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451 ! Family of Antoine Bourg & Antoinette LandryAntoine Bourg was born Abt.1609 at Martaize, Loudun, Vienne, France, and died Bef. 1693 at Port Royal, Acadia.Wife AntoinetteLandry was born Abt. 1618, and died Aft. 1693 in Acadia. They were married Abt. 1642 in Acadia.Their children were:1- Francois Bourg b: Abt. 1643 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Abt. 1686 Port Royal, Acadia +Marguerite Marie Boudrot b:Abt. 1648 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1665 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 9 November 1718 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 9 November 1718 St. Jean Baptiste, Port RoyalNotes for Francois Bourg:- 1671 Port Royal: Francois Bour 28, Marguerite Boudrot 23,Michel 5 1/2, Marie3; 15 cattle, 5 sheep, 5 1/2 arpents.2- Marie Bourg b: Abt. 1645 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 19 September 1730 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 19 September 1730 Port Royal, Acadia +Vincent Breau b: Abt. 1631 LaChaussee, Vienne, France; m: Abt.1661 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Abt. 1685 Port Royal, AcadiaNotes for Marie Bourg:- 1671 Port Royal: Vincent Brot 40 farmer, wife Marie Bour 26, Marie 9, Antoine 5, Marguerite 3, Pierre 1; 9 cattle, 7 sheep, 5 arpents.3- Jean Bourg b: Abt. 1646 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Bet. 1693 - 1698Port Royal, Acadia +Marguerite Martin b: Abt. 1644 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1667 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 24 April 1707 PortRoyal, Acadia; burial: 25 April 1707 St. Jean Baptiste, Port Royal4- Bernard Bourg b: Abt. 1648 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Bef. 1725 Port Royal, Acadia +Francoise Brun b: Abt. 1653 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1670 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 23 May 1725 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 24 May 1725 St. Jean Baptiste, Port Royal5- Martin Bourg b: Abt.1650 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Aft. 1714 Cobequit, Acadia +Marie Potet b: Abt. 1657 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1675 Port Royal,Acadia; d: Aft.1714 Cobequit, Acadia 6- Jeanne Bourg b: Abt. 1653PortRoyal, Acadia; d: Bet. 1700 - 1703 +Jean Belliveau b: Abt.1652 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1673 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Abt. 1735 Tracadie, Ile St. Jean7- Renee Bourg b: Abt. 1655 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Abt. 1685 Pisiquit, Acadia +Charles Boudrot b: Abt.1646 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1672 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Aft. 1714 Pisiquit, Acadia8- Huguette Bourg b: Abt. 1657 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Bet. 1687 - 1693 Port Royal, Acadia +SebastienBrun b:Abt. 1655 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1675 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 15August 1728 Port Royal, AcadiaNotes for Huguette Bourg:- 1686 Port Royal: Bastien Brun 32, Hugette Bourg 28, Jeanne 9, Claude 7, Abraham 6, Vincent 5, Jean 4, Antoine1;12cattle, 12 sheep, 10 hogs, 1 gun.- 1693 Port Royal: Sebastien Brun 38 widower, Jeanne 16, Claude 14, Abraham 12,Vincent 11, Jean Baptiste 9, Anthoine 8, Marie 6; 12cattle, 20 sheep, 10 hogs, 10 arpents, 1 gun.9- Jeanne Bourg b: Abt. 1659 PortRoyal, Acadia; d: Bef. 22 February 1724 Acadia +Pierre Comeau b: Abt. 1652 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1677 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 8 April 1730Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 9 April 1730 Port Royal10- Abraham Bourg b: Abt. 1662 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Aft. 1736 Acadia +Marie (Sebastienne) Brun b: Abt. 1658 Port Royal, Acadia; m: Abt. 1683 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 13 April 1736 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 14April 1736 St. Jean Baptiste, Port RoyalNotes for Abraham Bourg:- 1686Port Royal: Abraham Boure 25, Marie Brun 24, Jean 2, Marguerite 6 months; 10 cattle, 10 sheep, 8 hogs, 6 arpents, 1 gun.- 1693 Port Royal:Antoinette Landry 76 widow, Abraham Bourg 31, wife Marie Brun 35, Jean Baptiste 9, Marguerite 7, Claude 5, Pierre 4, Marie 2; 12 cattle, 20 sheep, 8 hogs, 26 arpents, 1 gun.- 1698 Port Royal: Abraham Bourg 38, wife Marie Brun 40, Francois [Gautrot] 20, Jean Baptiste 15, Marguerite 13, Claude 11, Pierre 9, Marie 7, Michel 5, Charles 3, Joseph ?12 cattle, 20sheep, 12 hogs, 16 arpents, 60 fruit trees, 1 gun.- 1700 Port Royal: Abraham Landri (sic) 38, wife Marie Brun 42, Jean Baptiste 16, Claude 12, Pierre 11, Marguerite 14, Marie 9; 10 cattle, 16 sheep, 26 arpents, 1gun.- 1701 Port Royal: Abraham Bourg 40, wife Marie Brun 42, Jean 18, Claude 18, Pierre 10, Michel 9, Charles 6, Joseph 3, Marie 16, Marguerite 9; 14cattle, 17 sheep, 3 hogs, 10 arpents, 1 gun.- 1703 Port Royal: Abraham Bourg, wife, 5 boys, 3 girls- 1707 Port Royal: AbrahamBourg, wife, 3 boys 14 or older, 3 younger boys, 2 girls 12 or older; 24 cattle,28 sheep, 12 hogs, 8 arpents, 1 gun.-1714Port Royal (near the fort): Abraham Bourg, wife, 4 boys, 1 girl.11- Marguerite Bourg b: Abt. 1667 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 13September 1727 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 14September 1727 St. Jean Baptiste, Port Royal +Louis Allainb: Abt. 1654 France; m: Abt. 1690 Port Royal, Acadia; d: 15 June 1737 Port Royal, Acadia; burial: 18 June 1737 St. Jean Baptiste, Port RoyalNotes for Marguerite Bourg:- 1698 Port Royal: Louis Allain 44, wife Marguerite Bourg31, Pierre 7,Marie 5; 1 servant; 10 cattle, 12 sheep, 8 hogs, 5 ? arpents, 31 fruit trees, 4 guns.- 1701 Port Royal: Louis Allain46, wife Marguerite Bourg 30, Louis 10, Marie 6, 3 servants ? Abraham Brun, Isaac Bergerat & Anne Comeau 16; 20 cattle, 30 sheep, 20 hogs, 3 arpents, 2 guns.- 1703 Port Royal: Louis Allain, wife, 2 boys (sic)- 1707 Port Royal: Louis Allain, wife, 1 boy 14 or older, 1 girl12 or older; 25 cattle, 27 sheep, 14 hogs, 3 arpents, 2 guns.- 1714 Port Royal (auCappe): LouisAlain, wife, 1 boy, 1 girl. Notes for Antoine Bourg:- 1671 Port Royal: Anthoine Bourc 62, Anthoinette Landry 53, married children Marie 26,Francois 27,Jean 24, and Bernard 22; unmarried Martin 21, Jeanne 18, Renee 16, Hugette 14, Jeanne12,Habraham 9, Marguerite 4; 12 cattle, 8 sheep, 4 arpents.- 1686 Port Royal: Antoine Bourc 95, Antoine Landry 80, Marguerite 18. (A note in the recordsshowedtheage of Antoineas 77 and the ageof Antoinette as 68.)- Bourg: Itis believed that Antoine Bourg, the founder of the family in Acadia, came originally from the parish of Martaize, near Loudun, France, and arrived at Port-Royal around 1640. HemarriedAntoinette Landry around 1643.Their grandson, Alexandre, settledat Grand-Pr?, where he was appointed a royal notary and official surveyor of lands. At the time of the Deportation, several Bourg families were able to escape andsomeof themsettled at Menoudie and Memramcook in NewBrunswick. Amongthe Bourg families who were victimsof the Deportation there was Joseph Bourg and his wife Madeleine Hache, the parents of Fran?-Anne Bourg who is believed to be the first childto be baptized onthe?les-de-la-Madeleine. [Telegraph-Journal, Thursday,July 28, 1994; p. A4, Fidele Theriault of Fredericton, New Brunswick] Notes for Antoinette Landry:- 1693 Port Royal: Antoinette Landry 76 widow, living with son Abraham?s family (see above)Parentsof Antoine Bourg - unknownParents ofAntoinette Landry - unknown BOURG, Antoine (I18233)
 
452 ! 6- Catherine Leblanc b: Abt. 1683 Port Royal, Acadia; d: Bet. 1733- 1740 Acadia +Pierre Cormier b: 25 March 1682 Beaubassin, Acadia (baptism: 25 March1682 Beaubassin, Acadia); m: Abt. 1702 Beaubassin, Acadia; d: Bet. 1722 - 1730 AcadiaNotes for Catherine Leblanc:- 1703 Beaubassin: Pierre Cormier, wife.- 1707 Beaubassin: Pierre Cormier, Catherine Leblanc, 2 boys <14; 9 cattle, 10 sheep, 8hogs, 6 arpents. LEBLANC, Catherine (I26756)
 
453 ! Family of Jacques Leblanc & Catherine HebertJacques Leblanc was bornAbt. 1651 at Port Royal, Acadia, and died Aft. 26 May 1731 at Grand Pre, Acadia.Wife Catherine Hebert wasborn Abt. 1656 at Port Royal, Acadia, and died Aft. 1714 at St. Charles des Mines, Acadia. They were married Abt. 1673 at Port Royal, Acadia. LEBLANC, Jacques (I51761)
 
454 ! Gabriel Beauvais dit St. Gemmei... was born in 1599 in St. Martin d'Ige, France and was married to Marie Crevier/Crosnier, who was born about 1605. I have found recordsthat indicate their death date was7Jan 1654, their son's wedding datein Canada, but have yet to confirm this.Jacques Beauvais dit St. Gemme... is from small village of St. Martin d'Ige in the Perche (Anjou) region of France. Jacques was christened 22 Nov 1623. On 7Jan 1654 he married Jeanne Sold? in Montreal.This was found about Jeanne's passage from France to Canada in 1653 as part of the La Grande Recue:The Few WomenRecruits... few women also boarded the Saint-Nicolas-de-Nantes and sailed to New France. ...the massivearrival of the King's Wards only started in 1663. In 1653, the major concern was to bring men over to defend New France. R.-J. Auger ... recordedthe names of fifteen female passengers. Recent research conducted by the Soci?t? de g?n?alogie canadienne-fran?aise indicates that there were actually fourteen women. Let us start with the names and the cities or villages they came from:1. ARTUS, Michelle - Noyen-sur-Sarthe (Sarthe / Pays de la Loire)2. BOURGEOYS, Marguerite - Troyes (Aube / Champagne-Ardenne)3. DUMESNIL, Marie - La Fl?che (Sarthe / Pays de la Loire)4. HURAULT, Catherine - La Fl?che (Sarthe/ Pays de la Loire)5. LORGUEIL, Marie - Cognac (Charente / R?gion Poitou-Charentes)6. LORION, Catherine - Saint-Soulle (Charente-Maritime / Poitou-Charentes)7. MERRIN (ou MAIR?), Jeanne - Poitiers (Vienne / Poitou-Charentes)8. MEUNIER (ou MOUNIER), Perrine - Nantes (Loire-Atlantique/ Pays de la Loire)9. PINSON, Marie-Marthe - La Fl?che (Sarthe - Pays de la Loire)10. RENAUD, Marie - Orl?ans(Loiret - R?gion Centre)11. RENAUDIN, Marie - Nantes (Loire-Atlantique / Pays de la Loire)12. ROUSSELIER, Jeanne - Mo?ze (Charente-Maritime / Poitou-Charentes)13. SOLD?, Jeanne - La Fl?che(Sarthe / Pays de la Loire)14. VOIDY (ou VEDY ou VEDI?),Jeanne - Saint-Germain-du-Val (Sarthe / Pays de la Loire)Here is some additional information about these women. Perrine Meunier came over with her husband, Julien Daubigeon. It should benoted that she was pregnant during the crossing and gave birth toadaughter ten days after arriving! Two younggirls married in Quebec City. They were Michelle Artus, who married Jean Descaries dit Le Houx, on November 5, 1654, and Marie Renaudin, who joined in matrimony with Nicolas Levieux, on September 9, 1654.Although both women eventually returned to France in 1670, it is interesting to note that one of their daughters became a nursing nun and died at the H?tel-Dieu de Qu?bec. Marie Dumesnil, a 12-year-old orphan was assigned to MargueriteBourgeoys,who assumed responsibility for her until she married Andr? Charly dit Saint-Ange (November 9, 1654).Four of the new arrivals married recruits: Catherine Huraultmarried Jean Lemercher (October 13, 1654), Marie Lorgueil married Toussaint Hunault ditDeschamps (November 23, 1654), Marie Renaud married Mathurin Langevin dit Lacroix (September5, 1654) and Jeanne Rousselier married Pierre Gaudin dit Chastillon (October 13, 1654). Five others married men from Montreal: Catherine Lorion married Pierre Vilain (October 13, 1654), Jeanne Merrin married ?loi Jarry dit Lahaye (September 11, 1654), Marie-Marthe Pinson married Jean Milot (January 7, 1654), Jeanne Sold? married Jean Beauvais (January 7, 1654) and Jeanne Voidy married JeanDumay (November9,1654). Finally, one of the women was later called the Mother of the Colony ? and for good cause. This was, of course, Marguerite Bourgeoys, the first educator and 'social worker' of Ville-Marie, who needsno introduction.Some ofthe recruits,in addition to Marguerite Bourgeoys, led very extraordinary lives...from Maison Saint-GabrielJacques died and was buried, in Montreal, 20 Mar 1691. Jeanne was born in 1632 in LaFleche, Angers, Anjou, France, and died 12 Nov 1697 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Eight children were born to Jacques and Jeanne:Children of Jacques & Jeanne Beauvais-St. JemmeName Sex Born Died AgeSpouseRaphael M 15 Oct 1654 21 Oct 1734 80 Elizabeth TurpinBarbe F 28 Aug 1656 25 Jan1746 90 Francois BrunetMarie sMarguerite F 30Aug 1658 28 Jun 1715 57 Jacques TetuJean M 26 Sep 1660 7 Jul 1704 44 Madeleine LemoineJacques M13 Dec 1664 14 Aug1671 7 N/AMarie Charlotte F 26 Jun 1667 25 Dec 1700 33 Alexandre TurpinEtienne F 21 Sep 1669 14 Sep 1753 84 Jean Baptiste PothierMarieJeanne F 8 Jan 1673 6 Feb 1703 30 Guillaume Boucher BEAUVAIS DIT ST-GEMME, Jacques (I11828)
 
455 ! 10. Edmund Lewknor, Esquire, born 16 November 1496 at Tangmere, died there on 11 March 1545, leaving a will (PCC 31 Pynnyng). He married about 1532, Joan TYRRELL, born say 1510 anddied before September 1557 at Racton, Sussex, daughter of Jasper and Anne (Goring) Tyrrell. She married second John Gunter, Esquire by whom she had a son Jasper. In his will Edmund asks to be buried with his parents at the Boxgrove Priory, daughters Elizabeth and Anne, sons Richard, George, and Edmund and wife Joane. He makes the Lord LaWarr one of his overseers of this will. That man's father, Thomas West, the 8th Lord LaWarr in his will of 1526 (PCC2Porch) leaves a bequest to "Edmund Lewkenor, my kinsman and servant." [MCA, p. 782-83 and sources cited therein. Using the work Tyrells in England by Brown, pp. 113-115, 243, and the Visitation of Sussex, it appears that Anne Goring, mother of Joan Tyrrell is the daughter of John Goring, Esquire and Joan Hewster. John'smaternal grandmother was Margaret Camoys, sister of the Eleanor Camoys, first wife of Sir Roger Lewknor above. Therefore, the Camoys descent is not lost in this new arrangement.]! Edmund LEWKNOR Esquire [Parents] 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 was born 6 16 Nov 1496 in Tangmere, Sussex,England. He died 11 Mar 1545 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. Edmund married Jane TYRRELL on 1529 in Tangmere, Sussex, England.Jane TYRRELL [Parents] 1, 2 was born 1509 in Rawreth, Essex, England. She married EdmundLEWKNOR Esquire on 1529 in Tangmere, Sussex, England.Othermarriages:GUNTER, John EsquireThey had the following children: F i Elizabeth LEWKNOR was born 2 Mar 1538. M ii Thomas LEWKNOR 1, 2 was born 3 27 Jan1539 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. F iii Anne LEWKNOR 1 was born 2 12 May 1540 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. M iv Richard LEWKNOR Esquire 1, 2 was born 3 14 Mar 1541 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. M v George LEWKNOR 1 was born 2 1 Nov 1542 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. M vi Edmund LEWKNOR 1, 2 was born 3 18 Dec 1543in Tangmere, Sussex, England. LEWKENOR, Edmund (I54051)
 
456 ! 11. Elizabeth Lewknor, born 2 March 1533 at Tangmere, died prior to 1577. She married as his second wife, Thomas STOUGHTON, son of Lawrence and (---) (Combes) Stoughton. He was born 25 March 1521 at Stoke, Surrey, and died at London on 26 March 1578.[MCA, p. 783, and sources cited therein.]! Elizabeth LEWKNOR[Parents] 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 was born 7 2 Mar 1538 in Tangmere, Sussex, England. She married 8 Thomas STOUGHTON on 27 Feb 1553 in Stoughton, Surrey, England.! Elizabeth LEWKNOR1"Family of Stoughton," NEHGR 5:3 (Jul 1851) (New England Historic, Genealogical Society.), p. 350, Los Angeles Public Library.2Bannerman, William Bruce, The Visitationsof the County of Sussex, Made and Taken in the Years 1530 (London: Harleian Society Publications, 1905.), p. 79, Los Angeles Public Library, Gen 942.005 H284 v.53.3Bannerman, William Bruce, The Visitations of theCounty of Surrey Made and Taken in the Years 1530, ..1572, .. and 1623(London: Publications of the Harleian Society, 1899.), p. 87, Family History Library, 942 B4h v. 43.4Richardson, Douglas, Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families (Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., 2005.), p. 783, Family History Library, 942 D5rdm.5Sumner, Edith Bartlett, Descendants of Thomas Farr of Harpswell, Maine (Los Angeles: American Offset Printers, 1959.), p. 268, Family History Library, 929.273 F24s.6Bindoff, Stanley Thomas, The History of Parliament: The House of Commons, 1509-1558 (London: Secker & Warburg, 1982.), 3:388, Family History Library, 942 D3hp 1509-1558.7The Journal of the British Archaeological Association (London: H.G. Bohn, 1846-1918. FHL BRITISHFiche #6,026,511.), 30:60, Family History Library.8Bindoff, S. T.,Historyof Parliament, 1509-1558, 3:388. LEWKENOR, Elizabeth (I54052)
 
457 ! The Township of Kingston 1796A Roll of the Inhabitants of the Midland District in the Province of Upper Canada Who Adhered to the Unity of the Empire and joined the Royal Standard in America Before The Treaty of Separation in the Year 1783. Taken in Open Sessions Held at Kingston October the 11th and at Different Adjournments till the 15th of November 1796. (Kingston Before TheWar of 1812 - pg 348-350). Transcribed by Linda Herman, June, 2001.Purdy, Gilbert U.E.! The Loyalists of Ontario, Sons and Daughters of American Loyalists:PURDY, Gilbert Sr., Guides and Pioneers, m. Mary. Lived at New Burgh, Ulster Co., N.Y. Died 1778David of Ernestown, U.E.Gilbert, of Kingston, O.C. 7 June 1800Micajah, of KingstonSamuel,Mercy, m. John Everitt, of Kingston, O.C. 3 Mar 1809RhodaMaryCharlotte, m. Nicholas Herchmer of Kingstonm O.C. 17 Nov 1797! PURDY FAMILY by Doreen Hooper O'Brien, UE - appearedin Cataraqui Loyalist Town Crier (Sept. 2005), 24(4):4-6Cataraqui was first settled by Loyalists, many of them Methodists who, in 1784, came from New York State under the leadership of Michael Grass. It was with his Company No. 5 under Captain John Everitt that Gilbert Purdy died onpassage to Philadelphia under Gen. Howe. His widow, Mary, her four sons and four daughters came to settle in Cataraqui area. Some of Gilbert and Mary's children moved a little further afield but names of theirdescendants are well known to the larger Cataraqui area. Mary's daughter, Mercy, married John Everitt and later married Peter Grass, a son of Michael Grass. Daughter Rhoda married, first, John Wartman, and on his death married Barnabus Day. Daughter Catherine married Joseph Ferris and daughter Charlotte married Nicolaus Herchmer. It appears from family tree notes and from "The Purdy Connection" compiled by Ruth Law that widowMary's eldest son David lived in the Collins Bay or Bath area andher youngest son, Samuel, when married moved to Elizabethtown. That leaves sons Gilbert and Micajah who remained in Cataraqui and whose descendantshave been associated with the Methodist church ever since.Gilbert Purdy (1763-1851) - His grave stoneis inthe United Church cemetery near the road, south of the church and states "he was a member of the Methodist Church for 64 years". This means he became a member in 1787. Gilbert married Ann Elizabeth Jennings and they had 13 children. The branches spread out but some remain close by. Gilbert's son, Jesse (1794-1881) had a son Robert (1836-1896) whose daughter Hester Jane (1868-1958) married John W. Edwards. We do know that Dr. J.W.Edwards and his wife HesterJane as well as their children Edna(Edwards), Worden, Sadie (Loney), Evelyn (Packer) and Elizabeth (Haggart) did live in Cataraqui and contributed much to the life of the Methodist Church in the early1900's.Gilbert's son, Samuel (1795-1859), who married Pamela Ferris, startedthe first regular stage coach between Kingston and York (Toronto) on Jan. 4, 1817. (From "Canadian History for January" by E.A. Taylor in Methodist Sr. Sunday SchoolPaper, Kingston). Their home was in Sandville on the third concession of KingstonTwp. They belonged to the Wesleyan MethodistChurch but it seems their children went further afield - at least two sons went "out west".Gilbert's son, David (1808-1876), who married MaryElizabeth Rees, appears to have the most descendants who remained connected with the church in Cataraqui. They lived in a stone house on con.3 Lot 16 (where John Baker later lived) and theyhad 12 children.MicajahPurdy (1768-1844) was the other son of widow Mary who remained in the Cataraqui area. His gravestone is directly across the highway from Cataraqui United Church and his death notice stated he was a Wesleyan Methodist. He was five times married- Elizabeth Sands, Mercy Sands (sisters), Ann Detlor, Mary Embury and Hester Jane Holmes - and whenhe died he was survived by his last wife and nine of his 23 children. His daughtersmarried into the families of Guess, McCrea, Switzer, VanAlstine, Beachand Beamish. Micajah established mills along the Cataraqui Creek and also in Loughborough Twp. Heowned severallots and it is known that he owned Lot 17 Con. 3 east of the Cataraqui Cemetery as early as 1814. He is remembered even today by the name "Purdy Mills Road" in Cataraqui. It appears that most of Micajah's children lived elsewhere except John whoseson John is listed as a steward in the 1884 Circuit Register; Philip whose wife Charlotte, I believe, is namedin the Circuit Register andalso a daughter Hester. Micajah's son Valentine (1814-1892) lived on the homestead by the Cataraqui Creek all his life and cared for his step-mother after his father's death. He married Harriet Hughson and theyhad8 children. PURDY, Gilbert (I65318)
 
458 ! The Parish Register of Kingston Upper Canada 1785-1811 PART 275. Caverly-Purdy: Jos. R. Caverly & Mary Purdy (Licence) Jany. 4th, 1809. PURDY, Charlotte (I65284)
 
459 ! SIDNEY Township BaptismsParents' Names Children Date of BirthRulif PURDY and Deborah Clapp - David - 4 Nov 1811 PURDY, David (I65293)
 
460 ! This information was originally published by: ONTARIO HISTORICAL SOCIETY Papers and Records Volume 27, Published in Toronto in 1931 Pages 5-14.THE QUINTE LOYALISTS 0F 1784.By P. H. BRYCE, M.A.,M.D." ... Turning then to Kingston, or Township No. 1, which was only six miles square, we find here, as in the upper St. Lawrence grants, an officer placed on lot No. 1, Con. 1, and another on lot 25, the westerly limit. These were Capt. Jos. Hackman andCapt. Michael Grass. Next to Grass came Rev. John Stuart, Loyalist Clergyman from the Mohawk; then Lieuts'. Ellerbeck, Galloway, Moore, Charles Grass, Capt. Maguire, Lieut. Atkinson, Robt. Van Alstine, Lieut. Lewis Kott?, Capt.Everett and Capt. Auser. On the 2nd concession were JohnSpiers, Ben Vancurat, Sergt. D. Purdy, John Connon, Mr. McCarty, Chris. Myers, Leo R. Graham, Richard Hall, Matthew Burnett and Capt. Gale...." PURDY, David (I65264)
 
461 ! Name Cemetery County Township ReferenceTHRASHER, A. Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Abigail Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Ada E. Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Eleanor Elizabeth Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Everett Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Jane Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER,Keitha I. Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, M.Marie FoxboroHastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Orick Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, S. Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Sydmer Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191THRASHER, Zadoc Foxboro Hastings Thurlow QU-H-1191! BURIALS IN HASTINGS COUNTY CEMETERIESOF PEOPLE BORN BEFORE THE YEAR 1800Thrasher, Joseph, b. 1790, h/o Elizabeth (d. 1849), Longwell's Cemetery, Sidney TownshipThrasher,Zadock, b. 1760, Longwell'sCemetery, Sidney Township THRASHER, Zadock (I74769)
 
462 ! Name Cemetery County Township ReferenceMcWILLIAMS, James R. St Charles Borromeo Roman Catholic, Read Hastings Tyendinaga QU-H-1217!  MCWILLIAMS, James Randall (I57625)
 
463 ! ir William de la Pole, 4th Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of England1,2,3,4M, d. 22 June 1366Father William de la Pole d. 1329Mother Elena Rotenheryng Sir William de la Pole,4th Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of England married Katherine de Norwich, daughter of Sir Walter de Norwich, Lord High Treasurer and Chief Baron of the Exchequer and Catherine Hedersete.4 Sir William de la Pole, 4th Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of Englanddied on 22 June 1366.FamilyKatherine de Norwich d. 28 Jan 1382ChildrenBlanche de la Pole+ d. 1378Margaret de la Pole+ d. 1366John Poole (Pole)+Catherine de la Pole+3Sir Michael de la Pole, Lord de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of the Northern Fleet+ b. c 1330, d. 5 Sep 1389Sir Edmund de la Pole, Captain of Calais+4 b. c 1337, d. 3 Aug 1419Citations[S4448] Unknown author, Lineage and Ancestry of HRH Prince Charles by Paget, Vol. II, p. 441; The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, by Ronny O. Bodine, p. 124.[S5] Douglas Richardson, Plantagenet Ancestry, p. 689.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. I, p. 572.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 357-358.Katherine de Norwich1,2F, d. 28 January 1382Father Sir Walter de Norwich, Lord High Treasurer and Chief Baron of the Exchequer d. bt 1328 - 1329Mother Catherine Hedersete d. bt 1340 - 1343 Katherinede Norwich married Sir William de la Pole, 4th Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of England, son of William de la Pole and Elena Rotenheryng.2 Katherine de Norwich died on 28 January 1382.FamilySir William de la Pole, 4thEarl of Suffolk, Admiral of England d. 22 Jun 1366ChildrenBlanche de la Pole+ d. 1378Margaret de la Pole+ d. 1366John Poole (Pole)+Catherine de la Pole+Sir Michael de la Pole, Lord de la Pole, 1st Earl of Suffolk, Admiral of the Northern Fleet+ b. c 1330, d. 5 Sep 1389Sir Edmund de la Pole, Captainof Calais+2 b. c 1337, d. 3 Aug 1419Citations[S4449] Unknown author, The Ancestry of Dorothea Poyntz, by Ronny O. Bodine, p. 124; Wallop Family, p. 264.[S16] Douglas Richardson, Magna Carta Ancestry, 2nd Edition, Vol. II, p. 357-358 DE LA POLE, X (I29660)
 
464 ! Hilbrants, Witsje[1]Birth 1641 New Amsterdam, , , New NetherlandChristened 8 Sep 1641 New Amsterdam, , , New NetherlandGender FemaleName Witsje HillebrantName WyntjeDied Yes, date unknownPerson ID I3904 My GenealogyLast Modified 5 Mar 2011Father Pieterszen, Hilbrandt, d. Yes, date unknownMother Alberts, Femmetje, d. Yes, date unknownFamily ID F2036 Group SheetFamily Lootman, Jan, d. Yes, date unknownChildren 1. Lootman, Hillebrand, c. 14 Apr 1660, Wildwyck, , , New Netherlands , d. Aft 1699 2. Lootman, Juriaan, b. Abt 1663, Wildwyck, , , New Netherlands , d. Yes, date unknownLast Modified 5 Mar 2011Family ID F1423 Group Sheet HILLEBRAND, Witsje (I44883)
 
465 ! Honeywell, Israel, Jr. ? of Westchester County , N.Y. Member of New York stateassembly from Westchester County, 1777-79, 1798-99. Burial location unknown . HONEYWELL, Israel (I45144)
 
466 ! Michigan Deaths:County: OtsegoCity/village/township: LivingstonLast Name:PrestonGiven Name: ElizaBirth Date: 8 Jun 1812Age: 93Death Dte: 3 Jul 1905Father's Last Name: HalsteadCause of Death: Nephritis HALSTEAD, Eliza (I42903)
 
467 ! 1842 Census IndexMalahide Township, Elgin CountyCanada West / Ontario Malahide Township, Elgin County, Ontario, CanadaOrder # Last Name First Name Conc. # Lot # North or South Half Occupation Years in Prov. Orgin # in Family210 Gillis Samuel 3 10 N BlackSmith 15 USA, Canada 3! 1851 Townsend Twp, NorfolkLAC # C-11741 LDS # 349228 District: Norfolk District No: 25 Sub-District: Townsend Twp Sub-District No: 238PT PG LN FIRST_NAME LAST_NAME OCCUPATION BIRTHPLACERELIGION RESIDENCE AGE SEX MARITAL NO_FAM_M NO_FAM_F NON_FAM_M NON_FAM_F M_BIRTHS F_BIRTHS REMARKS TRANSCRIBERS_REMARKS PROOFREADERS_REMARKS2185 33 Samuel Gillis Canada Baptist 34 m M 12 185 34 Jane Gillis Canada Baptist 22 f M 12 185 35 Glorvina Gillis Canada Baptist 2 f S1 GILLES, Samuel (I40060)
 
468 !  SUREAU, Daniel (I72277)
 
469 ! Olivier Morel, sieur de La Durantaye: (1640-1716) Olivier was the son of Thomas Morel & Alliette du Houssaye, born in Bretagne, France. He married Francoise (daughter of Denis Duquet & Catherine Gautier), the widow of Jean Madry, at Quebec in 1670. Their children were Louis-Joseph (b.1671)(m.1st.Elisabeth Rasne & 2nd Elisabeth Picaret), Francoise-Genevieve (b.1672)(m.Louis de Cadaran, sieur de Bonneville in 1687), Philippe-Olivier (sieur du Houssay)(1675-1703)(m.Marie-Suzanne Guyon), Charles-Alexander (sieur de La Chaussee)(b.1681)(m.1st.Charlotte Moussion & 2nd.Marie Couillard) & Francois (sieur de Boisbrillant & du Houssay)(1685-1722)(m.MarieThibierge). Olivier arrived in NewFrance a newly commission captain in the Regt.of Campelle, attached to the Carignan-Salieres Regt. In 1683La Durantaye & 30 French soldiers arrive in the west to garrison St.Ignace. As La Durantaye mission in thewestevolves, the eastern edge of "Middle America" is suffering from the effects of expanding Iroquois territory & fleeing tribes to the west; increasing English population & influence in the east (William Penn's new colony of Philadelphiahad 80 houses & New York traders offer better exchange rate & higher quality goods); recovering western tribes from European epidemics; expanding fur trade in the Illinois country by Robert Cavelier de la Salle; trading practices of predominant traderswest of Lake Michigan like Nicolas Perrot, Daniel de Greysolon, sieur du Luth & Pierre-Charles Le Sueur; and shifting alliances of the western tribes (Dakota & Ojibwe have a strong alliance against the Fox and the Fox & Iroquois alliance against the Illinois). In 1684, as commander ofMichilimackinac (and a rival of la Salle in the fur trade), is at Fort.St.Louis with 60 soldiers to assist the commander in a pending Iroquois attack and later that same year gathers a force of western tribes for La Barre's failed attempt to invade Iroquois country, Again in 1687 he is assisting in another invasion of Iroquois country with Denonville's more successful campaign against that tribe. Earlier that year La Durantaye & Tontyhad joined forces in capturing more than 30 English tradersattempting to establish trading ties to the Ottawa, the English are jailed & their French guides are executed. By 1689 New France was experiencing epidemics & attacks by the Iroquois and France was at war with the English as William of Orange takes control of the English throne. Nicolas Perrot declares for France the lands to the west of Green Bay and Olivier was still at Fort Michilimackinac writing to the newGovernor ofNew France, Frontenac, that the western tribes were worried that theFrench would make an alliance with the Iroquois. Frontenac answered his concerns by sending Capt.Louis de Louvigny to replace LaDurantaye as commander and gathered the western tribes with the help of Nicolas Perrot at Michilimackinac to here his words incouncil through Louvigny. ! Olivier Morel de La DurantayeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaOliver Morel de La Durantaye (17 February 1640 ? 28 September 1716[1]) was an Officerof NewFrance. Born in Notre Dame Gu Gaure Nantes, France, he served as commandant of Fort Michilimackinac, in what is now Michigan, from 1683 to 1690.[1] In 1684 he traveled to Fort St. Louis to assist Henri de Tonty against the Iroquois, and itis thoughtthat during this journey he constructed a temporary fort that Tonty visited in the winter of 1685/1686, and later referred to as the Fortof ChicagoReferencesWeilbrenner, Bernard (2000). "Morel de La Durantaye, Olivier". Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online. University of Toronto/Universit? Laval. Retrieved 2009-07-03.Andreas, Alfred Theodore (1884).History of Chicago. Chicago: A.T. Andreas. p. 65.! Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online1701-1740 (Volume II)MOREL DE LA DURANTAYE, OLIVIER, esquire, captain, commandant, councillor, seigneur; b. 17 Feb. 1640 at Notre-Dame-de-Gr?ce, near Nantes, son of Thomas Morel, Sieur de La Durantaye, and of Alliette Du Houssaye; d. 28Sept. 1716. Morel de La Durantaye arrived in Canada in June 1665 as a captain in the Carignan-Sali?res regiment, although his commission dated only from 10 Dec. 1665. He worked withhis company on the building of Fort Sainte-Anne, and in September 1666he took part in Prouville* de Tracy?s expedition against the Mohawks. He returned to France in 1668, and on 25 March 1669 he contracted to raise a company of 50 men; in August 1670 he was back in Canada. On 14 September, at Quebec, hemarried Fran?oise Duquet, the surgeon Jean Madry*?s widow, who was fairly well off and who owned the arriere-fief of Grandpr?in the seigneury of Notre-Dame-des-Anges. They were to have 10 children, who were all baptized, from 1671 to 1685, at Quebec. From 1670 to 1683 Morel de La Durantaye was attached to the Quebec garrison, wherehe commanded one of thesix companies of colonial regular troops. Fur-trading was also one of his occupations, since for eight years he owned a fur-tradingsite at Montreal. On29 Oct. 1672 he obtained from Talon* the seigneury of La Durantaye, which was to be enlarged in 1693 and 1696; on 15 July 1674 Buade* de Frontenac granted him the seigneuryof Kamouraska, which he was to sell in 1680 toCharles Aubert de La Chesnaye, after having vainly tried to fish there. On 10 Oct. 1682 Morel deLa Durantaye took part in a meeting of religious and lay notables held at Quebec by Le Febvre* de La Barre to discuss the best course of action to follow in face of the Iroquois peril. The following spring, at the governor?s request and accompanied by Louis-Henri de Baugy, hewent to the Great Lakes region and the Illinois country to put a stop to the corrupt practices of the coureurs de bois,whowere trading in furs without licences. He was also instructed to invite the Indians ofthisregion to come to Montreal to trade their furs and meet the new governor; finally, he received orders to inquire into the activities of Cavelier* deLa Salle, as there was a likelihood that the latter would lose the authority which he heldover the forts in that area. In July 1683 Morel de La Durantaye took over the command of Michilimackinac, a positionthat he was to occupy until 1690, and inAugust ofthe same year Baugy replaced Henri Tonty as commandant of Fort Saint-Louis. On 19 July 1684 Morel de La Durantaye left the fort, at the head of a party of 500 men laboriously mustered with the help of Daniel Greysolon Dulhut and NicolasPerrot, to join La Barre?s expedition against the Iroquois. Theyweresupposed to meet at Niagara. On the way, Durantaye was informed by a messenger of the conclusion of the unfavourable peace signed at Anse de La Famine (Mexico Bay, near Oswego, N.Y.). On 6 June 1686 he wasinstructed to set up a post atDetroitandanother at the ?Toronto portage.? It was not possible to establish the latter, which was to bear the name Fort Rouill? (Toronto), until 1750. On 7 June 1687, acting on Brisayde Denonville?s instructions, he went to the south of Lake Erie?torepeat the formal taking over the said posts? which had first been done by La Salle. On 10 July, with Dulhut and Henri Tonty, he joined up with Denonville?s army to the south of LakeOntario; hewas at the head of a party composedof 160Frenchmen, 400 allies, and 60 prisoners. A few days later he helped to burn down and destroy the Seneca villages. In 1690 he persuaded 400 or 500 Indians to go to trade in furs at Montreal,and according to Bochart de Champigny he marshalled 100 canoes for this purpose. The same year he was relieved of his post as commandant of Michilimackinac and replaced by La Porte de Louvigny, because he had apparently been too well disposed towards the Jesuits. The following year he obtainedpermission to trade in furs in the west, and signed an agreement with Jean Fafard. In 1694 he was again at the head of a company with instructions to clear the neighbourhood of Montreal of Iroquois; at thattime he was promotedcaptainonthe activelist. The king granted hima gratuity of 1,500 livres in 1700, and on 18 May 1701 a pension of 600 livres with permission to leave the service. In 1702 Fran?ois de Beauharnois* de La Chaussayerecommended him forappointment totheConseil. Souverain. The appointment was made on 16 June 1703; he received his commission on 29 October and was installed on 26 Nov. 1703. He had already sat on the council on 8 October, because of a shortage of judges. Late in the autumnof 1704 he went to France. As he had not returned by 1706, his wife claimed separate maintenance, because her own assets had been seized to pay her husband?s debts. The separation was granted in 1713. In 1708 Morel returned tosit on thecouncil,and except for beingabsenttwice in the winters of 1710 and 1711 he sat until 31 Aug. 1716, when he presided over the assembly and signed the minutes. Morel de La Durantaye died on 28 Sept. 1716, after giving his son Joseph-Fran?ois half of his La Durantaye seigneury. Hewas buried on 30 September in the church of Saint-Philippe, now Saint-Vallier. Governors, intendants, and Jesuits had spoken of him in very flattering terms. High praise was given to histact in dealing with theIndians, his uprightness, andhis loyalty to the king.Bernard WeilbrennerAQ, Seigneuries, Notre-Dame-des-Anges. Jug. et d?lib. ?M?moire de la d?pense faite par lesieur de La Durantaye aux Outaouais .. . ,?BRH, XXX (1924),49. P.-G.Roy, Inv. coll. pi?ces jud. et not., I, 112,197; Inv. concessions, I, 22. Le Jeune, Dictionnaire, II, 22?26. ?.-Z. Massicotte et R?gis Roy, Armorial du Canada fran?ais (2e s?rie, Montr?al, 1918), 82. Antoine d?Eschambault, ?La vieaventureuse de Daniel Greysolon, sieur Dulhut,? RHAF, V(1951?52),334?37. P.-G. Roy, ?Olivier Morel de La Durantaye, capitaine au r?giment de Carignan,? BRH, XXVIII (1922), 97?107, 129?36. MOREL, Olivier (I59417)
 
470 ! Diane's DatabaseEntries: 159600Updated: 2011-11-30 12:01:51 UTC (Wed)Contact: Diane Wolford SheppardBiographical notes ? Diane Wolford Sheppard 1997-2011or the sources citedID: I093013Name: Charles (Moran) MORAND , dit GrimardSex: MBirth: 1 MAR 1726 in La P?rade, Qu?bec, Canada 1Death: ABT 23 FEB 1785 in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan 1Reference Number: 93013Father: Jean-Baptiste MORAND , dit Grimard b: 7JUN 1685 in Batiscan, Qu?bec, CanadaMother: ?lisabeth Marie DUBOIS b: 19 MAY 1692 in Qu?bec, Qu?bec, CanadaMarriage 1 Marguerite SIMARD b: 21MAR 1726 in Baie St. Paul, Qu?becMarried: 23 NOV 1767 in Ste Anne's, Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan 1 2ChildrenCharles MORAN b: 9 MAY 1771 in Grosse Pointe, Wayne County, MichiganMarriage 2 Marie-Fran?oise MESNYb: 17 JUN 1744 in Detroit, Wayne County, MichiganMarried: BEF 1773 3Marriage Beginning Status: FriendsChildren Antoine (Billiau dit Lesperance) MORAN b: 21 JAN 1773 in Detroit, Wayne County, MichiganCharles (Lesperance) MORAN b: 25 JUN 1775 in Detroit, Wayne County, MichiganPierre (Billiau dit Lesperance) MORAN b: 5 DEC 1776 in Detroit, Wayne County, MichiganSources:Title: Genealogy of the French Families of the Detroit River Region (1701-1911)Author: Denissen, ChristianPublication: Detroit Society for Genealogical Research, Detroit, Revised edition, 1987Note: Revised Edition edited by Robert L. Pilon & Stephen F. Keller. Denissenanglicized the names; I have standardized names per Jett? wherever possibleNote: Good - Relied on Tanguay for Qu?bec data- names, dates & relationships should be verified with Jett? or PRDH, as birth dates as stated in Denissen are often baptismal dates.Repository:Note: Detroit Public Library, Windsor Ontario Public LibraryMedia: BookPage: 741Title: PRDH - Programme de recherche en d?mographie historiqueAuthor: Universityof Montr?alPublication: Montr?al, Qu?bec via internet subscription(names standardized per Jett?)Note: ExcellentRepository:Media: InternetPage: 23811Title: Genealogy of the French Families of the Detroit River Region (1701-1911)Author: Denissen, ChristianPublication: Detroit Society for Genealogical Research, Detroit, Revised edition, 1987Note: Revised Edition edited by Robert L. Pilon & Stephen F. Keller. Denissen anglicized the names; I have standardized names per Jett? wherever possibleNote: Good - Relied on Tanguay for Qu?bec data- names, dates & relationships should be verified with Jett? or PRDH, as birth dates as stated in Denissen are often baptismal dates.Repository:Note: Detroit Public Library, Windsor Ontario Public LibraryMedia: BookPage: 266 MORAN, Charles (I14144)
 
471 ! AubuchonJacques AUBUCHONdit LeLoyal came to Canada in 1643 as a 26-year old bachelor from Dieppe, Normandy. A carpenter by trade.His first marriage was to MathurinePoisson 10-8-1647 in Quebec. In 1649, he and his wife returned to France to LaRochelle where a daughter, Marie-Anne was born in 1650. Perhaps a business trip because they had left an infant son in the care of family, undoubtedly, in Trois-Rivi?res. He and his familyremained in France until 1652 when he returned to Canada and the Trois-Rivi?res settlement where a concession of land awaited him in Cap-de-la-Madeleine.Jacques Aubuchon had a half brother, Jean Aubuchon dit l'Esperance active in the fur trade living in Trois-Rivi?res, and Mathurine Poisson's widowed father, a lime maker who arrived in the early 1630's with Champlainas a valet (source: PREFEN http://www.unicaen.fr/mrsh/prefen/formPion.php ) was there also, as well as Mathurine Poisson's brother and sister.In 1658, Mathurine is considered a merchant (n?gociante). In May of that year, she was taken to court by ancestor Louis Pinard, a physician,for payment of 9 livres to be paid in the best beaver pelts that she hadpromised. She was made topay another 5 livres in the best beaver pelts within a month as well as the expenses. (source: "Visages du vieuxTrois-Rivi?res" Tome I.)Around 1665, Jacques Aubuchon and ancestor Pierre LeBoulanger testified against Madame Crevier, mother-in-law of PierreBoucher, that she and her relatives sold liquor to the Indians. (source: "Visages du vieux Trois-Rivieres" Tome I). Thiswas a serious accusation of a crime punishable by as much as death, but it wason ongoing problem wherever there were trading posts.From the same source, is a notation that in June 1669, Jacques Aubuchon was witness before Royal Notary, ancestor Cusson, to a settlement regarding orphan, Michel Arsenault, and his keeper,Claude Herlin. The issue was taken before the Judge and ancestor Quentin Moral.Mathurine Poisson died sometime around 1665 after the birth of her last child and the summer of 1666 when on the census of that year, she is listed as deceased. Together, Jacques Aubuchon and Mathurine Poisson had hadeightchildren.Also on the census, Jacques Aubuchon is listed as living in the region of Trois-Rivieres as a habitant and master carpenter. He was able to sign his name. At the timehehad five sons living with him, the eldest being 14 and the lasttwo aged 2 and 1.Jacques Aubuchon married for a second time in November of 1667 at Cap-de-la-Madeleine to Marguerite Itasse, a fille-du-roi from France, and a woman 30 yearsyounger than he. Together they had four children. The second daughter, Marguerite Aubuchon married to Pierre Desrosiers dit Dargie is my direct ancestor.A record for Notary Normandin indicates: "Vente d'une terre de 2 arpents de front sur40arpents de profondeur, ? Champlain, h?rit?e de son fils, Ren? Aubuchon-Dubuc parJacquesAubuchon, dudit lieu, ? Pierre Desrosiers (1 octobre 1693)." Translation: The sale of a lot of 2 arpents frontage and 40 arpents deep, in Champlain, inherited by Jacques Aubuchon from his son Ren? Abuchon-Dubuc, also of Champlain, to Pierre Desrosiers (Oct. 1, 1693). At this time, Pierre Desrosiers was Jacques Aubuchon's son-in-law.The Aubuchon family was settled in the Trois-Rivieresareawithother notable settlers such as Pierre Lefebvre, Etienne LaFond, Antoine Desrosiers, Jacques Hertel, Jean-Baptiste Godefroy and Michel LeNeuf. They were all known to one anotherand part of the enterprise of fur trading. And they were all ancestors.Jacques Aubuchon died in December of 1701 in Trois-Rivi?res just after his 84th birthday AUBUCHON, Jacques (I7956)
 
472 ! Ontario Probate Court Records - Surnames: O toZRG 22 Appendix A1Deceased's Name Location Occupation Date of Probate d/m/y Microfilm ReferencePURDY, Rulif Sidney Twp. Esquire 1/9/57 MS 638, Reel 63! ii. Ruliph Purdy of Ernestown b c1789 . OC 20 Nov 1810,d? 20 May 1856. m: Deborah Gilbert (widow) who was a Clapp of Fredricksburg on 8 Jan 1811. [Father] David?s land was deeded to Rulif. Ruliph PURDY was born in 1786 in Ernestown, Lennox and Addington County, Canada. (7095) He was named in an Order in Council on 20 Nov 1810.(7096) He was given a grant of land on 20 Nov 1810.(7097) He resided before 1856 in Sidney, Hastings County, Canada. (7098) He died on 20 May 1856 in Sidney, Hastings County, Canada. (7099)(7100) John Collins Clark, in his diary, notes: Ruliff Purdy, Esq., of Sydney a native of Ernestown, being the son of the late Mr. David Purdy, and brother of Samuel D. Purdy, Esq., and Mr. Joseph Purdy, etc., died this morning. He had an inventory of their estate taken on 21 Jun 1856. (7101) He had an estate probated on 6 Jan 1857. (7102) He was buried in Whites (Bayside) Cemetery, Sidney, Ontario. He is buried in lot 193, row 11 A. He was described as having blue eyes and curly hair. He the owner of the first carpet and pleasure sleigh in the district. Parents: David PURDY and Abigail OSTROM.He was married to Deborah CLAPP on 8 Jan 1811.(7103) (Ruliph Purdy, Ernest.; Deborah Gilbert (widow) Sidney, 8 Jan., 1811) They were married by The Reverend Robert McDowell. Both Waller and McDowell in his marriage register tell us her last nameis'Gilbert'. McDowell describes her as"a widow of Sidney." Children were: David PURDY, Nancy PURDY, Abigail Jane PURDY, Tabitha PURDY. PURDY, Rulif (I65259)
 
473 ! Surrogate Court Surname Index - 1793-1858RG 22, Appendix A25PURDY, Jesse Leeds and Grenville - 1817PURDY, John Frontenac - 1852PURDY, Micajah Frontenac - 1844PURDY, William York - 1854! Description of File or Item:Title Purdy, Micajah, Frontenac CountyDates of Creation 1844Physical Description 1 file of textual recordsFile or Item Forms a Part of This file or item forms part of the following group of records: RG 22-159Restrictions on the Group of Records of which this File/Item forms a Part Researchers must use microfilm version whenever available.Location and ordering information File is located on microfilm reel GS 1, Reel 1223. 1 UELEntries: 57635Updated: 2010-09-25Contact: RichardID: I23623Name: Micajah Purdy 1Sex: MBirth: 10 MAY 1766Birth: 10 MAY 1766 in USA 1Death: 26 JAN 1844 Death: 26 JAN 1844 in Kingston, Frontenac Co., Ontario, Canada 1Note:Clark notes that he was the father of 23 children of whom 9 survive and was married 5 timesThe Township Pioneers [ The Kingston Whig, July 1 1899]INVESTIGATIONS CONTINUED BY THOMAS W. CASEY Reminiscences of John Collins ClarkWritten Fifty-Five Years Ago - the Purdys, Herchimers and Other Neighboring Settlers - Sketch of the Writer - Tracing Their Descendants.ThePurdysThe Purdy family located in the last lot in Ernesttown adjoining Kingston and some of the descendents became residents of the latter. It may be as well, therefore, to give Mr. Clark?s reminiscencesof them. Hewrites:?David Purdy located thelast lot (No. 42) on the front of Secondtown, east side. He married Miss Abigail Ostrum, whose connections settled in the township of Sidney, not far from Belleville. He had a largefamily most of whom are still living (in 1844). Two of his youngest sons, Samuel and Joseph, reside on the old farm. The old man is dead, buthis widow still survives.?Gilbert, the oldest son of the Purdy family,married Miss Asenith Goldsmith, of Hallowell,who left him. Ruliff, another son, married a widow Gilbert, ofSidney, where he resides, and hasbecome a prominent and wealthy man. David was accidentally shot and killed when a boy by his cousin, John Everett. Samuel married Eliza, a daughter of Samuel Lockwood, and Joseph married Minerva, her sister.John andJacob married daughters of Jacob Fretts, of Fredericksburgh. Elizabeth married a Mr. Woodward; he died and she married again. Mary marriedJohn Abbott; he died and she married William Ellerbeck. Old Mrs. Purdy, mother of these children, has from heryouth been troubled at times with aberration of mind and several of the children have been similarly affected.David Purdy?s brothers, Micajah, Gilbert and Samuel,settled inthe township of Kingston. they had large families. Samuel movedto somedistant place. Gilbert is still living, he was twice married, and Micajah, who died lately, was married five times, and was the father of twenty-three children, nine of whom, and his last wife are living. His twofirst wives were sisters by the name ofSands, of Newburgh, New York state, the third was a Miss Ann Detlor, of Fredericksburgh, the fourth aMiss Embury (niece of the third) and the fifthMiss Mithebel Holmes, also of Newburgh, N.Y.Father: Gilbert Purdy , Sr. b: 1721 in NewYork State, U.S.A.Mother: Mary Dorlandb: BEF 13 SEP 1724 in Norwich, Chenango, New York, USAMarriage 1 Mercy SandsMarried: BEF 1784Marriage 2 ElizabethSANDSMarried: 6 JUN 1786 in Presbyterian Church, New Windsor, Orange County New York USAChildrenFemale Purdy b: 1793Marriage 3 Ann DetlorMarried: AFT 1786Marriage 4 Mary Anna Embury b: 1786 in South Fredericksburgh, Lennox and Addington Co.,Ontario, CanadaMarried: ABT 1798ChildrenMicajah Purdy , Jr. b: in Kingston City or Twp., FrontenacCo., Ontario, CanadaMarriage 5 Hester Jane Holmes b: 28 JUN 1779 in Newburgh Orange NYMarried: AFT 1828Sources: Title: One World Tree (sm)Author: Ancestry.com Publication: Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, n.d. Repository: Note: www.ancestry.com Media: Ancestry.com Text: Online publication - Ancestry.com. OneWorldTree [database on-line].Provo, UT, USA: The GenerationsNetwork, Inc. PURDY, Michajah (I65249)
 
474 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1741-1770 (Volume III)GASTINEAU DUPLESSIS, JEAN-BAPTISTE, ?voyageur-associate,? fur-trader, militia officer, merchant; b.1671 in the Trois-Rivi?res region, son of Nicolas Gastineau Duplessis and Marie Crevier; buried 9 Feb. 1750 at Trois-Rivi?res. Between 1694 and 1702 Jean-Baptiste Gastineau Duplessis went on several trading expeditions to the west as a ?voyageur-associate.? On 9 June 1694Daniel Greysolon* Dulhut hired him and some other men to go on a trading expedition to Michilimackinac. In 1701 he went to Detroit with his younger brother Louis and some 40 men, all of whom had been hired in theking?s name byIntendant Jean Bochart * de Champigny. The following year Gastineau Duplessis and his brother were employed by the Compagnie dela Colonie to go to Detroit with an expedition that was fully as largeas the preceding one. After these voyages Jean-Baptiste GastineauDuplessis settled at Trois-Rivi?res where, it seems, he became lieutenant of the militia. We do not know at what moment he went into business, but around 1730 he entered into partnership withFran?ois-?tienne Cugnetto try to introduce buffalo into Canada; this enterprise was not, however, successful. Some years later Gastineau Duplessis had new businessdealings with Cugnet, who in 1736 had become the chief shareholder in the Saint-Maurice ironworks company. Gastineau Duplessis furnished the ironworks with supplies valued at 7,071 livres 2 sols 6 deniers. He hadtrouble, however, in obtaining payment and, when Cugnet?s business began to fail, had to present a petition to Intendant Hocquart*in June 1741. In 1750, shortly after Gastineau Duplessis?s death, his wife encountered the same difficulties: this time Cugnet was sentenced in an ordinance from Intendant Bigot* dated 1 April to pay 2,722 livres 3 sols to Mme Gastineau Duplessis for the goods she had sold to the employees of the ironworks. On 19 Nov. 1711 Jean-Baptiste Gastineau Duplessis had married Charlotte Le Boulanger at Cap-de-la-Madeleine. Three childrenwere born of this marriage, including a daughter, Marie-Joseph, who in1749 married Pierre-Fran?ois Olivier* deV?zin.Roland-J. AugerAN, Col.,C11A, 53, ff.228?30. ANQ, NF, Ord. int., 1er, avril 1750. ANQ-M, Greffe d?Antoine Adh?mar, 9 juin 1694. PAC Report, 1904, app.K. Bonnault, ?Le Canada militaire,? APQ Rapport, 1949?51, 522. Massicotte, ?R?pertoiredes engagements pour l?Ouest, APQ Rapport, 1929?30, 202, 206?7. P.-G. Roy, Inv. ord. int., III, 164. Tanguay, Dictionnaire. Albert Tessier, Les forges Saint-Maurice, 1729?1883(Trois-Rivi?res, Qu?., 1952). Edgar Le Noblet Du Plessis, ?Nicolas Gatineau, sieur du Plessis,? SGCF M?moires, IV (1950?51), 23?39 P.-G. Roy, ?Les b?ufs illinois,? BRH, XXIII (1917), 275?84. GATINEAU, Jean Baptiste (I38369)
 
475 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1000-1700 (Volume I)DUQUET DE LA CHESNAYE, PIERRE, explorer, royal notary, attorney-general, seigneurial judge, seigneur; b. 14 Jan. 1643 in Quebec; d. 13 Oct. 1687 in Quebec. Son of Denis Duquet and Catherine Gauthier, Pierre was one of the first pupils of the Jesuit college of Quebec. The Journal des J?suites stresses on different occasions the role that he played in the musical portion ofthe religious ceremonies. Shortly after leaving the college, Duquet, at the age of 20, bought the registry of the notary Guillaume Audouart, whom he succeeded as royal notary. His commission, dated 31 Oct. 1663, made him the first Canadian-born notary. At this time Duquet had only just returned from an expedition, directed by Guillaume Couture*, which had taken him during the summer a little beyond Lake Nemiskau, about a hundred miles from Rupert River. This was the second attemptbythe French to reach Hudson Bay by land. Like most of the notaries of his period, Duquet had a well-filled career: he was often given power of attorney by litigants, and in addition he was commissioned to carry out several inquiries into irregularities in the liquor traffic. Inthe autumn of 1666 he went with the Carignan-Sali?res regiment into Iroquois territory and signed on 17 October the Proc?s verbal de la prisede possession des forts d?Agni?. Deputy attorney-general (1675?1681), attorney-general (1681?1686), seigneurial judge of Notre-Dame-des-Anges, of the ?le d?Orl?ans and of Orsainville, he was moreover the owner ofseveral properties at Quebec and L?vis and of two seigneuries granted to him in 1672 and 1675. His multifarious occupations prevented him however from giving the desired attention to his notarial acts, in which are to be found many errors and omissions. His registry, which is nevertheless very interesting, is preserved in the Judicial Archives of Quebec. On 25 August 1666 Duquet had married at Quebec Anne Lamarre, who came originally from the parish of Saint-Sulpice in Paris.Andr? VachonAJQ, Greffe de Pierre Duquet, 1663?84; Ins. Pr?v. Qu?bec, I, 303. AN, Col., C11A, 10, ff.96s. APQ, Ins. Cons. souv., I, 6. JR (Thwaites), passim. JJ (Laverdi?re et Casgrain), passim. Jug. et d?lib., passim. Ord. comm. (P.-G, Roy), I, 21. Ordre de M. d?Avaugour au Sr. Couture pour aller au Nord, BRH, VII (1901), 41. Papier terrier de la Cie des I.O. (P.-G. Roy), 250?52. ?Proc?s verbal de la prise de possession des forts d?Agni? (17 oct. 1666),? dans Sulte, M?langes historiques (Malchelosse), VIII, 57f. Delanglez, Jolliet, 248, 255, 260.P.-G. Roy, Inv. concessions, passim. ?Les notaires an Canada,? APQ Rapport, 1921?22, 22. J.-E. Roy, Histoire du notariat, I: 76f., 89?91. P.-G. Roy, Fils de Qu?bec(4v., L?vis, 1933), I, 10?12. Andr? Vachon, Histoire du notariat canadien, 1621?960 (Qu?bec, 1962), passim. DUQUET, Pierre (I33655)
 
476 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1000-1700 (Volume I)H?BERT, LOUIS, apothecary, first officer of justice in New France, first Canadian settler to support himself from the soil,m. Marie Rollet; b. Paris 1575?; d. Quebec,January 1627. According to his descendant, Couillard Despr?s, he was the son of a Louis H?bert who was apothecary at the court of Catherine de M?dicis. Documents more recently discovered in Paris indicate that his father was Nicolas H?bert, an apothecary, and that Louis was born in the Mortier d?Or, a house near the Louvre. The niece of Nicolas H?bert?s wife married Jean de Biencourt de Poutrincourt, in 1590. This relationship would explain Louis H?bert?s interest in the early settlements in Acadia and his presence in Du Gua de Monts?s expedition. Lescarbot, in Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.) in 1606, speaks with respect of his skill in healing and his pleasurein cultivating the soil, and, on his map of that region, indicates an island and a river named forH?bert. In the summer of 1606 H?bert sailed with Champlain and Poutrincourt along the coast to the southwest, seeking other sites suitable forsettlement. Poutrincourt and H?bert were so attracted by what is now Gloucester, Mass., that they planted a clearingthere to test the soil?s fertility. Both hoped to bring their families to settle in the New World. On this voyage H?bert showedthat, though intent on peaceful pursuits, he could be counted on for quick and courageous action in an emergency.With Champlain, Poutrincourt and several others, he leaped from the ship into a small boat, unclothed, in the middle of the night, in response to frantic cries from some foolhardy men who, having defied orders and remained on shore, were beingattacked by Indians. The Jonas, arriving from France in June 1607, brought the unwelcome news that, because ofthe cancellationof de Monts?s concessions, the company must returnto France. In 1610, H?bert was again in Port-Royal, with the group whom Poutrincourt hoped to establish there. As apothecary, he treated bothFrench and Indian patients. Apparently meals as well as medicine received his consideration; he preparedand administered both to chief Membertou in his last illness. He was in charge of the settlement when, in 1613, R?ne Le Coq de La Saussaye came with the Marquise de Guercheville?scolonists, withdrew the two Jesuit fathers from Port Royal, and sailedaway to start a new settlement elsewhere. The capture of this expedition at ?le des Monts Deserts by the English that same summer was followedby their destruction of Port-Royal (November 1613), and once more H?bert was forced to return to France. In the winter of 1616?17 he renewed acquaintance with Champlain who was in Paris seeking support for his colony at Quebec. This post, having survived for nineyears,probably seemed to H?bert a safe place for settlers, especially as Champlain obtainedfor him a favourable contract from the fur-trading company in control of the St. Lawrence region. Relying on these promises ? 200 crownsa year for his services as apothecary, and food and shelter for his family while gettingland cleared ? H?bert sold his house and garden in Paris and took his wife Marie Rollet and three children, Anne, Guillemette, and Guillaume, to Honfleur ready to embark.There he discovered that the company had no intention of honouring itsagreement. The besthe could obtain was a new contract, halving his salary and his land grant and stipulating that his family and his servant should be at the serviceofthecompany without pay. Having no alternative, he accepted and sailed with his family 11 March 1617.In Quebec hisapothecary?s skill and his small store of grain were a godsend to the sick and starving winterers. In spite of the company?sdemands on his and his servant?s time, he succeeded in clearing and planting some land. Champlain, on his brief visit of 1618, found cultivated land ?filled with fine grain? and gardens in which flourished a variety of vegetables, For many years H?bert was theonly man besides Champlain himself who took any interest in cultivating land. The tradingcompany did their utmost to discourage him. Both Champlain and Sagard say that the unlawful restrictions they imposed upon him and upon the disposal of his products prevented him from enjoying the fruits of his labours. When in 1620 Champlainreturned from France with (nominally) full authority over the colony, he gave H?bert responsibility in the administration of justiceby appointing him king?s attorney. In this capacity he signed the colony?s petition to the king in 1621. H?bert enjoyedthe confidence alsoofthe Indians, whom he, in contrast to many of his contemporaries, considered as intelligent human beings lacking only education. Many instances bear witness to their respect and affection for him. There is some question of trade relations with Guillaume de Ca?n, but in view of the fact that the surname H?bert isa very common one, this maybe a case of mistaken identity. In 1622 he petitioned the viceroy for a title to his land and on 4 Feb. 1623 received the grantguaranteeing him possession. Known later as the fief Sault-au-Matelot, the land included sites at present occupied by the Basilica, the seminary, and H?bert and Couillard streets. This title was ratified on 28 Feb. 1626 by the succeeding viceroy and some acres alongtheSt.Charles ? the fief Saint-Joseph, later known as fief de Lespinay ? were added, both holdings to be enjoyed?en fief noble.? H?bert hadachieved his cherished ambition: he had brought under his control enough of the wild land of the New World to support himself and his family in independence. The meadows along the St.Charles afforded pasture for cattle; on the higher ground he had grain fields, vegetable gardens, and an orchard planted with apple trees brought fromNormandy.All this hadbeenachieved in spite of the company?s opposition. Moreover,it hadbeen accomplished with hand tools only, not even a plough. (It was not until a year after the death of H?bert, that land was worked with plough and Oxen and agricultureon a largerscale couldbegin.) The winter of 1626 he had a fall onthe ice which proved fatal. He was buried in the Recollet cemetery on 25 Jan. 1627. In 1678 his bones still in their cedar coffin, were transferred to the vault of the newly erected Recollet chapel and with those of Brother Pacifique Duplessis were the first to rest there.Ethel M. G. BennettH?bert is mentioned in the following works of his contemporaries: Champlain, Works (Biggar), passim. JR (Thwaites), passim. Lescarbot, History (Grant), II,209, 234, 328, 331; III,246.Sagard,Histoire du Canada (Tross), I, 53, 83, 158?59. Le Clercq, while not strictly a contemporary, is near enough to the period to have gathered first-hand information and to have talked with H?bert?s daughter. Hegivesinformation about the family in First establishment of the faith (Shea), I,164?67, 281. Documents concerning company agreements, land grants, etc., are cited in Biggar, Early trading companies and in Azarie Couillard Despr?s, La premi?re famille fran?aise au Canada andLouis H?bert: premier colon canadien et sa famille (Lille, Paris, Bruges, 1913; Montr?al, 1918). The two latter works give detailed and imaginative, but as far as possible documented, accountsof the family and itsmembers. MadeleineJurgens,?Recherches sur Louis H?bert et sa famille,? SGCF M?moires, VIII (1957), 106?12, 135?45; XI (1960), 24?31. This is the general title of a series of three articles: the second (VIII (1957), 135?45) deals mainlywith NicolasH?bert; the third(XI (1960), 24?31) with Louis. HEBERT, Louis (I89626)
 
477 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online1000-1700 (Volume I)LETARDIF, OLIVIER, interpreter, head clerk of the Compagnie des Cent-Associ?s, judge of the court of the seigneury of Beaupr?; b. c. 1604 in Brittany, in the diocese of Saint-Brieuc, d. 1665 at Ch?teau-Richer. Letardif was at Quebecfrom at least 1621 on, since he signed the report of the meeting of leading citizens in that year; his presence is then noted from time to time until 1629. By that date he was an assistant clerk for the de Ca?ns;?experienced? in the Montagnais, Algonkian, and Huron languages, he served also as an interpreter. In July 1629, acting on behalf of Fran?ois Grav? Du Pont, who was ill, he handed over the keys of the Habitation to Lewis Kirke. We find him inQuebec again in 1633, promoted to be head clerk of the Cent-Associ?s, and fulfilling the functions of interpreteror witness as required. It was at this period that Letardif collaborated in the missionary effort: he supported the Jesuits andacted as godfather to Indians; he even administered baptism and, following Champlain?s example, adopted three young Indians. In May 1637 he received, jointly with Jean Nicollet (who shortlythereafter became his brother-in-law),the tract called Belleborne on the outskirts of Quebec (a commoner?s grant of 160 acres). In April 1646 he acquired one-eighth of the seigneury of Beaupr?. On becoming a member of the Compagnie de Beaupr?, with the title ?general and special procurator,?hemade a score of grants in the years 1650 and 1651. Then in 1653 Letardif gave up his Belleborne property, which was to become the castellany of Coulonge, and obtained land at Ch?teau-Richer, wherehe settled. From this time onward, until 1659, it would appear that he exercised the functions of seigneurial judge of Beaupr?; his ?premature senility? apparently caused him to neglect his duties.On 13 April 1662 he sold his fief in the seigneuryof Beaupr?. This former colleague of the de Ca?ns, of Grav? Du Pont, of Champlain,and of the Jesuit Paul Le Jeune died at Ch?teau-Richer in January1665, and was buried there on the 28th of that month. Letardif?s first wife, whom he married on 3 Nov. 1637, was 13-year-old Louise Couillard, daughter of Guillaume Couillard. Left a widower in November 1641, he married Barbe Esmard, widow of Gilles Michel and sister-in-law of Zacharie Cloutier, at La Rochelle on 16 May 1648. Only one childisknownto have been born of the first marriage; three more followed from the second. Olivier Le Tardif is the forefather of the Letardifs or Tardifsof North America.Marcel TrudelASQ, Documents Faribault, passim; Registre A, passim.; Seigneuries, III, 10;S?minaire VI, passim; XXXV, 25A, 27?27L; XXXVI, 1, 11; XXXVII, 3, 4. Champlain, Works (Biggar), V, 95, 209; VI, 62?63. Du Creux, History (Conacher), I, 176, 319,359. JR (Thwaites). Jug. et d?lib. P.-G. Roy, Inv. concessions, I, passim.Sagard, Histoire du Canada (Tross), I, 83. A.-?mile Ducharme, ?Olivier Le Tardif,? SGCF M?moires, XII (1961), 4?20. Archange Godbout, ?Origine d?Olivier Le Tardif,? SGCF M?moires, IX (1958), 151. Am?d?e-E. Gosselin, ?Olivier Letardif, juge-pr?v?tde Beaupr?,? RSCT, 3d ser., XVII (1923), sect.i, 1?16. L?on Roy, ?La famille Michel-dit-Taillon,? BRH, LII (1946),373?79. TARDIF, Olivier (I72469)
 
478 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1000-1700 (Volume I)PR?VOST (Provost), MARTIN, one of the pioneers of Beauport near Quebec; b. c. 1611, son of Pierre Pr?vost and Charlotte Vien, of Montreuil-sur-le-Bois-de-Vincennes (now Montreuil-sous-Bois), near Paris; d. 26 Jan. 1691 at Beauport. Pr?vost?s presence at Quebec is referred to in the documents of the notary Piraube as early as the year 1639. On 3 Nov. 1644, hemarried, at Quebec, Marie-Olivier-Sylvestre Manitouabeouich. This is the first marriage between a Frenchman and an Indian mentioned in Canadian historical records. The young bride had been given by her parents to the interpreter Olivier Letardif, who had been her godfather and had then had her brought up as a French girl in the home of Sieur Guillaume Hubou. From the time of his marriage until his death, we find Martin Pr?vost settled at Beauport as an ?habitant,? or farmer,which did not prevent himfrom having a piece of land and a house at Quebec in 1667. He was marrieda second time in1665, to Marie d?Abancourt, the widow of Jean Jollyet and of Gefroy Guillot. Pr?vost had had at least nine children by his first wife. Towards the end ofhis life, Pr?vost signed his name ?Provost.? His descendants have adopted one or other of the two spellings.Honorius ProvostJR (Thwaites), IX, 103; XI, 93. Papier terrier de la Ciedes I.O. (P.-G. Roy). JeanLangevin, Notes sur les Archives de Notre-Dame de Beauport (Qu?bec, 1860). PRÉVOST, Martin (I64711)
 
479 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1701-1740 (Volume II)BOURG, ABRAHAM, deputy representing Upper Cobequid, Nova Scotia, 1720?26; b. at Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.) 1662, son of Antoine Bourg and Antoinette Landry; married in 1683 Marie Brun, daughter of Vincent and Marie Breaux; date of death unknown. Abraham Bourg was one of the deputies chosen by the Nova Scotia Council to represent the Acadian districts in 1720, under the governorship of Richard Philipps*. He was apparently released from his duties in 1726 at his own request, because of lameness and infirmity. On 16 Sept. 1727 he, Francis Richards, and the deputies CharlesLandry and Guillaume Bourgeois refused to take the oath of allegiance to George II. Lieutenant-Governor Lawrence Armstrong maintained, moreover,that they had assembled the inhabitants a day earlier than they had been ordered. Armstrong charged that ?instead of persuading them to their duty by solid arguments of which they were not incapable they [the deputies] frightened them . . . by representing the oath so strong and binding that neither they nor their children should ever shake off the yoke.? For their alleged opposition they were committed to prison. It was ordered that Bourg, however, ?in consideration of his great age,? should be allowed to leave the province as soon as possible, but without his goods. As the others were released after a short time, it appears unlikely that Abraham Bourg actually left. An oath of 1730 bears asignature which may be his. It is not known when Bourg died, but it may have been after 13 April 1736, when Marie Brun?s burial record identifies her as the wife (not widow)ofAbraham Bourg.Maud HodyArchives of the Bishop?s House, Yarmouth, N.S., Registre de bapt?mes, mariages, et s?pultures pour la paroisse Saint-Jean-Baptiste ? Annapolis Royal, 1727?1755 (copy in Archives de l?universit? de Moncton). AN, Section Outre-Mer, G1, 466 (Recensements de l?Acadie, 1671, 1686, 1693, 1698, 1701, 1703 [Port-Royal], 1714 [Cobequid]; copies in Archives de l?universit? deMoncton). PANS, MS docs., XVII, Letter of Lawrence Armstrong, 17 Nov. 1727 (printed in PRO, CSP, Col., 1726?27); XXII, 150, 153, 160, 216ff. (printed in N.S. Archives, III). PANS, Oath of loyalty to George II, 1730 (no.7 in box of original oaths) BOURG, Abraham (I18230)
 
480 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online1701-1740 (Volume II)BROSSARD, URBAIN, master mason, son of Mathurin Brossard and Michelle Bidaut; b. 1633 or 1634 at La Fl?che, province of Anjou; buried 10 April 1710 at Montreal. Brossard came to Ville-Marie with the contingent of 1653. He had been engaged as a mason and settler and applied himself all his life to building and farming. His first undertaking dates from 30 Nov. 1658,when he agreed to start the following May to build a house for Rapha?l-Lambert Closse*. In 1660 Fran?ois Bailly* took him into partnership for three years. Six years later, in association with Michel Bouvier hebuilt a house for Pierre Chauvin.In 1672, with Gilles Devennes and Bouvier, he erected a vast house at Lachine for Jean Milot, a maker of edge-tools and merchant from Montreal. At the top of the contract a sketchsigned by Brossard (his partners could notwrite) shows the lay-out of thisbuilding. It measured 50 feet by 25, had a pavilion roof, and comprised a ground floor and two upper storeys, two chimneys, a forge, a well, and an outside oven. In 1676Brossard, with the same two partners, built a house for Daniel GreysolonDulhut,and in 1680, with Bouvier alone, a house for Philippe Dufresnoy Carion. The next ten years aremarked only by works of secondary importance: foundations, half-timbered field-stone gables and attics, chimneys and fireplaces. Then camea seriesof important works: in 1690, in partnership with Michel Dubuc,a house for the merchant Claude Pothier; in 1692 houses for Pierre Legardeur* de Repentigny and Claude Dudevoir, the first in association with ?tienne Campot, the other with Jean Mars;in 1695 an extensive enlargement to Jean-Vincent Philippede Hautmesnil?s house; finally, in 1704, in collaboration with Jean Deslandes, a mill on the seigneury of Pierre de Saint-Ours. Brossard was a good mason and knew how to cut stone;on occasionhe even acted as the supplier of stone and quarryman. His contracts inform us of the methods of work and the building practices of histime. From them we see that worksweregenerally carried out by masons in partnership, with joint responsibility,andnot by a single contractor. These masons generally engaged only ?their labour and their tools,? and as there were a score of them in and around Montreal, theyfeltno need to train apprentices. The use of cut stone was rare; most oftenpeople were content with ?boulders or field-stones.? Finally, the frequency of half-timbered field-stone construction must be noted, an ancient building method whichwas to continue in use into the following century. In 1660 Brossard hadmarried Urbaine, theonlydaughter of S?bastien Hodiau, who also came originally from La Fl?che. Urbaine died in 1681, after bearing him eight children, among them Catherine,who married the mason Jean Sareau, and Madeleine, who married the maker of edge-toolsFran?ois Campot,the son of the mason ?tienne Campot.Jules BazinAJM, Greffe d?Antoine Adh?mar; Greffe de B?nigne Basset; Greffe d?Hilaire Bourgine; Greffe de Claude Maugue; Greffe de Pierre Raimbault. Jug. et d?lib., II, 734. RecensementduCanada, 1666 (APQ Rapport). Recensements du Canada, 1667, 1681 (Sulte). R.-J. Auger, La grande recrue de 1653 (SGCFpub., I, Montr?al, 1955). DCB, I,78. [Faillon], Histoire de la coloniefran?aise, II, 536. Morisset, L?architecture en Nouvelle-France, 129. ?.-Z. Massicotte, ?Ma?ons, entrepreneurs, architectes,? BRH, XXXV (1929), 133?34. BROSSARD, Urbain (I19923)
 
481 ! Dictionary of Canadian Biography OnlineCUILLERIER, REN?, indentured employee of the H?tel-Dieu of Montreal,settler; b. c. 1639, probably at V?ron, in the diocese of Angers, son of Julien Cuillerier and Julienne Faifeu; d. c. 1712 at Montreal.Ren? Cuillerier arrived in New France on 7 Sept. 1659. On 8 June 1659, at La Rochelle, he had signed before the notary A. Demontreau an undertakingwith Sister Judith Moreau* de Br?soles, the superior of the H?tel-Dieu of Montreal. By this contract he became a servant at the hospital in Ville-Marie for an annual salary of 75 livres. By the autumn he was at Montreal, and on 25 Oct. 1661, with some settlers assisted by members of the garrison and led by Abb? Guillaume Vignal*, Cuillerier went to ?le de la Pierre, in the St Lawrence, to quarry materials with which to complete the building of the first seminary at Montreal. He had cause torueit, for the Iroquois were roaming the neighbourhood. The latter attacked the workers, killed some of them, wounded others, and captured Vignal, Claude de Brigeac*, Cuillerier, and Jacques Dufresne.Cuillerier and Brigeac were carried off into captivity among the Oneidas. They were subjected to a beating and Cuillerier had his nails torn out. The Indiansthen decided to burn the two Frenchmen. Death was first meted out to Brigeac, but Cuillerier was saved by an Indian woman who asked to adopt him ?in order that he might take the place of her brother.?During his captivity, which lasted 19 months, Cuillerier met other fellow-sufferers: Michel Messier, dit Saint-Michel, and Urbain Tessier, dit Lavigne. Inthe spring of 1663 Cuilleriertook advantage of a hunting trip with theOneidas, who had been joined by some Mohawks and captive Frenchmen, toflee in the direction of New Holland. He went to Fort Orange, whence he made his way to Boston, and finally reached Quebec.Cuillerier wasbackinMontreal at the end of the summer, and resumed his service with theReligious Hospitallers of the H?tel-Dieu. On 20 May 1665 he settled onMontreal Island, having obtained from the Sulpicians a land grant of 45 acres. This land was to formpart of theVerdun fief, which was granted to him in 1671. He took part in the founding of the parish of Lachineand in 1675 became its first churchwarden. The following year his fortified house received the name Fort Cuillerier. At the time ofthe1681 census hehad 32 acres under cultivation and owned 6 muskets, one pistol,and 6 head of cattle.On 22 March 1712 Cuillerier, who had been ill forsome time, made his will in the presence of Louis-Michel de Vilermaula*, parish priest of Lachine. His last willandtestament was deposited in Jean-Baptiste Adh?mar*?s registry on 26 Jan. 1716. Even if the date of his death is unknown to us, a notarial act of 27 Jan.1718, signed before the notary Adh?mar and deposited in Michel Lepallieur?s registry, indicatesthat Madame Lucault had ?been the widow of her said husband for morethan five years.?On 13 April 1665, in the chapel of the H?tel-Dieu of Montreal, Ren? Cuillerier had married Marie Lucault, daughter of L?onard Barbeau, dit Lucault,and of BarbePoisson. Sixteen children were born of this marriage; seven of them were baptized at Montreal and the others at Lachine.Claude PerraultAJM, Greffe de J.-B. Adh?mar; Greffede Michel Lepailleur de Lafert?; Registre d??tat civil de Lachine; Registresd??tatcivil de Notre-Dame de Montr?al. Archives de Saint-Sulpice, Paris, Fran?ois Citoys de Chaumaux, Estat des concessions faites parles seigneurs de Montr?al. JJ (Laverdi?re et Casgrain). Recensements duCanada, 1667, 1681 (Sulte).Camille Bertrand, Monsieur de La Dauversi?re, fondateur de Montr?al et des Religieuses hospitali?res de Saint-Joseph 1597?1659 (Montr?al, 1947), 230. [Faillon], Histoire de la colonie fran?aise. Archange Godbout, Les passagers du Saint-Andr?; la recrue de 1659 (Soci?t?g?n?alogique canadienne-fran?aise, V, Montr?al, 1964). Mondoux, L?H?tel-Dieu de Montr?al, 239, 246, 247.! " .... In the second and more satisfying essay, Brand?o details hisreasons for attributingthe document to Ren? Cuillerier. At 20, Cuillerier emigrated from Anjou to Montrealasan indentured servant; two years later, in the fall of 1661, Mohawk and Oneidaraiders carried him off to Iroquoia. Adopted by an Oneida woman, Cuillerier laterescaped to seek refuge among the Dutch and subsequently made his way back to Canada.In Brand?o?s reconstruction of events, shortly after his return the Sulpiciansasked the young manto give an account of hisexperiences among the Oneidas. Twodocuments allegedly resulted. The first, a captivity narrative, was forwarded totheHistoire sociale ? Social History, vol. XXXVIII, no 75 (mai-May 2005)Comptes rendus / Book Reviews 125Jesuits for inclusion in theRelation of1665.The second,the Abreg?, remained in thepossession of the Sulpicians who, four years later, would begin a mission to the Iroquoissettlements on the north shore of Lake Ontario (pp. 33?35). As Brand?o freelyconcedes, this hypothesis regarding the text?s genesis,however plausible, lacks firmevidence (pp. 32?33). more certain are the subsequent peregrinations of the text.Nation Iroquoise was without doubt one of the sources used by Antoine-Denis Raudotin his manuscript memoironNorth America (circa 1709), which the Jesuit PierreFran?ois-Xavier Charlevoix in turn consultedfor his Histoire et description g?n?ralede l?Am?rique septentrionale (1744) (pp. 21?25). Sometime before the Revolution,the only extant copyof the Abreg?made its way into thecollection of the Sulpicianmother community in Paris.The transcription of the document appears meticulous and the facing-page translationis intelligent and restrained.Each has its own set of notes: those accompanyingthetranscription focus on the peculiarities of the manuscript itself, while thoseaccompanying the translation explicate the content. The archaisms and lack of punctuationin the transcription will deter all but specialists, who are certain, however, toappreciate the editor?sdedication toaccuracy. Not wishing to impose their owninterpretations upon a number of ambiguous passages in the original or to obscureCuillerier?s occasional efforts to render Iroquois expressions into French, Brand?oandtranslator K. Janet Ritchhave optedfor a literal translation. Thus French famillebecomes English ?family?, even though (as a note explains) the term was evidentlyintended to designate a clan or clan segment (p. 63). A rare exceptionto this policyisthedecision to render French sauvage as?Native? rather than?savage? (p. 130,n. 5).Cuillerier?s report, written in the seventeenth-century equivalent of the ?ethnographicpresent?, favours simple, concrete description and tends overallto belessjudgemental than the writings of missionaries. Many of the conventional ethnographiccategories of the era are invoked (physique, virtues, vices, superstitions,funerals, mental faculties), but the Abreg? stands out for the detail it provides onIroquoiscouncils, a topic that occupies overone-thirdof thetext.Cuillerier makesclear that Iroquois women spoke in council and initiated mourning wars (pp. 62, 66,74?76), anticipating the Jesuit Joseph-Fran?ois Lafitau?s remarks by more than ahalf-century. Little of the author?s personalitycomesthrough in this short text ?perhaps because, as Brand?o surmises, the unlettered Cuillerier likely dictated hisreport to a Sulpician scribe (p. 34). From an era whose textual legacy to the presentis dominated bythe writings of missionaries,theAbreg?joins the works of Champlain,Radisson, Denys, and de Liette in delivering a lay person?s first-hand impressionsof seventeenth-century Native cultures. Brand?o prefers to emphasize thedocument?ssignificance for providing evidenceof the antiquity ofIroquois politicalarrangements (pp. 36?37), noting that the Abreg? does not so much add to ourknowledge of seventeenth-century Iroquois culture as it confirms the evidencegleaned from other, better-known sources...." CUILLERIER, Rene (I28440)
 
482 ! 405. Martha Hutchinson (d-o Ezra) (Ezra , Samuel , Samuel , Ralph ) was born about 1751 in Sharon, Litchfield, CT.Martha married Isaiah Honeywell. Isaiah was born on Oct 15 1752 in Fredericksburg, NY.They had the following children:740 F i Elizabeth Honeywell was born in Nov 1774 in Sharon, Litchfield, CT.741 M ii Ezra Honeywell was born on Feb 27 1776 in Gainsboro, MA.742 M iii Daniel Honeywell was born on Aug 27 1778 in Danesbourough, VT. Daniel married Sarah Doolittle.743 F iv Mary Honeywell was born on Feb 141781 in Rutland, VT. She died on Aug 5 1796.744 F v Lovicy Honeywell was born on Feb 28 1783 in Rutland, VT.+745 F vi Asenieth Honeywell746 Mvii Rice Honeywell was born onFeb 25 1788 in Half Moon, Saratoga, NY. He died on Aug 6 1796.+747 F viii Rebecca Honeywell748 M ix Enoch Honeywell was born on Sep 10 1794 in Stillwater, NY. He died on Sep 19 1796. HUTCHINSON, Martha (I45133)
 
483 ! 745. Asenieth Honeywell (Martha Hutchinson , Ezra , Samuel , Samuel , Ralph ) was bornon Jun 16 1785 in Half Moon, Saratoga, NY. She died on Feb 24 1876 in Canada.Asenieth married BaysManchester Eddy about 1800. Bays was born on Jul 4 1771 in Rhode Island. He died on Aug 2 1849. He was buried in Fairview Cemetery, Grafton, CT.They had the following children: 1316 F iAmy Eddy was born in 1803/1804 in Canada. She died on Sep 12 1880 in Mower Co, MN. Amy married Unknown. 1317 F ii Asenieth Eddy was born about 1806. Asenieth married (1) Unknown. Asenieth married (2) Unknown. 1318 M iii George W. Eddy was born about 1806. 1319 M iv William H. Eddy was born about 1810. He diedafter 1900. William married Unknown. 1320 M v Rice Honeywell Eddy was born on Jan 24 1815. He died on Jan 25 1877. He was buried in Pine Grove Cemetery, Prince Albert, Ontario, Canada. Rice married Unknown. 1321 Mvi Ira Manchester Eddy wasborn about 1817. He died on Mar 9 1899. Ira married (1) Unknown. Ira married (2) Unknown. 1322 M vii Asahel Eddy was born about 1820. Asahel married Unknown. 1323 M viii Hiram Alexander Eddy was born after1820. Hiram was born about 1820. Hiram married Unknown. 1324 F ix Emaline Narcissi Eddy was born on Jan 10 1826 in Canada. She died on Oct 5 1912 in Austin, Mower Co, MN. Emaline married Unknown. HONEYWELL, Aseniath (I34233)
 
484 ! BLETTE-GAZAILLE, JeanP?re: Pierre BLETTE-GAZAILLEM?re: Francoise JARDINIERNotes: Arriv? ?t?1665, soldat de la compagnie de St-Ours au r?giment de Carignan. AussiJean Bellet-Gazaille.Occupation: Soldat Cie St-OursNaissance: 13 SEP 1643, Sarrazac, St-Hilaire, DordogneD?c?s: 1722, St-Ours, Richelieu, QCS?pulture: 17 AUG 1722, Contrecoeur, Vercheres, QC BELLET, Jean (I12653)
 
485 ! Ren? LANDRY le Jeune [the Younger] b. c. 1634 in France, d. before 1693 in Port Royal, Acadia; m. c. 1659 in Port Royal Marie BERNARD (father unknown, possibly Andr? BERNARD, mother Andr?e GUYON) b. c. 1645 in PortRoyal, d. c. 1/10/1718, bur. 1/11/1718 in Port Royal. . 1. Antoine LANDRY b. c. 1660, d. before 2/16/1711 in St. Charles des Mines, Acadia; m. c. 1681 Marie THIBODEAU (d/o Pierre THIBODEAUand Jeanne TH?RIOT) b. c. 1661 in Port Royal, d. before 2/16/1711 at St. Charles des Mines. . . 1. Marie Marguerite LANDRY b. 9/4/1682 at Beaubassin, Acadia, bt. 6/25/1684 at Beaubassin, d. before 4/27/1734 in Cobequid, Acadia; m.c. 1701 Jean H?BERT(son of Jean H?BERT and Marie Anne DOUCET) b. c. 1681, d. at Cobeguit, Acadia; his 2nd m. 4/27/1734 at Grand Pr?, Acadia to Marguerite LEPRINCE or PRINCE (her 2nd m.) b. c. 1681; her 1st m. c. 1700 to Fran?ois TILLARD. Nochildren of Jean and Marguerite LEPRINCE. . . . 1. Anne Marie H?BERT b. c. 1702, d. 1758-1759 at sea on the way to France; m. c. 1720 Joseph dit Petit Jos DUGAS (son of Joseph DUGAS and Claire BOURG), Dugas #1.2a.4.1. . . . 2. Charles H?BERT b. c. 1703, d. 12/13/1758 at sea in the shipwreck of Duke William on the way to France; m. c. 1723 Marguerite DUGAS (dau. of Joseph DUGAS and Claire BOURG), Dugas #1.2a.4.3. . . . 3. Jean H?BERTd. before 1752; m. c. 1727 Marie Claire DUGAS(dau.of Joseph DUGAS and Claire BOURG), Dugas #1.2a.4.4. . . . 4. Anne H?BERT b. 2/12/1708, bt. 7/18/1708; m. c. 1727 Claude DUGAS (son of Claude DUGAS and Jeanne BOURG), Dugas #1.2a.2.1. . . . 5. Pierre H?BERT d. before4/28/1766; m. Marguerite BOURG (dau. of Abraham BOURG and Anne DUGAS), Dugas #1.2a.6. . . . 6. Joseph H?BERT b. c. 1710, d. between 10/4/1756 and 8/26/1763; m. (1) c. 1733 Isabelle (?lisabeth) BENOIT (dau. of Jean BENOIT and Marie Anne BREAU0; m. (2) c. 1750 C?cile MELANSON (dau. of Pierre MELANSON and Marie BLANCHARD). . . . 7. Ambroise H?BERT b. c. 1712, bur. 1/11/1778; m. (1) c. 1735 Marie Madeleine BOURG (dau. of Abraham BOURG andMarie TH?RIOT); m. (2) H?l?ne AUCOIN (dau. of Pierre AUCOIN and Catherine COMEAU, Aucoin #2.11), widow of Claude TRAHAN. . . . 8. Fran?ois H?BERT b. c. 1714, bur. 5/19/1787; m. c. 1738 Isabelle BOURG. . . . 9. Marguerite H?BERT d. between 1744 and 1747;m. c. 1735 Fran?ois BOURG (son of Pierre BOURG and Marguerite BLANCHARD). . . . 10. ?lisabeth H?BERT d. before 6/5/1764; m. c. 1742 Jean Pierre BOURG(son ofAbraham BOURG and Marie TH?RIOT). . . . 11. Marie Madeleine H?BERTm. c. 1746 Joseph H?BERT (son of Antoine H?BERT and Jeanne CORPORON). . . . 12. Charles H?BERT b. c. 1725, d. 1758-1759 at sea on the way toFrance; m. c. 1749 Marguerite Jos?ph BOURG. LANDRY, Rene (I49257)
 
486 ! Gabriel Rouleau ditSansoucyBorn: Abt 1613, St-Aubin de Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche, France 3Marriage: Mathurine Leroux about 16 Aug 1652 in unknown location, Qu?bec, Canada 1 2 3Died: 22 Feb 1673,Ste-Famille, ?le d'Orl?ans, Qu?bec, Canada about age 60 3Buried: 23 Feb 1673, Ste-Famille, ?le d'Orl?ans,Qu?bec, Canada 3 General Notes:[Translated from French to English by Robert Rouleau with babelfish.altavista.digital.com/cgi-bin/translate.Last corrections made by Marc A. Rouleau and Yves Rouleau .]The ancestorGabriel, possibly born in 1613, could be a descendant of Sebasti?n Rouollo (Rouleau) and of Catherine Sauvage who lived in Tourouvre, a smalllocality of the province of Perche inNormandy, in the North-West of France. Tourouvreis located at approximately 150 kilometers west of Paris.Since so few people could read or write at that time, names were often recorded inconsistently - as they soundedto each priest or magistrate. Later, because of all the wars and invasions in this part of France, many records and official documents were lost or destroyed. Hence, the archival information from that time in France, like many other places, is scantily available and not entirely accurate where it exists.We findvery little documentation on the comings and goings of ancestor Gabriel. At the census of 1667, he declared to be 54 years old and at his death in 1673 he was given the age of 60.Pierre Boucher, a person in charge ofthe store in the garrison of the Trois-Rivi?res, recruited colonists and among them, the list showed Gabriel Rouleau, lately arrived fromFrance in 1649. Gabriel had to battle against the Indiansand at the same time had to provide for all kinds of needs for the garrison. It was during this period of skirmishes with the Indians that Gabriel inherited his nickname of "Sanssoucy", or "without worry". It is probably within this garrisonthat Gabriel met his future wife Mathurine LeRoux. Anyway,wefind Gabriel and Mathurine, on August 16, 1652, in front of the notary Audouart, in Qu?bec City, to sign a marriage contract. Gabriel, "usually living in Trois-Rivi?res", promisedto marry Mathurine LeRoux, a16 year old girl, originatingfrom thetown of LaRochelle in France. Gabriel was then 40 years old.Around 1652 Gabriel Rouleau was granted by Robert Giffard, Lord of Beauport, a land where he hastily built a log house. On August 12, 1653, his first born daughter, Louise, was baptizedinQu?becCity. A first boy named Jean is also baptizedin Quebec city on March 14, 1655. The war between rival Indian tribes intensified so much that at the end of August 1656, a fire, presumably caused by hostile Indians, burned down the Rouleau house and the two children of the couple perishedin the flame.A little time after this harsh misfortune, the Rouleau couple decided to establish a new household in Ste-Famille, ?le d' Orl?ans, on a land conceded by Charles de Lauzon, Lord ofCharny-Lirec. Gabriel built a house there and undertook the clearing of the ground. It is in this new residence that was born Jean Rouleau, baptized in Qu?bec City on November 22, 1656. (One does not find any more trace of this Jean after 17 yearsof age). Gabrielfinally received the deed ofhis land on June 26, 1657. The couple Gabriel and Mathurine had many other children:Anne, baptized in Quebec on August 13, 1658, died 4 yearslater.Pierre, baptized in Chateau-Richer on April 5, 1661, deceased around theageof 12.Guillaume, a twin baptized in Ch?teau-Richer, May 3,1662. He married Catherine Dufresne, February 3, 1688. They settled ona farm in St-Laurent, I.O. and had 5 children.Anne, a twin baptized in Ch?teau-Richer, May 3, 1662.She marriedJean Houde on August 23, 1678, and died on January 15, 1703 in St-Antoine-de-Tilly.Catherine, born on April 3, 1664, deceased on April6 of the same year.Gabriel, baptized onJuly 15, 1665 in Ch?teau-Richer, married in first wedding, thewidow JeanneDufresne, November 25, 1685. He settled on Jeanne's farm in St-Laurent, ?le d'Orl?ans, which has since been always in possession of his descendants. He had 7 children. He married in second wedding, Catherine Roulois, February 6, 1713.They had 5 children.Marie,born on July 1, 1667, married Pierre DuSault on November 2, 1687.Claude, baptized on February 16, 1669 inSte-Famille, I.O., but we do not find any more trace ofhim.Joseph, baptized on May 13, 1672 in Ste-Famille, I.O.,buried on May 23, of the sameyear in Ste-Famille.Pierre, baptized on July 10, 1673in Ste-Famille, I.O., deceased on July 13 ofthe same year in Ste-FamilleGabriel Rouleau died at the age of 60 and was buried in the cemetery of Ste-Famille, I.O., February 23, 1673.Mathurine Leroux remarried on February 5, 1674 with Martin Mercier. She died in St-Laurent, I.O., at theage of 73 and was buried in the parochial cemetery on February 1, 1708.Gabriel married Mathurine Leroux, daughter of Antoine Leroux and Jeanne Jouiry, about 16Aug 1652 in unknown location, Qu?bec, Canada.1 2 3(Mathurine Leroux was born on18Mar 1635 in Ste-Marguerite, La Rochelle, Aunis, France 3, baptized on 18 Mar 1635 in Ste-Marguerite, La Rochelle, Aunis, France,2 4diedon 1 Feb 1708 in St-Laurent, ?led'Orl?ans, Qu?bec, Canada 3 5 and was buried on 2 Feb 1708 inSt-Laurent,?le d'Orl?ans, Qu?bec, Canada 3 5.) Marriage Events:? Marriage Contract, 16 Aug 1652, Qu?bec City, Qu?bec, Qu?bec, Canada. notary Audouart;thedate of themarriage ceremony isuncertain. Marriage Notes:Neither Mathurine nor Gabriel couldsign the marriage contract. They had 133 descendants as of31 Dec 1729.Sources1 Institut Drouin, Dictionnaire National des Canadiens Fran?ais1608-1760 (AFGS 1968), page 1189.2 Gagn?,Peter J., Before the King's Daughters: The Filles ? Marier,1634-1662 (Pawtucket, RI: Quintin Publications, 2002), page 204.3 PRDH (University of Montr?al - Online).4 Jett?, Ren?, Dictionnaire G?n?alogique des Famillesdu Qu?bec (Les Presses de l'Universit?de Montr?al, 1983), page 1011.5 Gagn?,PeterJ., Before the King's Daughters: The Filles ? Marier, 1634-1662 (Pawtucket, RI: Quintin Publications, 2002), page 205. ROULEAU, Gabriel (I69706)
 
487 ! The King?s Daughters and the Carignan SoldiersFCHSC member Dorothy des Lauriers has traced her Canadian ancestry to eleven King's Daughters (Filles du Roi) and six soldiers of the Carignan-Sali?res regiment. This is actually a rather small number of representatives from these groups, but Dorothy's ancestry is only 1/4 French-Canadian. Below is the direct lineage between Dorothy andher seventh great-grandparents, Marguerite Viard and Mathurin B?nard dit Lajeunesse. Marguerite was a Fille du Roi and Mathurin was a soldierinthe Carignan-Sali?res Regiment. Marguerite married three times and by 31 Dec 1729 her descendants numbered 133.Marguerite Viard and Mathurin B?nard dit Lajeunesse(direct line of descent to Dorothy des Lauriers)Marguerite Viard Born: Abt. 1650 in Brie-Comte-Robert, Paris, France Died: 27 Dec 1715 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada+Mathurin Benard dit Lajeunesse Born: Abt. 1644 in Villiers-Charlemagne,Anjou, France Married: 11Oct 1672 in Quebec City, Quebec Co., Quebec, Canada Died: Bet. 20 Jan 1681/82 - 20 Oct 1682 in Chambly, Chambly Co., Quebec, Canada VIARD, Marguerite (I12758)
 
488 ! 1.2.3.6) PHOEBE UNDERHILL born November 8, 1713 New York Colony, British Empire [first born]; married Obadiah Purdy [son of Joseph & Aletta (Guion) Purdy Jr] born 1712 Westchester Co, New York Colony, British Empire; and born to them were:(1.2.3.6.1) JOSEPH PURDY born c1735 Westchester Co, New York Colony, British Empire and died c1818 Northumberland Co, Upper Canada Colony (Ontario); 1794 was in Herkimer Co NY; married Mary maiden name unk UNDERHILL, Phoebe (I65268)
 
489 ! NATHANIEL UNDERHILL bornAugust 31, 1723; married Ann Honeywell [dau of Israel & Dorothy] (1719-1782) who apparently died before Nathaniel as she was not mentioned inwill ? apparently no offspring; 1759he was one of the Judges of the Courtof the Common Pleas, for the County of Westchester and in 1775 was elected Mayor of the Borough of Westchester; a Loyalist during the Rev War and arrested as such. He made his will March 29, 1783, which was proven February 13, 1784; and is recorded in New York Published Wills, Vol. 12, pp. 182-83. No wife is named, but he married Ann, daughter of Israel H and Dorothy (Pell) Honeywell and she died September 4, 1782 aged63 years, leaving no issue. He divided his lands in Westchester and elsewhere equally between Thomas McLeroth and Anthony Lispenard Underhill, ?son of my brother Israel.? He also gave the said Thomas one-half of his household furniture, a negro woman and her child and one-half hissloop Tamer, but in consideration of these bequests, ?said Thomas must pay Nathaniel?s sisters, Helena Morgan and Mary Bayley, certain sums.? Tohis nephew, Anthony Lispenard Underhill, he bequeaths three negro men slaves, with all stock of cattle,horses, etc.,but he is to pay ?my brother Bartow? 500 pounds, and ?my nephew Nathaniel, son of John,? 200 pounds; a negro girl to Glorianna Underhill; to Sarah, wife of Samuel Embree, 100 pounds; to Mary, widow of John Bugbee, 50 pounds; to AmeliaWright, daughter of Obadiah Purdy, and to Charity Dally, daughter of JoshuaHunt, 25 pounds each; to John and Benjamin Underhill, sons of John, and to nephews, Obadiah and Joseph Purdy, 50 pounds each; negro slaves Abraham, Phyllys and Peggy, theirfreedom; codicil not dated, mentions Gilbert Drake, son of sister Elizabeth, and Anner, daughter of brother John, and requests that the slave Peggy, to whom he had willed her freedom, be sold instead for behaving ?contrary to the rule of a goodservant.? UNDERHILL, Nathaniel (I76046)
 
490 ! Rice HoneywellBirth: Apr. 8, 1820 Prescott Ontario, CanadaDeath: Nov. 4, 1912 Theresa Jefferson County New York, USA s/o Richard & Fanny (Youker)Honeywell At the age of 18,Rice removed from Prescott, Ontario and settled on a farm at Redwood, NY. He was said to have married at the age of 20, although the records indicate 22. Rice was a farmer in Prescott, Ontario, Canada. Grandson Elmer Clarence "Tink" Honeywellremembered himfondly in 1983. "My image of Grandfather Rice was sitting in a straight back chair. A perfect gentleman. One of those fellows you would really want to know. I rememberhe was very kind to my mother, his daughter-in-law."Familylinks:Parents: Richard Honeywell (1802 - 1889)Children:Almira Honeywell McIntosh (1843 - 1891) *Ruth Honeywell Starr (1849 - 1913) *Francis Honeywell (1851 - ____)Lorenzo D. Honeywell (1853 - 1926) *Alonzo Honeywell (1853 - 1919) *William Duncan Honeywell (1857 - 1933)*Emily Honeywell (1859 - 1859) *Lucea West Honeywell Alkerton (1860 - 1945) * Spouse: Mary "Polly" Scott Honeywell (1821 - 1892) * *Burial: Maynard Cemetery, Grenville County Ontario, Canada Plot: Lot 100Created by: Parks HoneywellRecord added:Jan29, 2007 Find A Grave Memorial# 17739027 HONEYWELL, Rice (I45154)
 
491 ! Isaiah Honeywell, SrBirth: Oct. 15, 1752 Westchester County New York, USADeath: unknown Haldimand County Ontario, CanadaS/o David and Rebecca (Rice) Honeywell, spouse of Betsey Sanford (Cartwright) He was born in Fredericksburg (Carmel), Westchester County, NY Isaiah and Betsy came toHaldimand Township, Canada 17 Apr 1797. They lived on Concession 3, Lot 28 according to the 1826, 1827, and 1828 censuses. Theyalso receivedaCrown grant of Lot 33, Concession III comprising 200 acres. They had at least four children, Martha (Patty?), Amos, Isaiah Jr, and Anna Allen(Polly).Family links:Children:Martha Honeywell Harrington (1798 - 1882) *Amos Honeywell (1799 - 1884)Burial: Academy Hill, Haldimand CountyOntario, CanadaCreated by: Parks HoneywellRecord added: Feb 03, 2007 Find A Grave Memorial# 17795712! DelaVergne-EckerEntries: 12665Updated:2006-08-30Contact: Suzanne EckerID: I6208Name: Isaiah HONEYWELLSurname: HoneywellGiven Name: IsaiahSex: MBirth: 15 Oct 1752 in Fredricksburg, Putnam Cuonty, New York _UID: CC3DCB0B3B6BD511BEF8D7B999947A60B817Note:!Family record from Mrs. James Honeywell, Nov 18, 1929, and Mr. W. Bruce Honeywell, Jan 11 1930; Van Alstyne's Born, Married and Died in Sharon,Conn., (marriages); Vermont vital statistics, (births of Elizabeth andDaniel); Sanford Genealogy by C.E. Sanford, (1911); U.S. Pension records #S29236; Census of 1790; War Dept. Records; Vermont Revolutionary War Rolls. In 1773 he removed to Lanesborough, MA, perhaps being for a short time at Sharon, CT., as he was stated to be a resident of that place at the time of his first marriage. In 1778, he went to Rutland VT, lived there until 1784, whe he removed to Saratoga NY and later to Haldimand, Upper Canada, (now in Northumberland County, Ontario), where he thereafter lived.He is listed in the census of 1790 at Stillwater,AlbanyCounty, NY, with two males under sixteen, and three females, and the record of his second married, in 1797, states that he was a resident of that place. An old family record says:Wecameto Canada Apr 17, 1797." He performed much service in theRevolution. After drilling in a company of minute men under Capt. Todd, he was called out in May 1775, and served for seven months in Capt. Samule Sloan's company, Col. John Patterson's REgt., which marched to Boston. During the battle of Bunker Hills he was on guard duty at Charlestown Neck. In January 1776, with his brother Rice, he enlisted in Capt. Hall's company, Col Seth Warner's Regt.,and served for five months inthe expedition to Lake Champlain, St. Johns, Montreal and Quebec, returning about May 1, soon after which date he and his brother enlisted in Capt. Root's company, Col. Smith's regt.,served for six months, returning in the late fall. AboutJune 1, 1777 he enlisted at Lanesborough, in Capt. David Wheeler's Company,Col.Smith's regt., and was called out several times that summer on alarms, and being employed much of the time about the hospitals attending the wounded. Therecordsshow that he also served in the Vermont Militia, in March 1780 in Ensign Cushman'sCompany from Rutland; as lieutenant (sergeant?) in May 1780 in Capt. Samuel Williams' Company, Col Gideon Warren's Regt., and as sergeant in October and Novemberin the same company, Col. Ebenezer Allen's Regt., and as sergeant in October and November in1881 in the same company, Col Thomas Lee's Regt. Green Mountain Boys In 1834, as a resident of Haldimand, he applied for a pension, the record giving most of the foregoing facts, but no information as to his family, except that Rice Honeywell wasayounger brother. He also deposed in support of his brother's application. No record of his death. His farm is tillowned by a descendant, passing successively to Amos, Smith, Amos and Smith Honeywell, whose widow now lives there. MILITARYNOTESHeprefomed much service in the Revolution. After drilling in a Company of Minute Menunder Captain Todd, he was called out inMay 1775 andserved for seven months in Captain Sloan's Company, Colonel John Patterson's Regiment, which marched toBoston. During the Battle of Bunker Hill he was on Guard Duty at Charlestown Neck. In January 1776, with his Brother Rice heenlistedin Captain Hall's Company, Colonel Seth Warner's Regiment, and served for five months in the Expedition to Lake Champlain,St.Johns, Montreal & Quebec, returning about May 1, soon after he and his brother enlisted in Captain Root'sCompany,ColonelSmith's Regiment, served for six months returning in the late fall. About June 1, 1777 he enlisted, at Lanesborough,in Captain DavidWheeler's Company, Colonel Smith's Regiment and was called out several time that summer onAlarms, andwas present at the Surrender of Burgoyne, serving about three months, and being employed much of the time about the hospitals tending tothe wounded. The records show that he also served in the Vermont Militia, in March 1780 inEnsign Cushman's Company from Rutland HONEYWELL, Israel Or Isaiah (I45127)
 
492 ! Amos HoneywellBirth: Aug. 19, 1799 Haldimand County Ontario, CanadaDeath: Nov. 27, 1884 Haldimand County Ontario, CanadaSon of Isaiah & Betsey Sanford Honeywell, husband of Parmelia AllenFamily links:Parents: Isaiah Honeywell (1752 - ____)Children: Smith Amos Honeywell (1832 - 1889) * *Burial: Eddystone , Haldimand County Ontario, CanadaCreated by: Parks HoneywellRecord added: Mar 09, 2007 Find A Grave Memorial# 18310880 HONEYWELL, Amos (I45126)
 
493 ! Martha Honeywell HarringtonBirth: Jun. 17, 1798 Belleville Ontario, CanadaDeath: Nov. 10, 1882 Shelby Orleans County New York, USA Daughter of Isaiah and Betsey Sanford Honeywell, Sr., wife of Daniel Harrington, mother of eleven. Family links:Parents: Isaiah Honeywell (1752 - ____)Spouse: Daniel Harrington (1789 - 1869)Burial: Somerset Cemetery, Somerset, Niagara Co., New York, USAPlot: Harrington PlotCreated by: Parks Honeywell Record added: May 04, 2008 HONEYWELL, Martha "Patty" (I45149)
 
494 ! Jean Michaud or MichelBirth: 1640, FranceDeath: Aug. 5, 1689LachineQuebec,CanadaJean Michaud (dit Michel) was born in the year 1640 in La Rochelle, France. He emigrated to New France and married Marie Marchesseau on25 November 1670.They settled in Lachine near Montreal. On the night of August 5, 1689, during a heavy rain storm, between 1000-1500 Iroquoissilently crossed the river to Lachine. They crept through the woods and surrounded the farm houses and homesteads and attacked the surprised settlers.Approximately 24 men, women and children were killed during the attack and their homes and buildings were burned. About 80 others were taken prisoner or integrated into the tribes. Jean Michaud dit Michelwas among the victims. His body was buried in the Lachine Cemetery 5 years later."Je me souviens", a Franco-American history publication notes that the 25 victims "whose corpses were retrieved five years later...were officially buried in the Lachine church cemetery by the priest Pierre R?my".Family links:Children:Pierre Michaud or Michel (1672 - 1689)* MICHAUD, Jean (I58600)
 
495 ! (online translation) Isaac BedardBedard ancestor of AmericaThe name derives from B?dard beadle and is itself a religious allusion.The ancestor Isaac Bedard was born about 1616. He married, March 20,1644, Marie Girard Larochelle. He practiced primarily the job of master carpenter.From 1644 to 1658, they brought seven children to baptism they called: Jacques Fran?ois, Pierre Richard, Isaac, Louis and Anne. Jacques and Louis were the only survivors, the others died in infancy.In 1660, Bedard left for New France, they occupied a location in the Upper Town.By 1663, they left these places, it seems to Quebec, because they had one last little girl, who bore the same name as his mother, May 12, 1664.It is said that Bedard experienced great difficulty in being accepted in the community. For example, two years later, in 1665, they went to Petite-Auvergne, Charlesbourg, asmall village of St-Jerome, in an accommodation of five arpents, theypaid 60 pounds.For 16 years, sometimes farmer and sometimes master carpenter, Isaac Bedard tried to support his family adequately, yet he had several times to resign themselves to seek help for Jesuits to meet basic needsIn the 1681 census, IsaacB?dard, a carpenter and resident of Little Auvergne, had a gun, 4 cattle and 12 acres of land under cultivation.Isaac Bedard was buried January 15, 1689, to 73 years.The Bedard have multiplied so prodigiously,there are currently beyond 30.000 B?dardscattered in all provinces of Canada and several U.S. states.Bedard family provided the Church hundreds of priests and religious who devoted themselves in the countries of Africa, China, South Americaand extreme northern Canada.She also starredinthejudiciary and in politics, in all professions, and in all scientific careers and business.This brave family can claim a part of building the French Canadian nationality.Source: The Genealogy Centre francophone d'Am?rique BEDARD, Isaac (I11917)
 
496 ! JOSEPHTE VINET-LARENTE (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74103 Ann?ede r?f?rence: 1790P?re: GUILLAUME VINET-LARENTEM?re: MARIE-JOSEPHTE LABROSSENaissance: 11 JUL 1790,POINTE-CLAIRE, QCD?c?s: 6 FEB 1831,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QCGedcom de Levac, Ren? ?Living) (91) : Levac, M?rd, Lalonde, Sauv? Daoust, L?r (11-2010)Union 1 Date de mariage: 25 SEP 1809 Lieu: POINTE-CLAIRE, QCJOSEPH AUMAIS-DUMAIS (homme) #r?f?rence: 91,74102 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1792P?re: JEAN-BAPTISTE AUMAISM?re: LOUISE NEVEUJULIE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74108 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1810<>Naissance: 1810, MARGUERITE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74107 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1812<>Naissance:1812,<>D?c?s: 3 MAY 1854,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC SOPHIE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,73947 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1815<>Naissance: 1815,<>D?c?s: 5 JUN 1855,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC JOSEPH AUMAIS (homme) # r?f?rence:91,74101 Ann?e de r?f?rence:1820<>Naissance: 1820, MATHILDE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74110 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1823<>Naissance: 1823,<>D?c?s: 27 APR 1857,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC JEREMIE AUMAIS (homme) # r?f?rence: 91,131412 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1824<>Naissance: 1824, ESTHER AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence:91,74104 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1825<>Naissance: 1825, VIRGINIE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74111 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1825<>Naissance: FEV1825,<>D?c?s: 15 JUL 1825,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC JEAN-BAPTISTE AUMAIS(homme) # r?f?rence: 91,74112 Ann?e de r?f?rence: 1826<>Naissance: 1826,<>D?c?s: 29 OCT 1831,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC CATHERINE ROSE AUMAIS (femme) # r?f?rence: 91,74113 Ann?e de r?f?rence:1829<>Naissance: 25 NOV 1829,STE-ANNE-DE-BELLEVUE, QC VINET, Josephe (I8236)
 
497 ! Vincent BraultThe Breau Family starts in the new world with Vincent Brault; born 1631, died about 1685; first Breau settler in the colony of New France at Port Royal, Acadie; now Nova Scotia.Family reference: 1 Born abt. 1631 La Chauss?e in France Died between Nov 1684 and Jan 1686 Port Royal, Acadie (now Nova Scotia) Married abt. 1661 Marie Bourg (or Boure) at Port Royal, AcadieParents:Father: unknownMother: unknownChildren:Marie dit Vincelotte Breau; b. abt. 1662; d. 24 Nov 1749Antoine Breau; b. abt 1666Marguerite Breau; b. abt 1668; d. aft 1714Pierre Breau; b. abt 1670; d. abt 1760son, unknown name; b. abt 1671Anne Breau; b.1673; d. aft 1700Fran?ois Breau; b. abt 1674; d. aft 1755 censusJean Brot; b. abt 1674; d. aft 1755 censusMarie Breau; d. abt 1680; d. 1742Jeanne Breau; b. abt 1684Ren? Breau; d. abt 1685; d. 1768Elizabeth (or Isabelle) Breau; b. abt 1686Vincent?s Early YearsVincent was from La Chauss?e, in the Loudun area, Department of Vienne, France. He was recruited as a colonist for Acadie, where he arrived about 1652 and settled in the Port Royal area (near today's Digby, Nova Scotia).War broke out between England and France in 1654 and as a result, a British fleet sailedout of Boston and captured Port Royal. Acadie remained in the possession of England until the Treaty of Breda in 1667 returned it to French control.Vincent and MarieMarie'sparents were presumably from the sameregion in France as Vincent. Vincent and Marie married in Port Royal around 1661, he being about thirty years of age.The 1671 census of Port Royal shows Vincent Brot, age 40, with wife Marie Boure, age 26, two sons and two daughters, living on fourarpents (about three acres) of cleared land and having nine head of cattle and seven sheep. In the 1678 censushe is shown as Vincent Beraud with wife Marie Bourg, four sons and twodaughters living on three arpents of land and having five animals.By the time of the 1686 census he was deceased and Marie Boure was shown asthe widow of Vincent Brau1.FootnotesSources"A Breau Genealogy", 2nd Edition, compiled by Robert Brault and ClarenceT. Breaux; private publication, 2nd edition 2004; 440 pages; history and family lines of the descendants of Vincent Brault (1629-1686), a pioneer Acadian! Descendants of Vincent Brault(Brot)Generation No. 1 1. Vincent1 Brault(Brot) was born 1631 inLa Chasusse, Dept of Vienne, France, and died 1686 in Port Royal, Acadie. He married Marie Boure Abt. 1661 in Port Royal, Acadie, daughter of Antoine Boure and AntoinetteLandry. She was born 1645 in Port Royal,Acadie, and died September 19, 1730 in Port Royal, Acadie.Children of Vincent Brault(Brot) and Marie Boure are: 2 i. Marie2 Brault, born 1662 in Port Royal, Acadie; died October 24, 1749 in Port Royal, Acadie. She married Germain Savoie Bef. 1678in PortRoyal,Acadie. 3 ii. Antoine Brault, born 1666 in Port Royal, Acadie. He married Marguerite Babin Abt. 1687 in Port Royal, Acadie.4 iii. Margurite Brault, born 1668 in Port Royal, Acadie; diedAft. 1714 in Port Royal, Acadie.+ 5 iv. Pierre Brau, born 1670 in Port Royal, Acadie; died Aft. 1760 in Boston MA. 6 v. AnneMarie Brault, born 1672 inPort Royal, Acadie. 7 vi. Francois Brault, born 1674 in Port Royal, Acadie. He married Marie Comeau Abt. 1702 in Port Royal, Acadie. 8 vii. Jean Brault, born 1675inPort Royal, Acadie; died April 17, 1751 in Port Royal, Acadie. He married Anne Chiasson Abt. 1698 in Port Royal, Acadie. 9viii. Marie Brault, born 1677 in Port Royal, Acadie; died December 20, 1742 inSt. Francois duSud, Quebec. She married Abraham Gaudet Abt. 1704 in Port Royal, Acadie. 10 ix.Jeanne Brault, born 1680 in Port Royal, Acadie. She married Jean Leber May 23, 1714 in Port Royal, Acadie. 11 x. Rene Brault,born 1683 in Port Royal, Acadie. He married Marie Hebert December 18, 1715 in Port Royal, Acadie. 12 xi. Elizabeth Suzanne Brault, born 1686 in Port Royal, Acadie. Shemarried Marcel Saulnier November 24, 1710inPort Royal, Acadie. BRAULT, Vincent (I19125)
 
498 ! Honeywell wives 1740sPosted by: Geoff SmithDate: April 27, 2000Seeking wives of children of Israel Honeywell 1714-1762.! Re: Honeywell wives 1740sPosted by: Ernie KeeneDate: January 29, 2001In Reply to: Honeywell wives 1740s by Geoff Smith He m. (1) Dec 16, 1742, Jemima Pinkney: b.Mar 281724, Eastchester: daug. of Capt William and Ithamar Pinckney.d. April2, 1760 age 36 and is buried at St Peters Church.(8 chil this marriage)He m. 2nd June 29, 1768, Phebe Stevenson b. Mar 31 1734 daug of William & Hannah (Hicks) Stevenson. (no child 2nd marr.) ! Re: Honeywell wives 1740sPosted by: geoff smithDate: January 30, 2001In Reply to: Re: Honeywell wives 1740s by Ernie Keene Actually I sought the spouses of Israeland Jemimah's CHILDREN which was answered in part by another respondant. Still missing are the spouses (if there were any) of Ann, Gilead,Martha, Euphemia and Mary.! Re: Honeywell wives 1740s-Israel's chn.Posted by:ElviraDate: January 31, 2001In Replyto: Re: Honeywell wives 1740s bygeoff smith Ann md.James Haviland-Sept.5,1762(6 chn.); Israel(Ann's twin)md.Elizabeth Oakley-May 1766-3 chn;Gilead,b.,d.1746;Euphemia md.1-Elvin or Elvan Hunt-1766,or 1768;he d. 1772;md.2-Gilbert Williams-1775;md.3-Edward Briggs,abt.1785.Mary,b.1750,d.1752;William,b.Apr.14,1754-md.Sarah Pugsley-no more info.;Philip,md. Anne Eustace-prob. no chn.; Martha,b.Feb.9,1758,md.Gilbert Honeywell, her cousin-June 4, 1779. Source-'Desc. of Roger',which lists family members as the sources. Elvira! Re: Honeywell wives 1740sPosted by: ElviraDate: April 27, 2000In Reply to: Honeywell wives 1740s by Geoff Smith You didn't list names of sons.IhaveIsrael,b. 1743/44,md. Elizabeth Oakley;Gillead, b.1746,d.1746;William,b.1754,md. Sarah Pugsley;Philip,b. 1756,md. Anne Eustace. HONEYWELL, Israel (I45130)
 
499 ! Birthdate: 1660Birthplace: Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, CanadaDeath: Died 1711 in Nova Scotia, CanadaOccupation: Founder of Grand Pre, AcadiaAbout Antoine Landry, Sr.The family of Antoine LANDRY and Marie THIBODEAU[85552] LANDRY, Antoine (Ren? le jeune & Marie BERNARD [10514])married about 1681, from .. (Acadie)THIBODEAU, Marie1 (Pierre & Jeanne TH?RIAULT [85617])1) Ang?lique, married about 1723 Joseph BABIN2)Anne, marriedabout 1703 Antoine LEBLANC3) Antoine, married about 1705 Marie Blanche LEBLANC4) Fran?ois, married Grand-Pr? (Saint-Charles-des-Mines) (Acadie)1711-05-27 Marie Josephte DOUCET5) Fran?oise, born about 1695 (white) or 1707 (s?p.1767), died 1767-10-03, buried 1767-10-04 Lavaltrie (Qc), married Grand-Pr? (Saint-Charles-des-Mines) (Acadie) 1711-02-16 Pierre LEBLANC6) Germain, married about 1722 Marie C?cile FOREST7) Isabelle, married about 1703 Pierre H?BERT dit LAPRADE8) Jean, married about 1720Madeleine MELAN?ON9) Joseph, born about 1701 (m 1745), married about 1727 Marie Marguerite FOREST, married Grand-Pr? (Saint-Charles-des-Mines)(Acadie) 1745-01-11 Marie Josephte BOURG10) Marguerite, married about1706 Jacques H?BERT11) Marie Marguerite, married about 1701 Jean H?BERT12) Pierre, married about 1713 Marguerite FORESThttp://www.francogene.com/quebec--genealogy/085/085552.php--------------------According to PaulSuprenant, Edna Landry's son,Antoine lived in Acadia before 1755 (the Great Upheaval). -------------------- 1686 CensusAntoine LANDRY 26, Marie THIBODEAU 25; children: Marie 4, Antoine 2, Isabelle 1; 2 guns, 9 arpents, 8 cattle, 6 sheep, 10 hogs.1693 CensusAntoine LANDRY33, Marie TIBAUDEAU 32, Marie 10, Antoine 9,Isabelle 7, Anne 5, Marguerite 4, Pierre 3, Francois 1; 15 cattle, 8 sheep, 6 pigs, 12 arpents, 1 gun1701 CensusAntoine LANDRY, his wife. 6 boys, 5 girls, 8 arpents, 25 cattle, 25 sheep, 16 hogs,1gun.1703 CensusAntoine LANDRY, his wife, 2 boys, 2girls,1 arms hearer1707 CensusAntoine LANDRY, his wife, 7 boy less than 14; 1 arpent, 3 cattle, 8 sheep, 8 hogs. -------------------- It is possible that Antoine is the son of Rene Landryb.1618 who is married to Perrine Bourg and not Rene Landry b.1640.There is some speculation that Antoine is actually Rene Landry's, b. 1640, brother. LANDRY, Antoine (I49256)
 
500 ! Birthdate: 1698Birthplace: AcadiaDeath: Died 1789 in Pouques-Lormes, Burgundy, FranceJean Landry's Timeline1759 - May 28, 1759Age 61Burial of JeanChateauneuf, Ille Et Vilaine, France1789 - 1789Age 91Death of Jean at La VilainePouques-Lormes, Burgundy, France1698 - 1698Birth of JeanAcadia1714- January 22, 1714Age 16Marriage of Jean to Madeleine LandryGrand Pre,St Charles des Mines, Nova Scotia, Canada1725 - 1725Age 27Marriage ofJean Landry to Francoise GuedryNew Brunswick, Canada????Birth of Joseph Landry1735 - 1735Age 37Birth of Paul LandryGrand Pre, Acadia, Canada LANDRY, Jean (I49261)
 

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