Notes


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3101 Surety:1
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Family F268
 
3102 Surety:1
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3103 Surety:1
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3104 Surety:1
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3107 Surety:1
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3108 Surety:2
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3109 Surety:2
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Family F155
 
3110 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F213
 
3111 Surety:2
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Family F610
 
3112 Surety:2
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3113 Surety:2
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3114 Surety:2
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3115 Surety:3
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3116 Surety:3
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3117 Surety:3
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Family F209
 
3118 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Family F214
 
3119 Surety:3
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Family F860
 
3120 Surety:3
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Family F861
 
3121 Surety:3
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Family F862
 
3122 Surety:3
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3123 Surety:3
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3124 Surety:3
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Family F865
 
3125 Surety:3
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Family F866
 
3126 Télesphore Parizeau, né en 1867. De 1890 à 1896, il étudie à Paris où il obtient son diplôme de la faculté de médecine. Puis il devient chirurgien attaché à l'hôpital Notre-Dame à Montréal. Vice-doyen (1927-1934), puis doyen ( 1934-1938) de la Faculté de médecine de l'Université de Montréal, il prononcera de nombreuses allocutions. Il est fait chevalier de la légion d'honneur et décède en 1961.
Fonds de la Famille Parizeau, Université de Montréal 
Parizeau Télesphore (I11599)
 
3127 Temoin: Marcel Lussier, Yves Bourgeois
Jacqueline avait 36a. 4m. 
Bourgeois Jacqueline (I274)
 
3128 Texte de 5 pages transmis par Patricia Lacombe Source (S252)
 
3129 Texte de sa grand-mère maternelle fourni par Marie-Ange Pronovost Source (S45)
 
3130 Texte écrit par Wilfrid et Bernadette en 1976:
http://genealogie.familleboucher.ca/documents/Histoire_Famille_WB_Pauze.PDF
Attention, 26.9 Mo ! 
Family F94
 
3131 THANKFUL/LOUISE THERESE STEBBINS

Thankful STEBBINS at age 13 was brought to Chambly after her capture, probably by one of the HERTEL brothers, and according to Coleman, Thankful lived at the Hertel manor at Chambly. Fournier says that shs was ransomed in 1706 by Hertel. Thankful was baptized 23 April 1707 at Chambly as Louise Therese STEBENE, the godparents were Zacharie-Francois HERTEL, Seigneur of Chambly and Madame de PERIGNY, wife of the commandant of Fort Chambly, Her baptismal record says erroneously that she was from "England". Thankful/Louise Therese was the godmother of Jean Baptiste DENOYON, son of her sister Abigail, In 1708 at Boucherville.

Thankful STEBBENS and Adrien LEGRAIN had a contract of marriage drawn up on 1 Feb 1711 at Notary Tailhandier. Thankful/Theresa Louise STEBENS and Adrien Charles GRAIN dit LAVALLEE were married 4 Feb 1711 at Ste Famille de Boucherville. Jacques DeNOYON was present at the wedding and quite likely Abigail STEBBENS. From her marriage with Adrien LEGRAIN, Thankful/Therese Louise STEBBENS had 13 children. The family lived in the parish of St Joseph de Chambly. Her death on 11 July 1729 at Chambly followed the birth of the least child about one week.

The children of Thankful/Therese Louise STEBBINS and Adrien/Charles LEGRAIN were:

Francoise-Therese, born 2 & bapt 3 Mar 1713 Chambly;
Guillaume, born 28 & bapt 30 Dec 1714 Chambly;
Marie-Jeanne, bapt 30 Aug 1716 Chambly;
Marie, bapt 5 Feb 1718 Chambly; marr 7 Jan 1738 St Joseph de Chambly Jean-Francols BESSETTE;
Marguerite, marr 27 Nov 1738 St Joseph de Chambly Joseph PEPIN dit LAFORCE.; marr 2nd on 8 Oct 1742 St Joseph de Chambly Michel LAGEU dit SANSCARTIER;
Charlotte, bapt 6 Jan 1720 Chambly: marr Mar 1742 La Conception de la Pointe Olivier BAPTISTE VIEN:
Isabelle/ELISABETH, born 17 Dec 1721 Chambly (mother called Louise THESMEN): as Elisabeth she marr 22 June 1741 La Conception de la Pointe Olivier JEAN BERTRAND;
Judith, bapt 3 Jan 1722 Chambly:
Antoine. bapt 1 Nov 1723 Chambly;
Marie Therese, born & bapt 2 Feb 1725 Chambly (mother called Marie Therese LEBEAU); marr 23 Jan 1736 St Joseph de Chambly Jean Baptiste LARIVIERE; bur 21 July 1753 St Joseph de Chambly.
Anonymous, born, bapt at home by "bonne femme" Bessette; died & bur 6 March 1726 Chambly.
Charles-Antoine, born & bapt 2 June 1727 Chambly; marr Ist 31 Aug 1751 La Conception de la Pointe Olivier FRANCOISE BESSET; marr 2nd on 3 Nov 1756 Chambly Suzanne VALLIERE;
Veronique. born & bapt 4 July 1729 Chambly;
Some of the above children likely died in Chambly at a young age. Only 27 burials were listed in Chambly from 1701 to 1730.

http://www.leveillee.net/ancestry/stebbens.htm

 
Stebenne Stebbens Louise Thérèse (I9779)
 
3132 The Malone farmer., April 08, 1925, Page 4, Image 4
http://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/lccn/sn84031968/1925-04-08/ed-1/seq-4/ 
Boucher Gloria Mae (I3700)
 
3133 Theodore (31 ans) et Wilfrid (28 ans) du mariage à  Amanda sont listés. Family F1304
 
3134 Theodore est né à "Woster" (Worchester Mass) et n'habitait pas la maison de son père en 1935 mais vivait à Malone. Family F1304
 
3135 Théophile (50), Louise (32), Bénoni (14), M Louis (12), Martial (7), Malora (4) Family F5739
 
3136 Théotiste est inhumée à l'âge de 69 ans donc née approximativement en 1745 Bourgeois Théotiste (I632)
 
3137 Thomas déclare que son père est du Québec! Family F23
 
3138 Thomas est décédé. Sa veuve demeure à la même adresse Tubman Thomas (I6243)
 
3139 Thomas Tubman est énumérateur. Family F2483
 
3140 Tiré de http://homepage.ntlworld.com/pitretrail/myline/paternal/pbezier.htm

Notes for Pierre Bezier:

- 1686 Acadian census (Port Royal): Pierre Joan 60, Magdelaine Brin (Brun) 47, (children by her first marriage to Guillaume Trahan): Guillaume Trahan 19, Jean 17, Jean-Charles (sic) 15, Jeanne 12, Magdelaine 9, Marie 14; and by her second marriage Susanne Joan 2 months; 2 gun, 8 arpents, 10 cattle, 10 sheep.

- 1693 Port Royal: Pierre Arbezier 70, Magdeline Brun 48, Susanne 7, Jacques Leger (their son-in-law) 30, Madeleine Trahan (his wife) 15; 12 cattle, 15 sheep, 8 hogs, 7 arpents, 2 guns.

- 1698 Port Royal: Pierre Dalesie (deBezier) 60, Magdeleine Brun 56, Susanne 12.

- 1700 Port Royal: Pierre Debezier (widower) 79, Suzanne 14; 6 cattle, 10 sheep, 4 arpents. 
Bézier Pierre (I3520)
 
3141 Tiré de http://www.acadian-home.org/ancestorsacadian.html
Jacques Maillet, son of Antoine Maillet and François Choppart, of Parish, married at Port-Royal, Novemer 25, 1720, Madeleine Hébert daughter of Antoine Hébert and Jeanne Corporon. The thirteen children of this marriage, as well as the parents themselves were dispersed in 1755, some being sent to New York and others to South Carolina and to Massachusetts. The sons of Antoine-Salomon, born September 12, 1723 and Charles, born April 17, 1726, were not expulsed from Acadia. Antoine-Salomon had settled in Trahan Village, at Grand-Pré, following his marriage about 1751 to Marie Saulnier, daughter of René Saulnier and Marie-Josèphe Trahan. These displacements are unknown beginning from 1755 until 1768 when we find him with his second wife, Marguerite Blanchard at Pisiguit 
Maillet Jacques (I3742)
 
3142 Tiré de http://www.acadiansingray.com/Appendices-ATLAL-D'ENTREMONT.htm


Philippe Mius d'Entremont of Cherbourg, Normandy, came to Acadia in 1651 as a lieutenant of Charles La Tour, a childhood friend. Philippe was 50, a lieutenant-major, married to Madeleine Hélie du Tillet, and father of a daughter when he was named La Tour's adjutant. In 1653, during his second tenure as governor of the colony, La Tour awarded the trusty Mius d'Entremont the seigneury of Pobomcoup, now Pubnico, near Cap-Sable, where Philippe and Madeleine settled for most of their time in Acadia; Philippe thus became the sieur d'Entremont, baron de Pobomcoup, lieutenant-major et commandant des troupes. His barony ran from Cap-Nègre, northeast of Cap-Sable, around to Cap-Fourchu near present-day Yarmouth. He built his feudal house near the entry to the harbor at Pobomcoup. One biographer asserts: "D'Entremont played an important part in the colony's history both because of what he did as an administrator and because he was one of the rare Acadian seigneurs to concern himself with cultivation and with clearing land; he attracted to his estate 'several indentured workers and a few families from Port-Royal ... and this seigneury eventually formed a small centre of population.'" In 1670, at age 69, upon the restoration of the colony to France, Philippe became the King's attorney in Acadia. He served in this capacity until 1688, when old age and infirmity (he was 87!) compelled him to relinquish the post. In his final days he lived for a time at Minas with his older daughter and died in c1700 at age 99, "with all his teeth," either at Minas or Port-Royal. He and his wife Madeleine had four more children in Acadia, including three sons who created families of their own. Their older daughter married into the Melanson dit Laverdure family.

Oldest son Jacques Mius d'Entremont, sieur et baron de Pobomcoup, co-seigneur of Port-Royal and Acadia, born at Pobomcoup in c1658, married Anne, daughter of Charles La Tour and Jeanne Motin de Reux, Charles d'Aulnay's widow, in c1678. Jacques and Anne had nine children, including four sons who married into the Amireau, d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin, Landry, Boudreaux, and Molaison families. Their five daughters married into the Dupont Duvivier, Dupont Duchambon, Landry, Boulais de Saillans, Pastour de Costebelle, Navailles de Labatut, and Lafitte families. Philippe Pastour de Costebelle was governor of Newfoundland when he married Jacque's daughter Anne at Port-Dauphin, Newfoundland, in February 1716. Anne remarried--her third marriage--to French baron Chevalier Laurent de Navailles de Labatut at St.-Eustache de Paris in France in August 1719. She lived at her husband's family estate, the Château de Navailles-Labatut, which still stands near the village of Labutat-Figuières in the Béarn hills north of the Pyrenées, in the far southwest corner of France. She died at the château in October 1778, in her 80s, when her D'Entremont kinsmen were languishing far to the north at the port of Cherbourg, to which they had been deported 20 years before. Jacques died in 1735 or 1736 probably at Pobomcoup. His descendants used the surname Mius d'Entremont or D'Entremont.

Abraham Mius, sieur de Pleinmarais, born at Pobomcoup in c1658, married Marguerite, another daughter of Charles La Tour and sister of his brother's wife Anne, in c1676. They had nine children also. Four of their daughters married into the Bourgeois, Crépeau, Channitteau, and Landry families. None of Abraham's three sons seems to have survived childhood, so this line of the family, except for its blood, did not continue. Abraham died in September 1704, in his mid-40s. His daughters used the surname Mius.

Youngest son Philippe Mius d'Azy, born at Pobomcoup in c1660, married first an Indian woman whose name has been lost to history, in c1678. Philippe also lived for a time at La Hève, up the coast from Cap-Sable. He and his first wife had five children, including a son who married into the Amireau dit Tourangeau family and settled at Port-Royal, and two sons who also married Indian women. One of those sons lived at Mouscoudabouet, now Musquodoboit Harbor near present-day Halifax Philippe's two daughters married into the Viger and Bonnevie dit Beaumont families. Philippe remarried to another Indian woman, Marie, in c1687. They had nine children, including five sons, four of whom married. One son married into the Lapierre family. The surnames of three of the other married sons' wives have been lost, so they probably married Indian women. Philippe and Marie's four daughters married into the Thomas, Guédry dit Gravois, Grand-Claude, and Cellier dit Charêt families. Philippe, fils's descendants used the surname Mius d'Azy. Some of them left peninsula Acadia for Île St.-Jean, today's Prince Edward Island, by the 1750s.

LE GRAND DÉRANGEMENT

Le Grand Dérangement scattered this family even farther:

While the British were gathering up the Acadians in Nova Scotia in the fall of 1755, Marguerite Mius d'Azy of Port Lajoie, Île St.-Jean, and her new husband, Jean Delâge dit Langlois, left the island for Québec, where Marguerite died in early October 1755, age 36.

There were descendants of Philippe Mius d'Azy still at Port-Royal in 1755. One of them, granddaughter Marie-Josèphe, married to Jean-Baptiste Raymond, was deported to North Carolina aboard the Pembroke in December. Soon after the ship left Goat Island in the lower Annapolis River, a storm in the lower Bay of Fundy separated the Pembroke from the other transports filled with Port-Royal Acadians. The exiles aboard the ship, led by Charles Belliveau, a pilot, and including the Jean-Baptiste Raymond, saw their opportunity. They overwhelmed the officers and crew of the Pembroke, who numbered only eight, seized the vessel, sailed it to Baie Ste.-Marie on the western shore of Nova Scotia, hid there for nearly a month, and then sailed across the Bay of Fundy to the lower Rivière St.-Jean in January 1756. There, in early February, they were discovered by a boatload of British soldiers and sailors disguised as French troops. The Raymond and the others managed to drive off the British force, burn the ship, and make their way with the ship's officers and crew to the upper Rivière St.-Jean settlement of Ste.-Anne-du-Pay-Bas, today's Fredericton, New Brunswick, where they spent the rest of the winter. When food ran short at Ste.-Anne-du-Pay-Bas in the summer of 1756, Jean-Baptiste took his family to the St. Lawrence valley. Marie-Josèphe died in a smallpox epidemic at Québec in December 1757 two weeks before her husband died.

Most of the Mius d'Azys at Port-Royal fell into British hands. Philippe Mius d'Azy's grandson Joseph, married to Marie-Josèphe Préjean, ended up at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in late 1755. His younger brothers Charles, married to Marie-Marthe Hébert, Francois, married to Jeanne Duon, and Jean-Baptiste, married to Marie-Josèphe Surette, and their families went to Massachusetts. In October 1761, Joseph remarried to widow Marie Vincent at Philadelphia. In 1763, after the French and Indian War finally ended, Joseph took his family to Massachusetts, where his younger brothers and some of his D'Entremont cousins were still living in exile.

In the spring of 1756, two English sloops, the Mary and the Vulture, transported approximately 170 Acadians from the Cap-Sable area to New York and Massachusetts. One of these Cap-Sable deportees was Jacques Mius d'Entremont, père's son Jacques, fils, Jacques, fils's wife Marguerite Amireau, and some of their children; they sailed on the Vulture to Boston, Massachusetts. Jacques, fils died at Walpole, Massachusetts, in July 1759, age 80, and was buried at nearby Roxbury. Jacques, fils's daughter Anne married Abel, son of fellow Acadian Jean Duon, at Marblehead, Massachusetts, in 1756. Jacques, fils's son Joseph married Agnès, daughter of fellow Acadian Charles Belliveau, in Massachusetts in 1763.

.

The other D'Entremonts of Pobomcoup, including children of the captured Jacques, fils, escaped the 1756 deportation. They may have made their way to one of the Maritime islands north of peninsula Acadia, either to ÃŽle St.-Jean, today's Prince Edward Island, or to ÃŽle Royale, today's Cape Breton Island, which in 1755 were areas still controlled by France, or, more likely, the family eluded the British forces in the spring of 1756 and remained at Pobomcoup. No baptismal, marriage, or burial record places any of the D'Entremonts of Cap-Sable on any of the Maritime islands.

Their respite from British oppression was short-lived. After the fall of the French fortress at Louisbourg in July 1758, 400 British soldiers disembarked at Cap-Sable in late September to search for Acadians still in the area. Two sailboats manned by British troops sailed along the shore of the Cap-Sable area "to prevent the vermin from escaping in canoes," one British officer commented. This time luck ran out for the D'Entremonts of Pobomcoup. The British burned all of the houses and other buildings in the area to deny the Acadians shelter and sustenance. In late October, the British embarked 68 Acadians they had captured at Cap-Sable, plus their priest, on the transport Alexander II. This probably included D'Entremonts. Several Acadian families escaped the ruthless Rangers sent out to catch them but surrendered to British authorities the following summer and were held as prisoners at Georges Island, Halifax. Meanwhile, the Alexander II sailed from Cap-Sable to Halifax, which it reached the first week of November. From Halifax, in December 1758, the British sent the Cap-Sable Acadians to France with other Acadians from the Maritime islands. The D'Entremonts went to Cherbourg.

Among the Maritime Acadians sent to France in late 1758 were Marie-Madeleine, daughter of Joseph Mius d'Azy and wife of Jean-Baptiste Henry, her younger sisters Geneviève, wife of Francois Guérin, and Rosalie, wife of Éloi Lejeune, and their brother Charles-Benjamin, married to Marie-Josèphe Guédry. They were deported from Île St.-Jean aboard the British transport Duke William, and all of them perished at sea. Their cousin Marie-Madeleine D'Entremont, widow of Jean Lafitte of Île Royale, also was deported to France in 1758. Marie-Madeleine D'Entremont ended up at Rochefort, near La Rochelle, where she died in August 1760, age 70.

That the Cap-Sable D'Entremonts were at Cherbourg by late January 1759 is attested to by the baptism of Abraham, younger son of Jacques Mius d'Entremont III and Marguerite Landry of Pobomcoup, at Trés-St.-Trinité, Cherbourg, on 22 January 1759; Abraham's baptismal record states that he was born "aux quatre Sables" on 8 December 1758, so this gives an idea of when the family was transported from Acadia to France. The following year, 1760, was especially tragic for the Cap-Sable D'Entremonts at Cherbourg: Marie-Jeanne-Charlotte, age 3 weeks, daughter of Simon, and Simon, age 5, perhaps another child of Simon, died in February. Claire, wife of Charles-Paul Hébert, age 50, and Joseph, age 72, son of Jacques, père, died in March. Charles, age 33, a bachelor, son of Joseph; Anne, age 30; and Marguerite, age 45, daughter of Charles, died in May. Two more bachelor sons of Joseph, Jean, age 27, and Abraham, age 38, died in June. Jacques III also died at Cherbourg in 1760. The rigors of deportation probably contributed to so many deaths in the family that year; also, French ports were hotbeds of ship-borne epidemics such as smallpox and plague. There were also moments for the family to celebrate, however, such as young Abraham's baptism in January 1759. But tragedy always lurked in the dark corners of their lives. Cécile, daughter of Joseph D'Entremont, died at Cherbourg in c1762, in her late 30s. Simon, son of Joseph D'Entremont and widower of Marie Amireau, married Anne, daughter of fellow Acadian Gabriel Molaison of Pobomcoup and widow of Francois Viger, in September 1763. Joseph, son of Charles D'Entremont, married Anne, daughter of fellow Acadian Francois Landry, in February 1764, soon after his parents died at Cherbourg. Joseph's son Joseph David was born that December, and Pierre Marin was born posthumously in August 1766; Joseph had died at Cherbourg in March. Madeleine, daughter of Joseph D'Entremont, married Jean, son of fellow Acadian Jean Granger of Port-Royal, in May 1764. That same month, Madeleine, daughter of Charles D'Entremont, married Basile, son of fellow Acadian Pierre Boudrot of Port-Royal, but she died in December 1770, age 40. Pierre, son of Charles D'Entremont, died at Cherbourg in July 1778; he was 47 years old and never married.

Not all of the D'Entremonts remained at Cherbourg. By the early 1780s, Jacques IV, now in his 20s, had moved down the coast to St.-Malo in northern Brittany, where he married Frenchwoman Marie Herve of St.-Malo, widow of Louis Langlinais of that city. Jacques IV signed as a witness to a marriage at St.-Servan, near St.-Malo, in February 1784, about the time that the Spanish government offered the Acadians in Louisiana the chance for a new life in faraway Louisiana. Jacques IV, wife Marie, and his widowed mother, Marguerite Landry, were the only members of D'Entremont family who agreed to take it, but Jacques IV, ever the aristocrat, put a price on his emigration to the Spanish colony. Before he and his family set sail for Louisiana in August 1785, in recognition of the noble status of his family in old Acadia the Spanish made him a captain.

.

Meanwhile, the Mius d'Entremonts and Mius d'Azys who had been exiled to Massachusetts and Pennsylvania waited patiently for the French and Indian War to end. When it did, in early 1763, they were able to leave the British colonies, where they had never felt welcome. Amazingly, Jacques D'Entremont, fils's children and grandchildren returned to their home at Pobomcoup! They no longer held the seigneury there--that ended with their exile--but at least they were home again. One of Jacques, fils's younger sons, Bénoni, died at Pobomcoup, now Pubnico, Nova Scotia, in February 1841, in his late 90s.

Joseph Mius d'Azy and his family left Philadelphia for Massachusetts in 1763 to join his younger brothers and his cousins there. One of Joseph's daughters, Marie-Cécile, married Frenchman Pierre Rinard of Granville, Normandy, in Massachusetts in c1765. By 1767, the Mius d'Azys also had returned to their old home at Cap-Sable--to Ste.-Anne-du-Ruisseau-de-l'Anguille, Pointe-à-Rocco, Pointe-des-Ben, and Bas-de-Tousket, now Tusket, near Pobomcoup. In the 1780s, one of Charles Mius d'Azy's sons, Barthélemy, married to Madeleine Doiron, moved to Arichat on Île Madame, off the southern coast of Cape Breton Island, formerly Île Royale, and then to Prince Edward Island, formerly Île St.-Jean, in the 1790s. But most of the Mius D'Entremonts and Mius d'Azys remained in the Cap-Sable area.

LOUISIANA: RIVER SETTLEMENTS

Only one descendant of Philippe Mius d'Entremont, baron de Pobomcoup, found refuge in Louisiana. Philippe's great-grandson, Jacques IV, son of Jacques Mius d'Entremont III and Marguerite Landry, came to Louisiana aboard La Ville d'Archangel, the sixth of the Seven Ships from France, that reached New Orleans in early December 1785. Jacques IV was only 29 years old when he made the crossing. With him was his widowed mother, age not recorded, his wife Marie Herve, age 30, son Jacques-Ferdinand, age 1, newborn daughter Marie, or Martine, born probably aboard ship, and three stepchildren named Langline or Langlinais, ages 11, 9, and 7. Infant Martine was baptized at New Orleans soon after the family reached the colony.

Jacques IV took his family to the Acadian community of Ascension on the river above New Orleans, where his wife soon died. He does not seem to have remarried. Despite the captaincy given to him by the Spanish, censuses taken at Ascension in the late 1780s and early 1790s reveal a man who was not much more affluent than his fellow Acadians. In 1788, Jacques IV, now a widow, was living on the left, or east, bank of the river, with daughter Martine and two Langlinais stepchildren. His spread along the river was 8 arpents wide (the typical Acadian land grand was 6 arpents wide), he owned a single slave, one horned cow, and one pig. Three years later, still living with his daughter and two Langlinais stepchildren, he could boast 10 arpents of frontage on the river, but he still owned only a single slave and one cow. His swine herd, however, had increased to 10.

CONCLUSION

Jacques Mius d'Entremont IV, the captain, and his wife Marie Herve, had no more children in Louisiana. Son Jacques-Ferdinand probably died in childhood. Daughter Martine survived and married Jean-Baptiste, son of fellow Acadian Jean-Athanase Trahan, at Atakapas, west of the Atchafalaya Basin, in July 1802. Since no male line took root in Louisiana, this proud, old Acadian family, except for its blood, did not survive in the Bayou State.

The family's name also is given as d'Entremont de Pobomcoup, Meuse, Miousse, Mius d'Azit, Mius de Pobomcoup, and also is spelled as Dantremon, Dendremont. 
D' Entremont Jacques (I3684)
 
3143 Tiré de http://www.geocities.com/comeau_famille/comeau2a.html

Our ancestor Pierre Comeau l'aîné dit l'Esturgeon is the second son of the pioneers Pierre Comeau & Rose Bayon. He was born in 1652 probably in Port-Royal. Around 1677, he married in Port-Royal Jeanne Bourg, daughter of Antoine Bourg et Antoinette Landry 
Comeau l'ainé Pierre (I3544)
 
3144 Tiré du document reçu des Soeurs Grises

Ainée de 5 enfants. A perdu sa mère à  l'âge de 7 ans. Fut adoptée par une famille amie qui la garda deux ans puis la plaça chez nos orphelines à  la maison mère. De là , elle passa à  notre école S.-Joseph de la rue Cathédrale où de 1911 à  1915 elle fit son cours ménager après quoi elle entra à  notre noviciat.

Avait 5 ans quand sa famille vint se fixer au Canada. Mais après la mort de sa mère le père retourna aux Etats-Unis où il contracta un second mariage pendant que Rose-Alma était novice. Eut 4 enfants de cette nouvelle union; la belle-mère est considérée à  l'égal d'une mère par les enfants du premier lit et Sr Boucher affirme qu'il n'y a aucune différence entre frères et demi-frères: tous sont demeurés très unis. Son père est né et a été élevé aux Etats-Unis; mais sa mère était une québécoise. 
Boucher Rose - Alma (I76)
 
3145 TOUPIN dit DUSSAULT François-Amable et Marie Louise PROULT (sosa 276 et 277)

MARIAGE 09-02-1756 paroisse St-François-de-Sales, Neuville


SOURCE : S.G.C.F. d5p_1628A0372.ipg 4 ième sur 15 1/1

TRANSC
RIPTION

MARGE ;

Mariage de Francois Amable Dussault et de Marie Louise Proult


L'an mille sept cent cinqte six e le neuf février après la publication des trois bans de mariage faite au prones des messes paroissiales entre François Amable Toupin dit Dusault fils de François Amable Toupin dit Dusault et de Magdeleine Contancinaux les père et mère de cette paroisse d'une part et de Marie Louise Proult fille de feu François Proult et de Marie Thérèse Faucher les père et mère aussi de cette paroisse d'autre partou ne s'étant trouver aucun empêchement ni opposition canonique je soussigné prêtre et missionnaire à Neuville après avoir reçu leur mutuel consentement leur ay donné la bénédicton nuptiale suivant le _ de ce diocèse en présence de François Toupin dit Dussault père de l'époux et de Jean Toupin dit Dussault d'une part et de Joseph Proult et Augustin Matte frère et beau frère de l'épouse et de plusieurs autres parents et amis qui ne savent pas signé excepté Faucher qui avec nos signe
de ce requis __

L______ Faucher

Chartier de Lotbinière prêtre (prêtre missionnaire)

MARR: ASSO @I1449@
TYPE Présent
RELA Père de l'époux
MARR: ASSO @I1799@
TYPE Présent
RELA Frère de l'époux
MARR: ASSO @I1800@
TYPE Présent
RELA Frère de l'épouse
MARR: ASSO @I1801@
TYPE Présent
RELA Beau frère de l'épouse
MARR: ASSO @I1802@
TYPE Présent 
Family F2124
 
3146 TOUPIN dit DUSSAULT Jean-François et Marie-Magdelaine CONTENCINAU


(sosa 552 et 553)

MARIAGE 22-01-1731 St-François-de-Sales, comté P
ortneuf, Neuville

SOURCE : S.G.C.F. d5p_31100308.ipg 47/53, 347 ième feuillet 2/2

TRANSCRIPTION

MARGE :

Mariage entre Jean François Toupin dit Dusault et Marie Magdelaine Contencinau


L'an de grace mil sept cents trente et un et le vingt deuxième jour de janvier après avoir publiés___ des deux bans de mariage aux prônes de deux dimanches consécutifs dont le dernier fut hier entre Jean-François Toupin dit Dusault fils de Jean-Baptiste Toupin et de Marie Magdelaine Mazerai d'une part et Marie Magdelaine Contancinau fille de Pierre

?______
Contencianu et de Marie Françoise lefebvre et Monseigneur l'
Évêque Desamos et Coadjuteur de Monseigneur l'Évêque de Québec aiant accordé la dispense du troisième ban la quelle dispense j'ai entre les mains je soussigné docteur en théologie et curé de la paroisse de Saint François de Sales de Neuville ou autrement la pointe aux Trembles ai reçu leur consentement mutuel et leur ai donné la bénédiction nuptiale avec les cérémonies prescrites
de la fille
par la Sainte Église en présence de François Lefbvre dit Anger oncle maternel, de Jean Baptiste Toupin, de Nicolas Matte et de Charles Trépanier duquels les deux premiers doivent signer avec moi, les deux autres étant in____suivant l'ordonnance ont déclaré ne le savoir signer
François Toupain François Le Fefbvre Anger
Jean Toupain Dumont curé de Neuville

NOTE Monseigneur DESAMOS coadjuteur de l'Évêque a accordé la dispense du troisième ban

MARR: ASSO @I1807@
TYPE Présent
RELA Oncle de l'épouse
MARR: ASSO @I1808@
TYPE Présent
MARR: ASSO @I1809@
TYPE Présent
MARR: ASSO @I1810@
TYPE Présent 
Family F1808
 
3147 Tous les enfants se sont mariés à Ste-Marie-Salomé Family F2618
 
3148 Toussaint s’établira à Montréal où il a été un serviteur de Jeanne Mance avant de reprendre ses activités de couvreur de toit. Il épouse Barbe Barbier dite Minime le 24 novembre 1670 en l’église Notre-Dame-de-Montréal. Une maison ancestrale Beaudry, vieille de 300 ans et située à Pointe-aux-Trembles, existe toujours.
http://www.ville.montreal.qc.ca/cult…/maison-antoine-beaudry

Pas certain d'être le même

Voir http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/genealogieQuebec.aspx?name=Toussaint_Beaudry&pid=44517&lng=fr 
Beaudry Toussaint (I2966)
 
3149 Traduction du document :
Mariage de mon arrière grand-père Azarie # 8


Mariage :Azarie JODOIN et Ida VENNE le 10-02-1896 à St-Charles, Lache
naie, comté l'Assomption
Microfilm # 101

M. BJ.B. Durivage Prêtre curé le dix février, mil huit-cent
Jodoin quatre-vingt-seize Après la publication dun ban de Azarie mariage faite au de notre messe paroissiale entre, JodoinAzarie Jodoin, journalier fils majeur de Azarie Jodoin
&cultivateur et de Évelina Canti de cette paroisse dune Idapart, et Ida Venne fille mineure de Zéphirin Venne Vennemenuisier et de Joséphine Mathieu aussi de cette
paroisse dautre part, vu la dispense des deux autres bans accordée le quatre du courant par Messire H. Bourgeault Vicaire général de ce Diocèse, ne sétant
découvert aucun empêchement à ce mariage, du consentement des parents. Je, soussigné prêtre curé
de cette paroisse ai reçu leur mutuel Consentement de Mariage et leur ai donné la bénédiction nuptiale en présences de Azarie Jodoin père de lépoux et de
Zéphirin Venne pêre de lépouse qui ont signé avec les époux, lecture faite.
Zéphirin Venne
Azarie Jodoin
Azarie Jodoin
Ida Venne
Clarisse Venne
Achille Venne 
Cormier François (I5556)
 
3150 Trouvé le 11 septembre 2005 sur le site www.gencircles.com Source (S42)
 

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