or Tassin Dufour
Records on Ancestry
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