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Born in Varennes, Quebec, in February 1827, Joe was the fourth of five sons born to Julie (Girard) and Pierre Geoffrion. When his father died three years later, his mother quickly remarried. The stepfather provided harsh and, according to family lore, the boy left home rather than endure his abuse. Speaking little English he settled in Plattsburgh, New York. Originally part of a settlement known as New France, Plattsburgh had many French Canadian residents, some of whom may have taken the runaway boy under their wing.
Over the following decade the record is silent on Jefferson until October 1845 when he married Adeline Venette in Plattsburgh. Joe was 18 and Adeline, known as “Appoline,” was 16 at the time of their nuptials. Their first son, Joseph H., was born two years later and would live into maturity. Of their next six children, three would die before the age of 15, one in infancy. Each death was a painful loss.
Sometime after 1858 the family moved to Chicopee, Massachusetts where Joe and Adeline, opened a boarding house, welcoming eight boarders. This occupation apparently did not prove suitable and in 1864 the Jeffersons moved to Springfield, Massachusetts where Joseph enlisted in the Union Army. He held the rank of private in the 30th Massachusetts Unattached Heavy Artillery Regiment.
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Two years later Adeline died. Joseph mourned her passing
but needing a mother for his children, remarried in 1869. His new wife was Euphemia, known as “Phoebe,” Woods, born in Quebec in 1839. She had come to the U.S. as a teenager, working as a skilled weaver in the clothing mills of Massachusetts. Thirty-years-old, twelve years younger than Joseph, and not previously married, Euphemia was accounted a diligent mother and good homemaker. The couple would have four children but death once again would take two prematurely. A joint gravestone reveals the sad story of five Jefferson children's premature deaths.
The formal portrait taken circa 1885 shows members of the surviving family. Standing from left is Albert, Charles and Marie Louise. Seated from left is Euphemia, Louis, Anna, and Joseph Jefferson. The sedate formal setting belies the sorrows the family had experienced.
In an effort to provide for his growing family, Jefferson opened a saloon at 45 Railroad Street in Springfield and proved be a success as proprietor. By 1880 he had opened a larger drinking establishment at 189 Main Street, adding a retail liquor store. On the second floor Euphemia was running a boarding house. They called it “Jefferson House,” an indication that the runaway boy at last had arrived.
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By this time, Joe Jefferson, age 86, had died in April 1913, following a five week illness. After a funeral in his parish church, he was buried in Springfield’s St. Benedict’s Cemetery. A large granite stone identifies his grave site and commemorates his Civil War service. Lying near him are both Adeline and Euphemia, the latter having died in 1917.
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Notes: A principal source for this post was an unattributed biography provided with the Joseph Jefferson memorial on the Internet “Find a Grave” site. It also was the source of the photo of Jefferson that opens the vignette and of the grave monument. The family portrait, again from the Internet, is attributed to “i_nolan” 2010.
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