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 June 1792, three days after the death of the superior, Marguerite-Thérèse Lemoine* Despins, Sister Coutlée was elected to
 
Crespieul, a lawyer, and of Marguerite Théry, baptized by his uncle, canon Antoine Théry; d. December 1702. François de Crespieul entered the noviciate
her order, which had been founded in 1737 in Montreal by Marie-Marguerite d’Youville [Dufrost*]. The community had
 
Antoine Daniel, a Dieppe merchant, and Marguerite Martin; m. 4 Oct. 1620 Hélène Lemare in Dieppe; on 10 April 1632 he signed a contract there to marry Louise Duplix; d. 1661
 
, when on the point of embarkation, died 2 September of a sudden illness. His widow returned to France. Lusignan had married at Montreal, on 8 Jan. 1722, Madeleine-Marguerite, daughter of
 
Marguerite Dizy, wife of Jean Desbrieux, at Batiscan as his mistress, François was placed under an interdict by the bishop (not an excommunication as stated by Gosselin). After an altercation
 
fortune, Pierre Dizy seems to have entertained some social ambitions. He married four of his daughters to seigneurs and a fifth to the son of a seigneur; Marguerite, the youngest, entered the order of the
 
, and of Marguerite Auber; d. before 1678. François Doublet concerned himself with sea-borne trade, and about 1659 he was in partnership with a Dieppe
admitted to the bar of Lower Canada on 28 April 1827 and practised at Quebec. There on 27 July 1830 he married Marguerite Quirouet. The couple apparently had no children, but Charles had previously
 
Picard; m. 26 Nov. 1753 Marguerite Métivier in Montreal, and they had at least three children; d. after 1787. Laurent Ducharme was born into a
 
. Upon its completion he settled near his brother François at Terrebonne. In 1817 both of them were married there, François to Félicité-Zoë Séguin on 7 January, and 20-year-old Olivier to Marguerite
Bénoni d’Entremont* and Anne-Marguerite Pothier; d. 6 Sept. 1886 at East Pubnico, N.S
 
. Leaving the seminary in 1840, he served in the parish of Sainte-Marguerite-de-Dorchester for five years and then in Sainte-Marie-de-la-Nouvelle-Beauce (Sainte-Marie) from 1845 to 1847. Abbé Forgues
 
Gadoys* (1594–1667) and came to Canada with his parents. The family arrived at Ville-Marie (Montreal) about 1647 after a sojourn in the Quebec region. Pierre the younger was, according to Marguerite
Commerciale Saint-Jean-Baptiste, run by Charles-Joseph-Lévesque Lafrance. At 15 he was apprenticed to a tailor and five years later he opened his own business on the northeast corner of Rue Sainte-Marguerite
 
of Honon, and Marguerite de Bonfils; d. in 1746, possibly at Avignon, France. François de Galiffet came to New France in 1688 as an officer in the
 
Mediterranean in 1636, and in the attack of the Îles Sainte-Marguerite in 1637. In 1638 we find him in Acadia, serving as a commissary and storekeeper. He also fulfilled the functions of lieutenant to
 
, superior; b. 16 April 1671 in Montreal, daughter of Nicolas Gaudé, a carpenter, and of Marguerite Picard; d. 15 Jan. 1751 in Montreal
Geoffrion, a farmer, and Marguerite Beauchamp; m. 4 Feb. 1880 Angélina Lajeunesse in Terrebonne, Que., and they had four daughters and two sons; d. 17 Aug 1923 in Carleton, Que
 
-builder; b. 3 June 1806 at Quebec, son of Pierre Gingras, a merchant, and Marguerite Gaboury (Gabourit); m. there 3 July 1827 Louise Contremine, dit Jolicœur, and they had 11
conventions, F.-J. Robidoux, compil. (Shédiac, 1907). É.-L. Léger, L’histoire de la paroisse de Saint-Antoine, les débuts jusqu’à l’année 1967 ([Shediac Bridge, N.-B.], 1967). Marguerite
 
-Rivières, eldest son of René Godefroy* de Tonnancour, seigneur of La Pointe-du-Lac, and Marguerite Ameau; d. 30 Sept
, and merchant; baptized 27 March 1712 at Trois-Rivières (Que.), son of René Godefroy* de Tonnancour and Marguerite Ameau; d
 
. 1704 at La Flotte, Île de Ré, France, son of Denis Goguet, merchant, and Marguerite-Thérèse-Sibylle – ; m. 24 Nov. 1738 at Quebec Louise-Élisabeth, daughter of Jean
Treaty Organization (NATO) in 1950; m. secondly in 1922 in the same city Marguerite Holleville; d. there 26 Sept. 1929. Henry de
 
, son of Robert Groston* de Saint-Ange and Marguerite Crevier; d. 27 Dec. 1774, unmarried, at St Louis (MO
 
-Baptiste Guillet, merchant, and Marguerite Langlois; d. 28 Oct. 1868 in the village of his birth. On 6 Feb. 1809 Louis Guillet was
 
hospitality of a brother-in-law of Marguerite-Renée de la Croix, the superior of the Ursulines and a daughter of René Godefroy* de
 
in Canada and as governor of French Guiana; b. c. 1633, son of Jean Guillouet, a lawyer in the parlement, and of Marguerite Gascoing. m. 1666, at La Rochelle
 
. 30 Dec. 1708 at Agen, France, son of Joseph Guiton, a lawyer in the parlement, and Marguerite Masquard; m. Thérèse du Duc des Bordes, and they had at least one daughter; d. 24
 
, Lower Canada, son of Joseph Hamelle, a farmer, and Marguerite Fournier; d. 6 June 1905 in Montreal. After studies at
 
in Trois-Rivières, oldest son of Joseph-François Hertel* de La Fresnière and Marguerite de
 
HOWARD, JOSEPH, merchant and fur-trader; b. in England; m. c. 1763 Marguerite Réaume; d. 5 Dec. 1797 at
 
Marguerite [Bourgeoys*, named du Saint-Sacrement], to go and carry the spirit and the virtues of their founder elsewhere.” It was the
 
bankruptcy. The hospitallers had to give up the administration of the hospital, which was handed over to Marie-Marguerite Dufrost
Marguerite Bourdon]. Mother Juchereau refused, saying her sisters were called to minister to the sick in Quebec, not elsewhere. When ordered by Versailles to comply she nevertheless did so with good
 
. He studied, among other plants, the wild ginger (Asarum Canadense L.), the matgrass (Nardus Stricta L.), the marguerite (Chrysanthemum Leucanthemum L.), the ox-eye daisy
 
in Quebec. On 14 Nov. 1747 Lajus had married Marguerite Audet de Piercotte de Bailleul in Quebec, and they had several children who died in
 
-Trembles on Montreal Island; son of Antoine Lamarre, druggist, and Marguerite Levasseur of Saint-Michel-le-Palus parish in Angers (Maine-et-Loire); d. September 1740 at Pointe-aux-Trembles
 
’Youville, vénérable Marie-Marguerite Du Frost de Lajemmerais, veuve d’Youville, 1701–1771; fondatrice des Sœurs de la Charité de l’Hôpital-général
 
Marine; b. 12 Aug. 1712 at Aubusson, France, son of Gabriel-Alexis Des Bordes Landriève, presiding judge of the province of Marche, and Marguerite Mercier; buried 21 May 1778 at Artanes
 
jp; b. 16 Oct. 1814 at Quebec, son of Olivier Larue, master stonemason, and Marie-Marguerite Robichaux; m. 24 Feb. 1840 Maria Jane McClaren in Trois
 
, priest, Sulpician, and missionary; b. 1641 at Baugé, France, son of Charles-Emmanuel, Marquis d’Urfé et de Baugé, marshal of His Majesty’s camps and armies, and of Marguerite d’Allègre; d. 30
 
Leignes-sur-Fontaine (dept. of Vienne) France, son of Pierre de Lauzon, a lawyer, and Marguerite Riot; d. 5 Sept. 1742 at Quebec. After
Jean Delage, dit Lavigueur, and Marguerite Douglass; d. 11 Dec. 1885 at Lowell, Mass. Célestin Lavigueur showed a talent for
 
Tirepied, France, son of Jacques Courtois and Marguerite Le Ménager; d. 18 May 1828 in Saint-Laurent, Île d’Orléans, Lower Canada
 
, daughter of Jacques-Alexis de Fleury and Marguerite de Chavigny de Berchereau. They had one
 
Bourg*, dit Belle-Humeur, and Marguerite Melanson, dit La Verdure; d. 19 Oct. 1772 at Kervaux, in the parish of Le Palais, Belle-Île, France
 
. 10 Feb. 1762 in La Prairie (Que.), son of Michel Leclerc, master blacksmith, and Marguerite Bétourné; d. 9 May 1813 in Montreal, Lower Canada
 
, Lower Canada, son of François Lefebvre, a farmer, and Marguerite Rinfrette; d. 27 Jan. 1914 in Sudbury, Ont. Eugène
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