 So next we're going to go ahead and take a look at your maternal great-grandfather, Frank E. Fisher. And this one starts on your mother's side, goes to her father, Alfred Fisher, to his father, Frank Fisher. And then we get to Frank's Zave Fisher, who is actually born Francois Zave Le Boisignet, two Francois Zave Le Boisignet and Henriette Francois in 1868. The family lived in Fort Fairfield and Grand Island, Maine, and in St. Leonard, New Brunswick, among other places. And I noticed she did have a number of the ancestors in Grand Isle though. Yeah, that's where my grandmother was raised. She actually spoke French until she was about six, and then she learned English. Oh, wow. That's a really nice way to do it. Yeah. Now he married twice, first in 1892, in Fort Fairfield, Maine, to Marie Helen Nellie, Poitras. They were the parents of four children, including premature twins who died within a day, Pearl Agnes and Alfred Joseph. But what we did find interesting was that he was a dealer in horses, carriages, and slays in Fort Fairfield and in Grand Isle. Slaves, did you say? Or slays? Slays, sorry. Okay, big difference. We're not dealing, we're not dealing with the slay people know. Right, right. He also owned a hotel in Grand Island, and this was really fun. It was called the Frankie Fisher boarding house and restaurant. He owned it from 1908 to 1912, and there's a picture actually taken around that time period. This is one of the photographs featured on mainmemory.net. Now it was taken in 1905 when Frank would have been a carriage dealer there. You know, I don't know about you, but I just love seeing the clothing of the era, and you know, the horses and carriages on the unpaved main street, all the stuff that was the norm back then. Yeah, such a trip. Here you can see that Frank was also a deputy sheriff for some time in Grand Isle. Now he seemed to have been kind of a jack of all trades and very involved in the community. Starting on your mother's side again, we go to Elaine Morneau, your grandmother, her mother, and then to Elaine's father, Charles Jean Morneau, and finally to Charles, his father and your great-grandfather. This is another one of the remaining buildings in Grand Isle. They preserved that and they preserved several homes from the original community, but the house we're going to look at is the Morneau house. This one was built back in 1857. The Morneau house is believed to have been built in 1857 by Charles Morneau, your second great-grandfather and a French-Canadian immigrant. He settled in the Grand Isle main area in 1856 and the next year married Flavie Thibodeaux, your second great-grandmother. Charles was a merchant trader and provided space for a post office in his home when members of his family served as postmaster. In 1973, the house was donated to our living heritage by Normande Boupré and her husband Addie. She is Charles's great-granddaughter and your second cousin. In 1975, the house was moved to the Acadian village where it still stands to this day. So if you ever want somewhere to visit. Yeah, that's on my bucket list of places to go to. I've never been to May. Oh, see, now that would be great. You could go walk in the house. Like a big shot. Excuse me. I know what I'm doing. I belong here. I belong here. Back up. I want to talk to you about another second great-grandfather, Alexis Sear. And here we travel on your mother's line again to her mother, Elaine, to Elaine's mother, Suzanne, and finally to Suzanne's father, which is your second great-grandfather, Alexis Sear. Now, Alexis was born on the 7th of December, 1836 in St. Lucille, Madawaska, New Brunswick, the son of Paul Sear. And I'm not sure how you say that. Salome, Thibodeaux. He was first listed in a census record in 1850. At that time, his family was living on the Van Buren plantation in New Brunswick. His father, Paul, was working as a farmer and owned $4,000 of real estate. Three of his brothers worked as laborers. Eight of his nine siblings, including the three that worked, attended school. So here we see that his father was born in Maine and his mother was born in New Brunswick. His sister, Eleanor, died the following year at the age of 11. Three years later, his brother, Remy, died age 27. And Alexis and Philamine had four children between them, one son and three daughters. Nine months after Christine was born, Philamine died. And so here's, you know, Alexis with these four children. Now, several years before his death, Alexis represented his district in the state legislature. He was later said to be one of the principal citizens of a roostock. He died in 1887 and he was buried there. And, you know, once again, you just had so many interesting people in Grand Isle. It was just so fun to go crazy. I can't believe the amount of research that you guys did. It's so in-depth.