1801 to 1850 (of 4562)
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and of its seminary; b. 20 June 1875 in Saint-Norbert, Que., son of Clément Roch, a farmer, and Marie-Délia Laporte; d. 21 Dec. 1940 in Montreal
Clement Sabrevois de Bleury, a soldier, and Amelia Bowers, daughter of a Halifax half-pay officer; d. 15 Sept. 1862 in his manor-house at Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Laval), near Montreal
 
. Simonnet de la Croix, hospitaller and missionary,” and then “schoolmaster.” At that time he was teaching in the school at Longueuil. On 8 Oct. 1723 Bishop Saint-Vallier
in Belmont Cemetery, Sainte-Foy. Ulric-Joseph Tessier was a descendant of a family from La Rochelle in France that settled in New France in
, Massachusetts, as a Mahican; d. 8 Sept. 1755 at Lake George (Lac Saint-Sacrement). At a young age Theyanoguin moved from the Westfield region to Mohawk
 
Talbot, dit Gervais (d. 8 Oct. 1883), in Saint-Étienne parish at Beaumont; m. secondly 10 June 1885 Marie-Virginie-Célina Bardy, daughter of the late Pierre-Martial
 
Wetmore* and Harriet Rainsford; m. 12 Sept. 1848 Louisa Elizabeth Lansdowne in Saint John, N.B., and they had nine children; d. 7 March 1892 in Fredericton
parted in Saint-Jean (Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu), Que.; Stearns went south to become a clergyman in Philadelphia and Willis continued on to Montreal, where he arrived around June 1873
Ireland), son of Francis Anglin, an employee of the East India Company, and Joanna Warren; m. first 1853, probably on 26 November, in Saint John, N.B., Margaret O’Regan (d. 1855); they had no
Kingsclear Parish, N.B., son of John Allen and Ann Blair; m. 3 July 1845 Margaret Austen Drury in Portland (Saint John), N.B., and they had at least nine children; d. 27 Sept. 1898 in
, office holder, real estate agent, soldier, and philanthropist; b. 8 Nov. 1874 in Saint-Hilarion-de-Settrington (Saint-Hilarion), Que., son of Rieule Asselin and Cédulie Tremblay; m
1798 on Île aux Grues, Lower Canada (although his parents lived on Île aux Oies), son of François Baillargeon, a farmer, and Marie-Louise Langlois, dit Saint-Jean; d. 13 Oct. 1870
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under Saint-Ovide [Monbeton] proceeded overland. On New Year’s Day 1709, barely hours after the
politician; b. 9 Nov. 1870 in the parish of Saint-Enfant-Jésus, Montreal, son of Louis-Napoléon Dumouchel, a notary, and Caroline Leblanc; m. 20 Aug. 1918 Blanche Laplante in Pointe-aux
), lawyer, professor, journalist, politician, lieutenant governor, and author; b. 24 Dec. 1838 in Sainte-Rosalie, Lower Canada, son of Louis-Sébastien Langelier, a farmer, and Julie-Esther Casault
to Saint John, N.B., when he was very young and he was educated there in the public schools. As a boy he spent his summers hunting, fishing, and trading with the Indians on the Saint John River and its
doorstep of his house on Rue Saint-Jean taking the air and greeting with pleasure those who stopped to chat. His fortune had begun with trade, but nothing
Gabriel Lalemant; and that of 1650, which describes the ardours of the winter spent at Île Saint-Joseph (Christian Island) and the emigration and resettlement of the Hurons under the protection
Jean-Pierre or Pierre de Sales Laterrière from 1789), doctor, commissary and inspector of the Saint-Maurice ironworks, seigneur, and author; b. in the 1740s in the
Isabella Brent; m. 5 Feb. 1874 Henriette Brunelle in Saint-Hyacinthe, Que., and they had four daughters and a son; d. 24 April 1905 at Quebec
 
[Joybert*] was appointed captain in 1713. Périgny was awarded the cross of Saint-Louis in 1734. When he died 12 years later at the age of 85 he was “first captain” (the captain with the longest service
time he left Quebec, 13 May 1658, and his return on 8 August, he worked at the Sainte-Croix mission near Tadoussac, where he had gone at the same time as Father
 
AMANTACHA, baptized as Louis de Sainte-Foi, a Huron educated in France, later a friend and aide of the Jesuit
, État civil, Catholiques, Saint-Jean-Baptiste (Québec), 9 nov. 1901. ANQ-Q, CE1-15, 24 déc. 1844; M 186, M.-E. Anger. Arch. de la Maison Généralice des Sœurs du Bon-Pasteur de Québec
 
work at the University of New Brunswick and Provincial Normal School, and in about 1880, together with Professor Bailey, he exhibited to a Saint John audience, for the first time, a heliostat, a
 
, from the parish of Saint-Jacques de la Boucherie, Paris; d. 25 Jan. 1761 at Charlesbourg, near Quebec. Claude Barolet arrived in
 
. Claude Barrat married Jeanne Quisence at Saint-Malo in 1681. A census made in Newfoundland records his presence at Saint-Pierre in 1691; two years later he was employing ten lads who were learning the
 
Saint-Père, they appointed him seigneurial notary and clerk of the tribunal. He further became the secretary of the charitable organization and council of the parish of Notre-Dame. The Sieur
 
*, and later took part in a coastal raid at La Hève and in the destruction of Fort Saint-Louis, the trading post of the Compagnie des Pêches sédentaires de l’Acadie [see
 
Jouett (Jewett) whom he married in 1822; he married his second wife, Marie Ann Berton of Saint John, in 1837 and had three more daughters. Beckwith’s
Berczy* von Moll and Charlotte Allemand; d. at Sainte-Mélanie-d’Ailleboust, Que., 9 Dec. 1873. William Berczy Jr, son of a
 
Sarrazin; in 1727 they were at the bedside of the second bishop of Quebec, Saint-Vallier
 
between him and his wife signed in Quebec on 17 Oct. 1760. He was probably in attendance on the garrison of Fort La Tour, at the mouth of the Saint John River (N.B.), which was under the
 
, Lawrence Armstrong, dismissed him from his functions. He was replaced by François Mangeant, dit Saint
. NA, RG 31, C1, 1871, York County, N.B., St Mary’s parish, div.1: 39. N.B. Museum, (Saint John), W. F. Ganong fonds, folder 4, Braithwaite to Ganong, 27 Dec. 1904; 11 Jan. 1905
 
 1818 he had left his regiment in Kingston and returned to Quebec; on the 17th he advertised in the Quebec Gazette as a piano teacher with residence on Rue Sainte-Famille
 
Brunet sold finished leather. In the 1740s Brunet apparently lived in retirement in his house on Rue Saint-Vincent. He could probably afford to do so for
 
BULTEAU, GUILLAUME, Recollet priest; b. 1666, made his profession in the ecclesiastical province of Saint-André
 
Fort Saint-Frédéric (near Crown Point, N.Y.). He took part that year in building the great stone fort with which Amherst
 
Michel de Villebois de La Rouvillière, the commissary at Montreal, in 1737, and Claude-Michel-Jérôme, who became a naval officer in France. Claude-Michel was named a chevalier de Saint
 
CARON, THOMAS, secular priest, teacher at the seminary of Nicolet; b. 19 June 1819 at Saint-Antoine
 
CHAPOTON, JEAN-BAPTISTE, surgeon; b. c. 1690 in the parish of Saint-Jean-Baptiste, Bagnols (now Bagnols-sur
 
who were reinforced by 26 Indians from the Saint-Louis falls (Sault Saint-Louis) and the village of La Montagne (at Montreal). Two leagues above the Long Sault they caught up with Chaudière Noire
 April 1860. Morning Freeman (Saint John, N.B.), 25 July, 10 Sept. 1867; 9 July 1872. New Brunswick Reporter (Fredericton), 24 July 1872. St
 
. In 1691 he was appointed to the Huron (Wendat) mission at Notre-Dame-de-Lorette, located three leagues from Quebec on the seigneury of Saint-Gabriel, which belonged to the Jesuits. He had the privilege
 
, treated the 17 burned and maimed survivors, four of whom later died. The tragedy led to the building of All Saints’ Cottage Hospital, which opened in 1893
 
attorney; b. 1632 or around 1635–36 at Clair, near Rouen (province of Normandy), son of Jean Cusson and Jacqueline Pépin; d. 8 April 1718 at Saint-Sulpice
 
Acadia. That of Mathieu Damours, dated 1684, included the land between Jemseg and “Nacchouac” (Nashwaak) on the River Saint John. Here he developed the best cultivated seigneury on the river and with the
Derome was a brilliant student at the college of Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pocatière, and already showed his literary talents by winning French essay prizes and writing for newspapers. On 19 Oct. 1842
1801 to 1850 (of 4562)
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