the Armorial de France of d’Hozier as being the daughter of Simon-François Daumont de Saint-Lusson and Marguerite La Verge. On the other hand Tanguay’s dictionary gives Marguerite Bérin as
lieutenant in 1705, was put on half pay in 1711.
In 1710 he married Marguerite-Thérèse, the daughter of Joseph-François
CÉRÉ DE LA COLOMBIÈRE, MARIE-JULIE-MARGUERITE, dite Sœur Mance, Religious Hospitaller of St
-Gertrude Macard, daughter of Nicolas and Marguerite Couillard. Six children were born of this marriage; one of them, Charles-Joseph (1674–1726), became a priest and canon of the cathedral of Quebec, and
and Marguerite Petitot, dit Saint-Sceine (Sincennes); m. 1773 Marie-Marguerite Le Blanc at Salem, Massachusetts; d. after September 1799
Durocher, a tailor, and Marguerite Le Roy; d. sometime before 15 Sept. 1756.
Joseph Durocher’s name appears for the first time in Canadian
years. In 1692 he married Marguerite Crevier, by whom he had six sons and two daughters. Marguerite was buried at Montreal, 7 June 1707. On 24 March 1718 he married Élisabeth, daughter of
LEMOINE DESPINS, MARGUERITE-THÉRÈSE, superior of the Sisters of Charity (Grey Nuns) of the Hôpital Général of Montreal; b
Levasseur* and one of the founders of the Confrérie de Sainte-Anne, at the parish church of Quebec.
In 1648, in Paris, he married Marguerite Richard
, towards halfpast one in the afternoon, Marie-Josephte Chastelain, Boucher de Niverville’s wife, and her mother Marguerite asked the slave, who was sharpening a kitchen knife on a stone, to perform some task
. 17 April 1707 at Saint-François-du-Lac, daughter of Louis Véronneau, a merchant, and Marguerite Maugras; d. 20 April 1764 in Montreal
settlement. Indeed he died prematurely on 3 April 1699 and was buried at Trois-Rivières the next day. He was survived by his wife, Marie-Marguerite Blason de Vauvril, whom he had married at Quebec on 13
ACND, MS M1, Écrits autographes de Sœur Marguerite Bourgeoys. Dollier de Casson, Histoire du Montréal, 163–65, 241, 250, 252. JR (Thwaites), XLVII, 176–78, contains a letter
. One of the sons, Pierre, settled at Pisiquit. Two others, Joseph and Alexandre, lived at Chipoudy on properties which had been granted to their wives, Agnès and Marguerite, granddaughters of Pierre
Sagard from Tadoussac to Quebec. He was still in the colony in 1624, since in January he acted as godfather to Marguerite
. 1723 at Saint-Hilaire-du-Harcourt, France, son of Noël Hantraye and Marie Hamond; m. 9 Jan. 1753 Marie-Marguerite Debuire in Quebec; m. secondly 26 Nov. 1759 Marie-Françoise Viger in
10th child of Joseph-François Hertel de La Fresnière and Marguerite de
La Rocque de Roberval’s expedition. In 1555 he was still going to sea, because a document describes him as master of the Marguerite Bonaventure sailing out of Saint-Malo. This
-Rivières as a young man and there married Marguerite Pepin of Champlain on 10 Nov. 1704. Leclerc lived in the lower town and worked as a joiner, barn-builder, and house-framer. He took care of his
.
The elder, Pierre, dit La Verdure, a tailor, husband of Marie-Marguerite Mius d’Entremont, was one of the founders of Grand-Pré. Charles, a “laboureur” (ploughman), according to
to face unpaid bills with a wife to support. Abigail, referred to in Montreal notarial deeds as “Marguerite Stebens,” had greater cause for disappointment, however; not only was she in a foreign
POLLET, ARNOULD-BALTHAZAR, royal notary; b. 1702 in France, son of Germain Pollet and Marguerite Harry, of the parish
ROY, MARGUERITE, dite de la Conception (incorrectly
Precious Blood; b. 11 July 1833 in Saint-Hyacinthe, Lower Canada, daughter of Joseph Caouette, a blacksmith, and Marguerite Olivier; d. there 6 July 1905
at Quebec, eldest surviving son of Mathieu Damours* de Chauffours and Marie Marsolet; m. first 1 Oct. 1686 Marguerite
Suève. Then he entrusted the task to his wife, Marguerite-Renée Denys, whom he had married at Quebec on 16 Oct. 1672 and who was the daughter of Pierre
”), pilot; b. 1589 in France; d. 8 Sept. 1664 at Quebec.
Martin arrived in New France with his wife, Marguerite Langlois, her sister Françoise
and his “very fine intelligence” to the settlement of the vast territories to the north of Montreal. He was the founder and organizer of a large French-Canadian settlement at Sainte-Marguerite, in the
, married respectively Anne and Marguerite, the daughters of Governor Charles de La Tour and Jeanne Motin; the
further the case for beatification of her congregation’s founder, Marguerite Bourgeoys*. A voluminous correspondence describes this journey
condition that he marry their niece Marguerite, daughter of Jean-Paul Legardeur* de Saint-Pierre. The wedding took place on 24
Faillon, Histoire de la colonie française, III, passim. Henri Gauthier, Sulpitiana (Montréal, 1926). Albert Jamet, Marguerite Bourgeoys, 1620–1700 (2v., Montréal
BLANCHARD, JULIE-MARGUERITE-LIA, named Mother Marie-Antoinette, superior general of the Sisters of Charity of
Martinet* de Fonblanche, as an officer of the surgeons’ guild.
Bouchard had married Marguerite Boessel at Quebec on 6 Aug. 1657; they had seven
Champlain, became a Minim priest; b. c. 1600 in France, son of Nicolas Boullé, a secretary in the king’s privy chamber, and of Marguerite Alix; d. sometime after 1638
, son of Jean Bourdon and Marguerite Legris; buried 7 Aug. 1724 at Boucherville.
In our opinion, J.-Edmond Roy has wrongly identified Jacques
Joseph Dugas in 1725, and then the Marguerite, which was regularly in service to Quebec between 1734 and 1737. His name frequently appears in notaries’ minutes and in statements of the colony’s
children. He married Marguerite Bélanger in 1712, became a widower in 1717, and two years later took as his fourth wife Louise Nolin, by whom he had three children
married Marguerite, daughter of Jacques Hertel and Marie Marguerie. He fell foul of the law with
Marguerite and Pierre*; buried 13 Feb. 1723 at Champlain.
Michel
, he married Marguerite de Chavigny de Berchereau, widow of Thomas Douaire de Bondy and the mother of four children. His mother-in-law, Éléonore de
Fleury* Deschambault and of Marguerite de Chavigny; d. 29 Aug. 1698 at Mines (Minas Basin).
He was the eldest son of one of the most
and Geneviève Juchereau de Maur; and in 1700, in Acadia, to Marguerite, daughter of Michel
-Rivières.
Saint-Paul was married twice, and outlived both his wives. Marguerite Jutrat, whom he married in Trois-Rivières on 12 Nov. 1675, bore
Marguerite Martin, daughter of Abraham Martin.
After leaving
La Mothe, d’Esgry et de Hauteville, and of Marguerite Lyonne.
During the five years he spent in New France, from 1651 to 1656, Hauteville was
.), son of Jean-Baptiste Legardeur* de Repentigny and Marguerite Nicollet de Belleborne; d. 3 Dec. 1749 in
.”
In 1675 he had married Marguerite Volant, who bore him two daughters. In 1680 he married again, this time with Madeleine, the daughter of Pierre Boucher, the former governor of Trois-Rivières. Thirteen
MAHEUT, LOUIS, probably the first surgeon born in Canada, son of René Maheut, a bourgeois of Paris, and Marguerite Corrivault; b
silversmith and soldier; son of Antoine Olivier, dit Le Picard, and Marguerite Savantain; fl. 1688–98.
A native of the region of Beauvais, Marc