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(Gagetown), N.B., son of James Peters and Margaret Lester; m. 26 June 1823 Mary Ann Winnett in Annapolis Royal, N.S., and they had six daughters and four sons; d. 12 May 1852 in Saint
 
SAINT-OURS, FRANÇOIS-XAVIER DE, officer in the colonial regular troops; b. 12 Dec. 1717 at Montreal, fourth child of Pierre de
 
 Dec. 1723 he was ordained a priest by Bishop Saint-Vallier [La Croix*]; he had
 
(according to Tanguay); he came from Dieppe (province of Normandy), and was the son of Jacques de Horné and Catherine Duval; buried 7 March 1730 at Sainte-Croix
SOUMANDE, LOUISE, dite de Saint-Augustin, Religious Hospitaller, first superior of the Hôpital Général of
 
official French documents as “Arpentigny.” In the 1650’s in partnership with merchants of Saint-Jean-de-Luz, Aprendestiguy equipped a vessel which
BENGLE, MARIE-AVELINE, named Sainte-Anne-Marie, member of the Congregation of Notre-Dame, teacher, school
 
CARTIER, TOUSSAINT, called “the hermit of Saint-Barnabé”; b. c. 1707 in France; d. 30
 
Paul Denys de Saint-Simon (1649–1731) was the second provost of the marshalcy of Canada and a member of the Conseil Souverain of
 
DUMAS SAINT-MARTIN, JEAN, merchant-trader and justice of the peace; b. February 1725 at Montauban, France, son of Pierre Dumas
 
MONBETON DE BROUILLAN, dit Saint-Ovide, JOSEPH DE, officer in the colonial regular troops
. After completing his secondary education in Nantes, France, Louis Normant Du Faradon studied theology at the Sulpician seminary in Angers and was admitted into the Society of Saint-Sulpice in Paris
 
BARLOW, THOMAS, businessman and politician; b. 1788 in Saint John, N.B., son of Ezekiel Barlow; m. 24 May
 
conduct the inaugural services at the Mission Chapel in Portland (Saint John). In an Anglican community as self-consciously evangelical as 19th-century
 
GAUTHIER, LOUIS-ZÉPHIRIN, architect; b. 25 Aug. 1842 in Saint-Barthelémy (Saint-Barthélemy), Lower Canada, son of Amable
 
in Paris, France, son of François Guernon, an innkeeper, and Marie Coulon; m. first 10 Aug. 1761 Marie Dalpech, dit Bélair, in the parish of Saint-Sulpice
 
Pierre Hubert and Marie-Josephte Chartier; d. 9 Nov. 1842 in Saint-Denis on the Richelieu, Lower Canada, and was buried in the crypt of the parish church
 
of the Compagnie Razilly-Condonnier; consequently he probably arrived in Acadia with Commander Isaac de Razilly as early as 1632. Le Creux was in command of Fort Saint-François at Canseau and
SKINNER, EMMA SOPHIA (Fiske), linguist, suffragist, and social reformer; b. 23 Oct. 1852 in Saint John, daughter of Samuel
 
Saint-Claude, merchant, and Françoise Radisson; d. 14 June 1735, near Montreal, without issue. His older twin brothers, the Abbés
Conseil de Chicoutimi; b. 18 Jan. 1851 at the Saint-Alphonse mission (Saguenay), Lower Canada, daughter of Hyppolite Simard, a farmer, and Dosithée Simard; d. 11 May 1937 at the
BOURASSA, FRANÇOIS, farmer, Patriote, militia officer, and politician; b. 5 June 1813 in Sainte-Marguerite
 
CHARLY SAINT-ANGE, MARIE-CATHERINE, dite du Saint-Sacrement, known in religion, in the Congrégation de Notre
 
DUGAL, OLIVIER (baptized Charles-Olivier), wood-carver; b. 4 Nov. 1796 in Saint-Michel, not
 
Christian.” Her marriage in 1879 to a New Brunswick ship broker took her to Saint John, where she gradually moved from being an outsider to one possessing “the confidence of the community.” Though raised a
 
HÉBERT, JEAN-FRANÇOIS, Roman Catholic priest; b. 24 June 1763 in Saint-Pierre, Île d’Orléans, Que., son of
 
LEDUC, ANNE-FRANÇOISE, dite Saint-Joseph, nun, Religious
Lewin and Mary Furmage; m. 17 Dec. 1831 Sarah Ann Clarke in Chatham, N.B., and they had at least seven children; d. 11 March 1900 in Lancaster (Saint John West), N.B
gallicize his official religious name and signed Frère Élie), member of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, educator, and author; b. 27 Dec. 1875 in Salvail, near Saint-Hyacinthe
 
-Jacques Porlier, a merchant, and Angélique Cuillerier; d. 15 Aug. 1789 at Saint-Ours (Que.). Pierre-Antoine Porlier did his
 
. 18 Aug. 1842 in Saint-Vincent-de-Paul (Laval), Lower Canada. Joseph Pépin, a remarkable craftsman, practised at the time when
 
SERREAU (Sarreau) DE SAINT-AUBIN, JEAN, soldier, sailor, and seigneur; b. 1621 in the province of Poitou; d. 29 March
. Upon his return to Nova Scotia a few years later, Gray may have been given the parish of Amherst. In 1826 he was appointed curate in Trinity Church, Saint John, N.B., where his father had become rector
 
living in Saint-Roch ward at 148 Rue Saint-Vallier. During the following decade he lived on Rue Saint-Joseph in the same ward. From late May to early August 1874 Rigali ran an announcement in Le
 
Ireland); d. 23 July 1883 in Saint John, N.B., and was survived by his wife and two daughters. William Elder received an excellent theological
. 23 Jan. 1824 in Montreal, son of Louis Dière, dit Maréchal, and Geneviève Saint-Denis; d. there 26 July 1892. The son
Fontaine; d. 3 Nov. 1878 at Saint-Hyacinthe, Que. After spending his youth at Saint-Damase, where his family lived, Pierre Bachand entered the
 
Marguerite Mercier; m. 11 Oct. 1886 Rosana Caron in the parish of Saint-Roch in Quebec City, and they had nine children; d. 4 Dec. 1936 in that city and was buried there on 7 December
. 19 Sept. 1852 in Saint-Pierre-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud, Lower Canada, son of Calixte Dion, a farmer, and Angèle Picard; d. 8 Oct. 1918 in Côte-des-Neiges (Montreal
 
, carpenter, and Marie-Anne Pageot; d. 25 Dec. 1869 at Saint-Casimir, Quebec. The name Giroux was connected with religious architecture long before
Globensky, of Polish extraction, and Marie-Françoise Brousseau, dit Lafleur de Verchères; m. first Élisabeth Lemaire Saint-Germain, by whom he had four daughters and one son, and secondly
 
LEPAGE DE SAINTE-CLAIRE, LOUIS, priest, canon, seigneur; b. 22 Aug. 1690 at Saint-François, Île d’Orléans, son of René
or as La Corne Saint-Luc, officer in the colonial regular troops, merchant, interpreter, and member of the Legislative Council; b. at
 
. Recognized as a solid, dependable officer, Bécart de Fonville was for this reason made commandant of Fort Saint-Frédéric (Crown Point, N.Y.) in 1743, succeeding François-Antoine
 
Limoges, France, son of Jean Depéret, a merchant, and Valère Limousin; d. 17 April 1757 at Sainte-Anne-du-Bout-de-l’Île (Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Que
 
Pierre-Benjamin Dumoulin and Hermine Rieutord; m. 10 Jan. 1855, in Saint-Norbert d’Arthabaska
 Aug. 1844 at Saint-Jacques-de-l’Achigan (Saint-Jacques, Montcalm County), L.C., son of Joseph Dupuis, a farmer, and Euphrasie Richard, of Acadian ancestry; d. 24 Aug. 1876 at Montreal, Que
trader, and Marie Poulin; d. 3 Feb. 1859 in Saint-Michel, Lower Canada. Narcisse-Charles Fortier received his classical education at the
 
and Marie-Anne Barbeau; d. 2 May 1875 at Saint-Flavien, Quebec. Ferdinand-Edmond Gauvreau studied theology at the seminary of Nicolet
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