Alexis Robert - Tag Ancestry
Transcription
Alexis Robert - Tag Ancestry
Mary Jeanne - Omer - Louise – Olive: f6 / f7: ALEXIS ROBERT : EUPHROSINE MIGNIER dit Lagace FATHER: Alexis Robert : Germain Mignier dit Lagace MOTHER: Josette Desnoyer : Euphrosine Tardif BORN: 5 Aug 1818 St-Mathias, Rouville, Quebec [5] : 7 Jul 1820 St-John, Madawaska, Quebec [5] [5, 9] DIED: 21 May 1901 Pain Court, Ontario : 29 Nov 1915 Pain Court, Ontario [5] MARRIED: 7 Jan 1839 @ St-Pierre-de-Raleigh, Tilbury East, Kent County, Ontario [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Euphrosine Mignier was known as Phoebe.[20] Alexis and Euphrosine’s offspring birth/ marriage/death data (at St-Pierre-de-Raleigh) includes: Francois (31 Jul 1840 / Marie-Elmire Belanger 7 Jan 1862 Pain Court / 5 Sep 1889), Alexis (4 Apr 1842 / Marguerite Faubert 31 Jan 1865 Immaculate Conception, Pain Court / 1 Dec 1911 Immaculate Conception, Pain Court), Olive (e3), Joseph (4 Jan 1846 / Catherine Paquet 30 Apr 1866 Immaculate Conception, Pain Court / 2nd marriage, Margaret Campbell ca 1893), Pierre (15 Sep 1847 / Julienne Gaudreau 14 Jan 1868 Pain Court / 29 Jun 1919), William (8 Aug 1849 / 20 Sep 1865), David (13 Nov 1851 / Marie Belanger 30 Jan 1872 Chatham, Ontario / 12 Dec 1928 San Diego, California), Marie (19 Dec 1853 / Louis Charbonneau 9 Jan 1877 Immaculate Conception, Pain Court / 19 Apr 1928 Windsor, Ontario), Rosa (13 Nov 1858 / Jean-Baptiste Bechard 12 May 1874 Pain Court / died at Cohoes, Albany County, New York), John (24 Sep 1863 / wed Ms. Josie Robert ca 1884 / died autumn 1941) .[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis: g12 / g13: ALEXIS ROBERT : JOSETTE DESNOYER FATHER: Alexis Robert : Michel Desnoyers MOTHER: Amable Bricault : Marie-Anne Blain BORN: 6 Mar 1787 Chambly, Quebec [5] : ca 1790 at Quebec [5] MARRIED: 14 Aug 1815 @ St-Mathias, Rouville, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Alexis first married Catherine Beauvais on 13 Nov 1809 at St-Joseph, Chambly, Richelieu, Quebec.[5, 22] Vital statistics for Alexis’ children with Ms. Beauvais include: Catherine (2 Mar 1810 St-Mathias, Quebec / Antoine Bessette 5 Feb 1828 St-Joseph, Chambly, Quebec / 12 Feb 1898 St-Ignace-de-Stanbridge, Missisquoi, Quebec), Marguerite (8 Jun 1814 St-Mathias, Rouville / 11 Jun 1814 St-Mathias). Alexis Robert was a carpenter by trade. Alexis Robert and Josette Desnoyers’ offspring birth/marriage/death details include the following in their birth order: Rosalie (30 Aug 1816 Chambly), Alexis (f6), Celeste (23 May 1828 at St-Cyprien, Napierville, Quebec).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine: g14 / g15: GERMAIN MIGNIER dit LAGACE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: MARRIED: : EUPHROSINE TARDIF Germain Migner dit Lagace : Jean Tardif Helene Michaud : Anne Dubé [20] ca 1786 at Quebec : 9 Apr 1780 Kamouraska, Quebec [5] 7 May 1811 @ St-Basile de Madawaska, New Brunswick [20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis: h24 / h25: ALEXIS ROBERT : AMABLE BRICAULT FATHER: Louis Robert : Archange Bricault MOTHER: Marie-Josephe Lebeau : Madeleine Bazinet BORN: 1 Oct 1763 St-Joseph, Chambly, Quebec [5, 9] : 17 Jan 1764 Chambly, Quebec [5] DIED: 13 Jul 1832 St-Mathias, Rouville, Richelieu [5] : 20 Mar 1797 at Quebec [5] MARRIED: 26 Jun 1786 @ St-Mathias, Rouville, Richelieu, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Alexis and Amable’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at St-Mathias, Rouville, Richelieu, Quebec) follows in the order of their birth: Alexis (g12), Louis (26 Jan 1788 / 30 Mar 1789), Alphonse (10 Mar 1789 / 10 Oct 1790), Amable (6 Nov 1790 / Louis Beaudriau 17 July 1809) , Marguerite (11 Mar 1792 / Pierre Goyette 7 Jan 1811 / 2nd marriage, Francois Marcil 25 Sep 1843 St-Cesaire, Rouville / 6 Mar 1876 St-Cesaire, Rouville), Hypolite (19 Jul 1793 / 9 Mar 1796), Mr. Robert (22 Aug 1794 / 22 Aug 1794), Jean-Baptiste (9 Oct 1795 / 16 Feb 1801), Joseph (ca 1797 / 23 Aug 1797).[5, 22] Alexis was next wed to Marie-Louise Masse on 21 Jan 1799 at St-Mathias, Rouville, - 184 - Richeleau, Quebec. Statistics (at St-Mathias) for Alexis’ children with Ms. Masse include: Mr. Robert (20 Feb 1800 / 20 Feb 1800), Casimir (1 Mar 1801 / Sophie Letourneau 31 Aug 1824 / 2nd marriage, Marie Chevalier 23 Feb 1852 / 2 Jan 1871), Ursule-Aurelie (14 Oct 1803 Chambly / Jean-Baptiste Menard 2 Jul 1833 St-Joseph, Chambly), Adelaide (15 Apr 1805 / wed Joseph Menard 26 Oct 1824 / 26 Jan 1837 Boucherville, Quebec), Edouard (20 Apr 1807 / 15 Aug 1819).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josette: h26 / h27: MICHEL DESNOYERS : MARIE-ANNE BLAIN FATHER: Pierre Desnoyers : Jean Baptiste Blain MOTHER: Marie-Josephte Letourneau : Marguerite Pepin BORN: 16 Sep 1743 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9] : 4 Jul 1754 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 7 Jan 1771 @ St-Francois-Xavier, Vercheres, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Michel and Marie-Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Mathias, Rouville, Richelieu, Quebec) follows in the order of their birth: Michel (wed Marie-Louise Vinet 13 Jan 1793), Pierre (2 Jan 1774 / Catherine Bessette 2 Feb 1795), Josephte (wed Charles Tetreault 10 Aug 1802 Marieville) , Francois (wed Charlotte Surprenant dit Lafontaine 17 Oct 1803 Longueuil, Quebec) , Josette (g13), Hippolyte (wed Emelie Vegiard 8 Feb 1825).[5, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain: h28 / h29: GERMAIN MIGNIER dit Lagace : MARIE-HELENE MICHAUD FATHER: Joseph Mignier dit Lagace : Joseph Michaud MOTHER: Marie-Anne Quellet : Marguerite Cordeau BORN: ca 1758 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec [5, 20] : ca 1760 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 7 Jan 1783 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 37] MEMOIRS: Germain next married Josephte Levesque on 13 Feb 1787 at Notre Dame de Liesse, RiviereOuelle.[5, 9, 22, 37] Vital statistics for Germain’s children with Ms. Levesque include: Abraham (born ca 1788), Charlotte (ca 1800 / wed Sebastien Ouellet 15 Aug 1820 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Dominique (ca 1802 / Rosalie Boucher 7 Sep 1824 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec), Noel (ca 1804), Joseph (ca 1806), Clement (ca 1808), Josephte (ca 1810).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine: h30 / h31: JEAN TARDIF FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: : ANNE DUBÉ Charles Francois Tardif : Jean Dubé Anne-Marie Quellet : Anne Hayot [5, 9] 25 Nov 1755 Kamouraska, Quebec : 19 Apr 1753 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska [5, 9] 27 Jan 1777 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Jean and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Kamouraska) includes: Francoise (9 Dec 1777 / Louis-Joseph Mazerolle 23 Sep 1794 Madawaska, New Brunswick / 16 Feb 1871 Myshrall Settlement, York County, New Brunswick), Catherine (6 Jan 1779 / Germain Godin 4 Jul 1798 St-Basile, New Brunswick / ca 1851 French village, York, New Brunswick), Madeleine (7 Jul 1781), Genevieve (16 Dec 1782), Joseph (22 May 1784 / 27 Jul 1784), JeanBaptiste (26 Dec 1785), Marie-Anne (26 Nov 1786 / Jean-Baptiste Thibodeau 19 Jan 1810 St-Basile, New Brunswick / died in 1875 French village, York, New Brunswick), Euphrosine (g15), Marie-Theotiste (29 Mar 1794 St-Basile, New Brunswick / Charles-Amand Violette 1 Feb 1808 St-Basile, New Brunswick / 20 Sep 1871 St-Leonard, New Brunswick).[5] By way of their mothers, both Jean Tardif and Anne Dubé are fifth generation descendants of Jean Mignault (L470) and Louise Cloutier (L471). See the Cloutier chart included with the biography of Omer Lucier (c0). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 185 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis: i48 / i49: LOUIS ROBERT : MARIE-JOSEPHE LEBEAU Prudent Robert dit Lafontaine : Mathurin Lebeau Madeleine Fafard dit Delorme : Marie Le Sueur 17 May 1726 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 25] : 15 Dec 1728 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9] 3 May 1797 Boucherville, Quebec : 17 Jul 1804 Chambly, Quebec [5] 2 Feb 1750 @ Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] Their offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Joseph, Chambly) includes: Louis (20 Feb 1751 StMathias, Rouville, Quebec / Marguerite Cusson dit Desormiers 20 Jun 1774 Beloeil, Vercheres / 9 Apr 1835), Marie-Louise (24 Jan 1753 St-Mathias / Joseph Hamel 7 Oct 1771), Madeleine (3 Feb 1755 St-Mathias / Louis Guillet 8 Feb 1779 StMathias / 27 Mar 1821 Marieville, Rouville), Charlotte (15 Aug 1757 St-Mathias / 21 Aug 1758 St-Mathias), Elisabeth (10 Sep 1759 / Francois Lalanne 21 Jan 1782 St-Mathias / 1 Feb 1830 St-Mathias), Joseph (6 Nov 1761 St-Mathias / Marie Desrochers 26 Jan 1784 St-Mathias / 13 Dec 1826 Marieville), Alexis (h24), Charles (20 Nov 1765 / Marguerite Bricault 16 Aug 1790 St-Mathias), Barbe (16 Feb 1768 / Augustin Tetreault 28 Jan 1788 St-Mathias / 13 Oct 1794 at St-Mathias).[5, 9] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable: i50 / i51: ARCHANGE BRICAULT : MADELEINE BAZINET Jean-Baptiste Bricault : Jean-Baptiste Bazinet dit Tourblanche Petronille Janot dit Lachapelle : Angelique Loisel 25 Nov 1737 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5] : 23 Sep 1740 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5] 2 May 1780 Chambly, Quebec [5] : 20 Nov 1811 St-Mathias, Quebec [5] 11 Jan 1762 @ St-Infant Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Archange and Madeleine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details include the following in the birth: Amable (h25), Marie-Angelique (wed Basile Morier 8 Jan 1787 Beloeil, Quebec), Marguerite (Charles Robert 16 Aug 1790 St-Mathias sur Richelieu, Quebec), Jean-Baptiste (wed Marie-Reine Lavoie 19 Feb 1798).[5, 22] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: order of their __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel: i52 / i53: PIERRE DESNOYERS dit Desmarets : MARIE-JOSEPHTE LETOURNEAU FATHER: Jean Desmarets dit Desnoyers : Bernard Letourneau MOTHER: Therese Menard dit Lafontaine : Helene Paquet [5, 9, 20, 29] BORN: 26 Aug 1710 Longueuil, Quebec : 23 Apr 1715 St-Jean, Montmorency, PQ [5, 9] [5, 9, 29] DIED: 27 Jun 1760 Chambly, Quebec : 3 Aug 1781 St-Antoine-de-Chambly, Quebec [9] MARRIED: 5 June 1737 @ St-Joseph, Chambly, Richelieu, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Michel’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Chambly, Quebec) follows in their order of birth: Josette (12 Aug 1738 / Joseph-Xavier Beauvais 21 Feb 1757 / 8 Jan 1804), Therese (3 Feb 1740 / Gaspard Monty 19 May 1760 / 28 Feb 1808 St-Mathias), Pierre (ca 1741 / Marie-Josephte Cauchon 19 Aug 1771 / 2nd marriage, Charlotte Malboeuf 12 Sep 1785 Beloeil, Vercheres / 18 Sep 1808 St-Jean, Rouville), Michel (h26), Anne (27 Mar 1746 / Jacques-Pascal Fonteneau dit Desmoulins 5 Aug 1771 / 30 Mar 1783 St-Mathias), Isabelle (twin, 29 Apr 1748 / Pierre Peullier dit Lacroix 11 Feb 1766), Genevieve (twin, 29 Apr 1748 / 8 May 1748), Mr. Desnoyers (18 Nov 1749 / died same day), JeanBaptiste (28 Jan 1751 / 22 Feb 1751), Francois (18 Aug 1753 / Francoise Cartier dit Lague 27 Sep 1779 St-Mathias sur Richelieu), Toussaint-Amable (31 Oct 1756 / Marie-Anne Patenaude 11 Jan 1785).[5, 9, 22, 25] Marie-Josephte Letourneau was next married to Francois Papineau on 29 July 1771 at St-Joseph, Chambly, Quebec.[5, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 186 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie Anne: i54 / i55: JEAN-BAPTISTE BLAIN : MARGUERITE PEPIN FATHER: Louis Blain : Jean-Baptiste Pepin MOTHER: Marguerite Lumineau : Marguerite Casavant BORN: ca 1720 St-Constant, Laprairie, Quebec [9] : 18 Jun 1721 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 11 Oct 1796 St-Constant, Laprairie, Quebec : 13 Jul 1812 Marieville, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 1 Feb 1745 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean-Baptiste and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec) includes the following in the order of their birth: Jean-Baptiste (6 Nov 1745), Joseph (ca 1748 Vercheres, Quebec), Jean (14 Jul 1752), Marie-Anne (h27), Marie-Reine (18 Dec 1755 / Charles Besset 3 Nov 1773 Beloeil, Quebec / 2nd marriage, Joseph Bergeron ca 1792), Josephte (ca 1757 / Jean-Baptiste Gaboury 15 Feb 1779), Jacques (born 17 Aug 1759 / wed Appoline-Marguerite Daragon on 23 Nov 1779 / 4 Jun 1849 at LaColle, St-Jean, Quebec).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain: i56 / i57: JOSEPH MIGNIER dit Lagace : MARIE-ANNE QUELLET FATHER: Michel Mignier dit Lagace : Joseph Quellet MOTHER: Angelique Tibault : Madeleine Bouchard BORN: 28 May 1716 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5, 9, 28] : 23 Sep 1727 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5, 9] DIED: 16 Jun 1796 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5] : 9 Oct 1783 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5] MARRIED: 19 Nov 1750 @ Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 28, 37] MEMOIRS: Joseph first wed Genevieve Caron on 29 Aug 1740 at Notre Dame de Bon Secours. [5, 9, 22, 28] Their children’s vital statistics include: Genevieve (23 Jan 1742), Mr. Mignier (4 Mar 1743 / 4 Mar 1743), Marie-Josephte (3 Apr 1745 / Jean-Baptiste Lebel 28 Jun 1773 Kamouraska), Joseph (4 Apr 1747 / Claire Fortin 24 Nov 1777 St-Jean, Port-Joli, Quebec), Ms. Mignier (23 Jun 1749 / 23 Jun 1749).[5, 28] Ms. Caron died just six days after [5] the birth of their last child. Joseph and Marie-Anne Ouellet’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska) follow in the order of their birth: Louis (20 Aug 1751 / Marie-Rose Bouchard 9 Oct 1775 St-Louis-de-Lotbiniere / 21 Jun 1808 Gentilly, Becancour) , Francois (28 Jul 1752 / Catherine Deschamps 10 Feb 1777), Clement (9 Sep 1753 / Marie-Anne Grondin 12 Nov 1781), Marie-Anne (10 Nov 1754 / Joseph Lizotte 10 Nov 1777), Lambert (ca 1756 / Monique Mercereau 27 Nov 1786), Germain (h28), Marie-Charlotte (9 Sep 1760 / Henri Saucier 5 July 1784 / 9 Jan 1839 Frencheville, Maine), Toussaint (1 Nov 1761), Francoise (11 Feb 1763 / Michel Michaud 7 Sep 1789), Nicolas-Antoine (6 May 1764 / Marie-Josephte Lacroix dit Corbin 13 Jun 1796), Therese (19 Aug 1765 / Benoit Lizot 4 Aug 1800), Pierre (22 Jan 1767 / Gertrude Ouellet 7 Apr 1792 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies, L’Islet), JeanBaptiste (3 Jan 1770 / wed Marie-Anne Lacroix dit Corbin on 8 Oct 1792 / 15 Sep 1818 at St-Basile, New Brunswick).[5, 9, 22, 37] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Marie Helene: i58 / i59: JOSEPH MICHAUD : MARGUERITE CORDEAU FATHER: Francois Michaud : Jacques Cordeau MOTHER: Marie-Catherine Dionne : Marguerite Toupin [5, 9] BORN: 3 Mar 1716 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska : 18 Jul 1714 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 13 Apr 1798 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] : 5 Apr 1802 Kamouraska, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 7 Apr 1739 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Joseph and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Kamouraska, Quebec) includes: Joseph (14 Feb 1740 / Marie-Barbe Vaillancourt 7 Jan 1766), Jean (22 Oct 1741 / Veronique Boucher 18 Feb 1764 / 8 Jun 1826), Madeleine (15 Oct 1743 / 26 Jul 1758), Marguerite (7 Jul 1745 / Charles Vaillancourt 12 Jan 1767 / 17 Sep 1769), Genevieve (8 Feb 1747 / Jean-Baptiste Malenfant 11 Jan 1773 / died in 1847), Marc (ca 1750 / 19 Oct 1751), Francois (9 Aug 1752 / Marie Moreau dit Pelagie 23 Aug 1779) , Louis (22 May 1754 / Marie St-Laurent 16 Jul 1786 / 3 Jun 1832), Rose (5 Jan 1756 / Joseph Deneau 27 Feb 1775 Riviere-Ouelle / 17 Nov 1826), Antoine (ca 1758 / Angelique Leblond 16 Aug 1779 L’Isle Verte), Marie-Helene (h29), Benjamin (10 May 1761 / Marie-Anne Bourgoin 9 Feb 1784 / 3 May 1845 Frenchville, Aroostook County, Maine) , Alexandre (12 Apr 1763 / wed Euphrosine Tardif 17 Jan 1791).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 187 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean: i60 / i61: CHARLES-FRANCOIS TARDIF : ANNE-MARIE OUELLET FATHER: Charles Tardif : Augustin Ouellet MOTHER: Marie-Genevieve Leroy : Marie-Anne Autin BORN: 20 Apr 1729 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] : 5 May 1729 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 45] DIED: ca 1803 Kamouraska, Quebec [5] : 25 Jan 1796 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 45] MARRIED: 7 Nov 1752 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: Charles-Francois and Anne-Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Kamouraska, Quebec) follow in the order of their birth: Antoine (ca 1753 / Marie-Ursule Miville dit Deschenes 31 July 1780 RiviereOuelle), Jacques (7 Sep 1754), Jean (h30), Helene (8 Jun 1757), Marie-Reine (ca 1759 / Alexis Proulx 20 Oct 1783), Jean-Francois (19 Jul 1761 / 27 May 1762), Marie-Anne (31 Aug 1763 / Jean Dupere 23 Oct 1786), Marie-Rose (12 Aug 1765 / Louis Hudon dit Beaulieu 7 Mar 1791) , Marguerite (18 Oct 1767 / Francois Dupere 4 Aug 1788), JeanRaphael (22 Aug 1769 / Marie-Rosalie Lavoie 28 Oct 1793). Charles-Francois’ second marriage was with Genevieve Dubé on 3 Jun 1799 at St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec.[5, 22] Both Charles-Francois and Anne-Marie are descendants of Marin Boucher (m670). See the illustration included with the biography of Omer Lucier (c0). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne: i62 / i63: JEAN DUBÉ : ANNE HAYOT FATHER: Augustin Dubé : Zacharie Hayot MOTHER: Marie-Anne Soucy : Marie-Josephte Levasseur [5, 9] BORN: 28 Jul 1731 Ste-Anne-de-la Pocatiere, Quebec : 17 Sep 1730 Ste-Anne-de-la Pocatiere [5, 9] [5] DIED: 27 Feb 1803 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska, Quebec : MARRIED: 10 Jan 1752 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Anne’s sibling birth/marriage/death details (at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska, Quebec) follow: Anne (h31), Euphrosine (29 Aug 1754 / 30 Sep 1754), Dorothea (25 Aug 1755 / 4 Jun 1766), Theodosie (27 Jun 1757 / 21 Aug 1757), Isidore (ca 1758 / Catherine Roy 25 Nov 1783), Jean (10 Mar 1759), Alexandre (ca 1760 / wed Marie-Anne Vaillancourt on 3 Nov 1784), Josephte (27 Jan 1761 / 21 May 1761), Marie-Theodosie (23 Oct 1762), Augustin (28 Dec 1763 / wed Ursule Dion 13 Oct 1788 at L’Isle-Verte), Francois (16 Sep 1765 / 2 Nov 1765), Catherine (1 May 1767 / 12 Jun 1767), Germain (11 Jul 1770), Jean-Baptiste (12 Dec 1773), Ms. Dube (29 Dec 1775 / died same day) .[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Alexis - Alexis – Alexis – Louis: j96 / j97: PRUDENT ROBERT dit Lafontaine : MADELEINE FAFARD dit Delorme FATHER: Louis Robert dit Lafontaine : Francois Fafard dit Delorme MOTHER: Marie Bourgery : Marie-Marguerite Jobin [5, 9, 25] BORN: 9 Jun 1686 Boucherville, Quebec : 29 Sep 1691 Batiscan, Quebec [5, 9, 25] [5, 25] DIED: 3 Aug 1742 Chambly, Quebec : 6 Dec 1754 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: 7 Jan 1711 @ Ste-Anne-de-Detroit, Detroit, Michigan [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Louis’ sibling birth/marriage/death data (all Chambly): Francoise (14 Oct 1711 Boucherville / Joseph Vanier dit Fontaine 10 Aug 1728 / 5 Jun 1754 Fort-de-la-Presentation), Madeleine (23 Jul 1713 Sorel / Francois Masse dit Sancerre 8 Nov 1728 / 29 Sep 1781), Anne (17 Feb 1715 Boucherville / Rene Boileau 9 Sep 1732 / 3 Sep 1759), Antoine (18 Jun 1716 Boucherville / Charlotte Vigeant dit Taupier 22 Nov 1740), Renée (11 Jan 1718 Boucherville / Jean-Baptiste Maillot 23 Nov 1739 / 3 Mar 1782), Suzanne (3 Apr 1719 Boucherville / 24 May 1719 Boucherville), Charles (11 May 1720 / Marie-Anne Menard dit Fontaine 22 Apr 1743 / 17 Nov 1797), Pierre (19 Jan 1722 / Francoise Vigeant dit Taupier 5 Feb 1748 / 1 Mar 1784), Laurent (30 Jul 1723 / 14 Aug 1723), Marie-Francoise (22 Sep 1724 / Jean Leblanc 4 Nov 1748 Montreal / 10 Nov 1760), Louis (i48), Catherine (ca 1727 / Pierre Masse dit Sancerre 18 Aug 1749 / 19 Mar 1804 Stnd Mathias, Rouville), Suzanne 2 (31 May 1730 / 3 Jun 1730), Laurent-Roland (5 Dec 1731 / Marie-Charlotte Cadieux 12 Jan 1761 / 5 Sep 1797 St-Mathias, Quebec), Therese (31 Oct 1733 / 8 Jan 1734), Prudent (ca 1734 / 1 May 1735).[5, 9, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 188 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Alexis - Alexis – Alexis – Marie: j98 / j99: MATHURIN LEBEAU : MARIE LESUEUR Jean Lebeau dit Lalouette : Pierre-Charles Lesueur Etiennette Loret : Marie Drouet 30 Apr 1684 Contrecoeur, Quebec [5, 9, 27, 29] : ca 1690 Boucherville, Quebec [4, 9a, 23] [5, 9, 29] 11 Jan 1757 Chambly, Quebec : 12 Dec 1764 St-Ours, Quebec [4, 9, 23] 20 Feb 1713 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec [4, 9, 9a, 20, 23, 29] Mathurin was first married to Catherine-Noelle Martinbault on 30 Oct 1708 at Ste-Famille, Chambly. Mathurin and Ms. Martinbault had a daughter: Josephte-Angelique (20 Jul 1709 Boucherville / Francois Chicot 15 Feb 1730 Ste-Famille, Boucherville / 13 Dec 1738 Ste-Famille).[5, 29] Mathurin Lebeau and Marie Lesueur’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Chambly, Quebec) includes the following in the order of their birth: Madeleine (3 Dec 1713 / 3 May 1715), Louis (16 Feb 1715 / Angelique Besset 24 Nov 1739 / 24 Oct 1760), Catherine (31 Mar 1718 Boucherville / Augustin Cadieux 3 Feb 1739 / ca 1780 St-Denis, Vercheres), Veronique (22 Dec 1719 / Jean-Baptiste Laporte 20 Jan 1744), Josephte (20 Mar 1721 / 5 Feb 1722), Charles (6 Apr 1724 / MarieAmable Viau on 23 Jun 1749 at Longueuil / 17 Apr 1755), Joseph (26 Feb 1726 / 28 Dec 1745), Marie-Josephe (i49).[5, 9] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Boucherville, __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange: j100 / j101: JEAN-BAPTISTE BRICAULT : PETRONILLE JANOT FATHER: Jean Bricault dit Lamarche : Pierre Janot dit Lachapelle MOTHER: Marie Chenier : Petronille Tessier [5, 9] BORN: 27 Sep 1693 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec : 27 Sep 1704 Pointe-aux-Trembles [9 23] [5, 9] DIED: 21 Apr 1764 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec : 8 Jun 1744 Pointe-aux-Trembles [5] MARRIED: 8 Nov 1723 @ St-Enfant Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Archange’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at St-Enfant Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles): Marie-Anne (27 Jul 1724 / 7 Aug 1724), Anne-Therese (17 Feb 1725 / Joseph Foran 5 Feb 1748 / 11 Aug 1777), Josephte (3 Sep 1727 / 21 Apr 1733), Jean-Baptiste (22 Jan 1729 / 7 Apr 1733), Catherine (15 Nov 1730 / 11 May 1763 Montreal), Nicolas (4 Feb 1733 / Marie-Felicite Janot dit Lachapelle 12 Jan 1761), Anne (14 Feb 1735 / 1 Jan 1760), Marie (1 Nov 1736 / Isidore Janot dit Lachapelle 19 Jan 1761 / 4 Dec 1765), Archange (i50), Julien (25 Apr 1740 / Charlotte Brouillet 4 Feb 1765 St-Joseph, Chambly), Marie-Josephte (5 Jan 1742 / Maurice Bazinet 19 Apr 1762 / 4 Dec 1765), Petronille (20 Sep 1744 / 13 Oct 1748), Marguerite (17 Jun 1748 / wed Joseph Galipeau on 30 Jan 1769 / 9 Feb 1782 Longue-Pointe).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Madeleine: j102 / j103: JEAN-BAPTISTE BAZINET : ANGELIQUE LOISEL FATHER: Joseph Bazinet dit Tourblanche : Joseph Loisel MOTHER: Marie-Anne Senecal : Marguerite Beaudry BORN: 29 Mar 1712 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5] : 1 Feb 1717 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5] [5] DIED: 1 Nov 1760 St-Denis sur Richelieu, Quebec : 25 Nov 1747 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 3 Nov 1739 @ St-Infant Jesus, Point aux Trembles, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean-Baptiste and Angelique’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Pointe-aux-Trembles) includes: Madeleine (i51), Marie-Anne (7 Mar 1742 Sault-au-Recollet, Quebec / Antoine Chabal dit Fortunat 23 Sep 1761 Repentigny, Quebec / 19 Feb 1824 Longue Pointe, Quebec), Jean (25 May 1743 Sault-au-Recollet / 27 Jun 1743), Marie-Angelique (5 Jan 1745 Sault-au-Recollet / 22 May 1745), Jean-Baptiste (31 May 1746 Riviere-des-Prairies / Josephte Raymond 8 Nov 1773 Montreal), Joseph (16 Nov 1747 / 4 Dec 1747).[5, 22] Jean-Baptiste next wed Marguerite-Ursule Hebert on 10 Feb 1749 at Varennes, Vercheres, Quebec. Vital statistics (at St-Denis-surRichelieu) for their children: Marie-Madeleine (21 Mar 1750 / 10 Mar 1754), Francoise (16 Jul 1752 / 11 Feb 1755), Pierre (24 Sep 1754 St-Antoine-sur-Richelieu / Genevieve Martin 7 Jan 1783), Marguerite (10 Sep 1756 / 4 Oct 1756).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 189 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre: j104 / j105: JEAN DESMARETS dit Desnoyers : THERESE MENARD dit Lafontaine FATHER: Robert Desmarets dit Desnoyers : Jacques Menard dit Lafontaine MOTHER: Elisabeth Richaume : Catherine Fortier BORN: ca 1686 Repentigny, Quebec [5] : 2 Oct 1676 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 29] [5, 9, 29] DIED: 5 Mar 1763 St-Philippe, Laprairie : 19 Jun 1753 Longueuil, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 29] MARRIED: ‘a la gaumine’ ca 1709 @ Boucherville, Quebec [5, 25] MEMOIRS: Therese Menard first wed Jean-Baptiste Deniau on 11 Feb 1697 at Ste-Famille, Boucherville. Their children’s vital statistics include: Jean (6 Dec 1697 Tremblay / 3 Feb 1698 Boucherville), Marie-Anne (30 Nov 1698 Tremblay, Chicoutimi / Noel Carpentier 12 Jan 1721 Longueuil / died ca 1775 at Quebec), Jean-Baptiste (16 Mar 1700 Tremblay / Marie Benoit dit Livernois 29 Apr 1725 Longueuil), Pierre (4 Jan 1702 Tremblay / 4 Jun 1703 Tremblay), Pierre 2nd (26 Jun 1704 Boucherville / Marie-Jeanne Lamarre dit St-Andre 25 Nov 1726 St-Antoine-de-Pade, Longueuil / 28 Feb 1778 Chambly), Nicolas (2 Jul 1706 Longueuil / 9 Nov 1707 Longueuil) , Joseph (11 Mar 1708 Tremblay / 29 Aug 1716 Notre-Dame-de-Montreal).[9, 25, 29] After Mr. Deniau died in 1708, Therese Menard and Jean Desmarets were married ‘a la gaumine’ which was a form of do-it-yourself marriage ceremony. In this case it was presided over by the missionary, Reverand de Francheville while he was celebrating Mass. This type of marriage was first used in New France in the the early 1700’s. A couple would attend Mass in the presence of two witnesses. At the moment of Consecration, the couple would declare aloud their intention to take each other as husband and wife without further ceremony. This practice became so fashionable and also disruptive to services that the Bishop, supported by the administrative authorities, threatened excommunication for those who would contract marriage in this way. This marriage was later ratified on 29 Feb 1724 at Longueuil, Quebec. Since their son, Pierre, was born on 26 Aug 1710, it is assumed that the ‘a la gaumine ceremony’ would have taken place the preceding year.[5, 21] Therese and Jean’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Longueuil): Pierre (i52), Angelique (17 Jan 1713 / Louis Letouneau 23 Nov 1739), Madeleine (2 Apr 1715 Boucherville / Noel Carpentier 21 Mar 1743 / 30 Mar 1743) , Charlotte (23 Sep 1716 Boucherville / Laurent Viau dit Lesperance 7 Jan 1736 / 8 Dec 1747), Ursule (twin, 10 Aug 1718 / 27 Aug 1718 Boucherville), Etienne (twin, 10 Aug 1718 / Jeanne Giroux 7 Jan 1744 / 23 Apr 1796 Laprairie), Jean-Baptiste (26 Jun 1720 / 5 Aug 1720 Boucherville). [5, 9, 25, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte: j106 / j107: BERNARD LETOURNEAU : HELENE PAQUET FATHER: David Letourneau : Rene Paquet MOTHER: Francoise Chapelain : Helene Lemieux BORN: 30 Aug 1673 St-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9, 26] : 7 Dec 1682 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 22 Mar 1750 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 26] : 6 May 1758 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 31 Jul 1703 @ St-Francois, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Bernard first married Marie Rocheron on 2 Jun 1698 at St-Famille, Ile d’Orleans.[5, 9, 22] Bernard’s children with Ms. Rocheron (at St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans): Madeleine (20 Apr 1699 / 13 Nov 1701), JeanBaptiste (18 Jun 1701 / Catherine Menard dit Bellerose 26 Apr 1728 Chambly / 8 Apr 1770).[5] Helene Paquet first wed Pierre Juchereau on 5 Aug 1698 at Quebec City.[5, 9, 22] Helene’s children with Mr. Juchereau (at St-Francois, nd Ile d’Orleans): Pierre (22 Aug 1699 / 7 Sep 1699), Pierre 2 (10 Jun 1701 / Elisabeth Fageot 5 Jul 1734 Longue-Pointe, Quebec). Bernard Letourneau and Marie-Helene’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans) includes: Joseph (17 Aug 1704 / Angelique Bouteiller 13 Jan 1738 Longueuil / 2 nd marriage, Louise Marchand 6 Jun 1757 Chambly / 14 Feb 1773 Chambly), Marie-Helene (29 Aug 1706 / 22 Nov 1706), Francoise (1 Jan 1708 / 29 Apr 1715), Denis (18 Mar 1711 / 21 Mar 1711), Anne (1 May 1713 / 6 Sep 1714), Josephte (i53), Angelique (10 Nov 1717 / Joseph Rancin 7 Apr 1739 / 6 May 1791), Louis (ca 1718 / Josephte Demers 14 Apr 1749 / 23 Aug 1758), Therese (ca 1720 Quebec / Pierre Bougrat 30 Jan 1742 / 2 nd marriage, Rene Menard 3 Aug 1750 / 9 Mar 1790), Nicolas (10 Oct 1722 / Genevieve Peloquin 15 Aug 1746 / 19 Mar 1770), Helene (20 Jul 1725 Laprairie, Quebec / Jean Martin 12 Feb 1759 / 8 Apr 1759).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 190 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte - Marie – Jean Baptiste: j108 / j109: LOUIS BLAIN : MARGUERITE LUMINEAU FATHER: Francois Blain : Jean Lumineau MOTHER: Jeanne Barbier : Marie Quevillon BORN: 6 Aug 1685 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9] : 1 Nov 1690 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 2 May 1763 Varennes, Vercheres, Quebec : 25 Jan 1764 Varennes, Vercheres, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 15 Apr 1709 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: About 1703, Louis was noted at Port-Royal where he wed Marie Daigle, widow of Pierre Sibilau, and had one child. Louis moved to Quebec about 1708 and settled at Riviere-Ouelle.[21] Louis and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Famille, Boucherville) includes: Marguerite (5 Apr 1710 Riviere-Ouelle / Gilles Bonde 13 Feb 1736 St-Roch), Louise (9 Feb 1712 / Jean-Baptiste Denoyon 14 Apr 1731 / 3 Apr 1760), Ignace (10 Aug 1713 Cap-St-Ignace), Marie-Reine (4 Jan 1715 Cap-St-Ignace / Pierre Dame 29 Aug 1740 / 13 Apr 1750), Marthe (2 Nov 1716 L’Islet / Jean Chauvin 16 Jun 1732), Marie-Ludivine (9 Oct 1718 L’Islet / Louis Reguindeau 20 Nov 1741 / 6 Dec 1757), Jean-Baptiste (i54), Madeleine (25 Jan 1721 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / Francois Chauvin 8 Jan 1741 / 14 Sep 1770 Montreal), Anne (ca 1723 L’Islet / Pierre Daunay 29 Aug 1740), Louis (21 May 1725 / Josephe Petit 25 Oct 1745 / 21 Mar 1782), Antoine (ca 1726 / Madeleine Petit 19 Feb 1753), Charlotte (15 Mar 1728 / Henri-Joseph Donnet 19 Feb 1748), Amable (21 Apr 1730 / 18 Jun 1730), Angelique (10 Nov 1731 / wed Jean-Baptiste Pepin 7 Feb 1751).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite: j110 / j111: JEAN-BAPTISTE PEPIN dit Cardonnet : MARGUERITE CASAVANT FATHER: Jean Pepin dit Descardonnets : Jean Casavant dit Ladebauche MOTHER: Marie-Madeleine Loiseau : Jeanne Charpentier [5, 9] BORN: 28 Aug 1692 Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec : 16 Oct 1694 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9, 29] DIED: : 1 Jul 1769 Boucherville, Quebec [29] [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: 28 Sep 1716 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec MEMOIRS: Jean-Baptiste and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec) include the following in the order of their birth: Jean-Baptiste (1 Oct 1717 / Angelique Blain 7 Feb 1751), Louis (22 Jan 1719 / 10 Sep 1719), Marie-Josette (15 Apr 1720 / Jean Daunais 16 Nov 1739 / died in 1762), Marguerite (i55), Anne (13 Jan 1723 / 2 Sep 1724), Madeleine (16 May 1724 / 8 Jul 1726), Laurent (9 May 1725 / nd 13 Jul 1729), Louis 2 (16 Nov 1626 / Magdeleine Jaret 2 Feb 1748 Varennes, Vercheres) , Angelique (26 Mar 1728 / Julien Grignon 14 Feb 1763), Toussaint (4 Nov 1729 / 25 Mar 1730), Toussaint 2nd (ca 1732 / Josette Daunais 5 Feb 1759), Marie-Anne (ca 1635 / Michel Meunier 20 Jan 1755), Agathe (ca 1638 / wed Jacques Arrivee 5 Oct 1761) .[5, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Joseph: j112 / j113: MICHEL MIGNIER dit Lagace : ANGELIQUE THIBAULT Andre Mignier dit Lagace : Francois-Louis Thibault Jacquette Michel : Elisabeth-Agnes Lefebvre 18 Apr 1682 Charlesbourg, Quebec [5, 9, 27, 28] : 15 Feb 1686 Cap-St-Ignace, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 27, 28] [5, 9] 23 Jul 1738 Cap-St-Ignace, Quebec : 8 Feb 1726 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec [5, 9, 25] 28 Jul 1705 @ Cap-St-Ignace, Montmagny, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 28, 37] Joseph’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Anne, La-Pocatiere) includes: Madeleine (18 Apr 1706 Riviere-Ouelle / Joseph Soucy 7 Jan 1727 / 2nd marriage, Antoine Michaud 14 Jun 1751 / 14 Jan 1777) , Michel (8 Feb 1708 Riviere-Ouelle / 13 Feb 1708 Riviere-Ouelle), Angelique (11 Jan 1710 Riviere-Ouelle / Jacques Bois 25 Nov 1730 / 23 May 1787), Genevieve (16 Jun 1712 Riviere-Ouelle / Charles Pelletier 25 Nov 1748 / 23 Nov 1759), Michel 2nd (26 Mar 1714 Riviere-Ouelle / Marguerite Pelletier 9 Jan 1736 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies / 14 Mar 1773), Joseph (i56), Francoise (7 Feb 1719 Riviere-Ouelle / 8 Feb 1719), Jean (23 Sep 1720 Riviere-Ouelle / Brigitte Pelletier 20 Jan 1744 / 2nd marriage, Madeleine Dumont dit Gueret 16 Jan 1747 / 29 Jun 1765 St-Vincent-de-Paul, Laval), Josephte (2 Oct 1722 Riviere-Ouelle / Pierre Jean 6 Feb 1741 / 9 Mar 1786 St-Jean, Port-Joli, Quebec), Anne (25 Jul 1724 Riviere-Ouelle / Louis Grondin 23 Nov 1744).[5, 9, 22, 28, 37] Michel Mignier was next married to Louise Pinel on 6 Aug 1726 at La Pocatiere, PQ.[5, 21, 37] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 191 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Marie Anne: j114 / j115: JOSEPH QUELLET : MADELEINE BOUCHARD FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Gregoire Quellet : Francois Bouchard Anne Lisot : Marie-Anne Valliere 27 Jan 1697 Notre-Dame-de-Liesse [5, 9] : 8 Nov 1702 Notre-Dame-de-Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle [5, 9] [5, 9] 19 Nov 1759 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere : 23 Apr 1785 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska [5, 9] 19 Nov 1720 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Marie-Anne’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere) includes: Francois (21 Mar 1722 / Madeleine Mignault 29 July 1748 / 18 Nov 1771) , Gabriel-Basile (11 Sep 1724 / Veronique Mignault dit Labrie 10 Jan 1758 / 24 Jun 1809), Marie-Madeleine (24 Jan 1726 / Jean-Baptiste Emond 22 Feb 1745 / 24 Jun 1809), Marie Anne (i57), Joseph (ca 1730 / Madeleine Fortin 5 July 1751 / 18 Oct 1753 Fort de la Presquile, Quebec) , JeanClement (11 Jan 1733 / 12 Jun 1734), Pierre (18 Sep 1734 / Charlotte Deschamps 12 Jan 1762 / 19 May 1767) , Bernard (17 Aug 1736), Nicolas-Jean (8 Oct 1738), Marie-Josephe (12 Jun 1740 / 30 Mar 1742), Charlotte (15 May 1742 / Francois Richard dit Martinet 8 Nov 1762 / 2 nd marriage, Joseph Grenier 22 Apr 1771 Ste-Croix, Lotbiniere), Antoine (4 Sep 1744 / wed Claire Morin 24 Nov 1777 / 16 Dec 1828 Trois-Pistoles, Quebec), Genevieve (31 Mar 1747 / 29 May 1747).[5, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain - Marie - Joseph: j116 / j117: FRANCOIS MICHAUD : MARIE-CATHERINE DIONNE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Joseph (i58), Pierre Michaud : Jean Dionne Marie Ancelin : Marie-Charlotte Mignault [5, 9] 9 Dec 1687 Kamouraska, Quebec : 7 Sep 1697 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9] 6 Sep 1727 Kamouraska, Quebec : ca 1761 Ile d’Orleans, Montmorency, Quebec [9] ca 1715 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Joseph’s younger sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec) follows: Francois (ca 1718 / Josephte Martin 20 Nov 1742 / 12 Oct 1750), Benjamin (ca 1720 / Anne-Marie Chassey 21 Oct 1746 Kamouraska / 13 Feb 1794), Antoine (ca 1723 / Marie-Angelique Mignier 14 Jun 1751), Etienne (ca 1726 / Marie-Ursule Nadeau 16 Nov 1749 / 15 Nov 1756 Kamouraska), Madeleine (ca 1729 / Joseph de Lavoye 23 Nov 1750). Marie-Catherine Dionne’s second marriage was with Philippe Boucher on 4 July 1729 at Ste-Anne-dela-Pocatiere. Vital statistics (at Kamouaska, Quebec) for Marie-Catherine’s children with Mr. Boucher include: Philippe (24 Jan 1730 / Marie-Anne Lizotte 24 Nov 1760 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Joseph (11 Mar 1732 / LouiseGenevieve Levesque 20 Nov 1756 Berthier / 7 Apr 1786 Berthier, Quebec), Michel (29 Jan 1734), Marie-Josephte (9 Sep 1736 / Jean Rouleau 20 Sep 1756 Riviere-Ouelle), Genevieve (7 Jan 1739 / wed Joseph-Antoine Gagnon 18 Feb 1765).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite: j118 / j119: JACQUES CORDEAU : MARGUERITE TOUPIN FATHER: Jean Cordeau dit Desloriers : Antoine Toupin MOTHER: Catherine Latour dit Simonet : Louise Cloutier BORN: 13 Sep 1671 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9, 26] : 8 Jul 1685 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 21 Jan 1746 Kamouraska, Quebec [5] : 21 Apr 1723 Kamouraska, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 22 Aug 1702 @ Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jacques’ parents died when he was about nine years old. It is assumed that Jacques went to live with Nicolas Delaunay who was named his guardian.[26] Jacques and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Kamouraska) follow: Jacques (15 Aug 1703 Chateau-Richer / Madeleine Mirande du Lignon 1727 St-Maurice, Trois-Rivieres / 17 Jan 1747), Marguerite (i59), Madeleine (17 Aug 1707 Riviere-Ouelle / Antoine Michaud 30 May 1729 / 26 Oct 1780) , Antoine (twin, 28 Jan 1709), Francois (twin, 28 Jan 1709 / Genevieve Michaud 13 Jan 1738 / 7 May 1790), Anne (ca 1711 / Jacques Boutillet 29 Jan 1731 Chateau-Richer / 26 Dec 1761 L’AngeGardien), Genevieve (ca 1713 Chateau-Richer / Francois-Raymond Phocas 6 Nov 1741 / 8 Sep 1793), Brigitte (ca 1717 / Alexandre Michaud 12 Jan 1739 / 29 Dec 1800 St-Andre-de-Kamouraska), Marie-Josephte (1725 / Joseph Michel dit Taillon 10 Jan 1746 / 4 Mar 1756).[5, 9, 22] Jacques Cordeau next married Madeleine Mirande about 1724 at Kamouraska, Quebec. Vital statistics (at Kamouraska) for Jacques’ children with Ms. Mirande: Judith (ca 1726 / Augustin Dube 18 Nov 1748 / 14 Jun 1810), Josephte (23 Mar 1728 / Joseph Michel dit Taillon 10 Jan 1746 / 4 Mar 1756).[5] - 192 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine - Jean – Charles Francois: j120 / j121: CHARLES TARDIF : MARIE-GENEVIEVE LeROY FATHER: Guillaume Tardif : Pierre Roy (Leroy) MOTHER: Marguerite Godin : Marie-Anne Martin BORN: 4 Jun 1688 L’Ange-Gardien, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] : 23 Nov 1697 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] [5, 9, 25, 45] DIED: 6 Mar 1740 Kamouaska, Quebec : 9 Dec 1771 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 45] MARRIED: 17 Feb 1716 @ L’Ange Gardien, La Cote de Beaupre, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: Charles and Marie-Genevieve’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Kamouraska, Quebec) include: Jean (29 Dec 1716 Charlesbourg / Helene Ouellet 18 Feb 1738 / died in 1790), Marie-Genevieve (ca 1717 Riviere-Ouelle / Jean-Baptiste Ouellet dit Depaincour 10 Jan 1735), Marie-Anne (ca 1719 Riviere-Ouelle / Francois Paradis 29 Feb 1740 / died in 1801), Marie-Angelique (ca 1721 Riviere-Ouelle / Nicolas Letarte 8 Feb 1745 L’Ange-Gardien / 24 Aug 1764 L’Ange-Gardien), Marie-Josephe (ca 1723 Riviere-Ouelle / Jean-Baptiste Ouellet 24 Jul 1747 / died in 1764), Jeanne-Marie (ca 1725 / Barthelemi Ouellet 11 Feb 1752), Elisabeth (ca 1727 / Francois Tiriot 26 Apr 1751 Beauport), Charles-Francois (i60), Joseph-Marie (27 Apr 1731 / Marie-Madeleine Ouvrard dit Laperriere 14 Apr 1755 L’AncienneLorette / 2nd marriage, Marguerite Alain 16 Dec 1775), Marie-Madeleine (17 Apr 1733 / Jean-Baptiste Bechard 22 Apr 1751 / 29 Mar 1792), Marguerite-Apolline (9 Feb 1735 / Andre Laforge 13 Jan 1761), Jean-Roch (25 Jul 1736 / Marie-Louise Garnier 21 Jul 1766 Beauport / 9 Apr 1790 Ste-Marie-de-Beauce), Etienne (14 Jan 1739 / Marie-Rosalie Ayotte [5, 9, 22, 25, 45] 16 Jan 1758 / 31 Mar 1811). Marie-Genevieve LeRoy next married Pierre Hautbois on 29 Jul 1743 at Kamouraska, Quebec.[5, 45] Genevieve LeRoy next married Guillaume Hayot on 27 Jan 1755 at RiviereOuelle.[45] Charles Tardif’s first cousin is Joseph Denis dit LaPierre (i90) since their mothers were sisters. __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne Marie: j122 / j123: AUGUSTIN OUELLET : MARIE-ANNE AUTIN FATHER: Rene-Mathurin Ouellet : Francois Autin MOTHER: Angelique Lebel : Marie Boucher BORN: ca 1694 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska, PQ [5, 9] : 31 Aug 1697 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 23 Mar 1778 Kamouraska, Quebec : 29 Apr 1732 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 7 Feb 1719 @ Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 22] MEMOIRS: Augustin and Marie-Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Kamouraska) follow: Marie-Josephte (ca 1720 / Jacques Michaud 25 Jun1738), Jean-Baptiste (ca 1722 / Marie-Josephte Tardif 24 July 1747), Joseph (ca 1724 St-Michel-Bellechase / Marie-Thecle Charon 17 Feb 1749 St-Michel-Bellechasse), Augustin (ca 1726 / Genevieve Gauvin 25 Apr 1751), Barthelemi (ca 1728 / Jeanne-Marie Tardif 11 Feb 1752 / 6 Dec 1814), Anne-Marie (i61), Louise (23 Jul 1731).[5, 9, 22] Augustin next married Catherine Soulard on 22 Jul 1732 at Ste-Anne-dela-Pocatiere. Ms. Soulard died on 22 Oct 1734 at Kamouraska. Augusin then wed Marie-Anne Michaud on 17 Apr 1735 at Kamouraska, Quebec. Ms. Michaud died on 3 Mar 1736 at Kamouraska. Augustin Ouellet next married Marie-Angelique Labourliere on 4 Mar 1737 at Kamouraska. Vital statistics (at Kamouraska) for Augustin’s children with Ms. Labourliere include: Angelique (10 Jan 1738 / Michel Laine 12 Jan 1756 / 26 Feb 1799), Francois-Germain (10 Jul 1739 / wed Marie-Francoise Miville dit Deschenes on 23 Feb 1763 / died before 1799) .[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne - Jean: j124 / j125: AUGUSTIN DUBÉ : MARIE-ANNE SOUCY FATHER: Mathurin Dubé : Pierre Soucy dit Lavigne MOTHER: Marie-Anne Miville : Elisabeth-Ursule Fouquerreau [5, 9] BORN: 16 Jan 1695 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska : 18 Jan 1700 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska [5, 9, 45] [5, 9, 45] DIED: 12 Nov 1779 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska : 29 Sep 1785 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska [5, 9] MARRIED: 4 Jan 1721 @ Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 45] MEMOIRS: Augustin and Marie-Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska) follows in the order of their birth: Augustin (28 Jan 1722 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / 3 Feb 1722), Augustin 2nd (8 Feb 1723 / Marie-Judith Cordeau 18 Nov 1748 / 18 Dec 1808) , Marie-Catherine (5 May 1724 / Jean-Baptiste Beaulieu 14 Feb 1746), Marie-Josephte (5 Mar 1725 / Gabriel Phocas dit Raymond 24 July 1747) , Angelique (ca 1727 Ste-Annede-la-Pocatiere / Louis Levesque 19 Feb 1748 / 2 nd marriage, Joseph Chamberlain 6 Feb 1764 / 19 Feb 1784), Basile (ca 1729 / - 193 - Louise Cote ca 1752), Jean (i62), Joseph (12 Mar 1733 / Marie-Genevieve Hudon 28 Oct 1754 / 2nd marriage, Madeleine Beaudet 10 Apr 1758), Louis (18 Jun 1734 / Marie-Jeanne Dionne 17 Jan 1763 / 1 May 1801), Genevieve (10 Oct 1735 / 20 Oct 1735), Mr. Dube (28 Oct 1737 / died same day), Madeleine (20 Sep 1740 / Jean-Baptiste Levesque 3 May 1762), Charles (4 Jan 1742 / Marie Michaud 16 July 1764), Zacharie (4 Sep 1744 / wed Catherine Levesque 21 Nov 1768).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine - Anne – Anne: j126 / j127: ZACHARIE HAYOT : MARIE-JOSEPHTE LEVASSEUR FATHER: Jean-Baptiste Hayot : Pierre Levasseur MOTHER: Anne-Xainte Grondin : Marie-Elisabeth Michaud BORN: 14 Apr 1700 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9] : 16 May 1706 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: ca 1786 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] : 3 Aug 1787 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: 17 Nov 1727 @ St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec MEMOIRS: Zacharie and Marie-Josephte’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec) includes the following in the order of their birth: Josephte (23 Aug 1728 / Maurice Sirois 11 Jul 1750 / 5 Oct 1789), Anne (i63), Marie-Anne (25 Apr 1733 / Francois Ouellet 6 Feb 1758) , Alexandre (28 Nov 1735 / Charlotte Saucier 30 Mar 1761 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska / 22 Nov 1808 St-Basile, Madawaska, New Brunswick), Raphael (8 Dec 1737 St-Louis, Quebec / 21 Jan 1738), Genevieve (14 Sep 1739 La Pocatiere / wed Francois April 23 Nov 1763) .[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Prudent: k192 / k193: LOUIS ROBERT dit Lafontaine : MARIE BOURGERY FATHER: Andre Robert dit Lapommeray : Jean Baptiste Bourgery MOTHER: Catherine Bonain : Marie le Gendre [5, 9, 13, 25] BORN: 12 Aug 1638 Notre-Dame, Cogne, Larochelle : 10 Apr 1654 Trois-Rivieres [5, 9, 13, 25, 29] [5, 9, 13, 25] DIED: 1 Jan 1711 Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec : 19 Sep 1719 Boucherville, PQ [5, 9, 25, 29] MARRIED: 25 Nov 1666 @ Immaculate Conception Church, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Louis arrived at Quebec on 12 Sep 1665 as a soldier in the Carignan Regiment. [5] Louis’ trade was that of a cordonnier or shoemaker.[5, 25] Louis and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Boucherville, Quebec) follow in birth order: Pierre (L958), Joseph (22 Oct 1674 / Marie-Josephe Larrivee 26 Dec 1701 / 19 Nov 1748 Chambly), Francois (j220), Marie (1 Sep 1680 Pointe-aux-Trembles / Antoine Daunais dit Lafreniere 6 Nov 1702 / 3 Jan 1734), Marguerite (9 Jun 1683 / Pierre Daunais 6 Nov 1702 / 18 Dec 1766), Prudent (j96), JeanBaptiste (3 Jun 1688 / Genevieve Brebau dit Boisdamour 5 Feb 1714 St-Sulpice / 21 May 1748 Lavaltrie, Lanaudiere, Quebec), Louis (22 Mar 1691 / 10 Sep 1693), Jacques (15 Mar 1693 / Jeanne Demers 25 Apr 1718), Louis 2nd (15 Mar 1695 / Marie-Angelique Provost 25 Nov 1715 Varennes / 12 Aug 1764), Antoine (17 Jan 1698 / Charlotte Bourdon 17 Feb 1721 / 5 Nov 1768).[5, 9, 25] Louis Robert may also be found in this family history at the code number (k440) and (m1916). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine: k194 / k195: FRANCOIS FAFARD dit Delorme : MARIE-MADELEINE JOBIN FATHER: Francois Fafard dit Laframboise : Charles Jobin MOTHER: Marie Richard : Madeleine Girard BORN: ca 1658 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec [5, 26] : ca 1662 St-Germain, L’Auxerois, Paris [5, 9, 25] [5, 25] DIED: 7 Jan 1734 Ste-Anne-de-Detroit, Michigan : 29 Nov 1711 Ste-Anne, Detroit, Michigan [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: 3 Dec 1683 @ Notre Dame de la Visitation, Champlain, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: Francois was a coureur-des-bois and trader who followed his brother, Jean, to Detroit.[21] Francois and Marie-Madeleine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Ste-Anne-de-Detroit, Michigan) follow in the order of their birth: Francois (25 Sep 1684 Champlain / Marie-Jeanne Lemaitre dit Lamorille 9 Jan 1713 TroisRivieres / 6 Feb 1745 Sorel), Charles (10 Jun 1687 Batiscan / Marie-Francoise Lemaitre dit Lamorille 29 Mar 1717 TroisRivieres / 27 Feb 1756 L’Ile-Dupas), Madeleine (j97), Marguerite (22 Jul 1695 Batiscan / Michel Bisaillon 30 Jun 1710 / 26 Dec 1728 L’Ile-Dupas), Marie-Josephe (18 Jul 1698 Batiscan / Pierre Auclair 9 Nov 1716 Charlesbourg / 15 Jan 1752 Charlesbourg), Anne (ca 1699 / Jean-Baptiste Lupien dit Baron 8 Jan 1720 Sorel / 18 Mar 1783), Alexis (18 Mar 1706 Sorel / 19 Mar 1706 Sorel), Joseph (24 Sep 1708 / Marguerite Lepelle dit Desmarais 29 Oct 1739 / 8 Jan 1756 Berthier, - 194 - Haut).[5, 9, 25] Francois Fafard was next married to Barbara Loisel on 30 Oct 1713 at Detroit, Michigan.[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Mathurin: k196 / k197: JEAN LEBEAU dit Lalouette : ETIENNETTE LORET FATHER: Mathurin Lebeau : Jean Loret MOTHER: Louise Garatte : Francoise Lefroy BORN: ca 1647 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [5, 9, 27] : ca 1649 St-Laurent, Paris [5, 9, 27, 29] [5, 9, 27, 29] DIED: 15 Nov 1728 Ste-Famille, Boucherville : 29 Mar 1733 Ste-Famille, Boucherville [5, 9, 27, 29] MARRIED: 15 May 1672 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 27, 29] MEMOIRS: Etiennette was a Kings Daughter.[18, 27, 29] She came to Canada in the year 1671, with a dowry worth an estimated 100 livres. Etiennette and Jean, who was a farmer, settled at Chambly. In 1695, Jean Lebeau was working as a schoolmaster at Boucherville.[27, 29] Jean and Etiennette’s offspring birth/marriage/ death details (all at Boucherville except as noted) follow in the order of their birth: Rene (9 Feb 1673 / Madeleine Guertin 11 Feb 1694 / 17 Dec 1726), Jean-Baptiste (12 Feb 1675 / Marguerite Giguere 1 Apr 1704 Beaupre / 30 Jun 1762 Montreal), Louis (ca 1677 / Genevieve Brunet 8 Feb 1705 Monteral / 2 nd marriage, Christine Hotesse 14 Jun 1707 Montreal / 26 Feb 1713 Montreal), Pierre (ca 1679), Jeanne (13 Sep 1681 / 8 May 1706 Montreal), Mathurin (j98), Marie (ca 1686 Contrecoeur / Simon Seguin dit Laderoute 9 Nov 1706 / 9 Jun 1714), Therese (2 Nov 1689 Contrecoeur / Jean Gareau 11 Jan 1712 / 7 Sep 1757 Chambly), Marien (11 Jun 1692 Contecoeur / Suzanne Lory 26 Apr 1719 / 26 Jan 1758 Longue-Pointe, Montreal), Francoise (12 Jun 1694 Contrecoeur / 18 Jul 1759 St-Joseph-de-Chambly / 18 Jul 1759 Chambly, Quebec) .[5, 27, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Marie: k198 / k199: PIERRE-CHARLES LeSUEUR : MARIE-THERESE DROUET Mathurin Drouet dit Grandmaison Marie-Louise Bardou 2 Jul 1670 Sorel, Richelieu, Quebec [5, 9] 28 Jan 1736 Sault-au-Recollet, PQ [5, 9] FATHER: Victor Lesueur : MOTHER: Anne Honneur : [5] BORN: ca 1657 Notre-Dame-de-Hesdin, Montrueil, Artois, Fr. : DIED: 17 Jul 1704 San Christobal, Havana, Cuba [5, 9] : MARRIED: ca 1689 @ a natural union at Quebec [4, 5] MEMOIRS: While still a youth, LeSueur came to Canada under the auspices of the Jesuits, who sent him as a donné to their mission at Sault Ste-Marie with Father Pierre Bailloguet. In 1680, he entered the fur-trade and became a coureur-de-bois. He was soon involved in trade with the Sioux on the upper Mississippi River and learned many of the native tongues of the region. At Montreal, on 12 Sep 1682, he entered into an agreement with others for a voyage to Michilimackinac.[5, 42] Marie-Therese Drouet first wed Roman L’Homme on 5 Jul 1684 at Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal. No children were born of this union. Mr. L’Homme died about 1688.[5] Pierre-Charles LeSueur was with Nicolas Perrot at Fort St-Antoine, when Perrot claimed possession of the region for France in May of 1689. Fort St-Antoine was on the eastern shore of Lake Pepin which was part of the upper Mississippi River delta.[5, 42] Marie-Therese Drouet and PierreCharles LeSueur, who were unwed, had a daughter named, Marie (j99), about the year 1690.[4, 5] The parish register for Sainte-Famille Parish in Boucherville contains the marriage record for their daughter, Marie LeSueur (j99), which lists the parents as Marie-Therese Drouet and Pierre-Charles LeSueur.[9a] A record of the marriage contract for Marie LeSueur (j99) and her husband, Mathurin Lebeau, notes that Marie was the illegitimate daughter of Marie-Therese Drouet and Pierre-Charles LeSueur.[4] Furthermore, Jette’s research indicates that Marie-Therese Drouet had a daughter, named Marie (j99), out of wedlock with Pierre-Charles LeSueur. This daughter was born about 1690 and eventually married Mathurin Lebeau on 20 Feb 1713.[44] Marie-Therese Drouet’s third union was with Pierre Dagenais who she married on 30 Apr 1695 at EnfantJesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec. Vital statistics (at Montreal) for the children of Marie-Therese Drouet and Mr. Dagenais include: Joseph-Michel (1 Jul 1696 / Pointe-aux-Trembles / Anne Lemay 31 Jan 1718 / 2 Apr 1765), Madeleine (31 May 1698 / Jacques David 22 Jun 1716 / 2 nd marriage, Pierre Martineau 11 May 1733 St-Laurent, Ile-deMontreal, Quebec), Louise (10 Jul 1699 / 24 Aug 1699), Elisabeth (11 Feb 1701 / 15 Nov 1701), Pierre (24 Nov 1702 / Marie-Josephe David 4 May 1722 Ste-Famille, Boucherville / 3 Oct 1759 La Visitaition-Sault-aux-Recollet, Quebec), MarieJosephe (11 Sep 1704 / Jacques Fortier 21 Feb 1735 St-Laurent), Francois (6 Sep 1706 / 15 Nov 1706), Jean-Baptiste - 195 - (25 Nov 1707 / Marie Proulx 31 May 1734 St-Laurent), Francois-Marie (16 Nov 1710 / Charlotte Vanier 16 Nov 1739 Saultau-Recollet, Ile-de-Montreal, Quebec / 26 Dec 1775), Laurent (11 Jan 1713 / Marie-Elisabeth Brignon dit Lapierre 5 Nov 1736 Sault-au-Recollet).[5] Pierre-Charles LeSueur would also eventually marry. As his bride, Pierre-Charles accepted Marguerite Messier (L578) on 29 Mar 1690 at Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec.[5, 9, 20, 22] Vital statistics for Pierre-Charles’ children with Ms. Messier include: Marie-Anne (15 Feb 1693 Montreal / 10 Mar 1755 Mobile, Alabama), Louise (3 Jun 1694 Montreal / died in the summer of 1705 enroute with her family to reunite with her father at Mobile, Alabama), Catherine-Marie (21 Apr 1696), Jean-Paul (1 Jun 1697 Montreal / 13 Oct 1751 Mobile, Alabama) , Marguerite (4 Jul 1699 Montreal / Nicolas Chauvin, sieur de La Freniere 23 Jul 1724, Mobile, Alabama / died before 1738 in Louisiana).[5, 43] In 1693, Pierre-Charles LeSueur received a commission, from the Governor of New France, Louis de Buade, Comte de Frontenac, to reopen the routes from Lake Superior to the Mississippi, to build a post at La Pointe (Chequamegon Bay), to maintain peace between the Chippewas and the Sioux, and to protect them from their enemies, the Foxes and Mascoutens. LeSueur’s knowledge of the Sioux and Chippewa languages and his familiarity with the geography of the upper Mississippi enabled him to play a role in Indian diplomacy. In the summer of 1695, LeSueur returned from the west, bringing with him a Chief from both the Sioux and the Chippewa tribes. Their purpose was to ratify a peace between their two nations and to make an alliance with Frontenac, the governor of Quebec. A recount of LeSueur’s return indicates that ‘on 13 Jun 1695, twelve canoes of Indians arrived at Montréal from Michilimakinac with four Frenchmen and Mr. LeSueur who brought us letters from Antoine de la Motte, sieur de Cadillac …. Lesueur brought with him Chigouabé, chief of the Chippewa, and Cioscate, chief of the Sioux along with Cioscate’s wife and another Sioux woman ... Cioscate was the first Sioux ever to come to Montréal’. In 1697, LeSueur presented a report to the king of France, proposing that a permanent post be established among the Sioux. He mentioned the advantages of copper and lead mines in the area, the lucrative fur trade, and the availability of wood for construction purposes. He suggested that he be appointed commandant at La Pointe with exclusive trading rights for ten years and with permission to take arms to the Sioux. LeSueur further requested a guard of 20 men for the fort and an equal number for mining. These proposals met with some opposition. The Illinois tribes were against the giving of arms to their enemies, the Sioux, and the officials in New France claimed that LeSueur’s request for mining privileges was but a pretext for trading in furs. It wasn’t until 1699, with the support of his wife’s cousins, Pierre Lemoine, sieur d’Iberville (see m1158) and Jean-Baptiste Lemoine, sieur de Bienville (see m1158), that LeSueur was given royal permission to undertake an expedition to the Sioux country to open mines but was not to trade in beaver furs. LeSueur formed a compagnie des Sioux, with both Lemoine d’Iberville and Alexandre L’Huillier as members. LeSueur recruited men and artisans at Larochelle and accompanied the Lemoine brothers on their second Atlantic crossing to Louisiana. They arrived at Biloxi, Mississippi in January 1700. Later that year, with about twenty men, LeSueur started up the Mississippi in two canoes and a small sloop, which was the first sailboat to enter Dakota Territory. One of these men was Andre Penicaut, a ship’s carpenter turned chronicler who kept a journal of his exploits. These were later published in a book entitiled, ‘Fleur de Lys and Calumet’. Citing this book, Nasatir explains that this expedition was headed for ‘a stream that empties into the Mississippi from the left’, not far from St-Anthony Falls near St-Paul, Minnesota ... ‘reached there on 19 Sep 1700 and named this stream Riviere St-Pierre ... we then made our way through the mouth of this river and ascended it for forty leagues and found another river on the left ... we entered this and named it Riviere Verte (now called Blue Earth River) on account of the clay, that when loosened from the copper mines, dissolves and turns the water green ... although it was only the end of autumn, ice had already formed on the river’. The journal further reveals that an early winter forced them to postpone the mining plans and occupy themselves with hunting buffalo, and constructing the valley's first fort, Fort L’Huillier ... ‘a stockade was built surrounding some log huts and a storehouse where LeSueur piled the merchandise for bartering with the Dakota Indian ... some of the men were sent to hunt buffalo which were the group's provisions for winter ... after they were skinned, gutted and quartered the buffalo were put on scaffolds within the fort’. The following spring LeSueur left a detachment of men at the fort, and returned to Mobile with a cargo of furs and minerals. His activities during this period, particularly his open disregard of the prohibition against the beaver trade, further irritated the authorities of New France. In April 1702, LeSueur returned to France with d’Iberville. LeSueur gave an account of his expedition to the minister and showed his collection of minerals. He presented a mémoire summarizing his - 196 - activities during a 15-year period of exploring the upper Mississippi. LeSueur then asked for a commission as a judge at newly established Mobile, Alabama; for permission to employ men in further discovery work; for a substantial salary; and for the transportation of his family to Louisiana. Pierre Lemoine d’Iberville supported these requests for he still wanted to use LeSueur to win a share of the Mississippi Valley fur trade for Louisiana, at the expense of both Canada and the English colonies if necessary. The king appointed LeSueur judge at Mobile, permitted him to recruit men for exploratory purposes and agreed to pay him for his work among the Sioux and Illinois Indians. LeSueur left France in the spring of 1704 aboard the Pélican. The ship, which was carrying nurses and women to Louisiana, stopped at Havana, Cuba where LeSueur contracted yellow fever. He had to be left behind and shortly thereafter died and was buried in the parish church of San Cristóbal. Meanwhile, LeSueur’s wife, Ms. Messier, had applied for permission to go with her children to Louisiana. This was granted in a royal mémoire to Rigaud de Vaudreuil dated 14 July 1704.[5, 42] In his book, Old Mobile: Fort Louis de la Louisiane 1702-1711, Higginbotham, describes Ms. Messier’s journey. LeSueur’s wife, ‘a very tall, slender, blonde lady with a well shaped face, had engaged Francois Benoit dit Livernois (see k322) of Longueuil to escort her family on the trip’ from Montreal to Mobile in the hopes of reuniting with her husband. Ms. Messier’s ‘fellow travellers were her brother, Jean-Michel Messier de Saint-Michel, her son, Jean-Paul LeSueur, and her daughters Marie-Anne, Louise, Catherine-Marie and Marguerite. Both Jean-Michel and Louise would die before the party reached their destisnation. At the end of August 1705, a large canoe filled with relatives of Jean-Baptiste Lemoine de Bienville (see m1158), arrived at the fort. Upon arrival at Mobile, LeSueur’s family learned that the explorer had been dead for over a year.’ Marguerite and family decided to stay. LeSueur ‘already had a house constructed on the rue de Ruessavel. Across the street were fellow Canadians, Claude Trepanier and Philippe Minette.’ Ms. Messier wrote ‘to Maurice Blondeau, a Montreal merchant, to dispose of her Canadian home and lands and to send her the proceeds’.[5, 43] Pierre-Charles LeSueur helped to arouse French interest in the discovery of mines and contributed in an important way to the cartography of the upper Mississippi River area. His connection with Frontenac and later with Pierre Lemoine d’Iberville in Louisiana and Jean-Baptiste Lemoine de Bienville in Alabama made him a controversial figure in the political and commercial circles of his day.[5, 42] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable - Archange – Jean Baptiste: k200 / k201: JEAN BRICAULT dit Lamarche : MARIE CHENIER FATHER: Julien Bricault dit Lamarche : Jean Chenier MOTHER: Perinne Roussel : Jacqueline Sedilot BORN: 12 Nov 1646 Vay, Nantes, Bretagne, France [5, 9] : 4 Nov 1660 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 18 Aug 1726 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9, 25] : 6 Mar 1746 Pointe-aux-Trembles, PQ [5, 25] MARRIED: 12 Nov 1674 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Jean was a soldier in the La Marche Company of the Carignan Regiment that came to Canada in 1665. He served under Captain Michael Dugue de Boisbriand and for three years was engaged in battles against the Iroquois. They built forts of Chambly, Hull, Sorel and Trois-Riveres. When Jean left the military, he was awarded a tract of land along the St-Lawrence River, in the town of Sorel, at the east-end of the island of Montreal. Jean would farm this land until his death.[5] Jean and Marie’s offspring birth/ marriage/death details (all at St-Enfant Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal) includes the following in the order of their birth: Marie-St-Jean (2 Feb 1677 / died same day), Jean (2 Jun 1679 / 29 Nov 1688), Francois (25 Apr 1682 / 20 Dec 1688), Marie (23 Jun 1684 / Gilles Brouillet dit Laviolette 7 Jan 1704 / 13 Oct 1756) , Joseph (11 Feb 1686 / Elisabeth Archambault 26 Oct 1710 / died ca 1760) , Pierre (twin, 18 Oct 1688 / 9 Oct 1689) , Therese (9 Nov 1690 / Jean-Baptiste Renaud dit Blanchard 17 Nov 1710 / 20 Jul 1725 Montreal) , Elisabeth (24 Mar 1692 / 12 Sep 1692), Jean-Baptiste (j100), Catherine (2 Jan 1695 / Jacques Coitou dit St-Jean 24 Jan 1718), Francois (8 Jan 1697 / 19 May 1698), Louise (25 May 1699 / 11 Aug 1699), Marie-Catherine (2 Jan 1701 / Jean-Baptiste Desrochers 23 Nov 1722 / 14 Jul 1738), Pierre (24 Oct 1702 / wed Marie Allard 19 Oct 1733 / 19 Mar 1760), Joseph-Emery (ca 1704 / wed Jeanne Guerin).[5, 9, 22, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 197 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable - Archange – Petronille: k202 / k203: PIERRE JANOT dit Lachapelle : PETRONILLE TESSIER Marin Janot dit Lachapelle : Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne Francoise Benard : Marie Archambault 27 Mar 1660 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26] : 18 Mar 1670 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 22, 25, 29] [5, 9] 1 Jul 1725 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec : 19 May 1751 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] 31 Jan 1684 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Petronille’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Pointe-aux-Trembles): Pierre (17 Feb 1685 / MarieMadeleine Aubuchon 10 Nov 1710), Antoine (7 Jan 1688 / Jeanne Galipeau 12 Jan 1720 / 2 nd marriage, Marie-Anne Vaudry 10 Jan 1735 / 18 May 1746 Longue-Pointe), Nicolas (26 Feb 1690 / Anne Senet 20 Nov 1719 / 20 Apr 1742 Longue-Pointe), Jean (18 Mar 1692 / Marie Galipeau 29 Jan 1714 / 2 nd marriage, Marie-Marguerite Etienne dit Durivage 19 Jan 1722 Riviere-desPrairies / 12 Jan 1750), Jacques (15 Jun 1694 / Marie-Marguerite Dufresne 28 Nov 1718 / 18 Jun 1770 Longue-Pointe), Marie (19 Apr 1696 / Jacques Senet 8 Nov 1717 / 3 Feb 1757), Catherine (15 Mar 1698 / Jean-Baptiste Galipeau 3 July 1719 / 13 Aug 1742), Joseph (22 Jan 1700), Andre (18 May 1702 / Catherine Brouillet 15 Dec 1723 / died before Oct 1766), Petronille (j101), Laurent (9 Aug 1706 / Marie-Anne Chartier dit Robert 29 Jan 1730), Francois-Charles (13 Jun 1708 / Charlotte Touin 6 Nov 1734), Jean-Baptiste (7 Jul 1713 / Genevieve Blanchard dit Renaud 11 Jan 1740).[5, 9, 22] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean Baptiste: k204 / k205: JOSEPH BAZINET dit Tourblanche : ANNE SENECAL FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Antoine Bazinet dit Tourblanche : Jean Senecal Francoise Janot dit Lachapelle : Catherine Desenne 19 Jul 1680 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] : 26 Jul 1687 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 27] 23 Apr 1759 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9] : 20 Mar 1759 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] 28 Apr 1710 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Joseph and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal, Quebec unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Joseph (24 Jan 1711 / Marie-Josephte Chartier 21 Nov 1740), Jean-Baptiste (j102), Marie-Josephte (28 Nov 1713 / Marien Lebeau 17 Aug 1750), Anne (15 Aug 1715 / Joseph Bricault dit Lamarche 16 Jan 1736), Francois (3 May 1717 / Elisabeth Chartier 11 Jan 1745), Antoine (8 Mar 1719 / 17 Dec 1747), Pierre (15 Jan 1721), Jacques (23 Aug 1722 / 11 Sep 1722), Marguerite (11 Oct 1723 / 2 May 1724), Augustin (15 Apr 1725 / Marguerite-Ursula Hebert 20 Oct 1749), Marie (11 Feb 1727 / Marien Lebeau 17 Aug 1750), Marguerite 2nd (7 Nov 1728 / Rene-Louis Charland 12 Feb 1753), Etienne-Amable (17 Nov 1729 / 30 May 1730).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique: k206 / k207: JOSEPH LOISEL : MARGUERITE BEAUDRY FATHER: Joseph Loisel : Toussaint Beaudry MOTHER: Jeanne Langlois : Barbe Barbier [5, 9, 29] BORN: 7 Aug 1685 St-Infant-Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles : 2 Jul 1691 Pointe-aux-Trembles, PQ [5, 9] DIED: 10 Aug 1771 Appleton, Outagamie, Wisconsin [5, 9] : 15 Jun 1767 Pointe-aux-Trembles, PQ [5, 9] MARRIED: 17 Feb 1710 @ St-Infant Jesus, Pointe aux Trembles, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: Joseph and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec unless otherwise indicated) include the following in the order of their birth: Marguerite (18 Nov 1710 / 24 Apr 1728), Joseph (6 Mar 1713 / 11 Jan 1752 St-Philippe, Illinois), Jean-Baptiste (9 Feb 1715 / Dorothee Brouillet dit Bernard 12 Jan 1739), Angelique (j103), Toussaint (23 Sep 1718 / 3 Oct 1718), Toussaint 2nd (15 Oct 1719 / Josephte Tetreault 30 Jan 1747 / 2 Feb 1791), Nicolas (21 Jul 1721 / Louise Colombe 4 Feb 1754), Anne (6 Mar 1723 / Joseph-Francois Coiteux nd 5 Nov 1742 / 14 Apr 1737), Louis (8 Mar 1724 / 27 May 1724), Louis 2 (4 Feb 1725 / 20 Aug 1730), Madeleine (9 Jun 1726 / 10 Jan 1730), Francoise (30 Nov 1727 / 14 Apr 1737), Charlotte (13 Dec 1729 / Jean-Charles Maddox 10 Apr 1758), Jacques (11 Aug 1731 / 31 Aug 1731), Josephte (17 Mar 1733 / Paschal Beauchamp 22 Jan 1759), Marguerite 2nd (5 Apr 1735 / wed Joseph-Francois Bazinet 14 Jan 1754 / 9 Feb 1756), Dorothee (29 Apr 1737 / 27 May 1737).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 198 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Jean: k208 / k209: ROBERT DESMARETS dit Desnoyers : ELISABETH RICHAUME FATHER: Nicolas Desmarets : Pierre Richaume dit Petrus MOTHER: Marie Bocquet : Marthe Arnu BORN: ca 1651 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, France [5, 9] : 31 Aug 1666 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 11 May 1691 Repentigny, L’Assomption, Quebec [5, 9] : 4 Apr 1703 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: 23 Jul 1682 @ La Purification-de-la-Bienheureuse-Vierge-Marie-de-Repentigny [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Robert and Elisabeth’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Repentigny) includes: JeanneElizabeth (22 Jan 1684 / Jean-Baptiste Leriche dit Lalonde 25 Aug 1701 Montreal / 5 May 1738), Jean (j104), MarieMarthe (1 Mar 1689 / 25 Jun 1689), Madeleine (16 Jan 1691 / Antoine Beaumont dit Pistolet 30 May 1712 Montreal / 3 Sep 1732 Montreal), Charles (ca 1692 / Marie Ferret 15 Feb 1720 St-Sulpice, Quebec).[5, 9] Robert was killed by the Iroquois. Elisabeth next wed Pierre Moreau dit Francouer on 16 Aug 1697 at Quebec City. Elisabeth and Mr. Moreau had a daughter: Marie-Anne (14 Feb 1698 Montreal / wed Jean-Baptiste Bernard 24 May 1716 Montreal).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese: k210 / k211: JACQUES MENARD dit Lafontaine : CATHERINE FORTIER FATHER: Jean Menard dit Lafontaine : Jean Fortier MOTHER: Anne Savinelle : Julienne Coeffes [5, 9, 25, 26] BORN: 27 Aug 1629 Mervan, Poitou, France : 6 Jan 1640 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 25, 29] [5, 9, 25, 29] DIED: 14 Jan 1707 Boucherville, Chambly, Que : 31 Mar 1694 Boucherville, PQ [5, 9, 25, 26, 29] MARRIED: 19 Nov 1657 @ Immaculate Conception, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Catherine came to Canada as a Filles a Marier in 1657 and Jacques was a carriage maker and wheelwright. According to Gagné, several notarized contracts indicate that Jacques made his living as a carpenter.[26] The 1666 census reports that the household included the children Marie, Jean, Louis, Maurice and 35 year old servant, Simon Caillouet and 54 year old locksmith, Hierosme Langlois. The family lived at Trois-Rivieres until around 1670 then moved to Boucherville in the county of Chambly, making them one of the first families to colonize this region. On 13 Jul 1670, Jacques Menard was hired by Jacques Lussier (j0) to build a 20 by 16 foot home for his family. In 1673, Jacques contracted to build a barn for Jean DeNoyon (m1050). On 19 Mar 1673, Jacques Menard sold his land at Boucherville to his daughter, Marie and her husband Jacques Bourdon. On 4 Apr 1673, Pierre Boucher granted Jacques Menard a lot in the town that measured half an arpent of frontage by two in depth. Jacques and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all at Boucherville, Quebec) follows in the order of their birth: Marguerite (4 Sep 1658 Trois-Rivieres / died before 1666 census), Marie (7 Sep 1659 Trois-Rivieres / Jacques Bourdon 8 Feb 1672 / 2 Jul 1726), Jean-Baptiste (27 Nov 1660 / Marguerite Philippe dit Etienne 14 Oct 1681 / 29 Oct 1728 Montreal), Louis (28 Jul 1662 / Marie-Anne Fevrier dit Lacroix 12 Dec 1691 / 11 May 1742), Maurice (6 Jun 1664 Trois-Rivieres / was an interpreter at Michilimackinac / wed Madeleine Couc dit Lafleur 31 Dec 1684 / 9 May 1741 Chambly), Jean (14 Mar 1666 Trois-Rivieres / Elisabeth-Marie Valiquette 13 Mar 1690 / 7 May 1702 Montreal), Marguerite-Marie (k443), Jeanne (21 May 1669 Trois-Rivieres / Etienne Demers dit Dumais 25 Nov 1686 / 15 Oct 1747 Montreal), Marie (ca 1670 Trois-Rivieres / Francois Girard ca 1691), Anne (1 Apr 1671 / Francois Brunet dit Belhumeur 15 Nov 1688 / 3 Feb 1710 St-Francois-de-Sales, Ile-Jesus), Catherine (27 Sep 1673 / Jacques Lariviere 1 Feb 1699 / 1 Jan 1727 Montreal), Madeleine (17 Jan 1675 / 30 Jan 1675), Therese (j105), Jacques (17 Aug 1678 / 6 Jul 1685).[5, 9, 25, 26, 29] Jacques Menard dit Lafontaine is also found at number (L886). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Bernard: k212 / k213: DAVID LETOURNEAU : FRANCOISE CHAPELAIN FATHER: David Letourneau : Louis Chapelain MOTHER: Sebastienne Guery : Francoise Dechaux BORN: 3 Feb 1642 Muron, Saintes, France [5, 9, 25] : 23 Jul 1646 Notre-Dame-Lubersac, Limoges [5, 9] [5, 9, 25] DIED: 22 Feb 1709 Quebec City, Quebec : 13 May 1729 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: 16 Jun 1664 @ La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: Their marriage record shows David as a labourer and their residence as Ile d’Orleans.[25] Their offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec) includes: Marie-Anne (24 May 1665 - 199 - Chateau-Richer / Denis Charland dit Francoeur 17 Nov 1681 / 5 May 1687 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans), Francoise (10 Apr 1667 / Simon Gaulin 12 July 1685 / after her husband died in 1687, she joined the Congregation des Soeurs de Notre-Dame / 1 Feb 1693), Louis (29 Jan 1669 / Anne Blouin 19 Nov 1696 St-Jean / 12 Jul 1743 St-Laurent, Ile d’Orleans), Louis (i96), Elisabeth (15 Apr 1671 / Robert Gaulin 5 July 1688 / 18 Oct 1715), Bernard (j106), Marguerite (17 Sep 1675 / 3 Oct 1721 Montreal), Madeleine (30 Sep 1677 / 30 Apr 1683), Catherine (13 Nov 1679 / Pierre Morisset 24 Nov 1698 / 29 Nov 1761 St-Croix, Lotbiniere), Louise (7 Dec 1681 / Pierre Gagnon 28 Jan 1700 / 2 nd marriage, Pierre Drouin 7 Apr 1704 / 18 Sep 1752), Jacques (5 Nov 1683 / Marguerite Blouin 18 Jul 1709 / 1 Feb 1763 Quebec City), Therese (12 Aug 1685 / JeanBaptiste Leblond 25 Jun 1703 / 24 Jul 1710), Jean (twin, 28 Jul 1687 / Marguerite Caron 19 Apr 1706 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre / 12 Aug 1731), Joseph (twin, 28 Jul 1687 / 1 Oct 1687).[5, 9, 25] David Letourneau is also found at number (j192). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Helene: k214 / k215: RENE PAQUET : HELENE LEMIEUX FATHER: Emery Paquet : Gabriel Lemieux MOTHER: Vincente Beaumont : Marguerite Leboeuf BORN: 7 Aug 1650 St-Paul, Poitiers, Poitou [5, 9] : 3 Jul 1660 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 7 May 1699 Quebec City, Quebec : 18 Nov 1746 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 29] MARRIED: 16 Oct 1679 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Rene and Helene’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Rene (22 Sep 1680 / Catherine Mailloux 18 Nov 1703 / 11 Jan 1710) , Helene (j107), Noel-Antoine (28 Dec 1684 / Marguerite Beaudet 1 Apr 1709 St-Joseph, Chambly / 26 Jun 1744 Laprairie), Louis (18 Jan 1692 / Louise Guillot 10 Feb 1716 / 2 nd marriage, Genvieve Trotier 25 Jan 1751 Batiscan / 6 Aug 1753), Mr. Paquet (19 Nov 1694 / died same day), Marie-Anne (24 Feb 1697 / Louis Guerin 1 Aug 1712 / 30 Jun 1715) . Helene Lemieux’s second union was with Robert Foucher dit St-Aubin on 23 Nov 1705 at Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Louis: k216 / k217: FRANCOIS BLAIN : JEANNE BARBIER FATHER: Mathurin Blain : Guillaume Barbier MOTHER: Suzanne Crolet dit Courelle : Liesse Wilbert BORN: ca 1645 St-Sauveur, Bignay, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9, 21, 27] : ca 1651 St-Omer, Andres, Picardie [5, 9, 21, 27] DIED: 23 Oct 1708 Lachine, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 27] : 10 Nov 1689 Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 27] MARRIED: 7 Jan 1681 @ St-Trinity, Contrecoeur, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 27] MEMOIRS: St-Sauveur-de-Bignay is a village located in the arrondissement of St-Jean-d’Anglely, in Charente-Maritime in the former province of Saintonge.[21] Jeanne was a Kings Daughter who left for Canada in 1670 with a dowry of goods worth an estimated 50 livres.[18, 21, 27] Jeanne Barbier first wed Julien Plumereau dit Latraille on 3 Nov 1670 at Fort St-Louis, Chambly.[5, 9, 18, 21, 27] Mr. Plumereau was the master baker at Fort St-Louis. Jeanne and Mr. Plumereau had these children (at Sorel, Richelieu): Jacques (ca 1671), Marguerite (3 Apr 1673 / Jean Cardinal 10 Nov 1689 Lachine / died before 24 Aug 1721), Jeanne (ca 1675 / Joseph-Antoine Bourdria 2 Jun 1689 La-Nativite, Laprairie / 17 Aug 1759 Montreal), Madeleine (2 Feb 1677 / Michel Fily 29 Dec 1705 Montreal / 27 Dec 1760 Montreal), Louise (23 Feb 1678 / Raymond Boinneau 21 Oct 1692 Lachine / 2 nd marriage, Antoine Dubois dit Laviolette 17 Sep 1698 Lachine / 19 Dec 1736 Montreal), Pierre (ca 1679), Catherine (ca 1680 Chambly / Joseph-Francois Roy 17 Jun 1698 Lachine / 10 Jan 1752) .[9, 21, 27] Francois Blain appears for the first time in Canada on 20 May 1668 as one of those confirmed by Monsignor de Laval at Fort St-Louis de Chambly. Francois first worked for the Seminary of Quebec. The Seminary’s first book of accounting mentions his name as a servant. Francois Blain appeared as a witness for Mr. Plumereau at the signing of his marriage contract with Jeanne Barbier. Francois was also godfather of Francoise Dumas, daughter of Rene (L670), while Jeanne was the godmother was Etiennette Loret (k197). On 16 Oct 1673, Francois received a concession from Jacques de Chambly for 80 arpents of land. On 21 Jan 1674, Francois signed an agreement to marry. The date of the wedding was delayed because the intended bride was only 12 years old. That summer, Francoise went hunting without permission or a license which was a serious offence and was thrown into jail at Montreal. The father of his bride-to-be bailed him out that November. The engagement, however, was terminated sometime later as the young girl decided to marry another suitor. On 20 Jun 1675, Francois bought a piece of - 200 - land measuring 30 arpents in area, located on the island of Montreal at a place called St-Francois. There were some large buildings on this farm for which Francois agreed to pay 350 livres in seven equal annual payments. Francois went to live at Montreal where he committed a couple other indescretions resulting in fines of 10 and 17 livres. A few friends came to his defense by guaranteeing his good conduct thus preventing from being jailed again. A few years later, Francois returned to Chambly. On 5 Feb 1680, the Seigneur de Saint-Ours granted to Francois Blain, ‘habitant of the said St-Louis, a concession of four arpents of frontal land on the island and ten deep joining la petite rivere’. Francois was committed to paying 47 deniers in seigneurial rent and two capons in annual rent each St-Martin’s Day in November. It is assumed that after marriage Francois moved in with Jeanne on her farm. Francois sold his 80 arpents of land on 13 Sep 1682. It is thought that Jeanne became very ill in the latter part of 1688 since it is then that her two youngest children were put up for adoption. At Montreal on 29 Oct 1688, the warden of the church of NotreDame, Pierre Chantereau and his wife, Marie Cordier, took charge of three year old Louis. They were committed to care for Louis for the next 14 years and ‘promised to treat Louis humanely, to raise him, instruct him in the fear of God according to our holy religion, feed and support him ... the said Cordier promised to show him how to read and write.’ Jean-Baptiste Pothier and Etiennette Beauvais promised to care for two year old Pierre for the ensuing 15 years. However, in 1692, Pierre was placed under the care of his step-sister, Marguerite Plumereau and her husband, Jean Cardinal. Francois Blain then began a series of adventures with the explorer and fur trader, Nicolas Perrot. Francois was present when Perrot took possession ‘of the bay des Puants (Green Bay), lake and rivers of the Outaganis and Maskoutins, river of Quiskouche and that of the Mississippi’ in the name of Louis XIV. This saga lasted until 1696, the year in which a decree abolished trading permits and ordered the closing of the posts in the West. In 1698, Perrot and his men returned to their families. Later that year, Francois Blain reappeared in Montreal. On 20 Nov 1698, he obtained a concession of 60 arpents of land from the Seminary of Montreal at a place called La Grande Ance, located between Lachine and Pointe-Claire.[21] Francois Blain was worked as a plowman. Francois and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Contrecoeur, Quebec) follow in the order of their birth: Suzanne (3 May 1682 / Louis Limousin 30 Dec 1702 Montreal / 2 nd marriage, Rene Lecuyer 4 Nov 1705 Lachine / 18 Oct 1764 St-Laurent), Alexandre (29 Dec 1683 / died early in 1684), Louis (j108), Pierre (ca 1686 / wed Barbe Beaudry 22 Oct 1713 Montreal / 2nd marriage, Charlotte Maillet on 3 Jul 1747 at Pointe-Claire, Quebec / 12 Apr 1753 Montreal).[5, 9, 21, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Marguerite: k218 / k219: JEAN LUMINEAU : MARIE QUEVILLON FATHER: Jean Lumineau dit Poitiers : Adrien Quevillon MOTHER: Michelle Cailler : Jeanne Hunault BORN: ca 1664 Fontenay le Comte, Poitou [5, 9] : 28 Aug 1673 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9] DIED: 1 Feb 1733 Ste-Anne, La Pocatiere, Kamouraska [5, 9] : 2 Apr 1752 St-Roch, Aulnaies, L’Islet [5, 9] MARRIED: 16 May 1689 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean Lumineau was convicted of stealing wheat in 1690 according to the records of the Sovereign Council, as discovered by Lebel.[21] Jean and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details follow in the order of their birth: Marguerite (j109), Pierre (11 Mar 1693 Charlesbourg / 17 Jun 1756), MarieMarguerite (25 Dec 1695 Quebec City / Joseph Pelletier 9 Jun 1714 Quebec City / 2 nd marriage, Jean-Baptiste Chamberland 30 May 1723 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec / 28 Jun 1726 La Pocatiere, Kamouraska, Quebec), Joseph (born ca 1697).[5, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean Baptiste: k220 / k221: JEAN PEPIN dit Cardonnets : MARIE-MADELEINE LOISEAU FATHER: Guillaume Pepin dit Tranchemontagne : Lucas Loiseau MOTHER: Jeanne Mechin : Francoise Cure [5, 9] BORN: 4 Aug 1647 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec : 26 Apr 1671 Ste-Famille, Boucherville [5, 9, 27] [5, 9, 12, 29] DIED: 11 Feb 1724 Ste-Anne, Varennes : 1 Jun 1722 Ste-Famille, Boucherville [5, 9] MARRIED: 23 Nov 1685 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 12, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean Pepin first wed Jeanne Couillard in 1681.[5] Jean and Marie-Madeleine’s offspring - 201 - birth/marriage/death data (all Ste-Famille, Boucherville) includes: Guillaume (28 Sep 1687 Trois-Rivieres / 14 Oct 1695), Madeleine (28 Dec 1691 / Francois-Alexandre Jarret dit Beauregard, an ensign in the Carignan Regiment and then Seigneur of Vercheres, 4 Oct 1706 / 2nd marriage, Jean-Baptiste Casavant 22 May 1718 St-Ours, Richelieu / 30 Oct 1764 StAntoine, Richelieu), Jean-Baptiste (j110), Joseph-Jacques (k478), Louis (21 Jul 1697 / 5 May 1722), Francois-Pierre (19 Jan 1700 / 20 Jan 1700), Michel (21 Jan 1701 / Louise Patenaude 12 Feb 1725 Ste-Anne, Varennes, Vercheres / 2nd marriage, Marie-Anne Jarret 8 Feb 1744 Ste-Anne), Agnes (24 Oct 1707 / Martin Janson 9 Jan 1736 Ste[5, 9, 22] Anne / 30 Dec 1754 Varennes), Josephte (20 Jun 1710). Jean Pepin dit Cardonnets is also number (L956). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite: k222 / k223: JEAN-ROCH CASAVANT dit Ladebauche : JEANNE CHARPENTIER FATHER: Jean Casavant : Jean Charpentier dit Lapaille MOTHER: Marie Giguere : Barbe Renault [5, 9, 29] BORN: ca 1649 St-Pierre, Auch, Gascogne, France : 3 Oct 1661 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 29] [5, 29] DIED: 2 May 1732 St-Francois-Xavier-de-Vercheres : 29 Jun 1701 Quebec City, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 27 Apr 1681 @ St-Trinity, Contrecoeur, Vercheres, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Jeanne Charpentier was a midwife.[29] Jean-Roch and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at St-Francois-Xavier-de-Vercheres, Quebec unless otherwise noted) include the following in the order of their birth: Charles-Seraphin (5 Jul 1682 Contrecoeur / Elisabeth Heroux 17 Aug 1716 Boucherville / 14 Jul 1755), Anne (14 Sep 1690 / Joseph Laporte 10 Jan 1712 St-Sulpice, Repentigny, Quebec / 2nd marriage, Nicolas Choquet 21 Nov 1729 / 30 Apr 1774), Marguerite (j111), Jean-Baptiste (23 Mar 1698 Quebec City / Marie-Madeleine Pepin 22 May 1718 St-Ours, Richelieu / 26 Nov 1764 St-Antoine, Richelieu), Pierre (29 Jun 1701 Quebec City / Charlotte Tetreau 26 Jan 1728) .[5, 9, 22, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Germain - Germain – Joseph - Michel: k224 / k225: ANDRE MIGNIER dit Lagace : JACQUETTE MICHEL FATHER: Michel Mignier : Jacques Michel MOTHER: Catherine Masson : Jeanne Dupont BORN: 11 Apr 1641 [5, 9] : ca 1642 [5, 9, 16, 21, 27] PLACE: Bois-Plage, St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle : Ste-Catherine, Laflotte, Ile de Re [5, 9, 21, 27, 28, 45] DIED: 21 Nov 1727 Ste-Anne, La Pocatiere [5, 9, 16, 20, 27, 28] : 28 Nov 1710 Riviere-Ouelle [5, 9, 20, 21, 27, 28, 45] MARRIED: 23 Oct 1668 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 16, 20, 21, 27, 28, 45] MEMOIRS: Ile-de-Re is an island northwest of Larochelle, across from la Vendee. On 24 Feb 1664, Andre was with the L’Allier Company of the Carignan Regiment as they headed for the Antilles in a convoy of about 150 ships. They convinced the authorities of Cayenne, Martinique, Guadaloupe, St-Kitts and StDominique to cede these islands to France without much resistance. The next year, Andre’s company and three others sailed north to join other forces coming from France to combat the Iroquois threat at Quebec.[21] Jacquette Michel, a Kings Daughter, first wed Jean Gardin about 1658 at Ste-Catherine, Ile-de-Re, Aunis, France.[5, 18, 20, 21, 27, 45] After her father and her first husband died, Jacquette left for Canada in 1668 carrying goods worth about 100 livres as her dowry.[21, 28, 45] Andre Mignier and company landed at Quebec on 30 Jun 1665. In the army Andre Mignier was called by his nickname, La Gachette, which means ‘someone who can shoot with abilities’ or ‘sharpshooter’. The name, La Gachette eventually became Lagace. During his first winter in Canada, Andre was stationed at Quebec City. Between 1666 and 1667, his company joined the campaign against the Iroquois, manning garrisons and launching attacks. By the end of this period, their task was mostly accomplished and the countryside was relatively peaceful. On 4 Oct 1668, Andre received a piece of land located at the St-Joseph section of Charlesbourg on the St-Charles River that consisted of two arpents of frontage and 30 arpents in depth. The lessor was Guillemette Hebert (n2611).[21, 28] In 1672, Andre received an additional 15 acres for which he paid the price of one chicken and a small amount of money, 15 sols and three denier for rent each year to be paid on St-Martin’s day.[16, 21, 28] In the 1681 census, the Mignier family were living in the village of St-Joseph-de-Charlesbourg and owned a gun, three head of cattle and had 15 arpents under cultivation. On 28 Oct 1681, Andre sold his property at St-Joseph.[21] By 1685, the Migniers had moved to Riviere-Ouelle.[16, 28] On 28 Jun 1692, Andre and his son, Andre, signed a three year lease for a farm on the river with 14 arpents frontage by 40 deep. In 1695, Andre was a church - 202 - warden at Riviere-Ouelle.[21] Andre and Jacquette’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at St-Joseph-deCharlesbourg) follows in the order of their birth: Andre (4 Oct 1669 / Charlotte Pelletier 10 Nov 1693 Riviere-Ouelle / 2nd marriage, Francoise Ouellet 31 May 1701 Riviere-Ouelle / 4 Feb 1729 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska), Marie (13 Oct 1671 Quebec City / Rene Martin dit Barnabe ca 1693 Port Royal, Acadia / died after 1714) , Francoise (20 Jun 1674 Quebec City / Robert Morin 1 Jan 1690 Notre Dame, Quebec City / 29 Sep 1750 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Anne (18 Jan 1677 / Philippe Boucher 10 Nov 1693 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska / 27 Jan 1750 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Madeleine (24 Aug 1679 / Nicolas Lizot 18 Jan 1701 Riviere-Ouelle / 2nd marriage, Felix Aubert 25 Nov 1709 Kamouraska / 18 Apr 1733 Ste-Annede-la-Pocatiere, Quebec), Michel (j112), Joseph (ca 1684 / Madeleine-Catherine Lizot ca 1705 at Quebec City) .[5, 9, 21, 22, 27] Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Germain - Joseph - Anglelique: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ k226 / k227: FRANCOIS-LOUIS THIBAULT : ELISABETH-AGNES LEFEBVRE FATHER: Louis Thibault : Guillaume Lefebvre MOTHER: Neree Gautier : Barbe Viot [5, 9, 21, 25, 27] BORN: 28 Jun 1647 Ste-Catherine, La Flotte, Ile de Re : ca 1655 St-Germain, Paris [5, 9, 21, 27] [5, 9, 21, 25, 27] DIED: 10 Nov 1724 Cap-St-Ignace, Quebec : 28 Jul 1725 Cap St-Ignace [5, 9, 21, 25, 27] MARRIED: 14 Oct 1670 @ Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre, Petit-Cap, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 22, 25, 27] MEMOIRS: On 31 Mar 1665, Francois-Louis and Gilles Gaudreau, a fellow parishioner, entered the home of the notary, Teuleron, at Larochelle and were hired to go to Quebec for three years at 75 livres per year. Francois-Louis would receive 30 livres as an advance ‘in order to buy old clothes and comforts to support him for the present’. Regulations of the time required that all ships wanting to obtain port clearances had to transport work men at the rate of one for every ten tons. The ship, Chat-de-Hollande, had a capacity of 200 tons. It needed food supplies for more than two months, potable water, wine for the crew members and other consumables. Their crossing took 52 days, ending at Quebec City on 15 Jun 1665. [21, 22] In the 1666 and 1667 census Francois-Louis was a servant of Robert Paré (m1884) at Sainte-Anne-du-Petit-Cap.[21, 22, 25, 27] Pare’s farm on the Beaupre Coast, with an altitude of 100 meters, overlooked the Saint-Lawrence River and had a view of the whole length of the Ile d’Orleans, Cap Tourmente to the east and the city of Quebec to the west. This area was considered to be one of the most beautiful locations in the country. On 29 Jun 1669, Gilles Moulineux ‘sold to Francois-Louis Thibault, for 45 livres, one arpent of low land to be taken on the northeastern part of his concession, adjoining Jean le Picard (see n3772), to begin from the boundary of the said concession on the edge of the said Grande River as far as the second hill and above the said coast or hill by two and a half arpents which make the width of the rest of the concession of Moulineux grant or, as far as the depth of fifty arpents’. Lebel believes that Francois-Louis built his first cabin there and continued clearing the land which he had already begun.[21] Elisabeth-Agnes Lefebvre was a King’s daughter who brought goods evaluated at 200 livres and a gift of 50 pounds from the King when she arrived in Canada in 1670. On 31 Aug 1670, Elisabeth-Agnes signed a marriage contract with Nicolas Nauteau but it was cancelled three weeks later.[21, 25, 27] Guests at the wedding celebration of Elisabeth-Agnes and FrancoisLouis included Robert Paré (m1884), Jean le Picard (see n3772) and Jean-Baptiste Caron (m1886). On 1 May 1671, Francois-Louis sold the land that he had bought two years earlier. This farm had been small, uneven and not very favourable for farming so like many others at that time, he looked to the south bank of the StLawrence where new seigneuries offered attractive concessions. The first concession made by Genevieve de Chavigny, Seigneuresse of Vincelotte at Cap-St-Ignace, was to Francois-Louis on 9 Apr 1674. The farm was three arpents of frontal land on the St-Lawrence by 40 in depth. The annual rent was six livres and three live capons. He could hunt and fish as he pleased. In addition, Francois-Louis agreed to manage the farm belonging to Genevieve de Chavigny who would provide the seed grains while Francois-Louis would sow, at Quebec City.[21] By the 1681 census, Francois-Louis, with four children at home, had a gun, four horned cattle and five arpents in cultivation.[21, 22, 25, 27] In the summer of 1681, Monsignor de Laval, made his pastoral visit to Cap-St-Ignace and confirmed 15 people including the eight year old Elisabeth Thibault. Bishop Laval thought it time to build a church there so after discussions with the local seigneurs, it was decided that the church would be built on the land of the siegneur, Gamache, on the edge of the water, on the boundary of Vincelotte. Father Thomas Morel was appointed as the missionary responsible for it.[21] In 1682, Barbe Rotteau, a Kings Daughter, sold him a piece of land, two acres wide by one and a half leagues - 203 - deep at Chateau-Richer for 1000 pounds payable at 50 pounds per year. Francois-Louis sold this farm seven years later, to Louis Michel for the same price and conditions.[22, 25, 27] In 1683, the church construction at Cap-St-Ignace was complete. It was 40 feet long and 25 wide. Each resident had done their part by working a certain number of days and providing planks, beams and stakes for the cemetery enclosure according to their means. Francois-Louis had promised six days of work, 25 stakes and 10 planks.[21] On 2 Oct 1707, Francois-Louis obtained from Joseph Amiot, the new seigneur of Vincelotte and son of Genevieve de Chavigny, a concession with three arpents in frontage by 40 in depth. He sold this farm on 7 Jul 1711, to Ignace Bouchard for 150 livres cash.[21, 25, 27] In 1713, a Nicolas Fournier was elected tutor of FrancoisLouis’ 20 year old son. It is assumed that this son was Louis who married Cecile Fournier in 1716. [22, 25, 27] In the spring of 1716, Francois-Louis and Elisabeth-Agnes gave their youngest son, Louis, half of all their property which included: three arpents of frontal land, nine head of cattle with four of them draft, one plow, one cart, two axes, two pickaxes, three augers, two handsaws, three coopers molds, six plates, two pots, one fire shovel and one gun. In return, Louis would assure that they had heat, food and drink, allow them to use the garden, one cow and six hens. After their death, Louis would have 25 masses said for the repose of their soul. The parish census of 1724, notes that the Francois-Louis’ property consisted of a house, barn, stable and 40 arpents of workable land. Upon his death this testimony was added in the parish registry, ‘the whole paish attended the burial’. Lebel reports that Elisabeth-Agnes was favourably known because of her qualities as a mid-wife.[21] Francois-Louis and Elisabeth-Agnes’ offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Cap-St-Ignace, Quebec unless otherwise noted) follows in the order of their birth: Elisabeth (16 Mar 1673 Ste-Anne-deBeaupre / Jacques Belanger 22 Nov 1691 / 2 nd marriage, Martin Rousseau 3 May 1700 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / 12 Jun 1756 L’Islet), Jean-Francois (16 Dec 1675 Quebec City / Marie-Anne Guimond 28 July 1704 / 2nd marriage, Angelique Proulx 12 Nov 1705 St-Thomas, Montmagny / 30 Mar 1755 Montmagny), Jacques (10 Feb 1678 Quebec City / Marie-Anne Proulx 10 Jul 1703 Montmagny / 30 Mar 1755 Montmagny), Anne (3 Apr 1680 L’Islet / Jean Dumais 25 Oct 1704 L’Islet / 2 nd marriage, Jean Dirigoyen 1 Sep 1717 Quebec City / 25 Apr 1736 Quebec City), Genevieve (28 Mar 1682 / Jean-Francois Belanger 16 Nov 1699 / 14 Feb 1726 L’Islet), Marie-Anne (6 May 1684 / Louis Cloutier 1 Dec 1703), Angelique (j113), Madeleine (20 Apr 1688 / Charles Gaudreau 13 Oct 1710 / 10 Feb 1777 Montmagny), Barbe (21 May 1690 Montmagny / Nicolas Fournier 15 Jan 1714 / 25 Jul 1714), Joseph (5 Oct 1692 / 21 Oct 1692), Joseph 2nd (8 Sep 1693 / 9 Sep 1693), Louis (18 Dec 1695 / a carpenter / Cecile Fournier 20 Apr 1716 / 20 Feb 1765 St-Francois-de-la-Riviere-du-Sud).[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Germain – Germain - Marie – Joseph: k228 / k229: GREGOIRE OUELLET : ANNE-JOSEPHE LIZOT FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Rene Quellet : Guillaume Lizot Anne Rivet : Anne Pelletier [5, 9, 25, 27] 7 Oct 1672 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec : ca 1676 Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska [5, 9] [5, 9] 11 Nov 1720 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Kamouraska : 8 Feb 1716 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5, 9] 5 Mar 1696 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] Joseph’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle): Jean-Baptiste (ca 1694 / Francoise Morin 25 Nov 1720 La-Pocatiere / 2nd marriage, Therese Autin 4 Nov 1745 La-Pocatiere), Joseph (j114), Francois (13 Apr 1698 / Felicite Pinel 20 Nov 1720 / 5 May 1743 La-Pocatiere), Cecile (25 Nov 1700), Helene (12 Mar 1702 / 4 Feb 1725 La-Pocatiere), Sebastien (19 Sep 1703 / Anne Albert 27 July 1733 La-Pocatiere / 31 Jan 1760 La-Pocatiere), Jeanne (28 Dec 1704 / 28 Jan 1705), Jean-Bernard (8 Mar 1706 / Marie Jean 20 Jan 1730 L’Islet / 3 Jan 1760 La-Pocatiere), Madeleine (24 Sep 1707 / 5 Jan 1708), Jacques (26 May 1709 La-Pocatiere / Josephe St-Pierre 19 Jan 1739 St-Roch-Aulnaies / 2nd marriage, Charlotte Lebel 24 Aug 1750 St-Roch), Angelique (8 Apr 1711 / 7 Feb 1758), Josette (17 Apr 1712 / Etienne Grondin 11 Aug 1739 / 20 Jan 1760 La-Pocatiere), Madeleine (6 Aug 1714 / Jean-Baptiste Choret 11 Aug 1733 La-Pocatiere / 7 Feb 1758 Kamouraska). Gregoire Ouellete next wed Madeleine Dubé on 24 Aug 1716 at Notre Dame de Liesse.[5, 9, 22] They had a son, Gregoire (ca 1717 Riviere-Ouelle / wed Genevieve Berube 16 Aug 1740 Riviere-Ouelle).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 204 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain - Germain – Marie – Madeleine: k230 / k231: FRANCOIS BOUCHARD : ANNE VALLIERE dit Chevalier FATHER: Michel Bouchard : Pierre Valliere MOTHER: Marie-Madeleine Trotin : Anne Lagoue BORN: 4 Feb 1670 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 26] : 26 Oct 1672 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 27] [5, 9, 21, 25] DIED: 2 Jan 1754 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec : ca 1710 at Quebec [5] MARRIED: 12 Oct 1693 @ Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: Francois owned a piece of land at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere before his marriage. Later he lived at Riviere-Ouelle. In 1695, he obtained land from Charles Aubert de la Chesnaye in the seigneurie of Kamouraska.[21] Francois and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Notre Dame-de-Liesse, RiviereOuelle, Kamouraska, Quebec unless otherwise noted) include the following in the order of their birth: Jean-Francois (26 Aug 1694 / 1 Sep 1694), Anne (2 May 1696 / 6 May 1696), Francois (2 Jun 1697), Marie-Anne (29 May 1699 / Pierre Roy 7 Jun 1717 / 24 Jan 1774), Madeleine (j115), Joseph (19 Apr 1706 / Marie-Dorothea Quellet 1727 La-Pocatiere / 2nd marriage, Madeleine Thibodeau 23 Nov 1744 La-Pocatiere / 31 Jul 1780), Jean-Baptiste (12 Oct 1710 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans / Marie-Anne Taillon 13 Feb 1736 / 2nd marriage, Madeleine Ouellet 19 Nov 1742 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies, L’Islet).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain - Marie – Joseph – Francois: k232 / k233: PIERRE MICHAUD : MARIE ANCELIN FATHER: Antoine Michel (Michaud) : Rene Ancelin MOTHER: Marie Train : Claire Rousselot [5, 9, 21] BORN: ca 1637 Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitou : 7 May 1651 Notre Dame, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9, 21] [5, 9, 21] DIED: 28 May 1702 Kamouraska, Quebec : 18 Apr 1729 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: 2 Oct 1667 @ La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: As a young man, Pierre apprenticed with Jacques Audouit ‘who promises to teach him his craft and skills, as a hat decorator and all the ensuings’ for a set period of a year and a half. Pierre and his parents were then living in Puy Saint-Martin, a suburb of Fontenay-le-Comte.[45a] Lebel notes that for the better part of his life Pierre carried the family name, Michel. Michaud means ‘little Michel’. Pierre was baptized in the Church of Notre Dame located in the Rue Pont aux Chevres, France.[21] On 27 Mar 1656, before notary, Paul Moreau of Larochelle, Pierre indentured himself to Jacques Pepin, a ships factor and merchant of Larochelle to go to work in Quebec for three years. His salary would be 36 livres per year with an immediate advance of 38 livres and 5 sols. Pierre made the crossing aboard the ship, La Fortune. [21, 45a] This small ship of 100 tons displacement was commanded by Edouard Raymond. Pierre first established himself on the Beaupre Coast, then passed through the islands of the St-Lawrence, then to the south bank of the river and finally died at Kamouraska.[21] In 1661, Pierre must have done some manual labour on the construction of the second church of Ste-Anne as their legers contain a line reading, ‘to Pierre Michaud for two days – three livres’. In Aug 1663, he partnered with Michel Marquiseau to purchase a grant of three arpents in the village of Beaupre, to the east of the Riviere Ste-Anne. He sold this on 6 Sep 1665 to Francois Daniau for 150 livres.[21, 45a] Marie Ancelin came to Canada in the summer of 1665 with her father who was widowed at that time.[45a] In June 1667, Pierre obtained a land grant of three arpents river frontage on the south part of Ile d’Orleans, known today as the Parish of St-Jean, from Monsignor de Laval. After 1671, the Michauds lived on the Ile-aux-Oies. One record shows that ‘on 9 Sep 1673, Pierre Michaud living on the Ileaux-Oies, sold his land on the Ile d’Orleans where he had cleared 5 arpents to Jean Mourier’. Pierre probably worked in the service of Pepin, Sieur de Granville, for three years then exercised his right to move over to the twin Island of the Cranes, Ile aux Grues, which is just opposite Cap St-Ignace. On 17 Jul 1674, the seigneur of these two little islands granted Pierre, 6 arpents of frontage to a depth of the entire island. By the winter of 1681 the Michaud family was still living on the island farm. They had 6 arpents of cultivated land, ten animals and a hunting rifle. At 44 years of age, Pierre and his family climbed into their boat and crossed over to the south shore of the river to a place called L’Islet. In their 11 year stay here their last five children were baptized. In 1692, Dame Genevieve Couillard, widow of the late Sieur du Tarte, enticed Pierre to move to her fief at St-Jean-Port-Joli. A concession, privately granted, was made on 19 Oct 1695, by the Seigneuresse but two years later was sold by Michaud to Pierre Lessard. By 30 June 1695, Pierre held - 205 - official title to a concession of 12 arpents of frontal property on the river at Kamouraska. They must have worked both farms for a couple of years. Marie’s father and step-mother also established a home there about this time. Pierre developed cancer of the mouth from his pipe smoking. The widow, Marie Ancelin, convinced the Seigneur Louis Aubert de Forillon to make a small addition to her land for the children’s future use. Another eight arpents of frontage was added to the farm. An inventory of her possessions was made on 20 Apr 1724 and nine days later she gave her assets to her son, Joseph, and placed herself in his care.[21] Pierre and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Kamouraska) includes: Pierre (11 Feb 1672 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / Marie-Madeleine Thibodeau 5 Feb 1697 Quebec City / 15 Jan 1761) , Jean-Baptiste (3 Jun 1674 Ile aux Grues / Marie Vaillancourt 3 Jun 1697 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans / Marie-Francoise Dupille 28 Feb 1707 Notre-Dame-deLiesse, Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska / ca 1718), Marie-Anne (12 Nov 1676 Ile aux Grues / Pierre Boucher 19 July 1695 Riviere-Ouelle / 12 Jun 1755), Joseph (1 Dec 1678 Quebec City / Catherine Dionne 30 May 1702 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / nd 14 Jul 1735), Pierre 2 (2 Feb 1681 Ile-aux-Grues / Marie-Madeleine Cadieux 20 Oct 1704 Cap-St-Ignace / 18 Apr 1760), Louis (ca 1683 / Claire-Francoise Levasseur 22 Oct 1708 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City / 19 Jan 1760), Marie-Elisabeth (k255), Francois (j116), Genevieve (25 Nov 1690 / 28 Dec 1690), Marie-Madeleine (14 Feb 1692 Cap-St-Ignace / Nicolas Lebel 23 Aug 1707 Riviere-Ouelle / 1 May 1775 St-Louis, Kamouraska).[5, 9, 21, 22] Pierre Michaud is also (L510). Map compliments of the research of Fr. Gerard Lebel, translated and added to by Thomas Laforest.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie Catherine: k234 / k235: JEAN DIONNE : MARIE-CHARLOTTE MIGNAULT FATHER: Antoine Dionne : Jean Mignault dit Chatillon MOTHER: Catherine Ivory : Louise Cloutier BORN: 11 Mar 1670 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9] : 2 Feb 1671 Beauport, Quebec [5, 9, 25] [5, 9] DIED: 18 Aug 1752 Ste-Anne-de-la-Poacatiere, PQ : 9 Oct 1747 Ste-Anne de la Poacatiere [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: 2 Aug 1694 @ Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 22, 25] MEMOIRS: Lebel indicates that when Jean Dionne was just 15 years old he obtained a concession in the parish of St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans which he sold 5 years later. At 18 years of age, Jean bought the farm of - 206 - Pierre Boucher at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans and then sold it to Nicolas Asselin in 1701. From then on he lived on the east coast at Riviere-Ouelle, known today as Kamouraska.[21] Jean and Marie-Charlotte’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec unless otherwise stated) follows: Louis (15 Aug 1695 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / 29 Aug 1695 Ste-Famille), Jean (18 Aug 1696 Ste-Famille / 27 Sep 1696), Marie-Catherine (j117), Jean-Baptiste (5 Mar 1700 Ste-Famille / Marie Michaud 1 Jan 1726 / 12 Jun 1773), Joseph (ca 1701 ChateauRicher / Marie-Madeleine Meneux 11 July 1729 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Augustin (26 Sep 1702 La-Pocatiere / Marie Paradise 2 Sep 1726 St-Pierre, Montmorency / 2nd marriage, Angelique-Jeanne Moreau 1 Mar 1729 Kamouraska / died in 1786), Genevieve (ca 1704 Chateau-Richer / 26 Jun 1770 La-Pocatiere), Antoine (3 Jan 1707 / Marie Lizotte 21 Jun 1734 LaPocatiere / 12 Apr 1779), Anne (21 Aug 1709 / wed Jean Moreau 27 Oct 1726 / 21 Apr 1781 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Jacques: k236 / k237: JEAN CORDEAU dit Deslauriers : CATHERINE LATOUR dit Simonet FATHER: Sebastien Cordeau dit Deslauriers : Francois Latour dit Simonet MOTHER: Sabine Chapelier : Catherine Charland [5, 9, 26] BORN: ca 1635 Dangeau, Beauce, Orleanais, France : ca 1639 St-Eustache, Paris, France [5, 9, 26] [5, 9, 26] DIED: 21 Jan 1680 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans : 3 Feb 1678 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9, 26] MARRIED: 17 Nov 1659 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 26] MEMOIRS: Catherine came to Canada as a Filles a Marier in 1659. Jean was a baker by trade. [5, 21, 26] Jean and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follow: Marie nd (17 Nov 1660 / died young), Augustin (27 Feb 1662 / ca 1668), Marie 2 (27 Oct 1664 Chateau-Richer / Vincent Beriau dit Poitevin 23 Jan 1681 / 4 Jan 1710), Pierre (6 Aug 1667 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / ca 1670), Jacques (j118).[5, 9, 22, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite: k238 / k239: ANTOINE TOUPIN : LOUISE CLOUTIER FATHER: Toussaint Toupin : Jean Cloutier MOTHER: Marguerite Boucher : Marie Martin [5, 9] BORN: 5 Feb 1655 Quebec City, Quebec : 15 Apr 1658 Quebec City, Quebec [5] [5, 9] DIED: 1 Jun 1711 Chateau-Richer, Quebec : 23 Feb 1733 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: 24 Oct 1679 @ Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: Antoine and Louise’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Chateau-Richer unless otherwise stated) includes: Antoine (2 Aug 1680 / Francoise Lefebvre 3 Nov 1711 / 20 Aug 1720 Charlesbourg) , Noel (20 Apr 1683 / Anne David 17 Feb 1710 / Marie-Francoise Navers 12 Apr 1712 / 16 Aug 1759 Montreal), Marguerite (j119), Marie (4 Sep 1687 / Joseph Berthelot 24 Feb 1715 Jacob, St-Joachim / ca 1750), Francois (10 Jul 1689 / Jeanne Legris 21 Feb 1718 NotreDame, Quebec City / 7 Aug 1747), Pierre (27 Jul 1691 Quebec City / 3 Aug 1691 Quebec City), Joseph (20 Nov 1693 / Anne Legare 25 Nov 1726 / 20 Nov 1744) , Anne (31 Oct 1695 / Louis Jobidon 25 Oct 1717 / 11 Oct 1747) , Jean (13 Sep 1697 / 19 Jun 1716), Alexandre (16 Jan 1701 / Louise Chevalier on 13 Feb 1730 Beauport / 5 Jan 1759 Beauport).[5, 9, 21, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles: k240 / k241: GUILLAUME TARDIF : MARGUERITE FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: GODIN Olivier Tardif : Charles Godin Barbe Emard : Marie Boucher Their biographies may be reviewed at number (k166). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 207 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Marie Genevieve: k242 / k243: PIERRE ROY dit Desjardins : MARIE-ANNE MARTIN FATHER: Antoine Roy dit Desjardins : Joachim Martin MOTHER: Marie Major : Anne-Charlotte Petit BORN: 18 Dec 1671 Batiscan, Quebec [5, 9] : 4 Apr 1673 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans, PQ [5, 9, 25, 45] [5, 9, 25, 45] DIED: 29 Apr 1734 Repentigny, Quebec : 6 Feb 1709 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] MARRIED: 12 Feb 1691 @ St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: After Pierre’s father was killed in 1684, Pierre’s mother, Marie Major, took her children from Batiscan to Quebec City where Pierre worked as a cooper. After marriage, Pierre continued his work as a cooper in the parish of St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans. On 5 Mar 1695, Pierre and Marie-Anne Martin renounced their share of her parent’s estate on the sole condition that they be given a pregnant cow.[21] On 7 October 1696, Pierre obtained a land grant at Kamouraska where he farmed for the next thirty years.[45] Marie-Anne and Pierre’s children birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle) includes: Pierre (2 Nov 1691 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans / Marie-Anne Bouchard dit Serre 7 Jun 1717 / 13 Sep 1771 Kamouraska), Alexandre (12 Jun 1693 St-Pierre / 29 Jan 1709), Marie-Francoise (29 Sep 1695 St-Pierre / Francois Sirois dit Duplessis 5 Jun 1721 / 13 Jul 1763), MarieGenevieve (j121), Jean-Baptiste (12 Aug 1699 / Marie-Madeleine Michaud 5 Sep 1722 / 30 Aug 1781 Kamouraska), Augustin (5 Jun 1701 / Jeanne-Marie Boucher 22 Oct 1725 Boucherville / 10 Apr 1790 Ste-Anne, La Pocatiere, Kamouraska), Louis (5 May 1703 / Marie-Louise Hervieux dit Lesperance 22 Apr 1732 Berthier-en-Haut / 3 Jul 1780 Lanoraie), Guillaume (ca 1704 / Marie-Josephe Ethier 8 Mar 1734 Lanoraie, Berthier / 17 Apr 1756 L’Assomption), Marie-Anne (9 Oct 1706 / Pierre Miville dit Deschenes 28 Oct 1726 / 25 Apr 1781 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Marie-Josephe (15 May 1708 / Francois Gauthier dit Landreville 4 May 1727 Repentigny / 27 Nov 1760 St-Denis-sur-Richelieu). Pierre Roy next wed Angelique Autin on 25 Nov 1710 at Riviere-Ouelle, which was the first church in the Kamouraska territory. Their children’s vital statistics (all Riviere-Ouelle) follow: Charles (ca 1711 / Marie-Joseph Adam 2 Jun 1747 St-Pierre / died in 1764), Anne (ca 1713 / Jacques Miville 26 Oct 1735 / 4 Apr 1799), Agathe (ca 1715 / Pierre Mignot 3 Feb 1739 / 20 Feb 1758), Madeleine (ca 1717 / Etienne Ethier 21 Feb 1734 Repentigny / 12 Jul 1754), Angelique (ca 1719 / Nicolas Brousseau 26 Feb 1734 Repentigny, L’Assomption / 27 Jun 1764 L’Assomption), Marie-Louise (ca 1721 / Jacques-Sebastien Soulard 13 Aug 1742 St-Jean, Port-Joli, L’Islet / 31 May 1763 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies, L’Islet). Pierre Roy’s third marriage was with Marie-Charlotte Delurge on 30 Oct 1727 at Repentigny, Quebec.[5, 9, 25, 45] Vital statistics (at Repentigny, L’Assomption) for Pierre’s children with Ms. Delurge include: Marie-Catherine (23 Jul 1728 / Vincent Nestier 7 Aug 1752 Ste-Genevieve, Berthier-en-Haut, Berthier, Quebec / 19 Jun 1777 Nicolet, Quebec), Jean-Baptiste (26 Dec 1731 / 4 May 1733), Jean (26 Sep 1734 / Francoise Charbonneau 12 Aug 1765 Ste-Anne, Varennes, Vercheres / 28 Apr 1808 at La Presentation, St-Hyacinthe, Quebec). Pierre worked as a farmer and a carpenter throughout his life.[45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin: k244 / k245: MATHURIN OUELLET : ANGELIQUE LEBEL FATHER: Rene Ouellet : Nicolas Lebel MOTHER: Anne Rivet : Therese Mignault dit Chatillon BORN: 14 Sep 1669 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9, 27] : 9 Nov 1672 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21] DIED: 15 Jan 1721 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec [5] : 5 Dec 1728 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 8 Jan 1691 @ Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: In 1725, Angelique gave the farm to their daughter, Cecile and her husband and presumably put herself in their care.[21] Mathurin and Angelique’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle): Angelique (5 Nov 1691 / Romain Phocas dit Raymond 21 Jan 1709 / died ca 1716) , Francois (12 Sep 1693 / Marie-Anne Bouchard 1 Aug 1717 / 3 Jan 1754 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Augustin (j122), Marguerite (2 Dec 1696 / Joseph Michaud 10 Jan 1717 / 10 Mar 1735), Mathurin (twin, 28 Jun 1699 / 12 Feb 1736), Andre (twin, 28 Jun 1699 / Marguerite Levasseur 28 May 1733 / 12 Jan 1767), Joseph (4 Jan 1702 / Madeleine Michaud 1 Jul 1725 / 12 Feb 1736), Jean-Baptiste (1 Feb 1704 / Marie-Genevieve Tardif 10 Jan 1735 / 6 Dec 1780 Kamouraska), Cecile (15 May 1706 / Jean-Baptiste Michaud 8 May 1724 / 15 Jan 1794 Kamouraska), Louis (15 May 1706 / Josette Lacasse 13 Apr 1733), Alexis (10 Feb 1708 / Catherine Moreau 5 May 1732 / 1 Apr 1782 St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec), Helen (ca 1713 / wed Jean le Tardif on 18 Feb 1738) .[5, 9, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 208 - Mary Jeann – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine - Jean – Anne – Marie Anne: k246 / k247: FRANCOIS AUTIN : MARIE BOUCHER FATHER: : Jean-Galleran Boucher MOTHER: : Marie Leclerc BORN: ca 1663 Coutran, Champagne, France [5, 9] : 26 Feb 1663 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 26] [5, 9] DIED: 22 Jan 1732 St-Etienne, Beaumont, Quebec : 29 Nov 1704 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 21 Jun 1688 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 22] MEMOIRS: Marie Boucher first wed Jacques Thibodeau on 4 Sep 1675 at Chateau-Richer. Vital statistics for Marie’s children with Mr. Thibodeau (at Notre Dame-de-Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle) include: Adrien (1 Oct 1677 / Elisabeth St-Pierre 12 Nov 1710), Damien (7 Feb 1679), Marie (15 Feb 1681 L’Islet), Anne (2 Jun 1685 / Noel Pelletier 9 Jan 1708 / 2nd marriage, Francois Duplessy dit Sirois 28 Nov 1713 / 16 Mar 1721), Pierre (19 Feb 1687 / Anne Dusault dit Lafleur 11 Oct 1717 Lauzon, Levis). Francois Autin and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all RiviereOuelle) include: Francoise (25 May 1689 / Francois-Lucien Martin 25 Nov 1710 / 13 Feb 1747 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans), Angelique (15 Aug 1691 / Pierre Roy dit Desjardins-k755, 25 Nov 1710 / 30 Sep 1727), Jeanne (22 Nov 1693 / Pierre Mignault dit Chatillon 10 Nov 1714 / 29 Apr 1732 Kamouraska) , Jean-Francois (1 Dec 1695 / Claire-Francoise Levasseur 31 May 1719 / 19 Jan 1760), Marie-Anne (j123), Therese (8 Sep 1699 / Jean Gueret dit Dumont 1 Mar 1726 / 27 Dec 1759 St-Laurent, Quebec), Joseph (7 Aug 1701 / Felicite Miville 26 July 1725 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / 2 Sep 1767), Genevieve (28 Nov 1704 / Jean Miville / 2nd marriage, Jean Ouellet / 28 Dec 1759 La-Pocatiere).[5, 9, 22] Marie Boucher’s first cousins in this family history are: Marie Godin (j181), Marguerite Godin (k167), Gervais Houle (k312). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin: k248 / k249: MATHURIN DUBÉ : ANNE MIVILLE FATHER: Mathurin Dubé : Francois Miville dit Le Suisse MOTHER: Marie Campion : Marie Langlois [5, 9, 27, 45] BORN: 27 Jan 1672 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans : 27 Mar 1673 Lauzon, Levis, Quebec [5, 9, 45] DIED: 22 Nov 1725 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9] : 9 Mar 1717 La Pocatiere, Kamouraska [5, 9, 45] MARRIED: 13 May 1691 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 45] MEMOIRS: Mathurin and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec unless otherwise noted) includes the following in the order of their birth: Anne (20 Feb 1692 / 28 Feb 1692), Marie-Anne (8 Apr 1693 / Jean-Baptiste Grondin 8 Feb 1712 / 2nd marriage, Jean Mignault dit Labrie 4 Mar 1726 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / 3rd marriage, Francois Pauze 3 Feb 1744 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans), Augustin (j124), Marie-Charlotte (17 May 1696 / Pierre Morin 7 Jan 1722 La-Pocatiere / 20 Oct 1758 St-Roch-Aulnaies, L’Islet), Joseph (29 Jan 1699 / 17 Feb 1699), Angelique (9 Jan 1700), Marie-Gertrude (8 Dec 1702 / Francois Dutarte 7 Jan 1721 La-Pocatiere), Mathurin (13 Nov 1704), Jean-Francois (5 Jan 1706), Joseph 2nd (16 Dec 1707 / Marie-Ursule Morin 20 Feb 1729 La-Pocatiere), Marie-Jeanne (16 Apr 1710 / Andre Morin 28 Feb 1729 La-Pocatiere / 29 Jun 1736 La-Pocatiere), Jean-Baptiste (2 Apr 1712 / Anne Rasset 29 Apr 1737 Quebec City / 30 Jun 1780 Quebec City), Marie-Josephte (15 Mar 1713 / Bernard Mignier 5 Oct 1739 LaPocatiere).[5, 9, 22] Mathurin Dubé’s second marriage was with Marie Dunn about the year 1724 at Quebec.[5, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie Anne: k250 / k251: PIERRE SOUCY dit Lavigne : ELISABETH-URSULE FOUQUEREAU FATHER: Jean Soucy dit Lavigne : Urbain Fouquereau MOTHER: Jeanne Sauvenier : Jeanne Rossignol [5, 9, 21, 27, 45] BORN: 13 Apr 1673 Ile-aux-Oies, PQ : 22 Aug 1679 St-Francois-de-Sales, Neuville [5, 9, 27, 29, 45] [5, 9, 45] DIED: 7 Jan 1760 Riviere-Ouelle, PQ : 31 Dec 1758 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 29, 45] MARRIED: 13 Jan 1699 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 45] MEMOIRS: Lebel notes that Pierre was a farmer.[21] Main writes that Pierre and others along the lower St-Lawrence had to apply for and were granted special licences to hunt for Beluga whales, ‘les marsouins’. They would trap them in weirs at low tide.[12] Pierre and Elisabeth-Ursule’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle) includes: Marie-Anne (j125), Pierre (7 Feb 1702 / Jeanne Michaud 20 July 1723 / 26 May 1764), Joseph (19 Jul 1704 / Madeleine Mignier 7 Jan 1727 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / 21 Jul 1745 La-Pocatiere), Ursule (28 Jun 1706 / Michel Mignault dit Labrie 26 Oct 1724 La-Pocatiere / 1 Apr 1754 La-Pocatiere), Madeleine (25 Jun 1708 / Guillaume - 209 - Miville 14 Jan 1726 La-Pocatiere / died before 26 Jul 1745), Angelique (4 Oct 1710 / 29 Oct 1710), Francois (14 Feb 1712 / Claire Rousseau 3 Jul 1735 L’Islet / 9 Sep 1758), Francoise (28 Jan 1714 / Jean-Bernard Miville in 1733 / died in 1783), Catherine (27 Apr 1716 La-Pocatiere / Louis Moreau 17 Jun 1734 La-Pocatiere / 29 Mar 1769 La-Pocatiere), Genevieve (23 May 1718 / 18 May 1719), Charles (9 Oct 1721 / wed Angelique Lizot ca 1745), Jean-Baptiste (born 26 Jan 1725).[5, 9, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie: k252 / k253: JEAN-BAPTISTE HAYOT : ANNE-XAINTE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: GRONDIN Jean Hayot : Jean Grondin Louise Pelletier : Xainte Mignault 3 Sep 1661 Sillery, Quebec [5, 9] : ca 1672 Beauport, Quebec [5, 9] 20 Oct 1714 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9] : 5 Jun 1731 Berthier, Quebec [5, 9] 7 Feb 1695 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] Zacharie’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska) follow: Jean (4 May 1696 / Marie-Joseph Rousseau 17 Jan 1724 L’Islet / 2nd marriage, Marie-Madeleine Lefebvre 1 Jul 1748 St-Vallier / 25 Feb 1772 La Pocatiere), Guillaume (1 Apr 1698 / Marie-Anne Levasseur ca 1725 / 2nd marriage, Genevieve Roy 27 Jan 1755 / 10 Jun 1771), Zacharie (j126), Charlotte (ca 1701 / 27 Nov 1719 Quebec City), Pierre (ca 1703 / Marie Hudon 25 Feb 1734 / 2nd marriage, Marthe Normandin 25 Apr 1740), Genevieve (1 Apr 1707 / Joseph Boucher 10 Feb 1724 / 7 Feb 1757), Joseph (7 Apr 1709 / Marie-Claire Ouellet 12 May 1734 La-Pocatiere), Therese (1 Jul 1711 / Jacques Fradet 25 Jun 1736 StVallier), Antoine (ca 1714 / Marie-Charlotte Blanchet 13 Apr 1750 St-Pierre-du-Sud / 17 Jan 1791 St-Pierre-du-Sud).[5, 9, 22] Anne-Xainte Grondin next wed Michel Chartier on 15 Apr 1722 at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska.[5, 9, 21] Mr. Chartier was the former seigneur of La Riviere St-Jean in Acadia. He built a fort at Passamquoddy but was expelled by the English in 1704 so he moved to Quebec.[21] Anne-Xainte’s one child with Mr. Chartier was a son: Joseph (born 28 Mar 1723 Montmagny / wed Marie-Francoise Morin on 11 Nov 1746 at St-Pierre-de-Sud, Quebec).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie Josephte: k254 / k255: PIERRE LEVASSEUR : MARIE-ELISABETH MICHAUD Laurent Levasseur : Pierre Michaud Marie Marchand : Marie Ancelin 2 Jan 1678 Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] : 10 Nov 1685 Cap-St-Ignace, Quebec [5, 9, 20] [5, 9] 26 Oct 1738 St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec : 28 Jul 1766 St-Louis, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9] 8 May 1703 @ Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Quelle, Kamouraska, Quebec [5, 9, 20] Marie-Josephte’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska): Marie-Anne (26 Aug 1704 / Guillaume Hayot 1 Jan 1725 / died ca 1750) , Marie-Rose (13 Jun 1706 / Michel Gueret dit Dumont 7 Nov 1735 / 11 Dec 1756), Marie Josephte (j127), Genevieve (12 May 1708 / Jacques Gueret dit Dumont 16 Apr 1733 / 3 Feb 1801), Pierre (ca 1710 / Genevieve Phocas 7 Nov 1735 / 8 Dec 1791), Marguerite (ca 1712 / Andre Ouellet 28 May 1733 / 11 Dec 1793), Pierre-Francois (ca 1718 / Genevieve Phocas dit Raymond 7 Nov 1735 / St-Louis, Kamouraska / 8 Dec 1791), Marie-Claude (ca 1720 / Nicolas Cote 10 Apr 1741), Joseph-Clement (ca 1722 / Marie-Madeleine Albert 15 Feb 1742 / 14 Sep 1781), Elisabeth (ca 1724 / Alexandre Paradis 29 July 1743 / 8 Feb 1752), Ignace (ca 1726), Timothee (ca 1728 / Claire Nadeau 17 Jan 1750 / 25 Jul 1816), Marie-Louise (13 Nov 1729 / Joseph Sirois 17 Apr 1753 / 14 Aug 1809).[5, 9, 22] FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Prudent – Louis: L384 / L385: ANDRE ROBERT dit Lapommeray : CATHERINE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: in the parish Regiment.[20] BONAIN Pierre Robert : Leonne Rembault : [5, 9, 25] ca 1607 Breuilaufa, Haute-Vienne, Angoumois, France : ca 1608 Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9] [5, 9, 13, 25] 5 Sep 1663 Notre-Dame, Cogne, Larochelle, Aunis : 22 Jun 1648 Larochelle, Aunis [5] 20 Feb 1629 @ Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 13, 20] Andre was a merchant as well as an owner of a cabaret called Lion d’Argent on Rue Rainbault of Notre Dame, Cogne, Larochelle, Aunis, France.[25] He was also a soldier in the Carignan Andre and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all at Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle) - 210 - includes: Jeanne (31 Mar 1630), Rene (11 Dec 1633 / 2 Feb 1634 St-Barthelemi, Larochelle), Sebastienne (8 Feb 1637), Louis (k192).[5, 9] Andre Robert next wed Gillette Guillet on 22 Jun 1648 at Notre Dame, Cogne, Larochelle, Aunis, France.[5, 9, 25] Andre Robert’s next marriage was with Marthe Brouillard in 1653 at France.[5, 9] Vital statistics (at Larochelle, Aunis) for Andre’s children with Ms. Brouillard include: Marie (25 May 1654), Pierre (ca 1656), Andre-Elie (ca 1658).[5] Andre Robert may also be found in this history at number (L880) and (n3832). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Prudent – Marie: L386 / L387: JEAN-BAPTISTE BOURGERY : MARIE LEGENDRE FATHER: : Moise Legendre MOTHER: : Jeanne Casse [5, 9, 25, 29] BORN: ca 1620 St-Nicolas, Larochelle, Aunis : ca 1622 Surgeres, Saintonge, France [5, 13, 21, 25, 29] [5, 9, 13, 29] DIED: 10 Nov 1657 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec : 22 Jan 1699 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec [5, 9, 13, 21, 25, 29] MARRIED: ca 1645 @ St-Nicolas, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 13, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Jean-Baptiste and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details include the following in the order of their birth: Pierre (ca 1647 Larochelle, Aunis / Marie-Marguerite Boullard 21 Nov 1669 Boucherville / 16 Jun 1703 Ste-Famille, Boucherville), Madeleine (22 Jul 1652 Immaculee-Conception, Trois-Rivieres / Jean Beaune dit Lafranchise 22 Aug 1652 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City / 18 Feb 1741 St-Joachim, Pointe-Claire, Montreal), Marie (k193), Jean (28 Dec 1655 Trois-Rivieres / died ca 1666). Marie Legendre’s second marriage was with Florent Leclerc on 4 Feb 1658 at Immaculee-Conception, Trois-Rivieres. Vital statistics (at Trois-Rivieres, Quebec unless otherwise noted) for Marie’s children with Mr. Leclerc include: Florent (16 Feb 1659 / Jeanne Aubuchon 27 Nov 1685 / 24 Mar 1704), Jean (19 Dec 1660 / Marie-Claire Loiseau 24 Nov 1689 / 5 Dec 1730), Etiennette (28 May 1663 / Francois Bergeron 3 Nov 1676 / 18 Apr 1715 Louiseville, Maskinonge, Quebec) . Marie Legendre next wed Francois Michelot on 21 Feb 1667 at Immaculate Conception, Trois-Rivieres.[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 29] Marie Legendre’s fourth marriage was with Jean Lamarche on 3 Nov 1669 at Cap-de-la-Madeleine.[5, 9, 21, 25] Jean-Baptiste Bourgery is also (L882) and (n3834). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Francois: L388 / L389: FRANCOIS FAFARD dit Laframboise : MARIE RICHARD FATHER: Jean Fafard : Simon Richard MOTHER: Antoinette Leverdier : Catherine Constancineau BORN: 8 Jan 1630 Hotot, d’Evreux, Normandy [5, 9, 25, 26, 29] : 12 Mar 1636 Larochelle, Aunis, Fr. [9, 25, 26] [5, 9, 21, 25, 26, 29] DIED: 25 Dec 1711 Batiscan, Chambly, Quebec : 31 May 1695 Batiscan, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] MARRIED: 5 Nov 1656 @ Immaculate Conception, Trois Rivieres, St-Maurice, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Marie Richard came to Canada in 1656 as a Filles a Marier.[26] Francois Fafard came to Canada in 1650 and is noted at Trois-Rivieres on 25 Jan 1651.[26, 29] He obtained land on 6 Jun 1651.[21, 26, 29] This land consisted of two arpents frontage by 20 deep in the seigneurie of Cap-de-la-Madeleine. A few years later Francois sold this to Claude David (L524). Lebel notes that in 1664 and 1665, Francois lived in the village of Arbre-a-la-Croix, just to the east of the Prairies-Marsolet, in the seigneurie of Cap-de-laMadeleine. He sold this land on 10 Mar 1668. In March 1666, the Jesuits granted Francois some land at Batiscan. In 1681, the census shows Francois and Marie at Batiscan with their seven children, four cattle and 20 arpents under cultivation. On his death, Francois left an annuity of 800 livres to the church at Batiscan to have Masses said for the repose of his immortal soul.[21] Their children’s birth/marriage/death record: Jean (17 Sep 1657 Trois-Rivieres / was a famous coureur-des-bois who finally settled at Detroit / wed Marguerite Couc dit Lafleur ca 1685 Sault Ste-Marie, Michigan / 21 Dec 1756 Detroit, Michigan), Francois (k194), Joseph (ca 1662 Trois-Rivieres / Marguerite Lafond 25 Jul 1703 Batiscan / 24 Oct 1708 Montreal), Jeanne (ca 1664 Trois-Rivieres / Jean Chastenay dit Laguigne, a Carignan Soldier, 30 May 1689 Batiscan), Pierre (ca 1666 / wed Therese Acicia ca 1713), Louis (ca 1669 TroisRivieres / a voyageur and trader / Marie-Ursule Jacob 22 Oct 1696 L’Ange-Gardien / 27 Apr 1736 Sorel), Marie-Anne (ca 1672 Trois-Rivieres / Julien Laniel dit Soulange 10 Jan 1689 Batiscan / 17 Feb 1703 St-Antoine-de-Tilly, Lotbiniere).[5, 9, 25, 26, 29] Francois Fafard next married Madeleine Lefrancois (k403) on 8 Apr 1696 at La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame, Chateau-Richer and had no children.[5, 9, 21, 26, 29] Ms. Lefrancois had eight children with her previous husband, Guillaume Thibault (k402).[9, 21, 26] Francois and Ms. Lefrancois moved to Batiscan where she died on 23 Mar 1707.[21] Francois Fafard next wed Jeanne Guillet on 23 Jun 1711 at St-Francois, Batiscan.[5, 9, 26, 29] - 211 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Marie Madeleine: L390 / L391: CHARLES JOBIN : MADELEINE GIRARD FATHER: Jacques Jobin : Michel Girard MOTHER: Marguerite Roy : Francoise Anceaume BORN: ca 1632 Amfreville, Les-Andelys, Normandy [5, 9, 21] : ca 1639 St-Cyr, Vaudreuil, Les-Andelys [5, 9, 21, 25] DIED: 25 Nov 1705 Charlesbourg, Quebec [5, 9, 21] : 23 Mar 1675 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 21] MARRIED: 1 Jan 1657 @ St-Germain l’Auxerrois, Paris, France [5, 9, 20, 26] MEMOIRS: Charles Jobin was a master tailor.[9, 21] He specialized as a merchant pourpointier. That is, Charles made and sold pourpoints or doublets, French clothing which covered the body from the neck to the waist. By 1639, Charles was living in Paris in the parish of Saint-Germain-l’Auxerrois and learning his trade with his uncle Jean Jobin, who was also a tailor. Charles and family trekked to Canada in 1667. On 8 Apr 1668, Charles rented a property ‘located on the Ste-Genevieve hill’ with a house and 60 arpents of land. Charles promised to pay 75 livres by that August and the rest by St-Martin’s Day. The Sainte-Genevieve hill included the lands located between Cap-aux-Diamants and the Saint-Charles River. Some time earlier, Charles obtained from the Nursing Sisters, a concession of four arpents in frontage at Petite Riviere StCharles. He sold this on 25 Jun 1688, to Jean Lemelin for 110 livres. On 4 Feb 1669, Charles acquired a plot, 30 feet in frontage ‘on the street in the lower town going to the lane passing in front of the bishop’s residence’. He sold this on 13 May 1680 for 120 livres. Notary files indicate that on 20 Oct 1669, Charles admitted to owing 100 livres for the delivery of merchandise and that he paid for it on 5 April 1670. On 13 Apr 1671, Charles paid 10 livres for his Uncle Jean Jobin’s property, two arpents frontage by 50 deep in the seigneury of St-Ignace, along the St-Bonaventure road. Charles sold this farm four years later. On 25 May 1674, Charles bought a 40 foot lot on the street that went from Upper to Lower Town. He sold this property three years later.[21] Charles and Madeleine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Charlesbourg, Quebec City unless otherwise noted) include the following in birth order: Jean (ca 1658 Paris, France / 26 Sep 1677), Charles (ca 1660 Paris / was a voyageur to the land of the Outaouais / Marie Rousseau 16 Feb 1677 / died in 1694 dans-l’quest, Outaouais), Marie-Madeleine (k195), Catherine (ca 1665 Paris / Michel Lemay 22 Apr 1686 Champlain / 4 Nov 1713 Lotbiniere, Quebec), Jacques (8 Dec 1669 / Adrienne Bourbeau 23 Nov 1694 / 28 Feb 1728) , Therese (7 May 1672 / Jean Roy dit Audy 5 Feb 1691 / 2 Dec 1743), Anne (ca 1674).[5, 9, 21, 22] Charles next wed Marie Rousseau on 16 Feb 1677 at Quebec [5, 21] City. On 29 Jul 1678, Charles bought a two arpents of frontal land at ‘the prairie St-Lambert’, across from Montreal for his son, Charles. On 18 Oct 1678, Charles leased a house on rue Saint-Pierre with a cellar, heated room, cabanot and attic. The cost was 90 livres annually to be paid in four installments. The 1681 census indicates that Charles and family were living in the village of Saint-Bernard in Charlesbourg. They owned two head of cattle and had 15 arpents of land under cultivation. On 15 Mar 1683, Charles ‘living at present on the coast of the said St-Bernard’ asked Rene Rheaume to build him a wood house by the end of August with a frame of cedar 20 by 20 and 10 feet high, with two dormers on the roof. On 25 Aug 1695, the Nursing Sisters ceded to Charles two arpents of frontal land by 50 deep on the St-Bonaventure coast in the seigneury of St-Ignace. On 4 Jul 1697, Charles’ children from his first marriage, Jacques and Therese, ceded their rights to the estate of their mother, the late Madeleine Girard. This ended disputes that had been ongoing for four years. Charles stated, as the testater, in his last will drawn up on 22 Jul 1705, that ‘Francois Fafard, his son-in-law, living in Berthier, has received from the Savage Outaouais a bundle of beaver skins, put in his hands for him the testater and all his children so they may wipe their tears which they shed due to the death of the late Charles Jobin, his son, who died about ten or twelve years ago in their country, among their nations; the bundle was worth at least one hundred ecus’.[21] Vital statistics (at Charlesbourg, Quebec City unless otherwise stated) for the children of Charles and Ms. Rousseau includes: Toussaint (17 Dec 1677 / 15 Mar 1678), Rene (10 Jan 1679 / Marie-Jeanne Rose 24 Jul 1702 / 8 May 1725), Anne (29 Oct 1680 / 15 Dec 1680), FrancoiseCatherine (25 Mar 1682 / 28 Mar 1682), Francois (18 Mar 1683 / Suzanne-Jeanne Jousset 7 Jan 1711 Montreal / 17 May 1761 L’Assomption), Henri (25 Jul 1686 / 18 Nov 1688), Marie-Madeleine (7 Mar 1689 / Pierre Sasseville 29 Oct 1709 / 24 Jun 1760), Marguerite (12 Jul 1691 / 15 Jul 1691), Jean-Charles (1 Feb 1694 / 7 Feb 1694), Jean (28 Jul 1695 / Elisabeth Charet 10 Jan 1718 / 29 Apr 1758), Adrienne (3 Apr 1699 / wed Etienne Thibault 20 Jan 1721 / 30 Dec 1771).[5, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 212 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Mathurin – Jean: L392 / L393: MATHURIN LEBEAU dit Lalouette : LOUISE GARATTE BORN: ca 1620 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1622 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [5, 9, 20] DIED: MARRIED: 15 Nov 1729 at France [9] : 15 May 1675 at France [5] ca 1645 @ St-Jean-de-Monts, Les-Sables-d’Olonne, Lucon, Poitou, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Mathurin – Etiennette: L394 / L395: JEAN LORET : FRANCOISE LEFROY BORN: ca 1624 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [20] : ca 1630 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [20] DIED: 15 May 1672 Rabouillet, Pyrenees, France [5] : 11 Jan 1713 Brelevenez, France [5] MARRIED: 31 Dec 1649 @ St-Laurent-de-Paris, Ile-de-France, France [5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Marie – Pierre: L396 / L397: VICTOR LESUEUR : ANNE HONNEUR [20] BORN: ca 1635 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou, France : ca 1637 St-Jean-de-Monts, Lucon, Poitou [20] MARRIED: ca 1660 @ Notre Dame de Hesdin, Montreuil, Artois, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Marie – Marie – Marie Therese: L398 / L399: MATHURIN DROUET dit Grandmaison : MARIE-LOUISE BARDOU [5] BORN: ca 1638 Tuzie, Angouleme, France : ca 1645 St-Jacques-de-la-Boucherie, Paris [5] [5] DIED: 19 Mar 1699 Chambly, Quebec : 11 Jan 1688 Sorel, Richelieu, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 30 Sep 1669 @ Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City, Quebec [5] MEMOIRS: Marie Bardou was a King’s Daughter. Mathurin and Marie-Louise’s offspring birth/marriage/ death details include the following in the order of their birth: Marie-Therese (k199), Pierre (23 Oct 1672), Nicole-Jeanne (3 May 1675 Sorel, Richelieu / Thomas Beausoleil ca 1694 Montreal / 23 Apr 1699), Madeleine (7 May 1678 Sorel), Elisabeth (1 Mar 1682 Contrecoeur, Vercheres / Pierre Roulier dit Lamarche 19 Feb 1699 Notre Dame, Montreal / 11 May 1743 Champlain, Quebec), Francois (18 Mar 1684 Chambly), Francoise-Gertrude (5 Jan 1688 / died same day).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Jean – Jean: L400 / L401: JULIEN BRICAULT dit Lamarche : PERINNE ROUSSEL BORN: ca 1621 Vay, Nantes, Bretagne, France [5, 9, 20] : ca 1623 Vay, Nantes, Bretagne, France [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: ca 1646 @ Vay, in the diocese of Nantes, Bretagne, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Jean – Marie: L402 / L403: JEAN CHENIER : JACQUELINE SEDILOT FATHER: Jean Chenier : Louis Sedilot MOTHER: Marguerite Berard : Marie Grimoult [5, 9] BORN: ca 1626 Celles, Saintonge, France : 21 Dec 1637 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] [5, 9, 25, 27] DIED: 26 May 1699 Neuville, Quebec : ca 1666 Cote Ste-Genevieve, Quebec [5] MARRIED: 23 Oct 1651 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: Jacqueline’s baptism was only the 26th recorded in the registry of Notre-Dame-de-Quebec church in Quebec City. Jean and Jacqueline settled on the Sainte-Genevieve coast.[21] Jean Chenier was a master carpenter.[5, 9, 21, 27] In 1665, Jean had Simon Allain working for him on his farm and he had ten arpents under cultivation. After Jacqueline died in the year 1667, her brother, Adrien became guardian of the children. That same year two of the children became ill with ‘mal de la teigne’, a term used then for a disease of the scalp. Adrien approached Jean Mignault (L470) for help since he was known to have a gift for healing. Mignault asked for 100 livres as fee, ten of them for medicines. This transaction was made on 19 Mar 1667. Mignault set to work and completely cured both children.[21] Jean and Jacqueline’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follow: Jean-Francois (10 Oct 1655 Montreal / Genevieve Ferret 8 Feb 1683 Neuville / 17 Oct 1708 Montreal) , Adrien (22 Aug 1657 / 8 Dec 1657), Jean (17 Nov 1658 / - 213 - Marie-Genevieve Ferret 28 Feb 1683 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 16 Jun 1729 Montreal), Marie (k201), Marguerite (27 Aug 1662 / 29 Oct 1728 Montreal), Francois-Joseph (25 Aug 1664 / died within a year) , Francois (10 Oct 1655 / became a carpenter / 17 Oct 1708 Montreal), Anne (17 Feb 1666 / Jean Tellier dit Lafortune, a Carignan Soldier, 1 Dec 1688 Pointe-auxTrembles, Montreal / 8 Jul 1691 Repentigny).[5, 9, 22] Jean Chenier next wed Marie Grusseau (Groleau), a Kings Daughter, on 23 Aug 1667 at Quebec City.[5, 9, 25, 27] Vital statistics for Jean’s children with Ms. Grusseau include: Marie (born ca 1674 Neuville, Quebec), Antoine (15 Nov 1676 Quebec City / 4 Jan 1688 Neuville, Quebec).[5, 9, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Pierre: L404 / L405: MARIN JANOT dit Lachapelle : FRANCOISE BENARD FATHER: Robert Janot dit Lachapelle : Pierre Benard MOTHER: Jeanne de Pienne : Catherine Riverin BORN: ca 1630 Lachapelle-Monthodon, Champagne [5, 9, 26] : ca 1632 Vouvray, Loire, Maine, France [5, 9, 26] DIED: 20 Jul 1664 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26] : 6 Feb 1707 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26] MARRIED: 30 Aug 1655 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 26] MEMOIRS: Marin was a carpenter who enlisted to go to Canada in the spring of 1653 as a member of the Grande Recrue. Before departure Marin, acknowledged receiving 108 livres in advance wages. [26] The Grande Recrue was a recruitment drive organized by Marguerite Bourgeoys of La Societie de Notre Dame de Montreal and Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, Governor of Montreal to secure settlers for their city. The hope was that this new group would help strengthen and defend the young community at Montreal. The member’s indenture contracts were to begin at departure from St-Nazaire, the outer harbour of Nantes at the mouth of the Loire River. On 20 Jun 1653, they boarded the Saint-Nicolas, an old, worm-eaten ship.[21, 26] After sailing for 350 leagues into the Atlantic they decided to return to France because the rotten old ship was taking on water through every seam. Before docking at St-Nazaire, ‘Monsieur de Maisonneuve had all his soldiers placed on an island from which they could not escape because otherwise not one of them would remain’. He leased another ship, the Sainte Marguerite, which departed on 10 July 1653. During this second voyage, illness broke out among the passengers and eight people died. Finally, on 22 Sep 1653, about 99 men and 47 women arrived at Quebec City. As they approached the settlement, the pilot accidentally grounded the ship, leaving it so ‘that the great tide could not refloat it and it was necessary to burn it on the spot’. Jeanne Mance welcomed the immigrants to Quebec City and after a few days rest they resumed their journey to Montreal, arriving on 16 Nov 1653.[21] Others in our family history who travelled on this same journey include: Urbain Jette (k36), Jeanne-Anne Solde (L111), Marin Deneau (L872), Jean Valiquet (L890), Pierre Godin (m726), Gilles Lauzon (see m814), Toussaint Hunault (m878), Etienne Bouchard (m1086). Marin Janot received a land grant from Maisonneuve on 2 Feb 1654. Francoise Benard is included in the list of Filles a Marier. Marin became syndic of Montreal in 1656 and served four years. In November 1658, Francoise testified in the witchcraft trial of Rene Besnard dit Bourjoly, accused of making Marie Pontonnier (m827) and her husband sterile. Marin served as a soldier in the seventeenth squadron of the Saint-Famille militia in 1663. Marin drowned and was found five days later at Trois-Rivieres. His body was then buried at Montreal.[26] Marin and Francoise’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Montreal) includes: Cecile (11 Jun 1656 / Andre Carrier 17 Nov 1670 / 25 Jan 1729) , Francoise (L409), Pierre (k202), Robert (29 May 1662 Pointe-auxTrembles / Anne-Therese Langlois 26 Jan 1693 Notre Dame, Montreal / 14 Oct 1723), Jean (18 Jul 1664 / 2 Sep 1664). Francoise Benard next wed Guillaume Bouchard on 20 July 1665 at Notre Dame, Montreal and had a daughter named, Marie (20 Apr 1667 Montreal / Jean Griveau 18 Nov 1686 Pointe-aux-Trembles / died after 10 Feb 1718 Pointe-aux-Trembles).[5, 9, 22, 26] Marin Janot dit Lachapelle may also be found at the following number (m818). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 214 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Petronille: L406 / L407: URBAIN TESSIER dit Lavigne : MARIE ARCHAMBAULT FATHER: Arthur Tessier : Jacques Archambault MOTHER: Jeanne Meine : Marie-Francoise Tourault BORN: ca 1624 [5, 9] : 24 Feb 1636 [5, 9, 25, 29, 48] [5, 9] PLACE: Notre Dame-de-Chasteau, Anjou, Tours, Touraine : Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9, 25, 29] DIED: 21 Mar 1689 Notre Dame, Montreal, PQ [5, 9, 25, 29] : 16 Aug 1719 Pointes-aux-Trembles [5, 9, 21, 25, 29] MARRIED: 28 Sep 1648 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Urbain was a resident of Chateau-Lavalliere, Angers, Anjou, France. He arrived at Montreal about 1645.[29] Urbain was one of the pioneers to be granted land within the first five years of the existance of Montreal.[46] On 10 Jan 1648, Urbain received a grant from Sieur de Maisonneuve, Governor of Montreal. The following inscription is chiselled into a building block of the facade of The Royal Trust Company on Rue St-Jacques in Montreal, ‘This building is erected on part of the original concession to Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne being the eighth grant made to an individual in the Island of Montreal’. Urbain was also one of the first five colonists to have a child baptized in Montreal. He was a sawyer or woodcutter by trade. Urbain also constructed several houses. More than once, Urbain stated that he was unable to sign his name. This perhaps prevented him from occupying a more prominent position in Montreal, like his brothers-in-law, Jean Gervaise and Gilles Lauzon. By about 1650, Urbain Tessier owned 30 arpents of land in the city and 30 arpents at Cote Saint-Francois (now called Longue-Pointe). On 6 May 1651, two Montrealers, Jean Boudart and his wife were victims of an Iroquois raid. The former was killed on the spot, and the latter was led away to be burned. Four days later, at two o'clock in the morning, the same aggressors set fire to the brewery and to the houses of Michel Chauvin and Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne.[5] In his book on the history of Montreal, Prevost states that ‘on 18 June 1651, four Montreal citizens took refuge in a small redoubt after being surprised by the Iroquois ... a fifth person ... one of our old habitants named Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne, joined them after running through felled trees amidst a volley of enemy bullets ... other settlers burst out of the fort ... the Iroquois, crouched behind the felled trees, made the mistake of firing first ... when they got up to flee, the French picked off some thirty of them’.[46] In another account of the same event, Father Lauzon reported that ‘on 18 June 1651, four Frenchmen were attacked by a great number of Iroquois between the fort and Point-Saint-Charles ... these Frenchmen, in such small numbers ... they found no other protection but a miserable stronghold situated in the midst of a large quantity of felled wood, and there, resolved to cling dearly to life, they started to briskly fire on their assailants ... on hearing this noise, one of the oldest colonists, Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne, being the nearest to the place where the attack was being made, was the first to run there in all haste, with as much audacity as good fortune, passing through without accident, and with unparalled agility and speed, over the felled wood; he got into four Iroquois ambushes, was in the line of fire without being wounded, finally arrived in the hut where he joined the besieged, and cheered them by his couragous act’. Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne seems to have been at the forefront of the battle with the Iroquois. The location of the above combat was named ‘Place Lavigne’ and the small fort located there is designated on the old maps as ‘Bastion Lavigne’. A decade later, Urbain and others were captured by the Iroquois. An entry in the first registry of the Montreal parish refers to the capture. The entry reads, ‘on 7 Jun 1661, was baptized Urbain, son of Urbain Tessier, inhabitant, taken by the Iroquois, 24 March 1661, and it is not known whether he is dead or alive ... the godfather was Gilles Lauzon, coppersmith ... the godmother was Catherine Gauchet, daughter of nobleman Claude Gauchet’. On 18 Jun 1661, in the same reigistry there appeared, ‘was baptized Jeanne Messier, daughter of Michel Messier (L578) taken by the Iroquois March 24 ... it is not known whether he is dead or alive’. On 22 Jun 1661, four prisoners were brought back by the Goyogoin Indians. These returned captives revealed that one of Urbain Tessier’s companions ‘was burned by the Oneweronnons’. It is thought that this group of captives would have had a similar experience as others did during that era in history. On arrival to the village the prisoners passed through two rows of Indians who would beat them with rods and sticks. Some would be stopped to have their fingernails torn out or to have an entire finger cut off. In her writings, Marguerite Bourgeois noted that the Iroquois ‘have detached a finger from Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne’. A Jesuit priest, Father Simon Lemoine, negotiated the release of Urbain and the remaining eight prisoners on 31 Aug 1661. Once freed, Urbain Tessier resumed his - 215 - peaceful labors of land clearing and cultivation of the soil. He enrolled in 1663, as a soldier in the eighth squadron of the Sainte-Famille militia at Montreal. On 25 June 1678, Urbain Tessier and his brothers-in-law, Laurent Archambault, Jean Gervaise, and Gilles Lauzon, granted to Urbain’s father, a life pension of 100 livres noting that he was ‘quite unable to work to earn his living and clothing ... for the natural friendship they bear him, as they have always done’. Urbain and Marie’s children were educated by Pastor Souart, school-master at Ville-Marie and Marguerite Bourgeois.[5] Urbain and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/ death details (all at Montreal unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Charles (18 Jul 1649 / 24 Jul 1649), Paul (5 Feb 1651 / Marie-Madeleine Cloutier 13 Oct 1681 La Visitation-de-Notre-Dame, Chateau-Richer / 26 Apr 1730 Longue-Pointe), Madeleine (19 Jul 1653 / died ca 1666), Laurent (3 Jun 1655 / Anne Lemaire 20 Oct 1681 Quebec City / 27 Sep 1687), Louise (L955), Agnes (23 Mar 1659 / Guillaume Richard dit Lafleur 26 Nov 1675 / 24 Jan 1733 Pointe-auxTrembles), Urbain (7 Jun 1661 / 24 Mar 1685), Jean (14 Jun 1663 / Jeanne Leber 21 Nov 1686 Laprairie / 6 Dec 1734), Claude (25 Dec 1665 / died ca 1685), Jacques (24 May 1668 / 23 Jun 1670), Petronille (k203), Jean-Baptiste (26 Jan 1672 / Elisabeth Renaud dit Desmoulins 4 Nov 1698 / 19 May 1736 Longueuil), Pierre (21 Feb 1674 / 23 Feb 1674), Jacques 2nd (2 Mar 1675 / Marie Adhemar dit St-Martin 10 May 1699 / 7 May 1738), Ignace (11 Mar 1677 / Marguerite Lussier 23 May 1703 Repentigny / 3 Mar 1747 Repentigny), Nicolas (17 Jun 1679 / Genevieve Auge dit Baron 22 Jan 1716 / 3 Jan 1757).[5, 9, 22, 25, 29] Urbain Tessier dit Lavigne may also be found in this family history at the number (m1910). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Joseph: L408 / L409: ANTOINE BAZINET : FRANCOISE JANOT FATHER: Jean Bazinet dit Tourblanche : Marin Janot dit Lachapelle MOTHER: Marguerite Ausault : Francoise Besnard [5, 9] BORN: 6 Aug 1644 : 21 Jan 1658 [5, 9, 26] [5, 9] PLACE: St-Antoine-de-Tourblanche, Perigueux, Guyenne : Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26] DIED: 24 Jun 1729 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] : 14 Jun 1739 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: 6 Aug 1674 @ Montreal, Quebec MEMOIRS: Antoine was in the Lamothe Company of the Carignan Regiment that came to Canada in 1665.[5] Joseph’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Pointe-aux-Trembles) include: Marie (20 Mar 1676 / 4 Aug 1683), Pierre (26 Aug 1678 Cote-St-Jean, Montreal / Marie Roy 24 Nov 1698 / 2 Sep 1708 Trois-Rivieres), Joseph (k204), Anne (24 Jun 1682 / Pierre Beauchamp 2 Mar 1699 / 29 Aug 1751 St-Francis-de-Sales, Laval), Catherine (6 May 1684 / Jacques Beauchamp 4 Mar 1701), Marguerite (15 Mar 1687 / Joseph Robillard 20 Apr 1711 / 7 Mar 1745 Lavaltrie, Berthier), Antoine (11 Mar 1689 / Gertrude Senet 8 Jul 1720 / 18 Nov 1760), Francoise (12 Jan 1692 / Jean Baudreau 7 Jan 1715 / 11 Jul 1740 Contrecoeur, Quebec), Marie-Francoise (15 Mar 1694 / Etienne Contant 6 Feb 1719 / 12 May 1734 at Lachine) .[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Anne: L410 / L411: JEAN SENECAL : CATHERINE DESENNE FATHER: Martin Senecal : Pierre Desenne MOTHER: Jeanne Lappert : Marguerite Leger [5, 9, 27] BORN: 20 Sep 1646 : ca 1651 [5, 9, 27] [5, 9, 27] PLACE: St-Martin-Paluel, Dieppe, Rouen : Rue-Potier, Porte-Bourgogne, Notre-Dame-Chemin, Orleans [27] [5, 9, 27] DIED: 11 Feb 1723 Montreal, Quebec : 24 May 1735 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 27] MARRIED: 15 Oct 1672 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 27] MEMOIRS: Catherine was a Kings Daughter.[17, 27] She arrived at Montreal in 1672 and was lodged at the Maison St-Gabriel which was founded and operated by Marguerite Bourgeoys and the Congregation NotreDame to house the Kings Daughters until they married and to help them adjust to the new world. Jean Senecal was a plowman and a farmer who was noted in the census of 1666 and 1667 at Montreal as an indentured servant of Charles d’Ailleboust.[27] Jean and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Montreal) includes: Pierre (16 Aug 1673 / Marguerite Pinsonnault 4 Nov 1698 / 16 Jun 1734 Laprairie) , Therese (30 Dec 1674 / joined convent of Congregation Notre-Dame, Montreal / 17 Mar 1703), Mathurin (17 Dec 1678), Joseph (1 Mar 1681 / Marie-Anne Foucher 24 Nov 1712 / 18 Nov 1741), Andre (18 Feb 1683 / Marguerite Boyer 28 Oct 1710 / 13 Oct 1754), Marguerite (19 Jan 1685 / was a nun at the Congregation de Notre-Dame de Montreal / 6 Dec 1721), Anne (k205).[5, 9, 22, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 216 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph: L412 / L413: JOSEPH LOISEL : JEANNE LANGLOIS FATHER: Louis Loisel : Honore Langlois dit Lachapelle MOTHER: Marguerite Charlot : Marie Pontonnier BORN: 25 Nov 1654 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] : 16 Jun 1664 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26, 29] DIED: 9 Jun 1724 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 29] : 23 Feb 1719 Pointe-aux-Trembles [5, 9, 29] MARRIED: 7 Apr 1682 @ St-Infant Jesus, Pointe aux Trembles, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Joseph was the godson of Jeanne Mance and Paul de Chomeday, Sieur de Maissoneuve, Governor of Montreal. On 9 Dec 1681, Joseph obtained 60 square arpents of land on the St-Jean Coast.[21] Joseph and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (St-Enfant-Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal) follows in their order of birth: Madeleine (20 Jul 1684), Joseph (k206), Jean (30 Jun 1687 / 14 Oct 1687), Anne (1 Jan 1689 / 1 May 1689), Toussaint (17 Mar 1690 / Cecile Brunet 11 Jan 1724 Kaskaskia, Illinois), Jean-Baptiste (20 Jul 1692 / MarieAnne Beaudry 23 Jan 1719), Marie-Madeleine (2 Mar 1694 / Charles Trudeau 17 Nov 1710 / 26 Sep 1748 St-Antoine-dePade, Longueuil), Angelique (24 Jun 1696 / Nicolas Chaput 20 Aug 1716 Varennes / 8 Jun 1742 Ste-Anne, Varennes), Barbe (8 May 1698 / 30 Apr 1723), Louis (11 Nov 1699 / 14 Nov 1699), Pierre (16 May 1701 / 3 Jun 1701), MarieAnne (6 Sep 1702 / 10 Sep 1702), Marie-Therese (12 Aug 1704 / Joseph Chapleau 28 Feb 1792 / 29 Sep 1730) .[5, 9, 22, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Marguerite: L414 / L415: TOUSSAINT BEAUDRY : BARBE BARBIER FATHER: Louis Beaudry : Gilbert Barbier dit Leminime MOTHER: Vincente Godet : Catherine Devaux BORN: 28 Dec 1639 St-Jean-de-Velluire, Eveche, Poitou [5, 9] : 9 Jan 1654 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] DIED: 9 Aug 1695 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal [5, 9] : 24 Jan 1694 Pointe-aux-Trembles, PQ [5, 9, 29] MARRIED: 24 Nov 1670 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Lebel notes that St-Jean-de-Velluire, in the 1800’s was a community of 600 inhabitants who lived on the west side of the Vendee River. Today the village is part of the diocese of Lucon. In France, Toussaint practised the trade of roofer. In the spring of 1664, at Larochelle, 50 men hired to work in Canada were preparing to board the ship, le Noir, out of Amsterdam. The outfitters were members of the Compagnie de Rouen and captain Filly was at the helm. Toussaint was joined by friends, Jean Roy (L380) and Jean Robert. This group landed at Quebec on 25 May 1664. Quebec, the capital of New France, served as a port of entry to all immigrants. After a few days of rest, visiting with friends or lodging with host families, they contacted the institution or the person who had guaranteed their hiring. Toussaint was assigned to Montreal which at the time was under the constant threat of the Iroquois. The 1666 census lists Toussaint as a servant at the hospital, Hotel-Dieu-de-St-Joseph as well as working at the small farm of St-Gabriel, known as La Grange. On 2 Jul 1666, Gabriel Souart granted Toussaint some land in present day Verdun, near the StPierre River. Toussaint sold or relinquished this property later that year. In 1667, Toussaint was among nine labourers employed at the farm of the hospital, Hotel-Dieu de Montreal, administered by Jeanne Mance. The farm consisted of 100 arpents of land with 22 head of cattle. Lebel’s research cites a paper preserved at Chicago detailing a ‘partnership contract of Toussaint Beaudry and Nicolas Perrot on the one hand and Jean Desroches and Isaac Nafrechou on the other hand’. The document implies that the partners had decided to go out to the Outaouais country to seek furs and would share the expenses, risks, losses and profits. This two-year expedition began in 1668. Toussaint and Perrot, along with other fur-traders, were at the site of a Potawatomi village, near the mouth of the Oconto River in Wisconsin in 1668. A year later, Father Claude Allouez, began a mission there and called it St-Francis-Xavier. Barbe Barbier was born in Ville-Marie, now Montreal, just 12 years after its founding. She was presented for baptism at Notre Dame Cathedral by Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, founder of the town and first governor of the island of Montreal. On 9 Sep 1670, Toussaint paid 220 livres for a property at Pointe-aux-Trembles which was on the St-Jean coast on the east end of the island of Montreal. On 15 Nov 1671, Toussaint leased a cow for three years at 30 livres per year. On 15 Oct 1674, Toussaint acquired 12 square arpents of land near their farm at a place called the Lac-de-Francois Baux. On 4 Apr 1677, Toussaint sold some wheat to a neighbour for 150 livres. On 22 Nov 1678, Toussaint purchased a plot of land located nearby for 500 livres. This property measured three arpents - 217 - by twenty arpents. In 1680, Toussaint appeared as a church warden for his parish at Pointe-aux-Trembles. He bought a house in front of the church to be used as a rectory by their curate and paid in wheat worth 420 livres to be delivered by the next St-Jean Day. The 1681 census lists the Beaudry family living at Pointeaux-Trembles with one gun, one carbine, seven cattle and 25 arpents of land under cultivation. On 3 Nov 1681, Toussaint signed a deal with the church wardens of Montreal to put a roof on the church which was under construction. On 23 Dec 1689, Toussaint was hired to build a house of upright log construction, ‘twenty two feet by twelve feet square, with a roof ’. He and his men would receive 325 livres for this work which was to begin in August 1690. That summer a battle with the Iroqouis ended in disaster for the community with several men killed and others captured. The conditions of the time made it prudent for the workers in the fields to have their guns within arms reach and for all to gather in town or in a protected spot for the evenings. In 1693, several residents bought a plot near the church. They would each build a small house there and keep a bonfire going at night to provide greater security. Toussaint’s lot was 35 by 70 feet. Barbe Barbier died in 1694, just three hours after giving birth to Simeon. It appears that Toussaint shortly afterwards moved to his daughter, Barbe’s home at Ville-Marie where he died the following year. The inventory of his real estate and personal property included: 120 arpents of land, a two-storey house with cellar and attic, 50 minots of wheat, 24 of peas, 8 of oats, a plot of corn. The assets totalled 2,096 livres and debts 589 livres.[21] Toussaint and Barbe’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montreal, Quebec unless otherwise stated) include the following in the order of their birth: Toussaint (20 Mar 1672 / Francoise Archambault 20 Nov 1697 / 12 May 1744) , Louis (8 May 1674 / Francoise Langlois 12 Jan 1700 Ste-Anne, Varennes / 12 Nov 1743), Barbe (2 May 1676 / Guillaume Cavelier 20 Oct 1692 / 2 nd marriage, Pierre-Francois Hablain 22 Oct 1713 / 4 Aug 1744), Catherine (26 Nov 1678 / remained a spinster / 27 Nov 1735), Marie (9 Oct 1680 / Pierre Desroches 24 Nov 1698), Jeanne (13 Jun 1683 / became the first nun of the Beaudry line on 30 May 1702, joining the Nursing Sisters of the Hotel-Dieu of Quebec as a postulant / convent notes from 1714 reveal that ‘my sister, Jeanne Beaudry of the congregation was given the duty of teacher of the novices’ / died 31 Jan 1736), Jean-Baptiste (21 May 1686 / Marie-Madeleine Bougret 13 Aug 1714 Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec / 31 Jan 1761 St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, Quebec), Jacques (12 Aug 1688 / MarieAngelique Archambault 22 Jan 1714 / 18 Feb 1768), Marguerite (k207), Simeon (24 Jan 1694 / 19 Sep 1694).[5, 9, 21, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Jean – Robert: L416 / L417: NICOLAS DESMARETS : MARIE BOCQUET BORN: ca 1625 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, France [5, 9] : ca 1627 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Jean – Elisabeth: L418 / L419: PIERRE RICHAUME dit Petrus : MARTHE ARNU FATHER: Simon Richaume dit Petrus : Marc Arnu MOTHER: Catherine Belier : Louise Brodeur MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (k10). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Jacques: L420 / L421: JEAN MENARD dit Lafontaine : ANNE SAVINELLE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Pierre Menard dit Lafontaine : Madeleine Forest : 18 Aug 1597 Mervans, Poitou, France [5, 9] : 21 Dec 1601 Orleans, Bourgogne, France [5, 9] [5, 9] 23 May 1656 Mervans, Poitou, France : 21 Apr 1671 Mervans, Poitou, France [5, 9] 6 Jun 1628 @ Mervans, Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitou, France [5, 9] Jean Menard dit Lafontaine may also be found in this family history at the number (m1772). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 218 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Catherine: L422 / L423: JEAN FORTIER : JULIENNE COEFFES FATHER: Andre-Berthomme Fortier : Andre Coiffes MOTHER: Francoise Richard : Jeanne Dugas BORN: ca 1611 St-Jean-d’Angely, Larochelle [5, 9, 29] : ca 1613 Nantes, Loire-Atlantique, Brittany [5, 26, 29] [9] DIED: 18 Apr 1678 Quebec City, Quebec : 20 Apr 1650 Notre-Dame, Cogne, Larochelle [5, 9, 26, 29] MARRIED: 28 Oct 1636 @ Notre-Dame-de-Cogne, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 25, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Jean was a pastry chef and cook who grew up in the town of St-Jean-d’Angely.[26, 29] In 1650, Jean Fortier was described as operating a cabaret or neighborhood bar on the Grande Rue in the Grandes Boucheries section of Larochelle.[26] Jean and Julienne’s children birth/marriage/death data (at Notre-Dame-deCogne, Larochelle): Catherine (k211), Marie (4 Aug 1641 / 26 Oct 1641), Pierre (24 Jun 1642), Jacques (ca 1644 / 9 Jan 1651).[29] Jean Fortier next married Marie Mallet about 1651.[26, 29] Jean Fortier is also number (m1774). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Bernard – David: L424 / L425: DAVID LETOURNEAU : SEBASTIENNE GUERY FATHER: David Letourneau : MOTHER: Jeanne Dupen : DIED: 13 May 1670 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] : 3 Jul 1654 Larochelle, Aunis, France [9, 21] MARRIED: 10 Jan 1640 @ Muron, Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, Saintonge, France [5, 9, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: David’s birthplace, Muron, can be found on the main road from Rochefort to Surgeres, about sixteen kilometres to the north-east of Rochefort.[21] David’s sibling birth/marriage/death data follows: Marie (ca 1641 in France and never came to Canada), David (k212), Jean (29 Aug 1647 Muron, Charente-Maritime, Saintonge, France / Jeanne-Claude de Boisandre, a Kings Daughter, 15 Jan 1668 Ile d’Orleans / 2 nd marriage, Anne-Francoise Dufresne 18 Apr 1673 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / 23 Apr 1722 Quebec City) .[5, 9, 21, 22, 25] After Sebastienne died, David contracted to marry Jeanne Barille dit Gobeil before the notarty Casavant in the town of Maracenne, France on 6 Jul 1654. Their marriage vows were exchanged at St-Germain, Larochelle, Aunis.[5, 21] Vital statistics for David’s children with Ms. Barille include: Elizabeth (26 May 1655 St-Germain, Larochelle / Mathurin Tessier 23 Sep 1670 Champlain, Ste-Anne-de-la-Perade / 18 May 1708 Quebec City), Philippe (4 Jan 1657 France / Marie-Madeleine Simon dit Lapointe 14 Feb 1683 Sillery / 2 nd marriage, Marie-Madeleine Vallee 12 Feb 1685 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City), Jacques (ca 1667 Chateau-Richer, Montmorency / Angelique Guyon dit Buisson 8 Feb 1694 Ste-Anne-de-la-Perade), Guillaume (17 Jan 1670 at Quebec / 19 Jan 1670 Chateau-Richer, Montmorency).[5, 9, 21] In May 1658, David journeyed to the New World with his sons, David and Jean. David’s skill as a master baker and pastry maker came in handy on the voyage as it was said that he helped the ship’s cook feed the crew and passengers. Upon their arrival in early summer they went to work on a farm at Chateau-Richer for three years to satisfy their indenture contract. The 1661 census finds David and family living at Beauport where David had taken charge of the flour mill for Seigneur Giffard. On 24 Aug 1661, David bought a piece of land at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, west of the road that goes from Ste-Famille to St-Jean, for 110 livres. The title to this land was passed to David Jr. on the occasion of his marriage. A condition was that David Jr. would give his father 50 minots of grain for each of two years and his father would help with the sowing and harvesting. In March 1664, David bought two lots in the parish of St-Laurent and signed them over to his other son, Jean. Ms. Barille came to Canada in 1665 with the young children, Elisabeth and Philippe. In 1667, David sold the land at St-Laurent, Ile d’Orleans for 200 livres. In 1669, David bought a house, 24 by 20 feet, from Mace Gravel in the village of Chateau-Richer for 700 livres. To his second wife, Ms. Barille, David left the house, some land he got from Michel Bouchard (L460) in 1668, some land he got from Zacharie Cloutier (m374) in 1669, furniture worth 900 livres, animals worth 160 livres and liquid assets worth 260 livres. After David passed away, Ms. Barille would have two more marriages: (Rene Bin dit Lacroix 26 Oct 1670) and (Julien Bion dit le Breton 12 Jan 1681).[21] David Letourneau may also be found in this family history at the code number (k384). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 219 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis - Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Bernard – Francoise: L426 / L427: LOUIS CHAPELAIN : FRANCOISE DECHAUX BORN: 19 Sep 1617 St-Porchaire, Poitiers, Fr. [5, 9] : ca 1619 Notre-Dame, Lubersac, Brive, Gaillarde [5, 9] DIED: 1 Feb 1699 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] : 25 Jan 1694 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 9 Feb 1642 @ St-Porchaire, Poitiers, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Louis and Francoise and their son, Jacques, enlisted to go to Canada on 30 Apr 1658 at Larochelle, Aunis, France.[27] Louis Chapelain was a master metal turner.[25, 27] Lebel reports that Louis was an assistant sexton and bell-ringer at the cathedral in Quebec City earning a yearly salary of 65 livres. [21] Louis and Francoise’s offspring birth/marriage/death details follow in the order of their birth: Jacques (30 Mar 1643 St-Didier, Poitiers, Poitou, France / became a woodworker / Louise Chiasson, a Kings Daughter who arrived in 1666, 14 Sep 1666 Quebec City), Bernard (ca 1644 Notre-Dame, Lubersac, Brive-la-Gaillarde, Limoges, Limousin, France / Eleonore Mouillard, a Kings Daughter who arrived in Canada in 1671 with a dowry of 500 livres, 9 Nov 1671 Quebec City / 25 Nov 1734 Deschambault, Portneuf, Quebec), Francoise (k213).[5, 9, 25, 27] Louis Chapelain is also found at the number (k386). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Helene – Rene: L428 / L429: EMERY PAQUET : VINCENTE BEAUMONT BORN: 28 Mar 1614 St-Jean-Baptiste, Poitiers [5, 9] : 3 Apr 1620 Orleans, Bourgogne, France [9] [5, 9] DIED: 16 Oct 1679 Bourg-Royal, Charlesbourg : 20 Nov 1658 St-Jean-Baptiste, Poitiers, Poitou [5, 9, 27] MARRIED: 25 Oct 1637 @ St-Hilaire-de-la-Celle, Poitiers, Poitou, Vienne, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Rene’s sibling birth/marriage/death details follow: Pierre (22 Aug 1638 St-Jean-Baptiste, Poitiers), Marie (2 Jan 1640 St-Hilaire-de-la-Celle, Poitiers), Maurice (20 Dec 1641 St-Paul, Poitiers / Marie-Francoise Forget 27 Jul 1659 St-Paul, Poitiers / 27 Jan 1715 Quebec City), Louis (3 Jul 1643 St-Jean-Baptiste, Poitiers), Marguerite (7 Apr 1645 StPaul, Poitiers / a Kings Daughter with a dowry of 450 pounds / wed Francois Biville dit le Picard, a Carignan soldier in the Grandfontaine Company, 26 Nov 1670 Quebec City / 2 nd marriage Bernard Gonthier 20 Jan 1676 Quebec City / 4 Jul 1698 Beaumont, Bellechasse, Quebec), Francois (12 Jan 1647 St-Paul, Poitiers), René (k214).[5, 9, 18, 22, 27] Emery Paquet was next married to Renée Guillocheau on 29 Jul 1659 at Poitiers. Ms. Guillocheau was the widow of a local merchant, Jacques Forget, with whom she had two children.[5, 27] In the spring of 1667, Emery Paquet, Ms. Guillocheau and his children, Marguerite, René and Maurice with his family set sail for Canada. Emery was a woollen weaver. He and his son, Maurice, received land grants at Bourg-Royal, Charlesbourg, Quebec.[27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Helene – Helene: L430 / L431: GABRIEL LEMIEUX : MARGUERITE LEBOEUF FATHER: Louis Lemieux : Guillaume Leboeuf MOTHER: Marie Luguen : Marguerite Millot BORN: 10 Apr 1630 St-Etienne, Rouen, Normandy [5, 29] : 3 Jun 1640 Notre-Dame, Troyes, Champagne [5, 9] DIED: 2 Dec 1700 Pointe Levy, Lauzon [5, 9, 26, 27, 29] : 23 Nov 1670 Pointe Levy, Lauzon [5, 9, 25, 26, 29] MARRIED: 3 Sep 1658 @ Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Gabriel was a master cooper.[26, 29] Lebel notes that Gabriel knew the art of barrel making.[21] Marguerite arrived in New France about 1658 as a Filles a Marier. Gabriel and Marguerite ran a cabaret or a neighborhood bar. The syndic des habitants accused them of selling wine above the fixed price and on 22 Apr 1665, the couple was fined 10 ecus by the Sovereign Council for this infraction of the city ordinances. Marguerite was also accused of debauchery and other scandalous acts in their establishment. About 1666, Gabriel went to France with merchandise valued at 2400 livres. His ship was captured by the English and all the goods were confiscated forcing Gabriel to borrow money for his return to Quebec. This situation left the family in an impoverished state. They were hounded by creditors who threatened to sell their furniture and put the family on the street, ‘thus depriving Marguerite of the means to support her family’. Marguerite approached the Sovereign Council to ask for three years to pay off her debts. In 1667, Marguerite was accused of adultery and of keeping a ‘maison close’ and that she kept ‘women and girls for the purpose of committing the crime of lewdness’. On 26 Apr 1667, Gabriel appeared before the Sovereign Council claiming that Marguerite had been a good and blameless wife since they were married and that the accusations against her were false and just an attempt by their enemies to ‘disturb the peace’. He demanded - 220 - that those making the accusations be named and that the Sovereign Council charge them with slander and award Gabriel and Marguerite appropriate damages. Nothing seems to have come of the accusations from either party.[26] Gabriel and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Quebec City) follow: Nicolas (20 Aug 1659 / died before 1666 census), Helene (k215), Gabriel (4 Sep 1663 / Jeanne Robidoux 5 Dec 1690 Laprairie / 18 Sep 1739 Laprairie), Marie-Madeleine (5 Aug 1664 / Pierre Martin dit L’Angoumois 2 Mar 1688 / 1 Oct 1728), Marguerite (21 Jan 1666 / 8 Jan 1667).[5, 9, 18, 22, 26, 29] Gabriel Lemieux next wed Marthe Beauregard on 26 Nov 1671 at Notre Dame de Quebec City.[5, 9, 18, 22, 26, 27, 29] Ms. Beauregard was a Kings Daughter from StPatrice, Rouen, Normandy with a 400 pound dowry.[9, 18, 22, 26, 27] Gabriel Lemieux and Ms. Beauregard settled at Lauzon. Statistics (all Pointe-de-Levy, Lauzon) for Gabriel’s children with Ms. Beauregard are: Louis (31 Aug 1672 / Marie-Anne Carrier 4 May 1700 / 7 Nov 1749 Cap-St-Ignace, Montmagny), Michel (23 Oct 1673 / Marguerite Samson 8 Nov 1700 / 15 Apr 1750), Marthe (11 Apr 1675 / Mathurin Labrecque 5 Nov 1693 / 26 Nov 1761 Beaumont, Bellechasse), Charlotte (13 Apr 1677 / wed Ignace Samson 5 Jul 1700), Guillaume (12 Apr 1679 / 30 Nov 1701 Quebec City).[5, 9, 27, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise - Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Louis – Francois: L432 / L433: MATHURIN BLAIN : SUZANNE CROLET BORN: ca 1615 Bignay, St-Jean-d’Angely, Saintonge [5, 9] : ca 1617 Bignay, St-Jean-d’Angely [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Louis – Jeanne: L434 / L435: GUILLAUME BARBIER : LIESSE WILBERT dit Hubert [5, 9] BORN: ca 1624 St-Nicolas, Chalon-sur-Marne : ca 1626 St-Nicolas, Chalon-sur-Marne [5, 9] MARRIED: 31 Dec 1649 @ St-Nicolas, Chalon-sur-Marne, Champagne, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Marguerite – Jean: L436 / L437: JEAN LUMINEAU : MICHELLE CAILLER BORN: ca 1630 Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitiers, Poitou [5, 9] : ca 1632 Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitiers, Poitou [9] DIED: ca 1665 Poitiers, Poitou, France [5] : 15 Jan 1710 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9] ca 1655 @ Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitiers, Poitou, France [5, 9] Jean and Michelle’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitiers, Poitou, France unless otherwise noted) follows in the order of their birth: Gabrielle (ca 1656 / Pierre Therrien 17 May 1670 StJean, Ile d’ Orleans / 25 Nov 1707 St-Jean), Rene (ca 1658 / Jeanne Dufresne 27 Oct 1682 St-Laurent, Ile d’Orleans / 17 Jan 1687 St-Laurent), Marie (ca 1662 / Jean Rabouin 6 Jul 1706 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans / 19 Mar 1711 Quebec City), Jean (k218).[9] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Marguerite – Marie: L438 / L439: ADRIEN QUEVILLON : JEANNE HUNAULT FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Nicholas Quevillon : Toussaint Hunault Marie Vauquelin : Marie Lorgueil 1 Jan 1641 St-Ouen-Mauger, Dieppe, Rouen [5, 9] : 2 Nov 1658 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21] ca 1693 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9] : 2 Dec 1713 Riviere-des-Parairies, PQ [5, 9, 21] 2 Feb 1672 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] Adrien and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec unless otherwise noted) includes: Marie (k219), Marguerite (14 May 1676 Repentigny / Jacques Desmoliers dit Biernais 27 Nov 1697 Beauport / 16 Dec 1702 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Pierre (13 Nov 1678 / 1 Jan 1692), Francoise-Angelique (13 Mar 1681 Repentigny, Quebec / died in 1693), Jean-Baptiste (25 Jul 1683 St-Dominique, Quebec / Marie-Jeanne Moineau 19 Jan 1711 / 11 Apr 1753 Sault-au-Recollet, Quebec), Catherine (14 Mar 1686 / Guillaume Lacombe dit St-Amand 30 Jul 1703 / 2nd marriage, Samuel Papineau dit Montigny 6 Jun 1704 Riviere-des-Prairies / 31 Jul 1781 Montreal), Francois (ca 1688 / MarieLouise Devilleray 2 Dec 1713 Montreal / 4 Mar 1739). [5, 9] Adrien worked as a ropemaker and a carpenter. He was captured by the Iroqouis, taken to their village at Caughnawaga and eventually killed and scalped.[5] Jeanne Hunault was next married to Jacques Courval about 1695. Jeanne and Mr. Courval had a son named, LouisAugustin (15 Jan 1697 / Agnes Goguet 16 Nov 1716 Riviere-des-Prairies / 11 Apr 1761 Riviere-des-Prairies). Jeanne Hunault’s third marriage was with Pierre Taillefer on 7 May 1699 at Montreal. They had a son, Pierre.[5, 21] - 221 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean – Jean: L440 / L441: GUILLAUME PEPIN dit Tranchemontagne : JEANNE FATHER: Pierre Pepin MOTHER: Francoise Prieur MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L118). MECHIN : Jean Mechin : __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean – Marie Madeleine: L442 / L443: LUCAS LOISEAU : FRANCOISE CURE FATHER: Jacques Loiseau : Pierre-René Curé MOTHER: Marie Rouette : Barbe Charles BORN: ca 1644 Chervey, Troyes, Champagne [5, 9, 27] : ca 1651 Grevilliers, Arras, Artois, France [5, 9, 27] DIED: 14 Mar 1704 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9, 27] : 19 Jan 1709 Ste-Famille, Boucherville [5, 9, 27] MARRIED: 19 Dec 1669 @ Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Chambly, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 27] MEMOIRS: Francoise was a Kings Daughter.[18, 27] She left for Canada in 1669, carrying with her goods valued at about 200 livres for her dowry. She was lodged at the Maison St-Gabriel in Montreal which was founded and operated by Marguerite Bourgeoys and the Congregation Notre-Dame to house the Kings Daughters until they married. Lucas Loiseau is noted at Trois-Rivieres in the census of 1666 and 1667. Lucas and Francoise settled at Boucherville.[27] Their offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Ste-Famille, Boucherville, Quebec) include: Marie-Madeleine (k221), Joachim (28 Feb 1673 / Agnes Chicoine 2 Dec 1702 Varennes / 12 Dec 1734), Jeanne (30 Jan 1675 / 5 Nov 1687), Roger (30 Apr 1677 / 4 Jan 1688), Marie (4 Jun 1680 / Georges Ethier dit Lafleur 9 Feb 1699 / 18 May 1726 St-Sulpice).[5, 9, 27] Lucas Loiseau is also found at number (m1914). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jean Roch: L444 / L445: JEAN CASAVANT : MARIE GIGUERE MARRIED: ca 1645 @ St-Pierre, in the diocese of Auch, Gascogne, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jeanne: L446 / L447: JEAN CHARPENTIER dit Lapaille : BARBE RENAUD FATHER: Cyprien Charpentier dit Lapaille : Vincent Renault MOTHER: Catherine Therelle : Marie Martin [5, 9] BORN: ca 1636 Rouen, Normandy, France : 11 Sep 1644 Notre-Dame, Cogne, Larochelle [5, 9, 29] DIED: ca 1677 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9, 29] : 21 Jan 1719 Boucherville, Quebec [5, 9, 29] MARRIED: 10 Jan 1661 @ Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Jean worked as a labourer and obtained land in New France in 1662.[29] Jean and Barbe’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Quebec City) follow in order of birth: Jeanne (k223), Madeleine (7 Nov 1662 Ile d’Orleans / 5 Feb 1666), Jacques (22 Aug 1664 Chateau-Richer / Marguerite Martin 6 Jul 1689 Repentigny / 7 Oct 1693 Montreal), Marie (10 Nov 1666 / 10 Feb 1667), Helene (2 Apr 1668 / 6 Apr 1668), Jean (2 Nov 1669 / Francoise Hunault 22 Apr 1691 Riviere-des-Prairies, Montreal / 18 Dec 1741 Riviere-des-Prairies), Louise (28 Dec 1671 / Francois Pelisson 1 Mar 1688 Lauzon / 27 Oct 1739), Francoise (7 Apr 1673 Sillery / Claude Lemoine 12 Apr 1706), Sebastien (15 Jan 1675 Lauzon / ca 1681), Therese (7 Oct 1676 / 12 Dec 1745). Barbe Renaud next wed Nicolas Cochart on 18 Apr 1678 at Notre-Dame-de-Quebec and had, Jeanne. Barbe’s third marriage was with Mathurin Arnaud on 2 Dec 1679 at Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City. They had two children: Louis (ca 1682 Quebec City), Genevieve (22 Jul 1687 Quebec City / Rene Albert 20 Feb 1708 St-Joseph, Levis / 8 Jul 1745 Levis).[5, 9, 22, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Joseph – Michel – Andre: L448 / L449: MICHEL MIGNIER : CATHERINE MASSON BORN: ca 1610 St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle [5, 9, 21, 20] : ca 1612 St-Martin, Ile-de-Re [5, 9, 20, 21] DIED: 20 May 1678 Bois-Plage, Ile-de-Re, France [5, 9, 21, 28] : 10 Mar 1669 Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: 16 Apr 1635 @ St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 28] Andre’s sibling birth/marriage/death details (at Bois-Plage, Ile-de-Re, France) follow in the order of - 222 - their birth: Marie (24 Jan 1636 / Pierre Raguout ca 1668 / 2 nd marriage, Etienne Godin / 11 Feb 1686), Pierre (28 Dec 1639 nd Ile-de-Re / wed Catherine Raguener ca 1660 / 2 Dec 1680), Andre (k224), Marie 2 (30 May 1645 / 11 Feb 1686), Michel (10 Jan 1647 / wed Francoise Philippot ca 1672 / 6 Dec 1680), Jeanne (28 Jun 1649 / Jean Froschet ca 1667 / 2nd marriage, Michel Courmet ca 1669), Catherine (8 Apr 1654), Jean (15 Oct 1656), Etienne (4 Aug 1658).[5, 9, 21, 28] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain - Joseph – Michel – Jacquette: L450 / L451: JACQUES MICHEL : JEANNE DUPONT [5, 9] BORN: ca 1617 Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re : ca 1619 Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Joseph – Angelique – Francois Louis: L452 / L453: LOUIS THIBAULT : RENÉE GAUTHIER FATHER: Rene Thibault : Philippe Gauthier MOTHER: Catherine Oliveau : Marie-Marguerite Pichon [5, 9] BORN: 23 Oct 1621 Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re : ca 1621 Paris, France [21] [5, 9] DIED: 3 Feb 1679 Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re : 14 Oct 1670 Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte [5, 9] MARRIED: 29 Oct 1645 @ Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 21] MEMOIRS: Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte was a parish on the island of Re which is only 85 kilometers in area. This island, in the Atlantic Ocean, is separated from la Vendee by a ten kilometer strait on one side and from Ile d’Orleron by a twelve kilometer strait on the other. During their lifetime, the people of Re lived somewhat as they do today; fishing from the shore, oyster farming, harvesting seweed and a brown marine algae known as focus. The small town of La Flotte sent its products to Larochelle, the nearest commercial city and a very important seaport from where great ships departed for the Antillies and New France.[21] Louis and Renée’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Catherine-de-la-Flotte, Ile-de-Re, France except as noted) follows in the order of their birth: Francois-Louis (k226), Louis (15 Nov 1649), Marie (5 Dec 1651), Jacques (27 Nov 1652), Catherine (24 Jan 1655 / wed Etienne Mounier ca 1685), Marie (22 Dec 1658), Jean (6 Aug 1660).[5, 9, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Joseph – Angelique – Agnes Elisabeth: L454 / L455: GUILLAUME LEFEBVRE : BARBE VIOT BORN: ca 1627 St-Germain, Paris, France [5, 9, 20, 21] : ca 1629 St-Germain, Paris, France [5, 9, 20, 21] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1652 @ St-Germain, Paris, France [5, 9, 21] Guillaume Lefebvre died prior to the marriage of his daughter, Agnes-Elisabeth, in 1670.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain - Germain – Marie – Joseph - Gregoire: L456 / L457: RENE OUELLET : ANNE RIVET FATHER: Francois Ouellet : Joseph-Jacques Rivet MOTHER: Elisabeth Barre : Marie Doré BORN: 1 Jun 1639 St-Jacques-de-Hautpas, Paris [5, 9] : ca 1644 St-Gervais, Sees, Normandy [5, 9, 21, 27] DIED: 15 Jan 1722 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere [5, 9, 21, 25, 27] : 5 Apr 1675 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 27] MARRIED: 8 Mar 1666 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 27] MEMOIRS: Anne was the widow of Gregoire Hisse who was one of the huitieme tax collectors in Brittany. She was a King’s daughter with a dowry of 300 pounds who left for Canada in 1665. [5, 20, 21, 27] Rene Ouellet and Anne settled at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans.[27] Lebel states that René Ouellet, in a beautiful script, signed his name as René Houallet. It is thought that Rene, a gunsmith, arrived in Canada aboard the ship Saint-Andre in the summer of 1659 to go to work in the service of the great explorer, Medard Chouart des Grosseillers, then living at Trois-Rivieres. He was to receive 75 livres per year, lodging, food and drink from his cousin, Christophe Gerbault, a soldier and partner of Chouart. Lebel cites a transaction made on 26 Sep 1662, at Trois-Rivieres between the Jesuits and Rene Ouellet indicating that he agreed to work for a year at the Jesuit forge for a salary of 150 livres. In 1665, René was living at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, almost right across from Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre.[21] On 6 Feb 1673, René received a land grant of three arpents frontage in the parish of Ste-Famille. It is thought that René had been living on and working this plot for - 223 - some time and the grant just gave him official rights because two weeks later he sold it and the document included, ‘with this cleared land there is a cabin and a shed’. The buyer promised to pay 100 silver livres in two installments. In 1674, an agreement to rent a farm on the Ile d’Orleans for one year, states that Rene Ouellet was an ‘inhabitant of the seigneurie of Beaupre’. The farm was four arpents in frontage and came with a cow and a pair of oxen.[21] René and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Joseph (14 Apr 1667 Ste-Famille / Francoise Lizotte 12 Feb 1691 Riviere-Ouelle / 29 Jul 1740 Riviere-Ouelle), Mathurin (k244), [5, 9, 25] Gregoire (k228). About 1678, René Ouellet moved to La-Pocatiere where he wed Therese Mignault (L491) on 6 Feb 1679 at the home of Marin Fouquet. The marriage was registered, however, at Notre-Damede-Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 21, 22] In 1680, René moved to a farm with 8 arpents frontage by 42 in depth at Ile d’Orleans and remained there for 17 years. The 1681 census notes that Rene had six arpents of land under cultivation, seven head of cattle and one gun. At this time René’s oldest son, Joseph, was entrusted to the home of Jacques Meneux where he was working as a 14 year old servant. Another son, Mathurin, at 12 years old was in the service of Louis Gagné at Cap St-Ignace. The third son, Gregoire, was living with his stepaunt, Madeleine Mignault at Grande-Anse-des-Aulnaies.[21] In 1690, René and his three sons were among the brave who defended Riviere-Ouelle against the English under Admiral Phipps who was on his way to lay siege to Quebec City. The parish priest, Father Pierre de Francheville, discovered that the English fleet was sailing up the St-Lawrence and might land at Riviere-Ouelle. Since Seigneur Jean-Baptiste de la Bouteillerie was in Quebec City, the town’s inhabitants asked their priest to guide them in battle. Soon the enemy fleet dropped anchor off Riviere-Ouelle and a few English troops headed ashore in launches to perhaps collect some fresh water. The men of the town, led by their priest, hid at the edge of the forest. Just as the English were disembarking on the shore, the citizens of Riviere-Ouelle opened fire with a barrage of bullets. The handful of English soldiers hurried to their rowboats and headed back to their ships.[21, 25, 26] Others in this family history who were involved included: Michel Bouchard (L460) with sons, Etienne, Francois and Pierre, Jean-Galleran Boucher (L494) with sons, Pierre and Philippe, Jean Pelletier (m918). Rene and Ms. Mignault spent their final years at St-Roch-des-Aulnaies with the family of Rene’s son, Joseph. Rene’s will included this passage: ‘Rene Ouellet ... from parish Ste-Anne, living at present in the house of Joseph ... commends his soul to God ... and I wish and request that one of the two arpents of front land by a depth of one arpent ... be given in perpetuity to the church of Ste-Anne’.[21] Rene and Ms. Mignault’s children vital statistics (all Riviere-Ouelle) include: Therese (ca 1680 / Charles Pelletier 7 Jan 1698 / 25 Jul 1707), Francoise (10 Jul 1682 La Pocatiere / Andre Mignier dit Legace 31 May 1701 / 7 Jan 1728 La-Pocatiere), Sebastien (16 Apr 1685 / Madeleine Lizotte 16 Aug 1707 / 14 Jan 1756 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Anne (ca 1686 / Charles Boucher 18 Nov 1704 / 7 Feb 1758), Angelique (16 Oct 1690 / Ignace Berube 16 Aug 1707 / 4 Jan 1756 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Francois (12 Sep 1693 / Marie-Anne Bouchard 1 Aug 1717), Marie (4 Oct 1696 / 3 Nov 1745 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies).[5, 9, 21, 25] Rene Ouellet is also at number (L488). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne: L458 / L459: GUILLAUME LIZOT : ANNE PELLETIER FATHER: Robert Lizot : Jean Pelletier MOTHER: Catherine Joanne : Anne Langlois [5, 9, 21, 27] BORN: ca 1644 St-Pierre, Gravelle, Normandy : 30 Sep 1656 Beauport, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] DIED: 28 Nov 1706 Riviere Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 27] : ca 1695 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [21] MARRIED: 19 Jan 1670 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Beauport, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Guillaume’s birth place is now the community of Montviette in the diocese of Bayeux. According to Lebel, Guillaume was at Beauport, Quebec as a witness to the signing of the marriage contract of Louis Cote and Elisabeth Langlois (see L182) on 10 Oct 1662. On 3 Jun 1664, Guillaume was confirmed at the church of Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City before Bishop de Laval. This provided him with his rights as a full resident. On 14 Nov 1665, Jean Pelletier (m918), ceded ‘by way of cens and land rent’ to Guillaume two arpents of frontal land adjacent to his own farm west of the Montmorency Falls. Guillaume was expected to build a house. Shortly afterwards, Guillaume and a partner, Robert Gallien undertook the farming of Jean Pelletier’s land as well.[21] Guillaume Lizot was noted in the 1666 census as the servant of his father-in-law, Jean Pelletier at Beauport.[27] Guillaume and Anne’s marriage contract was signed on 12 May 1669. The Pelletiers promised a cow, two young steers, a hog, a pig, twelve napkins, four table cloths, twelve - 224 - handkerchiefs and a suit of clothes. Guillaume offered a dowry of 300 livres. The wedding was delayed until she passed her thirteenth birthday. On 26 Mar 1676, Guillaume sold the homestead with cabins and barns to Charles Cadieux for 500 livres. The Lizots became one of the founding families of Ste-Anne-de-laPocatiere on the south bank of the St-Lawrence River. Guillaume obtained six arpents of frontal land just to the west of the seigneury. In the 1681 census, Guillaume and family owned four guns, thirteen head of cattle and had ten arpents of land under cultivation. A notarized act, dated 29 Apr 1689, informs us that Guillaume was a carpenter and that he was granted a concession from Seigneur Juchereau at St-Denis-des-Aulnaies. His debt was 136 livres ‘for settlement of account for both the cens and the rent in arrears owed by him lent in his great need and necessity and for merchandise before this day’. Lizot made a downpayment of 18 livres and promised 12 minots of wheat and one hundred planks to be delivered ‘in the boat of the said Sieur de Saint Denis to the said place of Grande Ance’.[21] Guillaume and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle) includes: Francoise (1 May 1672 / Joseph Ouellet 12 Feb 1691 / 20 Oct 1699) , Nicolas (11 Feb 1674 Beauport / Marie-Madeleine Mignier dit Lagace 18 Jan 1701 / 28 Oct 1708) , Anne (k229), Noel-Mathurin (29 Oct 1677 / Catherine Meneux 28 Feb 1702 / 12 Feb 1740) , Marie-Anne (24 Mar 1679 La Pocatiere / Joseph Meneux 12 Jan 1705 / 15 Nov 1743), Marie-Francoise (24 Jun 1681 L’Islet / Gabriel Bouchard 12 Jan 1701 / 2 nd marriage, Nicolas Kerverzo 25 Nov 1736), Madeleine (ca 1683 / Sebastien Ouellet 16 Aug 1707 / 16 Mar 1765 La-Pocatiere), Joseph (2 Jun 1685 / MarieFrancoise Dancosse 24 Nov 1710 / 2nd marriage, Therese Lebel 9 Feb 1750 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies / 20 Apr 1768), Catherine (16 Apr 1687 La-Pocatiere / Gregoire Ouellet 5 Mar 1696 / 8 Feb 1716 La-Pocatiere), Marie-Madeleine (ca 1689 / Joseph Mignier dit Lagace ca 1709 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere).[5, 9, 21, 22] Guillaume Lizot next wed Marguerite Peuvrier on 10 Oct 1696 at Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 22, 27] Ms. Peuvrier was a Kings Daughter who came to Canada in 1663 with a dowry worth about 300 livres. They settled at Riviere-Ouelle and had no children.[27] Lebel’s research places Guillaume along with Robert Morin (see k224) at the funeral of Robert Levesque on 13 Sep 1699 at Riviere-Ouelle.[21] Ms. Peuvrier died at the Hotel-Dieu of Quebec on 20 Jan 1709, at age 66.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois L460 / L461: MICHEL BOUCHARD : MARIE-MADELEINE TROTIN FATHER: Clement Bouchard : Jean-Nicolas Trotin MOTHER: Louise Brillard : Madeleine Blanchard BORN: 16 Nov 1635 [5, 25] : ca 1646 PLACE: Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Larochelle [5, 9, 21, 26] : Bournezeau, La-Roche-sur-Yon, Lucon, Poitou [5, 9, 21, 26] DIED: 14 Apr 1709 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 26] : 7 Feb 1682 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [21] MARRIED: 2 Dec 1662 @ La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 26] MEMOIRS: At Larochelle, on 19 Mar 1657, Michel and his brother, Nicolas, signed a three year indenture contract to work in Canada at 75 livres per year plus all expenses. They arrived at Quebec City on 20 Aug 1657. The ship’s log records that they had to stop at the Ile-aux-Coudres, after ‘putting into port twice in Ireland’. On 28 Mar 1660, Michel began working land that was leased to him and Jacques Nourry (see k412) by Charles Legardeur as a farm for grain harvest. The lease was for five years and included use of the house, barn, stable, yard, garden, plowable land and standing wood. Each year, Michel and Jacques were required to plow, seed, harvest and deliver to the landlord, 65 minots of wheat, 25 of peas, 1000 well preserved eels, six hens, four capons, 25 cords of firewood, 13 dozen eggs and 20 pounds of butter. The farmers also had oxen, cows and all the necessary equipment at their disposal. Michel terminated this lease the following year and accepted another on 31 Dec 1661 from Nicolas Huot for three years. As the tenant, Michel was to pay 90 livres, a barrel of eels and 100 cabbages each Christmas.[21] Marie-Madeleine Trotin moved to Canada [26] in 1662 as a Filles a Marier. On 15 Oct 1662, Michel bought a lot measuring one and a half arpents in frontage by a league in depth on the Beaupre Coast. He returned this to the seller a couple of years later. On 13 Mar 1664, Michel received a concession from Charles Aubert de la Chesnaye, seigneur for part of the Beaupre Coast and Ile d’Orleans. Michel was committed to build a house, to pay 12 deniers for the cens, 20 sols for the seigneurial rent for each arpent of frontage, a few capons and the tithe to the local curate payable on each St-Martin’s Day. A couple of years later, Michel abandoned this homestead stating that he was unable to satisfy the requirements of the contract. The 1667 census indicates that the Bouchards were living at Ste-Anne-du-Petit-Cap, near Cap Tourmente, in the future parish of St-Joachim at a place commonly - 225 - called ‘les petits ruisseaux’. Michel sold this a year later to David Letourneau (k212).[21] In 1667, MarieMadeleine had to respond to charges of assault and battery against Nicolas Huot dit St-Laurent, sergeant de Beaupre. Marie-Madeleine and three other women were found guilty of slapping Huot and had to make a public apology on the steps of the Chateau-Richer church and pay the costs of the suit. Marie-Madeleine’s share of the cost was 67 livres. In addition she had to pay 100 sols for the work on the church of SainteAnne-de-Beaupre.[21, 26] On 21 Oct 1669, Michel acquired a piece of land with two arpents in frontage by a league and half deep in the village of Sainte-Anne. In 1671, Michel along with Etienne Lessard (see m438), Robert Paré (m1884), Jean Picard (see n3772) were put on trial for their illegal involvement in the trade of beaver skins. In 1673, Michel signed a seven-year farm lease to work two adjacent homesteads at Beauport, near the village of Fargy. They totalled three arpents in frontage and 21 arpents deep with a house, shed, other buildings, two cows, two oxens and farm tools. A year later, in 1674, he abandoned this lease and accepted a five year lease to farm the land of Toussaint Toupin (L476) at Chateau-Richer. Michel could use the livestock of four oxen, three cows and two steers and was to provide the landlord with 50 minots of wheat, ten of peas, ten of Indian corn and ten of barley each year. At the same time he sold the farm in the village of Ste-Anne with the entire proceeds of the sale going to pay his debts.[21] In 1675, the family were among the first handful of pioneers to move to the seigneurie of La Bouteillerie at Riviere-Ouelle.[21, 26] Michel’s deed of ownership did not come until 1677. The seigneur Deschamps de la Bouteillerie wrote, ‘this twelfth day of March one thousand six hundred seventy-seven, I have given and ceded to Michel Bouchard the homestead previously ceded by us to Francois du Buisson totalling the number of ten arpents in frontage by as much in depth, running along on one side of the abandoned homestead of Pierre d’Ancose, on the coast of the said Riviere-Ouelle bordered also by the said Riviere-Ouelle the whole stretch of the said land totalling the number of seventy-two arpents on the condition of paying every year by the said Michel Bouchard forty sols and three fat capons in seigneurial rent which he will bring to me alive on St-Martin’s Day or instead of the three fat hens or the money namely twenty sols for each chicken which he owes me, also the said Michel Bouchard is obliged to come grind his flour at the communal mill of our seigneurie, the tenant will be required to leave some paths in the country which will be Canada where I will show him ... will have the right to hunt and fish on the whole extent of the said land and also to send his cattle to the shore of the great cove and promise to give him a contract in the presence of the notary all done and quantified ... signed in our seigneurial house on the day and year as above’. The 1681 census notes that the Bouchards had seven children under roof as well as two guns, 14 head of cattle and nine arpents of cultivated land. This young community had grown but still only totalled eleven families and 67 inhabitants.[21] Michel and Marie-Madeleine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle) includes: Etienne (25 Dec 1663 ChateauRicher / Marie-Madeleine Meunier dit Laframboise 20 Oct 1692 Quebec City / 12 Aug 1738), Marie-Madeleine (31 May 1665 Chateau-Richer / Pierre Dancosse, summer 1679 / 2nd marriage, Jean Gauvin 29 May 1702 / 21 Nov 1755), Charles (14 Feb 1667 Chateau-Richer / Marie-Madeleine Dubé 5 Apr 1690 / drowned 26 Apr 1690), Francois (k230), Pierre (24 Jan 1672 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre / in 1691 he began in the service of the explorer, Louis Joliet, working on the Ile d’Anticosti for three years, then in 1695 he and his brother, Gabriel joined Joliet on an eighteen month journey / died before 1709), Marguerite (10 Mar 1674 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre / Francois Dutarte 29 Jul 1697 Pointe-de-Levy, Lauzon / 8 Feb 1724), Gabriel (8 Nov 1675 / nd Marie-Francoise Lizot 12 Jan 1701 / 1 Nov 1731 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Pierre 2 (18 Jun 1678 / Marie-Anne Bourassa 29 Oct 1699 Quebec City / 11 Apr 1717 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere).[5, 9, 21, 25, 26] Michel Bouchard next wed Marie- Madeleine de Laporte on 27 Oct 1682 at Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City. They had no children together.[5, 9, 26] Ms. Laporte had two children, Martin (ca 1678 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Anne (ca 1680 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere) from a previous union with Martin Fouquet. In 1684, twenty residents of the South Coast, including seigneurs Aubert de la Chesnaye and Deschamps de la Boutteillerie as well as Michel Bouchard, sent a request to the king of France and to the Sovereign Council to protest the withdrawal of their rights to trade furs with the Indians who came from New England and Acadia. They claimed that the rights to this trade were granted them in 1675, by the seigneurs as enticement to settle the area. Denis Riverin and others had obtained from the king, an ordinance which forbid this group from trading in beaver and other skins within the trading limits of Tadoussac, under penalty of a 500 livre fine and confiscation of the goods. Lebel suggests that Michel Bouchard, already more inclined to do this sort of business than to clear land and farm would have detected an excellent opportunity to satisfy his personal taste by settling at Riviere-Ouelle.[21] In - 226 - 1690, Michel and sons, Etienne, Francois and Pierre took part in the defense of Riviere-Ouelle against the English troops under Admiral Phipps who were on a mission to capture Quebec City. The parish priest, Father Pierre de Francheville, discovered that the English fleet was sailing up the St-Lawrence and might land at Riviere-Ouelle. Since Seigneur Jean-Baptiste de la Bouteillerie was in Quebec City, the town’s inhabitants asked their priest to guide them in battle. Soon the enemy fleet dropped anchor off RiviereOuelle and a few English troops headed ashore in launches, perhaps to collect some fresh water. The men of the town, led by their priest, hid at the edge of the forest. Just as the English were disembarking on the shore, the citizens of Riviere-Ouelle opened fire with a barrage of bullets. The handful of English soldiers hurried to their rowboats and headed back to their ships.[21, 25, 26] Others in this family history who were involved in this skirmish include: Rene Ouellet (L456) with sons Joseph, Mathurin and Gregoire, Jean-Galleran Boucher (L494) with sons, Pierre and Philippe, Jean Pelletier (m918). About 1691, Michel Bouchard moved to Quebec City and opened a tavern there.[21, 26] Lebel’s research reveals that in a notarized act drafted 18 Apr 1693, a ship’s officer, Dominique Repune, admitted owing a debt of 116 livres to Bouchard for food provided over the preceeding winter. In 1693, Michel’s daughter, Marguerite had a daughter out of wedlock. Michel sued the father of the child, Jean Gagnon who after his conviction appealed to the Sovereign Council. On 11 Jan 1694, the Council ordered that the suit be continued ‘for reasons of crime of rape and ... drugs claimed given to the said Bouchard in order to make her lose the child with which she was pregnant’. During the case the child would be entrusted to a nurse to whom Gagnon would provide the necessary clothes in addition to ten sols per day. The suit ended in an out-of-court settlement. The agreement provided that Gagnon take charge of the child, have him fed and supported by his nurse until the age of 20, in addition to paying 230 livres to Michel Bouchard. On 8 Nov 1695, Michel leased a cow for five years, to Louise Pelletier (L505), living at Pointe-aux-Trembles, seigneurie of Neuville. On 16 Oct 1696, Michel was ordered to pay Marie-Madeleine Morin (see m1651), widow of Gilles Rageot, 16 livres for wood already delivered. At the same time he was fined three livres ‘for bringing to his home some men to drink against the rules ... repetition of said action prohibited on penalty of closing his tavern’. A week later he asked the Sovereign Council to annul this sentence but they dismissed this request and added a fine of 60 sols for his ‘foolish appeal’. On 23 Feb 1697, the church warden for Notre-Dame-de-la-Victoire in the Lower Town of Quebec, leased to the Bouchards for their lifetime one of the newly constructed pews located ‘on the left side in entering along the near wall and adjoining in the front the pulpit and in the back the pew of the sieur Francois Pachot ... the Bouchards ... to pay fifteen livres in annual and lifetime rent ... and provide an authentic copy of the documents to the church warden’. Lebel suggests that Bouchard’s tavern was like a general store where the patrons could acquire items of domestic use as well as sit at tables sipping beer, wine and brandy. On 18 Aug 1703, Michel admitted to owing Jean Sebille, 387 livres ‘for balance of account for all the merchandise that he gave them to sell’. A record dated 26 Oct 1708, reveals that Michel lived on rue Notre-Dame, across from the parish church in the Lower Town. Michel died in the Hotel-Dieu of Quebec and was buried in the hospital’s cemetery. The customary inventory administered upon the death of Michel Boucard revealed that the debts outsized the credits so the assets were divided among the creditors and the accounts were closed.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain - Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Anne: L462 / L463: PIERRE VALLIERE : ANNE LAGOUE FATHER: Louis Valliere : Pierre Lagoue MOTHER: Perinne Fournier : Marie Boiscochin BORN: 12 Apr 1648 [5, 9] : ca 1651 [25, 27] PLACE: St-Pierre, Segonzac, Cognac, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9, 21, 27] : St-Etienne, LeMans, Maine, France [5, 9, 25, 27] DIED: 5 Sep 1681 St-Augustin de Desmaures, Quebec [5, 27] : 16 Dec 1728 St-Augustin, Desmaures [5, 9, 21, 25, 27] MARRIED: 8 Sep 1670 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 27] MEMOIRS: Pierre was hired by Pierre Parent from Beauport on 12 Oct 1666.[21] The 1667 census lists Pierre employed by Pierre Parent.[21, 27] Anne Lagoue was a Kings Daughter.[5, 18, 21, 27] She left for Canada in 1670 taking with her goods worth an estimated 200 livres for her dowry and a gift of 50 livres from the King as was the custom.[21, 27] Pierre gave his bride the customary gift of 300 livres tournois. About 1674, Pierre and Anne moved to St-Augustin, Riviere-aux-Roche.[21] Pierre and Anne’s children birth/marriage/ - 227 - death data (at St-Augustin de Desmaures) includes: Pierre (4 Oct 1671 Beauport / 15 Oct 1671 Quebec City), Anne nd (k231), Pierre 2 (31 Dec 1673 Beauport / Marguerite Gaboury 4 Nov 1698 / 27 Aug 1726), Madeleine (7 Apr 1676 Quebec City / Robert Petit 20 Jul 1696 Neuville / 12 Apr 1744), Remi (twin, 24 Feb 1678 / Catherine Lacasse 18 Jun 1701 nd Beaumont / 14 Mar 1754 St-Charles-de-Bellechasse), Jean (twin, 23 Feb 1678 / 24 Mar 1678 Quebec City), Jean 2 (2 Nov 1679 Quebec City / Claire Baucher 22 Feb 1700 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans / 2nd marriage, Suzanne Moranda 7 Nov 1707 St-Pierre / rd 23 Dec 1735 St-Pierre), Pierre 3 (24 Oct 1681 Neuville / Marie-Anne Caille 22 Jan 1705 Neuville / 20 Oct 1711 Quebec City).[5, 9, 21, 22, 27] Anne Lagoue next wed carpenter, Remi Dupil on 8 Jan 1682 at Neuville, Quebec.[5, 9, 18, 21, 27] Their children’s vital statistics (at Neuville): Renée-Jeanne (29 Nov 1683 / Jacques Vermette 25 Oct 1706 St-Augustin / 17 Jun 1761), Francoise (7 Jan 1686 / Jean-Baptiste Michaud 28 Feb 1707 Riviere-Ouelle / 25 Dec 1758), Francoise (29 May 1687), Genevieve (15 Mar 1689), Madeleine (17 Jul 1691), Augustin (29 May 1695 / wed Francoise-Madeleine Lecompte 26 Aug 1719 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans / 25 Nov 1755 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans), Therese (21 Sep 1699 St-Augustin).[5, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Helene – Joseph – Joseph – Pierre: L464 / L465: ANTOINE MICHAUD : MARIE TRAIN FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: : Pierre Train : Marie Michel ca 1596 Notre Dame Fontenay-le-Comte [5, 9, 20] : 27 Aug 1602 Notre Dame Fontenay-le-Comte [5, 9] [9] 19 Jan 1663 Maillezais, Poitou : 26 May 1662 Maillezais, Poitou [5, 9] ca 1621 @ Notre Dame Fontenay-le-Comte, Maillezais, Poitou, France [9, 20] Pierre’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at Notre Dame, Fontenay-le-Comte): Renée (28 Aug 1622 / Louis Brochard 14 Jun 1665 St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle, France), Etienne (ca 1626 / 4 Feb 1634), Thomas (7 Jun 1634 / 16 Oct 1635), Pierre (k232), Marie (2 Apr 1640).[5, 9] Antoine Michaud may also be found at the number (m1020). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Marie – Joseph –Francois – Marie: L466 / L467: RENE ANCELIN : CLAIRE ROUSSELOT FATHER: Louis A. Ancelin : BORN: ca 1622 Notre-Dame, Hermenault, Poitou [5, 9] : ca 1624 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 20 Nov 1695 Riviere Ouelle, Quebec : 19 Aug 1661 Notre-Dame, Larochelle [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: 3 Nov 1647 @ Notre-Dame, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 21] MEMOIRS: According to Lebel, Rene lived at Voiliers, France in 1661 and then at Puits Doux, France.[21] Rene and Claire’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Notre Dame, Larochelle) includes: Louis (13 Apr 1649 / Francoise Mesnager 4 Feb 1675), Marie (k233), Jean (21 Feb 1655 / died an infant), Suzanne (29 Apr 1657 / 5 Jun 1662), Francois (14 Mar 1660 / 26 Aug 1661).[5, 9] Rene next wed Marie Juin on 19 Jan 1665 at Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis, France. That spring they went to Canada with Rene’s daughter, Marie. Vital statistics (StJean, Ile d’Orleans) for Rene’s children with Ms. Juin include: Madeleine (22 Nov 1665 / died a toddler), Charles (26 Nov 1666 / 14 Nov 1688), Marie (18 May 1669 L’Ange-Gardien / Pierre Rondeau 5 Sep 1683 / 13 Jan 1741 St-Ours, Quebec), Catherine (17 Oct 1672 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / 22 Mar 1674 Ste-Famille), Philippe (30 Aug 1676 SteFamille, Ile d’Orleans / Madeleine St-Pierre 7 Jun 1701 Riviere-Ouelle / 14 Oct 1755 St-Louis, Kamouraska).[5, 9, 21] Lebel notes that Rene was a hemp worker by trade. The 1667 census shows the Ancelins, living at L’AngeGardien, owned two cattle and six arpents of cultivated land.[21] Rene Ancelin is also code number (m1022). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Jean: L468 / L469: ANTOINE DIONNE : CATHERINE IVORY BORN: ca 1635 Cautran, Champagne, France [5, 9] : ca 1637 Cautran, Champagne, France [5, 9] DIED: 23 Dec 1721 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9, 20] : 26 Mar 1709 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans [5, 9] [5, 9] MARRIED: 24 Feb 1660 @ Bourgogne, Marne, France MEMOIRS: Antoine and Catherine arrived in Canada about 1661. Antoine first lived at his brother, Jean’s, farm located within St-Pierre parish, Ile d’Orleans. On 2 Mar 1665, he bought a property with two arpents in frontage. In 1667, they owned eight arpents of cleared land and one cow. In 1669, he moved to a farm at Longue Pointe, St-Pierre parish with three arpents in frontage and six arpents of cleared land. The - 228 - property had a house, barn and stable. Antoine sold this in 1675 and moved to a three arpent wide strip of land at Ste-Famille. In 1679, Antoine bought a lot on the shoreline in lower Quebec town with a 20 foot frontage and built a house on it. He then traded this property to Henri Brau, in exchange for a property with four arpents frontage, 40 in depth and fishing rights. Antoine supplied eels to a merchant in Quebec from whom he had borrowed money. His daughter, Anne and her husband, Bernard Laisne lived with them from their wedding day forward and on 1 Feb 1680, it was agreed that ‘the parties of their good will and Bernard Laisne, their son-in-law, living with them together in their house in the said place ... made together the agreement and contract which follows ... namely the said Antoine Dionne and Ivory promised and were obligated to feed provide heat shelter and maintain with clothing according to their quality also the children who will come to them for four years from twenty-five April last to end on the same day of the year one thousand six hundred eighty-three ... as a reward for the work and services of their son-in-law and his wife during the said time given to them ... their land and homestead consisting of three arpents of frontage on the St-Lawrence River on the northern part of the said island ... with all the buildings which are on it adjoining on one side Nicolas Paquin and on the other Philippe Pasquier’. Lebel considers the above a lease contract between Antoine and his son-in-law. The 1681 census shows the Dionne family with 25 arpents of usable land, three cattle and a musket and Bernard Laisne and Anne counted in the household. Antoine’s daughter, Anne and her husband Bernard moved to their own land in 1685. In 1702, Antoine had a stone house, 30 feet wide with a chimney, a shed, a stable and 30 arpents of land under cultivation. [21] Antoine and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec unless otherwise noted) follows in the order of their birth: Andre (ca 1661 France / 28 Nov 1664 Chateau-Richer), Anne (27 Jul 1665 / Bernard Laisne dit Laliberte 26 Apr 1679 / 12 Oct 1728 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans), Madeleine (14 Dec 1667 / 10 Dec 1702 Quebec City), Antoine (24 Feb 1669 / died ca 1680), Jean (k234), Josephte (7 Mar 1672 / Pierre Benoit dit Abel 9 Nov 1694), Marie (22 Apr nd 1674 / Charles Normand 20 Nov 1691 Quebec City / 9 Feb 1736 Deschambault, Quebec), Anne 2 (13 Sep 1676 / Barthelemi Gobeil 19 Aug 1697 / 6 May 1737), Marguerite (6 Sep 1678 / 18 Sep 1678), Catherine (29 Mar 1680 / 10 Apr 1680), Catherine 2nd (23 Apr 1681 / 7 Feb 1683), Catherine 3rd (11 Aug 1683 / Joseph Michaud 30 May 1702 / ca 1716). [5, 9, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie Charlotte: L470 / L471: JEAN MIGNAULT dit Chatillon : LOUISE CLOUTIER FATHER: Nicolas Mignault : Zacharie Cloutier MOTHER: Madeleine de Brie : Xainte Dupont [5, 9, 25] BORN: 20 Apr 1622 Antony, Paris, France : 18 Mar 1632 St-Jean, Mortagne, France [5, 9, 21, 24, 25, 29] [5, 21] DIED: ca 1680 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec : 22 Jan 1699 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 29] MARRIED: 10 Nov 1648 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 24, 25] MEMOIRS: Jean was a native of Chatillon, near Bagneux and Fontenay-aux-Roses, now in canton of Sceaux, arrondissement of Antony, department of Hauts-de-Sceaux, in the environment of Paris.[21] Louise Cloutier first wed Francois Marguerie, Sieur de la Haye on 26 Oct 1645 at Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 21, 25] Gagné states that Mr. Marguerie was an explorer and companion of Samuel de Champlain.[26] Mr. Marguerie was a guide and interpreter of Native languages. He lived and worked among the tribes and even survived capture and imprisonment by the Iroquois. Once married, they went to live at Trois-Rivieres. On 23 May 1648, he and Jean Amiot drowned across from Trois-Rivieres, while attempting to cross the river in an old bark canoe. Childless and widowed at seventeen, Louise returned to Quebec where, five months later, she wed the soldier and tailor, Jean Mignault.[21, 25] Jean offered a dowry of 600 livres. At Larochelle on 1 Apr 1643, Jean Mignault enlisted as a soldier for the nobleman, Antoine Cheffault, one of the directors of the Campagnie General de la Nouvelle-France. Jean received 33 livres and five sous as an advance on his wages which were 60 livres per year for the three year contract. The ship, La Madeleine d’Olonne and the ship, La Marie de Dieppe left Larochelle on 27 Apr 1644 and Jean was aboard one of them. In February 1647, Jean spoke with the mother superior of the Ursuline convent at Quebec City to ask that she continue to keep and educate a particular native girl named, Barbe. Convent records note that Jean desired her ‘vigorously and powerfully’ and as proof he gave the Ursulines, 300 livres for her continued care. The records further indicate however, that ‘the girl did not want him and preferred a savage and followed the wishes of her parents’. In 1647, Jean obtained a property, five arpents in width near the Montmorency River - 229 - which he leased to Louis Lesage and Francois Hebert seven years later. The pair promised to seed the land for three years for half of the grain harvested. Mignault provided them with two steers, two cows, carts and plows. Lebel cites the Journal of the Jesuits noting the presence of Jean at Sillery, Quebec on 4 May 1647. He and his fellow soldiers along with a group of Hurons were departing for Montreal to fight the Iroqouis. Before departing he left a chest with its key in trust with the Jesuits and brought another chest to the home of Denis Duquet in Quebec City.[21] On 11 Jan 1648, Governor Montmagny sent Jean Mignault to the Huron Indians to invite them to the fur-trade.[24, 25] Jean along with two Christian Indians began a journey to the land of the Hurons. A passage in the Journal of the Jesuits adds that ‘Jean Mignault went on ahead to bring the words of the Governor to the Hurons, in order to let them know the state of affairs down here, with the order to do and say only what the Father Superior of the Hurons ordered him’. Prior to leaving, Jean had his gun repaired at a cost of seven livres and ten sols by the blacksmith, Jean Bonnart. In order to reach the mission of Sainte-Marie among the Hurons, the paddlers had to cross more than 300 leagues, passing up the Outaouais River, across many portages, down the French River to Georgian Bay to present day Midland, Ontario. The trek would take about a month.[21] Late in the year 1648, Jean commanded a group of six Frenchmen along with Algonquins and Hurons to hunt down the Iroquois.[24, 25] In 1657, Jean and family lived at Beauport and admitted to owing 82 livres to Michel Moreau for merchandise received. Through the Journal of the Jesuits, we learn that on 27 Oct 1661, the Mignault house burned down. The 1666 census shows Jean listed as a habitant and tailor living at Beauport with his wife, their six children and a domestic servant and weaver, Paul Foucault. The 1667 census adds that Jean worked 35 arpents of land in the fief of Zacharie Cloutier and that he owned a homestead where there were 16 arpents of cleared land but no one residing there. In 1667, two children of Jean Chenier and Jacqueline Sedilot (L403) were suffering from ‘mal de la teigne’, a term used then for a disease of the scalp. Jacqueline had died so her brother, Adrien, the guardian of these children approached Jean Mignault for help since he was known to have a gift for healing. Jean asked for 100 livres as fee, ten of them for medicines. This transaction was made on 19 Mar 1667. Jean set to work and completely cured both children. About 1672, there was a lot of migration by the residents of the Beauport Coast, Beaupre and also Ile d’Orleans to an area located south of the river. Therefore, about 1675, the Lebels, the Grondins, the Ouellets and the Pelletiers found themselves at the Grand-Anse. On 18 Jan 1678, Jean sold part of his land at Beauport to Charles Cadieux for 900 livres. Jean used 200 livres from this sale to liquidate a nine-year old debt with Charles Aubert. Jean Mignault then obtained a concession of four arpents at the Grand-Anse, in the seigneurie of La-Pocatiere. After a short stay, Jean relinquished this land and settled at Riviere-Ouelle where he died and where in 1681, Louise Cloutier was mentioned with three of her children as owner of three head of cattle and two arpents of cultivated land.[21] Jean and Louise’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City) follows: JeanAubin (18 Apr 1650 / Anne Dugas 6 Apr 1679 Beaubassin, Acadia / 5 Sep 1712), Therese (L491), Marie-Xaintes (L507), Madeleine (13 Jun 1654 / Noel Pelletier 21 Oct 1674 Beauport / 16 Mar 1704 Riviere-Ouelle), Francoise (8 Oct 1656 / 27 Oct 1661 in the fire that burned down their home), Jeanne (18 Dec 1658 / Antoine Gaboury 8 Jan 1678 Ste-Anne-deBeaupre / 22 Nov 1713 L’Ange-Gardien), Charles (12 Sep 1660 / was still living as of 2 Jun 1679), Louis (21 Sep 1663 / living as of 1683), Nicolas (18 Feb 1666 / 13 Mar 1666), Jean-Baptiste (27 Aug 1669 Beauport / died in 1680), Marie-Charlotte (k235).[5, 9, 21, 24, 25] Louise Cloutier next wed saddlemaker, Jean Matteau on 3 Feb 1684 at La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer and had no children together.[5, 21, 25] Jean Matteau was the [21] widower of Gabrielle Gagnon. Jean Mignault may also be found at the code number (m982) and (m1014). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Jacques – Jean: L472 / L473: SEBASTIEN CORDEAU dit Deslauriers : SABINE CHAPELIER BORN: ca 1605 Dangeau, Beauce, Orleanais, France [5, 9, 20] : ca 1607 Dangeau, Beauce, Orleanais [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 230 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Jacques – Catherine: L474 / L475: FRANCOIS LATOUR dit Simonet : CATHERINE CHARLAND BORN: ca 1610 St-Eustache, Paris, France [5, 9, 20] : ca 1612 St-Eustache, Paris, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Francois, a master surgeon and Catherine resided in the parish of St-Eustache, Paris.[26] Their children’s statistics: Catherine (k237), Pierre (wed Marie-Jeanne Dubos 7 Jan 1737 Charlesbourg, Quebec).[22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine: L476 / L477: TOUSSAINT TOUPIN du Sault : MARGUERITE BOUCHER FATHER: : Gaspard Boucher MOTHER: : Nicole Lemaire BORN: ca 1620 Notre Dame, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 21, 26] : 28 Jul 1631 Notre Dame, Mortagne [5, 9, 21, 24, 25] DIED: 10 Aug 1676 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26] : 3 Jun 1669 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 24] [5, 9, 20, 21, 22, 25] MARRIED: 25 Dec 1645 @ Quebec City, Quebec MEMOIRS: Amedee Emery’s research indicates that Toussaint held the title of “Sieur Dussault et Duclos” which means that he was considered a ‘bourgeois’ of Quebec.[20] Toussaint was a ship’s captain and master boatman who is noted at Sillery, Quebec on 25 Apr 1639.[21, 26] On this date he was godfather to a native Indian, baptized with the name Charles Chechouekhe. Given that there were no cross Atlantic voyages during the winter, Toussaint must have been in the country since 1638. On 11 Nov 1639, at the auction and sale of the property of the late Guillaume Hebert (m1650), at Quebec City, Toussaint paid 26 sols for a pair of old breeches or culottes. It is thought that in 1643, Toussaint moved to Trois-Rivieres where he settled near to Gaspard Boucher, his future father-in-law. Toussaint and Marguerite’s marriage contract included a promise from Gaspard to give 200 livres and other effects to his daughter. The Jesuit Journals reveal that on 23 Jan 1646, Toussaint and his brother-in-law, Pierre Boucher, arrived at Quebec City with a Mohawk Indian. At Trois-Rivieres, Toussaint owned a concession of three and a half arpents in frontage on which there was a house. On 3 Jun 1647, he sold this property and the grain that had been sowed that spring. They then moved to Quebec City. In 1648, Toussaint was seeking land on the Beaupre Coast. With permission from Olivier le Tardif (L332) he chose a plot at a place called Sault a la Puce. On 14 Jun 1650, this property was officially ceded to Toussaint, who became Sieur du Sault. The farm was over seven arpents of frontage by one and a half leagues in depth. On 8 Dec 1652, Toussaint detached 1 arpent in frontage to give to his sister-in-law, Madeleine Boucher (L983) and her husband, Urbain Beaudry. On 11 Oct 1654, Robert Paré (m1884) was hired by Toussaint to construct a house in Quebec City. Toussaint Toupin furnished all the materials and transported them to the riverbank in the city. Construction was to be finished by 10 Jul 1655, for the agreed upon price of 154 livres tournois. On 15 Jul 1655, Toussaint acquired a site 40 by 40 feet in the Lower Town, Quebec City on Rue Sault-au-Matelot. He had a two-storey stone house built there with two heated rooms, cellar, attic, small bakery, lean-to, small forge and yard. In October of that year, they rented their farm on the Beaupre Coast then moved to Quebec City for the winter. With his small boat, Toussaint did coastal trading on the river. On 12 Apr 1657, he bought a pew in the church of Notre-Dame. In 1662, the governor of Quebec gave Toussaint some land that was situated near the present site of NotreDame-des-Victoires. The 1666 census notes that Toussaint was a ‘master of barges’ with one of his vessels rather large at 20 tons and valued at 1300 livres. An inventory of their property completed in January 1670, included: at the quay of Quebec: a small boat; items in the house: furniture, kitchen utensils, a bin, bedding and clothing in quantity, a small silver cup, two mirrors valued at 3 livres each, six guns, two muskets, one cavalry rifle, one carbine, three pistols; items in the forge: an anvil, hammers, tongs, hand saw, small mold for casting goose and duck lead pieces, two pierriers, a type of small cannon used on small boats to repel boarders; items in the attic: scrap iron, eight pair of snowshoes, seven pair of moccasins, two packets of fish hooks; items in the cellar: butter, salt, eel, cow meat, beaver skins; animals on the farm at Château-Richer: three oxen, seven cows, three heifers, three bulls. Toussaint and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follows in the order of their birth: Mr. Toupin (20 Aug 1647 / 21 Aug 1647), Jean (10 Dec 1648 near Longue-Pointe, present day Chateau-Richer / wed Marie Gloria, daughter of his father’s second wife, 3 Jun 1669 / died 24 Nov 1700 La-Pointe-aux-Ecureils), Marie (19 Aug 1651 / Pierre Mouet, a Carignan soldier, 8 Apr 1668 Trois-Rivieres / 13 Mar 1723 Trois-Rivieres), Antoine (k238), Marguerite (17 Feb 1659 / 27 Feb 1659), Francois - 231 - (10 Jun 1660 / 22 Apr 1682).[9, 21, 22] Toussaint next wed Marie Bourdon, a Filles a Marier and widow of Jean Gloria, on 3 Jun 1669 at Notre-Dame de Quebec, Quebec City. They were part of a double wedding ceremony as Toussaint’s son, Jean, married Ms. Bourdon’s daughter, Marie Gloria in the same celebration. Vital statistics for Toussaint’s three children with Ms. Bourdon include: Jeanne (9 Feb 1670 Quebec City / Guillaume Guyon dit DuBuisson 3 Nov 1688 Quebec City / 18 May 1711 Quebec City) , Elizabeth-Ursule (1 May 1672 Chateau-Richer / Jean Cauchon 6 Apr 1690 Chateau-Richer / after the death of her husband and two children, she entered the Hotel-Dieu of Quebec as a novice on 15 Aug 1694 and later became the first person consecrated in the Toupin line / 21 Feb 1738 Quebec City), Jean-Baptiste Toussaint (7 Jan 1675 Chateau-Richer / took his father’s first name as his surname / 5 Jan 1699 Baie-St-Paul).[5, 9, 21, 26] On 3 Nov 1672, Intendant Jean Talon granted Toussaint and his son, Jean, the fief or seigneurie of Belair called La Pointe-aux-Ecureils.[21, 26] This farm comprised a half-league in frontage on the river, by a league in depth. It was primarily his son, Jean, who developed this property in the many years that he worked there. Toussaint rented his forge to notary and locksmith Romain Becquet at the rate of fifty livres per year. On 14 May 1676, Toussaint Toupin rented his house at Quebec City to Jean Lerouge.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise: L478 / L479: JEAN CLOUTIER : MARIE MARTIN FATHER: Zacharie Cloutier : Abraham Martin dit l’Ecossais MOTHER: Xainte Dupont : Marguerite-Genevieve Langlois BORN: 13 May 1620 St-Jean-de-Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 24, 25, 29] : 10 Apr 1635 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25] DIED: 16 Oct 1690 Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 24, 25, 29] : 25 Apr 1699 Chateau-Richer [5, 9, 24, 25] MARRIED: 21 Jan 1648 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 24, 25] MEMOIRS: Jean arrived in New France with his family in 1635.[25] Jean became a carpenter.[21, 24] Louise’s sibling birth/marriage/death details (all at Chateau-Richer, Quebec) include the following: Ms. Cloutier (6 Oct 1650 Quebec City / 7 Oct 1650 Quebec City), Jean (20 Feb 1652 Quebec City / Louise Belanger-see L816, on 14 Nov 1679 / 4 Dec 1709), Marie-Rose (16 Feb 1655 / Jean-Francois Belanger-see L816, on 17 Nov 1671 / 6 Feb 1682), Marguerite (15 Feb 1656 / Robert Caron 14 Nov 1674 / ca 1727 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre), Louise (k239), Anne (30 May 1659 / Paschal Mercier 11 Nov 1681 / 2nd marriage, Antoine Buteau ca 1697 / 27 Jul 1714), Saintes (ca 1660 / Charles Fortin dit Bellefontaine 11 Nov 1681 / 22 Sep 1725 L’Islet), Joseph (14 Aug 1663 / 7 Apr 1671), Paul (18 Sep 1665 / 25 Sep 1665), Pierre (15 Apr 1667 / Jeanne Verreault 27 Feb 1696 / 12 Apr 1703), Francoise (29 Sep 1669 / Antoine Doyon 11 Feb 1686 / 2nd marriage, Joseph Pasquier 16 Nov 1711 / 12 Apr 1721), Angelique (18 Jan 1672 / 15 Apr 1699), Agnes (18 Nov 1673 / Joseph Fortin dit Bellefontaine 25 Oct 1691), Magdeleine (6 May 1676 / Julien Maufils 25 May 1693 / 25 Apr 1699 Ste-Annede-Beaupre).[5, 9, 21, 22, 8, 25] Jean Cloutier’s descendants remained in the ancestral home for three centuries.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Guillaume: L480 / L481: OLIVIER le TARDIF : BARBE EMARD FATHER: Jean Tardif : Jean Emard MOTHER: Clemence Houart : Marie Bineau MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L332). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite: L482 / L483: CHARLES GODIN : MARIE BOUCHER FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Jacques Godin : Marin Boucher Marguerite Niard : Perrine Mallet Their biographies may be viewed at number (L334). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 232 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Pierre: L484 / L485: ANTOINE ROY dit Desjardins : MARIE MAJOR FATHER: Olivier Roy : Jean Major MOTHER: Catherine Baudard : Marguerite Lepelle BORN: 23 Mar 1635 [5, 9, 25, 27, 45] : 26 Feb 1637 [5, 9, 25, 45] [5, 9, 25, 27, 45] PLACE: St-Jean, Joigny, Sens, Burgundy : St-Thomas-de-Touques, Lisieux, Normandy [5, 9, 25, 27, 45] DIED: 10 Jul 1684 Lachine, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] : 8 Dec 1689 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 45] MARRIED: 11 Sep 1668 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 27, 45] MEMOIRS: Antoine first wed Catherine Guyot about 1657.[5, 22, 45] He had two children with Ms. Guyot: Jacques (5 Nov 1658 St-Jean, Joigny), Edme (13 Mar 1660 St-Jean, Joigny).[5, 45] Antoine was already working as a cooper like his father.[45] He left Larochelle on 19 Apr 1665 and arrived in Canada on 18 Jun 1665 as a soldier with the Froment Company of the Carignan Regiment aboard the ship Le Vieux Simeon. [5, 18, 27, 45] While waiting the arrival of the remaining companies of the regiment, which numbered twenty in all, the freshly disembarked troops left Quebec on 23 Jul 1665 for the foot of the rapids on the Richelieu River near Montreal. There with the other soldiers that made up the advance party, Antoine Roy helped construct a wooden fort named Fort Saint Louis. Two other forts were also raised in the region, Fort Richelieu and Fort Sainte Thérèse. After the arrival of the rest of the troops, the 24 companies of the regiment were posted to several locations in Canada. Eight companies were garrisoned in Quebec, one at Sainte Famille on Ile d'Orleans, three at Trois-Rivières, five at Montreal, two at Fort Saint Louis, two at Fort Richelieu, and three at Fort Sainte -Thérèse. The company to which Antoine Roy belonged was posted to Trois-Rivières, where it remained for two years from the fall of 1665 to the summer of 1667. As soon as peace between the French and Iroquois was settled on 8 Jul 1667 at Quebec City, the Carignan Regiment was recalled to France. Its presence in North America was no longer required since the Iroquois had been pacified and the Algonquins were allies. Both Indian nations formed a protective barrier between the French colony in Canada and the various English establishments further south. On 28 Aug 1667, the expeditionary force left the port of Quebec on board the Saint Sébastien bound for France. Of the 1200 soldiers who had come in 1665 to fight the Iroquois, 500 returned to their native country, 250 died during the French Indian wars and 450 remained in Canada. Antoine was among those that remained along the Saint Lawrence River. On 20 Oct 1667, he obtained from the Jesuits of the Cap de la Madeleine a land concession within their vast domain in Batiscan. The grant was signed in front of the notary of Trois-Rivières, Guillaume de La Rue.[45] Marie Major was a Kings Daughter with a 300 pound dowry who left for Canada in 1668.[18, 27, 45] The couple struggled financially which finally pushed Antoine’s creditors to take him to court at Trois-Rivières in 1682. Pressed by his lenders and unable to honor his debts, Antoine fled his household in June 1683 to live alone at the home of Julien Talua at Lachine on the Isle of Montreal. There he pursued his career as a master cooper. Found by Michel Lecourt, his principal lender, he was again dragged before the court, this time in Montreal in May 1684. Antoine was subsequently thrown in jail for a month. On 1 Jul 1684, Antoine accepted the terms offered by Lecourt to settle his outstanding debts of several years.[45] Just a short while later, Antoine’s landlord, Mr. Talua, returned early from the fields and found his wife in bed with Antoine. Mr. Talua took a stick and beat Antoine to death.[18, 27, 45] Mr. Talua’s wife, Anne Godeby, a Kings Daughter from Normandy, was tried for adultery and banished from the island of Montreal for life under penalty of whipping and being secured in irons should she return. Mr. Talua was sentenced to death and had his property confiscated by the Montreal magistrate. On appeal the Sovereign Council granted a new trial for the following year. Mr. Talua was eventually freed from prison and disappeard, never to be seen again. [18, 27] After Antoine was killed, Marie Major took her children to Quebec City where son, Pierre worked as a cooper.[45] Antoine and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Pierre (k242), Augustin (twin to Pierre, 18 Dec 1671 Quebec City / 11 Oct 1748 Lorette, Quebec), Jean-Baptiste (ca 1681 / Catherine Cotineau ca 1729).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 233 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Marie Anne: L486 / L487: JOACHIM MARTIN : ANNE-CHARLOTTE PETIT FATHER: Jacques Martin : Pierre Petit MOTHER: Luce Chalut : Catherine Desnoyers BORN: ca 1642 Estree, Eveche, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9, 21, 25] : ca 1646 St-Germain-Auxourois, Paris [5, 21, 25] [5, 9, 21] DIED: 30 Jun 1690 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans : 2 Mar 1736 St-Augustin, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] MARRIED: 16 Jun 1669 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25] MEMOIRS: Joachim left for Canada in 1656.[27] At Larochelle on 11 Apr 1656, Joachim signed a three year contract of indenture in New France. Promised a salary of 75 livres per year he departed on the ship, Le Taureau. Also aboard ship was the 18 year old farmer from Surges, Jean Rabouin (see j196 and L660). On 1 Feb 1660, Joachim leased a farm at La Caput in the territory of L’Ange-Gardien but that July he opted out of the contract.[21] Joachim first wed Marie Chalifoux (see j151) on 5 Nov 1662 at Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 21, 22] The Chalifoux’s promised to feed the newlyweds for a year and to build them a house measuring 18 by 16 feet on the Ile d’Orleans. Joachim was to provide 20 minots of wheat. Ms. Chalifoux died on 12 Oct 1663 at only 14 years of age. Upon his sister, Marie’s wedding, Joachim endowed her with a half-arpent of his land in the seigneurie of Lirec at Ile d’Orleans. The 1667 census shows Joachim with nine arpents of land under cultivation living next door to his sister, Marie and her family. The marriage contract of Joachim and Anne-Charlotte stipulated that the Petits would give the newlyweds a half-piece of property in the fief of Neuville. On 20 Mar 1680, Joachim signed a three-year share cropping lease with Pierre Denis. The property was located at Notre-Dame-des-Anges, at La Canardiere and had a ‘habitable house, stable yards’, barn, garden and workable lands of six arpents frontage. Joachim would keep half of the grain harvested and deliver the other half to his master, Denis. Joachim could take wood to heat his house and even sell it, ‘but not touch the small wood near the house’. The 1681 census shows Joachim and family living at la Petite Auvergne and having one gun, ten cattle and 15 arpents of cultivated land. Also in the household was Anne-Charlotte’s father, Pierre. On 31 Mar 1683, Joachim ‘living in this city’ was contracted by Anne Auber, to deliver to her property, some stones, lumber, planks and lime ‘which she needed’ to build a house in Lower Town, Quebec City. For the ‘transporting of the said stones’, Joachim would receive three livres ‘for each boat load’. As for the other materials, he would receive five sols. In 1685, the Martins moved to the parish of St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans and lived in a house measuring 24 by 18 feet.[21] MarieAnne’s sibling birth/marriage/death data (at St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans) follows: Louis (12 Jun 1671 Ste-Famille / Louise Ratte 12 Jan 1700 / 23 May 1749 La-Pocatiere), Marie-Anne (k243), Marguerite (6 Jan 1675 Ste-Famille / Jean Jollet 18 Feb 1692 St-Laurent / 13 Nov 1751 Quebec City), Angelique (4 Mar 1678 Ste-Famille / Pierre Chantal dit Lafleur 12 Jan 1696 / 9 Nov 1758), Catherine-Francoise (19 May 1680 Quebec City / Jean-Baptiste Labourliere dit Laplante 11 Feb 1697 / 16 Jan 1747 Kamouraska), Francois (22 Jun 1683 Quebec City / Francoise Autin 25 Nov 1710 Riviere-Ouelle / 13 Feb 1747), Jean-Baptiste (2 Dec 1686 / Marie Genest dit Labarre 25 Feb 1710 / 4 Aug 1761 Kamouraska), Charlotte (16 Jan 1689 / Louis Vernat dit Dufresne 25 Feb 1710 / 2nd marriage, Pierre Ratte 14 Oct 1725 Quebec City / 3 Dec 1749 St-Augustin).[5, 9, 21, 25] Anne-Charlotte Petit next wed Antoine Juchereau on 10 Sep 1691 at St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans.[5, 9, 21, 22] Mr. Juchereau provided a dowry of 5000 livres and they settled on an equal preciput of 1000 livres. On 5 Mar 1695, Anne-Charlotte’s daughter, Marie-Anne renounced her share of the estate on the sole condition that she be given a pregnant cow. Mr. Juchereau died on 3 May 1699. On 27 Apr 1701, Anne-Charlotte promised to pay her daughter, Angelique’s debt, 288 livres ‘for balance of account for merchandise delivered ... up to that day’.[21] Anne-Charlotte next wed Jean-Paul Maheu on 11 Jun 1703 at St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans.[5, 9, 21, 22, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Rene: L488 / L489: RENE OUELLET : ANNE RIVET FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Francois Ouellet : Joseph-Jacques Rivet Elisabeth Barre : Marie Doré Their biographies may be viewed at number (L456). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 234 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Angelique: L490 / L491: NICOLAS LEBEL : THERESE MIGNAULT dit Chatillon FATHER: Clement Lebel : Jean Mignault dit Chatillon MOTHER: Francoise Lagnel : Louise Cloutier BORN: ca 1632 Illeville-sur-Montfort, Rouen [5, 9, 21] : 9 Sep 1651 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] [5, 9] DIED: 2 May 1678 La-Pocatiere, Kamouraska, PQ : 3 Dec 1728 La-Pocatiere, Kamouraska [5, 9, 21, 25] MARRIED: 2 Apr 1665 @ La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: Nicolas Lebel’s presence in Canada was first noted on 13 May 1657, when he received a half arpent of frontal land at Chateau-Richer from Pierre Gagnon. Lebel was committed to building a house within the year and to work there by that autumn. Jean Cauchon (o7550) granted Lebel an adjoining property that was two arpents of frontage by a league and a half in depth. Nicolas would pay Cauchon 42 sols and one capon for the rents and cens owed to the seigneurs of Beaupre. It is thought that Nicolas had been working for these two men since his arrival to Canada in the summer of 1654.[21] Nicolas first wed Marie Drouin on 28 Nov 1662 at La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer.[5, 21, 22] Ms. Drouin’s father, Robert (L186) promised a gift of 100 livres cash, a milk cow, some clothes and dishes while Nicolas offered her a dowry of 400 livres. Ms. Drouin drowned on the morning of 2 May 1664. Therese Mignault had attended the convent of the Ursulines of Quebec for a while. At the marriage contract ceremony, the Mignaults promised 150 livres, a wedding dress, linens, dishes and utensils. The census of 1667 reveals that Nicolas and Therese owned one cow and had eight arpents of land under cultivation. On 29 Dec 1668, Nicolas returned his first farm to Pierre Gagnon for 100 livres. About 1675, several people from the Beaupre Coast, Beauport and the Ile d’Orleans settled on the south bank of the St-Lawrence. These regions of Riviere-Ouelle and Grand-Anse consisted of fertile lands, forests abounding with wild game, clear streams and a river full of fish as well as numerous available concessions. Nicolas obtained lot number 18 at La-Pocatiere, which was four arpents of frontage by 42 deep. On 30 Sep 1676, Nicolas sold his second property with a house, barn and 15 arpents of land cleared to Pierre Gagnon for 800 livres with the condition that he be allowed to live ‘with his family and animals on the said homestead until the feast of Pentecost of the next year’.[21] Nicolas and Therese’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all Riviere-Ouelle) includes: Jean (22 Jan 1670 Chateau-Richer / Marie-Anne Soucy 16 Aug 1689 / 6 Oct 1699), Angelique (k245), Nicolas (9 May 1675 Chateau-Richer / Madeleine Michaud 23 Aug 1707 / ca 1721), Joseph (3 Jul 1677 / Marie-Catherine Boutin dit Labonte 22 Nov 1701 / 6 Aug 1747 St-Roch).[5, 9, 21] Therese Mignault next wed Rene Ouellet (L456-father-in-law of Therese’s daughter, Angelique) on 6 Feb 1679 at Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 21, 22] Vital statistics for Therese and Mr. Ouellet’s children (all Riviere-Ouelle) include: Therese (ca 1680 / Charles Pelletier 7 Jan 1698 / 25 Jul 1707), Francoise (10 Jul 1682 La-Pocatiere / Andre Mignier dit Legace 31 May 1701 / 7 Jan 1728 La-Pocatiere), Sebastien (16 Apr 1685 / Madeleine Lizotte 16 Aug 1707 / 14 Jan 1756 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Anne (ca 1687 / Charles Boucher 18 Nov 1704 / 7 Feb 1758), Angelique (16 Oct 1690 / Ignace Berube 16 Aug 1707 / 2nd marriage, Jean-Baptiste Pelletier 16 Apr 1714 / 4 Jan 1756 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Francois (12 Sep 1693 / wed Marie-Anne Bouchard / 3 Jan 1754), Marie (4 Oct 1696 / 3 Nov 1745 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies).[9, 21, 25] Therese Mignault is buried at Berceau de Kamouraska cemetery. Nicolas Lebel is our common ancestor with Father Gerald Lebel, who is the author of the series, Nos Ancestres, a key resource for this family history.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie: L494 / L495: JEAN-GALLERAN BOUCHER : MARIE LECLERC FATHER: Marin Boucher : Jonas Leclerc MOTHER: Perrine Mallet : Marie Parmentier BORN: 16 Feb 1633 St-Langis, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 26] : 12 Jan 1634 St-Remi, Dieppe, Normandy [5, 26] DIED: 28 Mar 1714 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 26] : 8 Oct 1702 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 26] MARRIED: 10 Oct 1661 @ La Visitation de Notre Dame, Chateau-Richer, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 26] MEMOIRS: Marie came to Canada in 1661 as a Filles a Marier. Prior to leaving, Marie sold her father a small house that was to be her inheritance for the sum of 150 livres which she used to help pay the passage to Canada and settle in the new world. Jean-Galleran was a mason who came to New France with his family in 1634 having been recruited by Robert Giffard and Noel Juchereau. The family first settled on the Riviere-StCharles before Jean-Galleran’s father received a land grant at Chateau-Richer. After marriage Jean-Galleran - 235 - and Marie lived in an area that became L’Ange-Gardien when that parish was created in 1669. In 1671, the family moved to the seigneurie of La Bouteillerie or Riviere-Ouelle. The 1681 census lists Jean-Galleran as a carriage maker.[26] In 1690, Jean-Galleran and sons, Pierre and Philippe were involved in defending Riviere-Ouelle against the English under Admiral Phipps who was on his way to lay siege to Quebec City. The parish priest, Father Pierre de Francheville, discovered that the English fleet was sailing up the StLawrence and might land at Riviere-Ouelle. Since Seigneur Jean-Baptiste de la Bouteillerie was in Quebec City, the town’s inhabitants asked their priest to guide them in battle. Soon the enemy fleet dropped anchor off Riviere-Ouelle and a few English troops headed ashore in launches, perhaps to collect some fresh water. The men of the town, led by their priest, hid at the edge of the forest. Just as the English were disembarking on the shore, the citizens of Riviere-Ouelle opened fire with a barrage of bullets. The handful of English soldiers hurried to their rowboats and headed back to their ships.[21, 25, 26] Others in this family history who were involved included: Rene Ouellet (L456) with sons Joseph, Mathurin and Gregoire; Michel Bouchard (L460) with sons, Etienne, Francois and Pierre; Jean Pelletier (m918). Jean-Galleran and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Riviere-Ouelle): Marie (k297), Pierre (9 Nov 1664 Chateau-Richer / Marie-Elisabeth Michaud 19 Jul 1695 / 23 Sep 1737 Kamouraska), Philippe (13 Nov 1666 Chateau-Richer / Marie-Anne Mignier 10 Nov 1693 Kamouraska / 27 Jan 1750 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Marguerite (1 May 1669 / 16 Jun 1669 L’Ange-Gardien), Madeleine (24 Jun 1670 L’Ange-Gardien / Jean de Lavoie 22 Oct 1688 Notre-Dame-de-Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle / 3 Mar 1723 Quebec City), Catherine (24 Feb 1673 / 6 Aug 1690 Quebec City), Anne (28 Nov 1675 Quebec City / Francois Duval 21 Jan 1692 / 19 Oct 1762 Cap-St-Ignace), Francois (3 Feb 1677 / wed Jeanne Gaudreau 16 Nov 1701 Cap-St-Ignace).[5, 9, 21, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Mathurin: L496 / L497: MATHURIN DUBÉ : MARIE CAMPION FATHER: Jean Dubé : Pierre Campion MOTHER: Renée Suzanne : Marguerite Henault BORN: ca 1632 La-Chapelle-Themer, Lucon, Poitou [5, 9, 21, 27, 45] : ca 1654 St-Nicaise, Rouen, Normandy [5, 9] DIED: 28 Dec 1695 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 27, 45] : 28 Jan 1697 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 3 Sep 1670 @ Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 27, 45] MEMOIRS: Marie was a Kings Daughter who left for Canada in 1670 with a dowry of goods worth 200 livres.[18, 21, 27] Mathurin Dubé was noted in the 1666 census working at Beaupre. Mathurin and Marie settled at Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans. They moved in 1679, to St-Jean and then in 1684 to Riviere-Ouelle.[27] Lebel reports that Mathurin worked for Monsigneur de Laval for several years. On 22 Jun 1667, Bishop Laval conceded his servant a piece of land, three arpents in frontage by half that in width on Ile d’Orleans, within the boundaries of the parish of St-Jean, facing the south bank of the St-Lawrence River. The 1681 census lists Mathurin as 50 years of age and Marie as 27. They worked three arpents of land and had one cow. In 1684, Mathurin sold the farm at St-Jean and signed a lease to work the land of the seigneur of Auteuil at Grand-Anse, in the seigneurie of La-Pocatiere. They lived close to the seigneurial manor so Mathurin could use the bakehouse, barn and stable as well as work the fields. The lease specified that he was to cultivate the land, seed half of it and raise as many cows as he could.[21] Mathurin and Marie’s children birth/marriage/death details (all at Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska, Quebec unless otherwise noted) include the following: Mathurin (k248), Madeleine (17 Sep 1673 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / Charles Bouchard 5 Apr 1690 / 15 Jun 1749) , Louis (19 May 1676 Ste-Famille / Angelique Boucher 28 Jan 1697 / 1 May 1747) , Pierre (18 Dec 1678 Ste-Famille / Marie-Therese Boucher 7 Jan 1704), Charles (27 Oct 1680 St-Jean, Ile d’Orleans / ca 1682 St-Jean), Laurent (20 Apr 1683 St-Jean / Genevieve Boucher 7 Jan 1706 / 8 Apr 1768 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere), Augustin (ca 1687 / Marie-Anne Soucy 7 Jan 1720 Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere / 12 Nov 1779), Anne (23 Oct 1691 / 4 Nov 1691), Jean (8 Jan 1694 / died as an infant).[5, 9, 22, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 236 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne: L498 / L499: FRANCOIS MIVILLE dit Le Suisse : MARIE LANGLOIS FATHER: Pierre Miville dit Le Suisse : Noel Langlois MOTHER: Charlotte Maugis : Francoise Garnier BORN: 16 May 1634 [5, 9, 21, 25, 27, 29, 45] : 18 Oct 1646 [5, 9, 25, 26] [5, 9, 21, 25, 27, 45] PLACE: Notre-Dame-de-Brouage, Rochefort, Saintes : Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 26, 45] DIED: 23 Nov 1711 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 27, 45] : 14 Aug 1687 Quebec City [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] MARRIED: 10 Aug 1660 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: Francois Miville was a woodworker.[27] In 1656, a note concerning the awarding of a pew in the church of Quebec to Francois includes, ‘fifth row of pews or timbers which serve as seats beginning from the confessional which is below the pew of Sieur Noel Morin the place measures in all three feet from top to bottom projecting ten feet from the wall of the north side running towards the nave to be used by the said Francois Miville he and his heirs into perpetuity’. On 22 Nov 1657, Francois and his brother-in-law, Antoine Poulet, plus two others formed a partnership for working the ‘main part of a boat thirty feet from the keel’. Poulet, a ship’s carpenter, would direct the others in the construction of the vessel. Each was to pay 114 livres. On 24 Nov 1659, Francois was awarded the post of fiscal administrator of the seigneurie of Lauzon. The seigneur, Jean de Lauzon, also gave Francois the authority to collect the cens and rents for the seigneur. In 1660, Francois promised his fiancée 200 livres as a prefixed dowry. He obtained a farm with three arpents of frontage in the seigneurie of Lauzon on 29 Jun 1661. The 1667 census indicates that Francois, Marie and their three children were living on the Lauzon Coast and had 12 arpents of cultivated land. On 3 Nov 1672, Intendant Talon ceded Francois, a fief of ‘16 arpents of frontal land by fifty deep on the riviere de la Chaudiere, with the isle Fortunee, in the place called la Bonne entente’. This fief had to wait more than ten years before being worked. In the 1681 census, Francois was still living on the Lauzon coast practising his trade of cabinetmaking and had a gun, three cattle and five arpents of land cleared. In 1683, Francois ceded a piece of land to his friend Jean Lienard who was also allowed to trade in furs on the condition that he gives half the profits to his seigneur, Francois Miville. On 3 Oct 1688, Charles Aubert de la Chesnaye leased to Francois and his son, Joseph, for a period of nine years, a homestead at Grand Anse, consisting of workable land, woods and a new barn. He and his son had to pay an annual rent in grain, livestock and poultry, plus 270 livres at the end of the lease which was the value of the four oxen which he could use.[21] Francois and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City) includes: Francoise (5 Jun 1663 / Pierre Richard 6 Nov 1680 L`Islet / 1 Aug 1727 Cap-St-Ignace), Michelle (30 Mar 1665 Riviere-Ouelle / Michel Gosselin 12 Nov 1684 Ile d’Orleans / 2nd marriage, Michel Baugis 2 Jun 1704 / 27 Oct 1726 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans), Francois (20 Feb 1667 Levis, Lauzon), Joseph (8 Jun 1669 / Genevieve Caron 8 Jan 1695 Cap-St-Ignace / 25 Jan 1736 Montmagny), Jeanne (11 Apr 1671 / Denis Boucher dit Desrosier 21 Nov 1689 / 3 Nov 1744 St-Nicolas), Anne (k249), Jacques (27 Apr 1675 / Catherine Lecuyer dit Lapierre 20 Feb 1706 Montreal / 5 Apr 1717), Jean-Baptiste (27 Jun 1677 / 1 Jul 1707 Montmagny), Charles (11 Mar 1679 / Marie-Angelique Savaria 16 Apr 1703 Beauport / 12 Jan 1758 Terrebonne), JeanFrancois (14 Aug 1681 / 18 Oct 1703 Beauport), Angelique (20 Jun 1683 / Louis Gamache 26 Apr 1702 Cap-St-Ignace / 7 Jan 1745 Cap-St-Ignace), Pierre (ca 1685 Levis, Lauzon / 30 May 1688). Francois Miville’s second marriage was with Jeanne Sauvenier (L501) on 7 Nov 1692 at Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle. Francois had one daughter with in this union: Marie-Francoise (18 Jan 1694 Riviere-Ouelle / Prisque Boucher 6 Apr 1712 Riviere-Ouelle / 18 Jun 1758 Lauzon, Levis).[5, 9, 18, 21, 22, 25, 27] Francois Miville lived out his remaining days at Riviere-Ouelle.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Pierre: L500 / L501: JEAN SOUCY dit Lavigne : JEANNE SAUVENIER FATHER: Claude Soucy : Jacques Sauvenier MOTHER: Francoise de Vaime : Antoinette Babilette BORN: ca 1645 St-Vulfran, Abbeville, Amien, Picardie [5, 9, 21, 27, 45] : 3 Sep 1646 Paris, France [9] DIED: ca 1679 Ile-aux-Grues, Quebec [5, 9] : 12 Mar 1721 Riviere-Ouelle, PQ [5, 9, 20, 27, 45] MARRIED: 10 May 1670 @ Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5, 9, 45] MEMOIRS: Lebel reports that on 13 May 1665, the ship named L’Aigle d’Or, an old worm-eaten hulk, left the port of Larochelle with 200 soldiers in four companies. The crossing took more than three months. - 237 - Captain Villepars finally reached the shores of the Gaspé with this old ship which had sprung a leak on the high seas. They anchored just downstream from the Saguenay River and went ashore to hire an experienced pilot to guide them downriver to Quebec City. The L’Aigle d’Or made it back to France and served one last purpose in a naval action as a giant fireship.[21] Jean Soucy was a soldier in the Grandfontaine Company of the Carignan Regiment who arrived at Quebec City on 17 Aug 1665.[9, 45] He first wed Madeleine Marechal, a Kings Daughter on 6 Oct 1669 at Quebec City.[5, 9, 45] This union was annulled just seven days later when it was discovered that she was already married.[21, 45] Lebel cites Marie de l’Incarnation who wrote, ‘during the course of the last week of August, numerous soldiers received the scapular of Mont-Carmel ... there were indeed five hundred soldiers who took the scapular of the Virgin Saint’. One of those soldiers listed above was Jean Soucy. On 2 Sep 1665, Jean’s company made their way to the Richelieu River to begin to provide resistance to the Iroquois activities. There they built Fort St-Therese and then began to build a road linking this fort with that of Fort St-Louis at Chambly. Jean Soucy and his company then returned to Quebec City for the winter. In 1666, he took part in the campaign against the Mohawks beyond Lake Champlain and on 17 Oct 1666, the army took possession of the invaded territory.[21] Jeanne Sauvenier came to Canada in 1670 as a Kings Daughter.[18, 21, 27, 45] Her father had left the family when Jeanne was a baby and her mother abandoned her to public charity due to lack of means of sustaining her.[45] Jeanne had been one of the orphans at the house of Misericorde, founded by President Seguier in 1624. These girls were schooled in the arts and in letters according to the principles of the Catholic religion. From time to time they were called upon to put on recitations and plays at Court.[21] In 1669, Jean Soucy began working for one of his former officers, Pierre Becart who was seigneur of Ile-aux-Grues, having had acquired half of the islands, Ile-auxGrues and Ile-aux-Oies which were situated in the St-Lawrence River not far from Ile-d’Orleans. Jean Soucy helped to build the manor house for his seigneur. He was then ceded some land on Ile-aux-Grues where he built a house in 1674.[21, 45] Jean and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Riviere-Ouelle) follow: Anne (5 Sep 1671 Ile-aux-Oies / Jean Lebel 16 Aug 1689 / 2nd marriage, Jacques Bois dit Labaguette 24 Nov 1704 / 4 Feb 1743), Pierre (k250), Marie-Anne (15 Feb 1675 was the first child ever born on Ile-aux-Grues / Charles Pelletier 24 Jan 1701 / 1 Feb 1755 St-Michel, Yamaska), Guillaume (5 Apr 1677 Ile-aux-Grues / had a child with Marguerite Bouchard[5, 9, 21, 22, 27, 45] see L460, in 1704 Quebec City / died ca 1726) . Jeanne Sauvenier next wed Damien Berube, a mason, on 22 Aug 1679 at Ile-aux-Grues, L’Islet.[5, 9, 21, 27, 45] Witnesses at their wedding included Squire Noel Langlois, Seigneur of the Ile-aux-Oies (L186) and Jean Pelletier (m918). Jeanne and Mr. Berube, who was a mason by trade, settled at Riviere-Ouelle where their children’s events occurred: Jeanne-Marguerite (27 Oct 1680 / Rene Plourde 26 Aug 1697 / 26 Feb 1709), Pierre (4 Jan 1682 / Genevieve Dancosse 8 Jan 1706 / 5 Oct 1736) , Ignace (ca 1683 / Angelique-Marguerite Ouellet 16 Aug 1707 / 7 Mar 1709), Josephte (28 Oct 1684 / 8 Mar 1688), Therese (ca 1686 / 8 Mar 1688), Mathurin (17 Oct 1688 / Marie-Angelique Miville 6 Apr 1712 / 20 Nov 1741). Mr. Berube died on 7 Mar 1688, followed by his daughters, Josephte and Therese only one day later.[5, 9, 21, 27] They were likely affected by the epidemics of influenza, measles and other fevers experienced by the colony that year.[21, 27] Jeanne Sauvenier’s third marriage was with Francois Miville dit Le Suisse (L498) on 7 Nov 1692 at Notre Dame de Liesse, Riviere-Ouelle, Kamouraska. They resided at Riviere-Ouelle and had one daughter together named, Marie-Francoise (18 Jan 1694 Riviere-Ouelle / Prisque Boucher 6 Apr 1712 Riviere-Ouelle / 18 Jun 1758 Lauzon, Levis).[5, 9, 18, 21, 22, 27] According to Lebel, Jeanne’s marriage contract with Mr. Miville read ‘to hold no property in common between them, notwithstanding custom and usage’. Jeanne set about to inventory her belongings with the help of Guillaume Lizotte and Rene Ouellete, in the presence of Robert Levesque. She gave the inheritance from Mr. Berube back to his living children in four equal parts. The livestock was divided into two lots, one for the Berube children and the other for the Soucys. Then the last child, Marie-Francoise, whose father, Mr. Miville, was still living, renounced her part of the inheritance in favour of her half siblings. Jeanne and Francois retained the right of occupancy during their lifetime and Pierre Berube, who inherited the piece of property with the house on it, accepted the guardianship of his mother and her husband. The land was 12 by 24 arpents and contained a house, shed, old stable, pigsty, five cattle, three horses, seven pigs, seven sheep, 12 chickens, one rooster and two turkeys. In return for the early assignment of their inheritance the children were required, each year, to furnish the parents with two bushels of wheat, 10 pounds of lard. Jeanne Sauvenier and her husband could even make maple sugar for their - 238 - personal use. This lifetime lease was to continue for one year after the death of Jeanne Sauvenier in order to cover her funeral expenses and to have twenty-five Masses celebrated for the eternal repose of her soul.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth Ursule: L502 / L503: URBAIN FOUQUEREAU : JEANNE ROSSIGNOL dit Grossonneau FATHER: Jean Fouquereau : Martin Rossignol dit Grossonneau MOTHER: Renée Bataille : Renée Desjardins BORN: ca 1651 : 7 Aug 1650 [5, 9, 29] PLACE: St-Martin-Continvoir, Chinon, Angers [5, 9, 27, 29] : St-Pierre, Montfort-Amaury, Rambouilet, Chartres [5, 9, 27, 29] DIED: 24 Feb 1700 [5, 9, 27, 29, 45] : 22 Jan 1712 [5, 9, 27, 29] BURIED: St-Francois-de-Sales, Neuville, PQ [5, 9, 27, 29] : Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 27, 29] MARRIED: 28 Dec 1676 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 27, 29, 45] MEMOIRS: Jeanne was a Kings Daughter.[5, 18, 27, 29] After her father’s death, Jeanne left for Canada in 1670 with goods worth about 200 livres as her dowry.[27] Jeanne first wed Charles Petit on 1 Sep 1670 at Notre Dame de Quebec and had two sons: Jacques (1 Nov 1672 Quebec City / Charlotte Dupuis 24 Nov 1712 StFrancois-du-Lac, Quebec / 28 Oct 1714 St-Francois du Lac), Nicolas (29 Dec 1673 Quebec City / Marie-Marguerite Bertrand 14 Sep 1700 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 2nd marriage, Marie-Jeanne Sylvestre 24 Feb 1727 L’Enfant Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles / 3 Feb 1731 Cap-Sante, Portneuf). Jeanne next wed Jacques Forget on 4 Feb 1674 at Notre Dame de Quebec and had one son: Jean (31 Oct 1675 Neuville / Therese Thibault 13 Jul 1723 St-Francois / 13 May 1759 Ste-Rose).[5, 9, 18, 22, 27] Urbain Fouquereau and Jeanne settled at Neuville and their offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Francoisde-Sales) includes: Pierre (3 Aug 1677 Dombourg, Quebec City / died ca 1682), Urbain (Dec 1678 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 22 Apr 1769 Repentigny), Elisabeth-Ursule (k251), Michel (5 Oct 1681), Andre (20 Dec 1683 / Marie-Francoise Aupry 18 Apr 1720 La Nativite-de-la-Prairie / died ca 1721 Laprairie), Madeleine (10 Jul 1686 / Jacques Richaume 25 Feb 1710 Repentigny / 18 Nov 1765 Repentigny), Guillaume (23 Mar 1690 / Marie-Anne Riviere 10 Mar 1719 Repentigny / 22 Apr 1769 La Purification de la Bienheureuse Vierge Marie, Repentigny), Anne (3 Jul 1693 / Joseph Riviere 24 Nov 1712 Repentigny, L’Assomption / 2 nd marriage, Antoine Laniel dit Desrosiers 29 Nov 1719 Repentigny, L’Assomption / 7 Feb 1767 StGenevieve-de-Pierrefonds, Montreal), Marc (ca 1694 Pointe-aux-Trembles / Therese Dumas ca 1720), Helene (14 Feb 1696 / Michel Rivet 18 Jan 1718 Repentigny / 12 Dec 1736 St-Sulpice, Repentigny).[5, 9, 27, 29] Jeanne Rossignol’s fourth marriage was with Francois Huard dit Laliberte on 2 Sep 1704 at St-Francois-de-Sales, Neuville.[5, 9, 18, 22, 27, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean Baptiste: L504 / L505: JEAN HAYOT : LOUISE PELLETIER FATHER: Thomas Hayot : Nicolas Pelletier MOTHER: Jeanne Boucher : Jeanne de Voisy BORN: 8 Jun 1636 St-Jean, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9] : 10 May 1640 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 29] DIED: 11 Feb 1687 Neuville, Portneuf, Quebec [5, 9] : 7 Nov 1713 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 29] MARRIED: 17 Nov 1653 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 25] MEMOIRS: Jean and Louise were habitants of the Neuville coast. Lebel reports that one night in August 1658, Jean was seized by Iroquois but ‘by shrewdness saved himself from their hands’. Lebel also cites the Relations des Jesuits journal that reveals, ‘on 14 Aug 1658, twenty Mohawks were across from the fort at Trois-Rivieres on the far side of the big river, knowing full well that the Governor had arrived there ... during the evening they went down river and prowled around our houses with the intention of capturing a few Hurons or Algonquins ... instead they threw themselves on Jean Hayot and a companion at Cap-Rouge ... the Indians robbed them and stripped off their clothes without doing them any other harm because the Frenchmen talked themselves out of trouble’.[21] Jean and Louise’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Sillery) includes: Genevieve (ca 1658 / Gabriel Berard dit Lepine 23 Oct 1673 Neuville / 2 nd marriage, Jean Turcot 14 Dec 1712 Neuville), Jean-Baptiste (k252), Marie-Louise (1 May 1664 / Daniel Normandin 11 Feb 1687 Sorel / 26 Mar 1620 Champlain), Marie-Madeleine (14 Feb 1666 / Michel Robert dit Picard 22 Jul 1681 Sorel / 24 Jul 1746 Pointe-auxTrembles), Marie-Therese (15 Feb 1677 / Jean-Baptiste Larcheveque dit Lapromenade 13 Jan 1705 Quebec City / 24 Sep 1732), Angelique (9 Jun 1668 / 12 Nov 1743 Quebec City), Etienne (27 Feb 1673 Quebec City / Felicite-Anne Bonhomme - 239 - dit Beaupre 20 Jan 1702 Neuville / 24 Jul 1758), Marie-Francoise (26 Dec 1674 Quebec City / Claude Garnier 6 Feb 1702 Neuville / 18 Mar 1703), Jean (4 Jan 1677 / Marie-Charlotte Badel dit Lamarche 16 Feb 1711 Lachine / 2 nd marriage, Catherine Pagesi 7 Oct 1711 Champlain, Quebec / 18 Jun 1743), Louis (12 Dec 1679 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 11 Jan 1703).[5, 9, 21, 22, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne Xainte: L506 / L507: JEAN GRONDIN : MARIE-XAINTE MIGNAULT FATHER: Pierre Grondin : Jean Mignault dit Chatillon MOTHER: Marie Rigoulet : Louise Cloutier BORN: 18 Mar 1640 Ste-Marie, Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9] : 6 Jan 1653 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25] DIED: 1 Oct 1714 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 21] : 4 Mar 1736 Ste-Anne, La-Pocatiere [5, 9, 21, 25] MARRIED: 14 Aug 1669 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: According to Lebel, Marie-Xainte and Jean Fortin had a daughter out of wedlock, named Madeleine who was baptized on 26 Apr 1669. Jean Grondin left his homeland at about 26 years of age, after the death of his parents. He is noted in the 1667 census of New France as a servant at the home of seigneur Nicolas Juchereau. Jean and four co-workers took care of 17 head of cattle and 100 arpents of land. Those present at the marriage contract ceremony, at the home of Jean Mignault, included: Toussaint Giroux (k88), Pierre Lefebvre (k102), Zacharie Cloutier (m374) and his wife Xainte Dupont with their children, PierreZacharie (m1306), Charles and Jean (L478), Robert Drouin (L186), Romain Trepanier (see L186), Pierre Maheu (k92) and Nicolas Lebel (L490). Jean Grondin gave a dowry of 300 livres to his bride while the bride’s father promised to give them two arpents of frontage from his farm, to help them build a house and to allow them the use of cut and ready wood and stone for the construction. On 4 Apr 1678, Jean sold this farm totalling two arpents of frontage to the son of his friend, Toussaint Giroux for 500 livres. The details of the sale indicate that the farm now had ‘a small house of stone, wood trimmed with a stable at the end’. Jean and family joined the young community of La Pocatiere along with other pioneers such as his father-in-law, Jean Mignault, Guillaume Lizot (L458), Nicolas Lebel (L490), Rene Ouellet (L456) and Jean Pelletier (m918) with son, Noel (married Marie-Xainte Mignault’s sister, Madeleine). These families became the founding members of the parish of Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere. The registries of Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere were only begun in 1715 so earlier events were recorded at Riviere-Ouelle. In 1708, Jean Grondin gave his farm of six arpents frontage by 40 deep with ten arpents under cultivation to his son, Francois. In exchange Francois would care and provide for his parents until their death. The documents state that Jean Grondin felt incapable of ‘farming the little of his property’ which he owned and that the farm had ‘an old house of upright logs covered with planks sixteen feet long and thirteen feet wide with a clay chimney’. Also transferred to Francois were two oxen, two cows, one steer, two calves, three pigs, six hens and one rooster. Although both sides acted in good faith, the Coutume de Paris did not allow for disinheriting the children to the benefit of one so in 1711 the parents redid the division of their property in a more equitable and legal fashion. The new division was made in favour of Sebastien and Francois. The sisters renounced their shares. In addition to supporting their parents, Sebastien and Francois promised to support their brother, Joseph until he reached the age of 20. Jean and Marie-Xainte kept the area of the garden for their personal use. As for the apple trees, the apples would belong to all of the heirs. When Joseph reached the age of majority, he would have a right to his part of the land in the middle of the six arpents of his brothers.[21] Jean and Marie-Xainte’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere): Marie (4 Feb 1671 Beauport / Sebastien Bonin 25 Nov 1687 Riviere-Ouelle / 23 Apr 1741), Agnes (14 Mar 1673 Beauport / Pierre Emond 31 Mar 1690 Riviere-Ouelle / 24 Nov 1752 Quebec City), Anne-Xainte (k253), Louise (17 Oct 1678 Beauport / Charles Miville 13 Feb 1697 Riviere-Ouelle), Francois (8 Jun 1680 / Marie-Anne Darde dit Belair 29 Oct 1709 Chateau-Richer / 21 Jul 1719), Jean-Baptiste (18 Sep 1682 / Marie-Anne Dubé 8 Feb 1712 / 10 Oct 1723) , Therese (17 Oct 1684 / Pierre Albert 27 Nov 1702 Riviere-Ouelle / died ca 1736), Sebastien (17 Oct 1687 / Marie-Anne Pinel 27 July 1712 / 31 Dec 1749 Cap-St-Ignace), Jeanne-Marguerite (20 Jan 1689 / 27 Dec 1705 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec), Antoine (11 May 1692), Joseph (15 Mar 1696 / 6 Feb 1716).[5, 9, 21, 22] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 240 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Pierre: L508 / L509: LAURENT LEVASSEUR : MARIE MARCHAND FATHER: Jean Levasseur : Louis Marchand MOTHER: Marguerite Maheu dit Richard : Francoise Morineau BORN: 5 Jan 1648 [5, 9] : ca 1651 [5, 9, 21] [5, 9, 21] PLACE: St-Trinity, Bois-Guillaume, Rouen, Normandy : St-Martin, Ile de Re, Larochelle, Aunis [9, 21] DIED: 25 Dec 1726 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec [5, 9, 21] : 29 Aug 1708 Quebec City, Quebec [5] [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: 30 Apr 1670 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec MEMOIRS: Today, travelling north out of Rouen on highway 28 leads directly to Bois-Guillaume. Lebel’s research indicates that at Larochelle on 20 Apr 1663 two ships, the Flute Royale and L’Aigle d’Or, were preparing to get underway. These 300-ton vessels would attempt the Atlantic crossing with a combined total of 300 people packed aboard. The bad weather and poor hygienic conditions led to epidemic sickness. At least 66 died and another 75 seriously ill passengers were left at the town of Plaisance in Newfoundland. Only 159 passengers reached Quebec. Laurent who was among those that survived the gruelling trip, set to work for Guillemette Hebert, with whom he stayed for six years. On 22 Sep 1669, Laurent leased a farm with a house, a domestic servant, fishing rights, 2 cows, 2 bulls, 25 minots of grain in the field to be harvested and some fruit trees. This homestead located at St-David de Louberiviere, later numbered 698 Rue Commerciale, became the focal point of family life and was kept in the Levasseur name until 1925. Laurent bought an adjoining plot, one arpent by 40 in depth, for 27 livres in prime pelts in 1675. The 1681 census shows Laurent with one rifle, three cattle, six arpents cultivated, one shotgun and a pistol. In 1682, Laurent leased a neighbouring farm for 12 livres per year in silver. In 1689, he paid 400 livres for a farm that he had been worked by the owner for five years. In 1694, Laurent hired Jacques Bouteville to cut 100 cords of wood on his land for 22 sols per cord. On 20 Apr 1700, Marc-Antoine Chapelain signed for three years as a domestic servant in Laurent’s home. In 1708, Laurent and Marie’s daughter, Marie-Renée, was bequeathed 240 arpents square of land at Beaumont by her wealthy uncle, Louis Marchand. Laurent sold this farm to Jean-Baptiste Nadeau for 1000 livres, ‘600 of which would be paid in paper money now in circulation’.[21] Laurent and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Lauzon, Quebec except as noted) includes: MarieFrancoise (30 Mar 1671 / 13 Jun 1719), Marie-Claude (3 Mar 1672 / became Ursuline nun, Sister of the Visitation / 21 Mar nd 1745), Mr. Levasseur (7 Jun 1673 / 11 Jun 1673), Laurent (29 May 1674 / 3 Jun 1674), Laurent 2 (22 May 1675 / died ca 1720), Genevieve (13 Mar 1677 / 27 Nov 1686), Pierre (k254), Angelique (20 Feb 1681 / became Ursuline nun and took the name, Sister St-Joseph / 8 Nov 1749), Jean-Baptiste (10 Jun 1682), Marie (21 Jan 1686), Louis (4 Sep 1687 Quebec / Genevieve Huard 19 Nov 1716 / 17 Aug 1757), Claire-Francoise (26 Nov 1691 / Louis Michaud 22 Oct 1708 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City / 2nd marriage, Francois Autin 31 May 1719 Kamouraska / 19 Jun 1772 Kamouraska), MarieRenée (21 Feb 1694), Jean (11 May 1695 Quebec / Charlotte Jourdain 22 Oct 1722 / 20 Jan 1766 St-Joseph, Indiana).[9, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie Elisabeth: L510 / L511: PIERRE MICHAUD : MARIE ANCELIN FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Antoine Michel (Michaud) : Rene Ancelin Marie Train : Claire Rousselot Their biographies may be viewed at number (k232). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne - Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis - Alexis – Louis – Prudent - Louis - Andre: m768 / m769: PIERRE ROBERT : LEONNE REMBAULT [5, 9, 25] BORN: ca 1580 Breuilaufa, Haute-Vienne, Angoumois, France : ca 1582 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5] MARRIED: ca 1605 @ Breuilaufa, Haute-Vienne, Angoumois, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Andre’s sibling birth/marriage/death details (all at Breuilaufa, Haute-Vienne unless otherwise stated) includes: Andre (L384), Philippe (ca 1610 / wed Jeanne Dupuis ca 1635), Jacques (ca 1612 / Jeanne Bordier 20 Dec 1637 Larochelle, Aunis, France).[5, 9] Pierre Robert may also be found at the code numbers (m1760) and (o7664). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 241 - Mary Jeanne- Omer - Louise - Olive - Alexis - Alexis - Alexis - Louis - Prudent - Marie - Marie: m774 / m775: MOISE LEGENDRE : JEANNE CASSE BORN: ca 1587 Surgeres, Rochefort, Saintonge [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1589 Surgeres, Rochefort, Saintonge [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1612 @ Surgeres, Rochefort, Saintes, Saintonge, France [9, 20, 29] Moise was a master textile worker.[5] Moise Legendre is also at number (m1766) and (o7670). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis - Louis – Madeleine – Francois – Francois: m776 / m777: JEAN FAFARD : ANTOINETTE LEVERDIER BORN: ca 1596 St-Jean-Baptiste, Caen, Normandy [5, 9, 29] : ca 1598 Hotot-en-Auge, Lisieux, Normandy [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1620 @ Hotot-en-Auge, diocese of Lisieux, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Jean Fafard first wed Elisabeth Tibault about 1619 at St-Patrice, Argences, Caen, Bayeux, Normandy. They had one child, Francoise (ca 1620 St-Jean-Baptiste, France / to Canada as a Filles a Marier in 1647 / wed Mathurin Meunier 3 Nov 1647, first marriage ever celebrated at Montreal / died 13 Jan 1702 St-Anne-de-Beaupre, Quebec). Jean Fafard and Antoinette Leverdier’s offspring birth/marriage/death details are as follows: Bertrand (ca 1621 Hotot-en-Auge, Lisieux / Marie Sedilot 21 Dec 1640 Trois-Rivieres / 2 Nov 1660 Trois-Rivieres), Francois (L388).[5, 9, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis - Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Francois - Marie: m778 / m779: SIMON RICHARD : CATHERINE CONSTANCINEAU BORN: ca 1604 Hiers-Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5, 9] : ca 1606 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5] MARRIED: 27 Aug 1629 @ Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Marie - Charles: m780 / m781: JACQUES JOBIN : MARGUERITE ROY FATHER: Charles Jobin : MOTHER: Marie Duval : MARRIED: ca 1628 @ Amfreville-sous-les-Monts, Les Andely, Normandy, France [5, 9, 21, 26, 45] MEMOIRS: Jacques was a manual labourer. By 1639, Jacques and Marguerite were residing at Paris. Jacques had a brother, Jean, who was already living in Canada when Jacques’ daughter, Francoise, emigrated, thus providing her with a familiar face in the new world.[26] Jacques and Marguerite’s offspring data includes: Francoise (born ca 1630 Amfreville-sous-les-Monts, Les Andely / arrived at Quebec 1652 as Filles a Marier / wed Pierre Dandonneau dit Lajeunesse on 16 Jan 1653 at Trois-Rivieres / 6 Jul 1702 Champlain), Charles (L390).[5, 9, 21, 26, 45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Marie - Madeleine: m782 / m783: MICHEL GIRARD dit Laudiere : FRANCOISE ANCEAUME FATHER: Marin Girard : MOTHER: Madeleine Hebert : BORN: 22 Aug 1603 St-Cyr, Vandreuil, Rouen, Normandy [5, 9, 20] : ca 1611 Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9] DIED: 6 Feb 1661 St-Cyr, Vandreuil, Rouen, Normandy [5] : 27 Sep 1675 St-Cyr, Vandreuil, Rouen [5] MARRIED: ca 1635 @ Notre-Dame-du-Vaudreuil, Les Andelys, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Michel first wed Charlotte Desnoyers about 1631 at St-Cyr, Vandreuil, Les Andelys, Rouen, Normandy.[5, 9, 20, 21] They had a daughter, Marie (ca 1633 St-Cyr-du-Vaudreuil / a Filles a Marier with a dowry of 300 livres / Antoine Rouillard dit Lariviere, a carpenter, 22 Apr 1653 St-Jean Chapel, Cote St-Genevieve, Quebec City / 2nd marriage, Mathurin Moreau 8 May 1667 Quebec City / 8 Dec 1708 Sainte-Foy, Quebec).[9, 21, 26] Francoise Anceaume and Michel’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Joachim (ca 1637 St-Cyr-du-Vaudreuil / Marie Halay 27 Sep 1660 Quebec City / 2nd marriage, Jeanne Chalut 1 Jun 1676 Charlesbourg / 28 May 1712 Quebec City), Madeleine (L391), Anne (ca 1641 St-Cyr-du-Vaudreuil / Nicolas Daudeline 22 Oct 1665 Chateau-Richer / 23 Aug 1710 Ste-Anne, Varennes).[5, 9, 21, 25, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 242 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise - Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Jean – Marie – Jean: m804 / m805: JEAN CHENIER : MARGUERITE BERARD BORN: ca 1600 Celles, Saintonge, France [5] : ca 1602 Celles, Saintonge, France [5, 9, 20] [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: ca 1625 @ Celles, Saintonge, France MEMOIRS: Lebel notes that Jean Chenier was a master carpenter who lived on the Ste-Genevieve Coast and a friend of fellow carpenter and partner, Antoine Rouillard (see m782). On 3 Nov 1663, members of the Sovereign Council studied the request of the carpenters, Jean Chenier and Antoine Rouillard who claimed an amount of 350 livres for supplying 4000 small stakes and five beams for the casements of the King. On 12 Dec 1664, they won the bid for the repairs to the Chateau Saint-Louis and the Palace: ‘bid made on this day by Antoine Rouillard and Jean Chenier carpenters, according to the said official report of the inspection with the exception of the roof of the gallery of the great house of the Chateau, for the sum of two thousand seven hundred ninety livres’. In addition, these two experts made ten canon mountings ‘at the rate of twenty four livres each’. These buildings were the most prestigious residences of the time in New France. In 1666, the partners began a major renovation of the Magasin du Mont Royal located in the Lower Town of Quebec City. This residence served as a welcoming shelter for the immigrants who were destined for Montreal.[21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Jean – Marie – Jacqueline: m806 / m807: LOUIS SEDILOT : MARIE GRIMOULT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L206). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Pierre – Marin: m808 / m809: ROBERT JANOT : JEANNE PIENNE BORN: ca 1605 La Chapelle-Monthodon, Champagne [5, 20] : ca 1607 La Chapelle-Monthodon [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1625 @ La Chapelle-Monthodon, Champagne, France [5, 9, 20] Robert Janot may also be found in this family history at the following code number (n1636). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise - Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Pierre – Francoise: m810 / m811: PIERRE BENARD : CATHERINE RIVERIN [5, 20] BORN: ca 1602 Pouvrai, Mans, Perche, France : ca 1604 Pouvrai, Mans, Perche, France [5, 20] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1627 @ Pouvrai, diocese of Mans, Perche, France [9, 20] Pierre Benard may also be found in this family history at the following code number (n1638). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise - Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Petronille – Urbain: m812 / m813: ARTHUR TESSIER : JEANNE MEINE [5, 9, 29] BORN: ca 1598 Chateau-Lavalliere, Angers, Anjou : ca 1600 Chateau-Lavalliere, Angers, Anjou [5, 9] [5] DIED: ca 1651 Angers, Anjou, France : 13 Mar 1648 Chateau-Lavalliere, Angers [5, 9] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1623 @ Chateau-Lavalliere, Angers, Anjou, France [5, 9, 25, 29] Arthur Tessier may also be found in this family history at the following code number (n3820). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Petronille – Marie: m814 / m815: JACQUES ARCHAMBAULT : FRANCOISE TOURAULT FATHER: Antoine Archambault : Francois Tourault MOTHER: Renée Ouvrard : Marthe Le Noir [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] BORN: ca 1604 Lardilliere, Dompierre-sur-Mer : ca 1607 Lardilliere, Dompierre-sur-Mer [5, 9, 21] DIED: 15 Feb 1688 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 16, 21, 25, 29] : 9 Dec 1663 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 29] MARRIED: 24 Jan 1629 @ St-Philibert-du-Pont-Charault, Laroche-sur-Yon, Poitou [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 26, 48] MEMOIRS: Jacques Archambault was a plowman and wine maker. Records show that he sold three barrels of wine to J. Bonnevie on 15 Aug 1637 at France.[21, 26] Lardilliere was a hamlet outside of the village of Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle, Charente-Maritime which was previously the province of Aunis. Jacques arrived at Quebec with Pierre Legardeur de Repentigny, director of the new Compagnie des - 243 - Habitants, on 23 Sep 1646.[21] Upon arriving in Canada, Jacques, worked the farm of Pierre Legardeur de Repentigny.[21, 26] It is thought that after a short time Jacques went back to France to collect his family because the United States and Canada Passenger and Immigration lists and index, 1500-1900 indicates that Jacques and Francoise arrived at Quebec City, Quebec in the year 1647. Included with them on the list were their children, Denis, Anne, Jacquette, Marie, Marie 2nd, Louise and Laurent.[48] Jacques and MarieFrancoise farmed at Quebec City but then moved to Montreal in 1652. Here they reunited with two daughters who were raising families of their own.[21, 25] On 18 Nov 1652, Monsieur de Maisonneuve, governor of the island of Montreal, gave Jacques 30 arpents of land north of Rue Notre Dame and between present Rue St-Laurent and Rue St-Joseph. During the winter of 1655, Jacques and several residents of Ville-Marie or Montreal made a deal with the master surgeon Etienne Bouchard (m1086). They hired the surgeon ‘to dress and give medications for all sorts of things, illnesses both natural and accidental, except for the plague’ for the yearly amount of 5 livres. This was the first, known example of health insurance established on the continent. On 11 Oct 1658, Jacques was hired by Paul de Chomeday to dig a well, five feet in diameter, inside the fort of Ville-Marie at the Place d’Armes. He guaranteed at least two feet of stable water in the bottom of the well for the cost of 300 livres.[21] A plaque at the back of the Pointe-a-Calliere Museum of Montreal commemorates the construction of the first water well on 11 Oct 1658, upon request by Paul de Chomeday de Maisonneuve.[16] A concrete cistern in the middle of a pedestrian walkway in Placed’Armes, now marks the spot of Archambault’s first water well.[12] On 8 Jun 1659, Father Gabriel contracted Jacques to dig a well ‘in the garden of the hospital … with two feet of stable water at least … in the presence of a current of water’. The cleric would provide eight feet of wood, twenty planks, the stone, the lime and the sand. Jacques supplied the ropes and received 300 livres and 10 pots of eau-de-vie. On 16 May 1660, Jacques was asked to dig a well for the use of the community with a depth of 15 feet. He was paid 300 livres and 10 pots of eau-de-vie. Lebel writes that ‘Jacques Archambault became something of a legend in locating and digging many successful water wells’.[21] Jacques and Francoise’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Lardilliere, Dompierre-sur-Mer, France unless stated othewise) follow: Denis (12 Sep 1630 / Lebel cites the historian, Faillon’s description of Denis as one of the brave men who on 6 May 1651, risked their lives to help Catherine Mercier who had been kidnapped by the Iroquois and tortured at an unknown location – that July, 200 Iroquois attacked Ville-Marie creating a desperate struggle all day – ‘Denis Archambault, while lighting a cannon for the third time, was killed by an explosion from this weapon which shattered and killed a lot of the enemy’ / 26 Jul 1651 Montreal), Anne (ca 1632 / Michel Chauvin dit SteSuzanne 29 July 1647 Quebec City / Anne’s first baby died in the cradle / she became pregnant again only to find that Chauvin had a wife in France - he was sent back to France and Seur de Maisonneuve had the marriage annulled and also made arrangements for Anne to be paid the same wages that Chauvin had received `to raise and to feed the baby, Charlotte, for as long as Anne was in the service of the seigneurs` - he then helped arrange her marriage to Jean Gervais 3 Feb 1654 Notre-Dame, Montreal /died 29 July nd 1699 Montreal), Jacquette (k303), Marie (L407), Marie 2 (ca 1638 / Gilles Lauzon 27 Nov 1656 Montreal / 8 Aug 1685 Montreal), Louise (18 Mar 1640 / died that day), Laurent (10 Jan 1642 / became a carpenter / wed Catherine Marchand, a Filles a Marier, on 7 Jan 1660 at Montreal / 19 Apr 1730 Pointe-aux-Trembles).[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 26, 29] Jacques Archambault leased the farm to Pierre Dardenne after his wife, Francoise Tourault died. Jacques then married Marie Denot de la Martiniere (m1771) on 26 Jan 1666 at Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Champlain, Quebec.[5, 21, 29] They had no children. In the 1681 census, Jacques and Ms. Denot were living at the fief of Verdun, near Montreal.[21] Jacques Archambault can also be found in this history at the identification numbers (L606) and (n3822). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Joseph – Antoine: m816 / m817: JEAN BAZINET dit Tourblanche : MARGUERITE AUSAULT [5, 9] BORN: ca 1615 Tourblanche, Perigueux, Dordogne, France : ca 1617 Tourblanche, Perigueux, [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Joseph – Francoise: m818 / m819: MARIN JANOT dit Lachapelle : FRANCOISE BENARD FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Robert Janot dit Lachapelle : Pierre Benard Jeanne de Pienne : Catherine Riverin Their biographies may be viewed at number (L404). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 244 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Marie – Jean: m820 / m821: MARTIN SENECAL : JEANNE LAPPERT MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1640 @ St-Martin de Paluel, diocese of Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] According to Gagne’s research, Martin Senecal was a master cobbler or shoemaker.[27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Anne – Catherine: m822 / m823: PIERRE DESENNE : MARGUERITE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L224). LEGER __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique - Joseph – Joseph: m824 / m825: LOUIS LOISEL : MARGUERITE CHARLOT FATHER: Louis Loisel : Francois Charlot MOTHER: Jeanne-Louise Leterrier : Barbe Girardeau BORN: 2 Jun 1624 St-Germain-la-Blance-Herbe, Normandy [9, 26] : ca 1625 St-Jean, Greve, Paris [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] DIED: 4 Sep 1691 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26, 29] : 3 Oct 1706 Pointe-aux-Trembles [5, 9, 26, 29] MARRIED: 13 Jan 1648 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Marguerite came to Canada in 1647.[26] Louis was a master locksmith.[26, 21, 29] Louis Loisel’s presence at Montreal was noted in 1647. He obtained land in Canada on 20 Aug 1655.[29] He was granted 30 arpents of land in 1655. On 20 Mar 1660, Louis concluded a deal with Jean Aubuchon, Sieur de Lesperance (k102) to make latches, iron straps, door hinges and fittings for windows with the compensation being 36 livres ‘in merchandise from France’. On 20 Mar 1661, Louis sold an ox to Robert Cavalier (see L576). There was no money exchanged but Mr. Cavalier furnished eight days of special work with four oxen and 40 cords of firewood to be delivered to Louis’ home. In 1663, Montreal was living under the threat of Iroquois warfare. Monsieur de Maisonneuve organized the Militia of Ste-Famille. It had to be on watch day and night. The militia was composed of 20 squads of 7 defenders each or 140 men. Louis Loisel was part of the 17th division with Nicolas Hubert as corporal. On 11 Dec 1665, Louis added 15 arpents to his holdings by way of the Sulpicien priest, Gabriel Souart, who was ‘head of the clerics of the island of Montreal’. In 1667, the census takers noted that the Loisels had one animal and 18 arpents of land under cultivation. In 1681, the Loisels had one gun, two head of cattle and 30 arpents under cultivation. On 2 Aug 1688, Louis Loisel, Antoine Bazinet (L408), Jacques Chaperon, Pierre Janot (see k102) and his brother, Robert Janot (see m826) organized a trading journey to the West. They went to the merchant Francois Poignet in order to buy 1,778 livres in trade goods. The partners guaranteed the loan and Bazinet, Chaperon and Janot would make the trading journey with the hopes of returning in the autumn of 1689 with beaver pelts to pay the creditor and make a profit for the group. It seems that the fur venture did not pay off because on 3 Mar 1690, Louis liquidated all of his property which included a site on Rue Saint-Paul with a house and his farm for the total sale price of 1,100 livres. Later on, Louis and Marguerite’s daughter, Barbe took on the responsibility of caring for them. She and her husband agreed to feed and support them for their whole life and after their deaths ‘to do their funeral honors according to their condition’.[21] Louis and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Montreal): Jeanne (21 Jul 1649 / was considered the first child to be born in Montreal and survive - in Nov 1653 Marguerite Bourgeoys wrote, ‘Monsieur de Maisonneuve gave me Jeanne Loisel to raise ... she is the first child of Montreal to survive’ - Jeanne and Francoise were two of the first students at Marguerite Bourgeoy’s stable school in Montreal / wed Jean Beauchamp dit le Petit 23 Nov 1666 / 3 Oct 1708), Francoise (k419), Joseph (L412), LouisCharles (2 Jun 1658 / 28 Jun 1658), Marthe (15 Aug 1659 / died same day), Charles (4 Oct 1661 / 7 Nov 1661), Barbe (30 Aug 1663 / Pierre Roussel, who was a Carignan Soldier, 26 Oct 1676 / 2 nd marriage, Francois Le Gantier 28 Nov 1689 / 3rd marriage, Francois Fafard dit Delorme, was the King’s interpreter at Detroit / 24 Dec 1742), Louis (14 Aug 1667 / [5, 9, 21, 22, 26, 29] wed Louise Laberge 12 Oct 1789 St-Laurent, Quebec / 5 Sep 1667). Louis Loisel is also at number (L814). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 245 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique - Joseph – Jeanne: m826 / m827: HONORE LANGLOIS dit Lachapelle : MARIE PONTONNIER FATHER: Jean Langlois dit Lachapelle : Urbain Pontonnier MOTHER: Jacquette Charpentier : Felicite Jamin BORN: 21 Jan 1642 [5, 9] : 22 Jan 1643 [5, 9, 26, 29] [5, 9, 26] PLACE: Paris, France : St-Vincent, Lelude, LaFleche, Angers, Anjou [5, 9, 26, 29] DIED: 12 Dec 1709 Pointe-aux-Trembles [5, 9, 26, 29] : 7 Jan 1718 Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec [5, 9, 26] MARRIED: 5 Dec 1661 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: After the death of her father, Marie came to Canada in 1656 as a Filles a Marier. Marie Pontonnier is related to Jean Valiquet (L890).[26] Marie first wed Pierre Gadois on 12 Oct 1657 at Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal.[5, 26, 27] Mr. Gadois, a bourgeois and churchwarden, was also a mastor armorer and gunsmith who emigrated to Quebec City in 1636. Mr. Gadois then moved to Montreal about 1647 where, according to Marguerite Bourgeoys, he became the first altar boy in that city. Mr. Gadois’ father, Pierre, was known as the first habitant of Montreal since he received the first land grant from governor Maisonneuve in 1648. The Rue Saint-Pierre was named in his honor.[26, 27] Marie and Mr. Gadois’ marriage led to the first trial for witchcraft held in New France. With marriageable men outnumbering women by over two to one there was often competition for brides. In this case the jilted suitor swore revenge by promising to cast a spell over the couple using a knotted cord. Superstition held that if the person casting the spell knotted a cord three times in the presence of the couple during the marriage ceremony, the couple would be sterile unless the cord was un-knotted. During the wedding ceremony Mr. Gadois was told to recite the psalm, Miserere mei Deus backwards in Latin to ward off the spell, as was the custom in France at the time. When no children were born in the first year of their marriage the couple was advised to go to Quebec City to receive a second nuptial blessing from Bishop Laval. When this proved ineffective the jilted suitor, Rene Besnard, was tried for sorcery in the seigneurial court of Montreal. Faced with the prospect of being burned alive for sorcery, Besnard denied using witchcraft and even alleged that Marie Pontonnier had promised to sleep with him if he would break the spell. Marie testified that it was he who had suggested this remedy. The court ruled in favour of the couple and Besnard was imprisoned and later banished from Montreal. Witchcraft or not, after a three year waiting period imposed by canon law, Marie and Pierre’s marriage was annulled by Bishop Laval on 30 Aug 1660 ‘because of permanent impotence caused by an evil spell’. Governor Maisonneuve sentenced Pierre to pay Marie 100 livres on the feast of St-Michel and another 300 livres on Christmas as an indemnity for the time she lived with him. This judgement was based on a provision in their marriage contract that would give Marie compensation if they had no children.[26] Marie next married interpreter and surgeon, Pierre Martin dit Lariviere on 3 Nov 1660 at Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal. They had one child, Marie (baptized 9 Nov 1661 Montreal / Antoine Villedieu 26 Feb 1685 Pointe-auxTrembles / 24 Oct 1687 St-Enfant-Jesus-de-la-Pointe-aux-Trembles, Hochelaga, Montreal), who would have grown up as a sister to the children below.[5, 22, 26, 29] Pierre Martin was killed in an Iroquois ambush on 24 Mar 1661. His decapitated body was found on 22 Jun 1661 and buried at Montreal six days later. Marie Pontonnier’s third husband, Honore Langlois, was a hat maker who was noted at Montreal as early as 3 Jul 1659. They moved to Pointe-aux-Trembles late in 1680.[26] Honore and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all at Pointeaux-Trembles, Quebec) follow: Jeanne (L413), Honore (30 Dec 1665 / 18 Feb 1666), Marguerite (25 Feb 1667 / Andre Hunault 11 Nov 1686 / 25 Dec 1721 Ile-St-Therese, Varennes), Anne-Therese (19 Sep 1669 / Robert Janot dit Lachapelle 26 Jan 1693 / 5 May 1745), Jean-Baptiste (26 Jun 1672 / Jeanne Gauthier dit Landreville 4 Nov 1698 Varennes / 5 Sep 1731 Repentigny, L’Assomption), Andre (15 Apr 1675 / Francoise Bissonnet 7 Nov 1701 Ste-Anne, Varennes / 2nd marriage, Marguerite Gauthier 23 Jan 1708 Ste-Anne, Varennes / 26 Feb 1751 Ste-Anne, Varennes), Francoise (20 Nov 1678 Cote StJean, Quebec / Louis Beaudry 12 Jan 1700 Ste-Anne, Varennes / 24 Feb 1713 St-Enfant-Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles), Antoine nd (25 Sep 1681 / 30 Oct 1684), Joseph (22 Apr 1684 / 30 Apr 1684), Antoine 2 (13 Jun 1685 / 1 Dec 1688).[5, 9, 22, 26, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 246 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Marguerite – Toussaint: m828 / m829: LOUIS BEAUDRY : VINCENTE GODET DIED: 12 Apr 1664 St-Jean de Velluire, Larochelle [5, 9, 21] : 4 Dec 1664 St-Jean de Velluire, Larochelle [9] MARRIED: ca 1635 @ St-Jean de Velluire, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Lebel notes that Louis Beaudry died at about 50 years of age.[21] Louis and Vincente’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at St-Jean de Velluire, Larochelle, France) are as follows: Andrew (1 May 1637), Toussaint (L414), Marie (24 Jul 1642), Joanne (3 Aug 1645), Mathurin (2 Sep 1648 / wed Jeanne Vortoy).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Marguerite – Barbe: m830 / m831: GILBERT BARBIER dit Le Minime : CATHERINE DEVAUX FATHER: Pierre Barbier : Alexandre Devaux MOTHER: Claude Vizon : Louise de Renel BORN: ca 1625 St-Are, Decize, Nivernais, France [5, 9, 26, 29] : ca 1627 St-Germain-d’Eym, Lorraine, Fr. [5, 9, 26, 29] DIED: 15 Nov 1693 [5, 9, 26, 29] : 11 Apr 1688 [5, 9, 26, 29] [5, 9, 26, 29] BURIED: St-Enfant-Jesus, Pointe-aux-Trembles : Notre Dame, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 26, 29] MARRIED: 14 Nov 1650 @ Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Gilbert was a corporal in the militia in 1663.[29] Gilbert was a master carpenter and the Barbier family was one of the most respected in the town of Montreal. He had been one of the 12 colonists who arrived in Montreal in 1642. He was also procureur-fiscal and the first warden of the Church of Notre Dame, appointed 21 Nov 1657.[21, 26, 29] Apparently, Catherine was a pious woman who was brought to Canada by Jeanne Mance in 1650 as a Filles a Marier.[21, 26] She wrote a three line declaration claiming to have been cured of a stomach ailment from which she had suffered for five years. Five ecclesiastics then added their signatures to attest to this document which still existed as of this writing. On 5 Dec 1667, Gilbert and his son-in-law, Etienne, were hired to construct ‘a building of log on log on the second hill toward the woods’. This building was intended as a redoubt for defense. Dimensions were 24 feet long by 18 feet wide and 9 feet high with a door, two windows, a roof, some gables with loopholes in the front, back and sides for sighting on foot. It was named the redoubt of the St-Enfant Jesus.[21] Gilbert and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Montreal unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Charlotte (7 Aug 1651 / 28 Feb 1657), Adrienne (20 Aug 1652 / Etienne Trudeau 10 Jan 1667 Notre Dame Cathedral / 15 Nov 1693), Barbe (L415), Agathe (2 Aug 1655 / 4 Aug 1655), Gabriel (6 Sep 1656 / a voyageur who accompanied Rene-Robert Cavalier de La Salle in 1682 when he navigated the Mississippi River / he was on La Salle’s 1684 voyage to the Gulf of Mexico and landed in Texas in 1685 / wed in June 1686 to a lady who was also on the expedition / believed to be the first Euopean to be married in Texas / a child born to the couple in 1688 was the first white child to be born in Texas / was left in charge of Fort St-Louis when La Salle left to explore the Mississippi River / was killed when the fort was destroyed by Karankawa Indians in 1689), Nicolas (20 Apr 1658 / became a school teacher / died in combat with the English, 11 Aug 1691 Laprairie), Charles-Henri (8 Nov nd 1660 / Marie Pigeon 13 Jun 1684 / 2 marriage, Marguerite Cusson 25 Oct 1688 Cap-de-la-Madeleine / 8 Jun 1691), Marie (11 May 1663 / first Montreal-born girl to enter the Congregation of Notre-Dame at Montreal in 1678 / she became the order’s second mother superior, succeeding the founder, Marguerite Bourgeoys / died at the convent on 19 May 1739 Montreal). [5, 9, 21, 22, 26, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Jean – Elisabeth – Pierre: m836 / m837: SIMON RICHAUME : CATHERINE BELIER MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L20). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Jean – Elisabeth – Marthe: m838 / m839: MARC ARNU : LOUISE BRODEUR MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be reviewed at number (L22). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 247 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Jacques - Jean: m840 / m841: PIERRE MENARD dit Lafontaine : MADELEINE FOREST MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1590 @ Notre Dame, L’Esvieres, Angers, Anjou, France [5, 9] Pierre Menard dit Lafontaine may also be found in this family history at code number (n3544). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Catherine - Jean: m844 / m845: ANDRE-BERTHOMME FORTIER : FRANCOISE RICHARD MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1605 @ St-Jean d’Angely, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5, 9, 26, 29] Andre-Berthomme Fortier may also be found in this family history at code number (n3548). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Catherine - Julienne: m846 / m847: ANDRE COIFFES : JEANNE DUGAS FATHER: : Nicolas Dugas MARRIED: ca 1610 @ Loire-Atlantique, Nantes, Brittany, France [5, 9, 26] MEMOIRS: Andre was a merchant-baker.[26, 29] Andre’s second marriage was with Elisabeth Rosturier on 3 Jan 1648 at Notre-Dame, Cogne, Larochelle. Andre had two children with Ms. Rosturier who were named, Andre and Jacques-Hyacinthe.[5, 29] Andre Coiffes may also be found in this history at the number (n3550). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte – Bernard – David - David: m848 / m849: DAVID LETOURNEAU : JEANNE DUPEN MARRIED: ca 1610 @ Muron, Charente-Maritime, Rochefort, Saintonge, France [5, 9, 21] MEMOIRS: They made their home at the town of Muron, in the department of Charente-Maritime, district of Rochefort, canton of Tornay-Charente, Saintonge.[21] David Letourneau is also found at number (L768). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Gabriel: m860 / m861: LOUIS LEMIEUX : MARIE LUGUEN FATHER: Louis Lemieux : MOTHER: Madeleine Lemaitre : BORN: 3 Jul 1600 St-Michel, Rouen, Normandy [5, 9] : 6 Dec 1600 St-Michel, Rouen, Normandy [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 7 Jun 1665 Rouen, Normandy, France : 30 Sep 1669 Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9] MARRIED: 16 Apr 1624 @ St-Michel, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Louis Lemieux and Marie Luguen’s offspring birth/marriage/death details include the following in the order of their birth: Jean (1 Oct 1625 St-Michel, Rouen, Normandy, France), Pierre (26 Oct 1626 StMichel, Rouen / Marie Benard 10 Sep 1647 Quebec City / 18 Jul 1662 Tadoussac, Saguenay, Quebec) , Gabriel (L430).[5, 9, 21, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Marguerite: m862 / m863: GUILLAUME LEBOEUF : MARGUERITE MILLOT [5, 9] BORN: 15 Feb 1620 Troye, Champagne, France : 4 Nov 1620 Orleans, Bourgogne, France [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 11 May 1702 Troye, Champagne, France : 2 Jun 1689 Troye, Champagne, France [5, 9] MARRIED: 2 Jun 1638 @ Notre-Dame-de-Troyes, Champagne, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Guillaume and Marguerite were ‘bourgeois’ from the parish of Notre-Dame in Troyes, France.[20] Their children’s birth/marriage/death data includes: Marguerite (L431), Pierre (ca 1642 France).[29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte - Marie – Jean – Marguerite – Marie – Adrien: m876 / m877: NICHOLAS QUEVILLON : MARIE VAUQUELIN MARRIED: ca 1635 @ St-Ouen-le-Mauger, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 248 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Jean – Marguerite – Marie – Jeanne: m878 / m879: TOUSSAINT HUNAULT dit Deschamps : MARIE LORGUEIL dit Arcouet FATHER: Nicolas Hunault dit Deschamps : Pierre Lorgueil dit Arcouet MOTHER: Marie Benoit : Marie Bruyere BORN: ca 1629 : 23 Nov 1638 [5, 9] [5, 9, 21, 26] PLACE: St-Pierre-des-Champs, Beauvais, Picardie : Cognac, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5, 9, 21, 26] DIED: 13 Sep 1690 Montreal, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26] : 29 Nov 1700 Varennes, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 26] [5, 9, 21, 26] MARRIED: 23 Nov 1654 @ Montreal, Quebec MEMOIRS: Toussaint’s nickname comes from the name of his hometown. Toussaint and Marie were members of the Grande Recrue of 1653. Toussaint enlisted to go to Canada on 18 Apr 1653 in the study of Lafousse at La Fleche, Anjou. His contract was for five years as a plowman and defricheur at 75 livres per year. Before departure he acknowledged receiving 120 livres in advance wages.[9, 21, 26] The Grande Recrue was a recruitment drive organized by Marguerite Bourgeoys of La Societie de Notre Dame de Montreal and Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, Governor of Montreal to secure settlers for their city. The hope was that this new group would help strengthen and defend the young community at Montreal. The member’s indenture contracts were to begin at departure from St-Nazaire, the outer harbour of Nantes at the mouth of the Loire River. On 20 Jun 1653, they boarded the Saint-Nicolas, an old, worm-eaten ship.[21, 26] After sailing for 350 leagues into the Atlantic they decided to return to France because the rotten old ship was taking on water through every seam. Before docking at St-Nazaire, ‘Monsieur de Maisonneuve had all his soldiers placed on an island from which they could not escape because otherwise not one of them would remain’. He leased another ship, the Sainte Marguerite, which departed on 10 July 1653. During this second voyage, illness broke out among the passengers and eight people died. Finally, on 22 Sep 1653, about 99 men and 47 women arrived at Quebec City. As they approached the settlement, the pilot accidentally grounded the ship, leaving it so ‘that the great tide could not refloat it and it was necessary to burn it on the spot’. Jeanne Mance welcomed the immigrants to Quebec City and after a few days rest they resumed their journey to Montreal, arriving on 16 Nov 1653.[21] Others in our family history who travelled on this same journey include: Urbain Jette (k36), Jeanne-Anne Solde (L111), Marin Janot (L404), Marin Deneau (L872), Jean Valiquet (L890), Pierre Godin (m726), Gilles Lauzon (see m814), Etienne Bouchard (m1086). Toussaint was given a land grant by Monsieur de Maisonneuve on 24 Jul 1654. The property measured one arpent in width by thirty in depth and was on the St-Louis slope, which today is the land from Rue d’Iberville to Boulevard St-Laurent.[9, 21, 26] On 16 Sep 1665, Toussaint sold this farm to a neighbour. The 1667 census indicates that the Hunault’s with their six children, were living at Montreal and owned three head of cattle and had four arpents of land under cultivation. Early in 1669, Toussaint was living on the coast of StFrancois de la Longue-Pointe. In 1680, Toussaint and Marie provided a temporary home for five-year old Catherine and three-year old Madeleine Lemarche because their mother had passed away. The census of 1681 records Toussaint and Marie with four children still at home, four guns, four head of cattle and 19 arpents of land under cultivation. On 22 Feb 1684, the Sulpicien fathers, seigneurs of Montreal, granted Toussaint four arpents in frontage on the St-Francois coast. In 1687 and 1688, Toussaint bought 80 arpents on the St-Dominique coast at Riviere-des-Prairies; was granted the adjoining 80 arpents by the Sulpiciens; bought 60 square arpents in the same area and then bought another 28 arpents in the same vicinity. Lebel indicates that Toussaint was ‘cowardly assassinated by Sieur Gabriel Dumont, Baron de Blaignac, lieutenant in a company of the detachement of the Navy, who fatally stabbed him with a sword and who fled immediately afterwards’. Marie Lorgueil and her children brought a suit against Dumont, ceding their rights of inheritance and any possible damages from the trial to merchant Charles de Couagne in return for the dissolution of the debt that Toussaint owed Couagne but nothing came of it. [21] Toussaint and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Montreal, Quebec except as indicated) follow in the order of their birth: Thecle (23 Sep 1655 / Thomas Chartrand 29 Jan 1669 / 12 Mar 1674), Andre (3 Aug 1657 / Marguerite Langlois dit Lachapelle 11 Nov 1686 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 6 Jul 1707 Varennes), Pierre (22 Nov 1660 / Catherine Beauchamp 7 Dec 1686 Pointe-aux-Trembles / 5 Dec 1686), Jeanne (L439), Therese (12 Feb 1663 / Guillaume Leclerc 24 Nov 1676 / 17 Aug 1689, victim of the massacre at Lachine), Mathurin (24 Dec 1664 / 25 Jun 1671), Francoise (5 Dec 1667 / Nicolas Joly 9 Dec 1681 / 2nd marriage, Jean Charpentier 22 Apr 1691 Riviere-de-Prairies / 2 May 1748), Toussaint (1 May 1671 / 23 Apr 1673), - 249 - Toussaint 2nd (25 Aug 1673 / Antoinette Paquet 2 Jul 1691 / 2 nd marriage, Elisabeth Baudreau 24 May 1717 Riviere-de-Prairies / 3rd marriage, Francoise Auger 30 Nov 1727 / 22 Oct 1748 Sault-au-Recollet), Charles (25 Jul 1676 / 30 May 1695).[5, 9, 21, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean – Jean - Guillaume: m880 / m881: PIERRE PEPIN : FRANCOISE PRIEUR MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m236). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean - Jean – Jeanne: m882 / m883: JEAN MECHIN : MS. JEAN MECHIN MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m238). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean – Madeleine – Lucas: m884 / m885: JACQUES LOISEAU : MARIE ROUETTE BORN: ca 1615 Chervey, Troyes-Aube, Champagne [5, 9] : ca 1617 Chervey, Troyes-Aube, Champagne MARRIED: MEMOIRS: [5, 9] ca 1640 @ Chervey, Troyes-Aube, Champagne, France [5, 9] Jacques Loiseau is also found in this family history at the following code number (n3828). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Jean – Marie - Francoise: m886 / m887: PIERRE-RENE CURE : BARBE CHARLES BORN: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1625 Grevillers, Artois, France [5, 9, 20] : ca 1627 Grevillers, Artois, France [5, 9, 20] [5] 19 Nov 1650 @ Grevillers, Artois, France Pierre-Rene Cure may also be found in this family history at the code number (n3830). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jeanne – Jean: m892 / m893: CYPRIEN CHARPENTIER : CATHERINE THERELLE FATHER: BORN: MARRIED: Abraham Charpentier : 29 Mar 1600 Badonviller, Meurthe-et-Moselle, Lorraine [9] : ca 1608 Veulettes-en-Caux [5, 9, 29] ca 1631 @ Veulettes-en-Caux, Normandy, France [5, 9, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jeanne – Barbe: m894 / m895: VINCENT RENAULT : MARIE MARTIN dit Charlin FATHER: Jean Renault : Gabriel Martin MOTHER: Madeleine Gaufreneau : Marie Breton BORN: 20 May 1609 St-Marguerite, Larochelle [5, 9, 29] : 15 Mar 1615 St-Marguerite, Larochelle [5, 9, 29] [5] DIED: 23 Nov 1672 Cherbonnier, Larochelle, Aunis : 4 Dec 1684 at Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: 4 Oct 1631 @ Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 29] MEMOIRS: Vincent was a cobbler or shoemaker.[27] He was noted at Quebec from 1648 to 1668 working as a courier, inn-keeper and shoemaker.[29] Vincent returned to France on 2 Apr 1668.[5] Vincent and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis) includes: Marie (14 Nov 1632 / Pierre Blusson 8 Apr 1649 Notre-Dame, Quebec City / 27 Nov 1662), Madeleine (10 Aug 1634 / died before 1666 census) , Marie-Madeleine (13 Apr 1636 / died before 1666), Anne (2 Nov 1637 / died before 1666), Marie 2nd (20 Nov 1639 / died before 1666), Jacques (ca 1641 St-Jean-Baptiste, Gerberoy, Beauvais, Picardie, France / Marie Charrier, a Kings Daughter, 13 Oct 1665 Quebec City / 2nd marriage, Barbe Rotteau 24 Oct 1695 / 23 Dec 1708 Quebec City), Jeanne (11 Oct 1642 / Jacques Vaudry 14 Feb 1661 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec / 25 Feb 1714 Montreal), Barbe (L447), Gabriel (11 Sep 1657 Quebec rd City / 5 Feb 1672 Larochelle, Aunis, France), Marie 3 (15 Jan 1659 Quebec City / 4 Feb 1659 Quebec City).[5, 9, 18, 22, 27, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 250 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Joseph – Angelique – Francois - Louis: m904 / m905: RENE THIBAULT : CATHERINE OLIVEAU MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1619 @ Ste-Catherine de Flotte, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] Louis’ sibling birth data (at Ste-Catherine-de-Flotte) includes: Marie (ca 1623), Jeanne (ca 1625).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain - Germain – Joseph – Angelique – Francois - Renée: m906 / m907: PHILIPPE GAUTHIER : MARIE-MARGUERITE PICHON BORN: ca 1593 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris [5, 9, 25] : ca 1595 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 13 Aug 1631 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris : 3 May 1661 Notre-Dame, Quebec City [5, 9] MARRIED: 10 Jun 1618 @ St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, France [5, 9, 26] MEMOIRS: Philippe was also known as Sieur de Comporte. Philippe and Marie-Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Guillaume sieur de La Chesnaye (ca 1619 St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris / MarieEsther de Lambourg, a Filles a Marier, 19 Oct 1648 Quebec City / 26 Jul 1657 Quebec City), Renée (L453), Catherine (ca 1623 St-Etienne-du-Mont / Denis Duquet 13 May 1638 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City / 3 Aug 1702 Quebec City), Charles Gauthier dit Boisverdun (ca 1625 Paris / Catherine Camus, a Filles a Marier, 1 Aug 1656 Quebec City / 9 Feb 1703 Ste-Foy, Quebec).[5, 9, 20, 21] Marie-Marguerite Pichon next married Charles Sevestre (m438) about 1632 at St- Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, France [5, 9, 20] Marie-Marguerite came to Canada in 1636 with Mr. Sevestre and her son from her first union, Charles Gauthier dit Boisverdun.[25, 26, 29] Marie-Marguerite and Mr. Sevestre obtained a land grant at Québec from the Company of 100 Associates in 1639. In 1645, Mr. Sevestre was a clerk at the warehouse of the settlers' community. In 1649, he started the construction of the first church at Trois-Rivieres. Mr. Sevestre is mentioned as the first to hold the post of provost judge for the Lauzon Seigneurie. In 1651-52, Mr. Sevestre was the church warden of the parish of Québec City. [25] Lebel indicates that Mr. Sevestre was a ‘notable of Quebec’ and a Lieutenant of his jurisdiction of Quebec City. For a time they lived in a house on Rue Notre-Dame in the lower town of Quebec City.[21] Their offspring statistics may be viewed at (m438). Via her second husband, Marie-Marguerite Pichon is also number (m439). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine - Germain – Germain - Marie – Joseph – Gregoire – Rene: m912 / m913: FRANCOIS OUELLET : ELISABETH BARRE MARRIED: ca 1635 @ St-Jacques-du-Haut-Pas, Paris, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Lebel notes that Francois Ouellet was a collector general of the province of Poitou and that Elisabeth was from the town of Beaupere in the bishopric of Lucon, France. A document unveiled in Paris reads, ‘on 1 Jun 1639, before notaries ... Francois Ouellet, clerk to five large farms in France and Elisabeth Barre, his wife, living in Paris on Rue des Ursulins, Parish of St-Landry, make a mutual donation to the remaining survivor’.[21] Francois Ouellet may also be found in this family history at code number (m976). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain - Germain – Marie – Joseph – Gregoire - Anne: m914 / m915: JOSEPH-JACQUES RIVET : MARIE DORÉ 7 Jan 1671 Larochelle, Aunis, France [9] : ca 1650 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] 25 Aug 1637 @ Notre-Dame-de-Cogne, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5] Joseph-Jacques and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes the following in the birth: Marie (ca 1640 Larochelle / 10 Jun 1723 Quebec City), Maurice (14 Feb 1642 Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle / Marie Cusson 7 Jan 1671 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec / 14 Dec 1710 Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Quebec), Anne (L457).[5, 9] DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: order of their __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine - Germain – Germain - Marie – Joseph – Anne – Guillaume: m916 / m917: ROBERT LIZOT : CATHERINE JOANNE BORN: ca 1615 St-Pierre, Montviette, Calvados [5, 9] : ca 1624 St-Pierre, Montviette, Calvados [5, 9] DIED: MARRIED: 19 Jan 1670 ca 1640 @ Maine, U.S.A. [5, 9] : ca 1712 at Quebec [5, 9] St-Pierre-de-la-Gravelle, Montviette, Calvados, Normandy, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 251 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine - Germain – Germain - Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne: m918 / m919: JEAN PELLETIER : ANNE LANGLOIS FATHER: Guillaume Pelletier dit Gobloteur : Noel Langlois MOTHER: Michelle Mabille : Francoise Garnier BORN: 12 Jun 1627 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Perche [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] : 2 Sep 1637 Quebec City, PQ [5, 9, 21, 25, 26, 45] DIED: 24 Feb 1698 Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] : 16 Mar 1704 Riviere-Ouelle, PQ [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] MARRIED: 9 Nov 1649 @ Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: Jean arrived at Quebec with his parents in the summer of 1641.[21, 45] About 1646, Jean went into the service of the Jesuits and worked at the Mission Sainte-Marie-des-Hurons near present day Midland, Ontario.[21, 25, 45] Lebel’s work reveals journal notes of the Jesuit, Fr. J. Lalemant writing, ‘on 28 Aug 1646, I left alone in a canoe to go to Trois-Rivieres ... I brought with me two men and a child in a small boat ... one of the men was the son of Gobloteur, Guillaume Pelletier, pioneer, longsawyer, carpenter and coal merchant ... suddenly he (the son) volunteered to become a donné ... we promised his parents 100 francs for his first year and we did not leave out the new clothes’. A donné was a lay helper. In 1647, Jean returned to his parent’s home and became engaged to Anne but had to wait two years for the wedding to take place because of her age.[21, 45] The wedding ceremony actually took place in the private chapel of seigneur R. Giffard but was registered at Notre Dame. Jean Juchereau, Jean Guyon (m1304) and Jean Cote were among the witnesses. In 1665, Jean acquired a site at the foot of Cap-aux-Diamants and settled on the Ile d’Orleans. After two years of working on his land at St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans, he sold it to his brother-in-law, Jean Langlois for 75 livres tournois. In 1675, Jean Pelletier acquired land on Ile-aux Grues which he worked and cleared and then sold in 1678. Lebel reports that Jean Pelletier and Squire Noel Langlois (assumed to be his father-in-law–m1614) assisted at the second wedding of Jeanne Sauvenier (L501) in 1679.[21] In 1679, instead of settling at La Pocatière, near his children who had established themselves there three years before, Jean Pelletier chose to settle in the seigneury of Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies, where Nicolas Juchereau had conceded him five arpents of forest. At the same time, another colonist, Pierre Saint-Pierre, received a concession of land next to him. Jean and Pierre were the first two colonists of Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies. Indeed, two years later, the census ordered by Monsignor Laval reported that Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies included ‘only two family and eleven souls’. It is thought that for the next fifteen years, Jean and Pierre were the only two colonists of Saint-Roch and were living approximately fifteen arpents from each other.[45] The 1681 census shows that Jean and his family had five arpents of arable land, nine cows and one musket.[21, 26] In 1690, Jean Pelletier was among the brave who defended Riviere-Ouelle against the English under Admiral Phipps who was on his way to lay siege to Quebec City. The parish priest, Father Pierre de Francheville, discovered that the English fleet was sailing up the St-Lawrence and might land at Riviere-Ouelle. Since their Seigneur, Jean-Baptiste de la Bouteillerie, was in Quebec City, the town’s inhabitants asked their priest to guide them in battle. Soon the enemy fleet dropped anchor off Riviere-Ouelle and a few English troops headed ashore in launches, perhaps to collect some fresh water. The men of the town, led by their priest, hid at the edge of the forest. Just as the English were disembarking on the shore, the citizens of Riviere-Ouelle opened fire with a barrage of bullets. The handful of English soldiers hurried to their rowboats and headed back to their ships.[21, 25, 26] Others in this family history who were involved included: Rene Ouellet (L456) with sons Joseph, Mathurin and Gregoire, Michel Bouchard (L460) with sons, Etienne, Francois and Pierre, Jean-Galleran Boucher (L494) with sons, Pierre and Philippe. It was only in 1694 that Jean Pelletier and Pierre Saint-Pierre welcomed a third member of the Saint-Roch-des-Aulnaies community, when Joseph Ouellet, son of René Ouellet (L456), joined them.[45] It is thought that Jean and Anne moved in with their son, Noel at Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere. They both died there but were buried at Riviere-Ouelle which had the only cemetery and church in the area.[21, 45] Jean and Anne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City) follows in the order of their birth: Noel (3 May 1654 / Marie-Madeleine Mignault 21 Oct 1674 Beauport / 31 Aug 1712 Riviere-Ouelle), Anne (L459), Rene (k504), Antoine (11 Dec 1661 / 26 Dec 1661), Jean (19 Apr 1663 / Marie Huot dit St-Laurent 8 Jan 1689 RiviereOuelle / 12 Mar 1739 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Delphine (29 Jan 1666 / 27 Feb 1666), Marie-Louise (4 May 1667 SteFamille, Ile d’Orleans / Jacques Gerbert 5 May 1686 Cap-St-Ignace / 6 Nov 1725 Cap-St-Ignace), Charles (25 Sep 1671 / Marie-Therese Ouellet 7 Jan 1698 Riviere-Ouelle / 2nd marriage, Marie-Barbe Saint-Pierre / 30 Dec 1748 St-Roch-des-Aulnaies), Charlotte (29 Sep 1674 Beauport, Quebec / Andre Mignier dit Legace 10 Nov 1693 Riviere-Ouelle / 2 Sep 1699 Riviere- - 252 - Ouelle).[5, 9, 22, 25, 45] Jean Pelletier dit Gobloteur may also be found in this family history at the number (L1008). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois – Michel: m920 / m921: CLEMENT BOUCHARD : LOUISE BRILLARD FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Bouchard : Jean Brillard Marie Guerreau : Andree Gillebert ca 1607 Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Larochelle [5, 9, 25] : ca 1609 Andilly-les-Marais, Marans [5, 9] [5] 2 Dec 1662 Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Larochelle : 29 Apr 1645 Andilly-les-Marais, Marans [5, 9] 29 Oct 1632 @ Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20, 21, 27] Louise and Clement’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Michel (L460), Nicolas (3 Jun 1637 Andilly-les-Marais, Marans / emigrated with his brother, Michel, in 1657 / wed Anne Roy, a Kings Daughter who came to Canada in 1670 with a dowry of 300 livres, on 30 Sep 1670 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre / 16 Jan 1684 Cap-St-Ignace).[5, 9, 25, 27] Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois – Marie Madeleine: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ JEAN-NICOLAS TROTIN : MADELEINE BLANCHARD FATHER: : Jean Blanchard MOTHER: : Radegonde Lambert MARRIED: ca 1645 @ La Roche-sur-Yon, Poitou, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean-Nicolas was a linen weaver.[21, 26] He plied his trade at La Chaize-le-Vicomte, then at La Roche-sur-Yon and finally at Larochelle.[26] Jean-Nicolas and Madeleine’s offspring data: Marie-Madeleine (L461), Renée (born ca 1649 at France / wed Georges Derentes ca 1665 at Laleu, France).[9, 20, 21] Madeleine Blanchard [9, 21, 25] next wed Michel Richard dit Sansoucy (L694) about 1655 at Port Royal, Acadia. For their progeny’s vital statistics see number (L694). Via her second husband, Madeleine Blanchard is also code number (L695). m922 / m923: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Anne – Pierre: m924 / m925: LOUIS VALLIERE : PERINNE FOURNIER [5] BORN: 12 Feb 1620 Segonzac, Saintes, Saintonge : 16 Feb 1623 Segonzac, Saintes, Saintonge [5] [5] DIED: 8 Mar 1677 Segonzac, Saintes, Saintonge : 27 Sep 1652 St-Pierre de Segonzac, Saintes [9] MARRIED: 10 Aug 1639 @ St-Pierre de Segonzac, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Anne – Anne: m926 / m927: PIERRE LAGOUE : MARIE BOISCOCHIN BORN: ca 1625 St-Etienne-du-Mans, Sarthe, Maine [5, 9, 25] : ca 1627 St-Etienne du Mans, Sarthe [5, 9, 25] MARRIED: ca 1650 @ St-Etienne-du-Mans, Sarthe, Maine, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Helene – Joseph – Joseph – Pierre - Marie: m930 / m931: PIERRE TRAIN : MARIE MICHEL MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1595 @ Fontenay-le-Comte, Poitou, France [5, 9] Pierre and Marie’s children: Marie (L465), Pierre-Francois (ca 1605 Poitou, France / ca 1635).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Marie - Rene: m932 / m933: LOUIS A. ANCELIN : MS. LOUIS A. ANCELIN MARRIED: ca 1618 @ Hermenault, Poitou, France [5, 9, 21] MEMOIRS: Louis A. Ancelin’s offspring biographies include: Louis (ca 1620 Hermenault), Rene (L466), Pierre (ca 1624 Hermenault / a gardener at Larochelle, Aunis, France).[21] Louis A. Ancelin is also at number (n2044). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 253 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie - Jean: m940 / m941: NICOLAS MIGNAULT : MADELEINE de BRIE BORN: ca 1595 Mortagne, Perche, France [5, 9] : ca 1597 Antony, Paris, France [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1620 @ Chatillon-les-Bagneux, Sceaux, Ile de France, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Nicolas and Madeleine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details follow in order of birth: Jean (L470), Antoine (wed Marie Guillot 2 Oct 1804 at Quebec).[22] Nicolas Mignault is also at number (n2029) (n1965). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie - Louise: m942 / m943: ZACHARIE CLOUTIER : XAINTES DUPONT FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Denis Cloutier : Paul Michel Dupont Renée Briere : Perrine de Mortagne Their biographies may be viewed at number (m374). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite: m954 / m955: GASPARD BOUCHER : NICOLE LEMAIRE FATHER: Jacques Boucher : Nicolas Lemaire MOTHER: Francoise Paigne : Marie Castrie BORN: ca 1594 Notre-Dame, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 24, 25] : 10 Mar 1595 Mamers, Lemans, Sarthe [5, 9, 24, 25] [5, 9, 24] DIED : 20 May 1662 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec : 19 Jun 1652 Trois-Rivieres, Quebec [5, 9, 24] MARRIED: 12 Dec 1619 @ Mamers, Lemans, Sarthe, Maine, France [5, 9, 24] MEMOIRS: On 25 May 1633, Nicole received a plot of land and an orchard from her mother. This property, located at Perruchet, in the parish of St-Hilaire was sold on 1 Feb 1634. On 19 Mar 1635, they sold two parcels of plowed but unsown land at Charbonniers, adjoining the monastery of Val-Dieu to Jeanne Desjouis. On 20 Apr 1635, Marie Castrie, ‘abandoned wife of Pierre Delorme, her second husband’ promised Gaspard and Nicole a legacy superior to her other heirs because they had provided for her without recompense for eighteen months. Nicole's father had been involved with the Kebec Habitation and when an opportunity presented itself, the young Boucher family signed on as prospective settlers. They received the blessing of the Cure, travelled the 160 kilometres from Mortagne to Dieppe and embarked on one of the ships commanded by Duplessis dit Bouchart. Leaving France in the spring of 1635, they landed at Quebec on 4 July 1635 aboard the Saint-Jacques. They were greeted by Samuel de Champlain at Fort Saint-Louis, where the Bouchers first settled and where Gaspard's carpentry skills could be put to good use. Gaspard informed Champlain of an incident in which he was a victim. Apparently Gaspard had entrusted some personal effects to a travelling companion, Thomas Giroux, who refused to return them. Champlain ordered Giroux to return the property but Giroux held them still and the affair dragged on for three years. In court on 12 Sep 1638, Gaspard recounted ‘that he had asked Giroux to transport him from Mortagne to Dieppe with baggage which contained, among other things, two large salt cellars, two large flower vases, two large plates, six porridge bowls, eight to ten plates, a small tin bowl, two pewter bowls, a ceramic bottle containing rosewater, two bushels of cooked pears and one bushel of cooked prunes’. It is unclear whether the items were returned but Giroux was obligated to sell his property and was deported back to France. Gaspard would later be employed by the Jesuits at Trois-Rivieres, where the family would be granted land in 1644. In 1646, he ceased being a farmer for the Jesuits at Notre-Dame de Bonsecours, Beauport and moved his family to land he acquired on the St-Maurice River in the Trois-Rivieres area. Lebel cites in his research, Sister Estell Mitchell who writes, ‘the Boucher family had great influence at the post of Trois-Rivieres, being made up of 18 people out of the total population of 100 ... Gaspard, the father, as well as his sons-in-law Baudry and Lafond signed the official report of the election as trustee of Michel Leneuf du Herisson in Sep 1648 ... in Jan 1649 at the home of Gaspard, a marriage contract was signed between his son, Pierre and Marie-Madeleine Chretien, a Huron woman living in Trois-Rivieres and related to the Pachirini family ... she was a boarder for a few years at the Ursuline convent ... Mother Marie de l’Incarnation said about her, that there are some among the Hurons who persevered in their studies and whom we raised as French girls ... we provide for them and they do very well in reading, writing and speaking French ... we have introduced one of these girls to Monsieur Boucher who has been for some time the Governor of Trois-Rivieres’. On 16 Jun 1649, Gaspard - 254 - sold his property to Jean Sauvaget. The following year he was granted more land as ‘a place to build a house at the bottom of the hillside where the fort is situated’. This plot was 10 toises in frontage by 30 in depth located near the road which ran from the town to the common. His son, Pierre, received the neighbouring property on the same day. In 1668, their daughter, Madeleine, declared ‘that the title or deed to the property first obtained by Gaspard in 1644 had been burned with the house of the said Gaspard Boucher, in which it was kept’. It is thought that Nicole Lemaire perished in that house fire.[21, 22, 24, 25] Gaspard’s son, Pierre, who became the governor of Trois-Rivieres included in a written report about Trois-Rivieres: ‘it is a very beautiful country to see, a flat land, not mountainous, which has very pretty wood ... several rivers and lakes break up its lands, which are all bordered by lovely prairies, which harbour a quantity of animals, especially elk, caribou and beaver, plus very large quantities of wild game and fish ... the area which we have begun to clear is sandy, but the land does not provide a lot of produce because of the thick sandy topsoil ... we have only built on the north side ... it is like two sites separated by a large river ... the place is called TroisRivieres because it is where three rivers come together, separated by islands in the stream, which come in close to the land on the north side.’[21] Gaspard and Nicole’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Notre Dame, Mortagne, Perche, France) follow in the order of their birth: Charles (6 Apr 1620 / 17 Apr 1620), Antoinette (6 Aug 1621 / became a nun / 4 Sep 1691 Trois-Rivieres), Pierre (1 Aug 1622 / became governor of Trois-Rivieres / MarieMadeleine Ouebaudinoukoue Chretien, a Huron Indian, 17 Jan 1649 at her village of Audouart, Quebec / 2 nd marriage, MarieJeanne Crevier 9 Jul 1652 / died 19 Apr 1717 Boucherville where he had been granted a seigneury), Nicolas (9 Sep 1625 / 23 Mar 1649 Trois-Rivieres), Charles-Gaspard (4 Mar 1628 / ca 1633), Marie-Madeleine (n2623), Marguerite (L477), Madeleine (L983).[5, 9, 21, 22, 24, 25] Gaspard Boucher may also be found at the code number (m1966) and (o5246). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Jean: m956 / m957: ZACHARIE CLOUTIER : XAINTES DUPONT FATHER: Denis Cloutier : Paul-Michel Dupont MOTHER: Renée Briere : Perrine de Mortagne MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m374). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Marie: m958 / m959: ABRAHAM MARTIN dit l’Ecossais : MARGUERITE LANGLOIS FATHER: Jean-Galleran Martin : Guillaume Langlois MOTHER: Isabel Cote : Jeanne Millet BORN: 27 Nov 1589 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] : 18 Feb 1596 Orleans, Bourgogne, France [5, 9] DIED: 8 Sep 1664 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 24] : 17 Dec 1665 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 21] [5, 9, 24] MARRIED: 24 Oct 1621 @ Quebec City, Quebec MEMOIRS: In 1619, Henri de Montmorency and Samuel Champlain were recruiting workers for New France and preference was given to young men with families. At the time, many French people were becoming disillusioned with their existence. The costly Religious Wars resulted in high unemployment and an increased cost of living. When Marguerite’s sister, Francoise, and her husband, Pierre Desportes (n3302), a director in the Company of 100 Associates, announced that they would be going to the New World, Marguerite and another sister, Marie, decided to go along. The little group arrived at Tadoussac aboard the Le Sallemande, on 30 Aug 1620 and from there were transported to Quebec City. Abraham Martin was also on this voyage along with his first wife, Guillemette Couillard, whom he married on 18 Jun 1613 at Orleans, Bourgogne, France. With them was their six year old daughter, Anne.[24, 25] Abraham and Ms. Couillard actually had two children: Anne (23 Mar 1614 France / returned to France with family in 1629 then went to New France as a Filles a Marier in 1634 / Jean Cote 17 Nov 1635 at home of Robert Giffard, Quebec City / 4 Dec 1684 Quebec City). [5, 9, 24, 25, 26] Helene (ca 1616 Mouate, France / wed Philibert Rousselin at France).[9] Abraham's first wife died soon after they reached their new world home. Abraham and Marguerite Langlois married the next year. Their son, Eustache Martin, was one of the first French children born in New France. When he was baptized, Eustache’s godfather was Eustache Bouille, the brother of Helene Bouille who was the wife of Samuel de Champlain. When their daughter, Helene Martin, was born in 1627, Champlain himself, acted as her godfather. Helene Bouille apparently spent a great deal of time with the Langlois sisters, during the four - 255 - years she spent at Quebec. Abraham also had a personal friendship with Champlain who in his will, left a legacy to Abraham’s daughter, Marguerite, ‘to help her to marry a man of Canada’ and additional monies to Abraham himself ‘to be spent for clearing land’. This land that they had to clear would later become an important historical site, known as the ‘Plains of Abraham’. This is where the epic battle between the British forces of General James Wolfe defeated the French under the Marquis de Montcalm to seal the fate of New France in 1759. However, the land where Abraham Martin and Marguerite Langlois raised their children, was 32 acres of meadow on the St-Charles River, and the famous ‘Côte d'Abraham’ was the path that they used to water their animals.[24] Research by Lebel indicates that the Plains of Abraham at Quebec, were named after our Abraham Martin.[21] Througout his lifetime, Abraham was referred to as the ‘Scotsman’. Possible origins are that he might have made several voyages to Scotland in his youth as a ship’s pilot or that he might have assisted the Scottish settlers who began arriving at Port Royal about 1628. At one point, Abraham was employed by Jean De Biencourt and Du Gua de Monts as a navigator on the coast of Acadia. Charles La Tour was also part of this enterprise and it seems that these two men remained good friends. When Abraham’s son, Charles-Amador, was born his godfather was Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour. La Tour’s father had accepted a Scottish Barony after being captured by the Kirke Brothers in 1629 so perhaps by this connection, Abraham came by his nickname. When the British took control of Quebec in 1629, most of the colonists, including Abraham and family, were shipped back home. Thereafter, Abraham and Marguerite became guardians of their niece, Marie-Helene Desportes (m1651). It is thought that Marie-Helene’s mother, Francoise Langlois, died about 1632 and so Marguerite was given the task of raising the 12 year old Marie-Helene. When Abraham and Marguerite returned to Quebec in 1634 they brought along Marguerite’s brother, Noel. The Martins would become one of the first three families to be granted land in Quebec City when they were presented with 12 acres by the Company of New France in 1635. They received an additional 20 acres gift from Sieur Adrien du Chesney. Abraham and Marguerite’s descendants later sold this plot to the Ursuline nuns for 1200 livres. Abraham has been called Canada’s first pilot since his occupation was listed as a ‘King’s Pilot’ or navigator. Abraham also drew up the first map of Quebec, even though he was illiterate. Abraham Martin was charged and imprisoned on 15 Feb 1649 for ‘improper conduct with regard to a young girl’. The girl was only 16 years of age so it was detemined to be statuatory rape.[21, 24, 25] Abraham and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at Quebec City) follows in the order of their birth: Eustache (10 Oct 1622 / just the second child born at Quebec to European parents / died 1 Jun 1667 Huronia), Marguerite (m1883), Helene (21 Jun 1627 / Claude Etienne 22 Oct 1640 / 2 nd marriage, Medard Chouart dit Grosseillers, a great explorer and one of the founders of the Hudson Bay Company, 3 Sep 1647 / died ca 1651), Marie (L479), Adrien (22 Nov 1638 / joined the Jesuits / 1 Jun 1667), Madeleine (13 Sep 1640 / Nicolas Forget dit Despatis 6 Feb 1653 / 2nd marriage, Jean Fonteneau dit St-Jean 1 Feb 1681 Lachine / 22 Feb 1688 Lachine), Barbe (4 Jan 1643 / Pierre Biron 12 Jan 1655 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec / 4 Oct 1660), Anne (23 Mar 1645 / Jacques Ratte 12 Nov 1658 / 14 Jan 1717 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans), Charles-Amador (6 Mar 1648 / second priest ordained in Quebec by Monsignor de Laval on 14 Mar 1671 / he is credited with composing the first Canadian music, namely a hymn for a religious event / 19 Jun 1711 Ste-Foy, Quebec).[5, 9, 21, 24, 25] Marguerite Langlois’ second marriage was with Rene Branche on 17 Feb 1665 at Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec City.[5, 9, 21, 22, 25] Abraham Martin dit l’Ecossais may also be found at the following number (n3766). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer - Louise – Olive - Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Guillaume – Olivier: m960 / m961: JEAN TARDIF : CLEMENCE HOUART MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m664). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles - Guillaume – Barbe: m962 / m963: JEAN EMARD : MARIE BINEAU FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Simon Emard : Antoine Bineau Judith Guitot : Rose Turpin Their biographies may be viewed at number (m666). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 256 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Charles: m964 / m965: JACQUES GODIN : MARGUERITE NIARD MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m668). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie: m966 / m967: MARIN BOUCHER : PERRINE MALLET FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Jacques Boucher : Pierre Mallet Francoise Paigne : Jacqueline Leger Their biographies may be viewed at number (m670). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Pierre – Antoine: m968 / m969: OLIVIER ROY : CATHERINE BAUDARD FATHER: Jean Roy : MOTHER: Marie Boucquenier : [5, 9, 45] BORN: 2 Oct 1604 St-Andre, Joigny, Sens, Champagne : ca 1604 St-Jean-de-Joigny, Sens [5, 9] [5, 9, 45] DIED: 6 Dec 1661 St-Jean, Joigny, Sens, Champagne : 20 Dec 1659 St-Jean-de-Joigny, Sens [5, 9, 45] MARRIED: ca 1626 @ St-Jean-de-Joigny, diocese of Sens, Champagne, France [5, 9, 20, 45] MEMOIRS: Olivier was a master cooper.[5, 27, 45] Olivier and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Jean de Joigny) includes: Catherine (11 Jun 1627 / died at seven years of age), Marie (13 Feb 1629 / Etienne Milon ca 1653 / died in 1695), Charlotte (19 Aug 1630 / died at age four), Edmee (18 Mar 1632 / died at age three), Genevieve-Benedicte (8 Jul 1633 / died within a year), Antoine (L484), Elie (13 Jul 1636), Suzanne (31 Jul 1638), Jean (30 Aug 1640 / died at age 43 years in 1683), Catherine 2nd (19 Sep 1643 / Jude Guillerat 24 Sep 1675 St-Thibault, Joigny / 2nd marriage, Edme Girard 25 Jun 1686 St-Thibault, Joigny / 15 Oct 1694).[5, 9, 45] Olivier next wed Marie Pruneau in 1660 at St-Jean, Joigny. Olivier and Ms. Pruneau had a son: Zacharie (1 Feb 1661 St-Jean, Joigny / became a cobbler in Joigny / wed Anne Maure 23 Feb 1686 St-Jean, Joigny / 2nd union, Claude Lalande 12 Feb 1691 St-Jean, Joigny).[5, 45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Pierre – Marie: m970 / m971: JEAN MAJOR : MARGUERITE LEPELLE MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1635 @ St-Thomas de Touques, diocese of Lisieux, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] Jean was the receveur of the Baron of Heuqueville-en-Vexin and Aubeuf-en-Vexin.[27, 45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Marie – Joachim: m972 / m973: JACQUES MARTIN : LUCE CHALUT BORN: 24 Jul 1617 Estree, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5] : ca 1619 Estree, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] DIED: 30 Jun 1670 St-Pierre, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec [5] : 5 Nov 1662 at France [5] MARRIED: ca 1637 @ Estree, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jacques and Luce’s offspring birth/marriage/death details include the following in the order of their birth: Francois (25 Aug 1638 St-Etienne, Larochelle), Joachim (L486), Marie (ca 1647 Notre-Dame-de-Cogne, Larochelle / left for Canada in 1665 as a Kings Daughter / Jean Vallee 4 Feb 1666 La Visitation-Notre-Dame-de-Chateau-Richer, Quebec / 2nd marriage, Jacques Charier dit Lafontaine 5 Dec 1673 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans / 10 Jul 1729 Quebec City).[5, 9, 21, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Marie – Anne Charlotte: m974 / m976: PIERRE PETIT : CATHERINE-FRANCOISE DESNOYERS BORN: ca 1620 St-Germain d’Auxerre, Paris [5, 9, 21, 25] : ca 1622 St-Germain d’Auxerre, Paris [5, 9] [5, 9] DIED: 20 Oct 1676 Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre, Quebec : 16 Jun 1699 Charlesbourg, Quebec [5] MARRIED: ca 1645 @ St-Germain d’Auxerre, Paris, Ile-de-France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Pierre was one of the first two quit-rent payers at Notre-Dame-des-Anges, Quebec. He received his land on 6 Apr 1647. One of his domestic servants was killed on this property and his three year old son, Joseph, was taken by the Mohawks in May of 1650. He sold his land to Mr. M. Franchetot and then acquired land at Beaupré. From there he moved to Ile-d'Orléans and then to Charlesbourg. His remaining - 257 - days were spent at his son-in-laws, Joachim Martin’s La Petite Auberge, at Notre-Dame-des-Anges.[21, 25] Pierre and Catherine-Francoise’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follows in the order of their birth: Joseph (12 Jul 1647 / died as a captive of the Mohawks in 1653), Marie-Anne (30 Jan 1650 / wed Martin Piot), Anne-Charlotte (L487), Francoise (ca 1655), Rene-Jacques (16 Jan 1657 / 26 Nov 1742), Alexandre (6 Apr 1660 / wed Marie-Anne Messier dit St-Michel 8 Jan 1721 / 20 Nov 1738 Varennes, Quebec). [5, 9, 21, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Rene – Rene: m976 / m977: FRANCOIS OUELLET : ELISABETH BARE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m912). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Rene - Anne: m978 / m979: JOSEPH-JACQUES RIVET : MARIE DORÉ MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m914). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean - Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Nicolas: m980 / m981: CLEMENT LEBEL : FRANCOISE LAGNEL ca 1619 @ St-Leger, Illeville-sur-Montfort, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20, 21] Clement and Francoise’s offspring birth/marriage/death details are as follows: Marguerite (16 Feb 1620 Illeville-sur-Montfort, Rouen, Normandy), Colette (7 Sep 1622 Illeville-sur-Montfort), Nicolas (L490).[5, 9, 21] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean - Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Therese: m982 / m983: JEAN MIGNAULT dit Chatillon : LOUISE CLOUTIER FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Mignault : Zacharie Cloutier Madeleine de Brie : Xainte Dupont Their biographies may be viewed at number (L470). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean Galleran: m988 / m989: MARIN BOUCHER : PERRINE MALLET FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Jacques Boucher : Pierre Mallet Francoise Paigne : Jacqueline Leger Their biographies may be viewed at number (m670). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Marie: m990 / m991: JONAS LECLERC : MARIE PARMENTIER MARRIED: ca 1630 @ St-Remi, Dieppe, Normandy, France [5, 9, 26] MEMOIRS: Jonas and Marie were considered part of the ‘bourgeois’ class of society. Prior to Jonas’ daughter, Marie (L445), emigrating, he bought from her a small house that was to be her inheritance. Marie used the proceeds of the sale, 150 livres, to pay her passage to Canada and help her settle in the new world.[26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Mathurin – Mathurin: m992 / m993: JEAN DUBÉ : RENÉE SUZANNE MARRIED: ca 1630 @ Lachapelle-Themer, diocese of Lucon, Poitou, France [5, 9, 20, 21] MEMOIRS: Jean and Renee’s offspring birth data (at Lachapelle-Themer, Lucon, Poitou) includes: Mathurin (L496), Simon (ca 1636 / ca 1698), Rene (ca 1640), Jean (ca 1644 / 18 Feb 1708), Jacques (ca 1648 / 2 Jul 1719).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Mathurin – Marie: m994 / m995: PIERRE CAMPION : MARGUERITE HENAULT MARRIED: ca 1645 @ St-Nicaise de Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 258 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne – Francois: m996 / m997: PIERRE MIVILLE dit Le Suisse : CHARLOTTE MAUGIS BORN: ca 1605 Fribourg, Switzerland [5, 9, 21, 25, 29, 45] : ca 1607 St-Germain, Rochefort, Saintes [5, 21, 45] [5, 9, 21, 25, 29, 45] DIED: 14 Oct 1669 Lauzon, Levis, Quebec : 11 Oct 1676 Lauzon, Levis, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 29, 45] MARRIED: 10 Aug 1630 @ Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Fribourg, in the western part of Switzerland, is the head town of the region through which the Sarine River flows. Like the Pope and the King of France, Cardinal Richelieu, had his own Swiss guards. It is thought that Pierre was one of these. Cardinal Richelieu was at that time, governor of Brouage, France.[21] Cardinal Richelieu's persecution of the Huguenots (the name given to most French Protestants) would culminate in the siege of Larochelle, their major stronghold. Larochelle was one of the fortified towns conceded to the Protestants by the Edict of Nantes, 30 years earlier. Richelieu built a dam to close the port of Larochelle thus cutting off the city by land and sea. As a result, the townspeople endured a terrible famine until they were forced to capitulate. Miville the soldier was in camp in Brouage in 1628, at the time when Richelieu took control of Larochelle.[45] On 25 Jun 1635, Pierre was a witness at a wedding celebrated at StHilaire d’Hiers, France. The wedding act refers to Pierre as ‘sourice de Monseigneur the cardinal living in Brouage’.[21, 45] Lebel figures that Pierre and family lived at Brouage until about 1646. On 5 Nov 1646, Pierre leased a piece of land on the terraces, located near the walls of St-Nicolas and the gate of La Verite at Larochelle. The cost was 16 livres in annual rent. Pierre then had a house built with the foundation walls being two feet thick and the main floor walls being 18 inches thick. The house would have two fireplaces and be covered with tile. The cost would be seven livres per square foot but on 7 Dec 1647, the contract was nullified. Not many months later, Pierre moved to New France. Pierre, Charlotte and their six children emigrated to Canada on 23 Aug 1649 and arrived sometime that fall.[21, 45] When Pierre landed at Quebec it was still only a village of a few tens of houses located on the edge of the river around the institutions. They would have found shelter at Quebec City the first winter because it was too late for them to build. [21] On 29 Oct 1649, Governor Louis d’Alleboust granted the Mivilles three pieces of land on the coast of Lauzon across from the Plains of Abraham in the parish of St-David-de-la-l’Auberiviere, nearby the present day Patton Road. On the same day, Pierre received another piece of land on the Grand Allee, in the vicinity of Quebec City.[21, 25, 45] They had been preceded to the coast of Lauzon by only Francois Bissot (see n2610), Guillaume Couture (see m666) and the Jesuits. By the mid 1650’s Pierre came to own a couple of lots in the city of Quebec, one on rue Saint-Louis and one on rue Saint-Pierre. On rue Saint-Pierre, he built a house consisting of one heated room, a small lean-to, a cellar and an attic. Pierre obtained a deed for this property from Governor Jean de Lauzon on 20 May 1656. The year 1657, was a particulary difficult one for the French colonists between Trois-Rivieres and Ile d’Orleans because of regular acts of terror by the Iroquois. A report by the Jesuits indicates that the French had been victimized at Cap-a-la-Roche, ‘these barbarians, out of umbrage that they have for our folks in their country, committed many insolences, pillaging the houses killing the animals of the French metairies’. On 6 May 1657, the Journal of the Jesuits reported that ‘at noon, the Onondagas killed a cow belonging to Pierre Miville le Suisse, on the bank across from his home ... he fired over their heads without effect ... they killed a pregnant sow belonging to the same man’. In the spring of 1657, the cabinetmakers Jean Levasseur (m1016), Pierre Levasseur (see m1016), Guillaume Loyer, Pierre Biron (see m958), Francois Gariepy, Raymond Paget and Pierre Miville asked Father de Quen to establish a brotherhood of Sainte-Anne. On the first of May, the superior and grand vicar Joseph Poncet announced that ‘the Confrerie des Menusisiers de Madame Ste-Anne’ was established. He drew up the first rules which stipulated the exercises of piety similar to those in force in other brotherhoods. On 1 Jul 1664, Pierre was imprisoned at the Chateau Saint-Louis and the next day the king’s administrator accused him of having ‘committed sedition and intentionally, through open force, accompanied individuals to kidnap passengers sent by the King to the prejudice of the distribution which had been ordered by the Council’. After hearing nine witnesses and the statement of Sieur Giffard, the Sovereign Council and the Governor stated that Pierre was to be ‘banished in perpetuity from Quebec City and relegated to his house located on the Coast and seigneurie of Lauzon ... and not leave the area of the said seigneurie of Lauzon on penalty of the gallows and for this purpose will be taken as far as the said seigneurie by two bailiffs of this Council ... fine of 300 livres payable without delay ... one-third to the king for use in the cost of the war and the - 259 - remaining two-thirds to the poor of the Hotel-Dieu of this city’.[25] Robert Main reports that Pierre’s crime was boarding a ship full of Kings Daughters in the hopes of jumping the queue and finding brides for his sons.[12] Pierre was ordered to pay the legal expenses of the hearings. From this time on, Charlotte took over the administration of Pierre’s affairs, representing him in Quebec City when necessary. On 16 Jul 1665, shortly after the arrival of the Carignan Regiment, the new governor, Prouville de Tracy, conceded a domain called Canton des Suisses Fribourgeois. A width of 21 arpents on the river and 40 arpents deep, this concession was divided equally between the seven designated concessionaires, Francois Tisseau, Jean Gueuchuard, Francois Rime, Jean Cahusin, Pierre Miville, his sons, Francois and Jacques. This canton was located fifteen leagues downstream from Quebec City and on the other side of this concession stretched unceded land towards Tadoussac. The concession was made by way of cens, 20 sols and seigneurial rents, one sol and two capons payable to the Domain of the King on each St-Remi’s Day, the first of October. The tenants would have the right to hunt, fish and to use the fields both in front of and on their concessions and they would be obliged to fence their pastures.[21] This area was then called the Grande-Anse and is known today as Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière. Pierre Miville directed them in the clearing of their farms. Their area was known as the ‘County of the Fribourg Swiss’. The colonization did not last as the Swiss returned to their mother country. Pierre Miville stayed on the coast of Lauzon and soon became captain of the militia and was known as ‘the Swiss’.[25] Pierre became a master cabinetmaker and carpenter.[21, 25, 29] The 1667 census shows Pierre on the Lauzon coast with a 40 year old servant, eight cattle, and 30 arpents of cultivated land. On 5 Apr 1667, a letter written by Intendant Talon to Minister Colbert in France includes, ‘the plan that you make to recruit three hundred ... Swiss from the Catholic Cantons to send them here, especially delights the residents of Canada who having received this year very weak men, who are inclined to do very little useful work ... I am persuaded that one man from this nation is worth at least two from ours for what is done in this country ... a single one ... has put the fruit of his work in a condition to build some ships and I have already accepted one of them from him for which I have paid him two thousand livres’. This man that Talon refers to was Pierre Miville as verified by a document notarized by Rageot in which Pierre acknowledges receipt of the 2000 livres as payment for the ship. In the same letter, Talon refers to another boat of Pierre’s ‘to be used for fishing in the lower St-Lawrence River ... I am in negotiations with this resident and two others, almost of his skill, to make them undertake for their account and that of M. de Courcelle, a ship with a capacity of three hundred to four hundred tons, offering to pay the expenses which this enterprise demands, as well as that of the trade to be established with the Antilles where this ship could transport what this country produces and what the other lacks’. Pierre died in his house on the Lauzon Coast ‘at ten o’clock in the evening after having received the sacraments of confession and extreme unction’. Shortly after Pierre’s death, Charlotte and sons, Francois and Jacques formed a partnership to trade furs. They bought merchandise on credit totalling 4691 livres. A year later the receipts of sale of the pelts was only 1705 livres. The partners dissolved their association. Francois bowed out while Charlotte and Jacques committed to pay off the balance of the debt and would remain owners of the merchandise not sold. The assets of the partnership were valued at 1175 livers including an equiped sailboat, some accounts receivable and 181 moose skins which the hunters owned. Unfortunately they never recovered from this financial difficulty and ended up, after many years of litigation, losing the homestead and house at Quebec City. In memory of Pierre, on 18 Jul 1670, Charlotte and her sons made a donation to the brotherhood of Ste-Anne, of which Pierre was a founding member. It was noted that ‘together prompted by a motive of devotion to Madame Ste-Anne, they have by these documents given as a pure irrevocable gift to the Brotherhood of the said dame Ste-Anne established at Quebec the amount of 80 livres 6 sols tournois to those owed by the Community of Habitants of this country and they have said and affirmed this accepting me, Jean Levasseur bailiff at the Sovereign Council of this country as dean of the said brotherhood and have the said donors consented that the said Levasseur for the said brotherhood collect as trustee ten per cent of the amount ... and use it for what he decides to be suitable for the adornment of the chapel of the said dame Ste-Anne or in other things that he decides necessary’. Levasseur promised to have a high Reguiem mass said for the repose of the soul of Pierre. Thomas Morel, missionary of Point-de-Levy went to Charlotte’s house on the Lauzon coast in 1676 and administered the sacrament of extreme unction and the next day her body was buried ‘in the cemetery of the Church which was on the said coast of Lauzon’.[21] Pierre and Charlotte’s offspring birth/marriage/death - 260 - data (at Notre-Dame-de-Quebec City): Gabriel (ca 1631 Notre-Dame-de-Cogne, Brouage / 11 Nov 1635 Notre-Dame-deCogne), Marie-Anne (13 Dec 1632 Notre-Dame-de-Cogne / Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve 22 Nov 1650 / 5 Sep 1702 StAugustin, Portneuf), Francois (L498), Aymee (12 Aug 1635 Brouage / Robert Giguere 2 July 1652 / 9 Dec 1713 Ste-Annede-Beaupre), Marie-Madeleine (18 Nov 1636 Brouage / Jean Cauchon 20 Nov 1652 / 16 Sep 1708 Chateau-Richer), Jacques (2 May 1638 Brouage / Marie-Catherine de Baillon, a descendant of Emperor Charlemgne of France from 768 to 814 and a Kings Daughter from an upper class family with a dowry of 1000 livres, 12 Nov 1669 / 27 Jan 1688 Riviere-Ouelle), Suzanne (24 Jan 1640 Brouage / Antoine Poulet 12 Apr 1655 / 29 Aug 1675 Ste-Famille, Ile d’Orleans, Quebec).[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 29, 45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne – Marie: m998 / m999: NOEL LANGLOIS : FRANCOISE GARNIER FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Guillaume Langlois : Guillaume Garnier Jeanne Millet : Michelle Marille Their biographies may be viewed at number (L182). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Pierre – Jean: m1000 / m1001: CLAUDE SOUCY : FRANCOISE de VAIME DIED: MARRIED: 22 Aug 1679 ca 1643 @ Ile-aux-Grues, Quebec [5, 9] Picardie, France [5, 9, 20] : at Quebec [9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Pierre – Jeanne: m1002 / m1003: JACQUES SAUVENIER : ANTOINETTE BABILOTTE MARRIED: ca 1640 @ Paris, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth – Urbain: m1004 / m1005: JEAN FOUQUEREAU : RENÉE BATAILLE FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: MARRIED: Louis Fouquereau : Denise Gaudin : [9] 7 Sep 1626 St-Augustin, Angers, Anjou : ca 1628 ca 1649 @ Continvoir, Angers, Anjou, France [5, 9, 20, 29] Continvoir, Angers, Anjou [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth – Jeanne: m1006 / m1007: MARTIN ROSSIGNOL dit Grossonneau : RENÉE DESJARDINS FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: MARRIED: Jean Rossignol dit Grossonneau : Antoine Desjardins Marie Marteau : Marie Leleu ca 1624 St-Pierre-Montfort, l’Amoury, Chartres [5, 29] : 7 May 1629 St-Pierre-Montfort, l’Amoury [5, 29] 4 Jul 1649 @ St-Pierre de Montfort, l’Amoury, Chartres, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean: m1008 / m1009: THOMAS HAYOT : JEANNE BOUCHER FATHER: : Jacques Boucher MOTHER: : Francoise Paigne BORN: 17 Sep 1606 Soligny-la-Trappe, Perche [5, 9, 21] : ca 1606 St-Jean de Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 24] [9, 21] DIED: 9 Sep 1678 Notre-Dame, Quebec City : 14 Jan 1670 St-Francois, Quebec [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: 15 Jul 1629 @ St-Jean de Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 27] MEMOIRS: The first parish registry of Quebec noted Thomas’ prescence in the country on 30 Oct 1638. It is thought that Thomas and family arrived earlier that year. He first obtained about a half an arpent of land in the Upper Town of Quebec City at a spot then called Mont-Carmel which he sold in 1641 for 56 livres. On 30 Jul 1640, Thomas went to work for Nicolas Pivert as a land clearer. He owned another six arpents of land at Cap-Rouge but relinquished it before 1650. On 15 Apr 1646, Governor Hualt de Montmagny ceded land to Thomas at Sillery that had three arpents river frontage and stretched back 28 arpents to the St-Ignace - 261 - road. Lebel cites the Journal of the Jesuits which notes that Thomas and brother-in-law, Marin Boucher (m670) were sharecroppers on the Jesuits’ farm and includes this entry dated 11 Jun 1646, ‘Our farmers at Beauport agreed to a separation: Boucher left and Thomas Hayot remained in charge ... this was an agreement between them without our having to do anything except consent to it’. An entry on 24 Sep 1651, reveals that Thomas ‘had a canoe stolen by a Sokoquinois Indian who in company with an unknown Abenaquinois, made good their escape’. On 19 Aug 1653, the Jesuits recorded that Thomas had been elected a member of the people’s assembly for Cap-Rouge. In 1653, the Iroquois became an ever increasing menace in the Sillery area. The Jesuit fathers decided to help organize the inhabitants of the St-Francois-Xavier coast of Sillery and create a village providing greater safety for all. They detached 45 arpents to be evenly divided into 18 parcels of land. Both Thomas and his son-in-law Etienne de Nevers received a section. On their portion each inhabitant could plant a garden and build a barn and stable. Another five arpents were given to build a fort with a bastion. The residents collectively built the fort and lodgings in the enclosed space where they lived. These actions seemed to bring progress because on 6 May 1657, about 40 Onondagas from the Iroquois nation set up their huts at the edge of the river across from the Sillery and ten others entered Thomas’ house to negotiate a peace with the Hurons, Algonquins and the French. Nine days later they returned to their territory accompanied by three native ambassadors. The 1667 census has Thomas, age 58 years and Jeanne, age 27, living at Cap-Rouge on the St-Ignace coast next door to his daughter, Anne with three animals and 20 arpents cultivated land.[21] Thomas and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (at St-Jean-de-Mortagne) includes: Jeanne (ca 1630 / died an infant), Genevieve (30 Nov 1632 / Claude Bouchard dit Dorval, a surgeon, 1 Jan 1650 Sillery / died giving birth to their first child who was still-born 1 Mar 1651 Notre-Dame-de-Quebec, Quebec City), Randolphe (14 Jun 1634 / ca 1661 at Quebec), Jean (L504), Adrien (30 Oct 1638 Quebec City / Marie-Madeleine Guyon 24 Nov 1661 Quebec City / 2nd marriage Marie Pechina, a Kings Daughter who arrived in 1671 with a dowry of 300 livres, 18 Feb 1686 Quebec City / 17 Dec 1712 St-Antoine-de-Tilly), Anne (m1253).[5, 9, 21, 22, 27] Thomas next married Barbe Ravest, a Kings Daughter, on 8 Sep 1670 at Cap-Rouge, Quebec.[5, 9, 21] Thomas Hayot is also number (n2506). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Louise: m1010 / m1011: NICOLAS PELLETIER : JEANNE de VOISY FATHER: : Barthelemy de Voisy MOTHER: : Jeanne Gardony BORN: 7 Dec 1594 St-Pierre-de-Galardon, Chartres [5] : 27 Apr 1612 St-Pierre-de-Galardon, Chartres [5, 9] DIED: ca 1677 Sillery, Quebec [5, 9, 29] : 12 Dec 1689 Sorel, Quebec [5, 9, 25, 29] MARRIED: ca 1631 @ St-Pierre-de-Galardon, Chartres, Beauce, Orleanais, France [5, 9, 20, 26, 29] MEMOIRS: Nicolas was a master carpenter.[25, 29] Nicolas emigrated in 1637 with his wife and two oldest sons.[25] From 1637 to 1640, Nicolas was a carpenter for the habitation of Quebec City.[26] Among the Québec City buildings he is known to have worked on are the house of Louis Hébert (o5222), which was the first private home to be built outside the Québec fortification, the frame of Notre-Dame-de-Quebec Church's steeple, and the roof of the governor’s residence, Chateau Saint-Louis. Pelletier’s Cove along the Saguenay River is named after Nicolas.[5] Nicolas was thought to be the first man to whom D'Ailleboust granted land in the territory that the Jesuits wanted to keep for their converts. The family was absorbed in the Native Seigneurie in 1651 and was still there in 1663.[25] Jeanne de Voisy was convicted of selling alcohol to the native Indians.[25, 29] Nicolas and Jeanne’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Jean (ca 1633 St-Pierre-Galardon / Marie-Genevieve Manovely de Reville, a Filles a Marier, 21 Aug 1662 / 2 Nov 1692 Sorel), Francois (ca 1635 St-Pierre-Gallardon / Dorothee Amerindienne, from the Montagnais tribe, 1 Apr 1660 Tadoussac / 2nd marriage, Marguerite Morisseau 26 Sep 1661 Sillery, Quebec / 14 May 1690 seigneurie of Dautray), Marie-Anne (3 Apr 1638 / came to Canada as a Filles a Marier / Nicolas Goupil 17 Oct 1650 / 2nd marriage, Jean Denis 30 Aug 1655), Louise (L505), Francoise (13 Apr 1642 / Jean Beriault 17 Aug 1654 / 16 Jul 1707 Ste-Foy), Jeanne (19 Mar 1644 / Noel Jeremie de Lamontagne 29 Jan 1659 / 23 Jan 1715 St-Nicolas), Genevieve (6 Apr 1646 / Vincent Verdon 5 Nov 1663 / 16 Dec 1717), Nicolas (30 Apr 1649 Sillery / Madeleine Tegochix, native Indian, 22 Jun 1673 / 2nd marriage, Francoise Ouechipichinokiq on 3 Jun 1677 at Tadoussac, Quebec / 12 Feb 1729 Tadoussac).[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 26, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 262 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Jean: m1012 / m1013: PIERRE GRONDIN : MARIE-CATHERINE RIGOULET FATHER: Antoine Grondin : Jean Rigoulet MOTHER: Marguerite Nouveau : Marie Crucheau DIED: 6 Jul 1660 Ste-Marie, Bouage, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9] : 18 Apr 1657 Bouage, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9] MARRIED: 23 Sep 1631 @ Notre-Dame, Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: According to Lebel, Pierre and Marie died prior to Jean emigrating in 1667.[21] Pierre and Marie-Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death details are as follows: Jean (L506), Pierre (28 Aug 1650 SteMarie, Brouage, Saintes / Marie Fournier on 10 Oct 1696 at Neuville, Quebec / 28 Aug 1729 St-Joseph, Pointe-Levis, Lauzon).[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte: m1014 / m1015: JEAN MIGNAULT dit Chatillon : LOUISE CLOUTIER FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Mignault : Zacharie Cloutier Madeleine de Brie : Xainte Dupont Their biographies may be viewed at number (L470). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Pierre – Laurent: m1016 / m1017: JEAN LEVASSEUR : MARGUERITE MAHEU FATHER: Thomas Levasseur : Nicolas Maheu MOTHER: Germaine Legris : Jeanne Bonnet BORN: 5 Jan 1604 St-Trinite, Bois-Guillaume [5, 9, 20] : ca 1617 St-Trinite, Bois-Guillaume, Rouen [5, 9] DIED: 31 Aug 1686 Quebec City, Quebec [5, 9] : 24 Dec 1685 l’Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec [5, 9, 21] MARRIED: 23 Apr 1636 @ St-Trinite-de-Bois-Guillaume, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 20] MEMOIRS: Lebel indicates that as of the year 1675, Jean was the bailiff for the Sovereign Council. From it’s inception in 1663, this high court of the land assembled at Levasseur’s home in order to hear the various grievances of the citizens. The Sovereign Council met in a large room in Jean’s house which he rented to them for 250 livres per year. This continued until a more permanent chamber was procured for the Council. Jean and Marguerite’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (all at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) follow in the order of their birth: Jeanne (30 Jan 1639 St-Trinite, Bois-Guillaume), Nicolas (17 May 1641 St-Trinite), Pierre (16 Jun 1642 St-Trinite), Laurent (L508), Louis (ca 1650 / 27 Dec 1726), Anne (22 Jul 1652 / ca 1681), Noel (twin, 20 Dec 1654 / Marguerite Guay 30 Oct 1679 / 8 Mar 1730), Jean-Francois (twin, 20 Dec 1654 / ca 1681), Ursule (25 Feb 1656 / Guillaume Rogers 6 Jan 1671 Sillery / 20 Mar 1707), Therese (ca 1658 / Nicolas Bonhomme 14 Jan 1676 Sillery / 26 Mar 1731 L’Ancienne-Lorette), Angelique (9 Jun 1661 / Charles Hamel 25 Jul 1678 Sillery / 20 Apr 1717 Ste-Foye), Madeleine (11 Jun 1663 / 18 Jun 1663), Charles (7 Apr 1665 / ca 1681), Anne-Felicite (22 Apr 1667 / Jean-Francois Hamel 23 Apr 1685 L’Ancienne-Lorette, Quebec / 25 Sep 1748 L’Ancienne-Lorette), Joseph (21 Feb 1669 / 23 Feb 1669).[5, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Pierre – Marie: m1018 / m1019: LOUIS MARCHAND : FRANCOISE MORINEAU BORN: ca 1618 St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle [5, 9] : 3 Feb 1624 Ile-de-Re, Larochelle [5] DIED: 10 Oct 1690 Lauzon, Levis, Quebec [5, 9] : ca 1704 Lauzon, Levis, Quebec [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1643 @ St-Martin, Ile-de-Re, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20, 27] MEMOIRS: Francoise and Louis’ offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Quebec City unless otherwise noted) are as follows: Francois (13 Nov 1644 St-Martin, Ile-de-Re / Madeleine Groleau, a Kings Daughter, 30 Sep 1669 / 5 Nov 1701), Charles (ca 1648 St-Martin / Marie Bonne dit Guerriere ca 1670), Marie (L509), Madeleine-Jeanne (ca 1654 Ile-de-Re / 11 Aug 1669), Louis (ca 1658 Ile-de-Re / Lebel refers to him as the wealthy uncle of Marie-Renée Levasseur-see L598, who willed her 240 square arpents of land / wed Genevieve Rocheron 16 Jun 1693 Lauzon, Levis / died 25 Feb 1708), Jacques-Etienne (ca 1662 Ile-de-Re / Marguerite Gaudreau on 1 Aug 1699 at Cap-St-Ignace / 17 Dec 1708 Levis).[5, 9, 21, 22, 27] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 263 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Pierre: m1020 / m1021: ANTOINE MICHAUD : MARIE TRAIN FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: : Pierre Train : Marie Michel Their biographies may be viewed at number (L464). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Marie: m1022 / m1023: RENE ANCELIN : CLAIRE ROUSSELOT FATHER: MEMOIRS: Louis A. Ancelin : Their biographies may be viewed at number (L466). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Marie – Charles - Jacques: n1560 / n1561: CHARLES JOBIN : MARIE DUVAL MARRIED: ca 1600 @ Amfreville-sous-les-Monts, Les Andelys, Normandy, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Charles Jobin was a merchant-laborer.[21] Charles and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details are as follows: Jacques (m780), Jean (ca 1606 Amfreville-sous-les-Monts, Les Andelys / was a master tailor working at St-Germain-l’Auxerrois, Paris as of 1639 / wed Marie Girard 9 Oct 1639 Paris, France / moved to Canada ca 1645). [9, 21] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Alexis – Louis – Madeleine – Marie – Madeleine - Michel: n1564 / n1565: MARIN GIRARD : MADELEINE HEBERT DIED: 9 Oct 1639 Rouen, Normandy [5] : 10 Sep 1639 Rouen, Normandy [5] MARRIED: ca 1600 @ St-Cyr-du-Vaudreuil, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Their offspring data (at St-Cyr-du-Vaudreuil): Michel (m782), Jeanne (25 Aug 1606), Gilles (19 Oct 1609), Francoise (25 Mar 1616), Marie (12 Feb 1623 / Jean Jobin 9 Oct 1639 Paris / 23 Mar 1675 Quebec City) .[5, 9, 21, 25] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise - Olive – Alexis - Alexis – Amable - Archange – Petronille – Petronille – Marie – Jacques: n1628 / n1629: ANTOINE ARCHAMBAULT : RENÉE OUVRARD BORN: ca 1577 Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle [5, 9, 48] : ca 1579 Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: ca 1602 @ Lardilliere, Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 20, 29, 48] MEMOIRS: Antoine and Renée’s children birth/marriage/death data (at Dompierre-sur-Mer, Larochelle) follow: Jacques (m814), Denis (ca 1606 / Ozanne Lebreton 18 Jul 1630), Anne (ca 1608 / Francois Hernois at France / 2nd marriage, Jean Emard 2 Nov 1654).[5, 9] Antoine Archambault is also found at code number (m1212) and (o7644). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Archange – Petronille – Petronille – Marie - Francoise: n1630 / n1631: FRANCOIS TOURAULT : MARTHE LENOIR BORN: ca 1580 St-Amand-de-Bois, Angouleme [5, 9] : ca 1582 St-Amand-de-Bois, Angouleme [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1605 @ St-Amand-de-Bois, Angouleme, Angoumois, France [5, 9, 20, 29] MEMOIRS: Francois and Marthe’s offspring birth/marriage/death data follows in order of birth: Francoise (m815), Jacquette (ca 1612 St-Jean d’Angely, Saintonge, France / was a Filles a Marier / Pierre Jaroussel ca 1640 Perigny, Larochelle, Aunis, France / 2nd marriage, Jacques Previrault 21 Jul 1653 Quebec City / 3 rd marriage Maurice Arrivé 25 Aug 1654 Beauport / 21 Apr 1670 Ste-Famille, Ile d`Orleans).[5, 9, 25] Francois Tourault is also code number (m1214) and (o7646). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis - Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Joseph – Francoise – Marin: n1636 / n1637: ROBERT JANOT : JEANNE PIENNE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m808). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis - Alexis – Amable – Angele – Jean – Joseph – Francoise – Francoise: n1638 / n1639: PIERRE BENARD : CATHERINE RIVERIN MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m810). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 264 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis - Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Joseph – Louis: n1648 / n1649: LOUIS LOISEL : JEANNE-LOUISE LETERRIER BORN: ca 1595 St-Germain-de-la-Blanche-Herbe [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1597 St-Germain-de-la-Blanche-Herbe [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1620 @ St-Germain-de-la-Blanche-Herbe, Caen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20, 29] Louis Loisel may also be found in this family history at the following code number (m1676). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Joseph – Marguerite: n1650 / n1651: FRANCOIS CHARLOT : BARBE GIRARDEAU BORN: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1597 St-Jean-en-Greve, Paris [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1599 St-Jean-en-Greve, Paris [5, 9, 20] ca 1622 @ St-Jean-en-Greve, Paris, France [5, 9, 20, 29] Francois Charlot may also be found in this family history at the following number (m1678). Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Jeanne – Honore: n1652 / n1653: JEAN LANGLOIS : JACQUETTE CHARPENTIER FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: MARRIED: Guillaume Langlois Jeanne Millet ca 1610 St-Leonard-des-Parcs, Orne, Normandy, France [5] ca 1635 @ Paris, France [5, 9, 20, 29] : : : ca 1612 Paris, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Jeanne – Marie: n1654 / n1655: URBAIN PONTONNIER : FELICITE JAMIN [5, 9, 26, 29] BORN: ca 1612 St-Vincent, Le Lude, Anjou, France : ca 1614 St-Vincent, Le Lude, Anjou MARRIED: MEMOIRS: [5, 9, 26, 29] [5, 9, 20, 29] ca 1637 @ St-Vincent, Le Lude, Anjou, France Urbain Pontonnier died shortly before his daughter, Marie moved to New France in 1656.[5, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Marguerite – Barbe – Gilbert: n1660 / n1661: PIERRE BARBIER : CLAUDE VIZON BORN: ca 1600 St-Are de Decize, Nevers, Nivernais [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1602 St-Are de Decize, Nevers [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: ca 1625 @ St-Are de Decize, diocese of Nevers, Nivernais, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Marguerite – Barbe – Catherine: n1662 / n1663: ALEXANDRE DEVAUX : LOUISE de RENEL BORN: ca 1600 d’Eym, Meurthe-et-Mosel, Lorraine [5, 9, 20, 29] : ca 1602 d’Eym, Meurthe-et-Mosel [5, 9, 20] MARRIED: ca 1625 @ St-Germaine-d’Eym, Meurthe-et-Mosel, Lorraine, France [5, 9, 20, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Pierre – Therese – Catherine – Julienne - Jeanne: n1694 / n1695: NICOLAS DUGAS : MS. NICOLAS DUGAS MARRIED: ca 1580 @ at France [5, 29] MEMOIRS: Nicolas and his wife’s offspring birth data follows in the order of their birth: Mathurin (ca 1582), Martin (ca 1584), Jeanne (m847).[5] Nicolas Dugas may also be found at the code number (o7102). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Gabriel - Louis: n1720 / n1721: LOUIS LEMIEUX : MADELEINE LEMAITRE FATHER: Thomas Lemieux : Geuffin Lemaitre MOTHER: Ms. Catherine Lemieux : MARRIED: ca 1595 @ Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 12] MEMOIRS: Madeleine and Louis’ offspring birth/marriage/death data: Madeleine (ca 1596 St-Eloi, Rouen / ca 1597), Jehanne (ca 1598 St-Michel, Rouen), Louis (m860), Thomas (ca 1602 Rouen / Anne Corneau ca 1627 France) .[5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 265 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte - Marie – Jean – Marguerite - Marie – Jeanne – Toussaint: n1756 / n1757: NICOLAS HUNAULT : MARIE BENOIT BORN: ca 1595 St-Pierre-des-Champs, Beauvais [5, 9, 20] : ca 1597 St-Pierre-es-Champs, Beauvais [5, 9, 20] ca 1620 @ St-Pierre-des-Champs, Beauvais, France [5, 9, 20, 21] Nicolas and Marie’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at St-Pierre-des-Champs, Beauvais unless noted otherwise) follow: Marie (18 May 1620), Jean (16 May 1623), Toussaint (m878), Francois (12 Dec 1632).[5, 9] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte - Marie – Jean – Marguerite - Marie – Jeanne – Marie: n1758 / n1759: PIERRE LORGUEIL dit Arcouet : MARIE BRUYERE BORN: ca 1602 St-Vivien-de-Rouen, Normandy [5, 9, 20] : ca 1604 St-Vivien-de-Rouen, Normandy [5, 9, 20] [5, 9] DIED: 23 Nov 1654 Cognac, Saintes, Saintonge : 29 Jan 1674 Cognac, Saintes, Saintonge [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1630 @ St-Vivien-de-Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jeanne – Barbe - Vincent: n1788 / n1789: JEAN RENAULT : MADELEINE GAUFRENEAU DIED: 23 Nov 1652 Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9, 29] : ca 1630 Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 29] MARRIED: ca 1605 @ Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: Jean was a resident of St-Eloy, Notre Dame, Larochelle. He worked as a master shoemaker.[29] Jean and Madeleine’s offspring birth details (all at Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis) are as follows: Jean (ca 1607), Vincent (m894), Pierre (10 Jun 1612), Noel (17 Aug 1615), Madeleine (28 May 1617), Catherine (9 Feb 1619).[5, 9, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Marie – Marguerite – Marguerite – Jeanne – Barbe - Marie: n1790 / n1791: GABRIEL MARTIN : MARIE BRETON BORN: ca 1586 Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9] : ca 1588 Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis [5, 9] MARRIED: 16 Jan 1611 @ Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle, Aunis, France [5, 9, 29] MEMOIRS: Gabriel Martin was a resident of Notre Dame parish, Larochelle and worked as a stevedore or porter. He first wed Francoise Escuier in 1608 at Larochelle and had a son, Etienne (14 Mar 1609 Ste-Marguerite, Larochelle).[29] Gabriel and Marie Breton’s offspring birth data (at Larochelle, Aunis) includes: Marie (m895), Jacques (24 Jul 1617), Jean (31 Mar 1619).[5, 9, 29] Marie Breton next wed Nathaniel Goirier in 1631 at France.[5, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean: n1836 / n1837: GUILLAUME PELLETIER dit Gobloteur : MICHELLE MABILLE FATHER: Eloi Pelletier : Guillaume Mabille MOTHER: Francoise Matte : Etiennette Monhay [5] BORN: 2 Apr 1598 : 20 May 1592 [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] [5, 9, 21, 45] PLACE: La Cristerie, St-Pierre, Bresolettes, Perche : St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9, 21] DIED: 27 Nov 1657 Cote-de-Montage, Quebec [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] : 21 Jan 1665 Cote-de-Montage, PQ [5, 9, 21, 25, 45] MARRIED: 12 Feb 1619 @ St-Aubin de Tourouvre, Perche, France [5, 9, 20, 21, 25, 45] MEMOIRS: Lebel writes that Pelletier comes from the Latin word pelis, meaning one who works with or sells skins and furs. In the sixth and seventh centuries the desire for rare and precious fur-lined cloaks seized the European populations. By about 1350, the fur merchants or pelletiers of the city of Paris had their own status and privileges. It is doubtless that a number of these fur merchants adopted the surname of Pelletier and are among Guillaume’s ancestors. Guillaume met Michelle at La Gazerie where he was working charcoal or coal merchant.[21] An act dated 26 Jun 1630, indicates that ‘Macé Guyot ... yields to Jehan Maunoury and to Guillaume Pelletier, coal merchants, living in said Tourouvre, 106 cords of wood for the purpose of making coal ... in exchange ... Pelletier will deliver 175 coal pipes and will pay 4 gold coins’. On 8 Mar 1641, Guillaume and Michelle sold a part of their land to Robert Loyseau and leased the rest for five years to his brother-in-law, Jean Rousseau, for 15 livres per year. Later that spring Guillaume and family and his brother, Antoine, departed for Canada. On 5 Oct 1641, Guillaume sent a letter to Jean Rousseau, in France, asking him to pay 45 livres to Mr. Choiseau ‘in order to resolve family and business matters’. On 12 - 266 - Sep 1644, Guillaume obtained a concession of land with six arpents of frontage in the seigneurie of Beauport. His brother, Antoine, became his neighbour.[21, 45] The Jesuit Journal of 1646, mentions that Guillaume had gained employment as ‘a logger, sawyer, carpenter, coalman’.[45] About 1646, the parish church of Quebec and the chateau Saint-Louis were constructed. The archives of the Ursulines state that Guillaume Pelletier was ‘with those who participated in the completion of these two projects ... either by hauling of materials or by other works’. In 1647, Guillaume admitted before a notary that he was in debt for a loan of 342 livres that he had received from Martin Prevost.[21] Also in this year his brother, Antoine, died when his canoe overturned near Montmorency Falls. Since Antoine and his wife had not entered into a formal marriage contract, half of Antoine's property passed to his nearest living relative, his brother Guillaume. Guillaume, in turn, bought the other half of the property from Antoine's widow. Eight years later, Guillaume sold his brother's former property to Jean Migneault.[21, 45] In 1648, Guillaume sold two fine draft oxens and used 500 livres of the proceeds to reduce a debt that he and his brother, Antoine, had with the warehouse of Quebec. In 1649, the abandonment of the mission of Sainte-Marie-des-Hurons occurred. Their son, Jean, had worked there but the Iroqouis became more and more threatening, especially for the missionaries. The Pelletiers saw the arrival of the remains of the Huron nation who settled at the western tip of the Ile d’Orleans. As a community it became even more necessary to organize for protection. In 1653, Guillaume was named vice-mayor of the region of Beauport.[21] Guillaume and Michelle’s offspring birth/marriage/ death data includes: Claude (10 Feb 1622 St-Aubin-de-Tourouvre / died prior to 1641 at France), Guillaume (26 Feb 1624 St-Aubin-de-Tourouvre / ca 1646 at Quebec), Marie (ca 1625 St-Aubin / Julien Perrault 4 Mar 1647 Notre-Dame-deQuebec City), Jean (m918).[5, 9, 21, 45] Guillaume Pelletier may also be found in this history at number (m2016). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Anne: n1838 / n1839: NOEL LANGLOIS : FRANCOISE GARNIER FATHER: Guillaume Langlois : Guillaume Garnier MOTHER: Jeanne Millet : Michelle Marille MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (L182). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois – Michel - Clement: NICOLAS BOUCHARD : MARIE GUERREAU MARRIED: ca 1600 @ Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Aunis, France [9] MEMOIRS: Marie Guerreau had two brothers, Barthelemy (born ca 1573 at France) and Jacques (born ca 1575 at France). Both brothers were present at her son, Clement’s wedding in 1632 at Andilly-les-Marais, France.[21] n1840 / n1841: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois – Michel - Louise: n1842 / n1843: JEAN BRILLARD : ANDREE GILLEBERT ca 1607 @ Andilly-les-Marais, Marans, Aunis, France [5, 9] Jean and Andree’s offspring birth/marriage/death details are as follows: Louise (m921), Jean (ca 1611 Andilly-les-Marais), Nicolas (ca 1613 Andilly-les-Marais / Francoise Lambert 17 Jan 1640 Andilly-les-Marais).[9] MARRIED: MEMOIRS: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Germain – Germain – Marie – Madeleine – Francois – Marie - Madeleine: JEAN BLANCHARD : RADEGONDE LAMBERT BORN: ca 1603 Martaize, Vienne, France [5, 9, 25] : ca 1605 Seigneury Aulnay, Martaize, Loudon, Vienne [5, 25] MARRIED: ca 1628 @ La Roche-sur-Yon, Poitou, France [9, 20] MEMOIRS: Jean and Radegonde’s offspring birth/marriage/death data (all at Port Royal, Acadia): Madeleine (m923), Bernard (ca 1633 La Roche-sur-Yon), Marie (ca 1636 La Roche-sur-Yon / Pierre Gaudet le Jeune ca 1665), Anne (ca 1639 La Roche-sur-Yon / Francois Guerin ca 1658 / died 1714 Beaubassin, Acadia), Martin (ca 1642 La Roche-surn1846 / n1847: Yon / wed Francoise Leblanc ca 1670 Cobequid, Acadia / 2nd marriage, Marguerite Guillebault ca 1686 / 4 Jul 1718), Guillaume (ca 1645 La Roche-sur-Yon / Huguette Gougeon ca 1674 / ca 1716).[5, 21, 25, 36] Jean Blanchard is also (m1390). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 267 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie – Louise - Zacharie: n1884 / n1885: DENIS CLOUTIER : RENÉE BRIERE FATHER: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Cloutier : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n748). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie – Louise - Xaintes: n1886 / n1887: PAUL-MICHEL DUPONT : PERRINE de MORTAGNE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n750). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite - Gaspard: JACQUES BOUCHER : FRANCOISE PAIGNE FATHER: Jean Boucher : Nicolas Paigne MOTHER: Francoise Roussin : Marie Castrie MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1340). n1908 / n1909: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite - Nicole: NICOLAS LEMAIRE : MARIE CASTRIE DIED: ca 1618 Sarthe, Maine, France [5] : 15 Oct 1626 Sarthe, Maine, France [5, 9] [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1592 @ Lemans, Sarthe, Maine, France MEMOIRS: Nicolas Lemaire may also be found in this family history at code number (n3934) and (p10494). n1910 / n1911: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Jean – Zacharie: n1912 / n1913: FATHER: MEMOIRS: DENIS CLOUTIER : RENÉE BRIERE Nicolas Cloutier : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n748). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Jean - Xaintes: n1914 / n1915: PAUL-MICHEL DUPONT : PERRINE de MORTAGNE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n750). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Marie - Abraham: n1916 / n1917: MEMOIRS: JEAN-GALLERAN MARTIN : ISABEL COTE Their biographies may be viewed at number (m436). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Marie - Marguerite: GUILLAUME LANGLOIS : JEANNE MILLET FATHER: : Jacques Millet MOTHER: : Jeanne Vincent MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m364). n1918 / n1919: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles - Guillaume – Barbe- Jean: n1924 / n1925: SIMON EMARD : JUDITH GUITOT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1332). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles - Guillaume – Barbe - Marie: n1926 / n1927: ANTOINE BINEAU : ROSE TURPIN MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1334). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 268 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie - Marin: n1932 / n1933: JACQUES BOUCHER : FRANCOISE PAIGNE FATHER: Jean Boucher : Nicolas Paigne MOTHER: Francoise Roussin : Marie Castrie MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1340). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Perrine: n1934 / n1935: FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: PIERRE MALLET : JACQUELINE LEGER Jean Mallet : Marie d’Aussey : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1342). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Genevieve – Pierre – Antoine - Olivier: n1936 / n1937: JEAN ROY : MARIE BOUCQUENIER MARRIED: ca 1600 @ St-Andre, Joigny, diocese of Sens, Champagne, France [5, 45] MEMOIRS: Marie Boucquenier was godmother to her grandchild Marie (see m968) on 13 Feb 1629 at StJean in Joigny, Sens, Champagne. The baptismal record for Olivier (m968) includes the latin note, ‘non ex legitimo matrimonio sprerato’, which indicates that Olivier was born of a couple not legitimately married.[45] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Therese – Jean: n1964 / n1965: MEMOIRS: NICOLAS MIGNAULT : MADELEINE de BRIE Their biographies may be viewed at number (m940). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne - Augustin – Angelique – Therese – Louise: ZACHARIE CLOUTIER : XAINTES DUPONT FATHER: Denis Cloutier : Paul Michel Dupont MOTHER: Renée Briere : Perrine de Mortagne MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m374). n1966 / n1967: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean - Marin: n1976 / n1977 : JACQUES BOUCHER : FRANCOISE PAIGNE FATHER: Jean Boucher : Nicolas Paigne MOTHER: Francoise Roussin : Marie Castrie MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1340). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne - Marie – Marie – Jean – Perrine: n1978 / n1979: PIERRE MALLET : JACQUELINE LEGER FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Jean Mallet : Marie d’Aussey : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1342). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne – Marie – Noel: n1996 / n1997: GUILLAUME LANGLOIS : JEANNE MILLET FATHER: : Jacques Millet MOTHER: : Jeanne Vincent MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m364). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne – Marie – Francoise: n1998 / n1999: GUILLAUME GARNIER : MICHELLE MARILLE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m366). - 269 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth – Urbain - Jean: n2008 / n2009: LOUIS FOUQUEREAU : DENISE GAUDIN MARRIED: ca 1620 @ Angers, Maine-et-Loire, Anjou, France [5, 9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth – Jeanne - Martin: n2012 / n2013: JEAN ROSSIGNOL dit Grossonneau : MARIE MARTEAU MARRIED: 28 Nov 1617 @ Montfort-l’Amaury, Chartres, Ile-de-France, France [5, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Marie – Elisabeth – Jeanne - Renée: n2014 / n2015: ANTOINE DESJARDINS : MARIE LELEU MARRIED: MEMOIRS: 24 Aug 1625 @ Montfort-l’Amaury, Chartres, Ile-de-France, France [5, 29] Antoine next married Jehanne Guarier on 27 Jun 1632 at Montfort-l’Amaury, Chartres.[5, 29] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean - Jeanne: n2018 / n2019: JACQUES BOUCHER : FRANCOISE PAIGNE FATHER: Jean Boucher : Nicolas Paigne MOTHER: Francoise Roussin : Marie Castrie MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1340). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Louise - Jeanne: n2022 / n2023: BARTHELEMY de VOISY : JEANNE GARDONY MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1605 @ at France [5] A Family Search of all sources for birth, marriage data from 1570 to 1635 yielded no results.[9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Jean - Pierre: n2024 / n2025: ANTOINE GRONDIN : MARGUERITE NOUVEAU MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1600 @ Notre-Dame, Hiers-Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5] A Family Search of all countries for all records from 1520 to 1680 revealed no further data.[9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Jean – Marie Catherine: n2026 / n2027: JEAN RIGOULET : MARIE CRUCHEAU MARRIED: MEMOIRS: ca 1605 @ St-Marie, Brouage, Saintes, Saintonge, France [5] A Family Search of all countries for all records from 1520 to 1680 revealed no further data.[9] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte – Jean: n2028 / n2029: NICOLAS MIGNAULT : MADELEINE de BRIE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m940). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive - Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte – Louise: n2030 / n2031: ZACHARIE CLOUTIER : XAINTES DUPONT FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Denis Cloutier : Paul Michel Dupont Renée Briere : Perrine de Mortagne Their biographies may be viewed at number (m374). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 270 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Pierre – Laurent – Jean: n2032 / n2033: THOMAS-NOEL LEVASSEUR : GERMAINE LEGRIS BORN: 6 Sep 1580 Bois-Guillaume, Rouen, Normandy [5, 9] : 22 Aug 1577 Bois-Guillaume, Rouen [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1600 @ St-Trinité, Bois-Guillaume, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Thomas-Noel was a master woodworker.[21, 26] Thomas-Noel and Germaine’s offspring birth/ marriage/death data (all at St-Trinité, Bois-Guillaume, Rouen unless otherwise noted) includes: Pierre (8 Nov 1602), Jean (m1016), Louis (2 Nov 1606 / wed Marie Leboulanger / 23 Apr 1685), Jacques (9 Nov 1612 / wed Francoise Lecouer), Thomas (12 Jan 1614), Jeanne (26 Oct 1616 / wed Jean Lecouer / 7 Mar 1674) .[5] Thomas-Noel next married Genevieve Gauche about 1620 at France. Vital statistics for Thomas-Noel’s children with Ms. Gauch include: Jean (ca 1622 Paris / Marguerite Richard 24 Apr 1645 St-Nicolas, Paris / 30 Aug 1686 Quebec City), Pierre (ca 1625 St-Leuet, Paris / Jeanne Chaverlange, a Filles a Marier, 25 Oct 1655 Quebec City / 12 Mar 1694 Quebec City).[20, 21, 26] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Pierre – Laurent – Marguerite: n2034 / n2035: BORN: MARRIED: NICOLAS MAHEU dit Richard : JEANNE BONNET [9, 20] ca 1580 Paris, Ile de France, France : ca 1582 Paris, Ile de France, France [9, 20] [5, 9, 20] ca 1605 @ Paris, Ile de France, France __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Pierre - Marie: n2042 / n2043: PIERRE TRAIN : MARIE MICHEL MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m930). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Marie - Rene: n2044 / n2045: LOUIS A. ANCELIN : MS. LOUIS A. ANCELIN MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m932). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Jeanne – Honore - Jean: o3304 / o3305: GUILLAUME LANGLOIS : JEANNE MILLET FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: : Jacques Millet : Jeanne Vincent Their biographies may be viewed at number (m364). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Gabriel – Louis - Louis: o3440 / o3441: THOMAS LEMIEUX : MS. CATHERINE LEMIEUX FATHER: Jean Lemieux : MARRIED: ca 1563 @ Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 12] MEMOIRS: Thomas and Catherine’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes the following in the order of their birth: Gilles (ca 1565 Rouen, France / Elisabeth Angeau ca 1590 Rouen / ca 1613 Rouen), Louis (n1720).[5] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Gabriel – Louis - Madeleine: o3442 / o3443: GEUFFIN LEMAITRE : MS. GEUFFIN LEMAITRE MARRIED: ca 1565 @ Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 12] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Guillaume: ELOI PELLETIER : FRANCOISE MATTE FATHER: Guillaume Pelletier : Victor Matte MOTHER: Etiennette Monhe : Graziella Roy BORN: 2 Jun 1563 St-Pierre de Bresolettes, Perche [5] : 2 Apr 1567 St-Pierre de Bresolettes, Perche [5] DIED: 11 Feb 1625 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5] : at Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5] MARRIED: 22 Sep 1591 @ St-Pierre de Bresolettes, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France [5, 9, 20] MEMOIRS: Lebel indicates that Eloi was a wood and coal merchant living in the parish of Bresolettes. On o3672 / o3673: - 271 - 7 Mar 1616, Eloi Pelletier promised to pay Mace Pichon 20 livres for wood sold and delivered. [21] Francoise and Eloi’s offspring birth/marriage/death data includes: Guillaume (n1836), Antoine (ca 1608 St-Pierre-deBresolettes / wed Francoise Morin-L877, a Filles a Marier, on 19 Aug 1647 at Quebec City / drowned when his boat capsized on 2 Oct 1647 near Montmorency Falls and not far from his home) .[5, 9, 21, 22, 25, 26, 45] Eloi Pelletier is also at number (n4032). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean - Michelle: o3674 / o3675: GUILLAUME MABILLE : ETIENNETTE MONHAY FATHER: MOTHER: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: France) follow Guillaume Mabille : Nicholas Monhay Jeanne Navarre : [5, 9] ca 1564 Tourouvre, Perche, France : ca 1567 La Gazerie, Tourouvre, Orne [5, 9] [5, 9] 4 Feb 1627 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche : 9 Jan 1640 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5, 9] ca 1589 @ St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France [5, 9] Guillaume and Etiennette’s offspring birth/marriage/death details (at Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, in the order of their birth: Catherine (17 Jul 1590), Michelle (n1837), Claude (20 Feb 1596 / Michelle Barre ca 1623 St-Aubin), Thionette (12 Apr 1599), Guillaume (3 Nov 1601), Madeleine (ca 1603 / Jean Rousseau 12 Oct 1627).[5, 9, 45] Guillaume Mabille may also be found in this family history at number (n4034). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Anne – Noel: o3676 / o3677: GUILLAUME LANGLOIS : JEANNE MILLET FATHER: : Jacques Millet MOTHER: : Jeanne Vincent MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m364). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Anne – Francoise: GUILLAUME GARNIER : MICHELLE MARILLE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (m366). o3678 / o3679: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euprhosine – Germain – Helene – Joseph – Marie – Marie – Louise – Zacharie - Denis: o3768 / o3769: MEMOIRS: NICOLAS CLOUTIER : MS. NICOLAS CLOUTIER Nicolas’ biography may be found at number (o1496). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite – Gaspard - Jacques: JEAN BOUCHER : FRANCOISE ROUSSIN FATHER: Jehan Boucher : Martin Roussin MOTHER: Jeanne Bournier : Michelle Moreau MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2680). o3816 / o3817: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite – Gaspard - Francoise: NICOLAS PAIGNE : MARIE CASTRIE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2682). o3819 / o3820: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Jean – Zacharie - Denis: o3824 / o3825: MEMOIRS: NICOLAS CLOUTIER : MS. NICOLAS CLOUTIER Nicolas’ biography may be found at number (o1496). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Louise – Marie – Marguerite - Jeanne: o3838 / o3839: JACQUES MILLET : JEANNE VINCENT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n730). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 272 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin - Jacques: o3864 / o3865: JEAN BOUCHER : FRANCOISE ROUSSIN FATHER: Jehan Boucher : Martin Roussin MOTHER: Jeanne Bournier : Michelle Moreau MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2680). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin - Francoise: NICOLAS PAIGNE : MARIE CASTRIE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2682). o3866 / o3867: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Perrine - Pierre: o3868 / o3869: MEMOIRS: JEAN MALLET : MARIE d’AUSSEY Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2684). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Therese – Louise – Zacharie: o3932 / o3933: DENIS CLOUTIER : RENÉE BRIERE FATHER: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Cloutier : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n748). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Therese – Louise – Xaintes: o3934 / o3935: PAUL-MICHEL DUPONT : PERRINE de MORTAGNE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n750). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin - Jacques: o3952 / o3953: JEAN BOUCHER : FRANCOISE ROUSSIN FATHER: Jehan Boucher : Martin Roussin MOTHER: Jeanne Bournier : Michelle Moreau MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2680). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin - Francoise: o3954 / o3955: NICOLAS PAIGNE : MARIE CASTRIE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2682). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne - Marie – Marie – Jean – Perrine - Pierre: o3956 / o3957: JEAN MALLET : MARIE d’AUSSEY MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2684). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine - Euphrosine – Anne – Jean – Augustin – Anne – Marie – Noel - Jeanne: o3994 / o3995: JACQUES MILLET : JEANNE VINCENT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n730). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne - Jacques: o4036 / o4037: JEAN BOUCHER : FRANCOISE ROUSSIN FATHER: Jehan Boucher : Martin Roussin MOTHER: Jeanne Bournier : Michelle Moreau MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2680). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 273 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne - Francoise: o4038 / o4039: NICOLAS PAIGNE : MARIE CASTRIE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (o2682). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte – Louise – Zacharie: o4060 / o4061: DENIS CLOUTIER : RENÉE BRIERE FATHER: MEMOIRS: Nicolas Cloutier : Their biographies may be viewed at number (n748). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte – Louise – Xaintes: o4062 / o4063: PAUL-MICHEL DUPONT : PERRINE de MORTAGNE MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n750). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Marie – Marie – Marie – Rene - Louis: o4088 / o4089: JEAN ANCELIN : MICHELLE BOULET MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n1864). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Alexis – Amable – Angele – Angelique – Joseph – Jeanne – Honore – Jean - Jeanne: p6610 / p6611: MEMOIRS: JACQUES MILLET : JEANNE VINCENT Their biographies may be viewed at number (n730). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Alexis – Josephte – Michel – Josephte - Helene – Helene – Gabriel – Louis – Louis - Thomas: p6880 / p6881: DIED: MARRIED: JEAN LEMIEUX : MS. JEAN LEMIEUX 19 Dec 1581 St-Claire, Rouen, Normandy [5] : at St-Claire, Rouen, Normandy [5] ca 1535 @ St-Claire, Rouen, Normandy, France [5, 12] __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Guillaume - Eloi: p7344 / p7345: BORN: DIED: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: GUILLAUME PELLETIER : ETIENNETTE MONHE [5, 9] ca 1535 Bresolettes, Allier, France : 15 Jan 1542 Bresolettes, Allier, France [5] 1 Sep 1602 Bresolettes, Allier, France [5] : 12 Jun 1622 Bresolettes, Allier, France [5] 28 Mar 1560 @ Bresolettes, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France [5] Guillaume Pelletier may also be found in this family history at the following number (o8064). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Guillaume - Francoise: VICTOR MATTE : GRAZIELLA ROY MARRIED: ca 1565 @ at France [5] MEMOIRS: A Family Search of birth/marriage/death records from 1520 to 1620 in France provided no further information.[9] Victor Matte may also be found in this family history at the code number (o8066). p7346 / p7347: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Michelle - Guillaume: GUILLAUME MABILLE : JEANNE NAVARRE FATHER: Jehan Mabille : Jean Navarre MARRIED: ca 1560 @ Lagaserie, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France [5, 9] MEMOIRS: At the time of Guillaume and Jeanne’s granddaughter, Michelle’s baptism, in 1592 they were living in the parish of La Poterie in France.[21] Guillaume and Jeanne’s children: Guillaume (o3674), Gilles (born ca 1568 Tourouvre, Mortagne / wed Gillette Tortu). [5, 9] Guillaume Mabille is also at code number (o8068). p7348 / p7349: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 274 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Michelle - Etiennette: NICOLAS MONHAY : MS. NICOLAS MONHAY [5] BORN: ca 1542 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche : ca 1544 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5] [5] DIED: 23 Oct 1607 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche : 27 Jul 1617 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche [5] MARRIED: 24 Apr 1566 @ Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France [5] MEMOIRS: It is suspected that Nicolas Monhay is the brother of Etiennette Monhe (p7345) but it is unproven. Nicholas Monhay may also be found in this family history at the following code number (o8070). p7350 / p7351: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Anne – Noel - Jeanne: JACQUES MILLET : JEANNE VINCENT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (n730). p7354 / p7355: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite – Gaspard – Jacques - Jean: p7632 / p7633: JEHAN BOUCHER Jean Boucher : JEANNE BOURNIER : Guillaume Bournier : Catherine Huot FATHER: MOTHER: MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5360). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite – Gaspard – Jacques - Francoise: MARTIN ROUSSIN : MICHELLE MOREAU MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5363). p7634 / p7635: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin – Jacques – Jean: p7728 / p7729: JEHAN BOUCHER : JEANNE BOURNIER FATHER: Jean Boucher : Guillaume Bournier MOTHER: : Catherine Huot MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5360). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin – Jacques - Francoise: MARTIN ROUSSIN : MICHELLE MOREAU MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5362). p7730 / p7731: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Augustin – Angelique – Therese – Louise – Zacharie - Denis: NICOLAS CLOUTIER : MS. NICOLAS CLOUTIER MEMOIRS: Nicolas’ biography may be found at number (o1498). p7864 / p7865: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin – Jacques - Jean: p7904 / p7905: JEHAN BOUCHER : JEANNE BOURNIER FATHER: Jean Boucher : Guillaume Bournier MOTHER: : Catherine Huot MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5360). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin – Jacques - Francoise: p7906 / p7907: MARTIN ROUSSIN : MICHELLE MOREAU MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5362). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 275 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne – Jacques - Jean: p8072 / p8073: JEHAN BOUCHER : JEANNE BOURNIER FATHER: Jean Boucher : Guillaume Bournier MOTHER: : Catherine Huot MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5360). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne – Jacques - Francoise: p8074 / p8075: MARTIN ROUSSIN : MICHELLE MOREAU MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (p5362). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Anne – Xainte – Louise – Zacharie - Denis: p8120 / p8121: MEMOIRS: NICOLAS CLOUTIER : MS. NICOLAS CLOUTIER Nicolas’ biography may be found at number (o1496). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Michelle – Guillaume - Guillaume: JEHAN MABILLE : MS. JEHAN MABILLE [5] DIED: 14 Nov 1553 La Poterie, Perche, France : ca 1572 La Poterie, Perche, France [5] [5, 9] MARRIED: ca 1530 @ La Poterie, Perche, France MEMOIRS: Jeahan Mabille may also be found in this family history at the following code number (p16136). q14696 / q14697: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Germain – Marie – Joseph – Anne – Anne – Jean – Michelle – Guillaume - Jeanne: q14698 / q14699: MARRIED: MEMOIRS: JEAN NAVARRE : MS. JEAN NAVARRE ca 1535 @ La Poterie, Perche, France [5, 9] Jean Navarre may also be found in this family history at the following code number (p16138). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne–Omer–Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Germain – Helene – Marguerite – Marguerite – Antoine – Marguerite – Gaspard – Jacques – Jean - Jehan: q15264 / q15265: MEMOIRS: JEAN BOUCHER : MS. JEAN BOUCHER Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10720). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne–Omer–Louise–Olive–Euphrosine–Germain–Helene–Marguerite–Marguerite–Antoine–Marguerite – Gaspard – Jacques – Jean – Jehan - Jeanne: GUILLAUME BOURNIER : CATHERINE HUOT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10722). q15266 / q15267: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin – Jacques – Jean - Jehan: JEAN BOUCHER : MS. JEAN BOUCHER MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10720). q15456 / q15457: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Charles – Charles – Marguerite – Marie – Marin – Jacques – Jean - Jeanne: q15458 / q15459: MEMOIRS: GUILLAUME BOURNIER : CATHERINE HUOT Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10722). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin – Jacques – Jean - Jehan: q15808 / q15809: JEAN BOUCHER : MS. JEAN BOUCHER MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10720). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Jean – Anne – Marie – Marie – Jean – Marin – Jacques – Jean - Jeanne: q15810 / q15811: GUILLAUME BOURNIER : CATHERINE HUOT MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10722). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 276 - Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne – Jacques – Jean - Jehan: q16144 / q16145: JEAN BOUCHER : MS. JEAN BOUCHER MEMOIRS: Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10720). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Mary Jeanne – Omer – Louise – Olive – Euphrosine – Euphrosine – Anne – Anne – Zacharie – Jean – Jean – Jeanne – Jacques – Jean - Jeanne: q16146 / q16147: MEMOIRS: GUILLAUME BOURNIER : CATHERINE HUOT Their biographies may be viewed at number (q10722). __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ - 277 -