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! from marriage record, Ste-Ane , Detroit: "fille naturelle de Mr Daignau de cette paroisse" | DAIGNAU, Marie Louise Anne (I1115)
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! from marriage record, Ste-Ane , Detroit: "fils de Jacques Apet et de ______ " | APERT, Jacques (I1114)
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! From PRDH ( re Marriage date): "LA DATE DE L'ACTE A ETE LAISSEE EN BLANC, IL SUIT DEUX ACTES DE MARIAGE EN DATE DE L'ANNEE 1677 INITIALEMENTINSCRIT SUR UNE FEUILLE SEPAREE, L'ACTE A ETE RETRANSCRIT DANS LE REGISTRE ENTRE M 1680-10-16 ET B1680-11-13" | BUET, Alexis (I20287)
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! from PRDH - Status(es) : Illegitimate! Bapt?mePRDH# 60981Qu?bec 1693-05-03Rank Name Age M.S. Pr. Sex01 MARIE MADELEINE FONTAINE --- c pf02 MARIE MADELEINE FONTAINE MOTHER OF 01 DAUGHTER OF 03 --- c p f03 LOUIS FONTAINE GRANDFATHER OF 01SPOUSE OF 04 --- m d m04 BRASSARD GRANDMOTHER OF 01 SPOUSE OF 03 --- --- --- f05 PIERRE HEDOUIN ------ p m06 DOROTHEE RANSIN --- --- p f07 FRANCOIS DUPRE --- c p m Occupation : CURE Residence : QU?BEC | LARIVIERE, Madeleine (I49129)
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! from PRDH : "LA DATE ET LE LIEU DE BAPT?ME DE CET IMMIGRANT ONT ?T? OBTENUS DU FICHIER ORIGINE.""UN FR?RE ?GALEMENT APPEL? JEAN A ?T? BAPTIS? LE 2 MARS 1625 AU M?ME ENDROIT. LES ?GES D?CLAR?S AUX DIFF?RENTS RECENSEMENTS CONCORDENT MIEUX AVEC LE BAPT?ME DE 1622, MAIS IL SE POURRAIT QU'IL SOIT PLUT?T N? EN 1625" | GUAY, Jean (I42224)
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! from PRDH: " Am?rindienne algonquine, probablement montagnaise": "LE NOM "OUCHISTAOUICHKOUE" PROVIENT D'UNE CITATION EN TANT QUE MARRAINE EN1642. SA M?RE POURRAIT BIEN ?TRE "OUTCHIBALIABANOUKOUEAU", CIT?E PAR LE P?RE LEJEUNE COMME AYANT DES ENFANTS AVEC MANITOUABEOUICH. SOURCE: COMMUNICATION PERSONNELLE DE MAIRI COWAN"! MARTIN PR?VOST dit PROVOST1611-1691Martin Pr?vost, born on Jan. 4, 1611, is the son of Pierre Provost andCharlotte Vi?(Vien) of Montreuil-sous-Bois, a suburb to the east of Paris. Martin hadhad four brothers and one sister. He came to Canada around 1639 and married in 1644. According to the official records of New France, Martin Pr?vost was the first white to marryan indian. The wife of Martin called Marie Olivier Sylvestre, was of the Algonquian tribe. Her name at birth was Manitouab?ouich and she was given the Christian name d'Olivier in honor of her adoptive father, Olivier LeTardiff, interpreter and commissioner general of the company of the One Hundred Associations. Martin Pr?vost and his family moved from Quebec to Beauport. He died at age 80, on Jan. 27, 1691.MARIE OLIVIER SYLVESTRE (MANITOUABEOUICH)(1624-1665)By Suzanne Guimont BinetteIn the early history of Canada, it was not until Olivier LeTardif became the personal representative and interpreter for Samuel de Champlain that we first hear the name Manitouabewich. This young Indian, of the Huron Nation, had been hired as LeTardif'sownscout and traveling companion. Manitouabewich had been converted to Christianity by the French missionaries, and as part of the baptismal ritual, had been given the Christian name of Roch, in honor of St.Roch, the patron saint. Olivier LeTardifandRoch Manitouabewich traveled together for many years. It was the responsibility of LeTardif to establish anetwork of fur trading posts for the "Company" that Champlain had based at Quebec (l'Habitation at Basseville).Actually, the fur tradingpostswere the "middle link" between the trappers and the "Company". There were three types of trappers: a) the trappers that were "licensed" by the authorities of the Company b) the itinerant unlicensed trappers knownas the "Coureurs des bois"c)the Indians who trapped and traded with the Company. All of these three types bartered their furs at the fur trading post of his choice, usually the post nearest his hunting area. Thesystem worked well and was rather efficient. The trading posts gavethe trappers a "depot" at which they could dispose of their furs and at the same time barter for traps, knives, and items of clothing such as hats,shirts, etc. The Indiansalmost always bartered for blankets, mirrors, the white man's hats, andfor colored beads to adorn their native costumes and headdresses.As a team, LeTardif and Manitouabewich oftentimes penetrated deep into the vast expanse of the Canadian wilderness to make contact with some of the outlaying Indian settlements of the "back country", and along the way they met and did business with some of the nomadic Indians. They encouraged these nomadic Indians to use the facilities of the various trading posts that had been set up for the operation of fur trade. After eight years in the field, LeTardif was promoted by Champlain and became the head clerk (equivalent to Secretary-Treasurer) of the fur trading company. It was thenthat Le Tardif settled down to amore normal way of life, conducting the "inner affairs"ofthe Company atthe main office at Quebec (Basse-ville). Roch Manitouabewich also settled down to a more domestic way of life, but in his own environmentof the Huron settlement at Sillery near Quebec. The bond off friendship, trust, and loyalty between these two menwas very strong, and, although each lived in his own "milieu", they never lost contact one from the other.It was when Roch Manitouabewich and his wife had a daughter and hadher baptized that LeTardif became "Godfather" for the babygirl, and inaccordance with the custom of the times, LeTardif gave the girl his own name of Olivier. In addition,the missionary performing the baptism gave the girl the name Marie, in honor of the Virgin Mary, and he also gave her the name Sylvestre,meaning "one who comes from the forest" or "one who lives in the forest". When Marie Olivier Sylvestre was ten yearsold, Olivier LeTardif, in his generous way and because of his respect for his friend and servant, Roch Manitouabewich, adoptedthe young Indian girlas his very own daughter (she never carried the family name of LeTardif). This enabled her to be educated and reared in the same manneras a well-to-do French girl. First he placed her as a "live-in border"and student with the Ursuline Nuns at Quebec, and later he boarded herwith a French family where she was privatelytutored.It was in the atmosphere of this respected family of Guillaume Hubou and his wife Marie Rollet (when she married Guillaume Hubou, she wasthewidow ofLouis Hebert) that Marie Olivier Sylvestre met and married Martin Prevost, friend of the Hubou family anda very personal friend of Olivier LeTardif. This marriage was to be the first marriage on record between an Indian girl and a French colonist.Themarriage took placeon the third of January 1644 at Quebec. Recorded as witnesses to the ceremonywas Olivier LeTardifand Quillaume Couillard (father-in-law of LeTardif). | OLIVIER, Marie (I60538)
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! from PRDH: ""AYANT, A LEUR PAROISSE DE VERCHERES, DANS LE TEMPS OU LEPERE BERTIN RECOLLET CELEBRAIT LA MESSE PAROISSIALE, DECLARE TOUT HAUT, AU SCANDALE DU PUBLIC ET CONTRE L'USAGE ET LA DEFENSE DE L'EGLISE, QU'ILS SE PRENAIENT POUR EPOUXET EPOUSE POUR LESQUELLES CHOSES LE DIT SOLDAT AVAIT SOUFFERT PLUSIEURS CHATIMENTS COMME PRISON, CACHOT ET, DEPUISLE DIT TEMPS, LES DEUX DELINQUANTS, AYANT BEAUCOUP TEMOIGNE SE REPENTIR DE LEUR FAUTE ET, MGR LE COMTE DE FRONTENAC NOUS AYANTENVOYE DIRE AUJOURD'HUI PREMIER JOUR DE JUILLET MILLE SIX CENT QUATRE VINGT SEIZE, PARLE DIT REVEREND PERE BERTIN, SUIVANT LES ORDRES DU REVEREND PERE COMMISSAIRE, SON SUPERIEUR, QU'IL NE S'OPPOSAIT PLUS AU DIT MARIAGE APRES DETELLES PENITENCES CE CONSIDERE, VU LES BONTES DE NOTRE MERE LA SAINTE EGLISE POUR LES REPENTANTS ET LE DEPART DUDIT SOLDAT POUR LA GUERRE DESLE JOUR DE DEMAIN AFIN DE REPARER AUTANT QU'IL SE PEUT L'HONNEUR DE LASUSDITE MARIE MADELEINE ET FAIRE QUE L'ENFANT QU'ELLE A EU DUDIT SOLDAT SOIT LEGITIME" UNE DISPENSE DES TROIS BANS A ETE ACCORDEE PAR M. DOLLIER" | THIBAULT, Pierre (I74502)
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! from PRDH: ""FORGERON ET HABITANT EN CE POSTE, N? EN NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE" AU BAPT?ME DE SON FILS LOUIS AU POSTE DE LA RIVI?RE ST-JOSEPH DES ILLINOIS EN 1731. SOURCE: MARTHE FARIBAULT-BEAUREGARD, LA POPULATION DES FORTS D'AM?RIQUE, TOME I" | DESHETRES, Antoine (I30859)
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! from PRDH: "?G? DE 24 ANS LORS D'UNE D?POSITION LE 12 JUILLET 1689 DEVANT LE BAILLI ET JUGE CIVIL ET CRIMINEL MIGEON DE BRANSART. SOURCE : MSGCF 54-4, HIVER 2003, P.321" | COUSINEAU, Jean Baptiste (I27981)
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! from PRDH: "ACTE DE MARIAGE ? MARANS. SOURCE: MSGCF, 47-1 (PRINTEMPS 1996), 56-57. ON Y APPREND QU'OLIVIER CHARBONNEAU ET MARGUERITE ROY ?TAIENT VEUF ET VEUVE" | ROY, Marguerite (I69959)
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! from PRDH: "AYANT ?T? D?COUVERT QUE JEAN NEVEU ?TAIT D?J? MARI? EN FRANCE, CE DERNIER A ?T? CONVAINCU DE BIGAMIE ET RAPATRI?. SON UNION AVECANNE LEDET A DONC ?T? ANNUL?E"From PRDH: "AYANT CONTRACT? MARIAGE AVECANNE LEDET ALORS QU'IL ?TAIT D?J? MARI? EN FRANCE, JEAN NEVEU A ?T? CONVAINCU DE BIGAMIE ET RAPATRI?" - Jean Neveu et Nepveu, originaire de St-Georges-de-Montaigu, ar. LaRoche-sur-Yon, év. Luçon, Poitou (Vendée).Engagé à La Rochelle, le 10 juin 1645. | NEVEU, Jean (I60208)
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! from PRDH: "BAPT?ME PROVENANT DU FICHIER ORIGINE". | DUBOIS, Francois (I32472)
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! from PRDH: "BAPTIS? LE 1714-07-11. LA DATE DE NAISSANCE ET LE BAPT?MEEN FRANCE DE CET IMMIGRANT PROVIENNENT DU FICHIER ORIGINE. CIT? DANS LE REGISTRE DES MALADES DE L'H?TEL-DIEU DE QU?BEC LE 8 AO?T 1739: ?22 ANS, FAUX-SAUNIER?" | GODEFROY DIT ST-GEORGES, Francois (I40699)
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! from PRDH: "BAPTISE LE LENDEMAIN DE SA NAISSANCE DANS LA MAISON DE SON PERE LE QUANTIEME ET LE MOIS DE LA DATE DE L'ACTE ONT ETE OMIS, IL EST SITUE ENTRE B 1648-10-15 ET B 1649-01-30" | LANGLOIS, Jean Gabriel (I49566)
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! from PRDH: "Bien que la versionde son acte de mariage qui nous soit parvenue le D?nomme 'POIRIER', lui et ses descendants s'appellent 'PERRIER' " | PERRIER, Jean-Baptiste (I62805)
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! from PRDH: "CAPTUREE LORS DU MASSACRE DE LACHINE, LE 5 AOUT 1689, ELLE EST MORTE EN CAPTIVITE. SOURCE: MSGCF 50-3, NO 221, AUTOMNE 1999, P. 208"! from PRDH: "Captur?e lors du massacre de Lachine, le 5 Aout 1689,elle est morte en captivit?. Source: MSGCF 50-3, NO 221, Automne 1999, p. 208" | LEBRUN, Fille du Roi Marie (I8886)
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! from PRDH: "CIT? DANS LE REGISTRE DES MALADES DE L'H?TEL-DIEU DE QU?BEC, 29-08-1727, "21 ANS, DE FOUGERE EN BRETAGNE, SOLDAT"" | ST-PIERRE, Pierre (I72221)
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! from PRDH: "CIT? LE 08-08-1736 DANS LE REGISTRE DES MALADES DE L'H?TEL-DIEU DE QU?BEC: "18 ANS, PR?S DE PARIS, NAVIRE DU ROY LE H?ROS, RECRUE", ET LE 10-06-1737: "CANONNIER"" | HUATTE, Pierre (I45380)
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! from PRDH: "CIT? LE 12-10-1750 DANS LE REGISTRE DES MALADES DE L'H?TEL-DIEU DE QU?BEC: ?18 ANS, ROUEN, SOLDAT, COMPAGNIE DE LUSIGNAN?" | LECOQ, Jean-Baptiste (I52250)
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! from PRDH: "CIT? LE 14/11/1689 ? L'H?TEL-DIEU DE QU?BEC, ?G? DE 21 ANS" | LACASSE, Jean (I47779)
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! from PRDH: "D?C?D? ENTRE LE 2-2-1660 (CONFIRMATION) ET LE 14-7-1661 (INVENTAIRE APR?S D?C?S)"! Louis Gasnier or GagneBorn: 13 Sep 1612, St-Martin, d?Ig?,au Perche, d?partement actuel de l'Orne, FranceMarried 1638, Vieux,-Belleme Mortagne Orne France, to Marie MichelDied: 2 Feb 1662, Ste. Anne de Beaupre, Montmorency, Quebec The Gagne Coat of ArmsBIRTH: 13 SEP 1612, St-Martin-d'Ig?, Perche, FranceDEATH: JUL 1661, Ch?teau-Richer, QCBAPTISM: 13 SEP 1612, St-Martin d'Ig?, Mortagne, Perche, FranceEMIGRATION: 1644, Qu?bec, QC----------------------------------------------------------Translated from the L'Association des Familles Caron d'Am?rique web page, "Louis Gagne":If the name Gagn? counts today in the thousands everywhere in Quebec, it is thanks to the brothers Louis and Pierre Gasnier (Gagne).Like so many of the others, the ancestors Pierre and Louis Gagn? are of origin percheronne, born from the marriage of Louis Gagnier and Marie Launay, in St-Martin, of Ig?, au Perche, currently l'Orne. The elder one, Pierre Gagn? is baptized on January 2, 1610, and Louis, September 13, 1612. Pierre Gagn? learns the bakers trade, while his/herbrother is a laborer.At 26 yearsofage, about 1638, Louis married wifeMarie Michel, born in 1620, daughter of Pierre Michel and Louise Gory,St-Martin du Vieux-B?ll?me, dans Mortagne, au Perche. The couple arrives in New-France in 1643 or 1644.The first child Louise Gagne, cameintothe world in Ig?, baptized on January 21, 1642. May 25, 1654, Louise marries into the paternal house of Baupre, specifically Claude Bouchard,tailor of clothes. They have 12 chidren together.The sixth of the family, Louis Gagne, born on July 7,1651, and baptized on the 18th, in Quebec, married. on February 9, 1678, Marie Gagnon, born on August 1, on 1659, baptized September 8, daughter of Jean Gagnon and Marguerite Cauchon. Their daughter in the following generation, Marie Gagen, bornonNovember22, 1678, becomes the wife in 1702, of Jean Poulin, born on August 24, 1671, son of the ancestor Jean Poulin and Louise Par?.The third, Anne Gagn?, baptized on October 27, 1653, inQuebec, marries on September 11, 1670, in Beaupr?, Fran?ois Lacroix,born about 1642, originating inRouen, in Normandy.Ignace Gagne, born on March 12, 1656, is baptized three days later, in Quebec. Ignace marries on November 5, 1680, in Quebec, Barbe Dodier, born around 1664, daughter of Jacques Dodier andCatherineCharon. Their daughter Louise Gagne, born on September 20, 1683, marries in 1703, Gabriel-Robert Dufour.After the death of Barb Dodier, in February 1689, Ignace Gagne maried on November 6, 1689, Louise Tremblay, daughter of Pierre Tremblay and Ozanne Achon.Louis Gagn? dies aboutFebruary 2, 1660 and his inventory is made on July 14, 1661. His widow, Marie Michel, marries a second time, September 1666, Paul DeRainville, usher and widower of Roline Poet. Marie Michel, dies on November 12, 1687and, it is buried close to her first husband, Louis Gagn?, in the old cemetery of the ancestors, in Sainte-Anne de Baupre.
BIOGRAPHIE-BIOGRAPHY: Les généalogistes Gérard Lebel et Aimé Gagné ont tous 2 raconté la fin mystérieuse de Louis Gagné. Cet homme à son affaire, aimé et respecté de tous ses concitoyens, ne méritait pas un sort aussi cruel.
En résumé, disont.C àes 1753b»Ditab» «tab»s qu'aux printemps de 1660 et 1661, des bandes d'Iroquois, des Agniers, venus d'aussi loin que l'État de New-York, ravagent la côte de Beaupré. Les colons qu'ils ne tuent pas sur place, ils les amènent dansleurs villagespour mieux les martyriser.t.C àes 1753b»Ditab» «tab»
Toujours est-il qu'au début de juin 1661, Louis Gagné et Louis Guimont,son 3ème voisin, disparaissent sans laisser de traces. On ne les reverra jamais. On apprendra plus tard qu'ils sonttombés auxmains des Iroquois.IMMIGRATION:
Endriser.t.C àes 1753b»Ditab» «tab»roit arrivée / Arrival place: Québec,Capitale-Nationale,QC,CAN
Date: 1644
Réf. / Ref.: Fichier origine (Copyright 1998-2006 Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogieer.t.C àes 1753b»Ditab» «tab»)
Voir le site / Go the the site / Note: GAGNÉ / GASNIER, Louis (fiche 241616) | GAGNE, Louis (I89657)
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! from PRDH: "DATE DE NAISSANCE TIR?E DU FICHIER ORIGINE".! Posted By: Janet Manseau Email: Subject: Pioneer Jean Dumais/Demers/Dumets Post Date: April 21, 2010 at 15:47:01 Message URL: http://genforum.genealogy.com/demers/messages/1428.html Forum: Demers Family Genealogy Forum Forum URL: http://genforum.genealogy.com/demers/ Hi, I am posting the data and notes that I have for some of my pioneer ancestors, in hopes that they may be of interest to some of you that are doing research on your ancestors.Descendants of Jean DumaisCompiled by Janet Manseau DonaldsonUses as a guideGeneration No. 11. Jean1 Dumais was born about 1600 in Normandie, France. He married (1) Miotte Lecomte. She was born about 1600 in Normandie, France. He married (2) Barbe Mauger. She was born about 1600 in Normandie, France, and died 11 Jul 1699 in Normandie, France. Notesfor Jean Dumais: The Demers of Qu?bec were the Dumets in Normandie.Child of Jean Dumais and Miotte Lecomte is: 2 i. Etienne2 Dumais, born about 1620 in St. Jacques, Dieppe, Normandie, France; died 05 Jan 1697 in H?tel Dieu de Qu?bec City, QC. He married Francoise Morin 28 Jan 1648 in Qu?bec City, QC; born about 1620in St. Jean of Perrot, La Rochelle, France; died Bet. 25 Feb 1663 - 1666 in Sillery, Qu?bec. Canada.Children of Jean Dumais and Barbe Mauger are: + 3 i. Jean2 Dumais/Demers/Dumets, born about 1627 in St. Jacques de Dieppe, Rouen, Normandie, France;died 03 Jul 1708 in Qu?bec City, QC. + 4 ii. Andre Demers/Dumais/Dumets, born 03 Feb 1628 inSt. Jacques de Dieppe, Rouen, Normandie, France; died 17 Jul 1711 in Montr?al, QC.Generation No. 23. Jean2 Dumais/Demers/Dumets (Jean1 Dumais) was born about 1627 in St. Jacques de Dieppe, Rouen, Normandie, France, and died 03 Jul 1708 in Qu?bec City, QC. He married Jeanne Vedie 09 Nov 1654 in Notre Dame de Montr?al, QC (ct 4 Oct, Closse), daughter of Michel Vedie and Catherine Dorbelle. She was bornabout 1637 in St-Germain du Valla Fleche, Angers, Anjou, France, and died 01 Dec 1708 in Qu?bec City, QC.Notes for Jean Dumais/Demers/Dumets: Jean was born about 1627 in the parish of Saint-Jacques in Dieppe (archdiocese of Rouen), Normandie, thesonof Jean Demers/Dumais and Barbe Mauger. He is the brother of Andr? Demers/Dumais, who married "Filles ? Marier", Marie Chefdeville. Jean came to Canada in 1644. I could not find him, nor his wife in the 1666 Canadian census. They seemed to have moved around a great deal. He was 40 years old in the 1667 census and 50 in the 1681 census at Lauzon. The recording of wrong ages was very common back then. No one really cared.Sadly, Jeanne and Jean lost three of their children. Fran?ois was buriedat Montr?al 04 November 1687, Catherine drowned 05 July 1693 and was buried the next day at Qu?bec City and Michel was buried 21 February 1701 at Saint-Nicolas. Jean Demers/Dumais or Dumets died 03 July 1708 and was buried two days later in Qu?becCity.Notes for Jeanne Vedie: "Filles ? Marier", page 301, Jeanne Voidy was born about 1637 in Saint-Germain-du-Val (near La Fl?che, diocese ofAngers), Anjou, thedaughter of Michel Voidy and Catherine Dorbelle. She arrived in Montr?al aboard theSaint-Nicolas on 16 November 1653, as asingle and a member of the Grande Recrue (the great recruitment). Thiswas a group of about 100 men and 47 women and girls recruited in France in 1653 by Marguerite Bourgeoys and the Societe Notre Damede Montr?alto help populate, strengthen and defend the settlement at Montr?al. Atage 17, on 09 November 1654, Jeanne married Jean Demers/Dumais or Dumets in Montr?al. It is not known whether Jeanne could sign the marriage contract drawn up04October by notaryLambert Closse, but her husband definitely could not. She was 30 years old in the 1667 census and 43 in the 1681 census. Jeanne Voidy followedher husband to the grave five months later. She died 01 December 1708 and wasburied two days later at Qu?becCity.Children of Jean Dumais/Demers/Dumets and Jeanne Vedie are:5 i. Francois3 Dumais/Demers, born 16 Feb 1658 in Notre Dame de Montr?al, QC; died 04 Nov 1687 in Montr?al, QC. +6 ii. Marguerite Dumais/Demers, born 21 Oct 1659 in Notre Dame deMontr?al,QC; died Bet. 06 Sep 1722 -11 Jun 1725 in St. Nicolas, Levis, QC. +7 iii. Jean Dumais/Demers, born 06 Jul 1661 in Notre Dame de Montr?al, QC; died 10 Jul 1736 in Montr?al, QC.8 iv. Pierre Demers/Dumais, born 08 Oct 1663 in Sillery, QC; died07 Jul 1714 in H?tel Dieu de Qu?bec City, QC. He married (1) Jeanne-Marie Pouilot-dit-Guildebourg 01 Nov 1691 in Unknown,QC; born 26 Oct 1672 in Riviere aux Roches, QC; died Bef. 31 Jul 1703 in St. Antoine de Tilly, Lotbini?re, QC. He married (2) Marie-Jeanne Houde/Houle 31 Jul 1703 in Ste. Croix, QC; born 23 Aug 1685 in Ste. Famille de l'?le d'Orl?ans, QC; died04 Apr 1749 in Lavaltrie, QC.9 v. Anne-Marie Dumais/Demers, born 30 Aug 1665 in Sillery, QC; died 04 Oct 1711 in Qu?bec City, QC. She married (1) Gabriel Duchesne, (Julien & Jeanne Mariot) 03 May 1688 in Qu?bec City, QC; born about 1666 inBretagne, France; died 28 Sep 1691in Notre Dame de Qu?bec City, QC. She married (2) Michel Cureaux-dit-St.Germain 14 Oct 1693 in QC; bornabout 1666.+10 vi. Rene Dumais/Demers, born 13 Aug 1667 in Sillery, QC; died 21 Dec 1729 in St. Nicolas,Levis, QC. +11 vii. Marie-Madeleine Dumais/Demers, born 26 Mar 1669 in Qu?bec City, QC; died 15 Dec 1742 in St. Nicolas, QC. 12 viii. Andre Dumais/Demers,born about 1671 in Unknown, QC. +13 ix. Eustache Dumais/Demers, born 05 May 1673 inQu?bec City, QC; died 14 Dec 1708 in St. Nicolas,Levis, QC.14 x. Catherine Dumais/Demers, born 04 Apr 1675 in Qu?bec City, QC; died 05 Jul 1693in Qu?becCity, QC.15 xi.Nicolas Dumais/Demers, born 18 May 1677 in Sillery, QC; died 16 Dec 1740 in St. Nicolas, Levis, QC. He married Anne Rochon/Rocheron 03 May 1700 in Ste. Famille de l'?le d'Orl?ans, Montmorency, QC; born 26 Jul 1681 in Ste.Famille del'?led'Orl?ans, QC; died 28 Mar 1755 in St. Nicolas, Levis, QC.16 xii. Michel-JeanDumais/Demers, born 31 Aug 1681 in Qu?bec City, QC; died 21 Feb 1701 in St. Nicolas, Levis, QC. | DUMAIS, Jean (I30202)
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! from PRDH: "ETANT DONNE L'OMISSION DES PARENTSLORS DE SON MARIAGE ET LE LIBELLE DE SON CONTRAT DE MARIAGE, IL S'AGIT SELON TOUTE VRAISEMBLANCE D'UN ENFANT ILLEGITIME" | LAMARCHE, Marie Catherine (I48986)
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! from PRDH: "FAIT PRISONNIER LORS DU MASSACRE DE LACHINE, LE 5 AOUT 1689, IL EST MORT EN CAPTIVIT?. SOURCE: MSGCF 50-3, NO 221, AUTOMNE 1999,P. 208"! PIERRE BARBARY (BARBER) source GailMartin e/m mgailmartin a hotmail.com FATHER: Pierre Barbary MOTHER: Marguerite Beloy MARRIED: Marie LebrunHISTORY OF OUR FAMILIESPierre Barbary, also called "Barbarin dit Grandmaison",was born cicra 1650 in the parish ofLaPecaudiere,in Thiviers, in the Nontron area in the ancient province of Perigord which is todaylocated in the Department of Dordogne Pierre Barbary wasthe son of Pierre Barbary andMarguerite Beloy.Pierre Barbary dit Grandmaisonwas a soldier in the company ofContrecoeur in the Carignan-Salieres regiment, when he arrived in New France August 18, 1665 on board the ship "Golden Eagle".At first, he aided in the construction of forts along the Richelieu River which, atthat time,wascalled the Iroquois Riverbut in the following autumn he took part in a mission (as a punishment)against the Five Nations which was led by M. de Tracy. He found himself on land at Cote Saint-Sulpice which, at that point, was opening forcolonization. Later the area becameknown asCote de Lachine.Less than 3 years later, Pierre Barbary dit Grandmaison entered into a marriagecontract in front ofthe notary Basset with Marie Lebrun. originally from Saint-Jacques de Dieppe inRouen, Normandy.She was the daughter of Jacques Lebrun and Marie Michel. He married her, on the same day, atVille Marie in Montreal (February 24, 1668). Ten children were born to them during the following20 years. On the morning after a stormy nightsomething hit them full force.IntheSpring of 1687 the King sent 12 companies of marines in a fleet of 6 vessels to New France asGovenor Denonville was worried about guerilla warfare on the part ofthe Iroquois against the colony.On June 13, 1687, a large part of the colony left Montrealin the direction of the Five Nations Iroquois.Denonville and his 1200 soldiers 30 Iroquois and some 90 women and children with great force.Certain of the prisoners were sent to France to serve the French King. Denonvill's troops destroyedeverything in their path, destroying their possessions and leaving them with little more than theirlives. The victory was complete and the survivors were decimated by the famine that followed.The Iroquois came to Ile de Montreal at the head of Lachine. They spent a stormy night dispersingand moving into position for amassive attack. At dawn they massacred more than 200 people -- men,women and children, and tortured and imprisoned more than 100 more.Terror spread through the colony. Denonville was recalled to France by the King who replaced himby Louis de Baude, best known as Frontenac. Thiswas his second voyage to America. The manof 67 years was the only man capable of making peace between the English and Iroquois. Heundertook, uponarrival, to build fortifications at Montreal, Trois Tivieres and Quebec.Pierre Barbary, his wife, Marie Lebrun, and a large part of their children did not survive.Pierre Richon writes: "During the twenty years this couple was married ten children were born.Only three survived to adulthood --- the others died young, killed or burnet with their parents bythe Iroquois during the famous massacre at Lachine on August 5, 1689".Thanks to all the Barbary dit Grandmaison family.Thank youto AndreCarriere and Damasse Toupin for their precious writings regarding this family.Claude Latour.! from PRDH: "Faitprisonnierlors du massacre de Lachine, le 5 Aout 1689, il est mort en captivit?. Source: MSGCF 50-3, NO 221, Automne 1999, p. 208"! Soldat leLa Compagniede M. De Contrcoeur, Capitaine dans Le Regiment De Carignan | BARBARY, Pierre (I8885)
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! from PRDH: "HABITANTS DE LACHINE, "JEAN MOUFLET, ANNE DODAIN SA FEMMEET DEUX DE LEURS ENFANTS, MARGUERITE ET ANGELIQUE-GABRIELLE SEMBLENT S'ETRE LITTERALEMENT EVANOUIS AU LENDEMAIN DU 5 AOUT 1689" (SOURCE: MSGCF 50(3), P. 216). ON EN DEDUIT QU'ILS ONT ETE TUES OU CAPTURES LORS DU MASSACRE DE LACHINE" | MOUFLET, Jean (I59907)
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! from PRDH: "HILL WATER PRES D'ORANGE, NEW-YORK" | POUPART, Elisabeth Isabelle (I21134)
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! from PRDH: "L'ACTE DE S?PULTURE D'H?L?NE DESPORTES NE NOUS EST PAS PARVENU. CEPENDANT, UNE NOTE DU ?REGISTRE DE LA CONFR?RIE DE LA SAINTE-FAMILLE? PR?CISE SA DATE DE D?C?S; ELLE SERAIT D?C?D?E CHEZ SON FILS ALPHONSE, ? ST-THOMAS DE LA RIVI?RE-DU-SUD.SOURCE: ARTICLE DE L?ON ROY DANSLES MSGCF VOL. 2 (1946), P. 165-168""SA DATE DE NAISSANCE PRECISE EST INCONNUE. ON SAIT QU'ELLE EST NEE A QUEBEC APRES LE 7 JUILLET 1620, DATE D'ARRIVEE DE SA MARRAINE, HELENE BOULLE. D'APRES SON AGE AU MARIAGE,ELLE SERAIT NEE DANS LA SECONDE MOITIE DE 1620"! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1000-1700 (Volume I)DESPORTES, H?L?NE, said to be the first white child born in NewFrance, daughter ofPierre Desportes and Fran?oise Langlois; m. Guillaume H?bert 1634; d. 24 June 1675. The date of H?l?ne?sbirth has not been definitely fixed. Dionne says that she came to Quebec with her parents in 1613, Sulte that she was born in Quebec about 1622. Statistics from other sources indicate that she was 14 years old in1634, 38 in 1659, 46 in 1666, and 48 in 1667. Anne H?bert, according to Champlain, had died in childbirth previous to 1620; but since there is no further mention of her child, it was presumably still-born. Eustache Martin was born in October 1621. If, however, we assume H?l?ne?s birthdate to be 1620, which seems most probable, her claim is established as being the first white child born alive in the St. Lawrence region. (Sulte, to be sure, claims for Guillemette H?bert the honour of being the first-born Canadienne, on the assumption that Louis H?bert had his wife with him in Acadia in 1606, but Lescarbot?s evidence refutes this (History (Grant).) Pierre Desportes probably came to Quebec in 1614 with Abraham Martin: their wives were sisters. Desportes? occupation isnot known, but he must have had some standing in the community and sufficient education to be able to write, for he signed on behalf ofthe inhabitants the document of 1621 appealing to the king. No other facts are known about him. (He is not to be confused with Pierre Desportes de Ligu?re, to whom the Compagnie de la Nouvelle-France ceded ?le Royale (Cape Breton) in 1636.) Neither of H?l?ne?s parents witnessed her marriage contract, drawn up in Quebec in October 1634. Her husband was Guillaume H?bert. About this only son of Canada?s first settler little isrecorded except an occasional instance of his helping the priestsin their relations with the savages. Since he had inherited half his father?s land, which included some acres on the St. Charles as well as the original site above the cliff, itis to be assumed that his chief occupation during his short life was the cultivation of his fields. He was but alittle boy when he came to Quebec with his parents in 1617, therefore probably still in his twenties when he died in 1639. Threechildren wereborn of this marriage, one of whom died in infancy. The other two wereaSon Joseph and a daughter Fran?oise (b. 1638) who married Guillaume Fournier, 1651. H?l?ne?s second husband was No?l Morin (1616?80), a wheelwright,whobecame one of the early pioneers of Montmagny. Their son Germain* was consecrated to the priesthood by Mgr Laval* in September l665, the first Canadian-born priest. Another son, Jean-Baptiste (1645?94) was a member of the Conseil Souverain. Adaughter, Marie*, was thefirst Canadian-born nun.Ethel M. G. BennettFor information about the Desportes family in Quebec see L?on Roy, ?Pierre Desportes et sa descendance,? SGCF M?moires, II (1946?47), 165?68. See also Azarie CouillardDespr?s, Louis H?bert: premier colon canadien et sa famille (Lille, Paris, Bruges, 1913; Montr?al, 1918); La premi?re famille fran?aise au Canada. Dionne Champlain, II, passim. Sulte, Hist. des Can.-fr., II, 37, 78.! H?l?ne DesportesFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaH?l?ne Desportes is often citedas the first white child born in Canada, New France. There is considerable disagreement about when she was born and, in particular,if she was born in Quebec or before she arrived on the continent.[1] Her parentswere French habitants Pierre Desportes(1580- after 1629), who was in charge of the warehouse in Quebec as well as the village baker, and hiswife Fran?oiseLanglois (c1595- after 1629), who settled in Quebec. Herfather was a lawyer in the Parlement de Paris and an investorin the Companyof 100 Associates which funded Champlain's colony.Her godmother was Madame H?l?ne Boull?, the wife of Samuel deChamplain. In his will, Champlain left her 300 livres (about $15,000 in 1997).[2]After the fall of Qu?bec City in 1629, H?l?ne and herparents, along with Champlain were transported to London, and then back to France. Shortly after peacewasrestored in 1632, H?l?ne returned to Qu?bec, possibly with Champlain who arrivedback in Qu?bec on May 16, 1633.On the first of October 1634,H?l?ne married Joseph Guillaume H?BERT, son of Louis H?bert and Marie Rollet. Joseph's familyhadremainedin Qu?bec during the occupation and had the first farm there. His father LOUIS HEBERT had been involved in early expeditions to PortRoyal with Champlain and others.After Joseph Hebert died in 1639,H?l?ne was left with three living children.She then married No?l Morin, a native of the parish of St-?tienne in Brie-Comte-Robert, a village near Paris, on January 9, 1640, in QuebecCity. They had 12 children.Perhaps aided by having personally brought 19 of her own childreninto the world, H?l?ne learned the profession of sage femme, which is the French expression for midwife. She passed that profession onto two of her daughters.[edit]References^ Bennett, Ethel M. G. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. 2000. "H?l?ne Desportes". Accessed August 10, 2007.^ Samuel de Champlain, Father of New France. Boston: Little, Brown. 1972. pp. 179, 224.PRDH, Certificat de mariage No. 66320.Ibid., Certificat de mariage No. 66340.Ibid., Certificat d'unionNo. 78.Ibid., Certificat de famille No. 78.Email Quebec-Research-Digest, Suzanne Boivin Sommerville, 3 April 2002: "In his entry for Pierre DESPORTES, Langlois says he wasone of the first habitants of the country (1619), that his origins are unknown, thathe married in France Fran?oise Langlois, and that H?l?ne is the first child of French parents born in the country (I would add documented in some way as born who survived), and he cites_only_ an article by Roy L?on in MSGCF, vol. 2, (1945?)thatapparently says a request to the king carries his signature in 1621. He returned to France with his wife in 1629 and did not return. Langlois also says it is important to distinguish him fromanother Pierre de LA PORTE who drowned 28 April 1639 in the Saint-Charles River." Langlois, Michel.Dictionnaire Biographique des Anc?tres Qu?b?cois (1608?1700). Sillery:La Maison des Anc?tres Qu?b?cois. Tome 1 (Lettres A? C),1998; Tome 2 (Lettres D? I), 1999;Tome 3 (Lettres J ? M), 2000; Tome 4, Lettres N ? Z. Sillery: Les ?ditions du Mitan, 2001.Biographical Dictionary for TheJesuit Missions in Acadia and New France: 1602-1654, Lucien Campeau, S.J., translated by William Lonc, S.J. & GeorgeTopp, S.J., summer 2001,p. 147.[edit]External linkshttp://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nosracines/4317.htmhttp://web.archive.org/web/20091028154058/http://geocities.com/weallcamefromsomewhere/Kebec/helene_desportes.htmlhttp://www.leveillee.net/ancestry/union223.htmhttp://many-roads.com/2009/08/28/marie-helene-desportes/http://www.leveillee.net/ancestry/d523.htmhttp://www.lactualite.com/dossiers_speciaux/article.jsp?content=20051124_154547_46344- NAISSANCE-BIRTH: On rapporte queHélène est la première descendante française née en Nouvelle-France. Helene is said to be the first white chold born in New FranceBIOGRAPHIE-BIOGRAPHY: Possiblement le premier enfant blanc né en Nouvelle-France. Rho acé l'.éfav's18Rivitab»«tab»éf: Dictionnaire biographique du Canada en ligne. | DESPORTES, Helene (I31162)
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! from PRDH: "L'IDENTIFICATION DE SES PARENTS A ?T? OBTENUE DU FICHIER ORIGINE", "MARIAGE ? LAROCHELLE (ST-BARTH?LEMY). SOURCE: FICHIER ORIGINE" | ALAVOINE, Charles (I554)
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! from PRDH: "LE BAPT?ME ET LE NOM DES PARENTS DE CET IMMIGRANT PROVIENNENT DU FICHIER ORIGINE. IL PASSE EN FRANCE EN 1679, CAR IL EST DIT "DEPR?SENT ABSENT EN FRANCE" DANS LE CONTRAT DE MARIAGE DE SA FILLE ANNE DEVANT LE NOTAIRE VACHON LE 2 F?VRIER 1680 (SOURCE: DICTIONNAIRE BIOGRAPHIQUE DES ANC?TRES QU?B?COIS DE MICHEL LANGLOIS). COMME SA FEMME EST "VEUVE" AU RECENSEMENT DE 1681, ON SITUE, PAR INTERPOLATION, SON D?C?S EN 1680" | LE CLERC, Jean (I52156)
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! from PRDH: "MAJEUR LE 28 F?VRIER 1661 D'APR?S UN DOCUMENT NOTARI? D?COUVERT EN FRANCE. SOURCE : MSGCF, 54-1, #235, PRINTEMPS 2003, P. 55 ET SUIVANTES. "! from PRDH: "BAPTIS? LE 28 OCTOBRE CHEZ LES PROTESTANTS. SOURCE : FICHIER ORIGINE" | CHARRON, Pierre (I24624)
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! from PRDH: "MARIE JOSEPHE THIBAULT A BAPTISE L'ENFANT, LE CURE DE SA PAROISSE ETANT ABSENT POUR QUELQUES JOURS" | THIBAULT, Marie Francoise (I72222)
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! from PRDH: "MORTE EN COUCHES ? LA NAISSAANCE D'UN FILS APPEL? NICOLAS. SOURCE REGISTRES DE ST-JACQUES-DE-DIEPPE, CIT?S PAR GAIL MOREAU (COMMUNICATION PERSONNELLE)" | COINTEL, Marguerite (I26198)
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! from PRDH: "N?E ? ST-MARTIN-DE-R?, ELLE A ?T? BAPTIS?E LE 20 NOVEMBRE1643 AU TEMPLE CALVINISTE DE LA VILLENEUVE ? LA ROCHELLE. R?F.: FICHIER ORIGINE" | DODIN, Helene (I30372)
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! from PRDH: "NIECE DE MARTIN PREVOST (CONTRAT FILION DU 16-08-1683)(COMMUNICATION DE MICHELINE LECUYER)" | PROVOST, Jeanne (I42263)
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! from PRDH: "PRIS PAR LES IROQUOIS AVEC SON FILS CHARLES. SOURCE: LE DICTIONNAIRE G?N?ALOGIQUE DE REN? JETT?, QUI CITE LE JOURNAL DES J?SUITES"! Pierre Garemandit LePicardUpdated Jan 15, 2000Updated and Generation Added Aug 20, 2000Updated and Expanded Nov 10, 2004Surnames in CAPTIALS follow my husband's direct lineage.In the beginning, much of the informaton I gathered about the Pierre Gareman dit LePicard family came from various queries and exchanges of email on the Quebec-Research-L a rootweb.com and Acadien-Cajun-L a rootsweb.com mailing lists. At least 1contact has cited Jette and Tanguay for some of the info. In particular, James Carten of theAcadien-Cajun-L a rootsweb.com mailing list posted extensive details about Pierre Gareman's life in New France from numerous sources as given below.Pierre Gareman dit LePicard is listed as Garman in theProgramme de rechercheen d?mographie historique(PRDH) Pioneer files. A great deal of the first several generations of Pierre's can be found in Jette's Dictionnaire g?n?alogique des familles du Qu?bec : des origines ? 1730 (Jett?), as well as in l'abbe Cyprien Tanguay's works: Dictionnaire g?n?alogique des familles canadiennes depuis la fondation de la colonie jusqu'? nos jours (Tanguay). Several generations down the line, this French Canadian family connects with famillies from Acadia, and information about these marriages was found in Stephen A. Whites' Dictionnaire g?n?alogique des familles Acadiennes : Premi?re Partie 1636 ? 1714 (SWhite).For quick reference, check the (myNOTE: not updated yet!) outline for 8 generations for this family.Descendants of Pierre GAREMANGenerationNo.11. Pierre1 GAREMAN dit LePICARD died. He married Madeleine CHARLOT Abt. 1628 in Bagneux, Vic sur Aisne,Soissons, Picardie, France. She died bef. Jan 29, 1652 in Notre Dame de Quebec, Quebec.Notes for Pierre GAREMAN dit LePICARD:Source Jette:*pg464:GAREMAN dit LePICARD, Pierre (...) de Bagneux, pris par les Iroquois Oneiouts a Cap Rouge avec son fils Charles 10-06-1653.m vers 1628, Bagneux, canton Vic sur Aisne, ar Soissons, Picardie (Aisne)CHARLOT, Madeleine (...) de Bagneux; d avant 29-01-1652, Quebec.Enfants: Florence; Nicole; Marguerite; et Charles.Source PRDH:Pionnier: Pierre GARMANStatut(s): ImmigrantNaissance: Bagneux, ev Soissons, Ile de France (today: ar Soissons, Aisne, France)Premier mariage: avant 1626 avec MadeleineCHARLOTSource Carten:(chronologically reorganized)In 1628, Pierre Garemanof Bagneux, Picardie married Marguerite Charlot. Their first child arrived in 1629 and their second in 1631, they were girls, Florence and Nicole. This little family migratedtoQuebec before the birth and baptismof their third daughter, Marguerite, in 1639. They had, Charles, theironly son in 1643. They baptized Charles in Trois-Rivieres.According toMarcel Trudel (Terrier, p.307), the Gareman was in the region of Portneuffrom 1640 to work in the service of Jacques Le Neuf de la Poterie. A short time later, around 1642, the Iroquois forced them to take refuge in Sillery, atthehospice. It was about the same era that Pierre stayed sometime in Trois-Rivieres. Heshows up as a witness in 1643. The 25-05-1646, the seigneur Le Neuf came back again and signed with Gareman and Rene Mezeray a contract that incites themto take up where they left off in Portneuf. This contract did not have the desired follow-up because Mr. de la Poterie will declare in 1668 that the Iroquois danger obliged him and "many of his tenant farmers, had to abandon the area twentyyearsago" because the buildings were burned," in which they suffered notable losses that cost him a lot topresently settle and could not do it earlier because there were no troops in the country" (The Carignan Reg.). The historian Trudel concludes that the occupation of the area is not yet really underway before 1663, because the only two known residantsatthat time are Pierre Gareman and Rene Mezerets dit Nopce.In 1652 orbefore, the Compagnie des Cent-Associes granted to Pierre Gareman someland of four arpents wide on the (St. Lawrence) river, to which originally was twelve and a half arpents deep,and later to fifty. [In 26-03-1656, the inheritors will sell this land with buildings to Etienne Letellier, for the sumof 300 pounds. This property, today, takes up the major part of the parishes of Ste. Ursule and St. Benoit at the westernendof thecity of Ste. Foy.]In 10-06-1653, when he was living at Cap Rouge with his family, Pierre and his son Charles, 8 years old, are captured by the Iroquois. In the Histoire De Notre-Dame de Ste. Foy, the priest H.-A. Scott writes (pp. 295-296): "the10-06-1653, Francois Boule, called Petit Homme, was working in his field, which bordered on that of ReneMezerets, when he was hit by three gunshots, one in the stomach, in the groin, and in the thigh, then scalped. His other neighbor, Pierre Gareman,called the Picard, had a consequence even more sad, as he was taken alive with his son Charles, of eight years, and a young man named Hugues Couturier, and reserved to these terrible tortures so often written about.The Jesuit Journalalso tellsabout the attack on 10-06-1653 by the Onieda tribe of the Iroquois on Cap Rouge. The Journal refers to ten year old son, Charles. The Iroquois did not approve of men letting themselves be captured. They usually tortured and killed them,asthey did with our Pierre Gareman.References: Ancetres by Jacques Saintonge #162; "One HundredFrench-Canadian Families", p. 167-168, by Phillip Moore;and Jette | GARMAN, Pierre (I38234)
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! from PRDH: "SA DATE DE BAPT?ME A ?T? OBTENUE DU FICHIER ORIGINE MAIS AUCUN DOCUMENT CANADIEN NE NOMME SES PARENTS. SI CE BAPT?ME EST BIEN LESIEN, SES PARENTS SONT NICOLAS CHAUVIN ET CATHERINE PIEDGARE" | CHAUVIN, Marin (I24933)
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! from PRDH: "SES PARENTS N'?TANT PAS NOMM?S LORS DE SON MARIAGE, IL EST PLAUSIBLE QU'IL S'AGISSE DE L'ENFANT ILL?GITIME N? DE JEANNE THEODOREET JACQUES AMELOT.SON ?GE AU D?C?S CONCORDE AVEC UNE NAISSANCE EN 1694. VOIR L'ARTICLE DE THOMAS GEORGE AND JOELLEN ST. AUBIN DANS LA REVUE MICHIGAN'S HABITANT HERITAGE, VOL. 28, #4- OCTOBRE 2007"! Bapt?me PRDH # 10445Pointe-aux-Trembles 1694-11-17Birth :1694-11-17Rank Name Age M.S. Pr. Sex01 FRANCOIS AMELOT --- c p m02 JACQUES AMELOT FATHEROF 01 --- --- p m03 JEANNE THEODORE MOTHER OF 01 --- --- p f04 FRANCOIS DORME --- --- p m05 JEANNE MATOU --- --- p f06 C LEBRETON --- cp m Occupation : PRETRE? PRDHwww.genealogy.umontreal.ca | HOGUE, Francois (I45061)
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! from PRDH: "SON VRAI NOM SERAIT JOSEPH FRY, FILS D'ADRAIN ET DE HANNAH SARAH WHITE. LE 6 JUILLET 1695, IL EST FAIT PRISONNIER LORS DE L'ATTAQUE DU VILLAGE DE KITTERY. APR?S AVOIR V?CU UNE DIZAINE D'ANN?ES DANS UNE MISSION INDIENNE, IL EST LIB?R?.IL PASSE UN CONTRAT DE MARIAGE EN 1707, MAIS CELUI-CI FUT ANNUL? ET CE N'EST QU'APR?S AVOIR OBTENU LA NATIONALIT? FRAN?AISE QU'IL S'EST MARI?. SOURCE: MARCEL FOURNIER, ?DELA NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE ? LA NOUVELLE-FRANCE?, P. 135" | FRY OR LAFRAMBOISE, Joseph "Andree " (I36696)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Died outside of Qu?bec" | LALOUETTE, Jean-Baptiste (I48888)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Illegitimate . Immigrant" | PERRON DIT SUIRE, Daniel Francois (I62954)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Illegitimate"! Sepulture - PRDH # 368643Pointe-Claire 1777-01-27Death :1777-01-26Rank Name Age M.S. Pr. Sex01 ANDRE PREZAU 076 --- d m Residence : POINTE-CLAIRE? PRDHwww.genealogy.umontreal.ca | PRESSEAU, Andre (I64662)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec" | ROUSSELIERE, Jeanne (I24841)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec" | DECHAVIGNY, Francois (I29813)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec" | LAMARCHE, Jean (I48968)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec" | SAUVAGE, Jacques (I70348)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec"! Jr Sylvain Guerin (b. September 24, 1659, d. 1685)Sylvain Guerin (son of Sylvain Guerin and Gabrielle Gasteau) was born September 24, 1659 in Amboise, Indre et Loire, France, and died 1685. He married Marie Brazeau on 1680 in Quebec, daughter of Nicholas Braseau and Marrie-Anne Pinsonneau Dit LaFleur. Notes for Sylvain Guerin:When he returned to France around 1685, he was hanged for bigamy.More About Sylvain Guerin and Marie Brazeau:Marriage: 1680, Quebec.Children of Sylvain Guerin and Marie Brazeau are:+Francoise Guerin, b. 1680, d. August 26, 1757, Montreal, Qubec, Canada. | GUERIN, Sylvain (I42323)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant . Died outside of Qu?bec"; ""UN TEMOIGNAGE DE SON EPOUSE LE 3-6-1679 NOUS APPREND QU'IL N'EST PLUS AU PAYS "IL Y AURA CINQ ANS A LA TOUSSAINT PROCHAINE" SOURCE : COLLECTION DE PIECES JUDICIAIRES ET NOTARIALES, REFERENCE DE MICHEL LANGLOIS DANS L'ANCETRE, AVRIL-MAI 1999, P.267" | ENARD, Simon (I34432)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Immigrant" | ROGER, Rene (I37352)
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! from PRDH: "Status(es) : Indian" | MORISSEAU, Marguerite Dorothee (I89366)
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! from PRDH: "TUE AVEC SA FEMME EN NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE A L'HIVER 1707-1708 DANS DES CIRCONSTANCES INCONNUES. SOURCE: MARCEL FOURNIER, "DE LA NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE A LA NOUVELLE-FRANCE, P. 190" | POUPART, Rene (I64576)
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