Claire Jeanne Georgiana Amelie “Amy” Borde
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Claire Jeanne Georgiana Amelie “Amy” Borde

Birth
Death
4 Jul 1898 (aged 4)
Nova Scotia, Canada
Cenotaph
New Orleans, Orleans Parish, Louisiana, USA GPS-Latitude: 29.980925, Longitude: -90.11535
Plot
Section 2 - Aldigé tomb
Memorial ID
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Amelie and her young daughter, Amy, perished along with Alice Aldige' in the sinking of the steamship La Bourgogne in the Atlantic Ocean on July 4, 1898. It is to their memory that the Aldige' monument features two women in grief, holding on to one other at the bow of a boat is atop the Alidge tomb. This is one of the more notorious monuments at Metarie Cemetery, photographed often. They were lost at sea and not buried in New Orleans. The La Bourgogne sinking would expose the crew of the ship of horrific behavior, murdering passengers, mainly women, by shoving them with oars from liferafts, cutting lifelines. No children and only a few women survived the brutal attacks by boat crew. The maritime law: Women and Children First was the result of the tremendous callous loss of lives.

An excerpt newspaper account from The Salt Lake Herald; July 7, 1898, page 2:
NOTABLE VICTIMS.
Well-known People From All Parts of the Country.
New Orleans, July 6. - The only *New Orleans people known to have been aboard La Bourgogne are Mrs. Jules Aldige, sr., her daughter, Mrs. Dr. Robert Bordie [sic], and the latter's little girl. Mrs. Aldige and her daughter are well-known in New Orleans society.

*Other New Orleans residents who perished in the shipwreck were Mrs. Pauline Costa Langles and her daughter, Miss Angele Langles.
Amelie and her young daughter, Amy, perished along with Alice Aldige' in the sinking of the steamship La Bourgogne in the Atlantic Ocean on July 4, 1898. It is to their memory that the Aldige' monument features two women in grief, holding on to one other at the bow of a boat is atop the Alidge tomb. This is one of the more notorious monuments at Metarie Cemetery, photographed often. They were lost at sea and not buried in New Orleans. The La Bourgogne sinking would expose the crew of the ship of horrific behavior, murdering passengers, mainly women, by shoving them with oars from liferafts, cutting lifelines. No children and only a few women survived the brutal attacks by boat crew. The maritime law: Women and Children First was the result of the tremendous callous loss of lives.

An excerpt newspaper account from The Salt Lake Herald; July 7, 1898, page 2:
NOTABLE VICTIMS.
Well-known People From All Parts of the Country.
New Orleans, July 6. - The only *New Orleans people known to have been aboard La Bourgogne are Mrs. Jules Aldige, sr., her daughter, Mrs. Dr. Robert Bordie [sic], and the latter's little girl. Mrs. Aldige and her daughter are well-known in New Orleans society.

*Other New Orleans residents who perished in the shipwreck were Mrs. Pauline Costa Langles and her daughter, Miss Angele Langles.

Inscription

"In memory of mother, sister, niece lost on Steamship La Bourgogne"

Gravesite Details

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