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  1. Usually he used the alias "Gustave Anjou," but occasionally he also used the aliases "H. Anjou" and "M. Anjou." Gustave and Anna Maria married in 1889. After emigrating to the U.S. in 1890, Anjou took up residence on Staten Island (Richmond County, New York) and became a naturalized citizen in 1918.

    Gustave Anjou - Wikipedia

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustave_Anjou
  2. Gustave Anjou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gustave_Anjou

    Usually he used the alias "Gustave Anjou," but occasionally he also used the aliases "H. Anjou" and "M. Anjou." Gustave and Anna Maria married in 1889. After emigrating to the U.S. in 1890, Anjou took up residence on Staten Island (Richmond County, New York) and became a naturalized citizen in 1918.

    • 1
    • Anna Maria Anjou
    • Carl Gustaf Jungberg (father), Maria Lovisa Hagberg (mother)
    • Fairview Cemetery, New York City
  3. Gustave Anjou: An Intriguing Career of Genealogical Fraud ...

    ancestralfindings.com/gustave-anjou-intriguing...

    Gustave Anjou (December 1, 1863 – March 2, 1942) is an infamous person in genealogical circles. If you haven’t heard of him yet, chances are you will at some point as you go over old genealogical records in your research.

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  4. Gustave Anjou (1861-1942) - Find A Grave Memorial

    www.findagrave.com/memorial/29721834

    Born to Carl Gustaf Jungberg and his maid, Maria Lovisa Hagberg, Anjou was convicted of forgery in Sweden serving a prison term in 1886. He had a long line of aliases settling on the name Gustave Anjou. Anjou was his wife's maiden name which was historically prestigious as being related to the English Plantagenet line of royalty.

    • 1 Dec 1861, Stockholm, Stockholms kommun, Stockholms län, Sweden
    • Fairview Cemetery, Castleton Corners, Richmond County (Staten Island), New York, USA
    • 2 Mar 1942 (aged 80), Richmond County (Staten Island), New York, USA
    • 29721834 · View Source
  5. Gustav Anjou : The Roll Family Windmill

    rollwindmill.org/html/gustav anjou.html

    After serving a prison term in 1886 for forgery, Anjou changed his name to "Gustaf Ludvig Ljungberg" and then began using the alias "Gustave Anjou" (based on the maiden name of his fiancé, Anna Maria Anjou). Usually he used the alias "Gustave Anjou," but occasionally he also used the aliases "H. Anjou" and "M. Anjou."

  6. Gustave Anjou | Caldwell Genealogy

    caldwellgenealogy.com/the-myths-legends/gustave-anjou

    Gustave Anjou was born Gustaf Ludvig Ljungberg in Sweden in 1863 and died in 1942. Widely known today for his fraudulent genealogies of early American families in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s, Anjou was known to receive as much as $9,000 for a genealogy report from his wealthy clients.

  7. Gustave Anjou (Author of Ulster County, N.Y. probate records ...

    www.goodreads.com/author/show/5330054.Gustave_Anjou

    Gustave Anjou is the author of Ulster County, N.Y. probate records in the office of the surrogate, and in the county clerk's office at Kingston, N.Y. (4....

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  8. Amazon.com: Gustave Anjou

    www.amazon.com/Gustave-Anjou/s?k=Gustave+Anjou

    1-16 of 27 results for "Gustave Anjou". Skip to main search results

  9. Gustav Anjou - Torrens

    genealogy.torrens.org/Torrens/Essays/Anjou/anjou.html

    Ridgeley believed Anjou could not deliver what he promised. Letter 3: 17 Apr 1919 Gustave Anjou wrote to JST Asking price of the MS history was $950. The letter was duplicated, one for signing and return, the second (transcribed here) had a large P.S. Note that Anjou is replying to Jared's letter of 28th Jan, 1919.

  10. Gustav Anjou, Fraudulent Genealogist

    www.geni.com/projects/Gustav-Anjou-Fraudulent...

    Remington's article, "Gustave We Hardly Knew Ye: A Portrait of Herr Anjou as a Jungberg" revealed Anjou's true identity through exposing who his biological father really was. Anjou's fakery has also been well documented by the late Donald Lines Jacobus, founder of The American Genealogist.

  11. Don’t Be Gullible: Being Aware of Genealogical Fraud (Part ...

    blog.ancestorcloud.com/2017/02/03/dont-be-gullible-being...

    Gustave Anjou, 78, genealogist who made 60 trips to Europe and several around the world, tracing lineages of wealthy families at a price of $9,000 a pedigree, died Monday night. It would take years, however, to uncover the blatant fraud following Anjou’s death. Some newspapers would cite his research for years to come.