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251 E-link to this supposedly famous Acadian (possible relative)

http://www.acadiansingray.com/Appendices-ATLAL-BROUSSARD.htm

Acadians Who Found Refuge in Louisiana, February 1764-early 1800s BROUSSARD [BREW-sard, brew-SAR] ACADIA

Excerpt:
François Brossard, progenitor of one of the most notable Acadian families, was born in c1653 perhaps in Anjou, France, to parents still unknown and may have come to the colony in 1671 aboard the ship L'Oranger. He married Catherine, daughter of Michel Richard dit Sansoucy, at Port-Royal in c1678. They settled on haute rivière, now the upper Annapolis River, at a place called Beausoleil. Not long after his marriage, François "collaborated with Pierre Thibodeau in the colonization of Chepoudy, but he did not go to settle there himself." In early 1711, François was one of several residents of the haute rivière jailed by British commander Samuel Vetch. François and Catherine had 11 children, including six sons, all born at Beausoleil, five of whom created families of their own. Four of their daughters married into the Landry, Doucet, Préjean, and Bourg families. François died suddenly at his farm on haute rivière in December 1716, in his early 60s.

Oldest son Pierre, born in c1683, married Marguerite, daughter of Abraham Bourg, at Port-Royal in January 1709. They had nine children, including two sons who married into the LeBlanc family and settled at Minas. Two of their daughters married into the Boudrot and Préjean families and settled at Port Toulouse, Île Royale, today's Cape Breton Island, where their father Pierre moved by 1722. Pierre worked as a navigateur at Port-Toulouse.

François, fils, born in c1695, died at Annapolis Royal in November 1717, age of 22. He did not marry.

Claude, born in c1697, married first to Anne, daughter of Vincent Babin, fils of Pigiguit and widow of Abraham Bourg le jeune, at Grand-Pré in October 1718. Their sons married into the Landry and Aucoin families and settled at Pigiguit, Rivière-du-Nord-Est on Île St.-Jean, today's Prince Edward Island, and on Île Royale. Claude remarried to Marie, daughter of Claude Dugas and widow of Abraham Bourg, at Port-Royal in November 1754. Claude died in Maryland during Le Grand Dérangement.

Alexandre dit Beausoleil, whose nickname came from the haute rivière village where the Broussards lived, born in c1699, married Marguerite, daughter of Michel Thibodeau, at Annapolis Royal in February 1724. In c1730, they moved to Chepoudy, where her kinsmen lived, and then to LeCran, today's Stoney Creek, on Rivière Petitcoudiac, probably to put more distance between themselves and British authority in Nova Scotia. In c1740, they moved farther upriver to Village-des-Beausoleils, present-day Boundary Creek, New Brunswick.

Joseph dit Beausoleil, born in c1702, married Agnès Thibodeau, younger sister of brother Alexandre's wife, at Annapolis Royal in September 1725. They followed Alexandre and Marguerite to Chepoudy and Petitcoudiac, preferring to settle in territory controlled by France. Along with older brother Alexandre, Joseph was a leader of Acadian partisans who fought against the British in Nova Scotia during and after King George's War.

Youngest son Jean-Baptiste, born in March 1704, married Cécile Babin, younger sister of brother Claude's first wife, probably at Annapolis Royal in c1728. They remained at Port-Royal. Jean-Baptiste remarried to Anne, daughter of Louis Thebeau, probably at Annapolis Royal in c1748. Jean-Baptiste died at Mascouche, near Montréal, in July 1770, age 66, after Le Grand Dérangement.

The family's name evolved from Brossard to Broussard in Acadia. By 1755, François Brossard's descendants could be found at Annapolis Royal; at Grand-Pré and Ste.-Famille, Pigiguit, in the Minas Basin; at Village-des-Beausoleils on the upper Petitcoudiac; at Port-Toulouse on Île Royale; and at Rivière-du-Nord-Est on Île St.-Jean.

LE GRAND DÉRANGEMENT

Le Grand Dérangement of the 1750s scattered this large family even farther. Descendants of François Brossard ended up in the British Atlantic colony of South Carolina but did not remain there, in France, in the St. Lawrence River valley ... and in South Louisiana:

After yet another war erupted between Britain and France in 1754, the Acadians were again caught in the middle of it. When British and New England forces attacked Fort Beauséjour at Chignecto in June 1755, Broussards were among the area Acadians who were serving in the fort as militia. They, too, along with the French regulars, became prisoners of war when the fort surrendered on June 16. Governor Lawrence was so incensed to find so-called French Neutrals fighting with French regulars at Beauséjour that he ordered his officers to deport the Chignecto Acadians to the southernmost British colonies on the Atlantic seaboard. In mid-October 1755, the British transported Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil and his nephew Victor to South Carolina aboard the British warship HMS Syren. They were transported in chains, under heavy guard, along with other Acadian "troublemakers." They reached Charleston in late November and were held in close confinement on Sullivan's Island outside of the city.

Before the deportation ships arrived at Chignecto, some of the Acadians being held at forts Cumberland (formerly Beauséjour) and Lawrence managed to escape, Joseph dit Beausoleil among them. He rejoined his wife and younger children at Petitcoudiac, and they headed into the wilderness north of their home, not only hiding from the British patrols sent out to capture them but also engaging in what today is called guerrilla warfare, including privateering in the Bay of Fundy to harass British shipping. For a time, Beausoleil's "headquarters" was at Shediac on the Gulf of St. Lawrence shore, where he coordinated his resistance activities with Canadian Lieutenant Charles Deschamps de Boishébert, who had commanded French forces on Rivière St.-Jean.

Sometime probably in the summer of 1756, Joseph dit Beausoleil's brother Alexandre and Joseph's son Victor joined the resistance movement. Although at first held in close confinement in South Carolina, Alexandre and Victor had been allowed to go to the workhouse in Charleston, from which they escaped. They made their way through the coastal swamps and marshes into the Carolina backcountry, and, after a long, perilous journey across the face of the Appalachian Mountains, assisted no doubt by Indians friendly to the French, they returned to Acadia to fight again. Amazingly, Alexandre was in his late 50s at the time, but the rigors of advancing old age could not stop him from rejoining his family. He and Victor, along with seven other Acadians who had fled from Carolina, appeared at the Acadian settlement on Rivière St.-Jean in June 1756, about the time that other Chignecto exiles who had been deported to South Carolina returned to Acadia by boat. Alexandre and Victor did not remain on the St.-Jean but moved on to Shediac, where they reunited with their family.

.

British forces deported the Acadians at Minas in late October 1755, sending them to Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, and New England. The Broussards at Minas went to Maryland. Claude Broussard of Grand-Pré, who had remarried at Annapolis Royal in November 1754, in his late 50s, died in Maryland. Claude's son Jean and his wife Anne Landry were deported to Maryland with son Firmin, age 3. Jean and Anne had at least one more son in Maryland--Jean, fils, born in c1760. Jean, père died in Maryland in the mid-1760s. Augustin, son of perhaps Charles Broussard of Grand-Pré, was only 7 years old when he landed in Maryland in 1755. He soon became an orphan.

.

The Broussards at Annapolis Royal escaped the British round up there in the fall of 1755, spent a terrible winter in the woods and along the Fundy shore, crossed the bay to the French-controlled side in March 1756, and made their way north to the Rivière St.-Jean settlements before joining their kinsmen on the Gulf of St. Lawrence shore. Jean-Baptiste fought with older brothers Alexandre and Joseph dit Beausoleil in the Acadian resistance. When his brothers "surrendered" to British forces at Fort Cumberland, formerly French Fort Beauséjour, in late 1759, Jean-Baptiste refused to join them and took his family to Québec. One account says that his wife, two children, and his mother-in-law died on the way to Canada. One of his daughters by his first wife remarried at Île Jesus, near Montréal, in June 1761. Jean-Baptiste died at Mascouche, near Montréal, in July 1770, in his late 60s--five years after his older brothers had died in faraway Louisiana.

.

The Broussards on Île Royale and Île St.-Jean, living in territory controlled by France, escaped the British roundups in Nova Scotia during the fall of 1755. Their respite from British oppression was short-lived, however. After the fall of the French fortress at Louisbourg in July 1758, the victorious British swooped down on the islands and deported most of the Acadians there to France. The crossing to the mother country devastated the family:

Marie Broussard, wife of Honoré Préjean, crossed on the British transport Queen of Spain with her husband and nine children. Every one of them died at sea. Jean-Baptiste, age 37, son of Claude Broussard of Grand-Pré, wife Osite Landry, age 28, sons Joseph, age 7, Grégoire, age 2, and daughters Madeleine, age 9, Marguerite, age 5, and Rosalie, age 3, crossed on one of the five British transports that left the Gut of Canso in late November and reached St.-Malo in late January 1759. Son Jean-Baptiste-Paul was born aboard ship in December. Only Osite and two of her children--Madeleine and newborn Jean-Baptiste-Paul--survived the crossing. Marguerite, Rosalie, and Grégoire died at sea. Jean-Baptiste, père died in a St.-Malo hospital a month after they reached the city, and son Joseph died a month after that. Osite remarried to fellow Acadian Augustin Boudrot at Pleudihen, near St.-Malo, in August 1760 and gave him at least nine children. Jean-Baptiste Broussard's unmarried younger brothers Charles, age 26, and Firmin, age 21, also crossed to St.-Malo on one of the five ships. Firmin and Charles survived the crossing, but the ordeal proved to be too much for Firmin, who died at Buet, near St.-Malo, in late April 1759 and was buried at nearby Pleudihen. Cousin Pierre-Paul Broussard, age 32, crossed on one of the five ships with wife Madeleine Landry, age 31, sons Jean-Baptiste, age 8, and Pierre, age 1, and daughters Isabelle, age 6, and Marie-Marguerite, age 4. Pierre-Paul, Madeleine, and two of their children survived the crossing, but two of the children--Jean-Baptiste and Marie-Marguerite--died at Pleudihen in April 1759 no doubt from the rigors of the crossing. Pierre-Paul's younger unmarried brother François, age 22, also crossed with them and died at the hospital in St.-Malo in February 1759.

Pierre-Paul and Marguerite settled at Pleudihen and had more children in the area--Joseph-Osithe was born at Buet in March 1760 but died at Pleudihen in August 1761, Charles-Jean was born at Bas Champs in June 1763, Jean-Joseph at La Coquenais in March 1766, and Marie-Josèphe at Bas Champs in August 1768.

Charles settled at Pleudihen and married Anne, daughter of fellow Acadian Joseph Aucoin, at nearby Plouër in October 1764. They settled at La Coquenais near Pleudihen, where at least three children were born to them--Marie-Isabelle in March 1766, Joseph-Charles in November 1767, and Madeleine-Josèphe in December 1769.

Some of the Broussards who were deported to France from Île St.-Jean in 1758 ended up in ports other than St.-Malo. Joseph Broussard of Grand-Pré and Île St.-Jean and his sons Charles, age 15, and Jean, age 13, landed at Cherbourg, where Joseph died in January 1759, age 50, probably from the rigors of the crossing. Charles married Frenchwoman Bonne-Jacqueline-Françoise Castel probably at Cherbourg in c1764. They had at least five sons, all born probably at Cherbourg--Jean-Charles-Joseph, François, Jacques, Pierre in March 1771, and Joseph-Dominique, called Dominique, in May 1772. Daughter Bonne-Marguerite was born at Cherbourg in September 1773. Charles's younger brother Jean married Marguerite, daughter of fellow Acadian Honoré Comeau, at Cherbourg in July 1773. In the early 1770s, Charles, Jean, and their families participated in a venture in the Poitou region that attempted to settle Acadians from the port cities on a nobleman's land near Châtellerault. Charles's son Louis was born near Vienne, Poitou, in February 1774. Jean's sons Jean-Baptiste and Joseph were born near Vienne in May 1774 and November 1775. After two years of effort, the venture failed, and Charles, Jean, and dozens of other frustrated Acadians retreated with their families to the port city of Nantes in December 1775. Two years later, the Broussards were residing at Chantenay near Nantes, where Charles and Bonne-Jacqueline had two more sons--Guillaume-Médard, born in June 1776 but died two months later, and Jean le jeune, born in February 1778 but died at age 3 in September 1780. Jean and Marguerite also had at least two more children at Chantenay--twins Florence-Adélaïde and Pierre, born in October 1777, but Pierre died at age 10 months in July 1778. Charles remarried to Euphrosine, daughter of fellow Acadian Pierre Barrieau, at St.-Martin-de-Chantenay in June 1784.

Jean-Baptiste-Paul Broussard, the newborn who had survived the crossing from the Maritimes to St.-Malo in 1758-59, married Marie, daughter of fellow Acadian Étienne Melanson, at Pleudihen in June 1784. Their son Jean-Pierre was born at La Coquenais, near Pleudihen, in March 1785.

In the early 1780s, the Spanish government offered the Acadians in France a chance for a new life in faraway Louisiana, where many of their kinsmen had settled decades before. Charles and Jean Broussard of Chantenay took up the offer, but cousins Pierre-Paul, Charles, and Jean-Baptiste-Paul of Pleudihen chose to remain in France.

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Meanwhile, Joseph dit Beausoleil Broussard and his fellow Acadians harassed the British as best they could. In late 1756, they abandoned their "headquarters" at Shediac and moved north to a new camp at Miramichi, also on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, to put more distance between themselves and the British forces at Fort Cumberland. Their resistance exacted a terrible price. Obtaining food, clothing, and shelter for their families, especially during the winter, continually burdened the resistance fighters and limited their effectiveness against a well-fed, well-supplied, and comfortably-sheltered foe. Joseph's wife Agnès was among the many Acadians who died of sickness or starvation at Miramichi during the terrible winter of 1756-57. Some historians insist that all of the children at Miramichi died that winter. Son Victor's twin sons may have been among the many who perished. After the terrible ordeal at Miramichi, the resistance fighters retreated farther up the coast towards the French stronghold at Restigouche, at the head of the Baie des Chaleurs.

By the autumn of 1759, after four years of unimaginable hardship and the recent fall of Louisbourg and Québec, Beausoleil Broussard and his compatriots responded to a British offer of amnesty. They agreed to surrender to Colonel Joseph Frye, the commander at Fort Cumberland, to spare their families the horror of another Maritimes winter. Joseph dit Beausoleil's older brother Alexandre was held as hostage at Fort Cumberland until Joseph and other resistance leaders surrendered the following spring. However, the British reneged on their amnesty offer, and Joseph and his fellow Acadians continued their struggle from Restigouche. Beausoleil, along with hundreds of other Acadians, was captured at Restigouche in 1760. The British held him at Georges Island, Halifax, for a time, and then transferred him to Fort Edward at Windsor, formerly the Acadian settlement of Pigiguit. There, he managed to communicate with Acadian partisans still on the loose in the area, so the British returned him to Georges Island, where he and his extended family spent the next few years in close confinement.

In the prison camps of Nova Scotia--at Fort Cumberland and Fort Edward as well as on Georges Island--the Broussards were joined by hundreds of other Acadians whom the British had rounded up at Restigouche, Miramichi, Île St.-Pierre, Île Miquelon, and other places of refuge in the Maritimes region. Many of them were kin to the Broussards by blood or by marriage and thus were part of their extended family. They included Acadians named Arseneau, Babineau, Bergeron, Bernard, Boudrot, Bourg, Bourgeois, Breau, Brun, Caissie dit Roger, Comeaux, Cormier, Darois, Doucet, Dugas, Gautrot, Girouard, Godin, Guénard, Guidry, Guilbeau, Hébert, Hugon, Landry, LeBlanc, Leger, Martin, Michel, Pellerin, Pitre, Poirier, Prejean, Richard, Robichaud, Roy, Saulnier, Savoie, Semer, Surette, Thibodeau, Trahan, and Vincent.

Ironically, many of the young Acadians being held at Forts Cumberland and Edward were enticed to return to their former lands and rebuild and maintain the dykes that had transformed their corner of the world into an agricultural paradise. The New England "planters" who began to occupy Acadian farmland in the Annapolis and Minas basins in 1760 had no idea how to maintain the dykes and aboiteaux that kept the fertile fields from becoming tidal marsh again. The Acadians worked diligently for their New England "masters" and were paid in Canadian card money. Despite their plunge from proud landowners to mere laborers on their former lands, many young Acadian prisoners harbored the forlorn hope of living on their fathers' farms again.

This was not to be. Charles Lawrence, the great nemesis of all Acadians, died at Halifax in 1760 not long after his promotion to governor, but he was succeeded by Jonathan Belcher, Jr., who hated and feared the Acadians as much as Lawrence ever did. In July 1762, encouraged by Belcher, the Nova Scotia council ordered the deportation of the Acadian prisoners from the colony--600 of them, including the detainees on Georges Island as well as men held at Fort Edward and Annapolis Royal without their families! In late August, five ships carried the Acadians to Boston, but the Massachusetts authorities refused to take them. In mid-October, the prisoners returned to Halifax and were escorted back to Georges Island. Broussards likely were among them.

The war with Britain finally ended with the Treaty of Paris of February 1763. Article 14 of the treaty gave all persons dispersed by the war 18 months to return to their respective territories. In the case of the Acadians, however, this meant that they could return only to French soil. The Acadian settlements in Nova Scotia had not been part of French territory for half a century, and the settlements at Chignecto, Chepoudy, Petitcoudiac, and Memramcook now were part of British Nova Scotia as well, so the authorities in Halifax refused to allow any of the Acadian prisoners in the region to return to their farmsteads as proprietors. If Acadians chose to remain in Nova Scotia, they could live only in the interior of the peninsula in small family groups, away from their lands along the Fundy shore, or they could continue to work for low wages as laborers on their former lands, now, or soon to be, controlled by New England "planters." If the Acadians stayed, they must also take the hated oath of allegiance to the new British king, George III ... without reservation.

more may be found at:
http://www.acadiansingray.com/Appendices-ATLAL-BROUSSARD.htm 
Broussard dit Beausoliel, Joseph (I2203)
 
252 E-Link to this union may be found at:

http://www.cs.uiuc.edu/~friedman/genealogy/Dugas.htm

stating the following:

8. Agnès DUGAS b. c. 1686; m. 11/13/1704 Michel THIBODEAU (son of Pierre THIBODEAU and Jeanne THÉRIOT) b. c. 1680, d. 11/27/1734.
15 children. 
Dugas, Agnes (I2177)
 
253 E-Link to this union may be located at the following:

http://kjunkutie.tripod.com/lejeune.htm 
Benoit, Jeanne (I2238)
 
254 E-Link to this union may be located at the following:

http://www.normlev.net/ancestry/d152.htm#P304

vii. Georges BÉLANGER was born and baptized 1 August 1833 in Ste-Marie de Beauce. He married Camille DALLAIRE on 8 November 1853 in Ste-Marguerite, Dorchester, Québec. Camille, daughter of Augustin DALLAIRE & Geneviève LEMIEUX, was born and baptized on 28 July 1831 in St-Joseph de Lauzon, Lévis. She died after 1891 in Ste-Julienne, Wolfe, Québec. In the Census of 1871, there are eight children listed for Georges and Camille: Marguerite (16), François (15), Marie (14), Auguste (11), Ovide (9), Petchérias (6), Camille (4) and Georgina (2). Georges died after 1891 in St-Julien, Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. (1) (2)

Children:

i. Marie Marguerite BÉLANGER, was born and baptized on 8 October 1854 in St-Bernard, Dorchester, Québec. Marguerite married Edouard CARRIER. She died on 29 and was buried on 31 March 1895 in St. Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wofe, Québec. (2)(5)
Children: i. Marie Maguerite CARRIER was born on 26 and baptized on 28 September 1873 in Saint Patrice de Beaurivage, Co. Lotbinière Québec.
ii. Benjamin CARRIER was born on 28 and baptized on 29 January 1877 in St. Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec.

iii. Joseph Simeon CARRIER was born on 9 and baptized on 13 June 1890 in St. Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec.

iv. Florida CARRIER was born on 29 and baptized on 30 April 1894 in St. Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. A twin died at birth and was buried on the same day. No name given.

v. Théodule CARRIER married Marianne CARRIER, daughter of Ignace CARRIER & Philomène GINGUE, on 11 July 1904 in St. Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec.

ii. François BÉLANGER, was born on 8 and baptized on 9 April 1856 in Saint Sylvester, Co. Lotbinière,. (5)

iii. Marie Eléonore BÉLANGER, was born on 2 and baptized on 8 August 1857 in St.Pierre de Broughton, Co. Mégantic. She married George CARRIER on 19 August 1878 at St. Julien, Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. (2)(5)

iv. Augustin BÉLANGER, was born on 24 and baptized on 25 March 1859 in St. Pierre de Broughton, Mégantic. He married Marie DROUIN, daughter of Richard DROUIN & Lucie BARRON, on 17 September 1883 at St-Julien, Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. (3rd degree consanguinity). (2)(5)

v. Louis Ovide BÉLANGER, was born and baptized on 11 October 1860 in St-Pierre de Broughton, Mégantic, Québec. He died after 1891. He first married Célina ROY on 11 January 1886 in Ste-Sophie, Mégantic, Québec. Célina died between 1886 and 1891. Ovide then married Philomène MONGRAIN on 7 October 1891 in St-Julien, Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. Philomène died after 1891. (2)(5)

vi. Joseph BÉLANGER, was born on 3 and baptized on 7 May in 1862 in St-Pierre de Broughton, Mégantic, Québec. He died before 1871.(2)(5)

vi. Emilie Camille BÉLANGER, was born and baptized on 13 December 1863 in St-Pierre de Broughton, Mégantic, Québec. She died on 6 and buried on 8 August 1865 in Notre-Dame de la Victoire, Lévis, Québec. (2)

vii. Marie Pulcherie BÉLANGER, was born and baptized 13 June 1865 in Notre-Dame de la Victoire, Lévis, Québec. She died on 6 and was buried on 8 July 1888 in St-Julien de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec.(2)

viii. Emilie Camille BÉLANGER (2), was born and baptized 12 May 1867 in St-Bernard, Dorchester, Québec. She married Theodule Brochu on 28 October 1889 in St-Julien de Wolfeston, Wolfe Co, Que. She was buried on 16 December 1931 at Biddeford, York Co, Maine. (2)

ix. Georgina BÉLANGER was born and baptized on 14 April 1869 in St-Bernard, Dorchester, Québec. She died on 25 and was buried on 27 January 1887 in St-Julien, Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. (2)

x. Marie Delima BÉLANGER was born and baptized on 7 June 1871 in Saint Bernard, Dorchester. She died on 22 and was buried on 23 January 1887 in St. Juline de Wolfestown, Co. Wolfe, Québec. (2)

xi. Anne Obéline BÉLANGER was born on 13 and baptized on 15 September 1873 in Saint Patrice, Beaurivage, Co. Lotbinière, Québec. She died on 7 and was buried on 8 October 1873 in Saint Patrice. (2)

Please note: This is my theory: This is the record of Cyrille mistakely omitted in the Parish Register of Ste-Marie de Beauce 
Family: Georges Belanger / Camille Dallaire (F842)
 
255 E-link with information on Anne Marie (1) may be located at:

http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Claude_Boudreau&pid=7783&lng=en&partID=7782 
Thibodeau, Anne Marie (1) (I33017)
 
256 E-link:

http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/tibaudeau_pierre_2E.html

TIBAUDEAU (Thibaudeau, Thibodeau), PIERRE, miller, settler, founder of the Acadian family of that name; b. 1631 in the province of Poitou; d. 26 Dec. 1704 at Prée-Ronde.

Tibaudeau arrived in 1654 in Acadia and married Jeanne Terriot around 1660. Being a miller, he settled and built a mill near Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.), in a canton called Prée-Ronde, and soon became prosperous.

Tibaudeau is noteworthy particularly as the founder of Chipoudy (Shepody, N.B.). At an advanced age, he decided to acquire a seigneurial domain, and in the spring of 1698, with four of his sons and a comrade, he chose his site at Chipoudy. Guillaume Blanchard and two of his sons accompanied them there, then settled on the Petitcodiac.

A legal dispute arose which threatened his plan when an officer from Port-Royal, Claude-Sébastien de Villieu, asserted that the domains claimed by Tibaudeau and Blanchard formed part of the fief belonging to his father-in-law, Michel Leneuf de La Vallière (the elder). The case was referred to Paris, but this did not stop Pierre Tibaudeau from carrying on with the task of beginning a settlement. The final verdict did not reach Acadia until after the pioneer?s death. A decree of the Conseil d?État dated 2 June 1705, defining more precisely that of 20 March 1703, confirmed La Vallière?s claims. The dream of a seigneury at Chipoudy was dispelled. Nevertheless, the pioneers retained possession of their ?lands and inheritances,? and the settlement was able to develop: the 1706 census listed 55 persons at Chipoudy, and that of 1752, 359.

A daughter of the founder, Jeanne, had married the Sieur Mathieu de Goutin, naval commissary at Port-Royal and civil administrator; he wrote several letters or reports about the litigation between La Vallière and the Chipoudy settlers, and they constitute a valuable source of documentation concerning Pierre Tibaudeau.

Clément Cormier


[Historians have used as one of their main sources for this period Rameau de Saint-Père?s work, Une colonie féodale, which contains an interesting chapter on Pierre Tibaudeau. After years of genealogical research Placide Gaudet pointed out some errors in the family relationships described in the chapter in question. In a letter to Msgr Louis-A. Richard of Trois-Rivières, he stigmatized them as ?pure invention concerning the old miller?s children.? Gaudet attributed these errors to the fact that Rameau had only the censuses to guide him. In preparing this biography and that of Jean-François Brossard errors in Rameau have been indicated, for example the two alleged marriages of Brossard?s daughters, the first one with Pierre Tibaudeau, the other with Jacques Martin, neither of which took place. c.c.]

AN, Col., B, 27, f.153; C11D, 2, f.126; 3, ff.225?26; 4, ff.178?83; 5, ff.81?83; Section Outre-Mer, G1, 466 (Recensements de l?Acadie, 1671, 1686, 1693, 1698, 1700, 1703). PANS, MS docs., XXVI (parish register of Port-Royal, 26 Dec. 1704). P.-G. Roy, Inv. concessions, IV, 108. Placide Gaudet, ?Notes généalogiques? (preserved in PAC and Archives de l?Université de Moncton). Arsenault, Hist. et généal. des Acadiens, I, 518. Geneviève Massignon, Les parlers français d?Acadie, enquête linguistique (2v., Paris, 1962). E. C. Wright, The Petitcodiac: a study of the New Brunswick river and of the people who settled along it (Sackville, N.B., 1945), 6?14. Ganong, ?Historic sites in New Brunswick,? 308, 316. Placide Gaudet, ?Les ancêtres de feu l?honorable Sénateur Joseph Rosaire Thibaudeau,? Moniteur Acadien (Moncton), 8 juillet 1909. L. Jore, ?Mes ancêtres acadiens,? SGCF Mémoires, VI (1955), 270?71. P.-G. Roy, ?La famille Thibaudeau,? BRH, XXXVIII (1932), 65?67.

Reference:
Cite This Article

Clément Cormier, ?TIBAUDEAU, PIERRE,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 2, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed March 26, 2015, http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/tibaudeau_pierre_2E.html.
The citation above shows the format for footnotes and endnotes according to the Chicago manual of style (16th edition). Information to be used in other citation formats:

Permalink: http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/tibaudeau_pierre_2E.html
Author of Article: Clément Cormier
Title of Article: TIBAUDEAU, PIERRE
Publication Name: Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 2
Publisher: University of Toronto/Université Laval
Year of publication: 1969
Year of revision: 1982
Access Date: March 26, 2015 
Thibodeau, Pierre (I33023)
 
257 Early French Canadian Pioneers: The Thibodeaus Of Quebec ? Links Restored

http://acanadianfamily.wordpress.com/2011/02/16/french-canadian-pioneer-genealogy-the-thibodeaus-of-quebec-canadian-family/

http://acanadianfamily.wordpress.com/tag/thibodeau/

 
Miet, Marie (I39252)
 
258 Église paroissiale Saint-Barthélemy were Jean Vivien was christened and birth records are to be found:

E-Link
http://inventairenf.cieq.ulaval.ca:8080/inventaire/oneLieu.do;jsessionid=03B57C7D7B5FC32D09BCC8F40EA09470?refLieu=177&returnForward=%2FonePersonnage.do%3FrefPersonnage%3D1040%26ascPersonnageLie%3Dtrue%26sortPropPersonnageLie%3DperiodeConcernee

 
vivien, jean (I2372)
 
259 Eloi Dion had 2 spouses:

Link to these data found at:
http://records.ancestry.com/Eloi_Dion_records.ashx?pid=35354357

Born to Guillaume Dion and Genevieve Carrier. Eloi married Marie Josette Tanguay and had 3 children. Eloi married Angele Leblanc and had 6 children.


 
DION, Eloi (P117)
 
260 Embarquâe au port de Rochefort sur le navire "Hâeros" en 1731. Il âetait envoyâe de la prison de Saumur oáu il avait âetâe mis pour fabrication ou transport/contrebande ou vente de sel qui âetait illâegal puisque des taxes âelevâees âetaient prâelevâees sur sa vente par la province. Rabouin, Michel (I779)
 
261 Family Records Source (S-2122291884)
 
262 Feb 9, 1981
422 West 31st ST, Brooklyn NY
Father's Name: Frederick W. Simons Age 31
Occupation: undertaker
Mother's Name: Elizabeth M Simons Age 25
Number of Previous children: 2
How Many now living: 2
Mother's Madien Name: Elizabeth M Walsh
Mother's Birthplace: New Jersey 
Source (S-2128644546)
 
263 Francoise Comeau was previously married to:
Francoise Comeau was married to Antoine Brun this union resulted in the following children:

Where Gender
1735-10-24 Port-Royal Francois M Magdelaine Dupuy

1740-01-25 Port-Royal Anne-Marie F Joseph Dupuis

1742-01-22 Port-Royal Marie-Joseph F Joseph Lor

1742-01-22 Port-Royal Jean-Baptiste M Marguerite Gaudet 
Comeau, Francoise (I2146)
 
264 Frank F. McDonald's Obiturary Source (S-2122809419)
 
265 Gâerant de banque Molson Lawlor, Thomas (I1690)
 
266 General Info (i.e., DOB, Death, )see web site below:

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~etoilus/n3473.htm#28347

Notes
STEBBENS Thankful-Louise-Therese
Arbre d'ascendance Arbre de descendance Chronogramme
Père : STEBBENS John (1647 - 1724) (Age à la naissance de l'enfant : 44 ans)
Mère : ALEXANDER Dorothee (1660 - 1733) (Age à la naissance de l'enfant : 31 ans)
Freres/Soeurs :
STEBBENS Abigail-Marguerite (1684 )
Naissance :
Date : 5 septembre 1691
Lieu : Grande-Bretagne - Deerfield,Massachusetts,NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE
Baptême religieux enfant :
Date : 23 avril 1707 (15 ans)
Lieu : Chambly,,,,QUEBEC
Décès :
Date : juillet 1729 (38 ans)
Lieu : Chambly,,,,QUEBEC
Sépulture :
Date : 17 juillet 1729 (37 ans)
Lieu : Chambly,,,,QUEBEC
Prénom : Thankful-Louise-Therese
Nom de famille : STEBBENS
Information de famille :
avec LEGRAIN\LAVALLEE Adrien-Charles (1688) :
Mariage :
Type : Mariage religieux
Date : 4 février 1711 (19 ans)
Lieu : Boucherville Chambly,,,,QUEBEC
enfant :
LEGRAIN\GRAIN Marie (1718 Chambly,,,,QUEBEC - 1742 Pointe-Olivier,,St-Mathias,Cte Rouville,QUEBEC)

STEBBINS Rowland
Arbre de descendance Chronogramme
Naissance :
Date : 1594
Lieu : Grande-Bretagne - Bocking Parish,ANGLETERRE
Décès :
Date : 14 décembre 1671 (77 ans)
Lieu : Grande-Bretagne - Northampton,Massachusetts,NOUVELLE-ANGLETERRE
Prénom : Rowland
Nom de famille : STEBBINS
Information de famille :
avec WHITING Anne-Sarah (1591 - 1649) :
Mariage :
Type : Mariage religieux
Lieu : Grande-Bretagne - Essex County,ANGLETERRE
enfant :
STEBBENS John (1626 - 1679 )

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Census Records | Vital Records | Family Trees & Communities | Immigration Records

 
Family: Adrien Legrain / Louise-Therese Stebbins (F95)
 
267 General Infomation on Pierre:

+ JEANNE PIERRE THIBODEAU THÉRIAULT "Born in France to 1631. were said Martaizé native parish of the lordship of Aulnay in Loudunais, Haut Poitou, province of Vienna or St. Etienne de Marans, near La Rochelle. It could also come from the Vendée, around St-Jacques the Moutiers Mauxfaits. March 25, 1654, Emmanuel THE BLIND OF BELLE ISLE, charters a ship, Châteaufort, ship armed for war with another merchant of La Rochelle, the Sieur Guibeau and controlled by the latter. Pierre was hired by THE BLIND as stable colon. Sometimes in Canada at the end of May 1654. THE BLIND, Senior creditor of Charles d'Aulnay, a leading colonizers of Acadia and died two years ago, seizes several establishments and takes possession of the same year, Port Royal. (Peter Vincent, the ancestor of Clement, husband Yvette Thibodeau, was, according to the Father Lanctôt omi on the same ferry.) Here I must mention the father Lanctôt: ".... Châteaufort, armed for war, made ??available by Le Borgne partner, the Duke of Vendôme, from La Rochelle March 25, 1654. It carries on board some new settlers, Pierre Vincent and Michel Richard, laborers, and Pierre Thibodeau, miller. It is also loaded with supplies, weapons and ammunition, which is valued at 75,000 pounds ($ 15,000). The yacht of 300 tons arrived at Port-Royal in mid-May 1654. " "Two months after the arrival of Peter" (Thibodeau) "in Canada, July 31, 1654, although one is in full-time peace, an English fleet, commanded by Major Robert Sedgwick, appeared before Port Royal: it is composed of three warships and a ketch (two masts sailboat) carrying 500 soldiers. Sedgwick arrives Fort St. John River, which he seized and where he was taken prisoner Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour, governor of Acadia, after two weeks of stubborn resistance, despite its small garrison 120 men, Germain Doucet dit La Verdure, commander of Port-Royal, to capitulate. The French garrison and its commander and Le Borgne, are returned to France aboard Châteauford. After the departure of the French garrison, the British also left Port Royal, leaving no garrison people govern themselves by a Board chaired by a trustee, Guillaume Trahan. " Pierre Thibeaudeau acquires a wide land grant "in-the-top of the Dauphin River", near Port Royal. The site is called Pree-Ronde or "Village Thibeaudeau." It is located ten miles from the mouth of River Port Royal, in the heart of the valley of the same name. The site is now known as Round Hill, Nova Scotia. He set a house with farm buildings and a grist mill and boards, powered by near rivers called "Des-Loups-Marins." title miller of Pree-Ronde is renowned. 1659, Pierre married Terriau Joan, daughter of Jean and Perrine BOURG. Joan was born in 1644 Port-Royal. His father, born in 1601, hails from Martaizé. He married in France in 1635 and arrived in Canada around 1637. Their son Pierre, brother of Joan, is the origin of the establishment of the Grand Pré (Saint-Charles les Mines and St. Joseph River Duck). Marchand furs, colonizer, farmer, miller, and sawyer opener establishment Pierre Thibeaudeau founded with his son, the village of Chipoudie (now Riverside-Albert, New Brunswick). They erected a church on the site known today as the Church creek and a flour mill where now stands Mill creek. They also participate in the development of Trois-Rivières or region Chipoudie, Peticoudiac and Memramcouche. Pierre would have obtained the Governor of New France, M. de Frontenac, June 20, 1695, a grant of the lordship of Kaouaskagouche ( Vraskagache) between Desires and Majois Mountains in Acadia (now in Maine). This area is located along the Kennebec River and is 2 miles (8 km) deep and 1 mile (2 km) on each side of the river, including the islands. In 1699, Peter bought a sawmill that he brought from Boston. He moved in 1700 to Chipoudie. The dealership he claims in this area is 2.5 km on each side of the river and 10 km depth. Difficulties with the lord of Beaubassin, M. de la Valliere will ensure that it will never get the titles and privileges of that territory. M. de la Valliere claims the place and has more influence with the French royal authority. the census of 1671, Peter is 40 years old and Joan 27. They have six children: Mary Elder, age 10, the youngest Marie, 9, the youngest Marie, 7, Anne-Marie Elder, 6, Catherine, 4 years and Peter Senior, 1 year. They have 12 cattle and 11 sheep. Their arable land measuring 7 acres. Census 1686, Peter aged 55 and Joan 43. Their 14 children live with them: Mary Elder, 25, the youngest daughter Marie, 23 years old, the youngest Marie, 21, Anne-Marie Elder, 20, Catherine, 19, Peter Senior, 16 years, Jeanne, 14, Jean-Pierre, 13, Anthony, 12, Peter the youngest, aged 10, Michael, 8, Cecilia, 6 years, Anne-Marie Louise, 4 years, Claude, 2 years. They have one rifle, 10 acres arable, 14 cattle and 5 sheep. . the census of 1693, Pierre was 62 and Joan 50. They have seven children at home: Antoine Pierre Cadet, 15, Michael, 13, Cecilia, 11 years, Anne-Marie-Louise, age 10, Claude, 8, Catherine Joseph, 7 years and Charles, 7 years. They have 20 cattle, 30 sheep, 12 pigs, 2 guns and 30 acres tillable. Spring 1698, accompanied by his son Jean-Pierre Antoine, Pierre Cadet, Michel and his friend Pierre Gaudet, Pierre Thibeaudeau goes up 'at the eastern end of the Chignecto Bay in search of new lands to create Acadian settlements. They enter the basin Chipoudie, then go up the river Petitcoudiak exploring the banks. They make up even later Memramcouk the river. Returning Basin Chipoudie, they set up camp on the present site of Shepody, NB In July 1698, Peter left two of his son to Chipoudie Naxouat and goes to the top of the St. John River in the governor 'Then Mr. Villebon. He wants permission to establish new settlements in the region explored. returned to Port Royal, he organized a group of people willing to settle in the new region. Guillaume Blanchard and his two son, François Broussard, André and Jacques Martin, Jehan and Pierre Pitre are the number. Pierre wins flour for six months, tools, seeds, 2 oxen and 1 horse. late July 1698 upon arrival at Chipoudie, we organize the new facility by building a house, a barn and a barn in which are piled hay. Maliseet Indian, long Thibeaudeau partners in the fur trade, participate in the exploration of the hinterland in order to find a place to build a flour mill powered by the river . It works until late autumn. Buildings are closed. Maliseet settled on the spot for the winter. All Acadians returned to Port-Royal. Census In 1698, Pierre is 67 years old and Joan, 55. Children attending the Pree-Ronde: Jean-Pierre, 24, Anthony, 22, Pierre Cadet, 21, Michael, 19 years, Claude, 13 years, Catherine Joseph, 11, and Charles, age 7 . They have 20 cattle, 20 sheep, 8 pigs, 32 acres arable, 20 fruit trees and four guns. During winter 1698-1699, preparations are well underway to complete the foundation Chipoudie. Following spring, fresh start with his son and his companions to Chipoudie. It brings new provisions, four oxen and a herd of cows and sheep. Maliseet are still on site. It is plowing and sowing. Clearing and construction of buildings, the ditch and the sluice was continued. In the fall, we are preparing to fly to Port-Royal. Three of the son of Pierre Antoine, Pierre Michel and the younger, remain Chipoudie with Malecite trap. Upon arrival at Port-Royal, Peter learns that M. de la Valliere, seigneur of Beaubassin, claiming ownership of the territory newly discovered. Peter Nelson merchant buys Boston, the mechanisms of a flour mill and a sawmill. He returned to Chipoudie in the spring with his family. His companions the first time accompanying and 6 other boys committed to pay for 2 years. Three son are still there in the company of Maliseet. They carry ammunition and supplies of all kinds, the mechanisms of the two mills and a full backyard horses, cows, bull, pigs, chickens, geese, ducks, and? It is plowing and sowing and ditches and dikes is completed. The construction of another dam at the top of a waterfall is carried on a small rapid river which flows into the basin Chipoudie. This dam is designed to hold water and create a reservoir to supply the mills. It also builds locks to regulate the flow of water to the mills. In the fall of 1700, the two mills are in working order. Buildings are completed. Grasslands are bordered by 1,400 meters of ditches and dikes. To keep moving, it was planted young willow. Pierre returned to Port Royal with his wife and younger children. His son Antoine, Pierre and Michel Cadet remain on site as well as Pître and 6 men engaged brothers. the census of 1700, Peter and Joan 69 57. Children living with them are: Anne-Marie-Louise, 17, Catherine Joseph, 14, Claude, 13 and Charles, 11. They have 20 cattle, 28 sheep, 32 acres arable and 3 guns. Peter and Joan have 31 grandchildren son and 21 granddaughters. In nearly 60 years, the clan Thibeaudeau is composed of 70 people. Pierre overwinter next to the Pree-Ronde. In spring 1701, he sends supplies to Chipoudie through the brothers André and Jacques Martin and Jean Pitre, from marriage to Port Royal and returning with their wives to settle. On December 28, 1704, death of Pierre Thibeaudeau the Pree-Ronde at the age of 73 years. June 2, 1705, the State Council confirms ownership by Mr. de la Valliere land in question and still protects the rights of Acadians who settled there. On 12 July 1707, Joan Terriau donated all his property to his children (document in the Archives of France and its colonies). At the census of 1714, Joan is 71 years old and lives in Pree-Ronde with his son Charles, 25. Joan has at least 48 small-son, 52 granddaughters, 15 great-grandchildren and 10 great-son granddaughters. Several of his children died. Terriau Joan died at Port-Royal, December 8, 1726, at the age of 83. September 1, 1755, the British burned Chipoudie. More than 80 homes and 100 other buildings were burned. Women and children (30) were taken prisoner. NB The foregoing was written by Maurice Thibodeau which I added an excerpt from the work of the Father Lanctôt. I wanted to show that our ancestors had two traveled together in 1654. Mr. Thibodeau is the author of an excellent documentary on "internet", concerning the family of Pierre Thibodeau.
 
Thibodeau, Pierre (I33023)
 
268 Grand son of Harriet McDonald Source (S-2122803420)
 
269 Grave stone link:

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=100792211 
INKEL, Guy Marcel (P30)
 
270 He was the first Jean Vivien in the family line. They were the first documented Jeans in the family line in Petit Fe Tilly, n.w. in the town of La Rochelle, France. Vivien married Marthe Joslain around 1605 in La Rochelle, France, born in 1580. They lived in La Rochelle, France.

Marthe owned a lease on a small farm. The farm was called Petit Fe Tilly. The farm was near a small market town of ancient origin and is situated northwest of the city of La Rochelle, in the St.Maurice Parish. Later, the land passed on to the Beauharmois family. The estate of Petit Fe Tilly, which liees at the city limits of La Rochelle, near Joan of Arc church, can be viewed today. La Rochelle is the capital of charente-Maritime, was establiched in the 12th century. The register and legal transactions at city hall in La Rochelle, France. The Jean family can be traced back to as early as 1635.

More About Vivien Jean:
Occupation: "laboureur a boeufs". 
Joslain, Marthe (I2384)
 
271 HIBODEAU, JEAN-BAPTISTE Pierre
GRAMPS ID I01936
Birth Name THIBODEAU, JEAN-BAPTISTE Pierre 1 2 3
Also Known As Thibodeaux, Jean
Also Known As THIBODEAU, Jean-Baptiste 4 5 6
Gender male
Events
Birth 1673-00-00 7 8 9
Death 1746-12-12 at Riviere aux Canards (Grand-Pre), Kings Co., NS, Canada 10 11 12
Parents
Father THIBODEAU, PIERRE (I) [I01031] (Birth)
Mother THERIAULT, JEANNE [I01030] (Birth)
Siblings THIBODEAU, Marie [I01939]
THIBODEAU, Marie Catherine [I03088]
THIBODEAUX, Marie (DIT Lejeune) [I03089]
THIBODEAU, Marie Jeanne [I01935]
THIBODEAU, Anne-Marie (DITE l'Ainee) [I03091]
THIBODEAU, CATHERINE-JOSEPH [I02160]
THIBODEAU, Pierre (DIT l'aine) [I01934]
THIBODEAU, Jeanne [I03092]
THIBODEAU, Antoine [I01937]
THIBODEAU, Pierre (II) [I01938]
THIBODEAU, Michel [I01940]
THIBODEAU, Cecile [I03093]
THIBODEAU, Anne-Marie-Louise [I03094]
THIBODEAU, Claude [I01941]
THIBODEAU, Catherine [I03095]
THIBODEAU, Charles [I03096]
THIBODEAU, Joseph [I03097]

Families
Married Wife HEBERT, MARGUERITE [I01942]
Marriage Marriage of THIBODEAU, JEAN-BAPTISTE Pierre and HEBERT, MARGUERITE, 1702-02-17 at Port Royal, Annapolis Co., NS, Canada 13 14 15
Children THIBODEAUX, M-Madeleine [I04797]
THIBODEAU, Jean-Baptiste (Cramatte) [I01943]
THIBODEAU, Germain [I04798]
THIBODEAU, CHARLES [I06378]
THIBODEAU, Cecile [I03110]
THIBODEAU, Olivier [I04801]
THIBODEAU, Elizabeth [I04802]
THIBODEAU, Joseph [I04803]
THIBODEAU, Joseph [I12194]
THIBODEAU, Anne [I04804]
Source References
1. DC0270 Payeur Lafreniere (LPayeur) [S003804]
Confidence: Normal
2. Cole5H17.GED [S001643]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Apr 11, 2004
3. E_Cole5H17.GED [S215074]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Aug 19, 2005
4. DC0016 Early Acadians eg Cyr (Horman) [S001753]
Confidence: Normal
5. Cole5H17.GED [S001643]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Apr 11, 2004
6. E_Cole5H17.GED [S215074]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Aug 19, 2005
7. DC0016 Early Acadians eg Cyr (Horman) [S001753]
Confidence: Normal
8. Cole5H17.GED [S001643]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Apr 11, 2004
9. E_Cole5H17.GED [S215074]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Aug 19, 2005
10. DC0016 Early Acadians eg Cyr (Horman) [S001753]
Confidence: Normal
11. Cole5H17.GED [S001643]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Apr 11, 2004
12. E_Cole5H17.GED [S215074]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Aug 19, 2005
13. DC0016 Early Acadians eg Cyr (Horman) [S001753]
Confidence: Normal
14. Cole5H17.GED [S001643]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Apr 11, 2004
15. E_Cole5H17.GED [S215074]
Confidence: Normal
Text: Date of Import: Aug 19, 2005
Pedigree
THIBODEAU, PIERRE (I)
THERIAULT, JEANNE
THIBODEAU, Marie
THIBODEAU, Marie Catherine
THIBODEAUX, Marie (DIT Lejeune)
THIBODEAU, Marie Jeanne
THIBODEAU, Anne-Marie (DITE l'Ainee)
THIBODEAU, CATHERINE-JOSEPH
THIBODEAU, Pierre (DIT l'aine)
THIBODEAU, Jeanne
THIBODEAU, JEAN-BAPTISTE Pierre
HEBERT, MARGUERITE
THIBODEAUX, M-Madeleine
THIBODEAU, Jean-Baptiste (Cramatte)
THIBODEAU, Germain
THIBODEAU, CHARLES
THIBODEAU, Cecile
THIBODEAU, Olivier
THIBODEAU, Elizabeth
THIBODEAU, Joseph
THIBODEAU, Joseph
THIBODEAU, Anne
THIBODEAU, Antoine
THIBODEAU, Pierre (II)
THIBODEAU, Michel
THIBODEAU, Cecile
THIBODEAU, Anne-Marie-Louise
THIBODEAU, Claude
THIBODEAU, Catherine
THIBODEAU, Charles
THIBODEAU, Joseph 
Thibodeau, Jean-Baptiste dit Cramatte (I2199)
 
272 His house #39 listed on page 26 of history blue book still stood in 1995. Pierre Thibodeau arrived between 1632 & 1636 (Research): On july 20 1695 Gov. De Frontenac granted him on Kennebec river in Maine two leagues deep and a league on each bank a seigniory, he also traded with indians. Pierre Thibodeau, of the Province of Poitou, France, was about 23 years old when he came to Acadia, (Nova Scotia, Canada) in 1654. He was indentured to Emmanuel Leborgne, a merchant from La Rochelle, France. Thibodeau sought his fortune in the new land. After his indenture was completed, he married Jeanne Terriot, whose family had come to Acadia, (Nova Scotia, Canada) much earlier. The census of 1671 lists Thibodeau, as a "ploughsman," age40, as having moved from Port Royal to Pre Ronde. He and his wife had five daughters and one son. In time he added a grist mill to his marshland farm and a sawmill to his brookside holdings. His family grew to 16 children, seven sons and nine daughters. He had 159 grandchildren, more than half of whom were descendents of the seven Thibodeau brothers. Four of the boys Pierre l'Aisne, Pierre, Michel and Charles were part of the "Grand Derangement" or deportation of the Acadians in 1755. They eventually settled in the Bayou LaFourche area and the Opelousas in Louisianna.

Pierre Thibodeau & Jeanne Theriot had 20 children. In 1704 Pierre's occuption was Miller at Pree Roude. 
Thibodeau, Pierre (I33023)
 
273 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family: Joseph Broussard dit Beausoliel / Agnès Thibodeau (F852)
 
274 http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1913&dat=19741108&id=_54gAAAAIBAJ&sjid=jGgFAAAAIBAJ&pg=1107,1283141

WED 5O YEARS - Mr. and Mrs. Lionel Routhier celebrated their golden wedding anniversary recently at a party at the Marcotte Nursing Home where Mrs. Routhier is a patient. A special cake, decorated in white with golden leaves was served with wine and the couple received flowers, gifts and many cards. Mrs. Routhier was presented an orchid corsage and Mr. Routhier, a carnation boutonniere.

Mr. Routhier and thee former Aldea Viens were married Nov. 5, 1924, at St. Malo, Que. and have resided in this commumty for 33 years. Their resIdence is 25 Fair St., Lewiston, and Mr. Routhier is a retired carpenter. They have four daughters, Georgette Smith, Hawaii; Annette Burns. Milpitas, Calif.; Pierrette Fosnot, McLean, Va., and Renette Larock, Auburn. Mrs. Fosnot and Mrs. Larock were present for the happy occasion and Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Burns joined in the festivities by telephone. There are also six grandchIldren.

All the patients on D-4 at the Home were party guests and Rev. J.J. Dorion officiated at a special Mass in their honor.



from the Lewiston Evening Journal - Nov 8, 1974 
Family: Lionel ROUTHIER / Aldea VIENS (F938)
 
275 http://search.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/sse.dll?rank=1&new=1&MSAV=0&msT=1&gss=angs-g&gsfn=Edward&gsln=Fosnot&msdpn__ftp=SC&pcat=ROOT_CATEGORY&h=40137180&db=FindAGraveUS&indiv=1&ml_rpos=2 Fosnot, Edward (I2425)
 
276 http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/ViewPhoto.aspx?tid=4264500&pid=-1610093581&oid=1e625aa8-8c11-46d5-bbf9-76d9015bd96c&pg=0 Source (S-2122313964)
 
277 http://www.spsj.org/history.htm Repository (R-1780685348)
 
278 http://www.spsj.org/history.htm Repository (R-1780685347)
 
279 http://www.spsj.org/history.htm Source (S-1700232251)
 
280 http://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Thibodeau-30

he Acadian Thibodeau family stems from one man, Pierre Thibodeau. He was a miller who was born in France around 1631. His origins and date of arrival in Acadia are unknown.[1]

Around 1660 Pierre married Jeanne Thériot, daughter of Jean Thériot and Perrine Reau,[2] in Port Royal Acadia[4] (Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada).

Between about 1661 and 1689, the couple had 16 children:[2]

Marie b. c1661, m. c1681 Antoine Landry (son of Rene & Marie Bernard), d. St-Charles-des-Mines Acadie bef 16 Feb 1711;
Marie b.c1663, m. Port Royal before 1678 Census, Pierre Lejeune dit Briard (Pierre & Unknown Doucet);
Marie b.c1664, m. after 1686 Census, Charles Robichaud dit Cadet (son of Etienne & Francoise Boudrot), d. before 9 Jun 1703;
Anne-Marie b. c1666, m. c1682 Claude Boudrot (son of Michel & Michelle Aucoin), d. between 1698 & 1700;
(Marie-)Catherine, b. c1667, m. c1684 Claude Landry (son of Rene & Marie Bernard), d. before 11 Nov 1721;
Pierre the elder, b. c1670, m.c1690 Anne-Marie Bourg (daughter of Jean & Marguerite Martin), d. Pisiguit;
Jeanne, b. c1672, m. c1689 Mathieu de Goutin, died/buried Louisbourg 7/8 Apr 1741;
Jean, b. c1674, m. Port Royal 7 Feb 1703 Marguerite Hebert (daughter of Emmanuel & Andree Brun), d. Grand Pre Acadia, 9 Dec 1746
Antoine, b. c1676, m. Port Royal 8 Oct 1703 Marie Prejean (daughter of Jean and Andree Savoie), d. between 19 Nov 1753 and 6 Nov 1758;
Pierre the younger, b. c1678, m. Port Royal 25 Nov 1706 Anne-Marie Aucoin (daughter of Martin and Marie Gaudet), d. before 14 Oct 1734;
Michel, b. c1680, m. Port Royal 13 Nov 1704 Agnes Dugas (daughter of Claude and Francoise Bourgeois), d./buried Port Royal 27/28 Nov 1734;
Cécile, b. c1680, m. c1698 Emmanuel Le Borgne de Belisle (son of Alexandre and Marie de Saint-Etienne de La Tour);
Anne-Marie b. c1682, m. c1697 Charles D?Amours de Louvieres (son of Mathieu and Marie Marsolet), widower of Marie-Anne Genaple, d. Hotel-Dieu de Quebec, 2 Sep 1720;
Claude, b. c1685, m. Port Royal 5 Nov 1709 Elisabeth (Isabelle) Comeau (daughter of Pierre the elder and Jeanne Bourg);
Catherine-Josèphe, b. c1686, m. Port Royal 17 Feb 1705 Guillaume Bourgeois (son of Germain & Madeleine Belliveau) widower of Marguerite Mius de Pleinmarais; and
Charles b. c1689, m. Port Royal, Acadia 19 Dec 1715 Francoise Comeau (daughter of Pierre the elder and Jeanne Bourg), buried Port Lajoie, Ile Royal (Prince Edward Island) 12 Aug 1756.

Pierre was a founder of Chipoudy:

"In 1698 Pierre Thibaudeau, a resident of Port Royal, began his settlement at Shepody... A miller of Pré Ronde... he and his sons explored the Shepody area in the first year... The first wintering by three of the Thibaudeau's sons was in 1699/1700, when they did very well trading furs with the Indians. De Villieu heard of the activity and immediately protested that they were on his father-in-law's seigneurie without permission, although the precise boundaries of La Vallière's grant are almost impossible to determine from the wording of the concession. Thibaudeau had dreamed of a seigneurie of his own, like that of his old friend Mathieu Martin at Cobequid... but showed a willingness to compromise which de Villieu declined. When in 1702 de Villieu himself was willing to compromise, the Thibaudeau group, beleiving that a petition of their own to Paris would succeed, in turn refused. Indeed they were confident enough of success to invest a great deal of effort in dyking, building sluices (aboiteaux), and even erecting a grist-and-saw mill with machinery from New England. In 1703 they had their lands confirmed but "without prejudice" to the rights of La Vallière. The old man died thinking himself a true seigneur but, in an arrêt of June 2, 1705, the Thibaudeau's right to the land was expressly granted as a concession from La Vallière's seigneurie. Officially, the Thibaudeaus could not extend their lands, nor could others settle without assuming the legal position and charges consequent to being censitaires of the seigneur of Beaubassin. In 1702 there appear to have been seven households at Shepody (roughly thirty-three people)."[5]

At the time of his death[2], Pierre was living at Pré Rond Marsh[3] on the south bank of the Annapolis (Dauphin) River east of the fort.

Pierre died at Port-Royal on December 26 1704.[2]
Timeline

c1631 birth, in France

1632 Treaty Saint-Germain-en-Laye cedes Acadia to France; Razilly brings ~300 elite men[6]
1636 Arrival of the first French families to settle permanantly[4]

1654 British capture Port-Royal; French settlement ceases[7]

c1660 marriage to Jeanne Thériot
c1661 birth, daughter Marie
c1663 birth, daughter Marie
c1664 birth, daughter Marie
c1666 birth, daughter Anne-Marie
c1667 birth, daughter Marie-Catherine

1667-70 Treaty of Breda cedes Acadia to the French; settlement resumes[8]
1670?s-1690?s Available farmland decreases; some leave Port-Royal to establish new villages: Beaubassin (1671); Grand-Pré and Pigiguit (1680); Chipoudie (1698), and Cobeguit and Petcoudiac (1699).[9]

c1670 birth, son Pierre the elder
1671 residence, in Port-Royal
c1672 birth, son Jeanne
c1674 birth, son Jean, in Port-Royal
c1676 birth, son Antoine
1678 residence, in Port-Royal
c1678 birth, son Pierre the younger
c1680 birth, son Michel
c1680 birth, daughter Cécile
c1682 birth, daughter Anne-Marie
c1685 birth, son Claude
1686 residence, in Port-Royal
c1686 birth, daughter Catherine-Josèphe

1687 War of the League of Augsburg (King William?s War) starts between England and France[10]

c1689 birth, son Charles

1690 Phipps captures and sacks Port-Royal, coerces inhabitants' oaths of allegiance to English Crown, sets up local Peacekeeping Council and leaves within 12 days.[11][12][13] Seaman from two ships later loot and burn between 28 and 35 homes/habitations including the parish church.[14]?

1693 residence, in Port-Royal

1693 Port-Royal raid with looting and burning.[14]
1697 Treaty of Ryswick restores Acadia to France; Port-Royal is its capital[14]

1698 residence, in Port-Royal
1698 founder, Chipoudy
1700-1701 residence, in Port-Royal

1702 War of the Spanish Succession (Queen Anne?s War) starts between England and France[14]

1703 residence, in Port-Royal

1704 Blockade of Port Royal; no destruction of houses but some inhabitants taken prisoner[14]

1704 death, in Port-Royal

Discussion

Origins and Parentage. Some family trees list parents: a) Mathurin Thibodeau and Marie Dobeau of ; or b) Pierre Thibodeau and location of birth as Marans, Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France. I have found no evidence to support these links and they have been disconnecting pending further proof.
Sources

1671 Acadian Census at Port Royal: Pierre THIBEAUDEAU, 40, wife Jeanne TERRIAU 27; Children: Pierre 1, Marie 10, Marie 9, Marie 7, Anne Marie 6, Catherine 4; cattle 12, sheep 11.

1678 Acadian Census at Port-Royal: Pierre Thibaudeau & Jeanne Terriot-12 acres, 30 cattle, 3 boys: age 11- born 1669, 7-1671, 5-1673: and 5 girls: 12-1666, 8-1670, 4-1674, 3-1675, 1-1677.

Ages from this census: Pierre TIBAUDEAU 55, Jeanne TERIOT 43, Marie 25, Marie 23, Marie 21, Catherine 19, Anne Marie 17, Pierre 16, Jeanne 14, Jean 13, Antoine 12, Pierre 10, Michel 8, Cecille 6, Anne Marie 4, Claude 2.

1686 Acadian Census at Port-Royal: Pierre TIBAUDEAU 55, Jeanne TERRIOT: 43; children: Marie 25, Marie 23, Marie 21, Catherine 19, Anne-Marie 16, Pierre 16, Jeanne 14, Jean 13, Antoine 12, Pierre 10, Michel 8, Cecille 6, Anne-Marie 4, Claude 2; 1 gun, 10 arpents, 14 cattle, 5 sheep, 7 hogs.

1693 Acadian census at Port-Royal: Pierre TIBAUDEAU 59, Jeanne TERRIOT 50, Anthoine 17, Pierre 15, Michel 13, Cecille 11, Marie 10, Claude 8, Catherine Josephe 7, Charles 4; 20 cattle, 30 sheep, 12 pigs, 30 arpents, 2 guns

1698 Acadian census at Port-Royal: Pierre TIBAUDEAU 65; Jeanne TERRIOT (wife) 57; Jean 24; Antoine 22; Pierre 21; Michelle 19; Claude 13; Catherine 11; Charles 7; 20 cattle, 20 sheep, 8 hogs, 32 arpents, 20 fruit trees, 4 guns

1700 Acadian census at Port-Royal: Piere THIBAUDEAU 66; Jeanne TERRIOT (wife) 57; Anthoine 26; Piere 22; Michel 20; Claude 15; Charles 11; Marie 17; Catherine 14; 30 cattle, 28 sheep, 30 arpents, 3 guns.

1701 Acadian census at Port-Royal: Pierre TIBAUDEAU 71, Jeanne THIRIOT [Terriot] (wife) 50; Jean TIBAUDEAU 27, Anthoine 23, Pierre 21, Michel 19, Claude 16, Charles 13, Cecile 19, Catherine 14; 7 guns, 30 cattle, 25 sheep, 12 hogs, 19 arpents.

1703 Acadian census at Port-Royal: Pierre THIBAUDOT, his wife, 4 boys, 2 girls, 4 arms bearers.

1714 Acadian census at Port-Royal: The Widow THIBODEAU, 1 son.

Footnotes

? 1.0 1.1 1.2 White, Stephen A. La généalogie des trente-sept familles hôtesses des "Retrouvailles 94", Les Cahiers de la Société historique acadienne, vol. 25, nos 2 et 3 (1994). (Thibodeau)
? 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 White, Stephen A., Patrice Gallant, and Hector-J Hébert. Dictionnaire Généalogique Des Familles Acadiennes. Moncton, N.-B.: Centre D'études Acadiennes, Université De Moncton, 1999, Print, p1508-1511.
? 3.0 3.1 1707 homestead location of their children at Pré Rond Marsh. In Au Coeur de l'Acadie Acadian Settlement on the Annapolis River 1707 Map Parks Canada
? 4.0 4.1 Massignon, Geneviève. "Les parlers français d'Acadie, enquête linguistique", Librairie Klincksieck, Paris, 1962, 2 tomes, p32 (first French families in Acadia) p51 (Thibaudeau family; marriage in Port Royal.
? Clark, Andrew Hill, Acadia; the geography of early nova Scotia to 1760. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1968. p145 (Thibodeau founder of Chipoudy-Shepody)
? George MacBeath, Biography ? RAZILLY, ISAAC DE ? Volume I (1000-1700) ? Dictionary of Canadian Biography Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20
? William I. Roberts, 3rd, ?SEDGWICK, ROBERT,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20, 2013
? In collaboration, ?MORILLON DU BOURG,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20, 2013
? Pioneer Families, in 1755 l'Histoire et les Histoires, University of Moncton
? Griffiths, Naomi E.S., From migrant to Acadian : a North-American border people, 1604-1755, Montreal (Québec), McGill-Queen's University Press, 2005, p147-151 (King William?s War); p 267-268 (oaths of allegiance)
? C.P.Stacey, ?PHIPS, SIR WILLIAM,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed November 20, 2013
? Biography of William Phipps
? C.Bruce Fergusson,?LA TOURASSE, CHARLES,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed November 20, 2013
? 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Dunn, Brenda. A History of Port Royal / Annapolis Royal 1605-1800. Nimbus Publishing, p vii,ix,1-12 (early European settlement); p13 (1629 Food abundance Scottish settlement); p32 (Church and School 1686));p 40,43 (1693 PR raid); p44-45 (1697 Treaty of Ryswick); p52-53(1702 Queen Anne?s War); p61-62 (Blockade of PR); p 71-73(1707 Attack on PR); p82-85(1710 Siege of PR).


Note

Note: THIBODEAU, Pierre, n 1631 [R1671], [R1686], laboureur en 1671, , peut-ãetre originaire de Martaizâe (Vienne), peut-ãetre arrivâe entre 1632 et 1636 [RR p. 73], n 1633 [R1699], n 1630 [R1701]

TERRIAU, Jeanne, n 1644 [R1671] ou 1643 [R1686] (Jean & Perrine BOURG) [R1671-M], n 1642 [R1699]
1. Marie, n 1661 [R1671], [R1686], prob. m Pierre LE JEUNE dit BRIAR [R1671+R1686]
2. Marie, n 1662/1663 [R1671:8 áa 9] ou 1663 [R1686]
3. Marie, n 1664 [R1671] ou 1665 [R1686]
4. Anne-Marie, n 1665 [R1671] ou 1666/1669 [R1686], m Claude BOUDROT [R1671+R1686]
5. Catherine, n 1667 [R1671], [R1686]
6. Pierre, n 1670 [R1671], [R1686], m 1706 Marie Anne AUCOIN [ACR-3]
7. Jeanne, n 1672 [R1686]
8. Jean, n 1673 [R1686], n 1674 [R1701]
9. Antoine, n 1674 [R1686], n 1675 [R1699], n 1678 [R1701]
10. Pierre, n 1676 [R1686], n 1677 [R1699], n 1680 [R1701]
11. Michel, n 1678 [R1686], n 1679 [R1699], n 1682 [R1701]
12. Câecile, n 1680 [R1686], n 1682 [R1701]
13. Anne-Marie, n 1682 [R1686], n 1682 [R1699]:Marie
14. Claude, n 1684 [R1686] [R1699], n 1685 [R1701]
15. Catherine, n 1685 [R1699], n 1687 [R1701]
16. Charles, n 1688 [R1699] [R1701]
VIGNIOT?, Jeanne, n 1651 [R1701]

Source: [Haut-Poitou] p. 95-96, peut-ãetre originaire de Martaizâe, mais non confirmâe (le patronyme existerait áa cet endroit), d'apráes Geneviáeve Massignon[15]

Source: Genealogy of Canada

Father Mathurin Thibodeau Mother Marie Dolbeau http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Pierre_Thibodeau&pid=7778&lng=en&partID=7779


Acknowledgments

Thank you to Joseph Bahan for creating WikiTree profile Thibodeaux-153 through the import of jbb_2009-03-10_2009-03-10_2013-11-30.ged on Nov 30, 2013. Click to the Changes page for the details of edits by Joseph and others.

Robert Babin, firsthand knowledge. Click the Changes tab for the details of edits by Robert and others.

Biography

This biography was auto-generated by a GEDCOM import.[16] It's a rough draft and needs to be edited.
Name

Name: PIERRE i /Thibodeaux/[17][18][19][20][21]

Birth

Birth:

Date: 1631
Place: Poitou, France[22][23][24]

Death

Death:

Date: 26 DEC 1704
Place: Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada[25][26]

Marriage

Marriage:

Date: 1660
Place: CA[27]

Object

Object:

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Format: jpg
Title: France

Object:

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Format: htm
Title: link

Object:

File: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=4b62ea72-a0ac-46f3-8e19-627006d21e13&tid=24683317&pid=993
Format: htm
Title: Pierre Thibodeau

Object:

File: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=document&guid=0ad21685-f1e2-44ae-81cc-8c9388b1c7de&tid=24683317&pid=993
Format: htm
Title: Pierre Thibodeaux

Marriage

Husband: PIERRE i Thibodeaux
Wife: @P992@
Child: Marie Thibodeaux

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Catherine Thibodeau

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Pierre Thibodeau

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Jeanne Thibodeau

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Pierre Thibodeau

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Pierre (Le Jeune) Thibodeaux

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: @P1020@

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Child: Claude Thibodeau

Relationship to Father: Natural
Relationship to Mother: Natural

Marriage:

Date: 1660
Place: Port Royal, Nova Scotia, Canada[28][29]

Sources

? 1.0 1.1 1.2 White, Stephen A. La généalogie des trente-sept familles hôtesses des "Retrouvailles 94", Les Cahiers de la Société historique acadienne, vol. 25, nos 2 et 3 (1994). (Thibodeau)
? 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 White, Stephen A., Patrice Gallant, and Hector-J Hébert. Dictionnaire Généalogique Des Familles Acadiennes. Moncton, N.-B.: Centre D'études Acadiennes, Université De Moncton, 1999, Print, p1508-1511.
? 3.0 3.1 1707 homestead location of their children at Pré Rond Marsh. In Au Coeur de l'Acadie Acadian Settlement on the Annapolis River 1707 Map Parks Canada
? 4.0 4.1 Massignon, Geneviève. "Les parlers français d'Acadie, enquête linguistique", Librairie Klincksieck, Paris, 1962, 2 tomes, p32 (first French families in Acadia) p51 (Thibaudeau family; marriage in Port Royal.
? Clark, Andrew Hill, Acadia; the geography of early nova Scotia to 1760. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1968. p145 (Thibodeau founder of Chipoudy-Shepody)
? George MacBeath, Biography ? RAZILLY, ISAAC DE ? Volume I (1000-1700) ? Dictionary of Canadian Biography Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20
? William I. Roberts, 3rd, ?SEDGWICK, ROBERT,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20, 2013
? In collaboration, ?MORILLON DU BOURG,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003?, accessed November 20, 2013
? Pioneer Families, in 1755 l'Histoire et les Histoires, University of Moncton
? Griffiths, Naomi E.S., From migrant to Acadian : a North-American border people, 1604-1755, Montreal (Québec), McGill-Queen's University Press, 2005, p147-151 (King William?s War); p 267-268 (oaths of allegiance)
? C.P.Stacey, ?PHIPS, SIR WILLIAM,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed November 20, 2013
? Biography of William Phipps
? C.Bruce Fergusson,?LA TOURASSE, CHARLES,? in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 1, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003, accessed November 20, 2013
? 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 14.4 Dunn, Brenda. A History of Port Royal / Annapolis Royal 1605-1800. Nimbus Publishing, p vii,ix,1-12 (early European settlement); p13 (1629 Food abundance Scottish settlement); p32 (Church and School 1686));p 40,43 (1693 PR raid); p44-45 (1697 Treaty of Ryswick); p52-53(1702 Queen Anne?s War); p61-62 (Blockade of PR); p 71-73(1707 Attack on PR); p82-85(1710 Siege of PR).
? Source: #S859
? Thibodeaux-191 was created by Kate King through the import of Londre Family Tree.ged on Jun 24, 2014. This comment and citation can be deleted after the biography has been edited and primary sources are included.
? Source: #S-1639204988 Page: Source number: 659.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: JTW. Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=1208390&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Marriage date: 1660 Marriage place: CA APID: 1,7836::1208390
? Source: #S-2075046403 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=4459803&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Poiters, Poitou, France APID: 1,5769::4459803
? Source: #S-2075047034 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoold&h=2604351&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Death date: 26 December 1704 Death place: Pree Ronde, Ns, Canada APID: 1,5771::2604351
? Source: #S-2075046403 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=4459802&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Marans, La Rochelle, France APID: 1,5769::4459802
? Source: #S-2075047034 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoold&h=2604350&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Death date: 26 December 1704 Death place: Port Royal, Acadia, Canada APID: 1,5771::2604350
? Source: #S-1639204988 Page: Source number: 659.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: JTW. Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=1208390&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Marriage date: 1660 Marriage place: CA APID: 1,7836::1208390
? Source: #S-2075046403 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=4459803&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Poiters, Poitou, France APID: 1,5769::4459803
? Source: #S-2075046403 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoolb&h=4459802&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Marans, La Rochelle, France APID: 1,5769::4459802
? Source: #S-2075047034 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoold&h=2604351&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Death date: 26 December 1704 Death place: Pree Ronde, Ns, Canada APID: 1,5771::2604351
? Source: #S-2075047034 Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepoold&h=2604350&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Death date: 26 December 1704 Death place: Port Royal, Acadia, Canada APID: 1,5771::2604350
? Source: #S-1639204988 Page: Source number: 659.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: JTW. Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=1208390&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1631 Birth place: Marriage date: 1660 Marriage place: CA APID: 1,7836::1208390
? Source: #S-2075045782 Page: Birth year: 1644; Birth city: Port Royal; Birth state: Ns. Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=genepool&h=4823799&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1644 Birth place: Port Royal, Annapolisroyal, Ns Death date: 7 December 1726 Death place: Port Royal, Annapolisroyal, Ns Marriage date: 1660 Marriage place: Port Royal, Annapolisroyal, Ns APID: 1,4725::4823799
? Source: #S-1639204988 Page: Source number: 659.000; Source type: Electronic Database; Number of Pages: 1; Submitter Code: JTW. Note: http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=sse&db=worldmarr_ga&h=1205428&ti=0&indiv=try&gss=pt Note: Data: Text: Birth date: 1644 Birth place: CA Marriage date: 1660 Marriage place: CA APID: 1,7836::1205428

Source: S-1639204988 Repository: #R-2141367930 Title: U.S. and International Marriage Records, 1560-1900 Author: Yates Publishing Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2004.Original data - This unique collection of records was extracted from a variety of sources including family group sheets and electronic databases. Originally, the information was derived Note: APID: 1,7836::0
Repository: R-2141367930 Name: Ancestry.com Address: http://www.Ancestry.com Note:
Source: S-2074691109 Repository: #R-2141367930 Title: Ancestry Family Trees Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com. Original data: Family Tree files submitted by Ancestry members. Note: This information comes from 1 or more individual Ancestry Family Tree files. This source citation points you to a current version of those files. Note: The owners of these tree files may have removed or changed information since this source citation was created. Page: Ancestry Family Trees Data: Text: http://trees.ancestry.com/pt/AMTCitationRedir.aspx?tid=24683317&pid=993
Source: S-2075046403 Repository: #R-2141367930 Title: Family Data Collection - Births Author: Edmund West, comp. Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001. Note: APID: 1,5769::0
Source: S-2075047034 Repository: #R-2141367930 Title: Family Data Collection - Deaths Author: Edmund West, comp. Publication: Online publication - Provo, UT, USA: The Generations Network, Inc., 2001. Note: APID: 1,5771::0

 
Debeau, Marie (I47262)
 
281 I have tried to Prove that Hector McCaughin is a brother to Grace Rose McCaughan Watson Mother of Mary Anne Watson McDonald and is one of the family members in the states that convinced Mary Anne to come to America after John's death.


 
McCaughan, Hector (P162)
 
282 Immigration symbol
http://trees.ancestry.com/rd?f=image&guid=4c1e3770-8711-406b-9243-678e87521123&tid=29958690&pid=300 
DROUET, Elisabeth Isabelle (P249)
 
283 Ingâenieur technicien (C.I.L.) Levac, Lionel (I726)
 
284 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Simons, Dorothy Hope (P5)
 
285 John Harvey Shares; Uncle Joe was a Bachleor
Served in Royal Navy and toured India
Crippled with arthritis
Had a small confectionary shop in Alexandria NY
Later served at tax collector
Disprepancy on date of birth
1900 Census lists May 1864
Harvey Family Records say Marh 24 1864
Baptismal Records state Dec 9, 1862 - Glenmarkeeran Township, Culfeightrin Parish, Ballycastle, Cunty Antrim, Northern Ireland


Obit : Ticonderoga Sentinental March 19 1914
age 49 
Mc Donald, Joseph Alexander (P58)
 
286 John Stebbins, Sr died in Northampton in 1678, the manner of his death was regarded as "mysterous, in some way connected with witchcraft, but nothing was proved."

John came to America with his family on the Francis in 1634 and settled with them

in Roxbury, Ma He bought land in Springfield, Ma. in 1646 and in 1651 he bought a house

there. In 1656 he settled in Northampton, Ma. where he lived at the lower end of "Pudding

Lane" (now Hawley Street). He owned a sawmill in Fasthampton.

He was measurer of lands 1659 and again in 1671; Jan 1684 he was chosen bailiff for

the town to clear the meadows of all cattle and swine that are trespassers and impound

them so that they could preserve the corn and grass; he was a selectman in 1675 and again in 1678.

He died in an accident at his sawmill and the commonbelief was that he had been

killed by witches. Two examinations of his body were made and an inquest was held during

which a large number of women were summoned, to examine and touch him, intending in this

way to discover the witch. However no evidence was found concerning witchcraft and no

further action was taken even though 1/2 the jurors believed his death was due to

witchcraft.

His estate was presented in Northampton, Ma. 25 Mar 1679.

After John's death Abigail married 28 Dec 1681 Jedediah Strong, son of John Strong.

Abigail fell from her horse while passing South Hadley Falls, and died soon after. She had

started on 10 Oct 1710 from Northampton to visit her children by her first husband, who

were living in Coventry, Ct.

John married (1) Mary Anne MUNDEN 1, 2 daughter of Thomas MUNDEN Captain and SUSAN on 14 May 1646 in Springfield, Hampden County, MA. Mary was born about 1630 in Probably in England. She died in 1656 in Springfield, Hamden County, MA.

They had the following children:

+ 50 M i John , Jr STEBBINS Captain

51 M ii Thomas STEBBINS 1 was born on 24 Feb 1648/1649 in Springfield, Hamden County, MA. He died on 24 Apr 1650 in Springfield, Hamden County, MA.
52 F iii Anne STEBBINS 1 was born on 10 Apr 1651 in Springfield, Hamden County, MA. She died on 6 May 1652 in Springfield, Hamden County, MA.
53 M iv Edward STEBBINS 1 was born on 12 Jul 1653 in Springfield, Hampden County, MA. He died on 14 Oct 1653 in Springfield, Hampden County, MA.
+ 54 M v Benoni STEBBINS

John married 2 (2) Abigail BARTLETT 1 daughter of Robert BARTLETT and Ann WARRINGER on 17 Dec 1657 in Hartford, Hartford County, CT. Abigail was born 3, 4 on 26 Sep 1636 in Hartford, Hartford County, CT. She died on 10 Oct 1710 in South Hadley Falls, Hampshire County, MA.

1 _FA1

2 DATE 17 OCT 1710

2 PLAC Died, falling from her horse...

They had the following children:

+ 55 M vi Samuel STEBBINS

+ 56 F vii Abigail STEBBINS

+ 57 M viii Thomas STEBBINS

+ 58 F ix Hannah STEBBINS

+ 59 F x Mary STEBBINS

+ 60 F xi Sarah STEBBINS

61 M xii Joseph STEBBINS 1 was born on 17 Jan 1669/1670 in Northampton, MA. He died on 3 Jun 1681.
+ 62 F xiii Deborah STEBBINS

+ 63 F xiv Rebeckah STEBBINS

64 M xv Benjamin STEBBINS 1 was born on 3 Mar 1673/1674 in Northampton, MA. He died on 12 Oct 1778.
1 _FA1

2 DATE 3 MAY 1674

2 PLAC Baptisted

Benjamin married Mary ASHLEY 1 daughter of David ASHLEY and Hannah GLOVER on 21 Dec 1699 in Springfield, CT. Mary was born on 3 Mar 1682/1683 in Westfield, MA. She died on 7 Sep 1769 in Westfield, MA.
+ 65 F xvi Thankful A STEBBINS

John Stebbins, Sr died in Northampton in 1678, the manner of his death was regarded as "mysterous, in some way connected with witchcraft, but nothing was proved."

John Stebbins

Born: 1626 - England

Marr: 17 DEC 1657 - Northampton, Hampshire Co., MA

Died: 7 MAR 1677/78 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Father: Rowland Stebbins

Mother: Sara Whiting

Father: Rowland Stebbins

Mother: Sara Whiting

!st Wife of John Stebbins

Mary Anne Munson

Born: ABT 1626 - Massachusetts, Hampden County, Springfield

Died: AFT 23 JUN 1655 - Massachusetts, Hampden County, Springfield

Father: Thomas Munson

Mother: Joanna Mew

Other Spouses: Abraham Munden

Children

1. John Stebbins

Born: 28 JAN 1645/46 - Massachusetts, Hampden County, Springfield

Marr: 1679 - Dorothy Alexander

Died: 19 DEC 1724 - Deerfield, MA

2. Thomas Stebbins
Born: 24 FEB 1648/49 - Springfield, Hampden County, Ma

Died: 24 APR 1649 ?

3. Ann Stebbins

Born: 10 APR 1651 - Springfield, Hampden County, Ma

Died: 6 MAY 1652 ?

4. Edward Stebbins

Born: 12 JUL 1653 - Springfield, Hampden County, Ma

Died: 14 OCT 1653 ?

5. Benoni Stebbins

Born: 23 JUN 1655 - Springfield, Hampden County, Ma

Marr: 1676 - Mary Broughton (other spouses)

Died: 29 FEB 1703/04 - Deerfield, M

2nd Wife of John Stebbins:

Abigail Barlett

Born: ABT 1636 -

Died: OCT 1710 - Massachusetts, South Hadley Falls

Father:

Mother:

Other Spouses: Jedediah Strong

Children

1. Samuel Stebbins

Born: 21 JAN 1658/59 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

2. Abigail Stebbins

Born: 6 SEP 1660 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

3. Thomas Stebbins

Born: 6 MAY 1662 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

4. Hannah Stebbins

Born: 8 JUL 1664 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

5. Mary Stebbins

Born: 10 SEP 1666 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

6. Sarah Stebbins

Born: 4 JUN 1668 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

7. Joseph Stebbins

Born: 17 JAN 1669/70 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

8. Deborah Stebbins

Born: 5 MAR 1671/72 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

9. Benjamin Stebbins

Born: 3 MAR 1672/73 - Northampton, Hampshire Co., MA

Died: -

10. Rebecca Stebbins

Born: 20 FEB 1674/75 - Northampton, Hampshire Co., MA

Died: -

11. Thankful Stebbins

Born: 11 MAY 1678 - Massachusetts, Hampshire Co., Northampton

Died: -

John Stebbins, Sr died in Northampton in 1678, the manner of his death was regarded as "mysterious, in some way connected with witchcraft, but nothing was proved."

John came to America with his family on the Francis in 1634and settled with them

in Roxbury, Ma He bought land in Springfield, Ma. in 1646and in 1651 he bought a house

there. In 1656 he settled in Northampton, Ma. where he lived at the lower end of "pudding

Lane" (now Hawley Street). He owned a sawmill in Fasthampton.

He was measurer of lands 1659 and again in 1671; Jan1684 he was chosen bailiff for

the town to clear the meadows of all cattle and swine that are trespassers and impound

them so that they could preserve the corn and grass; he was selectman in 1675 and again

1678.

He died in an accident at his sawmill and the common belief was that he had been

killed by witches. Two examinations of his body were made and an inquest was held during which a large number of women were summoned, to examine and touch him, intending in this way to discover the witch. However no evidence was found concerning witchcraft and no further action was taken even though 1/2 the jurors believed his death was due to witchcraft.

His estate was presented in Northampton, Ma. 25 Mar 1679. After John's death Abigail married 28 Dec 1681 Jedediah Strong, son of John Strong. Abigail fell from her horse while passing South Hadley Falls, and died soon after. She had started on 10 Oct 1710 from Northampton to visit her children by her first husband, who were living in Coventry, Ct.

ID: I28653

Name: John STEBBINS

Sex: M

Birth: ABT 1626 in St. Mary's, Bocking, Essex, England 1 2 3 4 5 6

Death: BET 7 MAR 1677 AND 1679 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts 1 2 3 7 4 5 8 9

Burial: Bridgestreet Cemetery 5

Reference Number: 28653

Note:

BIRTH: Stebbins Ancestral Society has birth in Ipswich.

BIOGRAPHY: On Feb. 21, 1649 he was granted land in Springfield. He settled in Northampton between 1654 and 1658, being the first four years of that town's existence, and lived at the end of "Pudding Lane." He owned a sawmill there and in 1672-73 contributed wheat and flax valued at ten shillings to Harvard. He was selectman in 1675 and 1678..

DEATH: Killed in an accident at the sawmill.

Father: Rowland STEBBINS b: BET OCT 1592 AND 1594 in Bocking, Essex, England

Mother: Sarah WHITING b: 30 NOV 1591 in Bocking, Essex, England

Marriage 1 Mary Anne MUNSON b: 1623

Married: BET 14 MAY 1645 AND 1646 in Springfield, Hampden Co., Massachusetts 1 3 7 8

Note:

Descendants of Rowland Stebbins has marriage in March.

Marriage may have been in Hampshire County.

Children

Thomas STEBBINS
John STEBBINS b: BET 28 JAN 1646 AND 1647 in Springfield, Hampden Co., Massachusetts
Ann STEBBINS b: 10 APR 1651
Edward STEBBINS b: 12 JUL 1653
Benoni STEBBINS b: 23 JUN 1655
Marriage 2 Abigail BARTLETT b: BET 26 SEP 1636 AND 1637 in Hartford, Connecticut

Married: 17 DEC 1657 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts 1 10 3 4 6 11

Children

Sarah STEBBINS b: ABT 1657
Samuel STEBBINS b: BET 21 JAN 1657 AND 1659 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Abigail STEBBINS b: 24 SEP 1660 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Thomas STEBBINS b: 6 MAY 1662 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Hannah STEBBINS b: 8 JUL 1664 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Mary STEBBINS b: 10 SEP 1666 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Joseph STEBBINS b: BET 17 JAN 1668 AND 1670 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Sarah STEBBINS b: 4 JUN 1668 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Deborah STEBBINS b: BET 5 MAR 1670 AND 1672 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Benjamin STEBBINS b: 3 MAR 1674 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Rebecca STEBBINS b: 20 FEB 1676 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Thankful STEBBINS b: 11 MAY 1678 in Northampton, Hampshire Co., Massachusetts
Sources:

Title: A Genealogical Dictionary of The First Settlers of New England Before1692

Author: James Savage

Title: Stebbins Ancestral Society

Note: ABBR Stebbins Ancestral Society

Note: http://www.stebbinsancestralsociety.org/

Title: Descendants of Rowland Stebbins

Author: Mary Lou Clark

Note: ABBR Descendants of Rowland Stebbins

Title: The Ancestors of John Williams and Selina Brewster

Note: ABBR The Ancestors of John Williams and Selina Brewster

Note: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~syafam/wilmsanc.htm

Title: GeneaNet

Note: ABBR GeneaNet

Note: http://gw.geneanet.org

Note: Database=lovel

Title: Dupre genealogy site

Repository:

Note: http://www.adupree.com/

Media: Internet

Title: USGenWeb

Note: ABBR USGenWeb

Page: Hampshire Co., Mass

Title: Family history : recording the ancestors of Russell Snow Hitchcock

Author: Hitchcock, Russell Snow

Publication: Bath, Maine; 1947

Repository:

Note: Heritage Quest

Media: Book

Title: Descendants of Robert Bartlett

Repository:

Note: http://homepages.rootsweb.com/~cst/bartlett/team1a.htm

Media: Internet

Title: The Chamberlain Family

Note: ABBR The Chamberlain Family

Note: http://members.shaw.ca/chamberlaingenealogy/

Title: NORTHAMPTON, MA VITAL RECORDS

Repository:

Note: http://www.shypuppy.net/NH-Intro.html

Media: Internet

John Stebbins, son of Rowland Stebbins, was living in Roxbury, Mass. in 1651, but bought a house that year in Springfield. He was one of the original proprietors of Pocumtuck, owning twenty cow commons, and drew house lot, No. 13, there, in what is now Deerfield, Mass., but probably was not a settler. He made his home in Northampton.

He must have been a public spirited man because in 1654 he was a selectman and served on various committees: land survey (1659), laying out of public highways (166l), building of a new meeting house (1661). He served as juror in 1661, and was chosen bailiff responsible for clearing cattle and swine from public meadows. On April 18, 1661, he signed a covenant organizing the church of Northampton. He was also keeper of the sawmill. the place where he eventually died on March 9, 1679. He was apparently killed by some runaway logs, but the suddenness of his death seemed suspicious to some of his neighbors.

A twelve man jury of inquest rendered a verdict, which, while it did not directly charge witchcraft, showed that they more than half believed it had something to do with his death. Two examinations were of the remains and two reports were made to the court. In the first one, they declared that there was a "warmth and heate in his bodv yt dead persons are not usual to have"; they reported that there were "fewer places upon his breast yt seemed to have been pintched, though the doctor informed ym that in his lifetime there was a swelling between the

Pintches"; his neck was as flexible as that of a living person. Upon his body were found "several hundred of spots" that looked as if "they had been shott with small shott." and when thev were scraped there were holes under them. On the second examination, which must have been made soon after the first one, they found, as would very naturally follow, "the body somewhat more cold yn before, his joints were more limber," and several bruises on different parts of his person. which they had not previously discovered. The jury reported to the County Court in April, and Samuel BARTLETT, brother-in-law to STEBBINS. ,and who seems to have been the witch finder in general for the town, brought in all the testimony he could obtain. This evidence, which cannot be found now, was sent to the Court of Assistants at Boston. but no further action was taken. Undoubtedly the testimony pointed to some suspected person, but no one was named in the records......

After the death of John STEBBINS I on March 9, 1679, his widow, Abigail, remarried on December 28, 1681, to Jedediah STRONG, son of Elder John STRONG. She died on July 15, l689.

His first wife, married May 14,1646 at Springfield,MA, was Ann Munson Munden Stebbins, the widow of Abraham Munden of Springfield.
His second wife, married Dec 17,1657 at Northampton,MA, was Abigail Bartlett Stebbins, the daughter of Robert Bartlett and Ann ____ Bartlett. Abigail later married, as his second wife, Jedediah Strong.

Children(by first marriage): John Stebbins Jr, Thomas Stebbins, Ann Stebbins, Edward Stebbins, and Benoni Stebbins.

Children(by second marriage): Samuel Stebbins, Abigail Stebbins Phelps, Thomas Stebbins, Hannah Stebbins Sheldon, Mary Stebbins Strong, Sarah Stebbins Southwell, Joseph Stebbins, Deborah Stebbins Alvord Burt, Benjamin Stebbins, Rebecca Stebbins Strong, and Thankful Stebbins Strong.

Family links:

Parents: Rowland Stebbins (1592 - 1671) Sarah Whiting Stebbins (1591 - 1649) Spouse: Abigail Bartlett Stebbins Strong (1636 - 1689)* Children: Benoni Stebbins (1655 - 1704)* Abigail Stebbins Phelps (1660 - 1748)* Hannah Stebbins Sheldon (1664 - 1704)* Mary Stebbins Strong (1666 - 1733)* Deborah Stebbins Alvord Burt (1671 - ____)
(f/g) John Stebbins Birth: 1626, England Death: Mar. 7, 1679 Northampton Hampshire County Massachusetts, USA

___________________________________________________

His first wife, married May 14,1646 at Springfield,MA, was Ann Munson Munden Stebbins, the widow of Abraham Munden of Springfield.

His second wife, married Dec 17,1657 at Northampton,MA, was Abigail Bartlett Stebbins, the daughter of Robert Bartlett and Ann ____ Bartlett. Abigail later married, as his second wife, Jedediah Strong.

Children(by first marriage): John Stebbins Jr, Thomas Stebbins, Ann Stebbins, Edward Stebbins, and Benoni Stebbins.

Children(by second marriage): Samuel Stebbins, Abigail Stebbins Phelps, Thomas Stebbins, Hannah Stebbins Sheldon, Mary Stebbins Strong, Sarah Stebbins Southwell, Joseph Stebbins, Deborah Stebbins Alvord Burt, Benjamin Stebbins, Rebecca Stebbins Strong, and Thankful Stebbins Strong.

Family links:

Parents: Rowland Stebbins (1592 - 1671) Sarah Whiting Stebbins (1591 - 1649) Spouses: Abigail Bartlett Stebbins Strong (1636 - 1689) Anne Munson Stebbins (1623 - 1656) Children: John Stebbins (1647 - 1724)* Benoni Stebbins (1655 - 1704)* Abigail Stebbins Phelps (1660 - 1748)* Hannah Stebbins Sheldon (1664 - 1704)* Mary Stebbins Strong (1666 - 1733)* Deborah Stebbins Alvord Burt (1671 - ____)
Burial: Bridge Street Cemetery Northampton Hampshire County Massachusetts, USA Maintained by: Kevin Avery Originally Created by: Marigay Record added: Jul 27, 2001 Find A Grave Memorial# 5642542 -tcd

links
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~janarmstrong/steg05.htm#11660
John Stebbins, son of Rowland Stebbins, was living in Roxbury, Mass. in 1651, but bought a house that year in Springfield. He was one of the original proprietors of Pocumtuck, owning twenty cow commons, and drew house lot, No. 13, there, in what is now Deerfield, Mass., but probably was not a settler. He made his home in Northampton.

He must have been a public spirited man because in 1654 he was a selectman and served on various committees: land survey (1659), laying out of public highways (166l), building of a new meeting house (1661). He served as juror in 1661, and was chosen bailiff responsible for clearing cattle and swine from public meadows. On April 18, 1661, he signed a covenant organizing the church of Northampton. He was also keeper of the sawmill. the place where he eventually died on March 9, 1679. He was apparently killed by some runaway logs, but the suddenness of his death seemed suspicious to some of his neighbors.

A twelve man jury of inquest rendered a verdict, which, while it did not directly charge witchcraft, showed that they more than half believed it had something to do with his death. Two examinations were of the remains and two reports were made to the court. In the first one, they declared that there was a "warmth and heate in his bodv yt dead persons are not usual to have"; they reported that there were "fewer places upon his breast yt seemed to have been pintched, though the doctor informed ym that in his lifetime there was a swelling between the

Pintches"; his neck was as flexible as that of a living person. Upon his body were found "several hundred of spots" that looked as if "they had been shott with small shott." and when thev were scraped there were holes under them. On the second examination, which must have been made soon after the first one, they found, as would very naturally follow, "the body somewhat more cold yn before, his joints were more limber," and several bruises on different parts of his person. which they had not previously discovered. The jury reported to the County Court in April, and Samuel BARTLETT, brother-in-law to STEBBINS. ,and who seems to have been the witch finder in general for the town, brought in all the testimony he could obtain. This evidence, which cannot be found now, was sent to the Court of Assistants at Boston. but no further action was taken. Undoubtedly the testimony pointed to some suspected person, but no one was named in the records......

After the death of John STEBBINS I on March 9, 1679, his widow, Abigail, remarried on December 28, 1681, to Jedediah STRONG, son of Elder John STRONG. She died on July 15, l689.

His first wife, married May 14,1646 at Springfield,MA, was Ann Munson Munden Stebbins, the widow of Abraham Munden of Springfield. His second wife, married Dec 17,1657 at Northampton,MA, was Abigail Bartlett Stebbins, the daughter of Robert Bartlett and Ann ____ Bartlett. Abigail later married, as his second wife, Jedediah Strong.

Children(by first marriage): John Stebbins Jr, Thomas Stebbins, Ann Stebbins, Edward Stebbins, and Benoni Stebbins.

Children(by second marriage): Samuel Stebbins, Abigail Stebbins Phelps, Thomas Stebbins, Hannah Stebbins Sheldon, Mary Stebbins Strong, Sarah Stebbins Southwell, Joseph Stebbins, Deborah Stebbins Alvord Burt, Benjamin Stebbins, Rebecca Stebbins Strong, and Thankful Stebbins Strong. 
Stebbens, John (I962)
 
287 LDS Microfilm # 101170 - Title: Quarterly Returns of Births in Ireland, 1864-1955, with index to births, 1864-1921, in the General Registry Office of Ireland Ireland. General Register Office - page 94 Source (S-2113926755)
 
288 Le Pot de Beurre, de Horn

On retrouve aussi dans cet inventaire un autre JEAN, probablement Hélie JEAN. Et bien que son nom n?apparaisse pas, le troisième frère JEAN, Pierre JEAN s?est lui aussi très probablement embarqué sur ce navire avec son épouse Françoise FAVREAU. Hélie JEAN et Marie GAIGNET ont passé un contrat de mariage le 13 mars 1669 à La Rochelle mais ont vécu en union libre 7 ans avant de se marier à Québec. Vivien JEAN et Anne TROLLEAU ont aussi passé un contrat de mariage le 13 mars 1669 à La Rochelle mais se sont séparés dès leur arrivée à Québec et cette dernière épouse Mathurin GAUTHIER le 16 juillet 1669 à Québec. 
Ayrault-Herault, Suzanne (I2365)
 
289 Lea Fontaine was buried at this cemetry

Cimetière Saint-Malo
(Saint Malo Cemetery)
Saint Malo, Compton County, Quebec


Saint Malo Cemetery is a Catholic cemetery located in the village of Saint Malo, in the MRC of Coaticook. Follow route 253 south from Sawyerville toward the US border. Or from Coaticook, take the 9th Range to route 253 to East Hereford. Then go north on route 253. The cemetery is beside and behind the church.

Latitude: 45° 11' 55" N
Longitude: 71° 29' 46" W


Fontaine, Léa; d. 9 Mar 1922, aged 67y 3m, épouse de Joseph Viens 
FONTAINE, Marie Lea (P52)
 
290 Lejeunne family history for the 1998, The Times-Picayune. Used with permission.

Lejeunes immigrated via interesting path

By Damon Veach
Genealogy columnist/The Times-Picayune
April 12, 1998
The first Lejeune to arrive in Acadia from France was Pierre LeJeune, along with his wife, whose name is not known, and their three children, Edmee or Aimee, Pierre II and Catherine. This LeJeune family was from the Poitou region of France.

By the census of 1671, Edmee was married to Francois Gautrot (Gautreaux), and Catherine was married to Francois Scavois (Savoie). Pierre II is not mentioned in the census of 1671. However, in the census of 1686, two LeJeune men are listed, Pierre III (age 28) and Martin Lejeune dit Briard (age 25). They are listed as brothers, and because of their young ages, the Pierre III of this census could not be the same Pierre II listed as having arrived in Acadia in the 1630s. (Were these two LeJeune men the sons of the young Pierre Lejeune II who arrived with his sisters, Edmee and Catherine?)

Father Clarence-Joseph D'Entremont, in his book, ``Le Canada-Francais Documents sur l'Acadie,'' asserts that the Pierre II who arrived in Acadia as a child married a MicMac woman. The census of 1686 listed Pierre Lejeune III as being married to Marie Thibodeau and Martin LeJeune as being married to Marie-Jeanne Kagijonias, a member of the MicMac tribe. After Marie-Jeanne's death, Martin married Marie Gaudet, the daughter of Jehan (Jean) Gaudet and Marie-Jeanne Henry. A 1693 census lists a sister to Pierre III and Martin named Jeanne, who was married to Francois Joseph, a member of the MicMac tribe.

Pierre III and Marie Thibodeau had nine children, four boys and five girls.

The five girls were: Marie-Marguerite, who was born in 1686 and married in 1708 to Jean-Joseph Boutin; Jeanne, born about 1690, who was married in 1712 to Jean Roy II; Marguerite, who was born in 1695 and married in 1714 to Alexandre Trahan; Anne LeJeune, who was born in 1696; Catherine LeJeune, who was born in 1698 and married first Antoine LaBauve dit LaNoue, later Claude-Antoine Duplessis.

The boys were: Pierre IV, who was born in 1689 and was married in 1712 to Jeanne Benoit; Germain, who was born in 1693 and married Anne-Marie Trahan; Jean, born in 1697, who married Francoise Guedry or Guidry; and Joseph, who was born in 1704 and married to Cecile Pitre in about 1724.

Martin LeJeune dit Briard had four children with his first wife, Marie-Jeanne Kagijonias, and eight children with his second wife, Marie Gaudet. The three sons born of his first marriage were: Claude, who was born about 1685 and was married in 1705 to Anne-Marie Gaudet; Germain, born in 1689, who married Marie Guedry or Guidry in about 1729; and Bernard, who was born in 1693 and married to Isabelle Saulnier or Sonnier in about 1720. Their only daughter was Anne Lejeune, who was born in 1686 and married in 1702 to Rene LaBouve.

Following the death of his first wife, Martin Lejeune dit Briard married Marie Gaudet in 1700. It is interesting to note that Martin's son, Claude, married his stepmother's sister two years later.

Martin Lejeune and Marie Gaudet's eight children were: Theodore; Paul, who was born in 1702 and married in 1727 to Marie Benoit; Martin, Paul's twin, who was married in 1729 to Marie Renaud; Eustache, who was born in 1714 and married in 1747 to Marie-Anne Barriot or Barrilleaux; and Pierre. The three remaining children were girls named Claire, who was born in 1706 and married Francois Viger; Marguerite I; and Marguerite II.

In order to escape the encroaching and increasingly hostile British, a number of the LeJeune families left for Ile-Royale, present day Cape Breton Island, which was protected by the French fort at Louisbourg. For example, Paul Lejeune and Marie Benoit are shown on the 1752 census at Baie-des-Espagnols, Ile-Royale. The Acadians living on Ile-Royale were not affected by the Acadian deportations of 1755. However, after the fall of Fort Louisbourg to the English during the summer of 1758, there was another round of deportations from Ile-Royale and Ile St-Jean.

One of the sons of Paul Lejeune and Marie Benoit was named Jean-Baptiste. He was born in 1728 and was married in about 1748 to Marguerite Trahan, the daughter of Etienne Trahan and Francoise Roy. They were listed in the 1752 census as living at Baie-des-Espagnols. The census showed that they lived between the homesteads of Jean-Baptiste's parents and Marguerite's parents. In 1752, they had three children - Jean-Baptiste II, Blaise and Marguerite.

A mystery surrounds the eventual deportation of Jean-Baptiste Lejeune and his family. The 1763 census of Port Tobacco, Md., shows that the children of Jean-Baptiste and Marguerite were living there at that time. Jean-Baptiste and Marguerite were deceased. However, the census showed that they had two children between 1752 and 1763, both probably born in exile after the deportation. These two children were named Joseph and Nanette. The children were all listed as orphans and living with relatives or friends.

The mystery is that the Acadians deported from Ile-Royale were all sent to England or France. For example, Jean-Baptiste's mother, Marie Benoit, and at least one of his sisters were deported to France. It is not known why Jean-Baptiste and Marguerite were deported to Maryland. Perhaps they had moved back to the Nova Scotia mainland between 1752 and 1755 and were caught up in the initial round of deportations. Most of the initial deportees of 1755 were scattered among the American colonies.

In any event, Jean-Baptiste, Blaise, Joseph, Marguerite, and Nanette all eventually left Maryland en route to Louisiana with their uncle, Honore Trahan and his wife, aboard the English schooner Britain. This ship, ill-equipped and barely seaworthy, eventually ran aground near present-day Goliad, Texas. Eventually, the Acadians and the Germans were given Spanish passports for an overland journey to Louisiana. They traveled by land from Goliad to Natchitoches. Somewhere along the way, Nanette Lejeune left the travel party, although it is not known why.

The Lejeune family data will be continued in next week's column.

St. Tammany meeting: The next regular meeting of the St. Tammany Genealogical Society will be April 14 at 1:30 p.m. at the Covington Branch Library, located at 310 W. 21st Avenue in Covington. The public is invited. For more information, contact Martha Dutsch, 504-892-6561.

The next general meeting of the La Famille Gravois Corporation will be held at the St. James Parish Courthouse Annex and Library, located on Highway 20, Vacherie, on Saturday at 10 a.m. For more information, call Ronnie Gravois (in Mandeville) at 504-626-3023, Roland Gravois (in New Orleans) at 504-393-1264, or Richard Brazan (in Vacherie) at 504-265-3955.

Correspondence to this column should be addressed to Damon Veach, Louisiana Ancestors, care of Living Section, The Times-Picayune, 3800 Howard Ave., New Orleans, La. 70140. Queries are printed free and can be any length but should have a Louisiana connection by heritage or residence of researchers working on lines in other states. Books and other publications are reviewed only if a sample copy is submitted with each request. Dated notices should be sent several weeks prior to the scheduled event. Otherwise mail is filed by date of postmark and used as space permits. Damon Veach is also the editor of the quarterly ``Cajuns, Creoles, Pirates and Planters.'' 
Family: Pierre Lejeune dit Briard / Marie (2) Thibodeau (F866)
 
291 Leopold Inkel had 3 sisters:
Mariage
1928-01-05 Saint-Malo Dorina F to Wilfrid Lepine

1937-10-14 Saint-Malo Laurette F to Paul-Emile Lemieux

1944-09-16 Sherbrooke Fleur-Ange F to Lucien Gauthier
 
Inkel, Leopold (P28)
 
292 Leopold Inkel sister infor:

ID No:181398
Name: Laurette
Name: Inkel
Gender: F
Birth: ****
Parish / City: St-Malo, cté Compton
Country: Canada
Death: **** - Age: 78
Parish / City:
Country: Canada

Link found at:

http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogie=Inkel_Laurette&pid=181398&lng=fr
 
Inkel, Leopold (P28)
 
293 Link of following can be found at:

http://nantibo.philgay.qc.ca/fel/pafg109.htm#24238C

3689. Georges Thibeault (Fabien , Noël , Pierre , Charles François , Jean-François , François ) was born in 1875 in Paquetteville, Hereford. He died in Sep 1945. Georges was counted in a census in 1901 in Hereford, Compton, QC automaticgenealogy.com.

Georges married 1 Zéphirine Lachance daughter of Zéphirin Lachance and Phélonise Champeau on 16 Nov 1896 in St-Venant, Hereford. Zéphirine was born in Jan 1877 in Paquetteville, Hereford. She died on 7 Jun 1946.

[Notes]
They had the following children:

8216 M Zephirin Thibeault was born on 29 May 1898. He died in 1904.
8217 M Zéphir Thibault was born in 1898. He died in 1905.
8218 M Joseph-R. Hector Thibeault
8219 F Alice Thibeault
8220 M Médéric Eximaire Thibeault
8221 F Rose-Emma Thibeault
8222 M Joseph Thibeault
8223 M Fabien Wilfrid Thibault
8224 F Antoinette Thibault
8225 F Desneiges Thibeault was born in 1912. She died in 1968. Desneiges resided in Resided in W. Stewartstown QC.
Desneiges married Eugene Cote.
8226F Desneiges Thibault
8227 F Albina Thibault
8228 M Michel Thomas Thibault
8229 M Henri Thibault
8230 M Henri Thibault
8231 M Albert Thibault was born in Paquetteville, Hereford.
8232 M Albert (Thibeault) Thibault was born about 1920 in Paquetteville, Hereford, QC. He died about 1921. 
THIBEAULT, Michel (P341)
 
294 Link to e-information partial and yet more information on this expansive family:
http://gw.geneanet.org/lmarchesseault?lang=en;pz=martin+yvon;nz=marchesseault;ocz=0;p=claudia;n=viens 
ROBIDAS, Ernest (P16)
 
295 Link to e-information:

http://www.nosorigines.org/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Barnabe_Masson&pid=87503&lng=en&partID=87505


Other Marriages of: Barnabe Masson
Agnes Grenier
St-Augustin-de-Desmaures  
MASSON, Barnabe (P327)
 
296 Link to grave stone:

http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=100792211 
Inkel, Leopold (P28)
 
297 Link to Masson Family Tree site:

http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/s/t/p/Raymond-Stpeter-MA/GENE2-0006.html 
(Masson) VIENS, Clarina (P32)
 
298 Link to Thibeault family tree

http://nantibo.philgay.qc.ca/fel/pafg01.htm 
VIENS, Simone (P73)
 
299 Link to:
Father+Mother+Grandparnets

http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?pid=178483&lng=fr 
Inkel, Leopold (P28)
 
300 List of ACADIAN CENSUS 1700

E-Link can be located at:
http://www.acadian.org/census1700.html 
Thibodeau, Pierre (I33023)
 

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