Life Lines
Life Lines
id | Given Names | Surname | Sobriquet | Date Of Birth | Birthplace | Mother | Father | Marriages | Children | Exile | Louisiana | Property | Death Circumstances | Acquired Land By | Sources | Variants | Date Of Baptism | Predispersal | LA Arrival | Date Of Death | Date Of Burial | Baptism Site | Place Of Death | Paternal Grandparents | Maternal Grandparents | Interred At | Occupation | rev |
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1 | Pierre | Arosteguy (Rostigui) | 01/01/1713 | Bayonne, France | Marie Lassolde | François Arosteguy | Married Marie Robicheau (Robichaud), daughter of Charles Robicheau (Robichaut) and Marie Bourg, at St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, May 18, 1737. Jean Robichaud and Joseph Robichaud, brothers of the bride, witnessed the marriage record. | Anne (married February 25, 1766), Jean, Marguerite, Marie (Théotiste), Marie Rose (born August 17, 1765) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as an Acadian resident of New Orleans, August 17, 1765. Three of his children Jean, Marie, and Marguerite are listed among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767; Pierre, however, is not on the list. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:122; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:6; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313. | Perhaps the son of Joseph d'Arostiguy (d'Aresteguy) of the Lorembec settlement on Ile Royale (present-day Cape Breton Island). Joseph d'Arostiguy (d'Aresteguy) is the only person known to carry that surname in pre-dispersal Acadia. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2 | Anne | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | Veuve Bergeron | 01/01/1744 | Beauséjour, Acadia | Marie Hébert | Jean Arseneau | Married (1) Barthélemy Bergeron, who died ca. October 27, 1765. Married (2) Simon LeBlanc, the widower of Marie Josèphe Landry and the son of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Landry, at Ascension Catholic Church (in present-day Donaldsonville), November 9, 1767. | First marriage: Marguerite (born ca. 1763), Barthélemy (born ca. 1764; died before September 14, 1769), Charles Henry (born January or February 22, 1765; not listed in the 1769 census)Second marriage: Marie Anne (born 1768), Antoine Alexandre (baptized June 2, 1770), Anne Constance (baptized April 3, 1774), Edouard (born May 2, 1772), Henriette (married June 13, 1796), Benjamin (married November 19, 1804) | Was at New Orleans for the baptism of her son Charles Henry, ca. February 22, 1765. Subsequently settled at the Attakapas District, until an unidentified epidemic claimed her husband and forced her and many other Attakapas Acadians to migrate to Cabannocé. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the Widow Bergeron, residing in the household of Pierre Arseneau. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Simon LeBlanc. Her household included the following individuals: Simon Leblanc, 28 years old; Marie Anne, her daughter, 1 year old; Margueritte Bergeron, an orphan, 6 years old. Her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, two horses, twenty-eight hogs, and one musket. | Her burial record indicates that she was a native of Acadia, the widow of Simon LeBlanc, and appoximately seventy-five years of age at the time of her death. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:17; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 24; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 19; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2419; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:23; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 55-57; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 2, 12; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Anne Arsenault and Barthelemy Bergeron." | 1.765 | 21/08/1811 | St. James Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
3 | François | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 09/01/1764 | HIs burial record indicates that he was approximately one year old at the time of his death. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 18. | 19/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
4 | Guillaume | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1758 | Judith Bergeron | Jean Arseneau | Married Marguerite Gaudet, daughter of Louis Gaudet and Marie Hébert, at Cabannocé, March 5, 1786. | Charles Guillaume (born born January 10, 1787), Joseph Louis (born March 1, 1788), Rosalie Marguerite (born November 22, 1792), Henriette Eloïse (born January 20, 1795), Jean Baptiste Valéry (born January 24, 1797), Joseph Zenon (born March 14, 1799), Raymond (born March 6, 1801), Rosemond (born March 6, 1801), Anne Françoise (born March 15, 1803), Marie Joséphine (born March 25, 1803). Anne Françoise and Marie Joséphine were obviously twins, but the | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eight-year-old child residing in his parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. Purchased an African slave (a native of Angola) from Paul Azema, August 6, 1787. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:22-27; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Slave Sale, August 6, 1787, St. James Parish Original Acts. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
5 | Jean | Arseneau (Arceneaux, Arsenot) | 01/01/1728 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marguerite Hébert(?) | Pierre Arseneau(?) | Married Judith Bergeron. | Jean Charles (born 1752), Joseph (born 1754), Guillaume (born 1758), Paul (born 1762), Anne (born ca. February 1769), Manon (born 1769), François (born 1771), Laurent (born 1773), Alexandre (born 1777) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 380 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household that also included his wife Judith Bergeron and his sons Jean Charles, Joseph, Guillaume, and Paul. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 3 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm and one hog. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Judith Bergeron, his wife, 34 years old; Jean Charles, his son, 16 years old; Joseph, his son, 12 years old; Guillaume, his son, 8 years old; and Anne, his daughter, 7 months old. The census also indicates that the family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, fifteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 100 barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a forty-one-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Judith Bergeron, his wife, 44 years old; Joseph Arseneau, his son, 20 years old; Guillaume Arseneau, his son, 18 years old; Paul Arseneau, his son, 15 years old; François Arseneau, his son, 6 years old; Laurent Arseneau, his son, 4 years old; and Manon Arseneau, his daughter, 8 years old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with eighteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, sixteen cows, and four horses. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. He is identified as Jean Arsenot in the July 28, 1786 list. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | His burial record indicates that he was a 75-year-old widower at the time of his death. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.765 | 15/01/1800 | Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||
6 | Jean Charles | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Judith Bergeron | Jean Arseneau | Married Marie Josèphe Babin, daughter of Basile Babin and Anne Saulnier, at Cabannocé, January 17, 1777. | Abraham (baptized January 20, 1782), Denise (born March 15 or March 25, 1783), Félicité (married February 4, 1799), Justine (born April 13, 1787) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old child residing in his parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 3 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that also included his Marie Josèphe Babin, his fifteen-year-old wife. He and his spouse owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | His burial record indicates that he was a native of Acadia. Joseph Landry and Baptiste Chiasson witnessed the burial record. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27; 3:26; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.765 | 02/04/1813 | St. Michael's Catholic Church | NULL | |||||||||||||
7 | Joseph | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1754 | Judith Bergeron | Jean Arseneau | Married Marie Monique Dupuis (Dupuy), widow of Joseph Blanchard, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, September 10, 1780. | Céleste (born ca. 1781), Esther, Joseph, fils (born June 26, 1786), Modeste (born August 5, 1788), Pélagie (born December 13, 1790) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish) as a twelve-year-old child residing with his father, mother, and three siblings. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. | His burial record indicates that he was approximately fifty-six years of age at the time of his death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27; 3:26; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | 07/06/1811 | St. James Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
8 | Joseph | Arseneau (Arceneaux, Arcenos) | 01/01/1746 | Beaubassin(?), Acadia | Married Marie Bergeron. | Françoise (born 1767), Jean Charles (baptized July 3, 1774), Joseph (baptized August 21, 1777), Josèphe (baptized February 26, 1776), Marianne (Marie) (born 1769, married November 16, 1789), Marie Modeste (baptized January 10, 1779), Scholastique (baptized February 16, 1772) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 201 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including himself and his wife. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land with 4 arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bergeron, his wife, 24 years old; Françoise Arseneau, his daughter, 3 years old; Marguerite Arseneau, his daughter, 7 months old; and Théodore Bergeron, his nephew, 7 years old. His family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned six cows and twenty hogs. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-nine-year-old married man. He lived 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret in Cabannocé District. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bergeron, his wife, 31 years old; Jean Charles Arseneau, his son, 3 years old; Françoise Arseneau, his daughter, 10 years old; Marianne Arseneau, his daughter, 8 years old; Collastie (Scholastique) Arseneau, his daughter, 5 years old; and Théodore Bergeron, an orphan, 14 years old. Joseph Arsneau and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned one slave, twenty-four cows, and four horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. His name is rendered as Joseph Arcenos in the October 27, 1786 list. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
9 | Paul | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1762 | Judith Bergeron | Jean Arseneau | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a four-year-old child residing in his parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 3 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Not listed in his parents' household in the 1769 census of Cabannocé. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:22-24; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
10 | Pierre | Arseneau (Arceneaux, Arseneaux) | 01/01/1730 | La Pointe de Beauséjour, Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Anne Hébert | Jean Arseneau | Married Anne Bergeron, ca. 1757. | Cyprien (born ca. 1762), Rosalie (born ca. 1764), Marie Jeanne, Françoise Julienne (born November 15, 1768), Louis (born in 1768 in St. James Parish, according to his will and burial record, but not listed in the 1769 census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé), Pierre (baptized January 2, 1773), Alexandre (baptized June 20, 1774), François (baptized April 6, 1779) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 70 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. Evidently migrated to St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish, La.), ca. September 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a thirty-six-year-old settler occupying a tract of land measuring four arpents in frontage along the Mississippi River. His household included his wife, Anne Bergeron; his daughter, Rosalie; his mother-in-law; his sister-in-law, his sister; and Firmin Arseneau, an orphan. The census indicates he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included the following individuals: Anne Bergeron, his wife, 28 years old; Rosalie, his daughter, 5 years old; Marie Jeanne, his daughter, 3 years old; Françoise, his daughter, 10 months old; Firmin Arseneau, an orphan, 15 months old; and Charles Bergeron, an orphan, 11 months old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine cattle, three horses, twelve pigs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn and thirty barrels of surplus rice. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-eight-yer-old married man. Arseneau was reportedly engaged in smuggling corn "to the English at Manchac," ca. January 27, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Anne Bergeron, his wife, 34 years old; Louis Arseneau, his son, 7 years old; Pierre Arseneau, his son, 5 years old; Rosalie Arseneau, his daughter, 13 years old; Marie Arseneau, his daughter, 10 years old; Françoise Arseneau, his daughter, 4 years old; and Charles Arseneau, an orphan, 19 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage. They also owned eight slaves, forty cattle, and ten horses. He acquired a license to operate a cabaret and to sell "all sorts of beverages," ca. early 1781. Arseneau was ordered by the lieutenant governor to pay a fine of 40 piastres for permitting gambling in his cabaret, ca. February 14, 1781. In an unsuccessful attempt to obtain a pardon for Arseneau, Commandant Michel Cantrelle noted that the tavern-keeper was a "poor" head of a family who would have to sell two or three cattle to pay the fine because "he doesn't have a cent." Around May 3, 1781, Michel Cantrelle sent Pierre Arseneau (Arseneaux) to New Orleans in command of a boat. At New Orleans, Arseneau was to transport to Cabannocé a large shipment of gunpowder, flints, and lead musket balls for use by the Acadian Coast militia units that had been mobilized in response to a reported military threat posed by British loyalists at Natchez. On October 29, 1784, he joined with four other Acadian leaders in denouncing the tyranny of the local curé. Identified In an act of procuration recorded at St. Jacques de Cabannocé on November 9, 1787, Pierre Arseneau indicates that he was "a former resident of this jurisdiction [post]." Arseneau maintained that he "had been obliged to leave this coast [the Acadian Coast] with all of his family [and] to go and establish his residence in the Attakapas Post, where he had a large cattle ranch." Granted François Croizet, père, of St. Jacques de Cabannocé his power of attorney, November 9, 1787. | T8S, R4E, Sec. 095T8S, R4E, Sec. 096 | His succession is dated 1793. | Order of survey, April 12, 1786Order of survey, April 12, 1786 | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:12; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 16, 19; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Arsenault, Histoire et Généalogie, 6:2402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:5, 21, 24; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 27, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:470vo; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, April 6, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:294-295; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, February 12, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:284-284vo; Pedro Piernas to Michel Cantrelle, ca. February 1, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:287; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, May 3, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:311; Pedro Piernas to Michel Cantrelle, May 3, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:303; Jean Doucet, Jean Richard, Pierre Arseneau, Philippe La Chaussée, and Joseph Bourgeois to Governor Estevan Mir¢, October 29, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:271-272; Act of Procuration, November 9, 1787, St. James parish Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. James Parish Courthouse. | It is thought that Pierre Arceneau (the name is never rendered Pierre Louis in the original documentation) was born in 1731. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||
11 | Pierre | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1765 | "along the Mississippi River," probably St. James Parish | Marie Josèphe Gaudin (Godin) dit Lincourt | Pierre Arseneau | Married Angélique Bourgeois at St. Jacques de Cabannocé (St. James Parish), April 24, 1787. (One source indicates that the marriage occurred on April 6, 1786.) | Alexandre (baptized April 26, 1795, at the age of one year), Henrietta (Enriqueta) (born November 14, 1789), Survilio (Cirille?) (born November 16, 1792) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old child residing with Basile Préjean, his stepfather, and Marie Gaudin dit Lincourt, his mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of the household of Basile Préjean, his stepfather, and Marie (Gaudin dit) Lincour, his mother. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27, 131; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 19; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo. | 05/01/1799 | Attakapas District | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||
12 | Rosalie | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1764 | probably Halifax, Nova Scotia | Anne Bergeron | Pierre Arseneau | Married Joseph Breau. | unnamed child (born ca. 1779), Pierre Rosemond (born November 15, 1796) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of St. Jacques de Cabannoce (present-day St. James Parish, La.) as the two-year-old daughter of Pierre Arseneau. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old child in her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:13; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
13 | Alexis (Alexos) | Aucoin | St. Malo, France | Marie Hebert | Joseph Aucoin | Married (1) Françoise Henry (Francisca Enrique) at New Orleans, January 3, 1786. Married (2) Anne Dugas (Dugat), a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Joseph Dugas (Dugat) and Anastasie Variaux), at Assumption Parish, La., January 8, 1799. Joseph Aucoin, François Hébert, and Simon Guillot witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Marie Françoise (born October 12, 1794)Second marriage: Anne Victoire (born December 15, 1799), Alexis Celestin (born May 15, 1801) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 22; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-39. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
14 | Anne Augustine | Aucoin | Bangor, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Élizabeth (sometimes Isabel) Duon | Alexandre Aucoin | Married Pierre Trahan, son of Jean Trahan and Magdeleine Hébert, at the Attakapas church (present St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church), January 26, 1795. | Born at Bangor, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, in 1775. Spent the first ten years of her life in exile in France. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Hébert, Acadians in Exile, 15; Hebert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 22; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | Sun, Jul 16, 1775 | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
15 | Élizabeth Joseph (sometimes Isabelle ) | Aucoin | Bangor, Belle-Isle-en-Mer, France | Élizabeth (sometimes Isabel) Duon | Alexandre Aucoin | Married Joseph Benoit, son of Étienne Benoit and Magdeleine Benoit of Manchac, January 9, 1793. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 23; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | Wed, Jun 17, 1772 | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
16 | Isabelle | Aucoin | Anne Trahan | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Married her neighbor Pierre Richard, son of Leandre and Marie Thibodeaux, on August 22, 1797, at the Opelousas church. Fr. Pedro de Zamora officiated at the wedding. | Isabelle Aucoin brought to her marriage contract with Pierre Richard two (possibly four) arpents of land bounded on one side by the land of Baptiste Duplechin and by the property of Pierre Richard's children on the other. Her property was evidently located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 23, 666. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
17 | Marie Felicité (sometimes Feliciene) | Aucoin | 02/04/1770 | Bangor, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Élizabeth (sometimes Isabel) Duon (Duhon) | Alexandre Aucoin | Married (1) Joseph Fangue (actually Faulk), son of Luke Fangue and Marie Lisilir of Carolina, at the Attakapas church on October 2, 1787. Married (2) Olivier Guidry, son of Augustin Guidry and Marguerite Picot, at the Attakapas church on January 8, 1793. | Second marriage: Susanne (born January 20, 1794), Pierre (born February 25, 1796), Paul (born March 25, 1798), Olivier, fils (born April 8, 1800) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Hébert, Acadians in Exile, p. 16; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 22-23, 374; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | Sun, Feb 4, 1770 | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
18 | Marie Madeleine (sometimes ) | Aucoin | 01/08/1768 | Élizabeth (sometimes Isabel) Duon | Alexandre Aucoin | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Simon, son of René Simon and Sébastienne Monnier of Rennes, France, ca. 1786. | . | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
19 | Perpétue | Aucoin | 01/01/1763 | St. Malo, France | Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Married Charles Normand, a native of Montreal, at the Opelousas church, January 8, 1788. She contributed property valued at 500 piastres. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 24; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 28; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2407; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
20 | Pierre | Aucoin | 01/01/1776 | Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Married Françoise Silvestre, daughter of Joseph Silvestre and Catherine Ayes (Hayes? Ayers?), at the Opelousas church, January 2, 1800. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 24; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2407. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
21 | Anne Félicité | Aucoing (Aucoin) | Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France | Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Aucoin | Married Pierre Monte (Montet) at Ascension Parish, La., March 23, 1788. Tranquille Pitre, her next-door neighbor in 1788, and Joseph Terriot (Theriot) witnessed the marriage record. | Anne Eulalie (born January 29, 1789), Joseph Philippe (born January 29, 1789), Marie Josèphe Vincent (December 13, 1791), Anne Félicité (born May 1, 1792), Constance Emilie Emelie (born January 7, 1794), Jean Baptiste Olivier (born August 5, 1795), Celestine Céleste (born March 25, 1797), Jean Baptiste (born March 24, 1800), Leonardo (born November 20, 1804), Euchariste (born January 21, 1807) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her mother's household. She and her sixty-seven-year-old mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Pierre Monte. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fifteen hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a member of her mother's household. Félicité Aucoin's age is not indicated. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, one horse, and ten hogs. | Died before November 24, 1808. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 82; Hébert, Acadians in Exile, p. 15; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Montet and Anne Felicite Aucoin." | Thu, May 16, 1765 | 1.785 | Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
22 | Anne | Babin | Manchac, Iberville district | Marguerite Breau | Ignace Babin | Married Pierre Moro (probably Moreau) of Bordeaux, France, at the Attakapas church, October 22, 1799. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 26. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
23 | Basile | Babin | Married Anne Saulnier, date unknown. | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Died sometime before January 7, 1773. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 26. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
24 | Joseph | Babin | 01/01/1760 | Maryland(?) | Marguerite Boudrot | Dominique Babin | Entered into a marriage contract with Anastasie Melanson (Melançon), February 20, 1778. Married Anastasie Melanson, daughter of Honoré Melanson (Melançon) and Marie Josèphe Breau, at the Attakapas church, February 20, 1778. | Adélaïde (baptized May 9, 1779), Pierre Alexandre (born October 25, 1792; baptized December 28, 1794), Joseph (born September 22, 1783), Julien (born September 26, 1786), Louise Céleste (born February 25, 1795), Marceline Arthemise (born July 1, 1803), unidentified daughter (born August 18, 1799; interred August 18, 1799) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district, February 20, 1778-May 9, 1779. | T9S, R6E, secs. 59, 94T9S, R6E, sec. 2 | He died at the age of 60 years. | Spanish grant, March 5, 1778 | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 52-53; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 26-27; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 125-126. | 1.765 | 24/10/1820 | Attakapas District | NULL | |||||||||||
25 | Charles | Babineau (Babineaux) | dit Deslauriers | 01/01/1723 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Renée Bourg | Clément Babineau | Married Marguerite Doucet, daughter of René Doucet and Marie Broussard, at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, January 25, 1745. Married (2) Anne Guilbeau, a native of Port Royal and the daughter of Joseph Guilbeau and Madeleine Michel, at Ristitouche, in present-day New Brunswick, February 5, 1760. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1745), Marie Josèphe (born 1746), Charles (born 1749), Marguerite (born 1753) Second marriage: Dominique (born ca. 1761), Julien Joseph (born ca. 1762), Scholastique (born ca. 1766), Théodore (born ca. 1768), David (born April 25, 1771), Anne (born 1774) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 783 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that there was a woman and two children in his household. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Joseph Babineau, his son, 8 years old; Dominique Babineau, his son, 5 years old; Théodore Babineau, his son, 3 years old; and Scholastique Babineau, his newborn daughter. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. (Misidentified as "Charles Babins" in the list of 1769 oath-takers.) Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the thirty-nine-year-old head of a that included his thirty-six-year-old wife, an unidentified ten-year-old boy, an unidentified eight-year-old boy, an unidentified six-year-old boy, and a two-year-old girl. The census also indicates that the household owned fifteen head of cattle and five horses. The family also occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. | Died before his son David's wedding on July 1, 1800. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Recapitulation of the receipts which Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 27-30; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2413. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||
26 | Charles Dominique | Babineau (Babineaux, Babino, Babinot) | 01/01/1760 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Anne Guilbeau | Charles Babineau | Signed a marriage contract with Marguerite Claudine Thibodeau, February 18, 1783. Married Marguerite Claudine Thibodeau at the Attakapas church, February 24, 1783. | Alexandre (baptized May 24, 1795), Adélaïde (born 1797), Calas (probably Nicolas) (born May 7, 1793), Charles Dominique (born 1783), Julienne (born November 24, 1799), Marguerite (born July 27, 1788), Marie (born November 28, 1785), Victoire (born November 19, 1789) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his parents' household. Dominique Babineau (Babinot) participated in a hunting expedition with Jean Doucet, Jean Bernard, and Michel Bernard, ca. June 12, 1790. The members of this hunting party reportedly circulated slanderous rumors about Marthe Castille's moral character. Because of the resulting damage to his daughter's reputation, Joseph Castille urged Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to summon Guilbeau for questioning with a view toward punishing the guilty parties and rehabilitating his daughter's reputation, June 12, 1780. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Claudine Thibodeau, 40 years old; Charles Babineau (Babino), 20 years old; Marie Babineau (Babino), 16 years old; Marguerite Babineau (Babino), 15 years old; Victoire Babineau (Babino), 14 years old; Céleste Babineau (Babino), 13 years old; Athanase Babineau (Babino), 8 years old; and Julie Babineau (Babino), 4 years old. Dominique Babineau (Babino) and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty arpents frontage. They owned 500 cattle and 1 slave. | SMOA 1-44; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 29, 752; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Joseph Castille to Alexandre DeClouet, June 12, 1780, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2413. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
27 | Joseph | Babineau (Babineaux) | 01/01/1761 | Anne Guilbeau | Charles Babineau | Married Félicité (sometimes Felice) Cormier, ca. 1786. | Joseph (born October 4, 1787), David (born July 17, 1789), François (born December 19, 1790), Julie (born baptized May 24, 1795, at the age of 5 months), Julien (born January 1792, baptized September 21, 1794), Anastasie (born August 1, 1796) Jean (born 1801) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-one-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Félicité Cormier, 30 years old; Joseph Babineau (Babino), 15 years old; David Babineau (Babino), 13 years old; François Babineau (Babino), 10 years old; Julie Babineau (Babino), 8 years old; Julien Babineau (Babino), 7 years old; Anastasie (Anasthasie) Babineau (Babino), 6 years old; and Jean Babineau (Babino), 2 years old. Joseph Babineau (Babino) and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty arpents frontage. They owned 500 cattle, but no slaves. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 28-29; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2413-2414. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
28 | Anne | Bastarache | Salvador Mouton, ca. 1768. | Marie Geneviève (born September 15, 1765?) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
29 | Isabelle | Bastarache | Married Jean Mouton. | Marguerite Françoise (born November 20, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
30 | Marie Modeste | Bastarache | 01/01/1733 | Married Louis Mouton. | Anne Charlotte (born February 15, 1764), David (born 1770), Élizabeth (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Louis Mouton. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, her household included David Mouton, her seven-year-old son; and Elizabeth Mouton, her three-year-old daughter. She and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fifteen cows and two horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
31 | Anne | Benoît | 01/01/1763 | St. Jean Parish, Acadia | Hélène Comeau | Alexis Benoit | Entered into a marriage contract with Amant Broussard at the Attakapas district, May 24, 1775. Married Amant (Amand) Broussard. | Edouard (born October 17, 1777), Christine (baptized April 23, 1780), Scholastique (baptized March 24, 1782), Anne (Manon) (baptized March 21, 1784), Nicole (Amant) (born March 5, 1786), Eloy (born April 12, 1788), Suzanne (born April 2, 1790), Julie (born May 31, 1795), Louise (born October 20, 1l792), Rosemoned (baptized November 10,1799), Camille (born October 1801), Sélonise | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 46; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 131-132. | 18/09/1830 | 19/09/1830 | at her residence at Fausse Pointe, St. Martin Parish | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
32 | Donatien | Benoît | He was single at the time of his death. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 47. | 24/08/1797 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
33 | Jean | Benoît | Opelousas district | Died as an infant | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 46. | 03/10/1786 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
34 | Jean Charles (Charles) | Benoist (Benoît) | 01/01/1754 | Susanne Boudrot | Olivier Benoit | Married Anne (sometimes rendered Nanette) Savoie of St. James Parish at the Attakapas church, September 7, 1785. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. His name is rendered as Jean Benoist in the 1779 list. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included one man and one woman. He and his family owned fifteen cows and five horses. They occupied a very small tract of land with only two arpents frontage. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included three boys under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. They resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 48; Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Wood, Guide, 84-85; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
35 | Joseph | Benoît | Magdeleine | Etienne Benoit | Married Isabel Aucoin at the Attakapas church, January 9, 1793. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 48. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
36 | Magdeleine (Marie Anne) | Benoît | 01/01/1763 | New England probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Susanne Boudrot | Olivier Benoit | Married (1) Amant (Amand) Martin at the Attakapas church, September 16, 1787. Martin died sometime before October 1789. Signed a marriage contract with André Guillaume Fauvron in the Opelousas district, October 1, 1789. (Fauvron was a native of St. Malo, France.) | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 48-49; Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 84-85.. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
37 | Marie Angelle | Benoît | Married Amand Cormier at the Opelousas church, October 5, 1790. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 49. | 27/11/1791 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
38 | Marie Henriette (sometimes Anriette) | Benoît | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana | Magdeleine Breau | Etienne Benoit | Signed a marriage contract with Adam Huval at the Attakapas district, November 5, 1799. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 49. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
39 | Olivier | Benoît | 01/01/1729 | Acadia | Anne Marie Gaudet(?) | Pierre Benoît(?) | Married (1) Susanne Boudrot, ca. 1756. Married (2) Marie Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), daughter of Mathieu Brasseur and Anne Bellemère, ca. 1760. | First marriage: Jean Charles (sometimes Charles) (born 1754)Second marriage: Marie Rose (born 1761), Magdeleine (born 1763). | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-eight-year-old wife, an eighteen-year-old son, a twelve-year-old son, and an eight-year-old daughter. He and his family owned eighteen cows, ten hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Petitioned Louis Dutisné, commandant of the Iberville District, for permission to relocated in the Opelousas District, ca. October 12, 1777. On October 12, 1777, Dutisné informed the governor that Benoit claimed that living along the Mississippi River was "prejudicial to his health." | Father Joseph de Arazena officiated at his burial ceremony. Olivier Benoit's succession, in the original acts of St. Landry Parish, is dated December 8, 1787. A probate inventory was compiled on December 27, 1787. The value of his estate was 426 piastres. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 49-50; Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 84-85; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 29; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Dutisné to the governor, October 12, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:272vo-273; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2415. | 1.769 | 12/12/1787 | 13/12/1787 | Opelousas district | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||
40 | Roselia | Benoît | Marianne Trahan | Jean Benoit | Married (1) Roman de la Fosse. Married (2) Joseph Campos, a native of Detroit, at the Opelousas church, August 20, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 50. 159. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
41 | Sebastien | Benoît | Françoise Terriot (Theriot) | Augustin Benoît | Married (1) Jeanne de la Foresterie (de la Forêtière), daughter of Jean de la Forêtière and Marie Bonière, at Ascension Parish, La., August 16, 1789. He was a widower living along the Calcasieu River at the time of his second marriage. Married (2) Hipolite (Hipollite) LeBleu, a resident if the Calcasieu River area and the twenty-year-old daughter of Barthélemy LeBleu and Marie Josèphe Lamirande, at the Opelousas church, August 20, 1800. Charles Hébert, Joseph Campo, and Phavron (probably Favrot) witnessed the marriage record. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Calcasieu River area, August 20, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 50; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12, 42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:296. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
42 | Augustin | Bergeron | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 387 livres in Canadian card money and 2,223.10 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 52-53. | 1.765 | 30/08/1765 | 31/08/1765 | "au premier camp d'en bas" (probably upper F. Pointe) | Attakapas district | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
43 | Barthélemy | Bergeron | 01/01/1740 | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelémy Bergeron, fils | Married Anne Arseneau, ca. 1762. | Marguerite (born ca. 1763), Barthélemy (born ca. 1764; died before September 14, 1769), Charles Henry (born January or February 22, 1765), | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:17; Karen Theriot Reader, "Barthelemi Bergeron." | 1.765 | 27/10/1765 | Attakapas Distirct | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||||
44 | Cécile | Dugas | Veuve Bergeron | 01/01/1737 | Acadia | Married (1) Joseph Bergeron, who died in the Attakapas district. She was widowed by September 1769. Married (2) Nicolas Lahure at St. Louis Catholic Church (now cathedral), New Orleans, March 16, 1767. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1755), Cécile (born 1757), Marie Magdeleine (born 1759), Mathilde (born March 6, 1765) Second marriage: Nicolas Lahure(?) (born ca. February 1769) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Joseph Hébert's household, on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Her son Joseph and her daughters Cécile and Magdeleine (Marie Magdeleine) resided there with her. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-two-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph, her son, 14 years old; Nicolas Lahure(?), her son, 8 months old; Cécile, her daughter, 12 years old; and Marie Magdeleine, her daughter, 10 years old. Her family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned four cows, four hogs, and one musket. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:17, 105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
45 | Charles Henry | Bergeron | Anne Arseneau | Barthélemy Bergeron | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:17. | Sun, Mar 3, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
46 | Charles | Bergeron | 01/01/1756 | St. John River area, present-day New Brunswick | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Married Marie Forest, daughter of Charles Forest and Marguerite Saulnier, October 4, 1779. | Marguerite (born August 27, 1780), Marie Anne (born August 20, 1783), Charles (Pierre Charles) (baptized January 22, 1786), Jean Baptiste (baptized November 16, 1788), unidentified child (born 1790), Alexandre (born August 21, 1792) | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2420; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Charles Bergeron and Marie Forest." | 1.765 | 06/10/1801 | St. James Parish, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
47 | Jean Baptiste | Bergeron | 01/01/1730 | St. John River, Acadia | Marie Rose Melanson | Augustin Bergeron(?) | Married Catherine Caissy dit Roger. | Madeleine (born 1750), Osite (born 1752), Jean Baptiste (born 1754), Charles (born 1756), Michel (married September 24, 1796), Marianne (born May 31, 1765) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 700 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) He and his family subsequently moved to the Attakapas District, where his daughter Marianne appears to have been born on May 31, 1765. He and his family later moved to St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | Evidently a victim of the epidemic then sweeping through the Acadian cantonments in the Attakapas District. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 53; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2420; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12-13. | 1.765 | 02/11/1765 | Attakapas district | NULL | |||||||||||||
48 | Jean Baptiste | Bergeron | fils | 01/01/1754 | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron, père | Married Marie Elmire Babin, daughter of Basile Babin and Anne (Nanette) Saulnier (Sonnier), June 1, 1778. | Marie Françoise Julienne (baptized July 13, 1779), Henriette (January 26, 1781), Genevieve (born ca. 1781), Jean Pierre (born February 20, 1787), Constance (born November 3, 1788), Edouard (born December 4, 1792), Clemence, Eloise Carmelite (born January 4, 1798), Arthemise (Artemise) (born April 6, 1800), François Maximilien (born August 20, 1802), Drosin (Drausin) (born March 5, 1809) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of the household of Bonaventure Gaudin and Marguerite Bergeron. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Jean Baptiste Bergeron and Marie Elmire Babin." | 1.765 | 01/01/1827 | Thibodaux, Lafourche Parish, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
49 | Joseph | Bergeron | 07/01/1764 | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 53. | 1.765 | 19/10/1765 | Attakapas district | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
50 | Judith | Bergeron | 01/01/1734 | Acadia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Jean Baptiste Arseneau in Nova Scotia, ca. 1752. | Jean Charles (born 1752), Joseph (born 1754), Guillaume (born 1758), Paul (born 1762), Anne (born ca. February 1769), Manon (born 1769), François (born 1771), Laurent (born 1773), Alexandre (born 1777) | Her husband's dealings with New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she, her husband, and three sons lived on a tract of land measuring 3 arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Arseneau. Her household included the following persons: her husband, 40 years old; Jean Charles, her son, 16 years old; Joseph, her son, 12 years old; Guillaume, her son, 8 years old; and Anne, her daughter, 8 months old. The family occupied a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. The household owned four cows, one horse, fifteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Arseneau. In addition to her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Arseneau, her son, 20 years old; Guillaume Arseneau, her son, 18 years old; Paul Arseneau, her son, 15 years old; François Arseneau, her son, 6 years old; Laurent Arseneau, her son, 4 years old; and Manon Arseneau, her daughter, 8 years old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with eighteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, sixteen cows and four horses. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy years of age at the time of her death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:77; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:77; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron II and Marguerite Dugas." | 1.765 | 17/10/1799 | 17/10/1799 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present St. James Parish) | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
51 | Magdelaine | Bergeron | 01/01/1750 | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Burial record indicates that she was fifty years old. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:77, 78. | 1.765 | 21/09/1799 | St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
52 | Marianne | Bergeron | Louisiana | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 53. | Sun, Aug 4, 1765 | 1.765 | 31/08/1765 | Attakapas district | Probably buried on the family's farmstead | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
53 | Marianne (sometimes Marie Anne) | Bergeron | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Jean Baptiste Grevemberg, a prominent Attakapas district landowner, and Felicité Guilbeau served as Marianne Bergeron's baptismal sponsors. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 53-54. | Sun, Aug 4, 1765 | 31/08/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
54 | Osite | Bergeron | 01/01/1752 | Catherine Caissy dit Roger | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
55 | Anna (sometimes Ana) | Bernard | Marie Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | Married Olidon Broussard at the Attakapas church, February 3, 1790. The marriage ceremony was witnessed by Anaclet Broussard, François Broussard, Joseph Guilbeau, Michel Bernard, and François Guilbeau. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 54. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
56 | Félicité | Bernard | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Marie Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | An ecclesiastical investigation into her "freedom to marry" was conducted by Father Bernard de Deva, pastor of the Attakapas church, November 22, 1790. Married Isaac Thibodeau at the Attakapas church, November 23, 1790. The marriage was witnessed by Anaclet Broussard, Nicolas Thibodeau, Joseph Guilbeau, fils, and Jean Charles Guilbeau. | Felicité Bernard was born ca. 1779. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 55. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
57 | François | Bernard | Marie Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | Married (1) Magdeleine Broussard at the Attakapas church, February 3, 1790. The marriage was witnessed by François Broussard, Joseph Guilbeau, François Guilbeau, Jean Charles Guilbeau, and Michel Bernard. Father Bernardo de Deva performed the marriage ceremony. Married (2) Constance LeBlanc, a widow and the daughter of Gilles LeBlanc and Théotise Godin, October 8, 1816. | First marriage: François (I) (born May 20, 1793); François (II) (born January 1, 1794), Marie Thersile (born August 17, 1797)Second marriage: Elmire Marie, Louis Valsin, Jean Oscar | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 55-57. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
58 | Jean Baptiste (Michel) | Bernard | 01/01/1762 | "Parish of Acadia" | Marie Anne Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | Entered into a marriage contract with Marguerite Broussard, June 17, 1782. In the instrument, Marguerite Broussard is identified as a native of the Attakapas district. The contract was witnessed by François Broussard, Claude Broussard, Silvain Broussard, Simon LeBlanc, and Alexandre, Chevalier de Clouet. Married Marguerite Broussard at the Attakapas church, June 25, 1782. | Eloy (born August 6, 1800), François (born January 10, 1793), Jean (born April 9, 1783), Marie (Marie Laprade) (born November 2, 1787), Joseph (born 1788), Ursin (born 1792), Marie Adélaïde (born January 1, 1796), Marie Barbe (Barbara) (born July 9, 1798), Adélaïde (born 1802), Louis (born 1801) | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-five-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marguerite Bernard (actually Broussard), 35 years old; Jean Bernard, fils, 20 years old; Me [Marie] Laprade, 15 years old; Joseph Bernard, 15 years old; François Bernard, 13 years old; Ursain (Ursin) Bernard, 11 years old; Eloy Bernard, 8 years old; Adélaïde Bernard, 1 year old; and Louis Bernard, 2 years old. Jean Bernard and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned 250 cattle and 1 slave. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 56; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2422; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
59 | Marie | Bernard | Acadia | Married Jean Baptiste Savoie. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 56. | 01/01/1793 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
60 | Marie | Bernard | Marie Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | Married André Préjean at the Attakapas church, January 7, 1793. | Maxime (born 1797), Zélie (born 1799), Lézime (born 1800), Jean (born 1801) | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of André Préjean. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, the h ousehold included the following persons: Maxime Préjean, 6 years old; Zélie Préjean, 4 years old; Lézime Préjean, 3 years old; and Jean Préjean, 2 years old. She and her family occupied tracts of land with thirteen arpents frontage. They owned eighty cattle and four slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 56; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
61 | Michel | Bernard | 01/01/1735 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Cécile Gaudet | Jean Baptiste Bernard | Married Marie Guilbeau, daughter of Joseph Guilbeau and Madeleine Michel and a native of Port Royal, at Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, January 25, 1761. | Jean Baptiste Bernard (born 1762), Pierre (born 1762), Michel (born 1764), François (born 1766), Marie Anne (born September 7, 1770), Félicité (born 1772), Marie (born 1774) | At Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, in January 1761. Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 171 livres in Canadian card money and an additional 363 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). His household contained one man, one woman, and two boys. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Jean (Baptiste) Bernard, his son, 7 years old; Michel Bernard, his son, 5 years old; François Bernard, his son, 1 year old; Félicité (Fellisité) Bernard, his daughter, 1 year old; and Marie Marquis. Michel Bernard and his family owned eight cows, three horses, and ten horses. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. According to Bérard's list, Michel Bernard had twenty barrels of unhusked corn. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-six-year-old wife, an unidentified nine-year-old boy, an unidentified five-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old girl, and an unidentified six-month-old girl. The census also indicates that he and his faily owned sixteen beef cattle, nine horses, and four sheep. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included six children. There is no mention of a wife. He and his children owned forty-seven cows, ten horses and mules, and forty pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Michel Bernard's probate inventory included four slaves. His estate was valued at $2,594.10. | T8S, R4E, secs. 79 and 121 | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 40; Gallant, Les Registres der la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 40; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Recapitulation of receipts furnished by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 58; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 64-65; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 127-128; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | 31/08/1809 | along Bayou Carencro in modern Lafayette Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||
62 | Michel | Bernard | 01/01/1765 | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 58. | 1.765 | 28/10/1765 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
63 | Anne | Blanchard | Veuve Joseph Richard | 01/01/1727 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Élizabeth Terriot | Antoine Blanchard | Married (1) Joseph Richard. Entered into a marriage contract with Jean Baptiste Cormier, January 2, 1779. Blanchard brought property worth 271 piastres, 5 escalins to the second marriage. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Cormier at the Opelousas church, January 2, 1779. Her second marriage was witnessed by Amant Préjean and Joseph Granger. | First marriage: Anne (sometimes Anne Marie, Marie) (born August 6, 1765), Marie (born ca. 1760), Pélagie (born ca. May 1769), Rosalie (born January 6, 1763), Marguerite, Anastasie | Appears to have arrived in Louisiana in 1765. Probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé, ca. September 1765. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she, her first husband Joseph Richard, and her daughters Marie, Rosalie, and Anne occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned three hogs and one firearm. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Joseph Richard. In addition to her fifty-eight-year-old husband, he household included the following persons: Marie Richard, her daughter, 11 years old; another child whose name and age are illegible; and Joseph Richard, her husband's nephew, 7 years old. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 66-67; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 5; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | 31/12/1800 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
64 | Catherine | Blanchard | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Charles Amand Préjean at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, November 30, 1765. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92. | 1.765 | 03/06/1777 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
65 | Guy | Blanchard | 01/01/1720 | The April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit indicates that he was exempt from active duty because of either advanced age or infirmities. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 09/04/1786 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
66 | Magdeleine | Blanchard | Acadia | Angelique Bertrand | Toussaint Blanchard | Married André Mondon, a native of Domville, France, at the Opelousas church, August 7, 1790. | According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, her household included one woman over the age of fifteen years. She owned two slaves. The census indicates that she lived in the North Plaquemine (Brulé) area. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
67 | Marguerite | Blanchard | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Élisabeth Comeau | René Blanchard | Married Simon Broussard, April 11, 1768. | Died after "having gone to confession." | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 17/02/1795 | Vermilion (probably Vermilion Prairie) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
68 | Marie | Blanchard | 01/01/1737 | Canada | Married Amant Préjean. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Anne Richard at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, August 6, 1765. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238. | 1.765 | 29/09/1787 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
69 | Olivier | Blanchard | 01/01/1765 | Canada | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67. | 14/05/1788 | Attakapas district | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
70 | Pierre | Blanchard | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Judith Savoie (Savoy) | Paul Blanchard | Married Marguerite Breau, a native of Acadians and the daughter of Charles Breau and Marie Benoît, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 9, 1778. Joseph Mire, Pierre Breau, Olivier Part, and Herman Breau witnessed the marriage record. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Jean Baptiste Duon at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 1, 1765. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one cow two hogs and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned fourteen cows and three horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. Around July 13, 1794, one Mrs. Henri complained to Governor Carondelet that Pierre Blanchard and his cousin, Pierre Hébert, had induced Henri to drink and to play billiards at the local cabaret. During the course of the evening, Henri had spent three piastres on beverages, and he had lost thirty piastres in bets. On July 13, 1794, the governor ordered the Cabannocé commandant to conduct an official investigation into the matter. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Baron de Carondelet to Verret, Julyl 13, 1794, AGI, PPC, 209:254; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:100. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
71 | Marguerite (Marie) | Borel (Durel, Durelle) | 01/01/1742 | Married (1) Joseph Préjean. Married (2) Joseph Bourg, June 27, 1772. | Victoire (born ca. 1760), Rose (born 1762), Joseph (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born August 30, 1765), Basile (Baptiste) (born 1768), Marie Rose (born 1770), Anne (Aimée) (baptized January 20, 1771), Pélagie (born 1774), and Marianne (married January 2, 1797). It is unclear from the documentation if Marianne was actually Anne. | The birthdate of her son Jean Baptiste suggests that she arrived in Louisiana sometime in early 1765. Probably moved with her family to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Borel, her husband, and her two children occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family also owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Préjean. Her household included the following persons: Joseph Préjean, 34 years old; Baptiste (actually Jean Baptiste), her son, 4 years old; Basile, her son, 1 year old; Victoire, her daughter, 9 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, nine hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Préjean. In addition to her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Préjean, her son, 5 years old; Baptiste Préjean, her son, 2 years old; and Victoire Préjean, her daughter, 9 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Préjean, who is misidentified as Joseph Bourg in the census. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Préjean, her son, 14 years old; Jean Baptiste Préjean, her son, 11 years old; Basile Préjean, her son, 8 years old; Victoire Préjean, her daughter, 16 years old; Rose Préjean, her daughter, 15 years old; Marie Rose Préjean, her daughter, 7 years old; Aimée (Anne?) Préjean, her daughter, 6 years old; Pélagie Préjean, her daughter, 3 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-five cows, and four horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
72 | Augustin | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | père | Married Judith Martin. | Anne (born May 5, 1786), Augustin, fils (born April 15, 1782), Benjamin (born April 5, 1789), Jean (baptized May 30, 1784), Marguerite (born February 12, 1793), Pierre (born January 25, 1779) | On September 25, 1771, Cabannocé co-commandant Nicolas Verret informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that Augustin Boudrot (Boudreau), "an Acadian established in this country," had received a letter from an uncle in Canada indicating that one Mr. Chabot, a Quebec merchant, had paid a debt owed Augustin Boudrot in the amount of 7,800 livres. Because of the difficulty in transporting currency with any degree of security, Boudrot requested permission to travel to Canada to obtain the money. He assured Verret that he would return to his family once he had settled this business matter. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91; Verret to Unzaga, September 25, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:72; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
73 | Élizabeth (Elisabeth, Isabelle) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve LeBlanc | 01/01/1721 | Miramichi, Acadia | Catherine Hébert | Claude Boudrot | Married Étienne LeBlanc at Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, October 1, 1742. She was widowed before September 14, 1769. | Marie (born 1743), Simon Joseph (born 1744), Anne (born 1746), Marguerite (born 1748), Étienne (born 1751), Mathurin (born 1754), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1758), Joseph (born July 19, 1762), Marie Marthe Élisabeth (born April 15, 1765) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne, 43 years old; his wife, Elizabeth Boudrot, 45 years old; and the following children: Simon, 22 years old; Etienne, 15 years old; Mathurin, 12 years old; Joseph, 5 years old; Marguerite, 19 years old; Magdelaine (Madeleine), 8 years old; and Marie, 2 years old. The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc, her son, owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a forty-five-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Etienne, her son, 17 years old; Mathurin, her son, 13 years old; Marguerite, her daughter, 19 years old; Magdeleine, her daughter, 11 years old; and Marthe, her daughter, 5 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-nine-year-old, widowed head of a household that included the following persons: Etienne LeBlanc, her son, 16 years old; Mathurin LeBlanc, 14 years old; Marguerite LeBlanc, 20 years old; Marie Madeleine LeBlanc, her daugher, 3 years old; and Marie Marthe LeBlanc, her daughter, 6 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that she had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District, he reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following children: Etienne LeBlanc, her son, 24 years old; Mathurin LeBlanc, her son, 19 years old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, her daughter, 18 years old; and Marie LeBlanc, her daughter, 12 years old. Veuve LeBlanc and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned seventeen cows, four horses, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2537-2538; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
74 | Jean | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Marguerite Guilbeau. | Jean Charles | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 858 livres in Canadian card money and 1,583.10 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. | Evidently died in the late 1760s. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 89-90; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
75 | Jean Charles (sometimes Charles) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Married Dorothée Comeau. | Jean Baptiste (born March 15, 1788), Leufroy (baptized July 12, 1789), Susanne (born December 30, 1790), Augustin (baptized June 21, 1795), Celesie (born November 1, 1795), Marie Euphemie (born December 7, 1797) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
76 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Bourgeois | Charles Boudrot | Married Isabelle Apolline Trahan, daughter of Pierre Trahan and Marguerite Duon (Duhon), at the Attakapas church, November 19, 1792. The marriage was witnessed by François Boudrot, Felix Lopes, Charles Duon, and Isabel Apolines. | Joseph (born February 12, 1796), Marie Felonise (born April 30, 1798), Pélagie (born March 15, 1800), Philemon (born April 30, 1798), Scholastique (baptized May 24, 1795) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 89, 90. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
77 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Marie Françoise Semer. | Antoine (born February 28, 1786), Louis (May 15, 1789) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
78 | Marguerite (sometimes Margueritte) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1737 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Marie Josephè Derouen | Paul Boudrot | Married (1) Joseph Hébert. Married (2) Charles Landry, a native of Assumption Parish, Acadia, at St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France, November 7, 1759. | Children of the second marriage: Firmin (born ca. 1763), Sebastien (born ca. 1767), Louis (born ca. 1771), Jean (born ca. 1774), Charles (born ca. 1777), François (born ca. 1779), Marguerite (born ca. 1767) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
79 | Paul Dominique (Pablo Domingo) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1761 | Trigavou, Brittany, France | Marguerite Daigle | Zacharie (Zachary) Boudrot | Married Marie Olive (Olivier) Landry. | Paul Marie (born ca. 1785) (French genealogists and historians Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux identify this person as Marie, Paul Dominique's daughter.), Joseph (born January 3, 1787), Charles Roman (born November 9, 1787), Marie Françoise (born June 2, 1792), Florent Janvier (born January 1, 1795), Zacharie (Zacarias) (born April 7, 1799), Carmelite Eugénie (born May 5, 1800), Jean Pierre (born August 7, 1801) | French genealogists and historians Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux identify Paul Dominque Boudrot as Paul Dominique Doiron (Douairon). Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:110, 112, 114, 116, 118; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
80 | Cécille (Cécile) | Bourg | Veuve Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1737 | Married (1) Joseph Longueépée. Married (2) Ignace Hisé (Heuzé), the widower of Marie Josèphe renaud. | Pierre (born 1761), Charles (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born 1768), Grégoire (born 1776), Anne Marie (born 1765) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
81 | Gertrude | Bourg | 01/01/1743 | Ile St. Jean (Prince Edward Island), Acadia | Anne Boudrot (Boudreau) | Charles Bourg | Married Amand (sometimes Pierre Amant) Thibodeau at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 27, 1765. | Marguerite Blondine (born 1766), Isaac (born November 23, 1770), Constance Louise (born September 22, 1771), Jean Baptiste (born November 25, 1774), Armand (December 24, 1775), Gertrude (born January 30, 1778), Anne (born April 28, 1780), Isabelle (born May 30, 1782), Benjamin (born October 25, 1784), Placide (born March 14, 1788) | The date of her marriage indicates that she was among the Acadians who accompanied the legendary Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to Louisiana. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a twenty-eight-year-old member of Amant Thibodeau's household. This household included her thirty-eight-year-old husband, a one-year-old son, a four-year-old daughter, a seven-year-old daughter, and her mother, Anne Boudrot, the Widow Bourg (Bourque). | Her burial record maintains that she was was about ninety years of age at the time of her death. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 96; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 178-179. | 1.765 | 09/06/1827 | 10/06/1827 | at her residence at La Pointe, St. Martin Parish, La. | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
82 | Jean | Bourg | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Marie Landry | Joseph Bourg | Married Marguerite Richard, daughter of Pierre Richard and Marguerite Dugas, at the Opelousas church, March 30, 1784. | Augustin (born August 8, 1787), Celestine (baptized November 8, 1801), Césaire (baptized November 22, 1789), Elois (born February 10, 1791), Jean Baptiste (born June 22, 1786), Lucie (buried December 8, 1795), Marceline (born December 27, 1796), Marie (baptized September 22, 1793), Marie Silesie (born ca. 1798) | Born of Acadians exiled to Philadelphia. | Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three males of unspecified ages and one woman. He and his family owned sixty cows, ten horses, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. Anthony Corkain filed a civil suit against Jean Bourg in the Opelousas district, May 28, 1788. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including four boys under the age of fifteen years, one girl under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. In 1796, the Richard family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas district, November 8, 1801. | Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-100; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 48; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
83 | Joseph | Bourg | Married Suzanne Thibodeau. | Charles (baptized October 25, 1796), Joseph Valerie (born July 28, 1785), Leandre (baptized November 10, 1797), Marie Denise (April 15, 1792), Perosine (born January 1, 1788), Pierre (baptized March 29, 1800), Ursin (June 3, 1790) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-101. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
84 | Joseph Florent (sometimes Laurent) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1774 | Chantenay, Diocese of Nantes, France | Magdeleine Blanchard | Charles Bourg | Married Félicité Trahan at the Attakapas church, October 9, 1798. | Marguerite (born November 30, 1800) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the widow of Charles Bourg, his household included Charles Bourg (Bourq), his fourteen-year-old brother. His family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned sixteen barrels of corn and four hogs. His name is rendered as Joseph Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Charles Bourg, his fifteen-year-old brother. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 97-99; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
85 | Louise | Bourg | Ile St-Jean (now Prince Edward Island); one source indicates St. Louis Parish, Acadia | Anne Boudrot (Boudreau) | Charles Bourg | Married (1) Pierre Savoie, the son of Paul Savoie and Judith Michel and a native of St. AnneParish, Acadia, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., Jully 11, 1772. Savoie died in the Opelousas district, ca. May 10, 1788. Identified in her marriage contract with Joseph Landry, dated July 6, 1789, as the widow of Pierre Savoie. Married Joseph Landry at the Opelousas church, July 6, 1789. Joseph Bourg, Thomas Brin, and Charles Comeau witnessed the ceremony. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 98; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 47; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:124. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
86 | Lucien | Bourg | 01/01/1764 | Either St. Malo or Pleudihen, France | Magdeleine Blanchard | Charles Bourg | Married Marie Elizabeth Trahan. | Isabelle Marie (born November 1, 1787), Jean Firmin (born April 2, 1786), Marguerite (born December 24, 1789), Placide (January 2, 1797) | In the extant documentation Lucien Bourg's birthplace is variously described as either St. Malo or Pleudihen, Diocese of Dôle, France. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, until 1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Trahan, his wife, 44 years old; Firmin Bourg, 15 years old; Marie Bourg, 15 years old; Marguerite Bourg, 13 years old; François Bourg, 9 years old; and Placide Bourg, 6 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty semi-wild beef cattle and twelve tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-101; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
87 | Magdelaine | Bourg | Married Jean Baptiste LeBlanc. | Claude (born December 19, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
88 | Marguerite | Bourg | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Joseph LeBlanc's baptism, St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 8, 1765. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
89 | Marguerite | Bourg | Veuve Pitre | Ile St. Jean (now Prince Edward Island) | Anne Boudrot | Charles Bourg | Married (1) Pierre Pitre. Identified in her marriage contract with Charles Guilbeau, dated November 20, 1775, as a widow. | No children of the first marriage. | The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that Veuve Pitre was a widow living alone. She owned twelve cows and three horses. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 99; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
90 | Angélique | Bourgeois | St. James Parish, Louisiana | Married Pierre Arseneau at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., April 24, 1787. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:131. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
91 | Claude | Bourgeois | Louisiana | Magdelaine Bourg | Jean Baptiste Bourgeois | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Claude Trière and Rose Bourgeois served as his baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31. | Sat, Dec 21, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
92 | Jean Baptiste | Bourgeois | Married Magdeleine Bourg. | Claude (born December 19, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
93 | Jean Baptiste | Bourgeois | fils | 01/01/1761 | Marie Bourg | Jean Baptiste Bourgeois | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
94 | Joseph Marie | Bourgeois | 03/10/1763 | Marie Bourg | Jean Baptiste Bourgeois | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Baptiste Coursane(?) and Rose La Porte served as his baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31. | Thu, Dec 5, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
95 | Magdelaine | Bourgeois | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
96 | Marguerite | Bourgeois | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite LeBlanc | Claude Bourgeois | Married Joseph Gaudet at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 10, 1765. | Rosalie Victoire (born February 25, 1764), Joseph Simon (born November 7, 1766), Jean (born ca. 1767), Joseph (born ca. 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that Marguerite Bourgeois was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Gaudet. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Gaudet, her son, 10 years old; Joseph Gaudet, her son, 2 years old; Rosalie Gaudet, her daughter, 13 years old; and Marie Gaudet, her daughter, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi RIiver. They also owned one slave, twelve cows, and three horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
97 | Marie | Bourgeois | 01/01/1734 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Brun | Paul Bourgeois | Married Pierre Darois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, April 8, 1765. | Michel (born February 19, 1765) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Darois. Her household included the following persons: Pierre Darois, 36 years old; Olivier, her son, 5 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one cow and twenty hogs. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Darois. She and her husband evidently owned no land in 1777, but they did own ten cows and two horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31, 66; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
98 | Marie Rosalie (Rose) | Bourgeois | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Pierre Gravois. Married (2) Philippe La Chaussée, October 5, 1766. | First marriage: Louise (born 1755), Joseph (born 1753), Paul (Jean) (born 1751) Second marriage: Rosalie (married May 16, 1792), unnamed daughter (buried at the age of 1 day, July 18, 1773), Valentin Philippe (often identified as Philippe de St. Julien) (born 1772) | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Claude Bourgeois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 19, 1765. A resident of Cabannocé in 1766. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Philippe La Chaussée. In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old husband, her household included Philipee La Chaussée, her son, 5 years old, Louise Gravois, her daughter, 22 years old; Rosalie La Chaussée, her daughter, 7 years old; Joseph Gravois, her son, 24 years old; and Jean Gravois, her son, 22 years old. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:333-334, 404-405; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
99 | Cécille | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Married Joseph Henry. | Jean Laurent (born ca. 1766), Joseph (born ca. 1771), Pierre (born ca. 1780), Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1778), Anne Françoise (born ca. 1782), Magdelaine Apolline (a nursing infant in May 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
100 | Marie Magdelaine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Acadia | Jeanne Dugas | Claude Breau | Married (1) Charles Granger. Married (2) Jean Charles Hebert at St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France, June 26, 1763. | Robichaux, Acadian Marriages in France, 64. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
101 | Pierre | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Married Batilde Broussard, daughter of Silvestre Broussard and Félicité Guilbeau, at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1793. The marriage was witnessed by François Guilbeau, Theophile Broussard, and A. Broussard. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 115. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
102 | Anastasie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 07/08/1765 | Louisiana | Marie LeBlanc | Athanase Breau | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Trudeau, a merchant ship captain, and Magdeleine Breau served as baptismal sponsors. Listed in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a one-year-old member of Athanase Breau's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a four-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:34; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Mon, Dec 2, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
103 | Athanase (Atanas) | Breau (Braud, Breaux, Brou) | 01/01/1735 | Shepody, Acadia | Marie Michel | Ambroise Breau | Married Marie (Marie Josèphe) LeBlanc, daughter of Joseph LeBlanc and Isabelle Gaudet or Port Royal, at Ristigouche, Acadia, February 1, 1761. | Joseph (Joseph Athanase) (born August 2, 1762), Anastasie (born July 8, 1765), Marie (born 1769), Anne (born 1772), Paul (Paul Hippolite) (born 1775; married June 23, 1794), Jean Baptiste, Simon Athanase | He was at Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, in February 1761. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only 2/3 of a full ration. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Baptized his children at New Orleans, December 2, 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife and two children. The family owned a farm measuring six arpents frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River and one firearm. On August 1, 1768, Cabannocé commandant Louis Judice reported that Athanase Breau's (Brau's) home had been destroyed by fire. Breau had also lost his tools in the fire. Judice consequently asked Spanish governor Antonio de Ulloa to provide Breau with governmental aid. On September 15, 1768, Ulloa responded that he was unable to provide Athanase Breau (Brau) with any assistance. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Marie LeBlanc, his wife, 26 years old; Joseph, his son, 6 years old; Anastasie, his daughter, 4 years old; Marie, her daughter, 1 month old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. They owned thirteen cattle, 2 horses, twenty-five hogs, and one musket. A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's second corporal. A second muster roll, dated January 23, 1770, indicates that he was thirty-five-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie LeBlanc, his wife, 34 years old; Joseph Breau, his son, 13 years old; Paul Breau, his son, 2 year old; Anastasie Breau, his daughter, 12 years old; Marie Breau, his daughter, 7 years old; and Anne Breau, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, forty-four hogs, and three horses. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Atanas Brau in the 1779 militia list. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying their crops.On February 6, 1784, Paul Breaux purchased a large tract of land with thirteen arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The property, located twenty-five leagues above New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Veuve Simon Landry and below by the property of Paul Breau. A house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-six feet by sixteen feet, stood on the property at the time of the 1784 conveyance. | Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he died before 1794. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 59; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:34-35; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa, August 1, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Antonio de Ulloa to Louis Judice, Septemer 15, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
104 | Élizabeth | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Married Louis Bonin at the Attakapas church, November 19, 1799. | Of her union with Louis Bonin were born the following children: Élizabeth Emerante (born Ocober 9, 1800), | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 74. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
105 | Joseph | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 08/02/1762 | Marie LeBlanc | Athanase Breau | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Etienne B. Trudeau and Anne LeBlanc served as baptismal sponsors. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a three-year-old member of Athanase Breau's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:35; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Mon, Dec 2, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
106 | Magdelaine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Married (1) Étienne Benoît at the Church of the Ascension (in present-day Donaldsonville, Louisiana), January 5, 1771. Married (2) Michel Cormier, the widower of Catherine Stelly and a a resident of the Opelousas district, at the Attkapas church, February 10, 1789. | Isabelle (born 1773), Simon (born 1773), Xavier (born 1777), Augustin (Auguste), (born April 7, 1786), Benoît, Marie Henriette | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as a fifty-six widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Simon Benoît, 30 years old; Isabelle Benoît, 30 years old; Xavier Benoît, 26 years old; and Auguste Benoît, 18 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with only one arpent frontage. They owned 50 cattle. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 114; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
107 | Silvain (sometimes Sylvain) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 1,208 livres in Canadian card money and an additional 1,130.10 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Recapitulation of the receipts furnished by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 116. | 1.765 | 12/10/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | "dernier camp d'en bas" (probably Fausse Pointe area) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
108 | Alexandre | Broussard (Brossard) | dit Beausoleil | 01/01/1699 | Port Royal | Catherine Richard | Jean François Broussard | Married Marguerite Thibodeau, daughter of Michel Thibodeau and Agnès Dugas, on February 7, 1724. | Joseph Grégoire (born January 1, 1725), Marguerite (born April 15, 1726), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1732), Anselme (born May 2, 1734), Sylvain (born October 24, 1741), Simon (born 1746), Augustin, Pierre (born ca. 1752) | Served as a leader, with his brother Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil, of the Acadian resistance after the onset of the Acadian dispersal on 1755. Listed with his family as British prisoners at Halifax, Nova Scotia, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 2,360 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. Subsequently settled along Bayou Teche. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Recapitulation des recus fournis par le Ne Maxent aux accadiens ci-apres denommées des ordonnances en billets de Canada qu'ils lui ont deposé pour être par lui adressé à M. La Maletie à Bordeaux et donc la somme totale cadre avec celle du bordereau ci-devant des susdittes especes, April 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 253; Réaux and Réaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," Attakapas Gazette, 6 (1971): 130-144; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 119; Conover, Broussard, 5. | Settled at Chepody (present-day Hopewell Hill) in modern-day New Brunswick sometime after his marriage. | 1.765 | 18/09/1765 | Attakapas district | "camp d'en bas" (probably upper Fausse Pointe) | NULL | ||||||||||
109 | Marie | Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux) | 01/01/1749 | Élizabeth Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | Married (1) Hubert Janise, son of Jacob Janise and Catherine Petite, at the Ascension Church, October 12, 1772. | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The records reveal that her family owned one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of the household of Jean Bérard and Anne Henriette Broussard. The 1777 census of the Opelousas district indicates that she was twenty-eight years old. Her household included her husband Hubert Janise and two children: Hubert (four years of age) and Théotiste (two years of age). | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 110-111; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114; Wood, Guide, 93; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
110 | Amand (sometimes Amant) | Broussard (Brossard) | dit Beausoleil | 01/01/1749 | St. Jean Parish, Acadia | Agnès "Nanette" Thibodeau | Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married (1) Hélène Landry. Signed a marriage contract with Anne Benoit, May 24, 1775. This document was witnessed by Michel Meaux, Jacques Fostin, Jean Baptiste Labauve, Olivier Trahan, Pierre Broussard, and Joseph Landry. Married (2) Anne Benoît at Attakapas church in present-day St. Martinville, Louisiana, ca. May 24, 1775. | First marriage: Eloy Josephat Amand (sometimes Joseph dit Josephat). In a notarized document dated August 27, 1788, Amand Broussard recorded his wish that Josephat inherit equally with the children of the second marriage. Second marriage: Anne (baptized March 21, 1784), Christine (baptized April 23, 1780), Edouard (born October 15, 1777), Eloy (born April 2, 1788), Hebrard (born October 15, 1777), Julie (born May 31, 1795), Louise (born October 20, 1792), Nicolas (born March 5, 1786), Rosemond (baptized November 10, 1799), Scholastique (sometimes Escholastique) (born September 8, 1781), Susanne (born April 2, 1790) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of François Broussard's household. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a twenty-two-year-old member of François Broussard's household. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. Appointed by local commandant Gabriel Fuselier de la Claire to seize Antoine Bernard D'Auterive's property in order to satisfy his creditors, ca. November 2, 1773. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a widower. His household included one unidentified child. Broussard owned forty-five cattle and eight horses or mules. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He is listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On May 12, 1790, he became embroiled in a dispute with the Attakapas church wardens for failing to pay him the fifteen piastres that had been promised him for escorting Father Hilaire during his journeys to, and from, the Pointe Coupée district to the Attakapas district by way of Bayou Teche and the Atchafalaya River. On October 20, 1791, Attakapas Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre described Amand Broussard as a "low-life" (méchant homme) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 46, 118-150; rev. ed., vol. 2A, p. 150; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 49; Conover, Broussard, 11-12; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 131-132; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Fuselier de la Claire to Unzaga, November 2, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:66vo-67; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Jean Delavillebeuvre to the governor, October 20, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:148-149. | 1.765 | 08/01/1818 | 09/01/1818 | Fausse Pointe, St. Martin Parish | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
111 | Anne Henriette | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1746 | Acadia | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Jean Bérard, a native of Dauphiné Province, France, ca. 1765. | Adélaïde (born December 11, 1770), Alexandre (born March 3, 1775), Camille (born September 10, 1777), Christine (born ca. 1766), Jean Baptiste (born February 15, 1773) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that, in addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Jean Bérard, her husband, 29 years old; Christine Bérard, her newborn daughter; Marie Duon, no relationship indicated, 15 years old; Joseph Espagnol, a hired hand, 35 years old; Marie Brasseur (Braseaux), no relationship indicated, 19 years old; and an unnamed Negro slave. Anne Henriette Broussard and her family owned twenty-three cows, ten horses, and seven hogs. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the twenty-five-year-old wife of Jean Berard. Her household included her husband, an unidentified two-year-old girl, an unidentified six-month-old girl, and thirteen-year-old Marie Dugas. Anne Brossard (Broussard) and Jean Berard owned fifty-four head of beef cattle, twelve horses, and nineteen sheep. They occupied a large tract of land measuring twenty-four arpents frontage. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that her household included her husband, three children, and two slaves. Her family owned ninety cows, twelve horses or mules, and forty pigs. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 50-52; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 126-127; Conover, Broussard, 6, 19; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | 16/11/1820 | 17/11/1820 | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
112 | Anne Félicité | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1732 | Married Bruno Robichaud. | Firmin (born 1751), Bruno Robichaud, fils (born July 9, 1764) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she, her husband, and sons Firmin and Bruno occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:241; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2581. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
113 | Anselme | Broussard (Brossard) | 05/02/1734 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Magdelaine Dugas, daughter of René Dugas and Isabelle Broussard. | Théodore (sometimes Joseph Théodore) (married May 23, 1784) | He and his family appear were prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only two-thirds of a full ration. He was listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 360 livres in Canadian card money and an additional 661 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the 1766 census of lower Louisiana as a bachelor residing in the Bayou Tortue settlement of the Attakapas district. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Recapitulation of receipts provided by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C13a, 45:29; Réaux and Réaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," Attakapas Gazette, 6 (1971): 136-137; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
114 | Claude | Broussard (Brossard) | dit Grand | 01/01/1744 | Acadia | Agnès (Nanette) Thibodeau | Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married (1) Louise Lissette (Céleste) Hébert, daughter of Beloni Hébert and Jeanne Savoie. Married (2) Catherine Trahan, a native of Acadia and the daughter of Hyacinthe Trahan, at the Attakapas church, April 24, 1793. | First marriage: Apolline (Appolonie), Jean Baptiste (born February 5, 1773), Valéry (born May 15, 1774), Louis (born August 25, 1777), Suzanne (born 1778), Alexandre (baptized May 9, 1779), Élizabeth (Isabelle), Pélagie, Louise (Lise), Beloni (baptized March 20, 1785, at the age of 5 months), Anastasie (born January 15, 1786), Victoire (born October 15, 1787). Second marriage: Joseph (born 1793), Louis Claude (born 1794), Jean Joseph (born March 20, 1796), Marie Magdaleine (born 1797), Marie Delphine, Julie (born August 1801), Marie Célestine, Jean Joseph, Edmond (Armand) (born September 25, 1807; died at his parents' home; buried October 9, 1808). | Identified in the 1766 census of lower Louisiana as the sole member of a household in the Bayou Tortue settlement of the Attakapas district. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of François Broussard's household. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old member of René Trahan's household. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Claude Broussard, his wife, and two unidentified children. They owned twenty-five cattle, ten horses or mules, and twenty hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Catherine Broussard, 32 years old; Valéry Broussard, 26 years old; Marguerite Broussard, 16 years old; Belony Broussard, 18 years old; Louis Broussard, 7 years old; Joseph Broussard, 4 years old; Lize Broussard, 23 years old; Anasthasie Broussard, 17 years old; Victoire Broussard, 15 years old; Marie Broussard, 6 years old; Delphine Broussard, 5 years old; and Zelie Broussard, 2 years old. Claude Broussard and his family occupied a tract of land with thirty arpents frontage. They owned 300 semi-wild beef cattle and 20 tame cattle. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 125-126; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Conover, Broussard, 12-13; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 132-133; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | 13/10/1819 | 14/10/1819 | St. Martin Parish | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||
115 | François | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Agnès (Nanette) Thibodeau | Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Pélagie Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and Caroline Landry. | Olidon (sometimes Odilon) (born January 2, 1771), Théophile (born March 5, 1773), Jean François (baptized May 5, 1776), Joseph Sarazin (born May 16, 1777), François Isidore (born January 2, 1779), Pelagie (born January 15, 1781) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas District. He was the only member of his household. The census lists two persons by the name of François Broussard in the Bayou Tortue settlement and indicates that one of them was a "gardener." Without additional information, it is impossible to positively identify the gardener. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that François Broussard was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, who is not named in the census report; Claude Broussard, his brother, 21 years old; Amand (Armand) Broussard, his brother, 19 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne) Broussard, no relationship indicated, 16 years old; and Elizabeth Broussard, no relationship indicated, 6 years old. François Broussard and his family owned thirty-one cows, ten horses, and fifteen hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. François Broussard had twenty barrels of corn, according to the list. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included himself, his wife, Amant Broussard, Isabelle Landry, an unidentified eight-year-old girl, and an unidentified two-month-old boy. His family owned twenty-eight cattle and seven horses. His family also occupied a parcel land measuring seven arpents frontage, but they did not hold a title to it. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and two unidentified children. Accused of theft by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet, September 26, 1776. The members of his household owned thirty-six cows, six horses or mules, and ten pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On October 20, 1789, he joined with eight other Attakapas District ranchers in signing a contract to supply New Orleans with beef for one year. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included Pélagie Landry (Landrie), his fifty-four-year-old wife. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with thirty-five arpents frontage. They owned 700 semi-wild beef cattle and 60 domesticated cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Thomas, 50 years old; Leuder, 23 years old; Martin, 19 years old; Jean-Louis, 11 years old; Célestin, 7 years old; Charles, 5 years old; Godfrey, 4 years old; Charlotte, 42 years old; Hélène, 25 years old; Félicité, 23 years old; Madeleine, 17 years old; Angélique, 16 years old; Pte. Félicité, 10 years old; Marie, 7 years old; Messite, 4 yeaers old; Clarisse, 2 years old; and Hortense, 1 year old. | His burial record maintains that he died at the age of approximately seventy-eight years. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Conover, Broussard, 10; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 118-150; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 134-135; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Alexandré DeClouet to Governor Luís de Unzaga, September 26, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:98; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Memorial by Jean Delavillebeuvre, October 20, 1789, AGI, PPC, 212A371. | 1.765 | 15/05/1819 | 16/05/1819 | St. Martin Parish | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
116 | Françoise | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1737 | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a sixty-six-year-old member of a household headed by fifty-seven-year-old Augustin Broussard. The household also included the following persons: Joseph Broussard, 26 years old; August Broussard, 18 years old; and Apollonie Broussard, 27 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with twenty-four arpents frontage. They owned 200 semi-wild beef cattle and 50 tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Isadore, 16 years old; and Deliel, 8 years old. | Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
117 | Isabelle (sometimes Élizabeth) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Ursule Trahan | Joseph Broussard | Married (1) Michel Meaux, a native of Chaillevette, France, at the Attakapas church, February 14, 1770. The marriage was witnessed by Simon Broussard, François Grevemberg, Jean Baptiste Grevemberg, and Jean Trahan. Married (2) Pierre La Pointe, November 20, 1785. Signed a marriage contract with Thomas Nickerson, August 7, 1795. Married (3) Nickerson, August 25, 1795. | First marriage: Antoine (baptized May 5, 1776), Céleste (born July 31, 1771), François-Xavier (born April 23, 1777), Michel, fils (born February 2, 1773), Pierre (baptized April 23, 1780), Stanislas (baptized April 11, 1784), Thecla (baptized March 31, 1782). Second marriage: Vital La Pointe (married January 14, 1812) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of René Trahan's household. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included her husband, Michel "Mau" and two unidentified children. She and her family owned thirty cows, nine horses or mules, and thirty pigs. An affidavit, signed by Charles Dugas and François Broussard on May 26, 1775, verified that Isabelle Broussard had lost five cows with calves, two young bulls, two calves, two oxen, one horse, one cow with calf,one cow, and one ox in a livestock epidemic in the Attakapas District. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Vermilion River area, March 31, 1782-October 8, 1799. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 131, 150, 557-560; Affidavit, May 26, 1775, Original Acts, Volume I, non-paginated, St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La. | 1.765 | 09/03/1833 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
118 | Isabelle | Broussard (Brossard) | Married René Trahan. | Oliver (born 1755), Henriette (married May 23, 1784), Louis Joseph (born August 19, 1772) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 770. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
119 | Jean Baptiste (Jean Bapte) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1732 | Acadia | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married (1) Anne Brun, the daughter of Joseph Brun and Marguerite Pellerin. Married (2) Elizabeth Landry, widow of Joseph Dugas and daughter of Jean Baptiste Landry and Isabelle Dugas, at the Attakapas church, August 23, 1799. | First marriage: Jean (born ca. 1765), Michel (born ca. 1768), Perpétue (born April 14, 1771), Marie (born January 20, 1789), | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 570.8 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin, 1767. Along with René Trahan, he served as co-commandant of the Attakapas District in 1768. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his unnamed wife and the following persons: Jean Broussard, his son, 5 years old; Michel Broussard, his son, a newborn infant; Joseph Hébert, no relationship indicated, 20 years old; Mathurin (Maturin) Broussard, no relationship indicated, 16 years old; Théodore Broussard, no relationship indicated, 6 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne) Thibodeau (Tibodeau), no relationship indicated, 18 years old. Jean Baptiste Broussard and his family owned nine cattle, six horses, and ten hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas District, April 24, 1771. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District identifies him as the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-seven-year-old wife, an unidentified eighty-year-old boy, an unidentified seven-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, twenty-one-year-old Mathurin Broussard, and twenty-one-year-old Madeleine Thibodeau. Jean Baptiste Broussard and his family owned twenty-nine cattle and ten horses. His family occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The census indicates that there was one woman in his household. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and three children. His family owned forty cows, twelve horses or mules, and thirty pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He is identified as Jean Bapte Broussard in the May 10, 1777 list. On November 6, 1798, he was identified in ecclesiastical records as the major domo (warden) of the Attakapas church. In 1791, Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard), elders of the Acadian community, were interrogated regarding the performance of the commandant and church warden in the performance of their duties with regard to repairs to the local church. | His succession is dated May 7, 1823. His death record at St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church in Lafayette indicates (evidently incorrectly) that he was 98 years of age at the time of his death. | Pact; Recapitulation of receipts provided by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C13a, 45:29; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Voorhies, comp., Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 133, Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 2:146; Reaux and Reaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," 133-134; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2447; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; Conover, Broussard, 1:15; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:163; Circular letter to the commandants of the south Louisiana posts regarding Acadian fugitives, April 4, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Proceedings of the interrogation of Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard) Regarding Repairs to the Attakapas Church, (1791), AGI, PPC, 204:220-239. | 1.765 | 16/10/1825 | Lafayette Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||
120 | Jean | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1764 | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Anne Brun | Jean Baptiste Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Louise Ludivine (sometimes Louise Devine) Broussard, July 20, 1784. Married Louise Ludivine Broussard at the Attakapas church, July 28, 1784. | Domitille (baptized May 26, 1795), unidentified girl (buried February 22, 1797), Jean (born December 14, 1791), Joseph (born October 28, 1798), Julie (December 3, 1800), Lise (sometimes Louise) (born November 20, 1785), Marie (born January 20, 1789), | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to his father, who was a widower at the time the census was compiled, the houshold included Michel Broussard, Joseph Hébert, Mathurin (Maturin) Broussard, Théodore Broussard, and Magdeleine Thibodeau. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 118-150; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
121 | Joseph | Broussard (Brossard) | dit Beausoleil | 01/01/1702 | Shepody, Acadia | Catherine Richard | Jean-François Broussard | Married Agnès Thibodeau, daughter of Michel Thibodeau and Agnès Dugas, September 1725. | Jean-Grégoire (born 1726), Joseph "Petit Joe," Victor Grégoire (born ca. 1728), Raphaël (born 1733), Timothée (born 1741), Amand (born ca. 1745), François, Isabelle, Amand, Claude Eloy, and Françoise | Participated in French skirmishes against British forces near Fort Beauséjour, 1755. Led sixty men against the British forces beseigning Fort Beauséjour on June 16, 1755. Granted provisional amnesty by Col. Robert Monckton in exchange for Broussard's services as mediator between the British military and the French-allied Micmac Indians. Later organized Acadians in present-day New Brunswick into a resistance movement. Obtailed from the Canadian governor letters of marque and outfitted a privateer that captured several British ships in the Bay of Fundy. In November 1758, he led members of the Acadian resistance against British troops attempting to destroy Acadian settlements along the Petitcodiac River; wounded in the foot in the ensuing battle. Subsequently moved his family to the Miramichi River area. Identified by British General Jeffrey Amherst as the charismatic leader of the Acadian resistance, August 1761. When his followers faced famine, Broussard sued for peace. On the rolls as a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, ca. July 12, 1762. Subsequently moved to detention camps at Halifax, but his wife and children remained at Fort Edward. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that five members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 3 1/3 rations. Released and later arrested at Pisiquid, Nova Scotia, and brought before the governor's council for carrying a letter from French authorities to the Acadians. Jailed until 1764. | Helped organize the migration of former Acadian prisoners at Halifax to Louisiana by way of Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti). Departing Halifax in November 1764, Broussard and his followers arrived at New Orleans in February 1765. Joined with other Acadian leaders in signing a contract to grow cattle on shares for Antoine Bernard Dauterive, April 4, 1765. Louisiana's French colonial governor appointed Broussard the first commandant of the Attakapas district, April 8, 1765. Departed with the Acadians for the Attakapas country, ca. late April 1765. The fragmentary extant documentation suggests that he settled with his brother Alexandre in the Fausse Pointe area. | The date of his death is the subject of some considerable debate, because of the existence of two burial entries for Acadians named Joseph Broussard. The first indicates that he died in the Attakapas district on September 5, 1765. | C. J. d'Entremont, "Brossard (Broussard), dit Beausoleil, Joseph," Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 3, pp. 87-88; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Grover Rees, trans., "The Dauterive Compact: The Foundation of the Acadian Cattle Industry," Attakapas Gazette, 11 (1976): 91; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 137; Conover, Broussard, 5. | Summoned twice before the Provincial Council at Annapolis to face charges of assault (1724) and having fathered an illegitimate child (1726). Jailed briefly for refusing to support the child. Settled at Chipoudy with his brother Alexandre sometime after 1726. Subsequently moved to Le Cran settlement (near present-day Moncton, N.B.). Assisted French forces during the Battle of Minas (1747). Outlawed by William Shirley, governor of Massachusetts and commander-in-chief of British forces, for collaboration with the French, October 21, 1747. | 1.765 | 20/10/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Beausoleil settlement (location presently unknown) | NULL | |||||||||
122 | Joseph (Joseph Grégoire) | Broussard (Brossard) | fils | 01/01/1755 | Ursule Trahan | Joseph Broussard | Married Anne Breau (Braud), daughter of Jean Baptiste Breau and Marie Rose Landry, at Ascension Parish, June 3, 1776. Their marriage was recorded at the Ascension Parish church. | Joseph (born March 22, 1777), Marguerite (born October 27, 1778), Joseph Nicolas, unidentified child (died January 20, 1784, at the age of 3 weeks), second unidentified child (died January 20, 1784), Raphaël (baptismal record was lost during the colonial period), Alexandre (born December 1784), Dositsée (born December 23, 1786), Adélaïde (born June 26, 1774), Edouard (baptized March 31, 1793), Susanne (born December 24, 1795), Philemon (born November 1, 1796), Delphine (born 1799) | A sixteen-year-old member of Silvain Broussard's household in the 1771 census. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a bachelor living along. He owned nine cows and one horse or mule. Identified in his marriage record as a resident of the Attakapas District, June 3, 1776. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:162; Conover, Broussard, 56, 208-212; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 118-150; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
123 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Broussard (Brossard) | Married Olivier Thibodeau. | Marguerite Anne (born May 10, 1765), Marie (married January 10, 1779), Theodore (married July 2, 1782) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 140. | 1.765 | 16/05/1765 | 17/05/1765 | Attakapas district | Attakapas district | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
124 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1753 | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of François Broussard's household. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of René Trahan's household. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
125 | Marguerite | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1733 | Agnès Thibodeau | Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married René Trahan. | Known children: Olivier (born 1755), Madeleine Henriette Anieta, and Louis Joseph (born August 19, 1772) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas district as the thirty-eight-year-old wife of René Trahan. Her household included her husband, an unidentified four-year-old son, two unidentified daughters aged seven and two years, her sixteen-year-old son Olivier, Madeleine Broussard, and Claude Broussard. She and her husband owned 60 cattle, 16 horses, and 4 sheep. They occupied but did not own a large parcel of land measuring 12 arpents frontage. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Broussard, 10-11; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
126 | Mathurin (Maturin) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1750 | Ursule Trahan | Joseph Grégoire Broussard (Brossard) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). The census indicates that he was the only member of his household. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Maturin Broussard in the June 20, 1774, list. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Broussard, 14; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
127 | Pierre | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married (1) Marie Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Paul Honoré Melanson and Marie Breau, July 1, 1776. Marie Melanson was buried at the Attakapas church, January 14, 1791. Married (2) Marguerite Guédry (Guidry), daughter of Pierre Guédry and Marguerite Miller, April 16, 1798. | First marriage: Pierre Joseph (born June 15, 1777), Alexandre Pierre, Julien (baptized July 25, 1779), Louis (Don Louis), Ludivine (born January 8, 1786), Ursin Second marriage: Pierre Zépherin (born October 22, 1799), Élizabeth Belzire (born May 10, 1801), Césaire (born October 10, 1805), Marguerite Elmire (baptized August 13, 1806), Clémence, Emelie, Olivier (born October 10, 1812) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor. He owned six cows and five horses. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. The census indicates that he owned fifteen cattle and seven horses. He occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned fifty cows and eighteen horses or mules. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a sergeant in the Attakapas District militia. Pierre Broussard held the rank of sergeant in the Attakapas District militia unit in 1779. On December 29, 1779, Commandant Alexandre DeClouet ordered him to organize a detachment of ten men for the purpose of driving a herd of Attakapas cattle to New Orleans to feed the residents of the colonial capital and to support the Spanish war effort against British West Florida. DeClouet ordered Broussard to exercise all possible care in keeping the herd together and he forbade the sergeant to sell any of the cattle to settlers along the Mississippi River. The cattle drive successfully reached New Orleans, but on January 19, 1780, Governor Bernardo de G lvez expressed his disappointment because so many cattle were lost en route to the colonial capital. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On May 30, 1783, Commandant Alexandre DeClouet reported that Broussard, who was scheduled to lead a cattle drive from the Attakapas country to New Orleans, had contracted a fever and had thus been forced to turn over command of the drive to Joseph Prévost dit Colette. He served as a sergeant in the Attakapas District militia unit, 1785. On March 20, 1787, Pierre Broussard answered a summons to provide information regarding François Prévost. In his deposition, Broussard indicated that he led a cattle drive for Barthélemy Grevemberg in 1783. At New Orleans, the herd was sold for 1,900 piastres, but he received only 900 piastres of the sale price, because André Jung claimed 1,000 piastres as payment for a debt owed to him, evidently by Grevemberg. The matter was subsequently settled by arbitration mediated by Nicolas Forestall. On October 20, 1789, he joined with eight other Attakapas District ranchers in signing a contract to supply New Orleans with beef for one year. On May 8, 1791, at an assembly at which the local commandant requested bids for repairs to the local church, Pierre Broussard and Pierre Nezat presented a petition from settlers established along Bayous Vermilion and Carencro. This petition asked that the repair work on the district's only church in the present St. Martinville area be suspended until the petitioners had been given an opportunity to request establishment of a church in their neighborhood. On April 4, 1792, in a letter to the governor, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre described Pierre Broussard as an illiterate man who had joined with others to harrass the local priest, evidently about the establishment of a second church in the Attakapas District. Delavillebeuvre urged the governor to discipline Broussard and his cohorts for holding assemblies in violation of the commandant's orders to the contrary. On April 26, 1792, Jean Delavillebeuvre informed the governor that, despite officiallly posted gubernatorial proclamations prohibiting petitions not authorized by the local commandant and despite unspecified punishments already meted out to him, Pierre Broussard and his cohorts had re-established their "cabal," resumed their agitation for a church in the Carencro area, and evidently circulated another petition. Broussard's associates allegedly included Pierre Arseneau, Pierre Nezat, Pierre Dugas, and Jean Baptiste Broussard. His cumulative service record, compiled on December 31, 1797, provides the following information: He was a native of Acadia. He was forty-six years of age, and he was married. He had been appointed sergeant second-class on February 12, 1792, and had been promoted to the rank of sergeant first-class of grenadiers on December 1, 1796. He was again promoted to the rank of sublieutenant on June 15, 1797. His military dossier indicates that, by December 31, 1797, he had served in the Louisiana militia for seventeen years and in the Royal Mixed Legion of the Mississippi for five years, ten months, and eighteen days. As of December 31, 1797, he had not participated in any military campaigns. His superiors noted that he was "good for his rank; [had] supposed valor; [had] sufficient application [to duty] & capacity; [and had maintained] good conduct." | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:163; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 145; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Alexandre DeClouet to Bernardo de G lvez, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:254; Alexandre DeClouet to Bernardo de G lvez, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:255; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Bernardo de G lvez to Alexandre DeClouet, January 19, 1780, AGI, PPC, 192:257; Louis Judice to Bernard de G lvez, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:32-325vo; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Alexandre DeClouet to the governor, May 30, 1783, AGI, PPC, 196:181vo; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 235; Contract, March 20, 1787, Book 5, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Memorial by Jean Delavillebeuvre, October 20, 1789, AGI, PPC, 212A:371; Jean Delavillebeuvre to the governor, May 9, 1791, AGi, PPC, 204:129-132; Jean Delavillebeuvre to the governor, April 4, 1792, AGI, PPC, 205:241vo; Jean Delavillebeuvre to the governor, April 26, 1792, AGi, PPC, 205:256-258; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 169. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
128 | René (Renato, Renez) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1759 | Acadia | Françoise Thibodeau | Firmin Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Magdelaine Landry, June 12, 1775; subsequently married (1) Marie Magdelaine Landry. Married (2) Anne Godin (his burial record indicates Gaudet), daughter of Bonaventure Godin and Théotiste Thibodeau, January 9, 1779. Amand Préjean, Jacques Fostin, and Jean Guilbeau witnessed the wedding. Father Ange de Revillagodos officiated at the marriage ceremony. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district, June 12, 1775. The May 1, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Renez Broussard in the May 10, 1777, list. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Identified as Renato Broussard, a forty-year-old native of "Acadia in the country of Canada," in his burial record. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 147; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | 22/02/1799 | St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | 1 | ||||||||||||||
129 | Simon | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1744 | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Marguerite Blanchard, April 11, 1768. | Isidore (born ca. 1770), Odilon (born March 4, 1771), Simon, fils (born 1779), Joseph (born March 15, 1782), Marguerite, Julie Angélique, Alexandre Simon | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was twenty-five years old. His household included an unidentified newborn infant and seventeen-year-old Frème (Ephrème) Bruno. He owned seven cows, three horses,a dn eight hogs. The census indicates that his household included one teenaged boy, two men, and one girl of undetermined age. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Witnessed the marriage record of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard, Attakapas church, February 14, 1770. The 1771 census indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-one-year-old wife, an unidentified one-year-old son, and twenty-year-old Etienne Bruno. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife, two children, and ten slaves. His family owned forty-nine cows, nine horses or mules, and twenty pigs. Attakapas Commandant Alexandre DeClouet informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that, upon his return from the Opelousas District, that he had punished Simon Broussard, evidently for heeding "bad advice" from Jean Bérard, to whom he was related by marriage, January 25, 1775. (Jean Bérard was charged with insubordination. While the charge against Broussard is not specified, it was also for "insubordination".) On May 1, 1775, DeClouet informed Unzaga that, by means of the militia company drill that he held every Sunday, he had instilled "discipline" among all of the population, except for Simon Broussard, who remained insubordinate. DeClouet consequently ordered the militia sergeant to place Broussard under house arrest and to remain at Broussard's house to enforce the sentence. DeClouet requested gubernatorial authorization to strip Broussard of his lands and to expel him from the district. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. In 1791, Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard), elders of the Acadian community, were interrogated regarding the performance of the commandant and church warden in the performance of their duties with regard to repairs to the local church. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Conover, Broussard, 4, 66; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Marriage record of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard, February 14, 1770, from the files of St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La.; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Alexandre DeClouet to Luís de Unzaga, January 25, 1775, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Alexandre DeClouet to Luís de Unzaga, May 1, 1775, AGI, PPC, legajo 189B; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Proceedings of the interrogation of Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard) Regarding Repairs to the Attakapas Church, (1791), AGI, PPC, 204:220-239. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
130 | Sylvain (Silvain, Silvin) | Broussard (Brossard) | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Félicité Guilbeau, daughter of Joseph Guilbeau dit l'Officier and Magdelaine Michel. | Anaclet (born October 7, 1770), Batilde (born October 7,1770), Hubert (born August 3, 1772), Adélaïde (born June 26, 1774), Appolonie (baptized May 5, 1776), Félicité (born October 24, 1777), Marie Victoire (baptized May 9, 1779), Silvestre (born May 27,1784), François (born May 4, 1786), Céleste | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; and Joseph Broussard, no relationship indicated, 14 years old. Sylvain Broussard and his family owned ten cows, three horses, and fifteen hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife, two boys (actually one son and one daughter) one year old, and sixteen-year-old Joseph Broussard. The 1771 census indicates that he and his family owned fifteen beef cattle, nine horses, and four sheep. The family occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Silvain Broussard in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and three children. He and his family owned fifty-seven cows, seven horses or mules, and twenty-five pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. He evidently did not reside in the Opelousas District. His property was in the Carencro Bayou area of the Opelousas District. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 137-138; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | 02/03/1804 | 03/03/1804 | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
131 | Théodore (Joseph Théodore) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1763 | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Magdelaine Dugas | Anselme Broussard | Married Henriette Trahan, minor daughter of René Trahan and Isabelle Broussard and a resident of Fausse Pointe (the present Loreauville area), May 23, 1784. | Anastasie (born January 15, 1788), Arsène (born 1805), Arthémise (born December 10,1 799), Clotilde (born June 4, 1797), Isabelle (born 1782), Joseph Isidore (born March 18, 1790), Louis (baptized April 5, 1795), Madeleine (married March 3, 1823) | The list of Acadian prisoners at Halifax, dated August 12, 1763, lists Anselme Broussard, his wife, and three unidentified children. | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (around present-day Breaux Bridge). A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a six-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Henriette Trahan, his wife, 34 years old; Anastasie (Tassie) Broussard, 14 years old; Joseph Broussard, 12 years old; Louis Broussard, 10 years old; Clotilde Broussard, 8 years old; and Arthemise Broussard, 3 years old. Théodore Broussard and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-five arpents frontage. They owned 100 semi-wild beef cattle and 60 tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Étienne, 50 years old; Julie, 40 years old; Cyrille, 20 years old; Colas, 12 years old; Marguerite, 21 years old; François, 19 years old; Alexandre, 16 years old; and Marie, 12 years old. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 125, 131, 149, 375; Réaux and Réaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," Attakapas Gazette, 6 (1971): 135-137; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
132 | Théotiste | Broussard (Brossard) | Acadia | Married Augustin Guédry. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 149-150. | 1.765 | 26/07/1765 | 26/07/1765 | "le camp d'en bas" (probably near Loreauville) | "le camp d'en bas" (probably near Loreauville) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
133 | Victor | Broussard (Brossard) | Isabelle LeBlanc may have been his wife. | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 257; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
134 | Agnès | Brun | Veuve | 01/01/1730 | Acadia | Married (1) Paul Doucet. Signed a marriage contract with Olivier Thibodeau, son of Charles Thibodeau and Françoise Marie Comeau and the widower of Madeleine Broussard, in the Attakapas district, September 30, 1786. Married (2) Olivier Thibodeau at the Attakapas church, September 30, 1786. | First marriage: Anne (Nanette, Jeanette). Second marriage: Nicolas (born 1772), Cyrille (born 1773), Olivier (baptized 1776), Madeleine (born 1782), Jean Baptiste (born 1784) | At Halifax, Nova Scotia, in 1763. | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). Her household included one woman and one girl. On August 23, 1808, Agnès Brun, now an elderly widow, appeared before Judge James White and expressed her intention to divide her property among her children. In exchange, she demanded $25.00 per year from each child for subsistence purposes. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 125, 151; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 125; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 77-78; Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, p. 18. | 1.765 | 25/10/1809 | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church (St. Martinville) | NULL | ||||||||||||||
135 | Catherine | Caissy | dit Roger | 01/01/1736 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Rosalie Comeau | Michel Caissy | Married Jean Baptiste Bergeron. | Madeleine (born 1750), Osite (born 1752), Jean Baptiste (born 1754), Charles (born 1756), Marianne (born May 31, 1765), Michel (married September 24, 1796) | Was at the Attakapas District when her daughter Marianne was baptized in August 1765. She and her family appear to have migrated from the Attakapas District following the death of her husband Jean Baptiste Bergeron there on November 2, 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a widow and the head of a household including her brother Joseph Caissy and her following children: Jean Baptiste, Charles, Magdelaine, abd Osite. The census indicates that she and her family occupied a tract of land measuring four arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. She owned one hog and one firearm. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 53-54; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1763, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2420; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12-13. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
136 | Jean Baptiste | Chiasson | dit Neveu | 01/01/1762 | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family with whom he lived in 1766 was in New Orleans in December 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a four-year-old child residing in the household of his uncle, Pierre Chiasson. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2458; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:187-188. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
137 | Marie | Chiasson | 10/12/1765 | Louisiana | Ozite Marguerite (Ausède, Osite) Landry | Pierre Chiasson | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Alexis Joseph Carlier and Marie Margueritte Carlier served as her baptismal sponsors. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in her parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. She is not listed in her parents' household in the 1769 census of Cabannocé. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:187-188; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | Mon, Dec 9, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
138 | Michel | Chiasson | 01/01/1759 | Ozite Marguerite (Ausède, Osite) Landry | Pierre Chiasson | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family was in New Orleans in December 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seven-year-old child residing in his parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. On July 5, 1776, Commandant Nicolas Cantrelle notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that Michel Chiasson (Chiaison) and François Antailla were traveling to New Orleans to place before the governor their claims to Chevalier de Bellevue's land. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Bazitte(?) Claire(?), 28 years old; and Joseph Melanson, 23 years old. Michel Chiasson owned a tract of land with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They 1777 census also indicates that he owned no slaves or livestock. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2458; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:187-188; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Nicolas Cantrell to Luís de Unzaga, July 5, 1776, AGI, PPC,d 189B:149-150vo; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
139 | Paul (Paulle, Saul) | Chiasson (Chaission, Chaison) | frère | 01/01/1746 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Poirier | Abraham Chiasson | Married Marie Madeleine Blanchard, ca. 1770. | Marie Madeleine (born 1773), Paul (born 1776), Marguerite (born 1778), Anne Marie (born 1779) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one cow, six hogs, and one musket. Possibly identified as Paul Fasson in the 1770 militia muster roll for the Iberville District, but a Paul Chiason appears in the January 23, 1770, muster roll for Louis Judice's Company, Lafourche Militia. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years old. His name is rendered as Paulle Chaission in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 28 years old; his daughter, 6 years old; 3 years old; his son, 2 years old. They owned twene cows, one horse, eight hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he had lost nine of his twenty-one cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. His name is rendered as Paulle Chaison in the July 10, 1783 list. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2458; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
140 | Pierre | Chiasson (Chaisson) | 01/01/1729 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Poirier | Abraham Chiasson | Married Osite (Ozite) Marguerite Landry. | Basile (born 1757), Michel (born 1758), Jean Baptiste (born 1769), Basile (born 1771), Simon Pierre (born 1774), Marie (born October 12, 1765) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family was in New Orleans in December 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife Osite Landry, his son Michel, his daughter Marie, and his nephew Jean Baptiste Chiasson. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Landry, his wife, 38 years old; Michel Chiasson, his son, 10 years old; and Basile Chiasson, his son, 11 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, fifteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a forty-one-year-old married man. He lived two leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Landry, his wife, 44 years old; Jean Baptiste Chiasson, his son, 8 years old; Basile Chiasson, his son, 6 years old; Simon Chiasson, his son, 3 years old; and Monique Eustache (Ustache), an orphan, 18 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and six horses. They owned no slaves. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2458; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:187-188; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
141 | Marie | Grossin (Clausinet) | 01/01/1742 | Married Jean Baptiste Dugas. Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that she was actually Marie Grossin, not Marie Clausinet. According to the above-mentioned French researchers, she appears under the name of Marie Clausinet only in a list compiled by the Spanish consulate before the departure of the Bon Papa. In other records she is identified consistently as Marie Grossin. | Marie (born ca. 1774) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
142 | Dorothée | Comeau | Pointe Coupée Post | Married Jean Charles Boudrot. | Augustin (baptized June 21, 1795), Celesie (November 1, 1795), Jean Baptiste (born March 15, 1788), Leufroy (baptized July 12, 1789), Marie Euphemie (born December 7, 1797), Susanne (born December 30, 1790) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
143 | Isabelle | Comeau | Married Pierre Arosteguy. | Marie Rose (born August 17, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:7. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
144 | Jean | Comeau | Cap Français, Saint Domingue (now Haiti) | Anne Michel | Victor Comeau | Married Esther LeBlanc, daughter of Simon LeBlanc and Marguerite Guilbeau, at the Attakapas church, January 2, 1786. Father Gefrrotin officiated at the marriage ceremony. | His birthplace suggests that he was born ca. 1764. | He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included one man, one woman, and one girl. He and his family owned fifty cows and nine horses. They possessed neither slaves for real estate. | Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 199, 498; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
145 | Thomas | Comeau | 01/01/1760 | Anne Michel | Victor Comeau | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included his five-year-old brother Jean. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
146 | Victor | Comeau | Married Anne Michel. | Thomas (born 1760), Jean (born ca. 17640 | Appears to have made his way to Cap Français, Saint Domingue (present-day Haiti), where his son Jean was born. | Evidently misidentified as Victor Carmouche in a list of Acadians who, on April 1, 1765, sent Canadian paper money to France for redemption by the French monarchy; Comeau's contribution totalled 422.8 livres. Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one woman and two boys. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas district, January 2, 1786. | Died sometime before April 25, 1771, when his widow married Joseph Cormier at the Attakapas church. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, p. 125; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 199. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
147 | Ester | Cordne | 01/01/1725 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her son-in-law (possibly stepson), Amable Hébert, and her three grandchildren, André, Marie, and Geneviève Hébert. Traveled as part of Amable Hébert's household. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
148 | Anastasie | Cormier | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite (Marie Madeleine) Richard | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Pierre Bourg, son of Joseph Bourg and Marie Landry at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 27, 1772. The ceremony was witnessed by Paul Martin, Jean Savoie, François Savoie, and Jean Cormier. | Félicité (born ca. 1772; baptized July 14, 1776), Marguerite (baptized April 4, 1773), Rosalie (baptized August 19, 1774; married February 9, 1793), Magdeleine (Magalena) (born 1774; buried September 5, 1802), Jean Joseph (baptized April 19, 1778), Pélagie (baptized June 1, 1780), Pierre (baptized October 29, 1781), Anastasie (born ca. 1781; buried November 13, 1798), Alexandre (born January 27, 1788), Marie Ipolita (born April 5, 1791) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Bourg. She, her husband, and three children lived with her parents in 1777. The household also included Charles Bourg, a fifteen-year-old orphan. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:203; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120-122, 124, 125, 126, 128. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
149 | Catherine | Cormier | 01/01/1756 | Married Jean Richard. | Rosalie (born 1756), Jean, Joseph (baptized February 26, 1764) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Richard. In addition to herself and her fifty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Rosalie Richard, her twenty-one-year-old daughter. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
150 | Félicité (sometimes (Felice) | Cormier | 01/01/1773 | Married Joseph Babineau. | Joseph (born October 4, 1787), David (born 1790), François (born 1793), Julie (born 1795), Julien (born ca. 1796), Anastasie (born August 1, 1796) Jean (born 1801) | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the thirty-year-old spouse of Joseph Babineau (Babino). In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Babineau (Babino), 15 years old; David Babineau (Babino), 13 years old; François Babineau (Babino), 10 years old; Julie Babineau (Babino), 8 years old; Julien Babineau (Babino), 7 years old; Anastasie (Anasthasie) Babineau (Babino), 6 years old; and Jean Babineau (Babino), 2 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with twenty arpents frontage. They owned 500 cattle. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 28; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 28-29; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
151 | Jean Baptiste | Cormier | 01/01/1709 | Acadia | Married Marguerite (Magdeleine, Marie) Richard. | Jean Baptiste, Marie Anne, Marie, Marguerite (married January 7, 1771), Anastasie (born 1753, married January 27, 1772) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 692 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the sixty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Richard, his wife, 68 years old; Pierre Bourg, his son-in-law, 24 years old; Anastasie Cormier, his daughter and Pierre Bourg's wife, 24 years old; Marguerite Bourg, his granddaughter, 2 years old; Rosalie Bourg, his granddaughter, 2 years old; Félicité Bourg, his granddaughter, 5 years old; and Charles Bourg, an orphan, 15 years old. He and his family owned twelve cows in 1777. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 8, 1766; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
152 | Marguerite | Cormier | 01/01/1752 | Marguerite (Marie Madeleine) Richard | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Firmin Girouard, son of Paul Girouard and Marie Thibodeau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 7, 1771. The ceremony was witnessed by Paul Martin and Jean Savoie. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Firmin Girouard. In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Simon Girouard, her five-year-old son; Jacques Girouard, her four-year-old son; and Pierre Girouard, her five-month-old son. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. THey also owned twenty cows and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:204; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:204; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 208; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:324. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
153 | Marie (Marie Anne) | Cormier | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite (Marie Madeleine) Richard | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Michel Poirier, March 31, 1766. Michel Poirier appears to have died shortly before the April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | Pierre (born 1766), Joseph (born January or February 1769), Marguerite (born 1771), Rosalie (born 1773), Michel (born 1777) | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Joseph Poirier, her first cousin, at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-year-old wife of Michel Poirier. She and her husband resided on a six-arpent tract on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census indicates that she lived next door to her sister, Magdelaine Cormier, and her brother-in-law, Simon Mire. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of thirty-one-year-old Michel Poirier. Her household also included the following persons: Pierre Poirier, her son, 3 years old; Joseph Poirier, her son, 8 months old; and Marie (Poirier?), an orphan, 16 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. They owned four cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household; she was also evidently a widow. Her household included Pierre Poirier, her son, 10 years old; Joseph Poirier, her son, 8 years old; Marguerite Poirier, her daughter, 6 years old; and Rosalie Poirier, her daughter, 3 years old. She and her children owned eighteen cows and two horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé, February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
154 | Isabelle | Darois | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 216. | 1.765 | 10/10/1765 | Attakapas district | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
155 | Michel (Ollivier) | Darois | Louisiana(?) | Marie Bourgeois | Pierre Darois | If this child were born in New Orleans, as this baptismal certificat seems to suggest, then this baptism would help establish the approximately date of arrival of the Acadians led by Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil. Official correspondence from Louisiana's French caretaker adminisrators indicates only that they arrived in late February. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of his parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | Tue, Feb 19, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
156 | Pierre | Darois | 01/01/1733 | Pelaudiaque (probably Petitcodiac, Petitcoudiac), Acadie | Marguerite Breau | Jean Darois | Married Marie Bourgeois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, April 8, 1765. | Michel (more commonly known as Olivier) (born February 19, 1765) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | His son Michel's birth and baptismal dates indicate that he arrived in Louisiana in February 1765. Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. His household included one unidentified woman. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bourgeois, his wife, 35 years old; Olivier, his son, 5 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one cow and twenty hogs. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that also included Marie Bourgeois, his forty-two-year-old wife. He and his wife evidently owned no land in 1777, but they did own ten cows and two horses. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31, 66; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
157 | Alexandre | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1738 | Married Ursule Hébert. | Isaac (born ca. 1769), Mathurin (born ca. 1773), Joseph (born ca. 1778), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1783), Marie Rose (born ca. 1764), Magdelaine (born ca. 1766) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1759-1763. Resided at Pieslin, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | He was a resident of Manchac at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:243. | 1.785 | 02/10/1793 | St. Gabriel, La. | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
158 | Isaac | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1769 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
159 | Jean Baptiste | Douarion (Doiron) | Le Havre, France | Married Marie Blanche Bernard. | Cyprien (born August 15, 1789), Marie (born August 23, 1786), Marie Honorine (married February 13, 1786), Rose Lucie (married May 23, 1789), Toussaint (died August 8, 1800) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
160 | Joseph | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1778 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
161 | Magdelaine | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1766 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
162 | Marie Rose | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1764 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
163 | Mathurin | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1773 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
164 | Joseph | Doucet | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Martin | Michel Doucet | Married Anne Landry, daughter of Jean Landry and Magdelaine Broussard, at the Attakapas church, July 18, 1772. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Jean Berard, Augustin Grevemberg, François Grevemberg, Durieu, and Joseph Landry. Father Irenée, a Catholic missionary from Pointe Coupée Parish, officiated at the wedding ceremony. | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district, July 1772. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and one child. The family owned twenty-three cattle, four horses and mules, and six pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 259; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
165 | Madeleine (Magdelaine) | Doucet | Married Pierre Gaudet. | Marguerite (born August 1, 1764) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
166 | Marie Marthe | Doucet | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Martin | Michel Doucet | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 260. | 1.765 | 24/11/1765 | Attakapas district | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
167 | Michel | Doucet | 01/01/1714 | Married Marguerite Martin. | Joseph (sometimes Hilaire) (born 1751), Michel (born 1753), Pierre (born 1756), Jean (born ca. 1760), Marie Marthe (born ca. 1763, died November 24, 1765) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 2,000 livres in Canadian card money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one woman, one teenaged boy, and three young boys. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Michel Doucet was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Hilaire (Ylère) Doucet, his son, 19 years old; Michel Doucet, his son, 17 years old; Pierre Doucet, his son, 12 years old; Jean Doucet, his son, 9 years old; Bonaventure (Bonnaventure) Martin, no relationship indicated, 17 years old; and Judith (Judic) Martin, no relationship indicated, 17 years old. Michel Doucet and his family owned thirteen cows, three horses, and twenty hogs. Michel Doucet signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having twenty barrels of unhusked corn for sale. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the head of a household that included his fifty-year-old wife, Joseph Doucet, Judith Martin, Michel Doucet (his son), Pierre Doucet, Bonaventure Martin, and an unidentified ten-year-old boy. The 1771 census also indicates that Michel Doucet owned twenty-five beef cattle and two horses. He and his family occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage, but they did not have formal title to the property. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph(?) Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Michel Doucet, his wife, and two unidentified children. He and his family owned thirty cattle, eleven horses or mules, and eighteen hogs. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, p. 125; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 260; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
168 | Dorothée | Dubois | Served as a baptismal sponsor for André Savoie, who was baptized at New Orleans on September 22(?), 1765. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:251. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
169 | Athanase (Atanas, Athanaze) | Dugas (Dugat) | 01/01/1753 | St. Anne Parish, along the St. John River, Diocese of Quebec, Acadia | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Married Rose LeBlanc, daughter of Pierre LeBlanc and Anne Landry, September 15, 1777. | Joseph (born 1778), Anne Josèphe (born 1779), Madeleine (born 1780), Henriette (born 1781), Anne Marie (married February 28, 1802), Julie (married May 20, 1804), Jérôme Athanase (married January 21, 1805), Julien Canuel (born 1786), Marie Louise (born 1788), Rosalie Athanase (married Occtober 16, 1809) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of François Dugas's household. The census indicates that he owned a parcel of land measuring five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He also owned a firearm. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a an eighteen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was twenty-two-years-old. Michel Dugas, his twenty-year-old brother, shared his household. Athanase Dugas owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned five cows, four horses, ten hogs, and two muskets. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Atanas Dugas in the 1779 militia list. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2477; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:254; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.765 | 26/03/1791 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
170 | Cécile | Bergeron | 01/01/1753 | Cécile Dugas | Joseph Bergeron | Married Jean Charles Comeau at Cabannocé, September 23, 1776. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The household also included her brothers Joseph and Nicolas and her sister Marie Magdeleine. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:254-255; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
171 | Charles | Dugas | 01/01/1750 | St. Anne Parish, along the St. John River, Diocese of Quebec, Acadia | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Married Rose Babin, daughter of Antoine Babin and Catherine Landry, ca. 1772. | Marie Françoise (born 1773), Charles Grégoire (born 1774), Sophie Adélaïde (born 1776), Victor (born 1779; died October 10, 1779), Anastasie (born 1780), Marie Angèle (born 1783), Paul (born 1785), Laurent (born 1787), Joseph (born ca. 1789; died October 8, 1819), Jérôme (married February 24, 1811), Rosalie (died July 7, 1797) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of François Dugas's household. The census indicates that he owned a parcel of land measuring five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He also owned a firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Michel Dugas, his brother, 12 years old; Théodore Dugas, his brother, 9 years old; and Rose Dugas, relationship not identified, 20 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned two cows, four hogs, and one musket. IThe January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a a nineteen-year-old bachelor. dentified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head o a household that included the following persons: Rose Babin, his wife, 24 years old; Charles Dugas, his son, 2 years old; Adélaïde Dugas, his son, 8 months; and Théodore Dugas, his brother, 18 years old. Charles Dugas and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eleven cows, two horses, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He is listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780; the list indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-nine years of age at the time of his death. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2477; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 5, 35, 36. | 1.765 | 25/11/1809 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
172 | François | Dugas | 01/01/1740 | St. Anne Parish, along the St. John River, Diocese of Quebec, Acadia | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Married Marguerite Babin, daughter of Joseph Babin and Anne Terriot (Theriot), June 28, 1768. | Joseph (born 1770), Hipolyte (Hipolite, Hypolite) (born 1771), Athanase (born 1773), Michel (born 1776), Appolonie (born 1778), Joseph Roger (born 1783), Jean (born 1784), Marguerite (born 1786) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Dugas occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. François Dugas owned one firearm. The census lists Charles Dugas, Michel Dugas, Athanase Dugas, Théodore Dugas, and Rose Dugas as members of his household. On June 28, 1768, he resided "about 1/2 league above [Bayou] Lafourche des Chetimaches." Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife, Marguerite Babin. He and his spouse owned three cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. A 1770 muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's second sergeant. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-nine-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife, Marguerite Babin. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. He signed a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. (He was one of only three Cabannocé Acadians capable of signing the petition.) The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Babin, his wife, 27 years old; Joseph Dugas, his son, 7 years old; Hipolite (Hypolite) Dugas, his son, 6 years old; Athanase Dugas, his son, 4 years old; and Michel Dugas, his son, 1 year old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, two horses, nine hogs, and two muskets. François Dugas was one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal made to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the suggestion "made by people too lazy to make [enclosed] pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-six years of age at the time of his death. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2477; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coas, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2: 255; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8, 35, 36. | 1.765 | 28/10/1798 | 29/10/1798 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
173 | Jean | Dugas (Dugat) | 01/01/1741 | Married Marguerite Dupuis (Dupuy). | Augustin (born February 20, 1770), Céleste (baptized April 30, 1780, at the age of 9 months), Charles (baptized April 22, 1780, at the age of 3 months), Félicité (born July 4, 1774), Jean (born July 10, 1777), Joseph (born July 2, 1788), Julie (born April 16, 1772), Louis (born February 15, 1794), Marguerite (baptized October 15, 1786), Marie Sophie (born February 2, 1785) | Appears to have been among the Acadians held as prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Jean Dugas was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Jean Dugas was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his wife, who is not named in the census. He and his wife owned three cows, one horse, and seven hogs. Jean Dugas signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The Bérard list indicates that he had twenty barrels of corn. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife, a one-year-old son, and twenty-two-year-old Pierre Dugas . He owned 14 beef cattle, 4 horses, and a parcel of land measuring 12 arpents frontage to which he had no title. Dugas participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife and three children. He and his family owned twenty cows, five horses or mules, and twenty-five hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the sixty-three-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Charles Dugas (Dugat), 22 years old; Jean Dugas (Dugat), fils, 20 years old; Joseph Dugas (Dugat), 15 years old; Margte Dugas (Dugat), 16 years old; Isabelle Dugas (Dugat), 8 years old. Jean Dugas (Dugat) and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-seven arpents frontage. They owned 200 semi-wild beef cattle and 20 tame cattle. | His burial record maintains that he was approximately seventy years of age at the time of his death. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 268-279; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 141-142; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie, Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | 05/09/1809 | 05/09/1809 | at his residence at Grand Prairie | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
174 | Jean | Dugas | 09/01/1764 | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 274. | 1.765 | 19/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
175 | Joseph | Dugas | Married Cécile Bergeron, ca. 1754. | Joseph (born 1755), Cécile (born ca. 1757), Marie Pelagie Madeleine (born ca. 1759), Mathilde (born March 6, 1765) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Joseph Dugas appears to have arrived at New Orleans in February 1765 with the group of Acadians led by Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil, for his daughter Mathilde was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral) in the Crescent City on March 8, 1765. He and his family subsequently settled in the Attakapas district. Joseph Dugas died in the Attakapas district during the epidemic that spread through the Acadian encampments during the summer and fall of 1765. The date of Joseph Dugas' buried, however, is uncertain, because Father Jean-François de Civray, the local pastor, recorded three burial entries for persons named Joseph Dugas in the registers of the Attakapas church. Because the ages of the victims and the identities of the survivors are not indicated in the burial entries, positive identification of the deceased is impossible. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | The registers of the Attakapas church provide the following dates for burials of persons named Joseph Dugas: July 27, 1765; October 6, 1765; October 11, 1765. His widow remarried at New Orleans on March 16, 1767. Her marriage record indicates that Joseph Dugas died "at Attakapas." | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 247; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:17, 105; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 274; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Joseph Dugas and Cecile Bergeron." | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
176 | Joseph | Bergeron | 01/01/1751 | Cécile Dugas | Joseph Bergeron | Married Marguerite LeBlanc at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, October 16, 1780. | Étienne Silvestre (born December 26, 1787), Clémence (Clementa) (born March 14, 1791), Melanie Françoise (born May 30, 1793), Marie Françoise (born September 17, 1795), Benjamin (born October 29, 1799), Lucas (born March 15, 1802) | Resided with his mother and his sisters Cécile and Magdelaine at the Cabannocé residence of Joseph Hébert, April 9, 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included his brother Nicolas, his sister Cécile, and his sister Marie Magdeleine. The 1777 census of Cabannocé indicates that he was a member of the household of Pierre Bernard, his stepfather. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2481; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:257; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
177 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Marguerite | Dugas | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Married Anselme Broussard. | Theodore (married May 23, 1784) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 149. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
178 | Marie Magdelaine | Bergeron | 01/01/1752 | Cécile Dugas | Joseph Bergeron | Married Jean Baptiste Bernard at Cabannocé, September 23, 1776. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:258. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
179 | Magdelaine | Dugas | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 276. | 1.765 | 06/10/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
180 | Marie | Dugas | Married Mathurin Landry. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 276-277. | 1.765 | 28/07/1765 | 29/07/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
181 | Michel | Dugas | 01/01/1752 | St. Anne Parish, along the St. John River, Diocese of Quebec, Acadia | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Married (1) Anne Sophie Forest, daughter of Bonaventure Forest and Claire Rivet, at Cabannocé, February 23, 1778. Married (2) Rose (Rosalie) Forest (Forêt), daughter of Joseph Forest and Isabelle Léger, at Ascension Parish, La., July 21, 1800. Jean Baptiste Forest and Charles Dugas witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Marie Céleste (born 1779), Marguerite Pélagie (born 1779), Michel Edouard (born 1781), Julie Clothilde (born 1782), Marie Louise (born 1784), Joseph (born 1787), Félicité (born 1788)Second marriage: Joseph Valéry (married January 29,1827), Berthilde (married January 24, 1825), Joseph Alexandre (married February 14, 1825) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of François Dugas's household. The census indicates that he owned a parcel of land measuring five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twelve-year-old (sic) member of Charles Dugas's household. The household included his brothers Charles and Théodore. The family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old resident of his brother Athanase's household. Michel Dugas owned two cows, one horse, ten sheep, and one musket. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On November 15, 1798, Michel Dugas purchased a tract of land along the Mississippi River from Amant (Armand, Amand) Babin. This property was bounded above by the and of Raphael Babin and below by that of Louis Landry. His estate was inventoried and appraised on July 11, 1800. The probate inventory lists a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of Bayou Lafourche. This property was located thirty-two arpents below the junction of the Lafourche and the Mississippi River. Michel Dugas's property was bounded above by the land of Pierre Landry and below by the property of Théodore Dugas. Improvements on the property included a house measuring twenty-feet by fifteen feet. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-one years of age at the time of his death. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2477; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:260; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35-36. | 1.765 | 11/10/1828 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
182 | Michel | Dugas | ASC70/V273-25 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
183 | Rose | Dugas | 01/01/1749 | St. Anne Parish, along the St. John River, Diocese of Quebec, Acadia | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her brother François Dugas's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old member of Charles Dugas's household. The household also included Michel Dugas, Théodore Dugas. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2477; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
184 | Théodore (Téodore) | Dugas (Dugal) | 01/01/1758 | Acadia | Marie Bourg | Claude Dugas | Married (1) Madeleine Richard, widow of Pierre Babin, at Cabannocé, April 4, 1778. Simon Richard and Paul Babin witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Victoire Forest, ca. 1785. | Second marriage: Reine (married January 9, 1806), Anne Céleste (married May 19, 1806), Pierre Doctrove(?) (married December 30,1821), Isidore (died April 27, 1826) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of François Dugas's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old resident of Charles Dugas's household. The household included his brothers Charles and Michel. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Charles Dugas, his brother, and Rose Babin, his sister-in-law. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a corporal on active duty. His name is rendered as Téodore Dugal in the July 10, 1783 list. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourche District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. Around April 16, 1793, he was summoned by Commandant Louis Judice to inspect the flooding caused by crevasses on the Lafourche District farms of Judice and Ducourneaux. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2481; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Louis Judice to Baron de Carondelet, April 16, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:239-240; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:261; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
185 | Charles | Dugas | Port Royal, Acadia | Identified in a Louisiana marriage record, dated November 3, 1795, as a native of Port Royal. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 77. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
186 | Jean | Dugas | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 5. | 22/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
187 | Jean Baptiste | Dugas | 01/01/1736 | Married Marie Clausinet (Clossinet). There is some controversy regarding the identity of his wife. French genealogists and historians Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that his wife was actually Marie Grossin. | Marie (born ca. 1774) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
188 | Jean Charles | Dugast (Dugas) | Received a Spanish land grant in the Opelousas district, December 4, 1786. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
189 | Marie Magdelaine | Dugas (Dugast) | 01/01/1735 | Married Pierre Quintin (Kimine), the widower of Marie Louise Grossin. Pierre Quintin resided at Paramé, Brittany, 1759-1764, 1771-1773. He was a resident of Saint-Servan, France, 1763-1771. | Anne (born ca. 1761), Marie (born ca. 1762), Victoire Françoise (ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
190 | Charles (Charle) | Duon (DUAN, Duant, Duhon) | 01/01/1736 | Agnès Hébert | Jean Baptiste Duon | Married Marie Josèphe Préjean at Halifax, Nova Scotia, ca. 1756. | Jean Baptiste (born November 10, 1759), Marguerite (born February 6, 1764), Michel (born ca. December 1768), Charles (born 1773), Marie Marine (born 1775), Marie Madeleine (born 1776), Charles (born 1778), Scholastique (born 1779), Adélaïde (born 1782) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only two full rations. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that his family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he and his family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned two hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Préjean, his wife, 33 years old; Michel, his son, 10 months old; Marguerite, his daughter, 5 years old; and Jean Baptiste, his son, 9 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned seven cattle, fifteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a a thirty-five-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Préjean, his wife, 36 years old; Jean Baptiste Duon, his son, 10 years old; Michel Duon, his son, 2 years old; Marguerite Duon, his daughter, 6 years old. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Charle Duant in the May 10, 1777 list. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
191 | Claude | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1738 | Acadia | Agnès Hébert | Jean Baptiste Duon | Married Marie Josèphe Vincent at Miramichi, ca. 1757. | Firmin (born ca. 1766) and Joseph (born ca. 1768) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only 2/3 ration. | Arrived in Louisiana in 1765. Probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marguerite Duon at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 1, 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household consisting of his wife, Marie Vincent, and orphan Paul Duon. The household occupied a farm with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned two hogs and two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Vincent, his wife, 38 years old; and Paul Jeansonne, an orphan, 14 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, seven hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-two-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie Josèphe Vincent, his thirty-nine-year-old spouse, and Françoise Pitre, his six-year-old niece. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District, he reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. On January 2, 1777, Claude Duon (Duhon) sold to Joseph Gaudet, a resident of the Cabannocé District, a trast of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Honoré Duon (Duhon) and below by the property of Joseph Melanson. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-five by fifteen feet. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the seventy-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Firmin (Fermin) Duon, 30 years old; Marie Trahan, 30 years old; Marie Trahan (fille), 12 years old; Michel Trahan, 11 years old; Delphy Trahan, 10 years old; Firmin (Fermin) Trahan, 8 years old; Siesie Trahan, 4 years old; Parosine Trahan, 2 years old; and Alexis Trahan, 1 year old. He owned land with twelve arpents frontage. He also owned 300 semi-wild beef cattle and 40 domesticated cattle. He owned the following slaves: Allain, 40 years old; M. Jeanne, 14 years old; and Pouponne, 1 year old. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
192 | Jean Baptiste | Duon (Duhon) | 11/10/1759 | Marie Josèphe Préjean | Charles Claude Duon | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Pierre Blanchard and Josèphe Vincent served as his baptismal sponsors. His family probably moved to the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé, ca. September 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a six-year-old child in Charles Claude Duon's household. The family occupied a six-arpent parcel of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Bapte Duon (Duhon), 19 years old; Joseph Duon (Duhon), 13 years old; Placide Duon (Duhon), 11 year old; Pierre Duon (Duhon), 6 years old; Me Duon (Duhon), 40 years old; Frosine Duon (Duhon), Adélaïde Duon (Duhon), 17 years old; Félicité Duon (Duhon), 10 years old; Arthemise Duon (Duhon), 4 years old; Margte Duon (Duhon), 1 year old. Baptiste Duon (Duhon) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 300 semi-wild beef cattle and 30 tame cattle. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | Sun, Dec 1, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
193 | Marguerite | Duon (Duhon) | 02/06/1764 | Marie Josèphe Préjean | Charles Claude Duon | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Claude Duon and Anne Martin served as her baptismal sponsors. Her family probably moved to the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé, ca. September 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a two-year-old child in Charles Claude Duon's household. The family occupied a six-arpent parcel of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of her parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | Mon, Feb 6, 1764 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
194 | Anselme (Enselme) | Forest (Faures, Forêt) | 01/01/1751 | Marie Chiasson | Charles Forest | Married Marie Madeleine (Magdeleine) LeBlanc, daughter of Simon LeBlanc and Elizabeth LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, February 7, 1774. | Marie Madeleine (born 1774), Jean Louis (born 1776), Paul (born 1778), Augustin (born 1780) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was residing in his father's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a seventeen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the boundaries were not restored. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeBlanc, his wife, 22 years old; Louis Forest, his son, 7 months old; and Magdeleine Forest, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fiv cows, two horses, four hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Enselme Forein the July 27, 1777, petition. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2488; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
195 | Charles | Forest (Forêt) | fils | Marguerite Saulnier | Charles Forest | Married Marie Marguerite Blanchard, daughter of Benoît (Beloni) Blanchard and Magdeleine Forest (Forêt), at Ascension Parish, February 20, 1786. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that Charles Forest's wife was actually named Marie Magdeleine Blanchard.) | Charles Bélloni (baptized April 8, 1787), Scholastie (married April 4, 1809), Hypolite (married June 11, 1827) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was residing in his father's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as five-year-old member of his parents' household. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old bachelor living next door to his parents. According to the 1777 census, he owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On December 12, 1786, Charles Forest and Marie Marguerite (Magdeleine) Blanchard sold to Antoine Peytavin a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twenty-four leagues above New Orleans, this property was bounded above by the land of the Widow Forest and below by the property of Simon LeBlanc. Improvements on the foregoing property included a house of sur sol constsruction measuring twenty by fifteen feet. The residence had bousillage walls. | His burial record indicates that he died at the age of fifty-five years of age. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:125; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2488; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:292; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 41. | Tue, Dec 10, 1765 | 1.765 | 23/03/1783 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
196 | Charles | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1726 | Acadia | Françoise Dugas | René Forest | Married (1) Marie Chiasson, daughter of Abraham Chiasson and Marie Poirier, at Beaubassin, Nova Scotia, May 10, 1745. Married (2) Marguerite Saulnier (Sonnier), ca. 1755. | First marriage: Paul (born 1746), Anselme (born 1751; married February 7, 1774) Second marriage: Marie (born 1760; married October 4, 1779), Marguerite (born 1762), Charles, fils (born September 27, 1764) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was the head of a household including his wife, Marguerite Saulnier, and the following children: Paul, Anselme, Charles, Marie, and Marguerite. His niece, Marguerite Forest, resided with him. According to the census, Forest occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Saulnier (Sonnier), his wife, 44 years old; Charles, his son, 5 years old; Marie, his daughter, 10 years old; and Marguerite, his daughter, 8 years old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, six hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Sonnier (Saulnier), his wife, 45 years old; Charles Forest, his son, 6 years old; Marie Forest, his daughter, 10 years old; and Marguerite Forest, his daughter, 8 years old. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Saulnier, his wife, 49 years old; Marie Forest, his daughter, 17 years old; Marguerite Forest, his daughter, 15 years old. His fourteen-year-old son Charles Forest lived alone next door. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned sixteen cows, four horses, nine hogs, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Charles Forest's estate was inventoried on March 29, 1783. The probate inventory indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Improvements on this property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-five feet by sixteen feet. | His burial record maintains that he was fifty-five years of age at the time of his death. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:125; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2488; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:292; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 41. | 1.765 | 24/03/1783 | Ascension Parish | Ascension Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||
197 | Marguerite | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1762 | Marguerite Saulnier | Charles Forest | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was residing in her father's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
198 | Marguerite | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1746 | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was residing in the household of her uncle Charles Forest on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
199 | Marie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Saulnier | Charles Forest | Married Charles Bergeron, son of Jean Baptiste Bergeron and Catherine Roger(?) at Ascension Parish, October 4, 1779. | Marguerite (born August 27, 1780), Marie Anne (born August 20, 1783), Charles (Pierre Charles) (baptized January 22, 1786), Jean Baptiste (baptized November 16, 1788), unidentified child (born 1790), Alexandre (born August 21, 1792) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, she lived with her parents and siblings on a parcel of property measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:294; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marie Forest and Charles Bergeron." | 1.765 | 01/02/1793 | Ascension Parish, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
200 | Paul (Pierre Paul) | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1746 | Marie Chiasson | Charles Forest | Married Marguerite Orillon dit Champagne, ca. 1768. | Marguerite (born ca. 1768, buried January 23, 1773), Clement Anaclet (born November 24, 1773), Félicité (born November 23, 1773), Paul (born November 25, 1775), François Achille (born February 7, 1784), Joseph (married February 6, 1793), Angélique (married January 8, 1801), Louis (married February 28, 1802), Marie Reine (born December 3, 1788), Magdeleine | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was residing in his father's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Orillon, his wife, 19 years old; Marguerite, his daughter, 3 months old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, eight hogs, and two muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the followiing persons: Marguerite Orillon, his wife, 20 years old; Marguerite Forest, his daughter, 1 year old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Orillon, his wife, 27 years old; Joseph Forest, his son, 6 years old; Joseph Marans, a cabaret owner, 50 years old; and Angélique Dugas, the wife of Marans, 46 years old. Paul Forest and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, two horses, seven sheep, fifteen pigs, and two muskets. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he was a sergeant in the Lafourche District militia unit. The local priest seems to have accused Forest of improper conduct with a female slave, ca. July 8, 1788. On July 8, 1788, Commandant Louis Judice ordered Forest to sell the slave. Forest's wife, however, strongly objected to the sale. As a consequence, Judice subsequently conducted an investigation that exonerated Forest, July 9, 1788. On August 22, 1796, Commandant Louis Judice complained that Forest had witnessed (and evidently tacitly condoned) an unscrupulous horse sale. On January 16, 1800, his estate was inventoried and appraised. His probate inventory indicates that his estate included a tract of land with 5 1/2 arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, approximately one league below the parish church. The foregoing tract of land was bounded above by the property of Anselme Forest and below by the land of Victor Blanchard. Improvements on Pierre Paul Forest's land included a houes measuring twenty-five feet by fifteen feet. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2488; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, July 8, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:629; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judice, July 9, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:630; Louis Judice to the governor, August 22, 1796, AGI, PPC, 212A:460-461vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 42. | 1.765 | 26/12/1797 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
201 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Gaudet | 01/01/1719 | Jeanne Terriot | Bernard Gaudet | Married Joseph LeBlanc at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, July 2, 1742. | Marie Josèphe (born 1743), Anne (born 1748), Joseph (born 1750), Madeleine (born 1753), Isabelle (born 1754), Gilles (born 1757), Grégoire (born 1762) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, she and her husband Joseph LeBlanc owned a farm measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. She and her husband also owned four cattle, eight hogs, and two firearms, making them one of the most affluent families of Acadian exiles at Cabannocé. In April 1766, his household consisted of her husband and the following children: Joseph, Gilles, Anne, and Isabelle. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-year-old spouse of Joseph LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: Joseph LeBlanc, 50 years old; Gilles, her son, 11 years old; Anne, her daughter, 20 years old; and Isabelle, her daughter, 14 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten cattle, two horses, twenty-one hogs, and 2 muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph LeBlanc. In addition to her fifty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Gilles LeBlanc, her son, 17 years old; and Grégoire LeBlanc, her son, 15 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. She and her family owned three slaves, twenty cows, and five horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2536-2537. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
202 | Joseph | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1739 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Catherine Forest (Forêt) | Claude Gaudet | Married Marguerite Bourgeois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 10, 1765. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Joseph Terriot and Simon Gauterot. | Rosalie Victoire (born February 25, 1764), Joseph Simon (born November 7, 1766), Jean (born 1767), Marie (born 1772), Joseph (born 1775) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only two full rations. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-two-year-old married man. On January 2, 1777, Joseph Gaudet, a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, acquired fronm Claude Duon (Duhon) a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was situated between the lands of Honoré Duhon and Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-five feet by fifteen feet. It included a six-foot gallery. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Bourgeois, his wife, 33 years old; Jean Gaudet, his son, 10 years old; Joseph Gaudet, 2 years old; Rosalie Gaudet, his daughter, 13 years old; Marie Gaudet, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twelve cows, and three horses. On October 21, 1799, Joseph Gaudet (Godet) and Marguerite Bourgeois sold to Pierre Landry dit Pitre a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-five by fifteen feet. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
203 | Marguerite | Gaudet | 08/01/1764 | Magdeleine Doucet | Pierre Gaudet | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134. | Sun, Dec 1, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
204 | Pierre | Gaudet | Married Magdeleine Doucet. | Marguerite (born August 1, 1764) | British records indicate that he was an Acadian prisoner assigned to a work detail at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, ca. August 16, 1762. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
205 | Rosalie Victoire | Gaudet | Marguerite Bourgeois | Joseph Gaudet | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Daniel Danneville and Marie Victoire Danneville served as her baptismal sponsors. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Tue, Dec 10, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
206 | Louis | Gauterot (Gautreaux,Gautrot) | 01/01/1766 | Cabannocé | Magdelaine Breau | Simon Gauterot | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he resided with his parents on the family farm on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a three-year-old member of his parents' household. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. His name is rendered as Louis Gautrot in the July 28, 1786 list. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
207 | Marie Josèphe | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 04/03/1764 | Louise Thibodeau | Pierre Gautrot | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Amand Thibodeau and Gertrude Bourg served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:138. | Fri, Feb 22, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
208 | Pierre | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | Married Louise Thibodeau. | Marie Josèphe (born April 3, 1764) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:138. | 1.765 | 22/02/1765 | Attakapas district, sometime before | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
209 | Simon | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 03/12/1736 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia | Marie Josèphe LeBlanc | Charles Gauterot | Married Magdelaine (Madeleine, Marie Magdeleine) Breau. | Louis (born ca. January 1766), Jean Baptiste (born 1768), Charles (born 1770; married January 26, 1818), Simon (born 1772), Marie Madeleine (born 1774), Amand (born 1778), Joseph (married August 12, 1805) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only 2/3 of a full ration. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Witnessed the marriage of Joseph Gaudet and Marguerite Bourgeois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 10, 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of the right bank. The census indicates that his family owned a farm measuring six arpents of frontage on the Mississippi River. They also possessed three hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769(?), census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine (Madeleine) Breau, his wife, 27 years old; Louis, his son, 3 years old; and Jean Baptiste, his son, 18 months old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine cattle, fourteen pigs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) Breau, his wife, 35 years old; Louise Gauterot, his daughter, 11 years old; Jean Baptiste Gauterot, his son, 9 years old; Charles Gauterot, his son, 7 years old; Simon Gauterot, 5 years old; and Marie Magdeleine, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned two slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. On September 21, 1787, a Simon Gauterot acquired a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi RIver. This property was bounded above by the land of Robert Jones and Jacob Cowperthwait and below by the property of Daniel Hickey. On August 3, 1790, Simon Gauterot sold to his son, Charles, a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of Jean Baptiste Gauterot and below by the property of Simon Gauterot. A house measuring twenty-five feet by fifteen feet stood on the property conveyed to Charles Gauterot. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On November 5, 1793, he joined with numerous Acadian Coast residents in signing a formal complaint regarding the failure of Gilbert de St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc to build and maintain levees on their properties. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:53; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2491; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Petition to Resolve the Flooding Problem Caused by the Neglected Lands Owned by St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc, November 5, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:283; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 45. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
210 | Joseph | Girouard | Jeanne Amireau (Amirault) | Jacques Girouard | Married Ursule Trahan at New Orleans, April 8, 1765. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 351; facsimile communication from Stephen White to Janie Bulliard, November 26, 1997. | 1.765 | 22/10/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
211 | Joseph | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 44. | 1.765 | 02/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
212 | Marie Charlotte | Gaudin (Godin) | Married Jean Dugas. | François (born 1740), Rose (born 1749), Charles (born 1750), Michel, Athanase (born 1753), Théodore | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 346. | 1.765 | 17/07/1765 | 18/07/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
213 | Marie Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1738 | Married Ambroise Barnabé (Barnarbe) Martin. | Hélène (born 1761), Élisabeth (born March 21, 1765), Marguerite (born 1770), Rosalie (born 1772), Paul (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Ambroise Martin. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul Martin, her son, 2 years old; Hélène Martin, her daughter, 16 years old; Elizabeth Martin, her daughter, 12 years old; Marguerite Martin, her daughter, 7 years old; Rosalie Martin, her daughter, 5 years old; and Jean Gaudin, her brother, 30 years old. Magdeleine Gaudin and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:198; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
214 | Marie Geneviève | Gotreau | 01/01/1766 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Traveled with the family of Grégoire LeJeune and Elenne Damour. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
215 | Paul (sometimes called Jean) | Gravois | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marie Rosalie (Rose) Bourgeois | Pierre Gravois | Married Marie Vivienne Bourg, daughter of Joseph Bourg and Marie LeBlanc, at Cabannocé, June 21, 1790. | Amedé (born October 4, 1793), Edouard Donate (born December 26, 1801), Joseph (born November 30, 1791; married April 24, 1810), Marie Céleste (December 28, 1797; married May 1, 1815), Silvain (born September 15, 1803), Clarice (married January 27, 1823) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and an eighteen-yer-old bachelor. He resided 1 1/2 half leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old member of the household of Philippe La Chaussée, his stepfather, and Marie Bourgeois, his mother. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 258; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:333-334; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
216 | Augustin | Guédry (Guidry) | Married Théotiste Broussard, who was buried "au dernier camp d'en bas" (at the last camp downstream probably the Fausse Pointe [Loreauville] area), July 26, 1765. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 150. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
217 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 48 livres in Canadian card money and 260 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
218 | Joseph | Guénard | St. Laurent Parish, Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Anne Amirault dit Tourangeau | Jacques Guenard | Married Ursule Trahan at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, April 8, 1765. The marriage was witnessed by Louvigny and Henry Roche. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the local Acadian settlement. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included two males and one girl. He and his family owned thirty-five cows and ten horses. They evidently owned no real estate. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Plaisance area of the Opelousas District. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:136; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
219 | Anne | Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) | Veuve Babineau | 01/01/1735 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Married Charles Babineau, a native of Port Royal, the widower of Marguerite Doucet, and the son of Clément Babineau and Renée Bourg. The wedding was held at Ristigouche (in present-day New Brunswick) on February 5, 1760. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1745), Marie Josèphe (born 1746), Charles (born 1749), Marguerite (born 1753) Second marriage: Dominique (born ca. 1761), Julien Joseph (born ca. 1762), Scholastique (born ca. 1766), Théodore (born ca. 1768), David (born April 25, 1771), Anne (born 1774) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a thirty-six-year-old member of Charles Babineau's household. Her household included an unidentified ten-year-old boy, an unidentified eight-year-old boy, an unidentified six-year-old boy, and an unidentified two-year-old girl. Her family owned fifteen beef cattle and five horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a widow and that her household included six children. She and her children owned thirty-three cows, ten horses and mules, and forty pigs. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that she owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. She does not appear to have resided in the Opelousas District. Her property was evidently located along Bayou Carencro. Witnessed the baptism of Adélaïde Babineau at the Attakapas church, November 1, 1797; and the baptism of Anastasie Babineau at the Attakapas church, June 7, 1798. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 152; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 27-28; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 27-30; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2413; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
220 | François | Guilbeau (Gilliebau, Guilbeaux, Guillebaut, Guilliebeau) | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Married Magdeleine Broussard, daughter of Jean Broussard and Anne LeBlanc, at the Attakapas church, July 18, 1772. The marriage ceremony was performed by Father Irenée, pastor of the Pointe Coupée church and missionary to the Attakapas District. | Anastasie (born July 2, 1774), François Louis (born May 5, 1776), Joseph (born April 15, 1777), Anne (born August 3, 1782), David François (born July 2, 1785), Séraphine (born February 12, 1788), Edouard (born September 20, 1792), Julien (born June 4, 1795), Marie Victoire, Julie (born September 23, 1798) | Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The Bérard list indicates that Guilbeau, whose name he rendered Guilliebeau, had twenty barrels of corn. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included his fifteen-year-old brother Jean Guilbeau. François Guilbeau's household owned twelve beef cattle and six horses. François and Jean occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas District at the time of his marriage to Magdeleine Broussard, July 18, 1772. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as François Gilliebau. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and one child. They collectively owned twenty-five cows, five horses and mules, and twelve hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as françois Guillebaut in the May 10, 1777 list. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on Bayou Carencro. He evidently did not reside in the Opelousas District. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 379; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 164-165; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | 17/09/1822 | La Pointe, St. Martin Parish | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church Cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||
221 | Jean | Guilbeau (GiliesBau, Guilbeaux, Guillebaut) | 01/01/1756 | Acadia | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Jeanne Arseneau, native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (now St. James Parish), May 25, 1788. Married Marie Jeanne Arseneau at the Attakapas church, May 25, 1788. The wedding certificate was witnessed by François Guilbeau, Charlotte Guilbeau, Louis Arseneau, Pierre Arseneau. | unnamed child (buried August 30, 1784, at 12 days of age), Marceline (born March 18, 1789), Alexandre (born 1789), Justine (born 1792), Jean Louis (born 1794), François Placide (baptized May 3, 1795, at the age of two months), Cyprien Ozémé (Lézime) (born October 8, 1796), François (born September 11, 1798) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a fifteen-year-old resident of his brother François's household. He and his brother owned twelve head of beef cattle and six horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Jean GiliesBau in the June 20, 1774, list. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Jean Guillebaut in the May 10, 1777, list. In 1779, he served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. On May 28, 1780, he was formally charged by Marthe Castille with spreading false rumors about her moral character. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage, but he evidently did not reside in the Opelousas District. Guilbeau's property was in the Carencro area of the Opelousas District. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-three-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Jeanne Arseneau (Arceno), 34 years old; Marceline Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 15 years old; (?) Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 13 years old; Justine Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 11 years old; Alexandre Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 14 years old; Placide Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 12 years old; Lezime Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), Jean Louis Guilbeau (Guilbeaud), 9 years old. Jean Guilbeau (Guilbeaud) and his family occupied tracts of land with thirty arpents frontage. They owned 400 cattle and 4 slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 376-383; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Marthe Castille to Alexandre DeClouet, May 28, 1780, Original Acts, St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
222 | Joseph | Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) | dit l'Officier | Married Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel. | Marie (born 1727), Charles (born ca. 1739), Félicité (born 1748), François (born ca. 1750), Jean (born ca. 1756), Anne (born 1735), Marguerite | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 166 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas district, April 4, 1765. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 247; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 381-382. | 1.765 | 31/08/1765 | 01/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
223 | Marguerite | Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) | Evidently married (1) Jean Boudrot (Boudreaux). Married (2) Simon LeBlanc. | First marriage: Jean Charles Second marriage: Esther (married January 2, 1786), Frédéric (born February 3, 1771), Agricole (born November,1772), Marguerite (September 9, 1774), Joseph (born November 11, 1776), Pierre Simon (born June 29, 1778), Simon (baptized April 28, 1780, at the age of two months), Marie (born June 8, 1784), Silvestre (born February 13, 1782), François Joseph (born September 23, 1787), and Pierre (born June 29, 1778) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 89-90. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
224 | Rosalie | Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) | 01/01/1744 | Married Paul Thibodeau. | André Paul (born August 26, 1765), Anne (baptized April 30, 1780), Élisabeth (born September 4,1775), Joseph (born January 4,1778), Marie Rose (born April 27, 1784), Serafine (born October 15, 1770), Vital (born October 9, 1772) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as twenty-seven-year-old wife of Paul Thibodeau. Her household included her forty-year-old husband, an unidentified four-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. The family owned nineteen cattle and one horse. They occupied but did not own land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 743-759; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
225 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Haché | 01/01/1774 | Anne Boudrot | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
226 | Marie | Haché | 01/01/1770 | Anne Boudrot | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
227 | Marie | Haché | 01/01/1767 | Married Louis Antoine Charié (Charrié). | Pierre (born May 15, 1788), Louis Antoine (born March 11, 1791) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Traveled with the family of Jean Baptiste Dugas. Arrived at Louisiana on July 29, 1785. | Identified in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District as the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Louis Antoine Charié. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, oen cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:181. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
228 | Amable (Aimable) | Hébert | 01/01/1742 | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Hébert | Married Marie Anne Richard. | André (born 1776), Marie (born 1761), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1768), Geneviève (born 1768) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana his three children and his mother-in-law (possibly stepmother), Ester Cordne. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
229 | André | Hébert | 01/01/1776 | Marie Anne Richard | Amable Hebert | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
230 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1736 | Married Joseph LeBlanc. | Blanche (born ca. 1766), Marie (born ca. 1768), Joseph (born ca. 1770), Simon (born ca. 1772) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Her brother, Amable Hébert, and his family also sailed to Louisiana aboard the Bon Papa. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 17-19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
231 | Brigide (Brigitte) | Hébert | 01/01/1766 | Morlaix, France | Married Jean Charles LeBlanc, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Charles leBlanc and Rosalie Trahan. | Rosalie (born at New Orleans, ca. 1785; buried at New Orleans, October 24, 1799), Isabelle (born ca. 1790; buried at New Orleans, October 13, 1799); Angélique (born August 25, 1796; interred October 21, 1799), Augustin (died at the age of approximately three years; buried at New Orleans, October 25, 1799) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:171-172. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
232 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1713 | Married Isabelle (Elisabeth, Elizabeth) Bourg. He was a widower by 1785. | Resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | His burial record maintains that he was seventy-five years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:359. | 1.785 | 19/05/1787 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
233 | Geneviève | Hébert | Acadia | Married Joseph (sometimes Jacques) Derouen. | Agathe (born May 17, 1785), Geneviève (baptized May 13, 1779), Jacques (born June 12, 1780), Joseph Marie (born November 19, 1776), Marie Françoise (born October 28, 1783), Marie Rosalie (born September 25, 1786), Victoire Adelaide (born December 16, 1783) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 238-240. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
234 | Isabelle | Hébert | 01/01/1771 | Marie Anne Richard | Amable Hebert | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
235 | Marie | Hébert | St. Malo, France | Married Pierre Aucoin, a native of Acadia, at St. Louis Catholic Church in New Orleans, January 14, 1786. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 24. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
236 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1761 | Marie Anne Richard | Amable Hebert | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
237 | Pierre | Hébert | Identified in ecclesiastical records as an orphan during the summer of 1765. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 475. | 1.765 | 24/07/1765 | 25/07/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
238 | Thérèse | Hébert | 01/01/1750 | Married Jean LeBlanc. | Marie (a nursing infant in May 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
239 | Ursule | Hébert | 01/01/1742 | Married Alexandre Doiron. | Isaac (born ca. 1769), Mathurin (born ca. 1773), Joseph (born ca. 1778), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1783), Marie Rose (born ca. 1764), Magdelaine (born ca. 1766) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
240 | Anne Françoise | Henry | 01/01/1782 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
241 | Jean Laurent | Henry | 01/01/1766 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
242 | Joseph | Henry | 01/01/1745 | Married Cécille Breau. | Jean Laurent (born ca. 1766), Joseph (born ca. 1771), Pierre (born ca. 1780), Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1778), Anne Françoise (born ca. 1782), Magdelaine Apolline (a nursing infant in May 1785) | Resided at Saint-Suliac France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
243 | Joseph | Henry | 01/01/1771 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
244 | Magdelaine Apolline | Henry | 01/01/1785 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
245 | Marie Josèphe | Henry | 01/01/1778 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
246 | Pierre | Henry | 01/01/1780 | Cecille Breau | Joseph Henry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
247 | Anne Marie | Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1765 | Cécille Bourg | Ignace Hisé (Heuzé) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
248 | Charles | Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1763 | Cécille Bourg | Ignace Hisé (Heuzé) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
249 | Gregoire | Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1776 | Cécille Bourg | Ignace Hisé (Heuzé) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
250 | Jean Baptiste | Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1768 | Cécille Bourg | Ignace Hisé (Heuzé) | Appears to have married Marie Kimine just before the Bon Papa's departure from France. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
251 | Pierre | Hisé (Heuzé) | 01/01/1761 | Cécille Bourg | Ignace Hisé (Heuzé) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
252 | Jacques | Hugon | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 423. | 1.765 | 08/10/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
253 | Paul | Josset | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 443. | 1.765 | 24/08/1765 | 24/08/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
254 | Pierre | Lagresse | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 1,096 livres in Canadian card money and an additional 5,068 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Recapitulation of the receipts fournished the Acadians by Maxent, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
255 | Charles | Landry | 01/01/1735 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Landry, père | Married Marguerite Boudrot. | Firmin (born ca. 1763), Sebastien (born ca. 1767), Louis (born ca. 1771), Jean (born ca. 1774), Charles (born ca. 1777), François (born ca. 1779), Marguerite (born ca. 1767) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Robichaux, Acadian Marriages in France, 40; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56-57. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
256 | Charles | Landry | 01/01/1777 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
257 | Fermin (Firmin) | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
258 | François | Landry | 01/01/1779 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
259 | Isidore | Landry | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Marie Dugas | Mathurin Landry | Ambroise Martin and Marie Arseneau served as his baptismal sponsors. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 476. | Sat, Jul 27, 1765 | 1.765 | 09/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
260 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
261 | Jean Antoine | Landry | Cecile Poirier | Olivier Landry | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Antoine Olivier and Magdeleine Brazier served as baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:167. | Sun, Feb 26, 1764 | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
262 | Joseph | Landry | fils | Acadia | Magdelaine Boudrot | Joseph Landry | Signed a marriage contract with Louise Bourg, the widow of Pierre Savoie, July 6, 1789. Married Louise Bourg at the Opelousas church, July 6, 1789. | Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Identified on his marriage contract as a resident of the Attakapas district, July 6, 1789. | Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 98, 477. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
263 | Louis | Landry | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
264 | Lucie | Landry | Marie Richard | Jean Bourg | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 98. | 08/12/1795 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
265 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Landry | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Married (1) Firmin Guédry (Guidry), son of Jean Baptiste Guédry and Anne Dupuis, at St. Gabriel, February 19, 1786. Married (2) Paul Breau, an Acadian and a native of Baltimore, Maryland, January 5, 1801. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1787), Sebastian (born 1789), Marie Modeste (buried January 18, 1791), Céleste (born 1791), Jean (a twin) (born 1795), Edouard (a twin) (born 1795)Second marriage: Paul (a twin) (born ca. July 1801), Françoise (a twin) (born ca. July 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | On September 21, 1801, Marguerite Landry's estate was sold in a probate sale. Among the items sold were a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, three leagues above the parish church, and a house measuring thirty-one feet by fifteen feet. The land was located between the properties of Olivier Part and Jean Kling. Her estate was appraised at $500. Seven of her children survived her. The surviving children are named below and their age in 1801 is indicated: (first marriage), Jean Baptiste, 14 years old; Sebastien, 12 years old; Céleste, 10 years old; Jean, 6 years old; Edouard, 6 years old; (second marriage) Paul and Françoise. | Her burial record indicates that she died at the age of thirty-six years. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:155; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47, 56. | 1.785 | 13/09/1803 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
266 | Marie | Landry | Holy Family Parish, Pequedete (Pisiquid?) | Married (1) Joseph Bourde (Bourg?), who died sometime before 1765. Married (2) François Savoie at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, July 22, 1765. | Marguerite, Jean | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:167. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
267 | Marie Olive (Olivier) | Landry | 01/01/1767 | Agathe Barillot | Anselme Landry | Married Paul Dominique Boudrot. | Paul Marie (born ca. 1785) (French genealogists and historians Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux identify this person as Marie, Paul Dominique's daughter.); Joseph (born January 3, 1787), Charles Roman (born November 9, 1787), Marie Françoise (born June 2, 1792), Florent Janvier (born January 1, 1795), Zacharie (Zacarias) (born April 7, 1799), Carmelite Eugénie (born May 5, 1800), Jean Pierre (born August 7, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:110, 112, 114, 116, 118; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
268 | Olivier | Landry | Married Cécile Poirier. | Jean Antoine (born November 13, 1760) | His son Jean Antoine was baptized at New Orleans on February 26, 1764. If this date is correct, then he and his family were among the first Acadians to arrive in Louisiana. Witnessed the marriage of François Savoie and Marie Landry at New Orleans, July 22, 1765. | He died sometime before his widow's marriage to Jean Jacques Léger, widower of Anne Amirault, on April 26, 1774. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:167; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:167, 251; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:598. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
269 | Sebastien | Landry | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Boudrot | Charles Landry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
270 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1748 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Gaudet | Joseph LeBlanc | Married Jean Duon. | François Marie (born 1771), Anne (born 1771), Marie (born 1776), Joseph (married February 3, 1799) | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Joseph Breau at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 2, 1765. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with her prosperous family on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Duon. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Jean Duon (Duhan). In addition to herself and her thirty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: François Duon (Duhan), her son, 6 years; Anne Duhon (Duhan), her daughter, 6 years old; Marie Duon (Duhan), her daughter, 1 year old; Honoré Duon (Duhan), her father-in-law, 61 years old; Marie Vincent, her mother-in-law, 64 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-eight cows, four horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:34; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.765 | Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Landry | Bernard Gaudet and Jeanne Terriot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
271 | Blanche | LeBlanc | 01/01/1766 | Anne Hébert | Joseph LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
272 | Cosme (sometimes Comme) | LeBlanc | Acadia | Catherine Thibodeau | Simon LeBlanc | Signed a marriage contract with Isabelle Broussard in the Attakapas district, July 13, 1781. The contract was witnessed by Olivier Thibodeau, Claude Martin, Joseph Broussard, and Jean Baptiste Hébert. | Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 498; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
273 | Étienne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Étienne LeBlanc | Married Osite LeBlanc, daughter of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Madeleine Landry, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 7, 1778. The married record was witnessed by Mathurin LeBlanc and Joseph Landry. | Anne Catherine (born September 25, 1778), Edouard (born June 4, 1780), Anne Céleste (born November 14, 1782), Marceline (born November 25, 1780)), André Étienne (born August 16, 1791; married February 10, 1812), Étienne Privot (born July 22, 1793), Gustave (born October 6, 1795), Manette (probably Nanette, a nickname for Anne) (married July 25, 1808) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a seventeen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. That household also included the following siblings: Mathurin, 14 years old; Marguerite, 20 years old; Marie Madeleine, 3 years old; and Marie Marthe, 6 years old. Petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga for a land grant with six arpents frontage contiguous to that of François Duon (Duhon), ca. April 1771. Louis Judice, co-commandant of the Cabannocé District, informed Unzaga on April 22, 1771, that the land had been abandoned by Jean Jeansonne two years earlier. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On November 21, 1784, LeBlanc is identified in official governmental correspondence as the acting sublieutenant in the Cabannocé militia unit. On March 16, 1793, Paul Breau, sindic for the Cabannocé area, formally complained to the governor about the negligence of Pierre Part and Étienne (Estienne) Leblanc. Both men had ignored the sindic's orders to repair their levees. Alarmed by the daily rise in the Mississippi River, Breau asked the governor to order Part and LeBlanc, who werer evidently absentee landowners, to report to the Cabannocé District immediately and to undertake the necessary repairs. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. He appears to have been the Étienne LeBlanc whose military service record was compiled by the Spanish colonial government on June 30, 1792. This service record indicates that it he was thirty-nine-years of age and a native of Louisbourg, Canada. (The birthplace cited in his service record also appears in numerous other Acadian service records. It appears to have been a generic term used by the Spanish scribe for Acadia.) According to the service record, he was married and enjoyed robust health. He became a volunteer in the colonial militia on February 12, 1770; He was promoted to the rank of sergeant-first class on September 10, 1779. He had served in the Cabannocé mliitia for twenty-two years and in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for four months and nineteen days. He had participated in the Spanish campaigns against Manchac and Baton Rouge (1779) and Mobile (1780). The service record indicates that his his conduct needed improvement. He had demonstrated valor in his military service, but he had also exhibited only average application to duty and poor ability. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was a resident of Ascension Parish in 1799. | His burial record maintains that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2542; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:464; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:90; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Estevan Mir¢ to Michel Cantrelle, November 21, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:279; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:464; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 70; Paul Braux (Breau) to the governor, March 16, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:233; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 199; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:236; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 70. | 1.765 | 03/10/1796 | Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||
274 | Étienne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1723 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Anne Terriot | René LeBlanc | Married Elizabeth (Elisabeth, Isabelle) Boudrot at Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, October 1, 1742. | Marie (born 1743), Simon Joseph (born 1744), Anne (born 1746), Marguerite (born 1748), Étienne (born 1751), Mathurin (born 1754), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1758), Joseph (born July 19, 1762), Marie Marthe Élisabeth (Elisabeth) (born April 15, 1765) | He was at Miramichi in 1760. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (Madeleine) (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc owned two firearms. On November 27, 1771, Étienne LeBlanc's estate was inventoried and appraised. His estate included a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River and a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by fourteen feet. | Died sometime before the September 14, 1769, census of Cabannocé. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2537-2538; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:479; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
275 | Gilles (Gil) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1757 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Gaudet | Joseph LeBlanc | Married (1) Théotiste Gaudin at Cabannocé, February 12, 1781. Married (2) Marine (probably Marianne) LeBlanc, widow of Joseph Babin and the daughter of Désiré LeBlanc, at Cabannocé, December 21, 1783. Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand indicates that he married (3) Madeleine Bourgeois, a native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, at St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La., September 26, 1816. | Resided with his family on their Cabannocé farmstead in April 1766. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that, despite his tender age, he owned a small concession measuring two arpents frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. On May 19, 1795, Gilles (Gille) LeBlanc, a corporal in the local militia, and three other militiamen escorted Jean Riquest, a man suspected of inciting slaves to revolt, to New Orleans for trial. On December 24, 1797, Gilles LeBlanc purchased a tract of land from Madeleine Babin, the widow of Anselme LeBlanc. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:466; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 122; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Michel Cantrelle to Governor Carondelet, May 19, 1795, AGI, PPC, 31:473; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 70. | 1.765 | Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Landry | Bernard Gaudet and Jeanne Terriot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
276 | Isabelle | LeBlanc | Acadia | Married Joseph Dupuis. | Marguerite | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 275-276. See pages 290, 298, 499-500. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
277 | Isabelle | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Gaudet | Joseph LeBlanc | Resided with her family on their Cabannocé farmstead on the right bank of the Mississippi River, April 9, 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Landry | Bernard Gaudet and Jeanne Terriot | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
278 | Jacques | LeBlanc | 01/01/1772 | Marie Trahan | Simon LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
279 | Jean | LeBlanc | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Bourg | Simon LeBlanc | Married Thérèse Hébert. | Marie (a nursing infant in May 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
280 | Jean Charles | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | St. Malo, France | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Married Brigide (Brigitte) Hebert, a native of Morlaix, France, and the daughter of Amable Hébert and Marianne Richard. | Rosalie (born at New Orleans, ca. 1785; buried at New Orleans, October 24, 1799), Isabelle (born ca. 1790; buried at New Orleans, October 13, 1799); Angélique (born August 25, 1796; interred October 21, 1799), Augustin (died at the age of approximately three years; buried at New Orleans, October 25, 1799) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:171-172. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
281 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Marguerite Trahan. Married (2) Anne Hébert, the sister of Amable Hébert, who also sailed to Louisiana aboard the Bon Papa. | Blanche (born ca. 1766), Marie (born ca. 1768), Joseph (born ca. 1770), Simon (born ca. 1772) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
282 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1770 | Anne Hébert | Joseph LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
283 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1765 | Marie Trahan | Simon LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
284 | Joseph | LeBlanc | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot | Étienne LeBlanc | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Joseph LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists Joseph LeBlanc as a five-year-old member of his father's household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177. | Sun, Dec 8, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
285 | Joseph | LeBlanc | père | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia | Catherine Landry | Jacques LeBlanc | Married Isabelle (Elizabeth) Gaudet, daughter of Bernard Gaudet and Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, July 2, 1742. | Marie Josèphe (born 1743), Anne (born 1748), Joseph (born 1750), Madeleine (born 1753), Isabelle (born 1754), Gilles (born 1757), Grégoire (born 1762) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 1 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, Joseph LeBlanc owned a farm measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He also owned four cattle, eight hogs, and two firearms, making him one of the most affluent Acadian exiles at Cabannocé. In April 1766, his household consisted of his wife and the following children: Joseph, Gilles, Anne, and Isabelle. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle Gaudet, his wife, 50 years old; Gilles, his son, 11 years old; Anne, his daughter, 20 years old; Isabelle, his daughter, 14 years old. The members of the household owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned ten cattle, two horses, twenty-one hogs, and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elizabeth (Isabelle) Gaudet, his wife, 57 years old; Gilles LeBlanc, his son, 17 years old; and Grégoire LeBlanc, his son, 15 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They also owned three slaves, twenty cows, and five horses. He appears to have been the Joseph LeBlanc who was ordered by Cabannocé District Commandant Michel Cantrelle to conduct to boats to New Orleans, evidently in anticipation of the military campaign being planned by Governor Bernardo de G lvez. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:93; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Michel Cantrelle to the governor, August 24, 1778, AGI, PPC, 191:358; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2536-2537. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
286 | Joseph (Jausephe) | LeBlanc | fils | 01/01/1750 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Gaudet | Joseph LeBlanc | Married Marguerite LeBlanc. | Rosalie (born 1772), Simon (born 1774), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1776) | Resided with his family on their Cabannocé farmstead on the left bank of the Mississippi River, 1766. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he owned a concession measuring four arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River and that he also possessed six hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone on a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The census suggests that this property was adjacent to that of his parents. Joseph LeBlanc owned one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a nineteen-year-old bachelor. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. His surname is rendered as Jausephe LeBlanc in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant and that he was a twenty-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 28 years old; Simon LeBlanc, his son, 3 years old; Rosalie LeBlanc, his daughter, 5 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeBlanc, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one slave, sixteen cows, and three horses. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of first sergeant. He appears to have been the Joseph LeBlanc listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost one of his eleven cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | 1.765 | Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Landry | Bernard Gaudet and Jeanne Terriot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
287 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1758 | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Étienne LeBlanc | Married (1) Joseph Landry dit Dios, son of Abraham Landry and Marguerite Flan, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 23, 1773. Married (2) Henri (Henry) Robichaux, son of Amable (Aimable) Robichaud and Anastasie Dugas, at Cabannocé, September 8, 1787. | First marriage: Simon (born April 15, 1782), Jacques Donat (born December 11, 1783), Pierre (baptized December 24, 1785), Marie Madeleine (baptized May 1, 1788) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc, her brother, owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eleven-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. On November 30, 1794, LeBlanc "caused [the] sale of [the] estate of her first husband . . . to be made." This estate included a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River in Ascension Parish. It was bounded above by the parish church and below by the land of the Widow Landry. Improvements included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty by sixteen feet. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:415-451, 472; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 91; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2528. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
288 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1747 | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Étienne LeBlanc | Married (1) Joseph LeBlanc, son of Joseph Leblanc and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Gaudet, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 3, 1771. Married (2) Joseph Dugas at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, October 16, 1780. | First marraige: Rosalie (born 1772), Simon (born 1774), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1776) Second marriage: Benjamin (born October 29, 1799), Clementa (born March 14, 1791), Étienne Silvestre (born December 26, 1787), Lucas (born March 15, 1802), Marie Françoise (born September 17, 1795), Melanie Françoise (born May 30, 1793) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc, her brother, owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. This household also included the following siblings: Etienne, 16 years old; Mathurin, 14 years old; Marie Madeleine, 3 years old; and Marie Marthe, 6 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Joseph LeBlanc. In addition to her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included Simon LeBlanc, her son, 3 years old; Rosalie LeBlanc, her daughter, 5 years old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, her daughter, 1 year old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and three horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:474; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
289 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1737 | Married (1) Charles Breau. Married (2) André Tramplé (sometimes Templé), a native of the Parish of Menibeux, Diocese of Avranches, France, at St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France, September 10, 1759. | Jean (born ca. 1761), Charles (born ca. 1763), Jacques (born ca. 1765), Servant (born ca. 1770), Olivier (born ca. 1774), André (born ca. 1778), Isabelle (born ca. 1760), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1768) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France, September 10, 1759. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Robichaux, Acadian Marriages in France, 39; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
290 | Marie (Françoise Marie) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1767 | Anne Hébert | Joseph LeBlanc | Married Françoise Xavier Boudrot, son of Antoine Boudrot and Brigitte Part, at St. Gabriel, La., May 23, 1787. | Joseph (born July 1, 1788), Jérôme (born June 12, 1791), Marie (born March 29, 1792), Pierre (born February 27, 1797), Louis (born February 26, 1798) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Died sometime before April 25, 1803. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113-117. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
291 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1785 | Thérèse Hébert | Jean LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 17. | 1.785 | Simon LeBlanc and Marguerite Bourg | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
292 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1744 | Married Athanase Breau, son of Ambroise Breau and Marie Michel of Shepody, at Ristigouche, Acadia, February 1, 1761. | Joseph (born August 2, 1762), Anastasie (born July 8, 1765), Marie (born 1769), Anne (born 1772), Paul (born 1775; married June 23, 1794) | Baptized her two children at New Orleans, December 2, 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Athanase Breau's household, which also included her children Joseph and Anastasie. The household owned a farm measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Athanase Breau. Her household included the following individuals: Athanase Breau, her husband, 35 years old; Joseph, her son, 6 years old; Anastasie, her daughter, 4 years old; and Marie, her daughter, 1 month old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. They owned thirteen cattle, 2 horses, twenty-five hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Athanase Breau. In addition to her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Breau, her son, 13 years old; Paul Breau, her son, 2 years old; Anastasie Breau, her daughter, 12 years old; Marie Breau, her daughter, 7 years old; and Anne Breau, her daughter, 5 years old. Marie LeBlanc and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, forty-four hogs, and three horses. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 59, 202; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:34-35; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
293 | Marie Louise | LeBlanc | Catherine Thibodeau | Simon LeBlanc | Baptized in St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Philippe Marigny and Marie Louise Dauberville served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177. | Fri, Feb 22, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
294 | Marie Angélique | LeBlanc | 01/01/1765 | Catherine Thibodeau | Simon Leblanc | Baptized in St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jeury Detour, a New Orleans merchant, and Marie Angelique Revoil served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177. | Wed, Feb 20, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
295 | Marie Marthe Élisabeth | LeBlanc | Louisiana | Élisabeth Boudrot | Étienne LeBlanc | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc, her brother, owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | Sun, Dec 8, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
296 | Mathurin | LeBlanc | 01/01/1754 | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Étienne LeBlanc | Married Rosalie Terriot, daughter of Joseph Terriot and Magdelaine Bourgeois, at Cabannocé, May 5, 1778. | Marie Rose (born 1785), Marie Farcile (married July 6, 1807) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old old member of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. On December 12, 1780, a Mathurin LeBlanc purchased a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, this property was situated between the lands of Noël Perrett and François Duon (Duhon). Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-two feet by fifteen feet and a detached kitchen of poteaux-en-terre construction. On January 30, 1787, LeBlanc sold the property he had acquired in 1780 to Charles Peytavin du Riblon. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:474; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2542; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 72-73. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
297 | Rose | LeBlanc | Veuve Raphael Broussard | 01/01/1736 | Acadia | Anne Terriot (Theriot) | René LeBlanc | Married Raphaël Broussard, a resident of "Précou Riat," Canada. | The register of admissions at the Ursuline Convent in New Orleans indicates that she had been "at the convent some months" prior to August 1765. A circular letter written at the time of her death indicates that she had traveled to New Orleans with her family, and, "as soon as she learned that there was a religious community in New Orleans she asked to be received." On August 14, 1765, the religious at the convent held a meeting and agreed "that she [Rose LeBlanc] should be admitted to the novitiate in view of her good will, her gentl[e] disposition and kindness to all. She was received as a coadjutrix Sister, March 31, 1766 and received the religious habit [on] April 29, 1766 before the beginning of the very hot weather. Reverend Père Antoine, Spanish Capuchin, officiated at the ceremony." She took the religious name of Sister Ste. Monique on April 30, 1768. Father Dagobert, a French Capuchin, presided over the naming ceremony. In her death notice, a fellow Ursuline noted that "we have received her and she has edified us very much during the short time she was with us. . . . She was a very useful member of the community, skillful in all things, of a gay disposition, fervent and exact in all her duties, rendering prompt service to all alike. She was so grateful for her vocation that she said she could never thank God enough for the great favor of her religious vocation." | She died of smallpox. | James F. Geraghty, "Louisiana's First Acadian Religious," Attakapas Gazette, 12 (1977): 198-199. | 1.765 | 06/02/1773 | Ursuline Convent, New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||
298 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1772 | Anne Hébert | Joseph LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
299 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1723 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Catherine Landry | Jacques LeBlanc | Married (1) Marguerite Bourg, daughter of Jean Bourg and Françoise Aucoin, at Cobequid, Acadia, August 13, 1743. Married (2) Marie Trahan, the widow of François Granger and the daughter of Joseph Trahan and Elizabeth Terriot (Theriot), at Falmouth, England, August 2, 1757. | First marriage: Françoise (born 1745), Jean (born 1746), Basile (born 1748), Simon (born 1750)Second marriage: Joseph (born ca. 1764), Pierre Marie (born 1766), Marie Anne (born ca. 1770), Jacques (born ca. 1772)(Françoise entered a convent in France, ca. 1767.) | Deported to Falmouth, England. He was at Morlaix, France, in 1764 and Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, in 1767. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | His burial record indicates that he died at the age of seventy-seven years. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 72; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2536-2537. | 1.785 | 05/02/1802 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||
300 | Simon | LeBlanc | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Étienne LeBlanc | Married Elizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc, daughter of Joseph LeBlanc and Elizabeth Gaudin, at the Church of the Ascension (modern-day Donaldsonville), September 20, 1772. | Joseph (born 1774), Marie Madeleine (born 1775), Marguerite (born 1779), Simon (born 1781), Louis (born 1783), Balthazar (born 1786), Céleste (born 1788) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that Etienne LeBlanc's family was in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably settled temporarily in the Attakapas District before moving to Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census lists the following persons in Etienne LeBlanc's household: Etienne (43), his wife Elizabeth Boudrot (45), and the following children: Simon (22), Etienne (15), Mathurin (12), Joseph (5), Marguerite (19), Magdelaine (8), and Marie (2). The family resided on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Etienne LeBlanc owned two firearms. The census also indicates that Simon owned a parcel of land measuring 4 arpents frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi. He had a firearm in his possession. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with 4 arpents frontage. He owned two cows, five hogs, one sheep, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a twenty-four-year-old bachelor Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District, he reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle (Elizabeth) LeBlanc, his wife, 22 years old; Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeBlanc, his daughter, 18 months old; and Joseph LeBlanc, his son, 3 years old. Simon LeBlanc and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cattle, one horse, five hogs, and two muskets. In mid-1777, three Acadians of approximately the same age were named Simon LeBlanc. One of them was a sergeant in the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew on June 17, 1777. On September 26, 1777, Commandant Louis Judice, who resided on the location of present-day Donaldsonville, complained that Simon LeBlanc had rented a horse to, and served as a guide for, a "Mr. Rose," an English fugitive from New Orleans. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; ; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2542; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Louis Judice to (Bernardo de G lvez), September 26, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:300-301vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
301 | Louis | Leger | 01/01/1767 | Ile Royale (now Cape Breton Island) | Angélique Pinet | Jacques Michel Leger | Married Anne Doucet, daughter of Joseph Doucet and Anne Landry, at the Opelousas church, January 17, 1792. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 257. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
302 | Amant (sometimes Amand) | Martin | 01/01/1750 | Canada | Magdeleine Cyr | Dol(?) Martin | Married Magdeline Benoit at the Attakapas church, September 16, 1787. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 49, 543-544. | 30/11/1787 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
303 | Ambroise Barnabé | Martin | dit Barnabé | 01/01/1734 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Cyr | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Married Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine, daughter of Jean Gaudin dit Bellefontaine and Françoise Dugas, ca. 1759. | Hélène (born 1761), Élisabeth (born March 21, 1765), Marguerite (born 1770), Rosalie (born 1772), Paul (born 1775) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 410 livres in Canadian card money and 445 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a native of Acadie, and a thirty-five-year-old married man residing two leagues from Commandant Nicolas Verret's residence. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Magdeleine Gaudin, his wife, 39 years old; Paul Martin, his son, 2 years old; Hélène Martin, his daughter, 16 years old; Elizabeth Martin, his daughter, 12 yeasrs old; Marguerite Martin, his daughter, 7 years old; Rosalie Martin, his daughter, 5 years old; and Jean Gaudin, his brother-in-law, 30 years old. Ambroise Martin and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned twelve cows and three horses. | His burial record inciates taht he was seventy years of age and married at the time of his death. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:198; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 129; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:520. | Evidently moved with her family to Malpeque, Ile St-Jean, ca. 1742. | 1.765 | 14/01/1796 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | ||||||||||
304 | Anne Marie Jeanne | Martin | 01/01/1744 | probably Malbeque, Ile St-Jean (Prince Edward Island) | Emilienne (Magdelaine) Comeau | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Signed a marriage contract with François Savoie, August 22, 1769. By means of the contract, François Savoie contributed 500 livres to the marriage. Married François Savoie, widower of Anne Thibodeau, at the Attakapas church, May 22, 1769. The marriage contract indicates that Marie Martin was a native of Ile St. Jean. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marguerite Duon at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 1, 1765. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of François Savoie. In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: François Savoie, fils, 13 years old; Pierre Savoie, 10 years old; Jean Savoie, 7 years old; and Marie Savoie, 6 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 130; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Marriage contact, August 22, 1769, Original Acts, Volume I, n.p., St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's office, St. Martinville, La.; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 546; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
305 | Claude | Martin | Port Royal | Jeanne Comeau | Charles Martin | Married Marie Babin. | Jean André (born September 1, 1770), Joseph Marin (born January 27, 1773), Marie Appolonie (born baptized May 5, 1776), Michel (born March 6, 1777), Marie Angelle (Angélique) (baptized July 25, 1779), Valéry (born December 8, 1782), Dositée (born April 8, 1784) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 3362 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marie Josèphe Gauterot at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 22, 1765. Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). Registered a cattle brand, 1766. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his unnamed wife and eighteen-year-old Marguerite Prince. Claude Martin and his family owned thirteen cows, one horse, and eighteen hogs. Claude Martin signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The Bérard list indicates Claude Martin had twenty barrels of corn. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife, a six-month-old son, Joseph Babin, Marguerite Prince, and Joseph Prince. Claude Martin owned twenty-five beef cattle and one horse. He and his family occupied, but did not have formal title to, a parcel of land with twelve arpents frontage. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph(?) Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. Participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a corporal in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and two children. The family owned sixty cattle, nine horses and mules, and thirty pigs. With one Ozenne, collected parishioners' dues for the Attakapas church, 1781. Purchased land in the Attakapas District from François Ledée, ca. January 23, 1787. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. Dictated his last will and testament at La Pointe, May 4, 1798. His burial record maintains that he was a "major domo" (trustee) of the Attakapas church at the time of his death. | T.9S, R4E, sec. 24T9S, R5E, secs. 100-101T9S, R6E, secs. 93, 96, 97, 102, 126 | His burial record maintains that he was sixty years old at the time of his death. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 132-135; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 43; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | 18/07/1798 | La Pointe | NULL | |||||||||||||
306 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Martin | Marie Magdelaine (Madeleine) Bodin dit Bellefontaine | Ambroise Bernabé Martin dit Barnabé | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Gilbert Guillemard and Elisabeth Maxent served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:198. | Sun, Apr 14, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
307 | François | Martin | 01/01/1746 | probably Malbeque, Ile St-Jean | Emilienne Comeau | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Jacques La Chaussée, who was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral) in New Orleans on January 27, 1765. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 130; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:159. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
308 | Helaine (Hélène) | Martin | Acadia | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Married Maurice Fontenot, a native of the Alabamons Post (Fort Toulouse, near present Montgomery, Ala.) and the son of Jean Fontenot and Marie Françoise LaGrange, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, June 9, 1778. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:521. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
309 | Judith | Martin | 01/01/1753 | Married Augustin Boudrot, père. | Anne (born May 5, 1786), Augustin, fils (born April 15, 1782), Benjamin (born April 5, 1789), Jean (baptized May 30, 1784), Marguerite (born February 12, 1793), Pierre (born January 25, 1779) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Michel Doucet and Marguerite Martin. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
310 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) | Martin | 01/01/1728 | Married to Amand Préjean at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, July 21, 1749. | Marie (born 1750), Anastasie (born 1751), Anne (Marianne) (born 1752), Marie Magdeleine (born August 1769), Joseph (born 1760), André (born October 6, 1765), Louis (baptized January 20, 1771), Félicité (born December 11, 1772) | The baptismal record for her son André indicates that she and her family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. Probably initially settled in the Attakapas district. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old wife of Amand Préjean. The family occupied a farm measuring six arpents frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The following children were present in the household: Marin, André, Anastasie, and Anne. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-one-year-old spouse of Amand Préjean. Her household included the following persons: Amand Préjean, 40 years old; Joseph, her son, 10 years old, André, her son, 4 years old; Anastasie, her daughter, 18 months old; Marianne (Anne), her daughter, 16 years old; and Marie Magdeleine, her daughter, 1 month old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eight cattle, one horse, twenty hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Amand (Amant) Préjean. In addition to her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Préjean, her son, 10 years old; André Préjean, her son, 5 years old; Anne Préjean, her daughter, 17 years old; and Marie Préjean, h er daughter, 2 years old. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:522, 607-608; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | 18/12/1772 | Church of the Ascension (Donaldsonville) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
311 | Marguerite | Martin | 01/01/1733 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Cyr | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Married (1) René Robichaux. Signed a marriage contract with Antoine Bordat, a surgeon, at the residence of Michel Doucet and Marguerite Martin, October 31, 1767. Married (2) Antoine Bordat at the Attakapas church, October 31, 1767. | First marriage: Madeleine (Magdeleine) (born 1752), Geneviève (born 1754)Second marriage: Marie Marthe (married June 23, 1783), Marie Modeste (born January 24, 1772), and Scholastique (February 18, 1770) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). Her household one woman, one teenaged boys, and two girls. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that, in addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Antoine Bordat, her husband, 49 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne), her daughter, 14 years old; Geneviève, her daughter, 12 years old; and Marie Marthe, her daughter, 1 year old. Marguerite Martin's family owned nine cows, one horse, and twelve hogs. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that her household included Antoine Bordat (Borda), her fifty-year-old husband; three unidentifed girls aged twelve, two, and one years; fifteen-year-old Madeleine Robichaux; and a thirty-year-old black slave. Her family owned twelve beef cattle and two horses. The household occupied but did not own a parcel of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 80-81, 546; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 129-131; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | Evidently moved with her family to Malpeque, Ile St-Jean (modern-day Prince Edward Island), ca. 1742. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
312 | Marguerite Anne | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 05/10/1765 | Louisiana | Magdelaine Broussard | Olivier Thibodeau | Father Jean François de Civray performed the baptismal ceremony. René Trahan and Marie Thibodeau served as baptismal sponsors. André Masse evidently served as an honorary sponsor. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 753. | Sat, May 11, 1765 | 16/05/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
313 | Paul | Martin | dit Barnabéa | 01/01/1748 | probably Malbeque, Ile St-Jean | Emilienne Comeau | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Married Françoise Housser, daughter of André Housser and Marie Elizabeth Bonvillain, at Cabannocé, January 12, 1779. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Paul Léger, a nineteen-year-old hired laborer. Paul Martin owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned six cows. The 1777 census indicates that he owned no slaves. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 130; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
314 | Anne | Michel | Acadia | Jeanne Breau | Jacques Michel | Married (1) Victor Comeau, who died sometime before 1771. On April 25, 1771, she married (2) Joseph Cormier, a native of Acadia, a resident of the Opelousas district, and the widower of Marguerite Saulnier. Father Irenée, a Catholic missionary from the Pointe Coupée district, officiated at the wedding ceremony. Jean Berard, J. Gaignard, Grevemberg and Mercier were witnesses. | Thomas (born 1760), Jean (born ca. 1764) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district in April 1771. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 207, 568. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
315 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Michel | Veuve Guilbeau | Married Joseph Guilbeau. | Marie (born 1727), Charles (born ca. 1739), Félicité (born 1748), François (born ca. 1750), Jean (born ca. 1756), Anne (born 1735), Marguerite | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a widow. In addition to herself, her household included François Guilbeau, her nineteen-year-old son, and Jean Guilbeau, her thirteen-year-old son. She and her family owned six cows, two horses, and twenty hogs. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
316 | Anne Charlotte | Mouton | Marie Modeste Bastarache | Louis Mouton | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Pierre Songy and Charlotte Rilieux, the wife of Joseph Songy, served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213. | Mon, Dec 2, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
317 | Anne | Mouton | ATGZ-XXII 1p 1-7 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
318 | Céleste | Mouton | ATGZ-XXII 1p 1-7 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
319 | Jean Diogène | Mouton | dit Neveu | 02/01/1740 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marguerite Caissy dit Roger | Jacques Mouton | Married Isabelle Bastarache, a native of Port Royal, Acadia, and the daughter of Jean Bastarache and Angélique Richard. | Marguerite Françoise (born November 20, 1765), Jean Frédéric (born 1768), Sylvestre (born 1770), Madeleine (born April 22, 1773) | He and his family were listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but they received only 1 1/3 rations. | Mouton, The Moutons, 1, 2; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
320 | Jean | Mouton | père | 01/01/1763 | Prission Parish (La Prission), Acadia | Anne Bastarache | Salvador Mouton | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Marthe Bordat on July 22, 1783. Married Marie Marthe Bordat, a native of the Attakapas district and daughter of Antoine Bordat and Marguerite Martin, June 23, 1783. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Jean Mouton, l'oncle, Joseph Landry, Jean Hébert, Jean Guilbeau. Father Geffrotin officiated at the marriage ceremony. | Jean, fils (born 1783), Adélaïde (born 1789), Joseph (born 1791), François (born 1793), Marthe (born 1795), Charles (born 1797), Don Louis (born 1799), Pierre (born 1802) | The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Jean Mouton's marriage contract with Marie Marthe Bordat, dated June 22, 1783, indicates that bride and groom were getting married with their parents' approval. This approval was legally necessary because Bordat was a minor. The parties to the contract indicated their intention to be married in the Catholic church as soon as possible. The contract stipulated that their community property be subject to the "laws and customs of Spain" even if Louisiana were to be ceded to another power. In the case of legal separation, each party was to receive the property brought to the marriage. Neither party would be responsible for debts contracted by the other spouse before the marriage. The couple's community property initially contained cattle and oxen valued at 258 piastres . Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Around April 3, 1797, Jean Mouton and Jean Savoie notified Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre that they were going to contest ownership of a cypress grove. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marthe Bordat (Borda), 36 years old; Adélaïde Mouton, 14 years old; Joseph Mouton, 12 years old; François Mouton, 10 years old; Marthe Mouton, 8 years old; Charles Mouton, 6 years old; Don Louis Mouton, 4 years old; and Pierre Mouton, 1 year old. Jean Mouton, père, and his family occupied lands with a total of sixty-two arpents frontage. They also owned 600 cattle and 10 slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, (original series), 1:420; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 585-586; Marriage contract, June 22, 1783, St. Martin Parish Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Jean Delavillebeuvre to the governor, April 3, 1797, AGI, PPC, 25A:236; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
321 | Louis | Mouton | 01/01/1737 | Acadia | Married Marie Modeste Bastarache, daughter of Jean Bastarache and Angélique Richard, at Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, ca. 1760, according to genealogist Bona Arsenault. | Anne Charlotte (born February 15, 1764), David (born 1770), Élizabeth (Isabelle) (baptized February 6, 1774; married April 24, 1792) | He and his family were listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received rations for only two persons. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-nine-year-old married man. He lived 2 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Mastarache, his wife, 44 years old; David Mouton, his son, 7 years old; Anne Mouton, his daughter, 12 years old; and Elizabeth Mouton, his daughter, 3 years old. They owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fifteen arpents frontage and two horses. | Arsenault, Histoire et Génealogie, 2 vols. (1965), 1:270; Mouton, The Moutons, 2; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:99, 560. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
322 | Marguerite Françoise | Mouton | Isabelle Bastarache | Jean Mouton | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Raymond Dubreuil Rosemont and Marguerite Duverges served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213. | Wed, Dec 25, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
323 | Marie Geneviève | Mouton | Anne Bastarache | Salvador Mouton | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Two Trudeau's, whose first names are illegible in the baptismal register, served as her baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213. | Mon, Dec 2, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
324 | Marin (Marrin) | Mouton | Anne Bastarache dit Le Basque | Salvador Mouton | Married Marie Josèphe Lambert, a native of the Alibamons Post (Fort Toulouse, near present-day Montgomery, Ala.) and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Lambert and Catherine Eustache, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 20, 1777. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Charles Gaudet and Paul Doucet. | The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Marrin Mouton in the May 10, 1777 list. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. His name is rendered as Maistre Mouton in the 1779 list. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:560; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
325 | Salvador (Salvator) | Mouton | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Marie Girouard | Jean Mouton | Married (1) Anne Bastarache, daughter of Jean Bastarache and Angélique Richard, at Port Royal, Acadia, January 24, 1752. Married (2) Anne Forest (Forêt), daughter of Joseph Forest (Forêt), at New Orleans, 1768. | First marriage: Jean (born 1755), Anne Prexede (born 1756), Marin (born 1758), Marie Geneviève Céleste (born September 15, 1765?) | He and his family were listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that four members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family only received 2 2/3 rations. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a thirty-five-year-old native of Acadia, and a married man. His lived two leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Commandant Nicolas Verret. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:213; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:560; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Mouton, The Moutons, 3. | 1.765 | 09/04/1773 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||
326 | Grégoire | Pellerin | 01/01/1729 | Married Cécille Préjean. | Emilie (born ca. 1767; married November 13, 1788), Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1769), Frédéric (born December 10, 1770), Eugénie (born March 8, 1772) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 24 livres in Canadian card money and 185 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one woman, two boys, and two girls. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Grégoire Pellerin, his unnamed wife, his two-year-old daughter Emilie Pellerin, and his newborn daughter Marie Josèphe Pellerin resided with (?) Sorel. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the head of a household that included his forty-four-year-old wife, a four-month-old son, a four-year-old daughter, and a three-year-old daughter. The census also indicates that his household owned twenty-five cattle, four horses, and ten sheep. Pellerin and his family occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his houshold included his wife and four children. The family owned 50 cows, 10 horses and mules, and 8 pigs. | Died sometime before November 13, 1788, when his daughter Emilie signed a marriage contract with Pierre François Sigur, a native of Pont Amonsson, Lorraine. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 257; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 613-616; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
327 | Cécile | Poirier | 01/01/1725 | Married (1) Olivier Landry. Married (2) Jean Léger, son of Jacques Léger and Anne Amirault, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 26, 1774. Jean Poirier and Joseph Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Jean Antoine (born November 13, 1760) | Her son Jean Antoine was baptized at New Orleans on February 25, 1764. If this date is correct, then she and her family were among the first Acadians to arrive in Louisiana. Served as a sponsor at the baptism of François Poirier at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, March 6, 1765. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Léger. In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: the Widow Forest, 56 years old; Jean Baptiste Forest, an orphan, 4 years old; Rosalie Forest, 7 years old; Marguerite Forest, 3 years old; and Pierre Poirier, an orphan, 13 years old. Cécile Poirier and her husband owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They also owned two slaves, ten cows, and three horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:167, 229; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:491. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
328 | Jean (sometimes Jean Baptiste) | Poirier (Poiret) | 01/01/1737 | Menoudy, Beaubassin district, Acadia | Marie Cormier | Jean Poirier | Married Magdelaine (Madeleine) Richard, daughter of Jean Richard and Catherine Cormier, at Mobile, January 22, 1764, after receiving a dispensation for consanguinity. The act of marriage was witnessed by Georg Antony Neninger, Antoine Bérard, and René Girard. | François (born March 6, 1765), Jean Baptiste (born May 20, 1760), Joseph (born June 12, 1762), Marie (born 1767), Michel (born 1774) | Possibily among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Arrived at New Orleans in April 1764. Evidently requested property in the Cote des Allemands (German Coast) area, ca. September 15, 1768. Subsequently settled at St. Jacques de Cabannocé. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone and that he did not own any livestock. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine Richard, his wife, 35 years old; Jean Poirier, his son, 17 years old; François Poirier, his son, 12 years old; Michel Poirier, his son, 3 years old; Marie Poirier, his daughter, 10 years old. Jean Poirier and his family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty cows, and five horses. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. His name is rendered Jean Poiret in the 1779 militia list. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Vidrine, Love's Legacy, 321; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229; Antonio de Ulloa to Louis Judice, September 15, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
329 | Jean Baptiste | Poirier | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Richard | Jean Poirier | Baptized at the St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Baptiste De Ville and Marianne Couturier served as baptismal sponsors. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' househood. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Thu, Mar 1, 1764 | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
330 | Jean Chrysostome | Poirier | 01/01/1763 | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 630. | 1.765 | 01/07/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
331 | Joseph | Poirier | 06/12/1762 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Richard | Jean Poirier | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Richard, his maternal grandfather, and Marie Cormier, his first cousin, served as baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229. | Sun, Feb 26, 1764 | 1.764 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
332 | Michel | Poirier | 01/01/1738 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Michel Poirier(?) | Married Marie Cormier, daughter of Jean Baptiste Cormier and Marie Madeleine Richard, at Cabannocé, March 31, 1766. | Pierre (born 1766), Joseph (born January or February 1769), Marguerite (born 1771), Rosalie (born 1773), Michel (born 1777) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 2,360 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including himself and his wife, Marie Cormier. The couple owned a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the river. The census indicates that Poirier owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Cormier, 24 years old; Pierre Poirier, his son, 3 years old; Joseph Poirier, his son, 8 months old; Marie (Poirier?), an orphan, 16 years old. Poirier and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-one-year-old married man. He lived one league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. | He appears to have died shortly before the April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Recapitulation of receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2568; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:598-600; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé, February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
333 | Amand (Aman, Amant) | Préjean (Pregen) | 01/01/1724 | Shepody, Acadia (one source indicates Beaubassin, Acadia) | Marie Louise Comeau | Joseph C. Préjean | Married (1) Magdeleine (Madeleine) Martin at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, July 21, 1749. She died December 17, 1772. Married (2) Marie Terriot, ca. 1773. | First marriage: Marin, Joseph, Marie (born 1750), Anastasie (born 1751), Anne (Marianne) (born 1752), Marie Magdeleine (born August 1769), Joseph (born 1760), André (born October 6, 1765), Louis (baptized January 20, 1771), Félicité (born December 11, 1772) Second marriage: Dominique (born October 20, 1774), Hélène (born June 14, 1776) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. Amant Préjean and the other able-bodied Acadian men were sent from Fort Edward to Halifax, Nova Scotia, on July 12, 1762. His wife and children remained at Fort Edward. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that six members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 4 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | The birthdate of his son André Joseph indicates that he arrived in Louisiana sometime in early 1765. Identified as the head of a household in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The census indicates that he occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He also owned one hog and one firearm. His wife Magdeleine Martin and the following children shared his residence: Marin, André, Anastasie, and Anne. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Martin, his wife, 41 years old; Joseph, his son, 10 years old; André, his son, 4 years old; Anastasie, his daughter, 18 years old; Marianne, his daughter, 16 years old, and Marie Magdeleine, his daughter, 1 month old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, one horse, twenty hogs, and one musket. The 1769 census suggests that he and his family lived alongside the households of Marin Préjean, Joseph Préjean, and Charles Préjean. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Martin, his wife, 48 years old; Joseph Préjean, his son, 10 years old; André Préjean, his son, 5 years old; Anne Préjean, his daughe, 17 years old; and Marie Préjean, his daughter, 2 years old. Amand Préjean and Desire LeBlanc were elected delegates representing the Acadian population of Cabannocé, ca. April 22, 1771. The delegates subsequently approached Governor Luís de Unzaga to complain that the priest assigned to their district remained at Natchitoches refused to take up his new posting. The Acadians noted that "the other people don't deserve him any more than they [the Acadians] do." Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. At the time of his second marriage, around 1773, Amand Préjean "declared the following were issue of his first marriage: Marin, Joseph, André, Anne, Anastasie,Madeleine and Félicité." Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. On January 22, 1775, Pierre Landry purchased the Magdeleine Martin's estate. The sale evidently included the Préjean farm, a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-two leagues above New Orleans. Standing on this property, which was bounded above by the land of Marin Préjean and below by the property of Jean Jeansonne, was a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-six by seventeen feet. The residence had bousillage walls. On June 16, 1775, Amand Préjean purchased the property and improvements that Pierre Landry had acquired from the Martin estate six months earlier. On January 10, 1779, Amand Préjean witnessed the marriage of Anne Blanchard and Jean Baptiste Cormier at the Attakapas church. On May 19, 1777, Amand Préjean and Joseph Granger, acting as agents for Marie Terriot (Theriot), sold to George Urquhart a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, about twenty-three leagues above New Orleans. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the "hill at Beaubassin" (east of present-day Carencro) at the time of his death. His death record maintains that he was sixty-six years old at the time of his death. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:522, 607-608; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 66-67, 636; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGi, PPC, 188B:80; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.765 | 04/12/1787 | Beaubassin, Louisiana | Attakapas Church | NULL | |||||||||||
334 | Anastasie | Préjean | 01/01/1751 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Martin | Amand Préjean | According to genealogist Sidney A. Marchand, she entered into a marriage contract with Jean Saulnier, son of Jean Saulnier and Marie Aucoin, at Cabannocé on April 28, 1770. Married (2) Jean Jeansonne(?). | Rosalie (married November 22, 1790), Andréa (born December 3, 1777), Marie Josèphe (baptized March 19, 1780), Augustin (baptized September 2, 1782), Jean (married November 21, 1797), Hypolite (born 1787, buried January 23, 1799), Félicie (baptized August 24, 1789), Euphrosine (born May 15, 1794), Céleste (born December 10, 1798) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably subsequently moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a twenty-year-old member of the household headed by Jean Jeansonne. The position of her name suggests that she was married to Jean Jeansonne, but, according to genealogist Sidney A. Marchand, she had entered into a marriage contract with Jean Saulnier on April 28, 1770. According to the August 1, 1770, census, her household also included Pierre Jeansonne, Jean Jeansonne's brother. The census also suggests that she lived next door to her parents and siblings. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 433-436. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
335 | André | Préjean | 10/06/1765 | Louisiana | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Martin | Amand Préjean | Married Marie Bernard. | Maxime (born 1797), Zélie (born 1799), Lézime (born 1800), Jean (born 1801) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably subsequently moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a four-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a five-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Bernard, 34 years old; Maxime Préjean, 6 years old; Zélie Préjean, 4 years old; Lézime Préjean, 3 years old; and Jean Préjean, 2 years old. André Préjean occupied tracts of land with 13 arpents frontage. They owned 80 cattle and 4 slaves. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | Sun, Dec 8, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
336 | Anne | Préjean | 01/01/1728 | Married (1) Joseph Savoie. Married (2) Joseph Hébert, December 22, 1767. | Marguerite (born 1759), Joseph André (baptized September 22?, 1765), Joseph Barbe (born November 4, 1766) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a member of the Joseph Savoie household, which included her daughter Marguerite. The family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in December 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert. Her household included the following individuals: Joseph Hébert, 34 years old; Paul Hébert, a son by her second husband, 8 months old; Joseph Savoie, a child of her first marriage, 3 years old; and Marguerite, also a child of her first marriage, 9 years old. Her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned one slave, four cattle, two horses, eighteen sheep, and one firearm. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Hébert, her son, 9 years old; Paul Hébert, her son, 7 years old; Jean Hébert, her son, 5 years old; and Marguerite Hébert, her daughter, 17 years old. | The marriage record of her daughter Marguerite indicates that she died before September 7, 1778. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:251; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:129, 666; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
337 | Anne (Marianne) | Préjean | 01/01/1752 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Martin | Amand Préjean | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably subsequently moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
338 | Cécille (Cécile) | Préjean | 01/01/1727 | Married Grégoire Pellerin. | Emilie (born ca. 1767; married November 13, 1788), Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1769), Frédéric (born December 10, 1770), Eugénie (born March 8, 1772) | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a forty-four-year-old member of Grégoire Pellerin's household. Her household included three children: a four-month-old boy, a four-year-old girl, and a three-year-old girl. She and her family owned twenty-five cattle, four horses, and ten sheep. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 612-616; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
339 | Charles Amand | Préjean | Louisiana | Marguerite Richard | Charles Préjean | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Amand Prejean and Catherine Blanchard were his baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231. | Sat, Nov 30, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
340 | Jean Baptiste | Préjean | Louisiana | Marguerite Borel (sometimes Durel, Durelle) | Joseph Préjean | Married Clemente Gravois, daughter of Joseph Gravois and Louise Françoise St. Julien La Chaussée, at Cabannocé, April 26, 1803. | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral) in New Orleans. Jean Baptiste Nicollet, a New Orleans merchant, and Jeanne Dubuisson served as his baptismal sponsors. Probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling with his family at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was a one-year-old child in the household of Joseph Préjean and Marguerite Borel. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a four-year-old resident of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:608; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Sun, Dec 1, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
341 | Joseph | Préjean | 01/01/1732 | Acadia | Married Marguerite (sometimes Marie) Borel (sometimes Durel, Durelle). | Victoire (born ca. 1760), Rose (born 1762), Joseph (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born August 30, 1765), Basile (Baptiste) (born 1768), Marie Rose (born 1770), Anne (Aimée) (baptized January 20, 1771), Pélagie (born 1774), and Marianne (married January 2, 1797). It is unclear from the documentation if Marianne was actually Anne. | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Beauséjour around August 24, 1763. | The birthdate of his son Jean Baptiste suggests that he arrived in Louisiana sometime in early 1765. Probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Préjean, his wife, and his two children occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family also owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Durel, his wife, 32 years old; Baptiste (actually Jean Baptiste), his son, 4 years old; Basile, his son, 1 year old; and Victoire, his daughter, 9 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, nine hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a thirty-four-year-old married man. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie (Marguerite) Baurel (Borel), 33 years old, his wife; Jean Baptiste Préjean, his son, 5 years old; Baptiste Préjean, his son, 2 years old; and Victoire Préjean, his daughter, 9 years old. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. His estate was inventoried by Ascension Parish officials on July 4, 1772. His property was subsequently sold at a probate sale. | He died sometime before June 27, 1772. His estate was inventoried on July 4, 1772. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; "Liste des Acadiens Prisonniers au Fort Beauséjour, en 1763," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 27ième cahier (mars, 1965): 21-25; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:607-608; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Inventory of Joseph Préjean Estate, July 4, 1772, Original Acts, Book A, Clerk of Court's Office, Ascension Parish Courthouse, Donaldsonville, La.; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17, 87. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
342 | Marie Josèphe | Préjean | 01/01/1736 | Françoise Boudrot | Charles Duon | Married Charles Claude Duon at Halifax, Nova Scotia, ca. 1756. | Jean Baptiste (born November 10, 1759), Marguerite (born February 6, 1764), Michel (born ca. December 1768), Charles (born 1773), Marie Marine (born 1775), Marie Madeleine (born 1776), Charles (born 1778), Scholastique (born 1779), Adélaïde (born 1782) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that her family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. The family probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she and her family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned two hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Duon (Duhon, Duan). Her household included the following persons: Charles Duon, 35 years old; Michel, her son, 10 months old; Marguerite, her daughter, 5 years old; Jean Baptiste, her son, 9 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned seven cattle, fifteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Charles Duon (Duhon). In addition to her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Duon, her son, 10 years old; Michel Duon, her son, 2 years old; and Marguerite Duon, her daughter, 6 years old. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District (including her brothers), she reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2481-2482; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
343 | Marin | Préjean | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Martin | Amand Préjean | Married Marie Rose Benoit. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that his family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably subsequently moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Marin Préjean owned another piece of property, measuring four arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi. He also owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He also owned one cow and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a nineteen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. The census suggests that he lived next door to his parents and siblings. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 49, 80, 239; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
344 | Victoire | Préjean | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Borel (sometimes Durel, Durelle) | Joseph Préjean | Ecclesiastical records indicate that her family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. Probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling with her family at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was a six-year-old child in the household of Joseph Préjean and Marguerite Borel. The family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
345 | Marguerite | Prince | 01/01/1757 | Marguerite (Marie) Boudrot | Olivier Prince | Married Jean Louis Bonin, a native of Mobile, April 25, 1771. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church of the Pointe Coupée post, La. Jean Bérard, one Menier, and one Gaignard witnessed the marriage record. | Benjamin (born August 16, 1781), Dominique (born May 14, 1789), Françoise Pélagie (born January 6, 1796), Jean Baptiste (born November 25, 1784), Jean Louis, fils (born November 14, 1775), Louise (born ca. 1778), Marguerite (born March 28, 1777), Moïse (January 25, 1791), and Susanne (born March 28, 1773) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-year-old orphan residing in the household of Jean Baptiste Forest. The documentation suggests that her foster family was destitute at the time of its settlement at the Iberville post. Identified in the 1771 Census of the Attakapas District as an eighteen-year-old member of Claude Martin's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 119; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 74-77; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:608. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
346 | Anne | Quintin | 01/01/1761 | Marie Magdelaine Dugas | Pierre Quintin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
347 | Heloise (Victoire) Françoise | Quintin | 01/01/1771 | Marie Magdelaine Dugas | Pierre Quintin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
348 | Marie | Quintin | 01/01/1762 | Marie Magdelaine Dugas | Pierre Quintin | Appears to have married Jean Baptiste Hisé (Heuzé). | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
349 | Pierre | Quintin (Guimin) | 01/01/1720 | Canada | Married Marie Magdelaine Dugas. | Anne (born ca. 1761), Marie (born ca. 1762), Victoire Françoise (ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:350. | 1.785 | 08/07/1788 | St. Gabriel, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
350 | Anne (Marie) | Richard | 08/06/1765 | Louisiana, probably New Orleans | Anne Blanchard | Joseph Richard | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. She was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral) of New Orleans, and her baptismal sponsors were Jacques Gaignard, a local merchant, and Marie Blanchard. They probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Anne Richard resided with her parents and sisters Marie and Rosalie on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned three hogs and one firearm. Not listed in her family's household in the 1769 census of Cabannocé. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | Sun, Dec 15, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
351 | Jean | Richard | Magdeleine | Served as the baptismal sponsor for his grandson, Joseph Poirier, at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 26, 1764. Served as the baptismal sponsor for his grandson, François Poirier, at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, March 6, 1765. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
352 | Joseph | Richard | Catherine Cormier | Jean Baptiste (Jean) Richard | Baptized at St. Louis Catholiic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Richard, his brother, and Magdeleine Richard, his aunt, served as his baptismal sponsors. The baptismal record mistakenly lists Joseph Richard's birthdate as March 24, 1748. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238. | Sun, Feb 26, 1764 | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
353 | Joseph | Richard | Cap Français, Saint Domingue (now Haiti) | Married Marie Magdelaine Castille of the Iberville district. | Delphine (born February 6, 1800) | He died sometime before June 27, 1807, when his estate was inventoried and appraised at $5,529. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 658; Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, pp. 7-8. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
354 | Joseph | Richard | dit Vieux | 01/01/1713 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Madeleine Girouard | Pierre Richard | Married to Anne Blanchard at Port Royal, January 20, 1744. | Anne (sometimes Anne Marie, Marie) (born August 6, 1765), Marie (born ca. 1760), Pélagie (born ca. May 1769), Rosalie (born January 6, 1763), Marguerite, Anastasie | Migrated to Louisiana in early 1765. Witnessed the marriage of Jacques Lachaussée and Rose Thibodeau at New Orleans, January 27, 1765. His daughter Anne (sometimes Anne Marie) was baptized at New Orleans on August 6, 1765. Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766. census of Cabannocé. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Blanchard, his wife, 45 years old; Marie, his daughter, 10 years old; Pélagie, his daughter 4 months old; and Joseph Richard, his nephew, 7 years old. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cattle, twenty-four hogs, and one musket. A 1770 list indicates that he had twelve barrels of surplus corn. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household tha included the following persons: Anne Blanchard, his wife, 48 years old; Marie Richard, his daughter, 11; a second child, whose name and age are illegible; and Joseph Richard, his nephew, 11 years old. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. On November 7, 1776, Joseph Richard and his wife sold to Basile Landry a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twentythree leagues above New Orleans, the property was situated between the lands of Amand Babin and Joseph Melanson. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-one by fourteen feet. Around December 24, 1777, his estate included a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. His farm had fallen into ruin. | Joseph Richard died at the home of his son-in-law, Basile Préjean. His estate was inventoried on December 24, 1776. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:159, 238-239; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2575; Census of Cabannocé, April 8, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Inventory of Joseph Richard's Estate, December 24, 1776, Original Acts, Book A, Clerk of Court's Office, Ascension Parish Courthouse, Donaldsonville, La.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 89-90. | 1.765 | 27/02/1777 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
355 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Richard | 01/01/1732 | Nappan, Beaubassin district, Acadia | Catherine Cormier | Jean Baptiste (Jean) Richard | Married Jean (sometimes Jean Baptiste) Poirier, son of Jean Poirier and Marie Cormier, at Mobile, January 22, 1764, after receiving a dispensation for consanguinity. The act of marriage was witnessed by Georg Antony Neninger, Antoine Bérard, and René Girard. | François (born March 6, 1765), Jean Baptiste (born May 20, 1760), Joseph (born June 12, 1762), Marie (born 1767), Michel (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Poirier. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Poirier, her son, 17 years old; François Poirier, her son, 12 years old; Michel Poirier, her son, 3 years old; and Marie Poirier, her daughter, 10 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty cows, and five horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:229; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.764 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
356 | Marguerite | Richard | 01/01/1745 | Married Charles Préjean. | Charles Amand (born November 28, 1765; appears to have died before April 1766); Amable (Aimable) (born ca. February 1769), Simon Pierre (born December 24, 1773), Simon Paul (born 1773), Magdalene (born October 8, 1775), Rosalie (born ca. 1780), Célestin (born 1782), Anastasie (born 1784) | The family appears to have arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably moved to the Attakpapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Charles Préjean and his wife Marguerite Richard occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old wife of Charlers Préjean. Her household included the following persons: Charles Préjean, 32 years old; Aimable, her son, 7 months old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned three cattle, twenty-four hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Charles Préjean. In addition to her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included her son Amable (Aimable) Préjean. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Charles Préjean. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Aimable Préjean, her son, 8 years old; Simon Préjean, her son, 6 years old; Marie Préjean, her daughter, 3 years old; and Magdeleine Préjean, her daughter, 18 months old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, three horses, two sheep, four hogs, and two muskets. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2571; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:607-608; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
357 | Marguerite | Richard | Opelousas district | Marguerite Dugas | Pierre Richard | Married Jean Bourg, son of Joseph Bourg and Marie Landry, at the Opelousas church, March 30, 1784. | Augustin (born August 8, 1787), Celestine (baptized November 8, 1801), Césaire (baptized November 22, 1789), Elois (born February 10, 1791), Jean Baptiste (born June 22, 1786), Lucie (buried December 8, 1795), Marceline (born December 27, 1796), Marie (baptized September 22, 1793), Marie Silesie (born ca. 1798) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas district, November 8, 1801. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-100. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
358 | Marie | Richard | 01/01/1760 | Anne Blanchard | Joseph Richard | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Marie Richard resided with her parents and sisters Rosalie and Anne on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned three hogs and one firearm. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
359 | Rosalie | Richard | 01/06/1763 | Louisiana, probably New Orleans | Anne Blanchard | Joseph Richard | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably moved to the Attakapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Rosalie Richard resided with her parents and sisters Marie and Anne on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned three hogs and one firearm. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:239; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | Sun, Dec 15, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
360 | Rosalie (Rose) | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Veuve Claude Richard | La Pointe de Beauséjour, Acadia | Married (1) Claude Richard. Married (2) Jacques La Chaussée at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, January 27, 1766. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:261. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
361 | René | Robichaud (Robicheau) | Married Marguerite Martin. | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that five members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 3 1/3 rations. Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | He was one of the original Acadian settlers for the Attakapas District. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 679. | 1.765 | 01/08/1765 | 02/08/1765 | Attakapas District, La. | Attakapas District, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
362 | Bruno (Bruneau) | Robichaud (Robicheau) | père | 01/01/1725 | Marie Forest | Joseph Robichaud | Married Anne Félicité Broussard. | Firmin (born 1751), Bruno, fils (born July 9, 1764) | He and his family were listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but they received rations for only two persons. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Robichaud, his wife Anne Broussard, and his sons Firmin and Bruno, fils, occupied a parcel of land measuring 6 arpents frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Robichaud owned one firearm. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:241; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2581. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
363 | Bruno | Robichaud (Robicheau) | fils | 07/09/1764 | Anne Félicité Broussard | Bruno Robichaud | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. François Bruneau, Salomon Malline, and Marie Testar served as his baptismal sponsors. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was living with his parents and brother Firmin on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:241; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | Tue, Dec 3, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
364 | Firmin | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1751 | Anne Félicité Broussard | Bruno Robichaud | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he was living with his parents and brother Bruno on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. It also indicates that he owned a separate parcel of land on the right bank measuring four arpents frontage. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
365 | Genevieve | Robichaud (Robicheau) | Acadia | Marguerite Martin | René Robichaud | Married Armand Dugas, a native of Acadia and the son of Claude Dugas and Anne Hébert. Father Ange de Revillagodos performed the marriage ceremony. Jean Baptiste Berard, Jean Baptiste Broussard, and Joseph Cormier witnessed the marriage. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 677. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
366 | Madeleine (Magdelaine) | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1756 | Acadia | Marguerite Martin | René Robichaud | Married Charles Hébert, a native of Acadia residing in the Attakapas country, at the Attakapas church, April 27, 1773. Father Irenée, a Capuchin pastor at the Pointe Coupée church and a missionary to the Attakapas district, officiated at the marriage ceremony. The wedding was witnessed by Bordat, Berard, Delahoussaye, and Joseph Hébert. | Eulalie (born ca. 1774), Scholastique (born 1776), Solange (born 1781), Moïse (born 1784), Julia (born 1787), Jean (born 1789), Ursin (born 1792), Jean Valmont (born 1795), Marguerite (born 1797) | The 1771 census of the Attakpas District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old resident in a household that included her stepfather Antoine Bordat, her mother, three unidentified girls, and a thirty-year-old black slave. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district at the time of her wedding on April 27, 1773. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Jean Charles Hébert. In addition to herself and her fifty-two-year-old husband, the household also included Moïse Hébert, 20 years old; Ursin (Ursain) Hébert, 9 years old; Valmont Hébert, 6 years old; Marie Hébert, 4 years old; and Marguerite Hébert, 2 yeasr old. Robichaud and her family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontrage. They owned 250 semi-wild beef cattle and 20 tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Rosette, 30 years old; François, 18 years old; and Pierre, 5 years old. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 678; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
367 | Marin | Robichaud (Robicheau) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 678. | 1.765 | 18/08/1765 | 18/08/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
368 | Abraham | Roy | 01/01/1731 | Port Royal, Acadia | Marie Bergeron | François Roy | Married (1) Anne Auboi. Married (2) Madeleine (Marie) Doucet, June 6, 1768. | First marriage: Pierre (born 1752), Sauveur (born 1753), Marie (born 1755), Charles (born 1756), Marguerite (born 1757), Joseph (born 1760) Second marriage: Joseph (born 1770) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 272.17 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown, April 1, 1765. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his son Sauveur, his daughter Marie, the Widow Lafaye, and Marie Marquis. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that Roy owned one firearm and two hogs. The 1769 census indicates that he owned a second parcel of land along the Mississippi River. This property was evidently bounded by the land of Anne Gaudet and Paul LeBlanc. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River,, a forty-year-old married man, and a native of Acadia. Roy lived two leagues from the residence of Cabannocé commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine (Magdeleine, Madeleine) Doucet, his wife, 41 years old; Pierre Roy, his son, 17 years old; Charles Roy, his son, 14 years old; Sauveur Roy, his son, 17 years old; Joseph Roy, his son, 6 years old; and Marguerite Roy, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
369 | Marie (Marie Anne) | Roy | 01/01/1755 | Anne Aubois (Houboi) | Abraham Roy | Married Jean Saulnier at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, May 23, 1773. | Rosalie (baptized March 13, 1774), Jean Baptiste (baptized August 25, 1776), Marie Marguerite (baptized October 25, 1778), Félicité (baptized June 30, 1789), Jean Espiritu (born July 5, 1791) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eleven-year-old child residing in her widowed father's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the seventeen-year-old spouse of Jean Saulnier. In addition to herself and her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included two children Jean Baptiste, 4 years old; and Rosalie, 3 years old. The census suggests that Marie Roy lived near her parents. Marie Roy, her husband, and her son are listed in the 1789 census of the left bank of the Lafourche District, but their ages are underestimated by at least ten years. The 1789 census of the left bank of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Saulnier. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, the household included Jean Saulnier, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-eight barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; .Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2585; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:678-679. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
370 | Sauveur | Roy | 01/01/1759 | Anne Aubois | Abraham Roy | Married Marie Bourgeois, daughter of André Bourgeois and Marie Jacobine, at Baton Rouge, May 22, 1780. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seven-year-old child residing in his widowed father's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Abraham Roy, his father, and Magdeleine (Marie, Madeleine) Doucet, his stepmother. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; .Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2585; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
371 | Marguerite | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1729 | Married Charles Forest. | Marie (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762), Charles, fils (born September 27, 1764) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with her husband Charles Forest and her children and step-children on a parcel of property measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-four-year-old member of a household that included the following persons: Charles Forest, her husband, 47 years old; Charles, her son, 5 years old; Marie, her daughter, 10 years old; Marguerite, her daughter, 8 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, six hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-five-year-old spouse of Charles Forest. In addition to her forty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Forest, her son, 6 years old; Marie Forest, her daughter, 10 years old; and Marguerite Forest, her daughter, 8 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the forty-nine-year-old spouse of Charles Forest. In addition to herself and her fifty-two-year-old husband, her household included Marie Forest, her seventeen-year-old daughter, and Marguerite Forest, her fifteen-year-old daughter. Charles Forest, her fourteen-year-old son, lived next door. Marguerite Saulnier and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows, four horses, nine hogs, and one musket. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:125; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
372 | Joseph André | Savoie (Savoy) | Louisiana | Anne Préjean | Joseph Savoie | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. The date of the baptism is difficult to read and the date is thought to be September 22, 1765. André Bombrund and Dorothée Dubois served as his baptismal sponsors. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a three-year-old member of the household of Joseph Hébert, his stepfather, and Anne Préjean, his mother. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:251; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | Sun, Sep 22, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
373 | François | Savoie (Savoy) | St. Charles Parish, Annapolis-Royal, N.S. | Married (1) Anne Aucoin. Married (2) Marie Landry at St. Louis Catholic Chuch (now Cathedral), New Orleans, July 22, 1765. The marriage was witnessed by Olivier Landry. Entered into a marriage contract with Anne Thibodeau, daughter of Paul Thibodeau and Marguerite Trahan, October 14, 1766. | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:251; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 92-93. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
374 | Joseph | Savoie (Savoy) | Married Anne Préjean. | Marguerite (born 1759), Joseph André (baptized September 22?, 1765), Joseph Barbe (born November 4, 1766) | The marriage record of his daughter Marguerite indicates that she died before September 7, 1778. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:251; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119, 666. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
375 | Marguerite | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1759 | Anne Préjean | Joseph Savoie | Married Louis Boulé, a native of Québec and the son of Louis Boulé and Ursule Rouseau, at Cabannocé, September 7, 1778. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old child residing in the household of Joseph Hébert, her stepfather, and Anne Préjean, her mother. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119, 666; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
376 | Jean Baptiste | Semer (Semère, Sémèrre, Simèrre) | 01/01/1744 | Married Marie Thibodeau. | Marie (born ca. 1761), Urbain (born July 22, 1771), Victoire (born April 27, 1774), Jean Baptiste (born September 3, 1776), Marguerite (baptized May 9, 1779), Marie Marthe (baptized June 1, 1780), Marie Magdeleine (born February 11, 1781) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 604 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. Sometime before September 13, 1766, Jean Baptiste Semer wrote a letter to his father at Le Havre, France. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) In this letter, Semer describe in glowing terms "the goodness of the soil, and the climate, and all of the advantages that they have provided him as well as all of his comrades." The letter spearked great interest in Louisiana among those Acadians exiled to France. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included his wife and Marie Semer, his eight-year-old daughter. Jean Baptiste Semer and his family owned eight cows, four horses, and nineteen hogs. Jean Baptiste Semer signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having sixty barrels of unhusked corn for sale. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his twenty-nine-year-old wife, twenty-two-year-old Anselme Thibodeau, twenty-year-old Victor Blanchard, and two unidentified girls aged respectively eight and two years. Semer and his wife owned twenty-nine beef cattle and six horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Baptiste Semer in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and four children. They owned thirty-six cows, five horses and mules, and eight hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | Died sometime before January 31, 1799, when his daughter Magdalaine signed a marriage contract with Baptiste Calais. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Duc de Praslin to Mistral, Compiègne, France, September 13, 1766, AC, B 125:450vo; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 705-707; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
377 | Marie Françoise | Semer | Married Joseph Boudrot. | Antoine (born February 28, 1786), Louis (May 15, 1789) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 88-91. | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
378 | Marie Anne (Marianne) | Surette (Suret) | Chipute(?), England [Shepody, Acadia] | Marie Thibodeau | Pierre Surette | The date of birth on the baptismal certificate is difficult to read. It is thought to be February 24, 1762. Marie Anne Surette was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Jean Lafitte, a New Orleans merchant, and Marie Anne Fortier. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:259; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 736. | Mon, Mar 4, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
379 | Pierre | Surette (Suret) | Married Marie Thibodeau. | Marie Anne (born ca. February 24, 1762), Augustin (born June 19, 1765) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. The Acadian men detained in the concentration camp at Fort Edward were sent to Halifax on July 12, 1762. Pierre Surette (Suret) was too sick to accompany the main party of prisoners. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that five members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 3 2/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 15 livres in Canadian card money and 88 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:259; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 735. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
380 | Joseph | Terriot (Theriot) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
381 | Marie Rose (sometimes Marie Roze) | Terriot (Theriot, Teriot) | possibly Halifax, Nova Scotia | Magdeleine Bourgeois | Joseph Terriot | Married Isaac LeBLanc, ca. 1780. | Marie Genevieve (born ca. 1781) | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Hardi de Boisblanc and Charles Rose de la Chaise served as her baptismal sponsors. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | She died sometime before November 16, 1789. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:261; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:511; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | Mon, Dec 9, 1765 | 1.765 | St. Louis Catholic Church, New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||
382 | Amand (Amant, sometimes Pierre Amant) | Thibodeau (Thibodaut, Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1734 | Notre Dame des Nièges Parish, Shepody, Acadia | Marie Comeau | Charles Thibodeau | Married Gertrude Bourg, daughter of Jacques Bourg and Anne Boudrot, at St. Lous Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 27, 1765. | Marguerite Blondine (born 1766), Isaac (born November 23, 1770), Constance Louise (born September 22, 1771), Jean Baptiste (born November 25, 1774), Armand (December 24, 1775), Gertrude (born January 30, 1778), Anne (born April 28, 1780), Isabelle (born May 30, 1782), Benjamin (born October 25, 1784), Placide (born March 14, 1788) | Fled with his family to Ile St-Jean after the beginning of the Grand Dérangement. | Ecclesiastical records demonstrate that he was in New Orleans on February 27, 1765, indicating that he was a member of the first large group of Acadian exiles to reach Louisiana. Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marie Josèphe Gauterot at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 22, 1765. Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas District (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one woman. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Amand Thibodeau was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Blondine (Blandine) Thibodeau, his daughter, 2 years old; Isaac (Izaac) Thibodeau, his son, 1 year old; Marguerite Bourque, no relationship indicated, 25 years old; and Marie Gauterot (Gotreau), no relationship indicated, 5 years old. Amand Thibodeau and his family owned three cows, two horses, and sixteen hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. Amand Thibodeau signed with his mark an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, a one-year-old son, a four-year-old daughter, a seven-year-old daughter, and his mother-in-law, Anne Boudrot, the Widow Bourque. He and his family owned twn beef cattle and two horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and four children. He and his family owned twenty-six cattle, five horses and mules, and twenty hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He is identified as Amant Thibodaut in the May 10, 1777 list. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:138, 261; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 211-212; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 96.; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 178-179; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | Spent his childhood at Shepody, a settlement established by his grandfather, Pierre Thibodeau. | 1.765 | 24/06/1818 | La Pointe area (around modern Breaux Bridge) | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Cemetery, St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||
383 | Anne (Nanette) | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1755 | Brigitte Breau | Charles Thibodeau | Married Pierre Dugas, son of Charles Dugas and Anne Robichaud, in the Attakapas District, July 18, 1772. Augustin Grevemberg and De Verbois witnessed the marriage record. | Silesie (born October 26, 1774), Pierre (born March 6, 1777), Françoise (born June 14, 1777), Céleste (baptized April 30, 1780, at the age of 9 months), Anne (Nanette) (baptized January 21, 1785), Louise (born January 6, 1787), Anne (Petite) (born February 15, 1888), Élizabeth Aspasie (born August 1794), Anne Clémence (born October 15, 1796), Alexandre (baptized April 24, 1799), Marie Cléonise (born June 8, 1801), Eloïse, EugénieThe birthdate of either Pierre or Françoise is obviously in error. | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old resident of Joseph Broussard's household. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district, July 18, 1772. | Her burial record maintains that she was approximately sixty years of age at the time of her death. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 268-279; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 142-143; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:693. | 1.765 | 01/11/1817 | 02/11/1817 | her farm at "Pont de la Butte" | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
384 | Jean (Anselme, Enselme) | Thibodeau (Thibodaut, Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1749 | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Brigitte Breau | Charles Thibodeau | Signed a marriage contract with Marguerite Melanson, native of Snoyde, New England, (probably Snowhill, Maryland), June 20, 1780. He contributed eighty cows, thirty horses, and ten arpents of land to the marriage. On February 20, 1793, he signed a marriage contract with Anne Trahan, a native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, and the daughter of Pierre Trahan and Marguerite Duon. | First marriage: Marguerite (born 1781), Jean Baptiste (born 1783), Thomas (born 1785) Second marriage: Pierre Paul (born 1795), Domitilde (born 1796), Anne (born 1798), Louis (born 1801), Louise (born 1804), Marguerite (born 1806), and Scholastique Tharsile (born 1808) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that his household included one unidentified man and one unidentified girl. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of René Trahan's household. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Semer's household. Thibodeau participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rrendered as Anselme Thibodaut in the May 10, 1777 list. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Served as a baptismal sponsor for Eugène Carlin at the Attakapas church, July 15, 1778. Purchased a tract of land from Bernard, chief of the small Attakapas village (near present-day Milton, La.), November 6, 1780. The property had thirteen arpents frontage on both banks of the Vermilion River. Sold property in the Opelousas district to Jean Baptiste Hébert, December 29, 1780. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Trahan, his wife, 32 years old; Geneviève Thibodeau, 10 years old; Paul Thibodeau, 8 years old; Domicile Thibodeau, 6 years old; Anne Thibodeau, 4 years old; and Louis Thibodeau, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with thirty arpents frontage. They owned 550 semi-wild beef cattle and 50 tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Philipe, 40 years old; Mary, 40 years old; Modeste, 20 years old; and Jn. Baptiste, 14 years old. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 213; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 745; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 40; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2598; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Land Sale, November 6, 1780, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
385 | Catherine | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Simon LeBlanc. | Cosme (sometimes Come, Comme) (born ca. 1760; married July 13, 1781), Donat (Donna) (born ca. 1764), Marguerite (born ca. 1769), Marie Angélique (born January 1, 1765), Marie Louise (born January 30, 1762) | Probably the unnamed spouse of Simon LeBlanc in a general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
386 | Louis | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 83 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
387 | Louise | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Pierre Gauterot, who died sometime before February 1765. | Marie Josèphe (born April 3, 1764) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:138. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
388 | Marguerite | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Agnès Thibodeau | Michel Thibodeau | Married Alexandre Broussard on February 7, 1724. | Jean Grégoire (born January 1, 1725), Marguerite (born April 15, 1726), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1732), Anselme (born May 2, 1734), Sylvain (born October 24, 1741), Simon (born 1746), Pierre (born ca. 1752) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 752-753; Arsenault, Histoire et Généalogie, 6:2445; Réaux and Réaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," Attakapas Gazette, 6 (1971): 130-144. | Settled at Chepody (present-day Hopewell Hill) in modern-day New Brunswick sometime after her marriage. | 1.765 | 05/09/1765 | "dernier camp d'en bas" (probably Fausse Pointe, La.) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
389 | Marie | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Pierre Surette. | Marie Anne (born ca. February 24, 1762) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). Her household included one woman and one unidentified girl. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:259; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, p. 125. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
390 | Marie Louise | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1761 | Brigitte Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Charles Thibodeau | Married François Louvière. | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a five-year-old member of René Trahan's household. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 754. | 1.765 | 05/12/1796 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
391 | Marie | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Magdelaine Broussard | Olivier Thibodeau | Married Opelousas district resident Joseph Saulnier, the son of Cherine (Charles?) Saulnier and Anne Desroy (Darois?), at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. Father Ange de Revillagodos performed the marriage ceremony. Silvain Saulnier, Joseph Granger, and Amand Thibodeau witnessed the marriage certificate. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Attakapas district, January 1779. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 753. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
392 | Olivier | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1733 | Marie Françoise Comeau | Charles Thibodeau | Married (1) Madeleine (Magdeleine) Broussard, who died on May 17, 1765. Signed a marriage contract with Agnès Brun, thereby allowing the children of Olivier Thibodeau's first marriage to inherit equally with those of the second, September 30, 1786. Married (2) Agnès Brun, a native of Acadia and the widow of Paul Doucet. | First marriage: Marie (married January 10, 1779), Théodore (married July 2, 1782), Anne Marguerite (born May 10, 1765; died soon afterward). Second marriage: Cécille (born 1774), Céleste (born February 8, 1786), Cirille (born October 8, 1773), Emilie (baptized July 25, 1779), Nicolas (born June 15, 1771), Olivier (baptized May 5, 1776) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 1,115.15 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Was one of eight Acadian leaders who signed a contract with Antoine Bernard Dauterive to raise cattle on shares in the Attakapas District, April 4, 1765. Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas District (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included two boys and two girls. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Anne Thibodeau, his daughter, 15 years old; Thédoroe Thibodeau, his son, 8 years old; Marie Thibodeau, his daughter, 8 years old; and Anne Thibodeau, his daughter, 5 years old. Olivier Thibodeau and his family owned thirteen cows, two horses, and fifteen hogs. Olivier Thibodeau signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight year-old wife, an unidentified ten-year-old son, a ten-year-old daughter, a six-year-old daughter, and seventeen-year-old Nanette (Thibodeau?). His family owned thirty-four beef cattle and four horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and five children. The family owned fifty cows, twelve horses and mules, and fifty pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. On March 6, 1789, Attakapas Commandant Alexandre DeClouet formally objected to a gubernatorial decision to trand to Olivier Thibodeau (Tibaudau) a tract of land lying between Thibodeau's existing property and that of René Trahan. DeClouet argued that this large tract of land should have been given to the Acadian immigrants from France. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | His burial record maintains that he was approximately seventy-five years of age at the time of his death. His succession is dated August 23, 1808. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent gave the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Rees, "The Dauterive Compact," 91; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, p. 125; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 78; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 179-180; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Alexandre DeClouet to Estevan Mir¢, March 6, 1789, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | 19/11/1803 | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
393 | Paul | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux, Tibodau) | 01/01/1731 | Married Rosalie Guilbeau. | André Paul (born August 26, 1765; died September 7, 1765), Anne (baptized April 30, 1780), Élisabeth (born September 4,1775), Joseph (born January 4,1778), Marie Rose (born April 27, 1784), Serafine (born October 15, 1770), Vital (born October 9, 1772) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 33 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that there was one unidentified boy in his household. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Paul Thibodeau, his son, 3 years old; Isaac Thibodeau, his son, a newborn infant. Paul Thibodeau and his family owned eight cows, one horse, and eighteen hogs. Paul Thibodeau signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. The 1771 census indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included himself, his twenty-seven-year-old wife, an unidentified four-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. His family owned nineteen cattle and one horse. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Paul Tibodau in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and four children. They collectively owned thirty cows, seven horses and mules, and thirty pigs. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. He evidently did not reside in the Opelousas District. His property appears to have been along Bayou Carencro. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 743-759; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
394 | Suzanne | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Joseph Bourg. | Charles (baptized October 25, 1796), Joseph Valerie (born July 28, 1785), Leandre (baptized November 10, 1797), Marie Denise (April 15, 1792), Perosine (born January 1, 1788), Pierre (baptized March 29, 1800), Ursin (June 3, 1790) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-101. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
395 | Theodore | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Magdelaine Broussard | Olivier Thibodeau | Married Marie Louise Saulnier, daughter of Sylvère Saulnier and Magdelaine Bourg, Acadian residents of Opelousas, at the Attakapas church, July 2, 1782. Father Joseph Arazena performed the marriage ceremony. | Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 758; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
396 | Madeleine | Doiron | Veuve Charles Thibodeau | Marie Dugas | Charles Doiron | Married Charles Thibodeau at Philadelphia, 1764. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 253; Recapitulation of the receipts furnished by Mr. Maxent to the Acadians, [April 30, 1765]. AC, C13a, 45:2; Card Money mg | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
397 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1770 | Marie Trahan | Simon LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
398 | Félicité | Trahan | 01/01/1771 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Magdeleine Hébert | Jean Trahan | Married Joseph Laurent Bourg at the Attakapas church, October 9, 1798. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 97-98. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
399 | Isabelle | Trahan | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, Brittany, France | Marguerite Duon (Duhon) | Pierre Trahan | Married Joseph Boudrot at the Attakapas church, November 19, 1792. The marriage was witnessed by François Boudrot, Felix Lopes, Charles Duon, and Isabel Apolines. | Joseph (born February 12, 1796), Marie Felonise (born April 30, 1798), Pélagie (born March 15, 1800), Philemon (born April 30, 1798), Scholastique (baptized May 24, 1795) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 89, 90. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
400 | Jean | Trahan | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Darois | René Trahan | Married Marguerite Broussard, daughter of Alexandre Broussard and Marguerite Thibodeau, at Beaubassin, Acadia, on December 26, 1744. | Germain (born 1751), Madeleine (born 1749, married April 25, 1771), Marguerite (born 1753), Ludivine (born February 21, 1756) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that his household included one teenaged boy, two men, and one girl. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Germain (Germin) Trahan, his son, 18 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne) Trahan, his daughter, 20 years old; and Marguerite Trahan, his daughter, 16 years old. He and his family owned ten cows, three horses, and ten hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Witnessed the marriage record of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard, St. Jacques de la Nouvelle Acadie Parish (Attakapas church), February 14, 1770. Trahan participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. | His burial record claims that he was ninety-five years of age at the time of his death. This seems unlikely, judging from the ages of his children in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:133; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 766-771; Conover, Trahan, 48; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Marriage of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard, February 14, 1770, files of St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La.; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.765 | 10/04/1799 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
401 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1734 | Married Simon LeBlanc. | Joseph (born ca. 1765), Jacques (born ca. 1772), Anne (born ca. 1770) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
402 | Marie | Trahan | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Aucoin. Married (2) Antoine Bellard | Second marriage: Antoine (baptized September 3, 1780), Céleste (born June 16, 1777), Esther (baptized June 24, 1779), Etienne (born 1767), Louis (born August 24, 1782), Modeste (married January 6, 1789). | In the record of her second marriage, she is identified as a resident of St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 43-44. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
403 | Marie Françoise | Trahan | Euphrosine Vincent | Michel Trahan | Married Jean Baptiste Trahan, a native of England and the minor son of Jean Trahan and Magdelaine Hébert, at the Attakapas church, January 3, 1785. | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Joseph Marie Amman and Marie Françoise Gallot served as her baptismal sponsors. The date of her baptism indicates that she and her parents were among the Acadians who accompanied Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to Louisiana. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a member of her parents' household. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:268; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 771; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | Tue, Feb 26, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
404 | Marie Élizabeth (also) Marie Isabelle) | Trahan | 01/01/1760 | Liverpool, England | Marguerite Duon | Pierre Trahan | Married Lucien Bourg, son of Charles Bourg and Magdeleine Blanchard. | Isabelle Marie (born November 1, 1787), Jean Firmin (born April 2, 1786), Marguerite (born December 24, 1789), Placide (January 2, 1797) | Extant documentation maintains that she was born either in London or Liverpool, England. There was no group of Acadian exiles in London, however. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Lucien Bourg. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Firmin Bourg, 15 years old; Marie Bourg, 15 years old; Marguerite Bourg, 13 years old; François Bourg, 9 years old; and Placide Bourg, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty semi-wild beef cattle and twelve tame cattle. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 96-101; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
405 | Marie Louise | Trahan | 01/01/1769 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Magdeleine Hebert | Jean Trahan | Married Jean Charles Bourg, native of the Diocese of St. Malo, France, at the Attakapas church, October 9, 1798. | Marie Modeste (September 23, 1799) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 97; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43.. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
406 | Michel | Trahan | 01/01/1726 | Élizabeth Darois | René Trahan | Married Euphrosine Vincent. | Paul (born 1751), Athanase (born ca. 1753), Jean (born 1755), Françoise (born 1754), Marie Françoise (born November 29, 1764) | His daughter Marie Françoise was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, on February 26, 1765. This date indicates that he and his wife were among the Acadians who accompanied Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to Louisiana. Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 71 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas District. His household included one woman, two teenaged boys, one adult male, and one girl. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Athanase (Atanace) Trahan, his son, 16 years old; Paul Trahan, his son, 19 years old; Marie Trahan, his daughter, 17 years old; and Marie Trahan, his daughter, 6 years old. Michel Trahan and his family owned six cows, one horse, and sixteen hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District maintaints that he was forty-five years of age. The census also indicates that he was the head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, a six-month-old unidentified girl, twenty-year-old Paul Trahan, seventeen-year-old Françoise Trahan, and fifteen-year-old Jean Trahan. Michel Trahan and his family owned fifteen cattle and six horses. They also occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Trahan participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife and two children. He and his family owned forty cattle, five horses or mules, and twelve hogs. | Recapitulation of receipts furnished by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:268; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Trahan, 49; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 773; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | 20/01/1784 | Attakapas District | NULL | |||||||||||||||
407 | Olivier | Trahan | 01/01/1755 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Broussard | René Trahan | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a sixteen-year-old resident of René Trahan's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that ; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; . | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
408 | Paul | Trahan (Trahant) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Euphrosine Vincent | Michel Trahan | Married Marie Dugon (evidently Duon, Duhon), daughter of Joseph Dugon (evidently Duon, Duhon) and Théotiste Broussard (Brossard), at the Attakapas church, July 18, 1772. The marriage occured after the couple had been given a dispensation for consanguinity in the third degree. | Christine (born November 15, 1783), Françoise (born October 3, 1781), Joseph (born February 12, 1790), Juliene (born November 1, 1777), Louise Philonise (born June 24, 1778), Marie Magdeleine (born January 4, 1788), Marie Reine (sometimes Marie Regina) (born January 29, 1774), Paul Olivier (baptized May 5, 1776), Pierre (born January 20, 1786), Rosalie (baptized April 28, 1780, at the age of 9 months), Théotime (buried November 24, 1797), Thimothée (Timothée) (born December 12, 1796) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Paul Trahan was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. Trahan participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife and one child. He and his family owned eight cattle, five horses or mules, and two pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Paul Trahant in the May 10, 1777 list. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was a resident of the settlements along the Vermilion River, January 24, 1784. Sold a parcel of land in the Opelousas district to one Gonsoulin, October 22, 1787. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Trahan was the defendant in a civil suit filed by Guillaume Despau in the Opelousas district, May 29, 1789. He was also the defendant in a civil suit filed by Romain de la Fosse in the Opelousas district, May 30, 1789. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 46, 52; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 763-775; Conover, Trahan, 49; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 180-181; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | 12/12/1795 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
409 | René | Trahan | 01/01/1729 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Darois | René Trahan | Married Isabelle (Elizabeth) Broussard. | Known children: Olivier (born 1755), Madeleine Henriette (Magdeleine) (born ca. 1769), René (born ca. 1767), Louis Joseph (born August 19, 1772) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marguerite Anne Thibodeau in the Attakapas district, May 11, 1765. With Jean Baptiste Broussard, he served as co-commandant of the Attakapas District, April 1768. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Olivier Trahan, his son, 13 years old; René Trahan, his son, 2 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne) Trahan, his newborn daughter; Elizabeth Broussard, no relationship indicated, 18 years old; Enselme (Anselme) Thibodeau, no relationship indicated, 20 years old; and Marie Louise Thibodeau, no relationship indicated, 5 years old. Signed with his mark a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. René Trahan and his family owned twenty-six cows, eight horses, and twenty hogs. René Trahan signed an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Signed the marriage record of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard on behalf of the bride's parents, Attakapas church, February 14, 1770. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The Bérard list indicates that he had sixty barrels of corn. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, one unidentified son aged four years, unidentified daughters aged seven and two years, sixteen-year-old Olivier Trahan, sixteen-year-old Madeleine Broussard, and twenty-three-year-old Claude Broussard. The census indicates that Trahan owned 60 cattle, 16 horses, and 4 sheep. His family occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. His property holdings made him one of the wealthiest Acadians in the Attakapas District. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph(?) Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. Trahan participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a sergeant in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and four children. They owned sixty-eight cattle, thirteen horses and mules, and twenty-five pigs. | His will is dated 1790. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 752, 776; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; Circular Letter to the Commandants of South Louisiana Posts, April 4, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Marriage of Michel Meau and Isabelle Broussard, February 14, 1770, from the files of St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La.; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Broussard, 10-11; Conover, Trahan, 49; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
410 | Ursule | Trahan | Elizabeth Darois | René Trahan | Married (1) Joseph Broussard, who died sometime before April 1765. Married (2) Joseph Geronnard at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, April 8, 1765. | Joseph, fils (married June 3, 1776), Isabelle (born 1750) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:267; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 776; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23. | 1.765 | 10/10/1765 | Attakapas district | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
411 | André | Tramplé (Templé) | 01/01/1726 | Married (1) Marie Deveau. Married (2) Marguerite LeBlanc. | Jean (born ca. 1761), Charles (born ca. 1763), Jacques (born ca. 1765), Servant (born ca. 1770), Olivier (born ca. 1774), André (born ca. 1778), Isabelle (born ca. 1760), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1768) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1770. Resided at Plouer, France, 1770-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
412 | André (Servin) | Tramplé (Templé) | 01/01/1778 | St. Malo, France | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Married Céleste Aucoin, daughter of Olivier Aucoin and Cécille Richard, at Ascension Parish, La., May 7, 1792. (One source indicates May 14, 1792.) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
413 | Charles | Tramplé | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
414 | Isabelle | Tramplé | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
415 | Jacques | Tramplé | 01/01/1765 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
416 | Jean | Tramplé | 01/01/1761 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
417 | Marie Magdelaine | Tramplé | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
418 | Olivier | Tramplé | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
419 | Servant | Tramplé | 01/01/1770 | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Tramplé | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
420 | Euphrosine (Marie Froisine, Françoise) | Vincent | 05/04/1726 | Acadia | Anne Marie Doiron | Michel Vincent | Married (1) Michel Trahan, who died before March 1786. Married (2) Basile Landry, son of Pierre Landry and Marguerite Forest, at the Attakapas church, May 23, 1786. | First marriage: Marie Françoise (born November 29, 1764), Paul (born 1751), Jean (born 1755), Françoise (born 1754) Michael E. Conover maintains that Athanase Trahan was also the son of Michel Trahan and Euphrosine Vincent. | Her daughter Marie Françoise was baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, on February 26, 1765. This date indicates that she and her husband were among the Acadians who accompanied Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to Louisiana. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the forty-year-old wife of Michel Trahan. Her household included her husband, an unidentified six-month-old girl, twenty-year-old Paul Trahan, seventeen-year-old Françoise Trahan, and sixteen-year-old Jean Trahan. Her family owned fifteen cattle and six horses. They also occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:268; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Trahan, 49; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 472-473. | 1.765 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
421 | Marie Josèphe | Vincent | 01/01/1739 | Anne Marie Doiron | Michel Vincent | Married Claude Duon at Miramichi, Canada, ca. 1757. | Firmin (born ca. 1766) and Joseph (born ca. 1768) | Was a baptismal sponsor for Jean Baptiste Duon at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, December 1, 1765. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with her husband and orphan Paul Duon on a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Claude Duon (Duhon). Their household included fourteen-year-old orphan Paul Jeansonne. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, seven pigs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Claude Duon (Duhon). In addition to her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included Françoise Pitre, a six-year-old orphan. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
422 | Michel | Cormier | Acadia | Married (1) Anne Saulnier, who was buried on January 7, 1773. Married (2) Catherine Stelly. Signed a marriage contract with Magdelaine Breau, the widow of Etienne Benoit, February 10, 1789. Married (3) Magdelaine Breau at the Attakapas church, February 10, 1789. | First marriage: Amand (born ca. 1771), Michel (born ca. 1772) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a widower and that his household included the following persons: Michel Cormier and two unidentified children. He and his family owned twenty cows, six horses or mules, and sixteen hogs. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household including six males of unspecified ages and one girl. He and his family owned seven slaves. They also owned 130 cows and 15 horses. He and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-two arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Prairie des Femmes area of the Opelousas District. | In the burial register, the pastor of the Opelousas church, Father Pedro de Zamora, lamented the fact that he had been unable to administer the last rites to Cormier because the deceased's family had been so slow to notifiy him. His succession is dated July 4, 1795. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 1; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 208-209; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | 30/12/1790 | Opelousas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
423 | Olivier | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | frère (he was the brother of Silvain Saulnier) | Madeleine Comeau (Comeaux) | Pierre Saulnier (Sonnier) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned twelve cows and five hores or mules. His succession is dated August 10, 1775, but he appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 3; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Arsenault, Histoire et genealogie, 6:2585-2586. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
424 | Joseph | Comeau | Issued a Spanish land grant in the Opelousas district, January 3, 1778. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 4. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
425 | Michel | Comeau | Married Marie Girouard. | Jean | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the local Acadian settlement. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Michel Comeau, his wife, and four unidentified children. He and his family owned 100 cows, five horses or mules, and forty hogs. Issued a Spanish land grant in the Opelousas district, July 22, 1778. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included two males, one woman, and one girl. He and his family owned eight slaves. They also owned 500 cows and 50 horses. They occupied a large tract of land with 32 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Plaquemine Brulé area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, his household indicates that his household contained two males over the age of fifteen years and one woman over the age of fifteen. He and his family owned one slave boy, and two slave girls. They also owned five slave men and four slave women. The census indicates that he lived in the North Plaquemine (Brulé) area. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 257; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 4; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
426 | Guillaume | Richard | Richard's succession was opened in the Opelousas district, September 5, 1780. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 7. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
427 | Silvain (Silvin) | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1736 | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Madeleine Comeau (Comeaux) | Pierre Saulnier (Sonnier) | Married Magdeleine Bourg, ca. 1760. | Marie-Louise (born ca. 1762; married July 2, 1782), Gertrude (born ca. 1764), Silvain (Sylvain), fils (born ca. 1766; interred January 2, 1796), Catherine (born ca. 1770), Céleste (born ca. 1772), Joseph (born April 29, 1776; baptized May 26, 1776), Étienne (born 1778; interred August 21, 1780), Charles (baptized August 26, 1781, at the age of four and one half months), Leufroy (Leufroi) (born May 13, 1788; baptized December 7, 1788) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of himself, his wife, and five unidentified children. He and his family owned 120 cows, eight horses or mules, and thirty pigs. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. His name is rendered as Silvin Saunier in the 1777 list. He purchased a slave from Elizabeth P. Cuny in the Opelousas district, September 20, 1780. Mortgaged cattle acquired from Joseph Théry, January 25, 1781. Became embroiled in litigation with Jean Baptiste Malvot regarding a slave which Saulnier purchased from the defendant, October 31-November 7, 1783. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included six males of unspecified ages, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned eight slaves. They also owned 300 cows, 34 horses, and a tract of land with 32 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. Purchased a slave from Joseph, Chevalier Poiret, November 4, 1789. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including three boys under the age of fifteen, one girl under the age of fifteen, two males fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. His family owned four slave boys under the age of fifteen years, two slave girls under the age of fifteen years, two slave men fifteen years of age or older, and three slave women fifteen years of age or older. The Saulnier (Sonnier) household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 8, 9, 20, 54; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2585-2586. | 1.765 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
428 | Mme Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | Married Pierre Guedry. | Resided along Bayou Carencro at the time of her death. Her succession is dated January 7, 1781. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 9; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 376. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
429 | Blaise | Brasseur (Brasse, Brasseaux, Brasset, Brasso) | 01/01/1752 | Élizabeth Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | Married Anne Préjean. | Alexandre (born February 22, 1788), Blaise, fils (baptized May 19, 1793), Caliste (baptized July 25, 1795), Céleste (baptized July 25, 1795), Elise (born January 1, 1792), Hélène (baptized August 13, 1780), Marguerite (born May 2, 1785), Marie Magdelaine (baptized September 15, 1782) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The records indicate that his family carried all of their belongings in one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was fifteen years of age. He appears to have been the unnamed eighteen-year-old boy residing in his mother's household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. His name is rendered as Blaise Brasse in the 1776 muster roll. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. His name is rendered as Blaise Braddo in the 1777 list. On August 1, 1781, Governor Bernardo de G lvez issued a land grant in the Opelousas District to Blaise Brasseur. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household cluded one boy, one man, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned no slaves, but they possessed forty-five cows, ten horses, and a tract of land with eleven arpents frontage. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included two boys one to fifteen years of age, six girls one to fifteen years of age, one man fifteen years of age or older, and one woman fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned one male slave fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 10; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 109-111; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 93; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
430 | Victor | Richard | Married Marie Magdeleine Brasseur. | Magdeleine (born May 10, 1778), Marguerite (baptized May 23, 1780, at the age of five weeks) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas District as a resident of the post's Acadian settlement. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor. The census also indicates that he owned thirty cows, six horses or mules, and ten pigs. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Gave a deposition in the Opelousas district regarding Joseph (probably Joseph Bourg's) succession, November 23, 1781. Purchased a slave in the Opelousas district from Joseph Frédéric, August 16, 1783. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included four males of unspecified ages, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned three slaves. They also owned 150 cows, 29 horses, and a tract o land with 16 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including two boys under the age of fifteen years, one girl under the age of fifteen years, two males fifteen years of age or older, and two females fifteen years of age or older. Richard and his family owned one slave boy under the age of fifteen years, two slave men fifteen years of age or older, and two slave women fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that Richard's household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 11, 19; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 657-667; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
431 | Joseph | Granger | 01/01/1748 | St. Charles Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Euphrosine Gauterot (one source indicates Terriot) | Pierre Granger (Grangé) | Married (1) Anne Geneviève Babin, daughter of René Babin and Magdeleine Bourg, April 11, 1768. Married (2) Anne Dugas, native of Sts. Pierre and Paul Parish, Acadia, and the daughter of Pierre Dugas and Marguerite Daigle, at the Attakapas church, January 16, 1791. Anne Dugas was the widow of Charles Hébert. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in April 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Geneviève Babin, his twenty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned eight hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that a twenty-four-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Geneviève Babin, his twenty-three-year-old wife. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. Signed a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. (He was one of only three Acadian petitioners capable of signing his name.) On November 3, 1776, Joseph Granger and Geneviève Babin sold to Firmin Landry a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. Standing on the property was a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by thirteen feet. On June 8, 1777, he was listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia. Sold a parcel of land in the Opelousas district to Jean Baptiste Granger, May 15, 1782. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 361; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 13; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10, 46. | 1.765 | 27/12/1798 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||
432 | Jean Baptiste (sometimes Baptiste) | Granger (Grangé) | Acadia | Euphrosine Gauterot (occasionally mistakenly identified as Thibodeau) | Pierre Granger | Married Susanne Cormier, a native of Acadia and the daughter of Joseph Cormier and Marguerite Saulnier, at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. | Pierre (married October 19, 1808) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas district, January 10, 1779. Purchased a parcel of land in the Opelousas district from Joseph Granger, May 15, 1782. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included four males, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned 70 cows and 14 horses. They occupied a tract of land with 10 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included four boys under the age of fifteen years, three girls under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and two females fifteen years of age or older. The members of his household owned no slaves. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 211, 360-361; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 13; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
433 | Joseph | LeJeune (Le Jeune) | père | 01/01/1756 | Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Baptiste LeJeune, père | Married (1) Perrine "Patsy" Hay, daughter of Gilbert Hay and Eugénie "Jane" Jackson, ca. 1781. Patsy Hay was born ca. 1766. Married (2) Marie Ritter in a civil ceremony on May 21, 1822. The second marriage was validated in a religious ceremony at St. Charles Borromeo Catholic Church, Grand Coteau, La., October 11, 1843. | First marriage: Marie Josèphe "Josette" (baptized June 29, 1783, at the age of three months), Joseph, fils (born August 29, 1784), Jean Baptiste (born march 26, 1786), Marguerite (born May 1, 1788), Suzanne (Susanne) "Susette" (born September 17, 1789), Pierre (Peter) (born January 20, 1791), Gilbert (Hubert) (born March 22, 1783), Jacques (James) (baptized June 22, 1796), Eugénie "Jane" (baptized June 15, 1798), Louise (Eliza, Lise) (baptized October 9, 1803, at the age of three months), Caroline (born May 13, 1805) | He and his sister Nanette (probably Anne) are identified as orphans at Port Tobacco, Maryland, in a list of Acadians dated 1763. He was among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Upon his arrival at the Natchitoches post on October 24, 1769, he was identified as an orphan living with the family of Honoré Trahan (his uncle) and Marie Corporon. He and his siblings subsequently established themselves at the Iberville District, where they resided until around 1774. Subsequently moved with his family to the Opelousas District. He appears as a fourteen-year-old in the 1777 census of the Opelousas District. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. His name is rendered as Joseph Le Jeune in the 1779 list. Purchased a parcel of land in the Opelousas district from Blaise LeJeune, July 23, 1783. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. A deposition by John Hay indicates that Joseph LeJeune resided on a disputed tract of land in the Opelousas district from 1786 to 1789. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including four males under the age of fifteen years, three females under the age of fifteen years, two males fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned one slave boy under the age of fifteen years and one slave girl under the age of fifteen years. In 1800, he and his family reportedly owned 1,040 acrres of land in the Fakaitaic Prairie (near present-day Eunice, La.) and seven slaves. In 1810, he and his wife owned ten slaves. Joseph LeJeune and his children Anglicized their surname, identifying themselves as members of the Young family in the 1810 census of Louisiana. They and their descendants have continued to identify themselves as Youngs to the present. (Joseph LeJeune did, however, identify himself by his birth name when his second marriage was validated by the Catholic church in 1843.) On September 20, 1821, Joseph Young and Patsy Hay partitioned their property among their ten surviving children. At that time, their estate included fifteen slaves. Joseph Young and his second wife were living near bayou Plaquemine at the time of his death. | His burial record indicates that he was 110 years old at the time of his death. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 84-85; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 19, 50; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Young, The Lejeunes of Acadia and the Youngs of Southwest Louisiana, 58, 76-95. | 1.769 | 14/10/1847 | NULL | ||||||||||||
434 | Charles | Comeau | Married Anastasie Savoie. | Auguste (married February 18, 1797) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified woman. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas District, April 9, 1771. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Charles Comeau, his wife, and four unidentified children. The family owned fifty cows, eight horses or mules, and twenty pigs. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. He was the defendant in a civil suit brought by Pierre Richard in the Opelousas District, December 29, 1783. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included two boys, one young man, one older man, one woman, and two girls. He and his family owned six slaves. They also owned 643 cows, fifteen horses, and a tract of land with fifty arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included one boy aged one to fifteen years, two men aged fifteen years or older, and one woman aged fifteen years or older. He and his family owned one slave boy aged one to fifteen years, to slave girls aged one to fifteen years, four slave men aged fifteen years or older, and three slave women aged fifteen years or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. He was able to sign his name on his son Auguste's marriage contract, February 18, 1797. | Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 21; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 42; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
435 | Pierre | Richard | Acadia | Marie Thibodeau | Leandre Richard | Married (1) Marguerite Dugas. Signed a marriage contract with Isabelle Aucoin at the Opelousas District, August 19, 1797. Married (2) Isabelle Aucoin, the widow of Jean Baptiste LeBlanc and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Aucoin and Anne Trahan, at the Opelousas church, August 22, 1797. | First marriage: Fabien (married January 10, 1779), François (baptized May 30, 1779), Marguerite (married March 30, 1784), Pierre (married May 8, 1787) | Possibly a prisoner of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas post as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified woman and one unidentified boy. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Pierre Richard, his wife, and five unidentified children. The family owned fity cows, nine horse or mules, and twenty pigs. Filed suit against Charles Comeau in the Opelousas district, December 29, 1783. Filed suit against Samuel Wells in the Opelousas district, September 16, 1788. Sued by Samuel Wells in the Opelousas district, October 28, 1788. In his marriage contract of August 19, 1797, Pierre Richard indicates that he owned two arpents of land in the Bellevue region of the Opelousas District. This tract of land was bounded above by that of Victor Richard and below by that of his children. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included four males and one woman. He and his family owned three slaves. They also owned 140 cows, 10 horses, and a tract of land with 36 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included four males fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned two male slaves under the age of fifteen years, two female slaves under the age of fifteen years, one male slave fifteen years of age or older, and one female slave fifteen years of age or older. In 1796, Pierre Richard and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 21, 44, 49; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 657-667; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
436 | Marie Magdelaine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Assumption Parish | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Signed a marriage contract with Jean Guédry in the Opelousas district, June 14, 1785. Married Jean Guédry at the Attakapas church, June 15, 1785. Father Geffrotin performed the marriage ceremony. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 256; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 115. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
437 | François | Pitre | Acadia | Agathe Doucet | Pierre Pitre | Married Marie Josèphe Thibodeau, daughter of Pierre Thibodeau and Françoise Saulnier (Sonnier). | Anastasie (born January 22, 1777), Charles (baptized July 29, 1781, at the age of 4 months), an unidentified child (buried on August 2, 1785), Eufrosine (baptized June 20, 1784, at the age of 4 months; died June 23, 1787), François (married November 23, 1795), Joseph (baptized September 11, 1791), Louis (born August 10, 1786), Marie Josèphe (married August 25, 1788), Paul (baptized May 26, 1779, at the age of 9 months), Pierre (married April 7, 1790), Silesie (Selesie) (born October 27, 1788) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. | The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: François Pitre, his wife, and three unidentified children. The family owned twenty-five cows, six horses or mules, and twelve hogs. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Named as an arbitor in the Meullion v. Escoffie civil suit, Opelousas district, September 25, 1785. Signed the marriage contract of Joseph Francoeur and Anne Marie Thibaudot (Thibodeaux) at the Opelousas post, November 5, 1786. Delivered a deposition against Cécile, a free woman of color, in the Opelousas district, December 29, 1788. Filed another civil suit against Cecile, free woman of color, December 29, 1789. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included five unidentified males and one female. He and his family owned three slaves. They also owned 130 cows and 35 horses; they occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Plaisance area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included two boys under the age of fifteen years, one girl under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned two male slaves fifteen years of age or older and two female slaves fifteen years of age or older. In May 1796, François Pitre and his family resided in the Grand Louis area of the Opelousas District. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 27, 49, [55]; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 24; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 2A, p. 752; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2566; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | Identified in his granddaughter Emilie's baptismal record (September 24, 1813) as a native of Acadia. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
438 | Jean | Guédry (Guidry) | Maryland | Agnès Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Magdeleine Breau at the Opelousas district, June 14, 1785. Married Marie Magdeleine Breau at the Attakapas church, June 15, 1785. Father Geffrotin performed the marriage ceremony. | On June 14, 1785, he rought to his marriage contract the following property: seventeen beef cattle valued at 170 piastres and 90 piastres. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 25; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 115; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 19. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
439 | Osite (sometimes Dorothée, Rose Osite) | Landry | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Married Joseph Castille, who was born ca. 1734, at Mah¢n, Menorca. Landry evidently married Castille while she was exiled to Maryland. | Pierre (born 1753), Joseph (born 1763), Marguerite (born 1755), Marie Marthe (born 1761), Marie Madeleine (born September 27, 1768), Jean Baptiste (married July 11, 1797), Manuel (married May 11 or 12, 1800) | In 1763, she was at Upper Marlboro, Maryland, where her son Joseph and her daughter Marie Marthe were born. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that her household included her husband, Joseph Castille, and the following children: Pierre, Joseph, Marguerite, and Marie (Marie Marthe). She is mistakenly identified as Rose in the 1767 census of St. Gabriel. Witnessed her son Jean Baptiste's marriage contract at the Opelousas District, July 16, 1797. (She was illiterate in 1797.) Placed her mark on her son Manuel's marriage contract at the Opelousas District, May 11, 1800. | Her burial record maintains that she was about 80 years of age at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:150; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 170-175; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104-105; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 43, 55-56; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 138-139. | 1.767 | 16/10/1810 | at the residence of her son-in-law Auguste Bijot | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||||
440 | Jean Baptiste | Hébert | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. Purchased property in the Opelousas district from Anselme Thibodeau, December 29, 1780. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 40; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128. | Appears to have been a prisoner of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
441 | Pierre | Dugas (Dugat) | 01/01/1751 | Port Royal | Anne Robichaud | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Married Anne Thibodeau, daughter of Charles Thibodeau and Brigitte Breau, July 18, 1772. | Silesie (born October 26, 1774), Françoise (born ca. 1776), Pierre (born March 6, 1777), Céleste (baptized April 30, 1780), Anne (baptized January 21, 1785), Eloise (born January 6, 1786), Anne (born February 15, 1787), Alexandre (born ca. 1793), Élizabeth Aspasie (born August 1794), Anne Clémence (born October 15, 1796), Eugénie (born June 8, 1801), Marie (born ca. 1802) | Identifed in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement of the Attakapas district. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of Jean Dugas's household. Dugas participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. On September 14, 1774, Attakapas Commandant Alexandre DeClouet reported that Firmin Landry and Pierre Dugas (Dugat) had not yet contributed their taxes for the construction of the local church and rectory. DeClouet also indicated that Dugas (Dugat) had received a land grant two years earlier. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Pierre Dugas, his wife, and one child. He and his family owned fifteen cattle, three horses or mules, and eight pigs. Acquired serveral large tracts of land in the Attakapas District. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. On October 29, 1777, Pierre Dugas signed a contract in which he agreed to raise 188 cattle on shares for one Cavalier, Barthélemy Grevemberg, and François Grevemberg. Under the terms of the contract, Dugas received one-third of the herd'sincrease. Received a Spanish land grant in the Opelousas district, December 8(?), 1786. His estate was valued at approximately $21,000 at the time of his death. According to Lucien and Melba Martin, his estate included 21 slaves, 1510 cattle, 47 horses, 11 teams of oxen, 3,200 pounds of cotton, 412 barrels of corn, and 1300 bundles of fodder. His property holdings also included "300 fence posts, the dwelling house, three barns, a kitchen with oven, and a lightning rod," as well as farming tools and implements. On October 20, 1789, he joined with eight other Attakapas District ranchers in signing a contract to supply New Orleans with beef for one year. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Thibodeau, 42 years old; Pierre Dugas (Dugat), fils, 11 years old; Alexdre Dugas (Dugat), 9 years old; Héloïse Dugas (Dugat), 16 years old; Eugénie Dugas (Dugat), 14 years old; Aspasie Dugas (Dugat), 13 years old; Clémence Dugas (Dugat), 7 years old; Cléonide Dugas (Dugat), 4 years old. Pierre Dugas (Dugat) and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-six arpents frontage. They owned 800 semi-wild beef cattle and forty tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Daniel, 36 years old; Henriette, 35 years old; Marianne, 13 years old; Isabelle, 9 years old; François, 15 years old; Byby, 8 years old; and Marguerite, 1 year old. | T9S, R5E, sec. 111 | Died at 3:30 p.m., July 11, 1826. Estate sales were held in July 1826 and September 1826. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 43; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 88-89; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 142-143; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Alexandre DeClouet to Luís de Unzaga September 14, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:102; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Contract, October 29, 1777, Original Acts, Volume 1, non-paginated, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Memorial by Jean Delavillebeuvre, October 20, 1789, AGI, PPC, 212A:371; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie, Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | 11/07/1826 | 12/07/1826 | St. John the Evangelist Church Cemetery, Lafayette, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
442 | Marie Froisine | Vincent | Married (1) Michel Trahan. Married (2) Basile Landry at the Attakapas church, May 23, 1786. | Sold a parcel of land in the Opelousas district to one Gonsoulin, October 22, 1787. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 45; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 472-473. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
443 | Athanase (Antanase, Antanasse) | Trahan (Trahant) | 01/01/1753 | Euphrosine Vincent | Michel Trahan | Married Magdeleine (Madeleine) Thibodeau, daughter of Joseph Thibodeau and Anne Hébert. | Athanase (born January 25, 1787), Julien (born May 22, 1789), Marie Magdaleine (born June 24, 1778), Michel (born March 20, 1785), Pierre (born July 25, 1783), Victoire (born December 22, 1793) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Antanase Trahan in the June 20, 1774, list. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Antanasse Trahant in the May 10, 1777 list. He sold a parcel of land in the Opelousas district to one Gonsoulin, October 22, 1787. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Magdeleine (Madalaine) Thibodeau (Thibodeaux), 59 years old; Madeline Thibodeaux, 24 years old; Joseph Trahan, 28 years old; and Pierre Trahan, 20 years old; Michel Trahan, 18 years old; Athanase Trahan, 16 years old; Julien Trahan, 14 years old; Anne Trahan, 12 years old; and Victoire Trahan, 10 years old. He and his family occupied property with twenty-nine arpents frontage. They owned 380 semi-wild beef cattle and 52 tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 46; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 762-777; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
444 | Mme Jean | Savoie (Savoy) | Married Jean Savoie. | Filed suit against Guillaume Despau in the Opelousas district, February 16, 1788. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 47. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
445 | Pierre | Savoie (Savoy) | St. Anne Parish, Acadia | Married Louise Bourg, daughter of Charles Bourg and Anne Boudrot, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., July 11, 1772. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas post as a resident of the Acadian settlement. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of Pierre Savoie and his wife. The couple owned thirty cattle, six horses or mules, and fifteen pigs. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. | His succession was opened in the Opelousas post on May 10, 1788. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 47; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:124. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
446 | Pierre | Terriot (Theriot) | Received a land grant from Governor Estevan Mir¢. Submitted a petition to relocate to the Opelousas district, July 24, 1788. Sold his land grant to Maurice Blanchard and Augustin Bruneau, November 22, 1800. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 48; Sketch of Several Tracts of Land Surveyed by "Andry," in T12S, R4E, South Eastern District, East of the River, Claims Section, State Land Office Records, Baton Rouge, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
447 | Gabriel | Martin | Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three males, one woman, and one girl. He and his family owned four slaves. They also owned five cows and four horses. They evidently did not own any real estate. Sold a parcel of property in the Opelousas district to Paul Leger, September 6, 1788. | Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 48; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
448 | Paul | Léger | 01/01/1758 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old day laborer living with Paul Martin. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. He served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. He appears to have been the Leger identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he wasa bachelor living alone. He owned three cows and sixteen horses. He occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. Purchased a parcel of land in the Opelousas district from Gabriel Martin, September 6, 1788. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, his household included four girls under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. The 1796 census indicates that his household was located in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 48; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
449 | Louis | Broussard (Brossard) | The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included himself and his wife. They owned no livestock at the time of the census. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. Extant records indicate that he was indebted to the Opelousas district court, January 12, 1789. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included three boys aged one to fifteen years, four girls aged one to fifteen years, two men aged fifteen years or older, and two women aged fifteen years or older. He and his family owned no slaves. The 1796 census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Prairie region of the Opelousas District. | General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 50; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
450 | Anne Marie | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Françoise Saulnier | Pierre Thibodeau | Married (1) Lange Bourg, who died June 28, 1788. Married (2) Basile Chiasson, July 20, 1789. Signed a marriage contract with Basile Chiasson, July 21, 1789. Married Basile Chaison (Chiasson) at the Opelousas church, July 21, 1789. | First marriage: Eloi | The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that she was the head of a household that included one woman and one girl. She owned one slave. She also owned 166 cows, 26 horses, and a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. The census indicates that she and her family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. She is identified as Veuve Langebourg in the 1788 census. Her marriage contract with Basile Chaison (Chiasson), dated July 20, 1789, inidcates that she brought to the union the large sum of 1,454 piastres, constituting half the value of her husband's estate, as determined by the appraisal of August 2, 1788. (The remaining half was inherited by her minor child Eloi.) The marriage contract also indicates that she was illiterate. | General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 52; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 179, 745; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 33. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
451 | Joseph | Hébert | dit Pépin | 01/01/1748 | Jeanne (Anne) Savoie | Belloni Hébert | Married Magdeleine Trahan, daughter of Jean Trahan and Marguerite Broussard, at the Attakapas church, April 25, 1771. | Joseph (born March 25, 1772), Adélaïde (born May 2, 1774), Agricole (born October 8, 1776), Célestin (baptized May 9, 1779), Marie Magdalene (born January 1, 1782), François (born April 27, 1784), Julie (born November 6, 1786), Louis (born May 10,1789) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. The census also indicates that he was living alone. The 1771 census of the Attakapas district indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old resident of Jean Baptiste Hébert's household. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and two children. The family owned sixteen cows, five horses or mules, and twenty pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. In 1791, Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard), elders of the Acadian community, were interrogated regarding the performance of the commandant and church warden in the performance of their duties with regard to repairs to the local church. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included sixteen-year-old Louis Hébert. He and his family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He owned 120 semi-wild beef cattle and 14 tame cattle. He also owned the following slaves: marie, 40 years old; Jn. François, 16 years old; and Joseph, 14 years old. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Voorhies, comp., Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 403-419; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188c:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Proceedings of the interrogation of Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard) Regarding Repairs to the Attakapas Church, (1791), AGI, PPC, 204:220-239; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-9. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
452 | Anne | Arosteguy | Beauséjour, Acadia | Marie Robichaud | Pierre Arosteguy | Married Bernard Capdevielle at St. Louis Catholic Church (now cathedral), New Orleans, February 25, 1766. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:6. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
453 | Mathilde | Dugas | 03/06/1765 | New Orleans, Louisiana | Cécile Dugas | Joseph Bergeron | Baptismal sponsors: Andrés Antonio de Abreu, a Spanish officer, and Marie Joseph Gaucien. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:105. | Fri, Mar 8, 1765 | 11/03/1765 | New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
454 | Catherine | Ride (Ritte?) | Veuve Blanchard | La Pointe de Beauséjour, Acadia | Married (1) Guillaume Blanchard, who died at Cap Français, Saint-Domingue (present-day Haiti). Married (2) Pierre Bonnard (Bonvard?) at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, September 18, 1766. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:239. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
455 | Françoise Julienne | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | Louisiana | Anne Bergeron | Pierre Arceneau | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:5. | Fri, Apr 14, 1769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
456 | Marie Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1741 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia(?) | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Pierre Arseneau, June 25, 1758. | Louis (born ca. 1769), Pierre, Alexandre, François, Cyprien (born ca. 1762), Rosalie (born ca. 1764), Marie Jeanne, Françoise Julienne (born November 15, 1768) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish, La.) as the twenty-six-year-old wife of Pierre Arseneau. Her household included her husband, her two-year-old daughter Rosalie, her mother, her sister, her sister-in-law, and an orphan. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-eight-year-old wife of Pierre Arseneau. Her household included the following individuals: Pierre Arseneau, 37 years old; Rosalie, her daughter, 5 years old; Marie Jeanne, her daughter, 3 years old; Françoise, her daughter, 10 months old; Firmin Arseneau, an orphan, 15 months old; and Charles Bergeron, an orphan, 11 months old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine cattle, three horses, twelve pigs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Arseneau. In addition to her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included Louis Arseneau, her son, 7 years old; Pierre Arseneau, her son, 5 years old; Rosalie Arseneau, her daughter, 13 years old; Marie Arseneau, her daughter, 10 years old; Françoise Arseneau, her daughter, 4 years old; and Charles Arseneau, an orphan, 19 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eight slaves, forty cows, and ten horses. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 19; Arsenault, Histoire et Généalogie, 6:2402; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:5; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:40; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron and Marguerite Dugas." | 1.765 | 16/03/1804 | Attakapas District | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | Attakapas Church | NULL | |||||||||||
457 | Marie Françoise | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 11/01/1766 | Louisiana | Marie Bergeron | Joseph Orillon | Baptized at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans. Pierre Nicolas Percheron, a New Orleans merchant, and Marie Françoise Paget were the baptismal sponsors. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:5. | Mon, May 4, 1767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
458 | Marie | Bergeron | Married Joseph Orillion. | Marie Françoise (born November 1, 1766) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:5. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
459 | Joseph | Orillon | 01/01/1741 | 1 | Married Marie Bergeron. | Marie Françoise (born November 1, 1766) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor living alone. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:5; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
460 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Richard | 01/01/1720 | Married (1) Catherine Cormier. Married (2) Anne Martin, widow of Joseph Forest, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, July 23, 1778. The marriage was witnessed by Joseph Bourg and Jean Léger. | Rosalie (born 1756), Jean, Joseph (baptized February 26, 1764) | Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Catherine Cormier, his fifty-six-year-old wife, and Rosalie Richard, his daughter, twenty-one-years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty-two cows, and three horses. On October 29, 1784, he joined with four other Acadian leaders in denouncing the tyranny of the local curé. | Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:622; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Jean Doucet, Jean Richard, Pierre Arseneau, Philippe La Chaussée, and Joseph Bourgeois to Governor Estevan Mir¢, October 29, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:271-272. | 1.764 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
461 | Anne | Préjean | Married Blaise Brasseur. | Alexandre (born February 22, 1788), Blaise, fils (baptized May 19, 1793), Caliste (baptized July 25, 1795), Céleste (baptized July 25, 1795), Elise (born January 1, 1792), Hélène (baptized August 13, 1780), Marguerite (born May 2, 1785), Marie Magdelaine (baptized September 15, 1782) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 109-111. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
462 | Angélique | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Nicolas Brasseur | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 109-110. | 26/09/1789 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
463 | François | Richard | Acadia | Marguerite Dugas | Pierre Richard | Married Hélène Brasseur at the Opelousas church, January 8, 1798. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
464 | Marie | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1723 | Ste. Famille Parish, Acadia | Anne Bellemer | Mathieu Brasseur | Married (1) Olivier Benoît. Signed a marriage contract with Claude Aucoin at the Opelousas post, November 20, 1788. Florentin Poiret and Claude Chabot witnessed the contract for the bride. Married (2) widower Claude Aucoin at the Opelousas church, November 20, 1788. The marriage was witnessed by Blaise Brasseur, Baptiste Figuron, Joseph Jeansonne, and Jean Jeansonne. | First marriage: Charles, Marie Rose, Madeleine | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | At the time of her second marriage, she brought to the union property valued at 213 piastres. This amount constituted half the value of the probate inventory of Olivier Benoît's estate. (The inventory was compiled on December 27, 1787.) The marriage contract also indicates that she was illiterate. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 49-50, 111; Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 84-85; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 29; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2415-2416. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
465 | Brigitte | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married to Charles Thibodeau, who pre-deceased her. | Anne (Nanette), Jean Anselme, Marie Louise | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 48 livres in Canadian card money and an additional 821.12 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux fon behalf of the Louisiana Acadians or possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) | Recapitulation of receipts provided by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 112. | 1.765 | 05/08/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
466 | Donat | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Married Anastasie Guilbeau, daughter of François Guilbeau and Magdelaine Broussard, at the Attakapas church, January 9, 1793. Anastasie Guilbeau was a native of the Attakapas district. Silvain Broussard, Théophile Broussard, and Isaac Broussard witnessed the marriage certificate. | Denise (born ca. October 15, 1797), Magdeleine Estelle (born July 1799), Marie (born October 1795) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 112, 114. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
467 | François | Breau (Braud, Braude, Breaux) | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Married Céleste Dugas, a native of Acadia and the daughter of Pierre Dugas and Nanette Thibodeau, at the Attakapas church, May 9, 1793. The marriage was witnessed by Joseph Dugas, Joseph Broussard, and Hubert Landry. Father George Murphy officiated at the marriage ceremony. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a sixteen-year-old bachelor. He lived one league from Commandant Nicolas Verret's residence in Cabannocé. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit; His name is rendered as François Braude in the 1785 list. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 113; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
468 | Isabelle | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Marguerite Breau | Firmin Breau | Married Louis Bonin at the Attakapas church, November 19, 1799. Paul Bonin, Firmin Breau, Joseph Bonin, and Theodore Thibodeau witnessed the wedding ceremony, performed by Father Michel Bernard Barrière. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 113. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
469 | Anastasie (sometimes Stassie) | Guénard | Anne Marie (Marie) Thibodeau | Timothé (Thimothée) Guénard | Signed a marriage contract with Amable Beaulieu dit Bertrand, son of Giles Beaulieu and Thérèse La Jeunesse, at the Opelousas district, February 9, 1766. Mlle Guenard was accompanied by Joseph Cormier, her first cousin who also witnessed the contract. | Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 1. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
470 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married Firmin Breau, a native of Acadia, April 3, 1769. | Adélaïde (born February 25, 1791), Agricole (born March 11, 1787), Donat (married January 7, 1793), Félicité (baptized May 5, 1776), François (married May 9, 1793), Isabelle (married November 19, 1799), Jean Baptiste (married August 19, 1800), Joseph (born February 25, 1787), Marguerite (born September 22, 1789), Marie Magdeleine (born ca. April 1770, married June 14, 1785), Modeste (born April 25, 1785), Pierre (married January 10, 1793), Scholastique (married November 19, 1799), unnamed son (born May 28, 1784) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Firmin Breau. Her household included her twenty-one-year-old husband and Marie Breau, her four-month-old daughter. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 111-117; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
471 | Firmin (Fermand, Pierre Firmin) | Breau (Braud, Braux, Breaux) | 01/01/1749 | Rivière aux Canards, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite Barillot | Alexis Breau | Married Marguerite Breau, a native of Pisiquid, Acadia, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Breau and Marie Rose Landry, April 3, 1769. | Adélaïde (born February 25, 1791), Agricole (born March 11, 1787), Donat (married January 7, 1793), Félicité (baptized May 5, 1776), François (married May 9, 1793), Isabelle (married November 19, 1799), Jean Baptiste (married August 19, 1800), Joseph (born February 25, 1787), Marguerite (born September 22, 1789), Marie Magdeleine (born ca. April 1770, married June 14, 1785), Modeste (born April 25, 1785), Pierre (married January 10, 1793), Scholastique (married November 19, 1799), unnamed son (born May 28, 1784)Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Firmin Breau had a son named Castel. Perhaps this was the son born on May 28, 1784. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that "after exile at Hingham, Massachusetts, he came to Louisiana before 25 April 1766." | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. He subsequently migrated to the Acadian Coast. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Breau, his wife, 23 years old; and Marie Breau, his daughter, 4 months old. Traveled to New Orleans to ask the governor's permission to sell their farms because the land was too low (flood-prone) to cultivate crops, ca. November 10, 1773. On January 13, 1774, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Amand Landry and Firmin Breau (Braud) had entered into an agreement to provide 3,000 pieux for shipment to New Orleans. They were to produce these nine-foot-long posts at a cost of of 3.5 piastres per hundred. Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that Landry and Breau had also requested permission to relocated in the Attakapas District. Firmin Breau traveled to New Orleans to carry his appeal to the governor, ca. January 13, 1774. Governor Luís de Unzaga ordered Louis Judice to determine the merits of his plea to relocate and to execute the governor's orders faithfully once they were issued. On March 21, 1774, Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that the arguments put forth by Amand Landry, Jean Jeansonne, and Firmin Breau (Braud) of Cabannocé for relocation at Attakapas or Opelousas were indeed valid, being based upon legitimate needs. Judice acknowledges that their relatives have offered to provide assistance of the aforementioned Acadians were allowed to settle alongside more established friends and relatives in the Attakapas and Opelousas districts. But Judice cautioned the governor that permitting the three Acadians to relocate would set a dangerous precedent, leading to a massive migration of Acadians to the prairie country. Unzaga subsequently overruled Judice and permitted the Acadians to relocate. On March 22, 1775, Louis Judice again submits to Governor Unzaga a petition from Firmin Breau, who wished to settle in the Attakapas country, where, "for a long time, he has had a herd of cattle." The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as firmin Braux in the May 10, 1777 list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Fermand Braud in the July 27, 1777, list. On October 20, 1789, he joined with eight other Attakapas District ranchers in signing a contract to supply New Orleans with beef for one year. | Firmin Breau died sometime before January 30, 1809. (Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he probably died in 1808.) On January 30, 1809, Breau's heirs acknowledged donations made by their father as the first step toward settling the estate. These donations included nine tracts of land. Breaux, however, had retained ownership of one farm on Bayou Teche, a cotton gin, and six slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 111-117; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, November 10, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:504; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 13, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:520; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Judice, March 15, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:539; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, March 21, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:540; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, March 22, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:268; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Memorial by Jean Delavillebeuvre, October 20, 1789, AGI, PPC, 212A:371; Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, pp. 22-23; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18, 19; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4.` | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
472 | Agnes | Broussard (Brossard) | Canada (Acadia) | Marie De Dur | Pierre Broussard | Married (1) (?) Potier. Signed a marriage contract with Pierre Vincent, January 2, 1788. Married (2) Pierre Vincent, a native of Rivière aux Canards, Nova Scotia, at the Attakapas church, January 3, 1788. Antoine Trousan and Joseph Duon witnessed the marriage certificate. | Died of a stroke. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 119. | 09/09/1788 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
473 | Pierre | Vincent | 01/01/1749 | Paroisse de St. J---, Rivière aux Canards | Marguerite (surname unknown) | Joseph Vincent | Signed a marriage contract with Agnès Broussard, a native of Canada, in the Attakapas district on January 2, 1788. Married (1) Agnès Broussard at the Attakapas church, January 3, 1788. Married (2) Catherine Galement (sometimes Galment), a native of the German Coast and the widow of Benedict Algros, at the Attakapas church, October 4, 1790. | Second marriage: Pierre, fils. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Catherine Galement (Gallmon), his spouse, 34 years old; Françoise Vincent, 16 years old; William Vincent, 15 years old; Joseph Vincent, 12 years old; Pierre Vinetn, 7 years old; and Rosalie Vincent, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage. They owned seventy semi-wild beef cattle and thirty tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 119; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
474 | Isabelle | Broussard (Brossard) | Acadia | Anne Bourgeois | Athanase Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Cosme LeBlanc in the Attakapas district, July 13, 1781. The contract was witnessed by Olivier Thibodeau, Claude Martin, Joseph Broussard, and Jean Baptiste Hébert. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 131, 498. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
475 | Marguerite | Martin | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Married Michel Doucet. | Jean, Joseph (married July 18, 1772), Michel, fils (married January 30, 1793), Pierre, Marie Marthe | Her succession is dated February 8, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 259-260, 545. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
476 | Simon | Girouard | dit La Prade | Marguerite Cormier | Firmin Girouard dit La Prade | Married Adélaïde Broussard at the Attakapas church, February 2, 1796. Louis Chemin, Vital Landry, Silvain Broussard, and Anaclet Broussard witnessed the marriage certificate. Father Michel Bernard Barrière officiated the marriage ceremony. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 118-119. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
477 | Jean Baptiste | Trahan | Purchased a slave from one Laviolette, July 18, 1780. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Became embroiled in a dispute with the Attakapas church wardens for failing to pay him the fifteen piastres that had been promised him for escorting Father Hilaire during his journeys to, and from, the Pointe Coupée district to the Attakapas district by way of Bayou Teche and the Atchafalaya River, May 12, 1790. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 120-121; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
478 | Angélique Julie | Broussard (Brossard) | Married Jacques Girouard, a native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (St. James Parish), at the Attakapas church, June 5, 1798. Jean Baptiste Broussard, Firmin Girouard, Guillaume Coxon, Simon Broussard, and Thomas Conar witnessed the marriage certificate. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 122. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
479 | Catherine | Broussard (Brossard) | Acadia | Rose Landry | Joseph Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Andrés Lopez de Acuna, a native of Punta Verde(?), Galicia, Spain, June 16, 1778. The contract was witnessed by Joseph Castille, Rose Landry, Antoine Rodrigue, Joseph Zonares, and Jean Baptiste Broussard. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 124. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
480 | Élizabeth | Broussard (Brossard) | Louise Hébert | Claude Broussard | Married Charles Duon, a native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (now St. James Parish) and the son of Charles Duon and Marie Josèphe Préjean, at the Attakapas church, February 11, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 128. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
481 | Charles | Duon (Duhon) | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana | Marie Josèphe Préjean | Charles Duon | Married Elizabeth Broussard, daughter of Claude Broussard and Louise Hébert, at the Attakapas church, February 11, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 128. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
482 | Marguerite | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Marguerite Melanson | Anselme Thibodeau | Married Eloy Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard and Marguerite Savoie, at the Attakapas church, July 22, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 128. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
483 | Magdelaine | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that there was another, unnamed woman in her household. | Voorhies, comp., Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
484 | Charles (Charle) | Guilbeau (Gilliebau, Guilbeaux, Guillebaut, Guilliebeau) | 01/01/1742 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Married (1) Anne Trahan. Signed a marriage contract with Marguerite Bourg, widow of Pierre Pitre and the daughter of Charles Bourg and Anne Boudrot. She was a native of Ile St-Jean. | First marriage: Ludivine (born 1770), Jean Charles (born December 15, 1771), Emilie (born December 20, 1773) Second marriage: Armand (born May 2, 1778), Marguerite | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas District. The census indicates that his household included one man, one woman, and one boy. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his unnamed wife. The couple owned eight cows, one horse, and fifteen hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. Signed with his mark an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. Bérard indicated that Guilbeau, whose name was rendered Guilliebeau in the list, had fifteen barrels of unhusked corn. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife and an unidentified one-year-old girl. His family owned fifteen cows and five horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Charles Gilliebau in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included three children. There is no mention of a wife. He and his family owned twenty-six cows, ten horses and mules, and thirty pigs. Listed in the May 10, 1777, muster roll of the Attakapas militia unit. His name is rendered as Charle Guillebaut in the May 10, 1777 list. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land arpents frontage. He does not appear to have resided in the Opelousas District. His property was evidently along Bayou Carencro. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 163-164; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | 11/04/1809 | 12/04/1809 | his residence at La Pointe, along Bayou Teche | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
485 | Baptiste | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
486 | Charles | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Agnès Dugas | Michel Thibodeau | Married Brigitte Breau, daughter of Pierre Breau and Anne LeBlanc, ca. 1719. | Anselme (born 1739), Marguerite (born 1740), Anastasie (born 1744), Anne (born 1751), Jean (born 1758), Marie Louise (born 1760) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the La Pointe settlement (near present-day Breaux Bridge) in the Attakapas district. The census lists one man, one woman, and one boy in the household. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 213; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | Pierre Thibodeau and Jeanne Terriot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
487 | Raymond | Richard | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. The census indicates that his household included one woman and one boy. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
488 | Joseph Grégoire | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1725 | Acadia | Marguerite Thibodeau | Alexandre Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married Ursule Trahan, daughter of René Trahan and Elizabeth Darois. | Joseph, fils (married June 3, 1776), Isabelle (born 1750) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. His household included one woman, one boy, and two girls. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
489 | Raymond | LeBlanc | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. His household included one girl. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
490 | Athanase (Athenais) | Broussard (Brossard) | Married Anne Bourgeois | Isabelle | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. His household included one woman, one boy, and two girls. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
491 | Isabelle | Broussard (Brossard) | Henriette Trahan | Théodore Broussard | Married Marin Mouton, June 3, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 131. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
492 | Jacques | Broussard (Brossard) | Manchac | Isabelle Charlet | Paul Broussard | Married Isabelle Miller, daughter of Jacob Miller and Anne Thegein, at the Opelousas church, July 7, 1791. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 132. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
493 | Élizabeth | Landry | St. Malo, France | Élizabeth Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married (1) Amand Landry. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Broussard at the Attakapas church, September 9, 1799. The marriage was witnessed by Jean Broussard, Donat LeBlanc, Simon Granger, Charles Dugas, and Simon Broussard. Father Michel Bernard Barrière officiated at the marriage ceremony. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 133. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
494 | Joseph | Broussard (Brossard) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 134. | 1.765 | 04/09/1765 | 05/09/1765 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
495 | Joseph | Broussard (Brossard) | Married Françoise Trahan at the Attakapas church, October 16, 1793. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 134. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
496 | Marguerite | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1736 | Acadia | Married Joseph Broussard. | Marguerite (born April 23, 1765), Edouard (born 1768), Louise Ludivine, Anastasie (Born 1776), Josaphat (born March 26, 1772), Magdeleine, Joseph (born March 15, 1774), François Alexandre (born March 20, 1777), Eloy Edouard dit Petit Joseph | Identified in her daughter Marguerite's baptismal record as an Acadian "from Attakapas." This indicates that she and her family accompanied Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to the Attakapas District ca. April 1765. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a thirty-five-year-old member of Joseph Broussard's household. The household also included René LeBlanc, Nanette Thibodeau, Louis Levron dit Luci, and three unidentified girls aged 5, 3, and 2 years. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 134; Conover, Broussard, 8-9; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | 20/10/1816 | St. Martin de Tours Church, St. Martinville | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
497 | Louis | Broussard (Brossard) | Lafourche district, Louisiana | Anne Landry | Augustin Broussard | Married Elizabeth Savoie, a native of St. James Parish and the daughter of Charles Savoie and Julie Arseneau, at the Attakapas church, May 20, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 139. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
498 | Louise Ludivine | Broussard (Brossard) | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Marguerite Savoie | Joseph Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Jean Broussard, July 20, 1785. Married Jean Broussard, son of Jean Baptiste Broussard and Marianne Trahan, at the Attakapas church, July 28, 1784. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 139. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
499 | Ludivine | Broussard (Brossard) | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Marie Melanson | Pierre Broussard | Signed a marriage contract with Marcel Patin, August 28, 1800. Married Marcel Patin, son of Antoine Patin and Catherine Bossier, at the Attakapas church, September 1, 1800. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 139-140. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
500 | Magdelaine | Broussard (Brossard) | Anne Landry | Augustin Broussard | Married Pierre Dugas. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 140. | 30/10/1792 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
501 | Magdelaine | Broussard (Brossard) | Anne LeBlanc | Jean Broussard | Married François Guilbeau, son of Joseph Guilbeau and Magdelaine Michel, at the Attakapas church, July 18, 1772. Jean Berard, Augustin Grevemberg, Françoise Grevemberg, Durieu, and Joseph Landry witnessed the marriage certificate. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 140-141. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
502 | Marguerite | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1768 | Attakapas district, Louisiana | Marguerite Savoie | Joseph Broussard | Signed a married contract with Jean Baptiste Bernard, son of Michel Bernard and Marie Guilbeau. Married Jean Baptiste Bernard at the Attakapas church, June 25, 1782. | Jean (born 1783), Marie (born 1787), François (born 1793), Marie Adélaïde (born 1796), Marie Barbe (born 1798), Eloi (born 1800), Marguerite (born 1802), Louis Arvillien (born 1805), Marcelline (born 1807), Marie Tharsile (1808) | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Bernard. In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Bernard, fils, 20 years old; Me Laprade, 15 years old; Joseph Bernard, 15 years old; François Bernard, 13 years old; Ursain (Ursin) Bernard, 11 years old; Eloy Bernard, 8 years old; Adélaïde Bernard, 1 year old; and Louis Bernard, 2 years old. Marguerite Broussard and her family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned 250 cattle and 1 slave. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 141; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
503 | Jean Baptiste | Broussard (Brossard) | dit Petit | 01/01/1773 | Nantes, France | Jean Broussard | Married Céleste Hébert, a native of the Attakapas district. | Marie Adélaïde (born October 14, 1797) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 142; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 2:146. | 1.785 | 01/04/1823 | Lafayette Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||
504 | Marie Françoise | Trahan | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Marguerite Duon | Pierre Trahan | Married Joseph Broussard of the Attakapas district, Louisiana. | Marie Denise (born December 31, 1797) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 142. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
505 | Michel | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1769 | Attakapas District, Louisiana | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Broussard | Married Anastasie Broussard, daughter of Joseph Broussard and Marguerite Savoie, at the Attakapas church, July 11, 1789. | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a newborn child in his father's household. The household also included his father, his unnamed mother, and the following persons: Jean Broussard, his brother; Joseph Hébert; Mathurin Broussard; Théodore Broussard; and Magdeleine Thibodeau. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On March 3, 1795, Basile Préjean filed a formal complaint with Commandant Louis Judice about Michel Brousssard. According to the the complainant, Broussard, an Attakapas District resident, had borrowed Préjean's pirogue on July 8, 1794, for a trip to New Orleans. Préjean had subsequently seen Broussard pass his house on numerous occasions, but Broussard had never stopped to return the vessel. Préjean asked that Judice contact the Attakapas District commandant about the matter. Judice addressed a letter to the Attakapas commandant on Préjean's behalf on March 3, 1795. Around February 11, 1796, Basile Préjean filed a complaint with Commandant Louis Judice, noting that Michel Brousssard had "grievously insulted him," evidently by calling him a "coquin" (a rascal, rogue, or scoundrel). On February 11, 1796, Louis Judice wrote a letter to the governor at Préjean's request, indicating that Préjean would be traveling to New Orleans to appear personally before the governor's tribunal in a quest for satisfaction. Judice noted that, throughout the thirty years in which Préjean had lived in his jurisdiction, the Acadian "had always conducted himself as an honest man." An official inquiry subsequently ordered by the governor determined that Préjean had filed false charges against Broussard. The governor ordered Broussard to pay a fine of thirty piastres on April 12, 1796. The fine was to be paid to Broussard. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 144; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Petition from Basile Préjean to Louis Judice, March 3, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264; Louis Judice to the Attakapas District commandant, March 3, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264; Basile Préjean v. Michel Broussard, October 8, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264vo; Governor to Louis Judice, April 12, 1796, AGI, PPC, 212A:446-447. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
506 | Michel | Broussard (Brossard) | Attakapas District, Louisiana | Anne Brun | Jean Baptiste Broussard | Jean Berard recalled on November 20, 1788, that Michel Broussard had been baptized sometime in 1768 by Father Valentin, then serving as pastor at the Pointe Coupée church and Catholic missionary to the Attakapas district, which was then without a resident priest. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 144. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
507 | Anne Adélaïde | Chaison (Chiasson) | 01/01/1774 | Châtellereault, Poitou Province, France | Monique Commeau (Comeau) | Basile Chaison (Chiasson) | Married Pierre Cyrille Thibodeau, son of Pierre Thibodeau and Françoise Saulnier, at the Opelousas church, June 15, 1790. | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 178-179; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
508 | Basille (Basile) | Chaison (Chiasson) | 01/01/1749 | Parish of Beauséjour, Acadia | Catherine Bourgeois | Pierre Chiasson | Married (1) Monique Commeau (Comeau). Signed a marriage contract with Anne Marie Thibodeau, widow of Lange Bourg, at the Opelousas post, July 21, 1789. Married (2) Anne Marie Thibodeau at the Opelousas church, July 21, 1789. | First marriage: Adélaïde (born 1774), Charles (born 1782), Louis (born ca. 1785; evidently died before July 20, 1789). Second marriage: Basile (baptized October 29, 1804), Céleste (baptized October 29, 1804), Julie (born September 5, 1793), Louis (baptized October 25, 1796), Marie Eugénie (born June 16, 1789), Pierre (born September 13, 1792) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence the death of infant Louis Joseph on September 17, 1785 suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | His marriage contract with Anne Marie Thibodeau, dated July 20, 1789, indicates that he brought to the union 545 piastres, constituting half the appraised value of his first wife's estate. Basile Chaison (Chiasson) was able to sign the contract. He appears to be the Basile Chaison (Chiasson) listed in the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District as the head of a household including three boys under the age of fifteen years, two girls under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. he and his family owned two slave boys under the age of fifteen years, one slave girl under the sge of fifteen years, one male slave fifteen years of age or older, and one female slave fifteen years of age or older. Basile Chaison's (Chiasson's) household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 179; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 33; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.785 | cooper | NULL | ||||||||||||||
509 | Eloise | Chiasson | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 179. | 21/05/1792 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
510 | Jean Baptiste (sometimes Baptiste) | Chiasson (Chiassan) | Nanette (probably Anne) Saulnier | Joseph Chiasson | Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included one man and one woman. His family owned forty cows and nine horses. They occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. His name is rendered as Bte Chiassan in the 1788 census. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, his household included one male under the age of fifteen and one girl under the age of fifteen. The household also included one male and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 179-180; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
511 | François | Broussard (Brossard) | Identified in the census of April 25, 1766, as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard) in the Attakapas district. The census lists two François Broussards in the Bayou Tortue settlement and indicates that one of them was a "gardener." Without additional information, it is impossible to provide positive identification of this individual. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
512 | Charles | Dugas (Dugat) | 01/01/1736 | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a settler of the Bayou Tortue settlement of the Attakapas district. His household included one unidentified woman. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Charles Dugas was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, who was not named in the census; and Pierre Dugas, his brother, 20 years old. Charles Dugas and his family owned fourteen cows, five horses, and four hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a memorandum to Louisiana's governor by the Attakapas Acadians detailing the tyrannical activities of local commandant Louis Pellerin. Charles Dugas signed with his mark an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having twenty barrels of unhusked corn for sale. The 1771 census of the Attakapas district indicates that his household included his thirty-five-year-old wife, and a one-year-old son. He and his family owned twenty-five cows and six horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Dugas participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife and two children. He and his family owned forty cows, fourteen horses or mules, and fifteen pigs. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the sixty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite Dugas (Dugat), 20 years old. Charles Dugas (Dugat) and his family occupied a atract of land with nine arpents frontage. They owned seventy semi-wild beef cattle and ten tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 268-279; Memorandum to Ulloa from the Attakapas Acadians, August 28, 1767, AGI, PPC, 198A:170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
513 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Married Joseph Chrétien, a native of Trois Rivières, Canada. | Benjamin (born August 15, 1783), Céleste (born married November 22, 1788), François (born September 15, 1790), Gérard (born April 30, 1785), Hypolite (born May 30, 1781), Joseph (died December 25, 1788), Louis (born August 15, 1783), Magdelaine (baptized November 1, 1779), Pierre (baptized November 1, 1779) | Identified as a resident of the Opelousas district in the April 25, 1766, census. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 183-185, 721; Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595.. | 1.765 | 18/04/1800 | Opelousas district, Louisiana | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
514 | Charles | Pellerin | Married Isabelle Thibodeau. | Marie (baptized January 11, 1766) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only two full rations. He is listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one woman and one girl. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 615. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
515 | Bonaventure | Martin | orphelin | 01/01/1753 | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas District (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). He is identified as an orphan in the census. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was an eightee-year-old resident of the household of Michel Doucet and Marguerite Martin. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Served as a baptismal sponsor for Apolonie Martin at the Attakapas church, May 5, 1776. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, p. 125; Census of the Attakapas District, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2585; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 544. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
516 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1739 | Married (1) Catherine Thibodeau. Married (2) Marguerite Guilbeau. | First marriage: Cosme (sometimes Come, Comme) (born ca. 1760; married July 13, 1781), Donat (Donna) (born ca. 1764), Marguerite (born ca. 1769), Marie Angélique (born January 1, 1765), Marie Louise (born January 30, 1762) Second marriage: Esther (married January 2, 1786), Frédéric (born February 3, 1771), Agricole (born November,1772), Marguerite (September 9, 1774), Joseph (born November 11, 1776), Pierre Simon (born June 29, 1778), Simon (baptized April 28, 1780, at the age of two months), Marie (born June 8, 1784), Silvestre (born February 13, 1782), François Joseph (born September 23, 1787), and Pierre (born June 29, 1778) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 48 livres in Canadian card money and 216 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). His household included one unidentified boy. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; Cosme (Come) LeBlanc, his son, 9 years old; Donat (Donna) LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old; and Marguerite LeBlanc, his newborn daughter. Simon LeBlanc and his family owned eleven cows, three horses, and twelve hogs. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. The Bérard list indicates that he had forty barrels of corn. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included himself, his twenty-five-year-old wife, an unidentified eleven-year-old boy, an unidentifieed seven-year-old boy, an unidentified one-year-old boy, and an unidentified eight-year-old girl. He and his family owned nineteen cattle and five horses. He participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. He appears to have been the Simon LeBlanc listed in the June 20, 1774, muster roll of the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included his wife and five children. The family owned thirty cows, eight horses and mules, and forty pigs. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage, but he evidently did not reside on the property. The said property was located in the Carencro area (i.e., along Bayou Carencro) of the Opelousas District. He received a land grant on the Attakapas district side of Bayou Carencro, ca. April 28, 1789. On June 18, 1791, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a memorandum signed by numerous Acadians indicating that, since his arrival in the Attakapas District, Commandant Jean Delavillebeuvre had done everything possible to induce the local settlers to repair the local church and its ancillary buildings. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:177; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246, 258; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 170-171; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 496-506; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 51; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Memorandum Regarding Jean Delavillebeuvre's Efforts to Renovate the Attakapas Church, June 18, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:166-167. | 1.765 | 24/12/1815 | 25/12/1815 | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church | NULL | |||||||||||||||
517 | Joseph | Martin | 01/01/1726 | Married Isabelle Thibodeau. | Esther (married January 28, 1789), Françoise Pélagie (born January 20, 1773) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the La Manque settlement of the Attakapas district (probably between present-day Parks and Breaux Bridge). A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his unnamed wife. He and his wife owned eleven cows, four horses, and six hogs. Joseph Martin signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, a one-year-old daughter, and a ten-year-old Negro slave. He owned twenty head of beef cattle and seven horses. Joseph Martin and his family occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph(?) Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Joseph Martin, his wife, two unidentified children, and one slave. Martin and his family owned sixty cattle, ten horses or mules, and fifty pigs. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 125; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 543-547; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2551; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
518 | Antoine | Comeau | Anastasie Savoie | Charles Comeau | Married Perpetué Broussard, daughter of Jean Baptiste Broussard and Anne Brun, at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1786. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 197. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
519 | Augustin | Comeau | Anaastasie Savoie | Charles Comeau | Married Céleste Saulnier, daughter of Silvain Saulnier and Magdelaine Bourg and the widow of E. Lavergne, at the Opelousas church, February 26, 1797. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 197. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
520 | Humile (sometimes Humilde) | Comeau | Anastasie Savoie | Charles Comeau | Married Silvain Saulnier, son of Silvain Saulnier and Magdelaine Bourg, at the Opelousas church, May 19, 1789. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 198. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
521 | Josette | Comeau | Anastasie Savoie | Charles Comeau | Married Silvestre Mouton, son of Jean Mouton and Isabelle Bastarache and a resident of the Attakapas district, at the Opelousas church, October 19, 1791. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 199. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
522 | Marie Louise | Comeau | Marie Giroir | Michel Comeau | Married Simon Bellard at the Opelousas church, August 7, 1790. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 200. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
523 | Marie Magdelaine | Comeau | Magdelaine Giroir | Michel Comeau | Signed a marriage contract with Pierre Doucet, a native of Miramichi, Acadia, at the Attakapas church, August 5, 1782. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 200. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
524 | Pierre | Doucet | 01/01/1756 | Miramichi, Acadia | Marguerite Martin | Michel Doucet | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Magdelaine Comeau, a native of the Opelousas post and the daughter of Michel Comeau and Marie Magdelaine Giroir, August 5, 1782. | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 200, 261; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
525 | Pierre | Comeau | Anastasie Savoie | Charles Comeau | Married Cécilia Langlois, daughter of Philippe Langlois and Marie Jeansonne, at the Opelousas church, October 17, 1791. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 200. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
526 | Amand | Cormier | Probably Anne Saulnier | Michel Cormier | Married Marie Angelle Benoit at the Opelousas church, October 5, 1790. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 204. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
527 | Anastasie | Cormier | Marguerite Bourg | Baptiste Cormier | Married Jean Mouton, son of Jean Mouton and Isabelle Bastarache, at the Attakapas church, June 10, 1788. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 204. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
528 | Anaclet | Cormier | 01/01/1766 | Anne Michel | Joseph Cormier | Married Magdelaine Richard, daughter of Victor Richard and Marie Brasseur, at the Opelousas church, July 25, 1793. | According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included one girl aged one to fifteen years, one man aged fifteen years or older, and two women aged fifteen years or older. He and his family owned one slave boy aged one to fifteen years, three slave men aged fifteen years or older, and three slave women aged fifteen years or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. His cumulative military service record is dated December 31, 1797. This document provides the following information: He was thirty-one years of age. He was a bachelor who enjoyed "robust" health. He had been appointed sergeant second-class on February 12, 1792, and he was promoted to the rank of sergeant first-class on December 1, 1796. He had not participated in any military campaigns during his military career. His superiors noted that he was "good for his rank; [he had] supposed valor; sufficient application [to duty] & capacity; [and] good conduct." | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 204; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 174. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
529 | Clemence | Cormier | Anne Michel | Joseph Cormier | Married Pierre Arseneau, son of Pierre Arseneau and Anne Bergeron, at the Opelousas church, April 24, 1792. | Evidently died of smallpox. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 205. | 17/11/1796 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
530 | Isabelle | Cormier | St. Jacques de Cabannocé (St. James Parish) | Marguerite Bourg | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Jean Baptiste Richard of the Pointe Coupée district at the Opelousas church, April 29, 1794. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 205. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
531 | Joseph | Cormier | Acadia | Cecile Thibodeau | Pierre C. Cormier | Married (1) Marguerite Saulnier. Married (2) Anne Michel, a native of Acadia and the widow of Victor Comeau of the Attakapas district, at the Attakapas church, April 25, 1771. Married (3) Marguerite Guilbeau. | First marriage: Suzanne (born ca. 1761, married January 10, 1779), Marie Louise (born ca. 1762), Félicité (born ca. 1765)Second marriage: Anaclet (born 1772), Clemence (born 1772; married April 24, 1792), Joseph (born 1774) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified woman and two unidentified girls. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas district, April 25, 1771. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Joseph Cormier, his wife, and seven unidentified children. The family owned seventy-eight cows, fifteen horses or mules, and fifteen pigs. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three young men, one older man, one woman, one young woman, and four girls. He and his family owned 697 cows, sixty horses, and a tract of land with thirty arpents frontage. They owned no slaves. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 205-211; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | He and his family were incarcerated as prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | 1.765 | 06/08/1795 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||
532 | Manon | Cormier | Marguerite Bourg | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Joseph Savoie, son of François Savoie and Marie Martin, at the Attakapas church, October 18, 1796. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
533 | Marie | Cormier | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 208. | 02/11/1800 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
534 | Susanne (Suzanne) | Cormier | 01/01/1760 | Acadia | Marguerite Saulnier | Joseph Cormier | Married Jean Baptiste Granger, a native of Acadia and the son of Pierre Granger and Euphrosine Gautreau, at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. | Pierre (married October 19, 1808) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 211; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46. | 27/11/1800 | Attakapas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
535 | Victoire | Cormier | Catherine Stelly | Michel Cormier | Married Augustin Roy, a native of the Illinois country and the son of Augustin Cormier and Dorothée DeGagnée, at the Opelousas church, October 7, 1794. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 211. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
536 | Pierre | Pitre | Probably Agathe Doucet | Probably François and Catherine | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified boy and one unidentified girl. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 628. | 1.765 | 31/12/1794 | Opelousas church | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
537 | Pierre | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Françoise Saulnier (Sonnier). | Adelaide, Anne Marie (married [2] July 20, 1789), Françoise (married January 10, 1779), Marie Josèphe, Pierre Cyrille (born August 29, 1776) | He and his family appear to have been imprisoned as prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified woman and two unidentified girls. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. With other Acadian settlers, he petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga to intervene with Jacques Courtableau's widow, who was challenging their land titles, June 3, 1773. The petitioners maintained that they had been settled on the "Coteaux de la Grande Prairie" by the late Jacques Courtableau. Governors Aubry and Ulloa had assured them that their titles were valid. If the Widow Courtableau was allowed to strip them of their lands, they would lose six years of hard work. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of the following persons: Pierre Thibodeau, his wife, and six unidentified children. He and his family owned fifty cows, four horses or mules, and forty pigs. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three males of unspecified ages, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned eighty cows, twenty-five horses, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. His name is rendered as Pr. Thibaudo in the 1788 census. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 743-759; Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Governor Luís de Unzaga, June 3, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:55; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | 23/07/1790 | Opelousas church | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
538 | Joseph | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saugnier, Saunier) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Census of the Opelousas District, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.765 | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
539 | Marie | Savoie (Savoy) | Veuve Léger | Port Royal, Acadia | Married (1) Paul Léger. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Missonère (Missionnère), a native of Paris, France, and the son of Jean Baptiste Missonère and Louis Marguerite Desmaillets, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 30, 1769. Benoist (Benoît), Emont, and Marcantel witnessed the marriage record. | Joseph, Scholastique | Identified in the 1766 census of Opelousas as a resident of the local Acadian settlement. Her household included one unidentified woman, one unidentified boy, and one unidentified girl. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:219; Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Census of Opelousas, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
540 | unnamed boy | Doucet | Marguerite Babin | Michel Doucet | Died of liver disease. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 258. | 01/01/1793 | Attakapas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
541 | Widow Marie | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the 1766 census as a resident of the Acadian community at the Opelousas district. Her household included one unidentified woman. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
542 | Charles Jean | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | According to genealogist Sidney A. Marchand, he married Marie Aucoin. | Jean (married April 28, 1770) | Identified in the 1766 census of the Opelousas district as a resident of the Acadian settlement. His household included one unidentified woman. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 128; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 94. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
543 | Marie Marguerite | Daigle (D'Aigle, Daigre) | 01/01/1759 | Falmouth, England | Marie Magdelaine Terriot | Simon Pierre Daigle | Married (1) Joseph Mire at the St. Gabriel Church, Iberville Parish, Louisiana, May 22, 1786. Married (2) Daniel Provenché, son of Daniel Provenché and Thérèse Lacroix and a native of Canada, at St. Gabriel, La., September 11, 1792. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 214; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:217, 609. | 1.785 | 26/10/1795 | St. Joseph Catholic Church Cemetery, Baton Rouge, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
544 | Simon Pierre | Daigle (Daigre) | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Magdelaine Terriot | Simon Pierre Daigle | Married Françoise Trahan, the widow of Jacques Fostin, at the Attakapas church, February 13, 1798. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 214. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
545 | Baptiste | David | Marie Kidder | Baptiste David | Married Scholastique Savoie, daughter of Pierre Savoie and Louise Bourg, at the Opelousas church, May 29, 1798. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 219. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
546 | Angélique | Richard | St. Jacques de Cabannocé (now St. James Parish) | Agnès Hébert dit Manuel | Joseph Richard | Married Joseph Derouen (De Rohan), a native of St. Michel Parish, Quebec, Canada, and the son of Jean Louis Derouen and Isabelle Latour, at Ascension Parish, La., April 22, 1792. The bride was a resident of the Attakapas District at the time of the marriage. Jean Baptiste Berkery and William Pitt Higbee witnessed the marriage record. | Anne (born August 23, 1798), Claire Eugenie (January 15, 1800), Henriette (born January 15, 1800), Louise (born July 26, 1796), Marie Carmelite (July 26, 1796) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 238-240; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:620. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
547 | Marie Solange | Préjean | Married Joseph Derouen. | Josèphe (born April 29, 1800) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 239. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
548 | Françoise | Pitre | Married Jean Joachim Desormeaux, a native of Saintonge province, France, at the Attakapas church, May 20, 1793. | Gerazime (Gerasime) (baptized November 10, 1795), Jean Joachim, fils (born ca. July 1798), Pierre (born ca. 1796), Placide (born September 3, 1799) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 245-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
549 | Marie Honorine (Hypolite) | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1768 | Notre Dame Parish, Le Havre, France | Marie Blanche Bernard | Jean Baptiste Douairon (Doiron) | Married François Begnaud, a native of the Diocese of Nantes, France, at the Attakapas church, February 13, 1786. Marie Honorine Doiron was a minor at the time of her wedding. (The age of majority was 25 in colonial Louisiana.) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as a sixty-five-year-old ow and the head of a household that included the following persons: François Begnaud (Becno), 22 years old; and Cyprien Begnaud (Becno), 19 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with 12 arpents frontage. They owned 200 cattle and 25 slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
550 | Marie Blanche | Bernard | 01/01/1748 | Married Jean Baptiste Douairon (Doiron). | Cyprien (born August 15, 1789), Jean Charles (born 1783), Louis Toussaint (born 1782; interred August 8, 1800), Marie (born August 23, 1786), Marie Honorine (born 1768; married February 13, 1786), Rose Lucie (born 1772, married May 23, 1789), Ursule (born 1779) | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
551 | Rose Lucie | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1772 | Marie Blanche Bernard | Jean Baptiste Douairon (Doiron) | Married Jean Melancon, son of Honoré Melanson and Marie Breau, at the Attakapas church, May 23, 1789. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
552 | Louis Toussaint | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1782 | Acadia | Marie Blanche Bernard | Jean Baptiste Douairon (Doiron) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified as a bachelor at the time of his death. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | 08/08/1800 | Attakapas district | Attakapas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||
553 | Anne | Doucet | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Agnès Brun | Paul Doucet | Married Jean Baptiste Huval, a native of New Orleans and the minor son of Jean Huval and Veronique Legère, September 24, 1786. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 257, 260. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
554 | Marie Josèphe | Doucet | Married Nicolas Joseph Mouton at the Attakapas church, January 12, 1788. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 260. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
555 | Jean | Gusman | 01/01/1735 | Spain | Juan Gusman (Gousman) | Married (1) Marie Barillot (Barrillot). Married (2) Rose Bonnevy. | Jean Thomas (born 1783), Rosalie Charlotte (born 1764) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
556 | Rose | Bonnevy (Bonnevie) | 01/01/1743 | Marguerite Lord (Laure) | Jacques Bonnevie | Married Jean Gusman. | Jean Thomas (born 1783), Rosalie Charlotte (born 1764) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
557 | Jean Thomas | Gusman | 01/01/1783 | Rose Bonnevy | Jean Gusman | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
558 | Rosalie Charlotte | Gusman | 01/01/1764 | Rose Bonnevy | Jean Gusman | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
559 | Jean | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1745 | Ursule LeBlanc | Joseph Broussard | Married Marguerite Commeau (Comeau, Comeaux). | Jean (born 1774) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
560 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Marguerite Poirier | Honoré Comeau | Married Jean Broussard. | Jean (born 1774) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 199. | 1.785 | 11/12/1792 | Attakapas church cemetery | NULL | ||||||||||||||
561 | Jean | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Commeau (Comeaux) | Jean Broussard | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
562 | Charles | Doucet | 01/01/1745 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a bachelor. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
563 | Jean | deLaune | 01/01/1737 | Marguerite Caissy | Christopher Delaune | Married Marianne (Marie, Marie Anne) Pars (Part). | Pierre (born either 1774 or 1778), Marie Céleste (a nursing infant at the time of the 1785 voyage to Louisiana) | He and his family are listed in two 1785 passenger lists. One list indicates that they Ddeparted La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. A send passenger list indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that Delaune and his family actually sailed aboard the Caroline because the birth of his daughter Marie Céleste delayed the family's departure. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
564 | Marianne | Pars (Part) | 01/01/1751 | Anastasie Bellefontaine | Eustache Part | Married Jean deLaune. | Marie Céleste (a nursing infant at the time of the 1785 voyage to Louisiana), Pierre (born 1778) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
565 | Marie Celeste | deLaune | 01/01/1785 | Marianne (Marie, Marie Anne) Pars (Part) | Jean deLaune | She and her family appear on two different Acadian passenger lists for 1785. One list indicates taht they Ddeparted La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. The second passenger list indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. The Caroline's passenger manifest describes her as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that she and her family actually sailed aboard the Caroline and that Marie Céleste's birth delayed the family's planned departure aboard the Amitié. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52 | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
566 | Pre. (Pierre) | deLaune | 01/01/1784 | Marianne Pars | Jean deLaune | He and his family appear in two different 1785 passenger lists. One passenger list indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The second passenger list indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that the family actually sailed aboard the Caroline, the birth of Marie Céleste deLaune having delayed their departure. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
567 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1741 | Married Elisabeth auCoin (Aucoin). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | cobbler | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
568 | Élisabeth | auCoin | 01/01/1735 | Married Jean Baptiste LeBlanc. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
569 | Marie Margueritte (Marguerite) | Semer | 01/01/1766 | Anne Landry(?) | Joseph Semer(?) | If this Marie Marguerite Semer was indeed the daughter of Joseph Semer and Anne Landry, then the documentary record indicates that her family was deported to England. She resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana in the company of her uncle, Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, and his wife, Elisabeth auCoin. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
570 | Marie | Moïse (Moÿse) | Veuve Olivier Pitre | 01/01/1740 | Marie Petit | Louis Moïse (Moÿse) | Married Olivier Pitre, son of Claude Pitre and Marguerite Doiron. Olivier Pitre died at Nantes, France, between 1779 and June 1785. | Victoire (born 1766), Louis Constant (born ca. 1766), Françoise (born 1771) | Took refuge at Miquelon, a French island off the southern coast of Newfoundland. Migrated from Miquelon to France, 1767. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1767-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Constant (Constance) Pitre, her twelve-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Marie Moïse, Veuve Pitre, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included Constant Pitre, her seventeen-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
571 | Louis Constant | Pitre | 01/01/1766 | St. Roman Parish, Diocese of Poitiers, France | Marie Moïse (Moÿse) | Olivier Pitre | Married Marie Rose Guédry, the daughter of Pierre Janvier Guédry and Marie Josèphe LeBert and a native of St. Donaciano Parish, Diocese of Nantes, France, at Assumption Parish, La., August 28, 1797. The marriage record was witnessed by Acadians Joseph Aucoin and Louis Dantin. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old adolescent residing with his fifty-year-old mother. He and his mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old residing with his fifty-one-year-old mother. He and his mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:593-595; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
572 | Victoire | Pitre | 01/01/1766 | Marie Moïse (Moÿse) | Olivier Pitre | Married Jean (Juan) Sagiro (Saisizo) at Ascension Parish, La., February 14, 1787. Jacques Mius d'Entremont and Jean Charles Boudrot witnessed the marriage contract. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Sagiro (Sagiron). She and her twenty-eight-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:595; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
573 | Françoise Olivier | Pitre | 01/01/1771 | Saint-Souliac, Diocese of Saint-Malo, Brittany, France | Marie Moïse (Moÿse) | Olivier Pitre | Married (1) Mathurin (Maturin) Chevalier (sometimes Chevalier Frelot) at Ascension Parish, La., May 9, 1786. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Étienne Everth and Victoire Pitre. Mathurin Chevalier is identified as an Acadian in the marriage record. Married (2) Jean Boudrot, son of Olivier Boudrot and Anne Dugas, at Assumption Parish, La., December 26, 1802. | First marriage: Mathurin (baptized at Ascension Parish, La., May 5, 1788) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the seventeen-year-old spouse of Mathurin Chevalier Frelot. She and her thirty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Mathurin Chevalier Frélo. She and her thirty-one-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned Twenty-nine barrels of corn and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:186-187; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:593; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
574 | Jh. (Joseph) | auCoin | 01/01/1725 | Magdeleine Boudreau (Boudrot). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
575 | Magdeleine | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1727 | Married Joseph auCoin (Aucoin). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
576 | Christophe | Delaune | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Caissy | Christopher Delaune | Married Marie Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Jean Baptiste (born 1775), Louis Auguste (born 1783 or 1784) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set of lists indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. (His family is also listed as having sailed aboard the Caroline.) The second set of passenger lists indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that they probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 74-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
577 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1727 | Cécile Véco | Pierre Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Christophe Delaune, the son of Christophe Delaune and Marguerite Caissy. | Jean Baptiste (born 1775), Louis Auguste (born 1784) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set of lists indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The second set of lists indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that they sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 74-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
578 | Jean Bte. (Jean Baptiste) | Delaune | 01/01/1775 | Marie Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Christophe Delaune | He and his family appear on two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The second set of lists indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that they probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 74-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | Christophe deLaune and Marguerite Caissy | Pierre Boudrot and Cécile Véco | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
579 | Céleste (Célestina) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1765 | St. Pierre et Miquelon | Married Louis Augeron. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her sister, Marie Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), wife of Christophe Delaune. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. Boudrot is also listed as a passenger aboard the Caroline, which departed France on October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. One again, the passenger list indicates that she traveled to Louisiana with the family of her sister, Marie Boudrot. | She was a resident of the Lafourche District at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:33. | 1.785 | 23/12/1798 | St. Louis Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
580 | Jean François | de la Maisière (Mazière) | 01/01/1748 | Married Véronique Renneau (Renaud). | Jean Baptiste (born 1777), Louise Céleste (born 1779), Rose Jeanne (born 1781) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included Véronique Renneau (Reneaud), his thirty-seven-year-old wife, Jean Baptiste de la Maisière, his ten-year-old son, Louise de la Maisière, his eight-year-old daughter, and Rose de la Maisière, his five-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Véronique Renneau (Renaud), his wife, 38 years old; Jean baptiste, his son, 11 years old; Louise, his daughter, 9 years old; and Rose, his daughter, 6 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
581 | Véronique | Renneau (Renaud) | 01/01/1758 | Married Jean François de la Maisière (Maizière). | Jean Baptiste (born 1777), Louise Céleste (born 1779), Rose Jeanne (born 1781) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Jean François de la Mazière. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste, her son, 11 years old; Louise, her daughter, 9 years old; and Rose, her daughter, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
582 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | de la Maisière (Maizière) | 01/01/1777 | Veronique Renneau (Renaud) | Jean François de la Maisière (Maizière) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Louise, his eight-year-old sister, and Rose, his five-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. Identified as Jean Baptiste de la Mazière in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Louise, his nine-year-old sister, and Rose, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
583 | Louise Céleste | de la Maisière (Maizière) | 01/01/1779 | Veronique Renneau (Renaud) | Jean François de la Maisière (Maizière) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Jean Baptiste, her ten-year-old brother, and Rose, her five-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. Identified as Louise de la Mazière in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste, her brother, 11 years old; and Rose, her sister, 9 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
584 | Rose Jeanne | de la Maisière (Maizière) | 01/01/1781 | Veronique Renneau (Renaud) | Jean François de la Maisière (Maizière) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Jean Baptiste, her ten-year-old brother, and Louise, her eight-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. Identified as Rose de la Mazière in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean baptiste, her eleven-year-old brother, and Louise, her nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
585 | Grégoire | Seme (Semer, Semère) | 01/01/1769 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. His sister Françoise accompanied him on the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | On March 12, 1787, he signed a contract in which he agree to serve Pierre Doucet as an indentured worker for one year. Semer obligated himself to live with Pierre Doucet; Doucet, on the other hand, was obliged to provide Seme with lodging and other necessities. The contract, signed in the Attakapas District, was witnessed by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Contract, Contract, March 12, 1787, AGi, PPC, Book 5, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La. | 1.785 | rope maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
586 | Françoise | Semé (Semer) | 01/01/1761 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied her brother Grégoire during the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
587 | Colette | Renneau (Renaud) | Veuve Toullier | 01/01/1740 | Marie Madeleine Poitier (Potier) | Jean Renaud | Married René LeTuillier. | Jean Charles (born 1766), Isidore (born 1771), Adélaïde (born 1769) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
588 | Jean Charles | Toullier | 01/01/1766 | Colette Renneau | René Le Tuillier (Toullier) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
589 | Isidore | Toullier | 01/01/1771 | Colette Renneau | René Le Tuillier (Toullier) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
590 | Adélaïde | Toullier | 01/01/1769 | Colette Renneau | René Le Tuillier (Toullier) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
591 | François | Landry | 01/01/1725 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on his voyage to Louisiana by two of his grandchildren (Jean Jacques Landry and Bonne Marie Landry) and by his nephew Jean Charles Landry. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-nine-year-old head of a household. His household included Jean Charles Landry, who is identified in the census as François Landry's nineteen-year-old grandson. (Jean Charles Landry was identified as François Landry's nephew in the Amitié's passenger manifest.) According to the 1788 census, François Landry owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-eight-year-old head of a household including Jean Charles Landry, his twenty-year-old grandson. François Landry and his grandchild occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:425. | 1.785 | 18/02/1797 | Ascension Parish, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
592 | Jean Jques. (Jacques) | Landry | 01/01/1770 | Cherbourg, France | Cécile La Garelle | Germain Landry | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied his grandfather, François Landry, during his voyage to Louisiana. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42. | 1.785 | François Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
593 | Bonne Marie Adélaïde | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1769 | Cherbourg, France | Cécile La Garelle | Germain Landry | Married Joseph LeJeune at New Orleans, November 24, 1785. | Jean Joseph (born 1787) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied her grandfather, François Landry, on her voyage to Louisiana. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Joseph LeJeune. In addition to herself, her household included Joseph LeJeune, her twenty-four-year-old husband, and Jean Joseph LeJeune, her one-year-old son. Identified as Marie Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Joseph (Josef) LeJeune (Lejeune). Her household consisted of herself, her twenty-five-year-old husband, and Joseph LeJeune, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:180. | 1.785 | François Landry | NULL | ||||||||||||||
594 | Jean Charles | Landry | 01/01/1767 | Plouer(?), France(?) | Marie Landry(?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied his uncle, François Landry, on his voyage to Louisiana. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of François Landry's household. Jean Charles Landry is identified in the 1788 census as the grandson of François Landry. (The 1785 passenger manifest of the Amitié, however, had identified Jean Charles Landry as François Landry's nephew.) The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Jean Charles Landry was a twenty-year-old residing with François Landry, his eighty-year-old grandfather. Jean Charles Landry and his grandfather occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and seven hogs. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
595 | Zacarie (Zacharie) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1725 | Cécile Corporon | Jean Baptiste Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married (1) Marguerite Daigle. Married (2) Marguerite Valois (Vallois). | Benjamin (born 1766) | Resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-;1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied during the voyage by his wife, his son, and Jacques Dubois, his stepson. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
596 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Valois (Vallois) | 01/01/1735 | Married (1) Olivier Dubois. Married (2) Etienne Terriot (Theriot). Married (3) Zacarie Boudreau (Boudrot). | First marriage: Jacques (born 1771) Second marriage: Benjamin (born 1766) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on the voyage by Zacarie Boudrot (Boudreau) and her two sons. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
597 | Benjamin (Benjamin Hilaire, Benjamain) | Boudrot (Boudereau, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1766 | Brittany | Margueritte Valois (Daigle?) | Zacarie Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married Anne Elisabethe (Isabel, Isabelle) Farquesine (Forgueson, probably Ferguson), daughter of Anselme Farquesine and Usina (Anna) Beri (Berry), at St. Gabriel, La., July 7, 1790. Paul Boudrot, Jean Baptiste Hébert, and Charles Boudrot witnessed the marriage contract. | Marie Josèphe (a twin) (born May 26, 1791; married February 6, 1809), Charles Maximilien (a twin) (born May 26, 1791), Paul Valentin (born January 13, 1792), Marie Victoire (born March 27, 1795), Rosalie (born March 29, 1798), Carmelite Eugénie (born May 5, 1800), Théotiste (Theotista) (born January 14, 1802) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on the voyage by his parents and his stepbrother, Jacques Dubois. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Binjamin Boudreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The 1788 census suggests that he lived next door to the households of Jean Pierre Culaire and Joseph Chiasson. Benjamin Boudrot owned fifteen barrels of corn. Identified as Benjamain Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:33; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:110, 116, 117, 118; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||
598 | Jques. (Jacques) Olivier (Oliviero) | Dubois | 01/01/1771 | Cherbourg, France | Margueritte Valois | Olivier Dubois | Married Marie Michel, daughter of François Michel and Anne Daigle. | Marinne (Marianne?) (born 1788), Paul (born February 28, 1800) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on the voyage by his stepfather, mother, and stepbrother, Benjamin Boudreau (Boudrot). Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that also included Marie Michel (Michelle), his twenty-three-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Marie Michel, his twenty-four-year-old wife, and Marinne (Marianne?), his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:112. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
599 | Jh. (Joseph) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1745 | Claire Comeau | Michel Boudrot | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard. | Jean Charles (born 1767), Joseph (born 1776), Marie Marthe (born 1765), Sophie (born 1782), Simon (born 1787) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1771. Resided at Plouer, France, 1771-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard, his wife, 44 years old; Joseph Boudrot, his son, 11 years old; Simon Boudrot, his son, 1 year old; Sophie Boudrot, his daughter, 5 years old; and Marie Hébert, an orphan, 14 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Joseph Bouderaux in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Marie) Richard, his wife, 46 years old; Joseph Boudrot (Bouderaux), his son, 13 year old; Louis Boudrot (Bouderaux), his son, 2 years old; Sophie Boudrot (Bouderaux), his daughter, 6 years old; and Marie Hébert, an orphan, 15 years old. Joseph Boudrot (Bouderaux) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty-nine barrels of corn, two horses, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
600 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Marie) | Richard | 01/01/1745 | Jean Richard | Married Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Jean Charles (born 1767), Joseph (born 1776), Marie Marthe (born 1765), Sophie (born 1782), Simon (born 1787) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1771. Resided at Plouer, France, 1771-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Boudrot. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Joseph Boudrot, 45 years old; Joseph Boudrot, her son, 11 years old; Simon Boudrot, her son, 1 year old; Sophie Boudrot, her daughter, 5 years old; and Marie Hébert, an orphan, 14 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Mari Richar in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Boudrot (Bouderaux). In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Joseph, her son, 13 years old; Louis, her son, 2 years old; Sophie, her daughter, 6 years old; and Marie Hébert, an orphan, 15 years old. She and her famiy occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty-nine barrels of corn, two horses, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
601 | Jean Charles | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1767 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard | Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married (1) Marguerite LeBlanc at Ascension Parish, La., May 31, 1787. Married (2) Marie Bertrand, the daughter of Pierre Bertrand and Catherine Bourg (Bourque), at Ascension Parish, La., February 4, 1793. | First marriage: Simon Hypolite (Hipolite) (born November 15, 1788), Jean Charles (born February 2, 1790)Second marriage: Louis Narcisse (born September 28, 1793) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 114, 115, 118; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
602 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1776 | St. Martin Parish, Diocese of Nantes, France | Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard | Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married Eulalie Dugas (Dugat), a native of New Orleans and the daughter of Ambroise Dugas and Marie Pitre, at Assumption Parish, La., June 28, 1803. Joseph Boudrot (Boudraux) and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113 (erratum, insert). | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
603 | Marie Marthe | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1765 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard | Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
604 | Sophie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1782 | St. Martin Parish, Nantes, France | Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard | Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married Joseph Hipolite Dagbert, a native of St. Eloy Parish, Dunkirk, France, and the son of Pierre Hipolite Dagbert and Nicole Flautée, at Assumption Parish, La., August 1802. Ambroise Hébert and Joseph Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:118. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
605 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1773 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Sailed from France with the family of Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot) and Margueritte (Marguerite) Richard. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
606 | Charles | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Daigle | Zacharie Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Marie Gotreau (Gauterot). | Charles Marie (a.k.a. Jean Marie?) (born ca. 1785) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household including Marie Gotreau (Gautreaut, Gauterot), his twenty-three-year-old wife, and Jean Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut), his two-year-old son. Jean Marie Boudrot was perhaps the child called Charles Marie in the 1785 passenger manifest of the Amitié. Charles Boudrot and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-five arpents frontage. They owned one cow and two hogs. His name is rendered Charles Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twenty-four-year-old wife, and Jean Marie, his three-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
607 | Marie | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1766 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Married Charles Boudreau (Boudrot). | Charles Marie (a.k.a. Jean Marie?) (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1765-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Boudrot (Boudreaut). In addition to herself and her twenty-three-year-old husband, her household included Jean Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut), her two-year-old son. This child was perhaps the same person identified as Charles Marie Boudrot in the 1785 passenger manifest of the Amitié. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Boudrot (Boudereau). In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, the household included Jean Marie Boudrot, her three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
608 | Charles Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1785 | Marie Gotreau (Gauterot) | Charles Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
609 | Jean Charles | Haché (Achée) | 01/01/1763 | Marie Hébert | Charles Haché | Married Marie Pinel (Pinet, Pinette). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. During the voyage, Haché and his wife were accompanied by his siblings Frédéric Haché and Marie Bonne Haché. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | His wife is listed as the Widow Haché (Hachez) in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 1. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
610 | Marie | Pinel (Pinette) | Veuve Haché (Hachez) | 01/01/1765 | Married (1) Jean Charles Haché. She was a widow at the time of her second marriage. Married (2) François Benoît (Benoist), September 3, 1789. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Sailed to Louisiana in the company of her husband and two of his siblings Frédéric Haché and Marie Bonne Haché. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old widow living alone. She occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. She owned thirteen barrels of corn and one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
611 | Frédéric | Haché (Hachez) | 01/01/1766 | Marie Hébert | Charles Haché | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Sailed to Louisiana in the company of his sister Bonne Marie, his brother Jean Charles, and his sister-in-law Marie Pinel. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
612 | Marie Bonne (Bonne Marie Madeleine) | Haché | 01/01/1767 | Marie Hébert | Jean Charles Haché | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Sailed to Louisiana in the company of her brother Frédéric, her brother Jean Charles, and her sister-in-law Marie Pinel. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
613 | Ursule (Ursulle) | Hébert | Veuve Jean Vincent | 01/01/1740 | Married Jean Vincent. | Anne Blanche (born 1762), Marie Blanche (born 1768), Jeanne Margueritte (Aimée) (born 1773), Flore Adélaïde (born 1774) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on the voyage by the following daughters: Anne Blanche, Marie Blanche, Jeanne Margueritte, and Flore Adélaïde. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-seven-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following children: Victoire, 20 years old; Aimée, 16 years old; and Adélaïde, 14 years old. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. Misidentified as Ursulle Vincent in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following children: Victoire, her daughter, 21 years old; Anne, her daughter, 17 years old; and Adélaïde, her daughter, 15 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
614 | Anne Blanche | Vincent | 01/01/1762 | Ursule (Ursulle) Hébert | Jean Vincent | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Victoire, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
615 | Marie Blanche (Marie Victoire) | Vincent | 01/01/1768 | Ursule (Ursulle) Hébert | Jean Vincent | Married (1) Louis Pinel at New Orleans, December 2, 1785. Married (2) Jacques Ferre at Ascension Parish, La., March 23, 1788. She is identified as Victoire Vincent in her marriage record. Tranquille Pitre and Joseph Terriot (Theriot) witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District as Victoire Vincent. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her mother's household. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Victoire Vincent in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Anne, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:720-721; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:309. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
616 | Jeanne Margueritte (Aimée, Marguerite) | Vincent | 01/01/1773 | Ursule (Ursulle) Hébert | Jean Vincent | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District as Aimée Vincent, a sixteen-year-old member of her mother's household. The household also included Victoire Vincent, her twenty-year-old sister, and Adélaïde Vincent, her fourteen-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
617 | Flore Adélaïde | Vincent | 01/01/1774 | probably Pleudihen, France | Ursule (Ursulle) Hébert | Jean Vincent | Married Santiago Jacques Thibodeau, son of Jean Thibodeau and Françoise Hilaire, a native of Pleudihen, Brittany, France, at Ascension Parish, La., November 16, 1789. Blaise Boudrot and Louis Pinet (Pinel) witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her mother's household. (Her mother was a widow.) The household also included Victoire Vincent, her twenty-year-old sister, and Aimée Vincent, her sixteen-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Victoire, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Anne, her seventeen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:721-721; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 100. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
618 | Pélagie | Benoît | Veuve d'Yves Crochet | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Marie Joseph LeJeune | Abraham Benoît (Benoist) | Married Yves Crochet, son of Guillaume Crochet and Julienne Durand. She was a widow in 1788. | Jean (born 1761), Yves (born 1769), Julien (born 1773), Françoise (born 1763), Margueritte (born 1766) | Resided at Mégrit, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1764. Resided at Mégrit, 1765-1767. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1767-1768. Resided at Mégrit, 1769-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household including Yves Crochet, her nineteen-year-old son, and Julien Crochet, her seventeen-year-old son. She and her sons occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Françoise Crochet, her twenty-three-year-old daughter, and La Garde (evidently Julien) Crochet, her eighteen-year-old son. She and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-seven barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Letter, Francis C. Blanchard, Winsloe, Prince Edward Island, to Jolene Adam, Acadian Memorial, November 11, 1998. | According to the 1752 census, Pélagie Benoit's family had settled in the Ance au Matelost region of Ile Saint-Jean. The census indicates her household consisted of Abraham Benoist (Benoît), her forty-two-year-old father, who was a native of Acadia and a habitant laboureur; Marie Joseph LeJeune, a thirty-four-year-old native of Acadia; Jean Benoist, 18 years old; Joseph Benoist, 2 months old; Marguerite Benoist, 16 years old; Marie Magdelaine Benoist, 12 years old; Joseph Benoist, 14 years old; Pélagie Benoist, 10 years old; and Marie Benoist, 5 years old. The family owned a yoke of oxen; 2 cows, 2 heifers, 5 sows, and 5 chickens. "Mr. Bonaventure" had only recently given them permission to settle the lands they occupied, and they had cleared 1 arpent. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||
619 | Jean (Guillaume) | Crochet | 01/01/1761 | Pélagie Benoit | Yves Crochet | Married Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household including Marie Boudrot, his twenty-one-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Boudrot (Boudereau), his twenty-two-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels o corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
620 | Yves | Crochet | 01/01/1769 | Pélagie Benoit | Yves Crochet | Married Anne Elizabeth Dugas sometime after 1788. | Marie Eulalie Adelaide (born March 12, 1792), Amand Bernard (born ca. 1794), François Marie (born January 15, 1796), Magloire (baptized December 10, 1797), Jean Baptiste Julien (born October 24, 1799), Eulalie Adelaide (born July 5, 1801) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Julien Crochet, his seventeen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Yves Jean Crochet II and Anne Elizabeth Dugas." | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
621 | Julien | Crochet | 01/01/1773 | Pélagie Benoit | Yves Crochet | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Yves Crochet, his nineteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
622 | Françoise | Crochet | 01/01/1763 | Pélagie Benoit | Yves Crochet | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Misidentified as François Crochet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included La Garde (evidently Julien) Crochet, her eighteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
623 | Margueritte (Margritta, Marguerite) | Crochet (Cochet) | Quesny or St. Malo, France | Pélagie Benoit (Benoist) | Yves Crochet | Married Joseph (Augustin Joseph) Adam. | André (born ca. 1787), Marie Josèphe (born March 3, 1789), Julie Adelaide (born May 14, 1791), Marcel (Marcelin) (born August 8, 1792), Pierre Alexandre (born January 1, 1795), Jacques (Santiago) (born September 20, 1796), Maximilien (Similien) (born May 8, 1798) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Adam. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1788 census suggests that she lived next door to her mother and siblings. Identified as Margritta Crochet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Adam. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-two barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:1; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Augustin Joseph Theriot and Maraguerite Perinne Crochet." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
624 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Doucet | 01/01/1766 | Marie Anne Précieux | Augustin Doucet dit La Justice | He appears to be the Jean Baptiste Doucet who married Marie Barbe Daublin (Doublin, Doublein), at Ascension Parish, La., June 14, 1789. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included François Doucet his sixteen-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-seven-year-old mother, the household included François Doucet, his sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:247; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 34. | 1.785 | Jean Doucet and Françoise Blanchard | driller | NULL | |||||||||||||||
625 | Marie Anne | Précieux | Veuve Doucet | 01/01/1733 | Anne Haché | Joseph Précieux | Married Jean Baptiste Doucet. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Jean Baptiste Doucet (born 1766) François Doucet (born 1771) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1764-1773. Her family occupied farm no. 44 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, 1774. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied during the voyage by her sons Jean Baptiste and François. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District as the Veuve Doucet. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included Jean Baptiste Doucet, her twenty-one-year-old son, and François Doucet, her sixteen-year-old son. She and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-seven-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Jean Baptiste Doucet, her twenty-two-year-old son, and François Doucet, her sixteen-year-old son. She and her sons occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
626 | François | Doucet | 01/01/1771 | Marie Anne Précieux | Augustin Doucet dit La Justice | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Jean Baptiste Doucet, his twenty-one-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-seven-year-old mother, the household included Jean Baptiste Doucet, his twenty-two-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
627 | Charles | Pinel (Pinet) | 01/01/1731 | Married Anne Durel. | Marie Magdeleine (born 1771), Louis (born 1763) | Resided at Cherbourg after his arrival in France. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
628 | Anne | Durel | Veuve Pinel | 01/01/1735 | Married Charles Pinel. | Marie Magdeleine (born 1771), Louis (born 1763) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household including Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Pinel, her seventeen-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Martine Pinel, her three-year-old (sic) daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, two cows, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
629 | Marie Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) | Pinel | 01/01/1771 | Anne (Marion?) Durel | Charles Pinel | Married Jean Baptiste Trahan at Ascension Parish, La., January 6, 1789. She is identified as the daughter of Charles Pinel and Marion Durell in her marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old residing with her mother, Anne Durel, the fifty-eight-year-old widow of Charles Pinel. She and her mother occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old wife of Jean Baptiste Trahan. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-two barrels of corn, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:705; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
630 | Louis | Pinel (Pinelle) | 01/01/1763 | Anne Durel | Charles Pinel | Married Marie Vincent. | Marie Louise (baptized October 1, 1786), Modeste Anne (Aneta) (baptized November 6, 1787), Jean Louis (born May 10, 1789), Joseph Maurice (born May 25, 1791) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twenty-seven-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twenty-eight-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-six barrels of corn and five hogs. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Lafourche District, June 6, 1792. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:591-592; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
631 | Louis | Lamoureux | dit Rochefort | 01/01/1741 | Marie Claire Pottier (Poitier, Potier) | Jean Baptiste Lamourieux | Married Marie Hébert, daughter of Jean Hébert and Marguerite Mouton. | Jean Louis (born 1765), Adélaïde (born 1775) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 74-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
632 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1747 | Port-Royal, Acadia | Marguerite Mouton | Jean Hébert | Married Louis Lamoureux (L'Amoureux)dit Rochefort, son of Jean Baptiste Lamoureux and Marie Claire Pottier (Potier, Poitier). | Jean Louis (born 1765), Adélaïde (born 1775) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 74-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 3;17. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
633 | Jean Louis | Lamoureux | 01/01/1765 | Marie Hébert | Louis Lamoureux dit Rochefort | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
634 | Adélaïde | Lamoureux | 01/01/1775 | Marie Hébert | Louis Lamoureux dit Rochefort | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
635 | Marie Jh. (Josèphe) | Richard | Veuve François Basset | 01/01/1735 | St. Charles Parish, Acadia | Cécile Gauterot | Jean Baptiste Richard dit Sapin | Married (1) François Basset, son of Jacques Philippe Basset and Louise Gigault. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. Married (2) Louis Menard. Married (3) José Garcia in New Orleans, July 15, 1795. | Marie (born 1780) | She and her family occupied farm no. 35 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, 1774. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Accompanied on the voyage by her daughter and by her sister, Marie Geneviève Richard. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:327. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
636 | Marie | Basset (Doucet) | 01/01/1780 | Marie Josèphe Richard | François Basset (Doucet) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
637 | Marie Geneviève | Richard | 01/01/1753 | Cécile Gauterot | Jean Baptiste Richard dit Sapin | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with her sister Marie Josèphe and her niece Marie Basset (Doucet). Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
638 | Louis | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1727 | Married Marie Hébert. | François Louis (born 1773), Magdeleine (born 1757), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1765) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-year-old head of a household including Marie Hébert, his fifty-seven-year-old wife, François Gaudet, his fourteen-year-old son, and Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Gaudet, his thirty-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 125 barrels of corn, two cows and eight hogs. They owned no slaves. His name is rendered as Louis Gaudet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-one-year-old head of a household that included Marie Hébert, his fifty-eight-year-old spouse, François Gaudet, his fifteen-oyear-old son, and Magdeleine (Madelaine) Gaudet, his thirty-one-year-old daughter. He and his family owned one slave. They occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They owned 150 barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
639 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1731 | Married Louis Gaudet (Godet). | François Louis (born 1773), Magdeleine (born 1762), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1765) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-eight-year-old spouse of Louis Gaudet. In addition to herslef and her sixty-one-year-old husband, the household included François Gaudet, her fifteen-year-old son, and Magdeleine (Madelaine) Gaudet, her thirty-one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one slave. They also owned 150 barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
640 | Magdeleine (Madelaine) | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1757 | Marie Hébert | Louis Gaudet (Godet) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Her name is rendered as Madelaine Gaudet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François Gaudet, her fifteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52.; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
641 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1765 | Marie Hébert | Louis Gaudet | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
642 | Michel | Doucet | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Married Marie Blanche Cousine (Cousin). | Jean Baptiste Michel (born 1773), Eléonore (Eleonnore) (born 1770), Margueritte (born 1776) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was a resident of New Orleans at the time of his death. | He died at Charity Hospital, New Orleans, La. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:135. | 1.785 | 20/09/1792 | New Orleans, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
643 | Marie Blanche | Cousin (Cousine) | 01/01/1748 | Judith Guédry (Guidry) | Jean Cousin | Married Michel Doucet. | Jean Baptiste Michel (born 1773), Eleonnore (born 1770), Margueritte (born 1776) | Resided at Le Havre, France. She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
644 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) Michel | Doucet | 01/01/1773 | Marie Blanche Cousin (Cousine) | Michel Doucet | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
645 | Eléonore (Honorine Eleonnore) | Doucet | 01/01/1770 | Marie Blanche Cousin (Cousine) | Michel Doucet | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
646 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Benoît (Benoist) | Veuve Précieux | 01/01/1753 | Élisabeth Terriot (Theriot) | Claude Benoît (Benoist) | Married Joseph Précieux, son of Joseph Précieux and Anne Haché. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
647 | Jh. (Joseph) | Doucet | 01/01/1732 | Marguerite Robichaud | Joseph Doucet | Married Marguerite Moulaison. He was a widower at the time of his departure from France. | Ange (born 1770), Marie Marthe (Marie Marguerite) (born 1766), Magdeleine (born 1768) | Resided at Le Havre after his arrival in France. He and his family occupied farn no. 31 in the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
648 | Ange | Doucet | 01/01/1770 | Marguerite Moulaison | Joseph Doucet | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | Joseph Doucet and Marguerite Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
649 | Marie Marthe (Marie Marguerite) | Doucet | 01/01/1766 | Havre de Grace, France | Marguerite Moulaison | Joseph Doucet | Married René Arnaud. | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:135. | 1.785 | 02/02/1792 | Joseph Doucet and Marguerite Robichaud | New Orleans, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
650 | Magdeleine | Doucet | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Moulaison | Joseph Doucet | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | Joseph Doucet and Marguerite Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
651 | Brigitte | PART | Veuve Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 11/11/1727 | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Élisabeth Hébert | Michel Part | Married Antoine Boudrot, son of Jean-Baptiste Boudrot and Cécile Corporon, at St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, July 24, 1747. The groom was thirty years of age at the time of the marriage. | Joseph (born 1766), Charles Michel (born 1761), Étienne (born 1767) | Resided at Trigavou, Birttany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:116. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
652 | Jh. (Joseph) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1766 | Veuve Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
653 | Charles Michel | Boudrot (Boudereau, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1761 | Veuve Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Michelle Boudreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Etienne Boudrot (Boudreaut), his twenty-one-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and five hogs. Identified as Michel Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Étienne Boudereau, his twenty-two-year-old brother. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
654 | Étienne | Boudrot (Boudereau, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1767 | Veuve Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Étienne Boudreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old residing with his elder brother, twenty-six-year-old Michel (Michelle) Boudrot (Boudreaut). His name is rendered as Étienne Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old residing with his elder brother, twenty-seven-year-old Michel Boudrot (Boudereau). He and his brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
655 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1769 | Veuve Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
656 | Marie Magdeleine | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1765 | Veuve Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
657 | Alexis | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1724 | Anne Françoise Dupuis | Pierre Breau | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Thibodeau. Married (2) Marie (Marie Josèphe) Guillot. | Margueritte (born 1765; married July 23, 1787), Charles, Fabien (died in infancy), Pierre (died in childhood) | He and his family resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie Guillot, his wife, and Margueritte (Marguerite) Breau, his twenty-one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. His name is rendered as Alexis Braut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Guillot, his sixty-five-year-old wife, and Marguerite (Margritte), his twenty-two-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he died in 1808. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||
658 | Marie (Marie Josèphe) | Guillot | 01/01/1723 | Marguerite Doiron | René Guillot | Married Alexis Breau (Brod, Braud). | Margueritte (born 1765) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-five-year-old spouse of Alexis Breau. In addition to herself and her sixty-four-year-old husband, her household included Margueritte Breau, her twenty-one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-sive-year-old spouse of Alexis Breau (Braut). In addition to herself and her sixty-five-year-old husband, the household included Marie Breau (Braut), her twenty-two-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
659 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margritte) | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1765 | probably France | Marie Guillot | AlexisBrod (Breau) | Married Louis Dantin (D'Antin), son of Louis Dantin and Marguerite Lassonde, at Ascension Parish, La., July 23, 1787. Charles Guillot and Marie Comeau witnessed the marriage record. However, she continues to appear as a member of her parents' household in the 1788 and 1789 census reports. | Louis François (baptized December 25, 1788), Marguerite (born November 20, 1789), Fabien Sebastien (born October 10, 1793), Marie Louise (August 24, 1795), Jean Baptiste (born February 28, 1799), Modeste Carmelite (born May 11, 1801), Marie Carmelite (born May 18, 1803) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her parents' household. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:220-221. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
660 | Fabien | Guillot | 01/01/1760 | Théotiste Daigle | Ambroise Guillot | Married Anne Girouard (Giroire). | Fabien (Fabian) Thomas (baptized May 17, 1787), Jean Baptiste (baptized May 12, 1788), Joseph (born September 1789), Louis Ambroise (born March 31, 1795), Marguerite (born February 14, 1797), Louis Gil (probably Gilbert) (born September 1, 1798), Anne (born September 5, 1800) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his uncle, Alexis Brod (Breau). Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household including Anne Girouard (Giroire), his twenty-year-old wife, and Fabien Guillot, his one-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Anne Girouard (Giroire), his twenty-three-year-old wife, and Fabien Guillot, his one-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 48. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
661 | Jean (Jean Charles) | Gotreau (Gautrau, Gauterot, Gauterau) | 01/01/1763 | Married Françoise Blanchard at Ascension Parish, La., February 10, 1786. Eudox(?) Giroire (Girouard), Marie Blanchard, and Marie Rose Giroir (Girouard) witnessed the marriage record. | Jean François (born 1786; baptized February 17, 1788), Suzanne (Susanne) (born 1787), Joseph Nicolas (born November 16, 1789) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his cousin, Alexis Brod (Breau). Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household including Françoise Blanchard, his twenty-year-old spouse, and Jean Gauterot, his one-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. His name is rendered as Jean Charles Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Blanchard, his twenty-one-year-old wife, Jean Gauterau, his two-year-old son, and Suzanne Gauterau, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. He appears to have been the Jean Gautrau who, in 1790, joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:44. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
662 | Louis | Dentin (Dantin) | 01/01/1747 | Marguerite La Sonde | Louis Dantin | Married (1) Jeanne Gesmier (Gemier). Married (2) Eleine (Hélène) AuCoin. | First marriage: Jeanne (born 1769), Marie (born 1773), Anne (born 1776), Julie (born 1778), Louis (married July 23, 1787) | Resided with Saint-Thual, Brittany, France, 1758-1766. Resided at Sécheral, 1766-1767. Resided at Saint-André-des-Eaux, France, 1767-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Louis Dantain in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Louis Dantin was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twelve-year-old daughter, Anne, his ten-year-old daughter, Julie, his eight-year-old daughter, and Marie Doiron, a fifteen-year-old orphan. Louis Dentin (Dantin) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Louis Dantin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his thirteen-year-old daughter, Anne, his eleven-year-old daughter, Julie, his nine-year-old daughter, and Marie Doiron, a sixteen-year-old orphan. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-two barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
663 | Eleine (Hélène) | AuCoin | 01/01/1748 | Élisabeth Amirault | Antoine Aucoin(?) (Aucoing) | Married (1) Alexis Grégoire Doiron. Married (2) Louis Dentin (Dantin). | First marriage: Françoise (born 1768), Marie (born 1773). Children and stepchildren of second marriage: Jeanne (born 1769), Marie (born 1773), Anne (born 1776), Julie (born 1778) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35. | 1.785 | 22/08/1786 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
664 | Jeanne | Dentin (Dantin) | 01/01/1769 | Jeanne Gesmier | Louis Dentin (Dantin) | Married Martin Pitre. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Martin Pitre. In addition to herself and her twenty-year-old husband, her household also included Joseph Hébert, her husband's fifteen-year-old half-brother, and Marie Hébert, her husband's twelve-year-old half-sister. Jeanne Dentin (Dantain) and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. Her name is rendered Jeanne Dantin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Martin Pitre. In addition to herself and her twenty-one-year-old husband, the household included one Marie, evidently Marie Hébert, her husband's thirteen-year-old half-sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
665 | Marie (Marie Anne) | Dentin (Dantin) | 01/01/1773 | St. Malo, France | Jeanne Gesmier | Louis Dentin (Dantin) | Married Guillaume Hébert. | Marie Jeanne Louise (born October 29, 1793), François Louis (born October 4, 1795), Jean Louis (born August 18, 1797), Eugénie Reine (born October 25, 1799), Marguerite Marcelite (born May 5, 1801), Augustin Louis (born August 15, 1803), Céleste (born March 17, 1805) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her father's household. The household also included Anne, her ten-year-old sister, Julie, her eight-year-old sister, and Marie Doiron, a fifteen-year-orphan. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:165-166; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
666 | Anne | Dentin (Dantin) | 01/01/1776 | Jeanne Gesmier | Louis Dentin (Dantin) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Marie, her twelve-year-old sister, Julie, her eight-year-old sister, and Marie Doiron, a fifteen-year-old orphan. Identified as Marie Dantin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Anne, her eleven-year-old sister, Julie, her nine-year-old sister, and Marie Doiron, a sixteen-year-old orphan. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
667 | Julie | Dentin (Dantin) | 01/01/1778 | Jeanne Gesmier | Louis Dentin (Dantin) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Marie, her twelve-year-old sister, Anne, her ten-year-old sister, and Marie Doiron, a fifteen-year-old orphan. Identified as Julie Doiron in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Marie, her thirteen-year-old sister, Anne, her eleven-year-old sister, and Marie Doiron, a sixteen-year-old orphan. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
668 | Françoise | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1768 | Eleine AuCoin | Married Jean (Jean Louis) Bodin. | Jean Bapiste (born September 8, 1788), Grégoire (born December 12, 1794) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twnety-year-old spouse of Jean Bodin. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn. They owned no slaves and no livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:102. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
669 | Marie | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1773 | Eleine AuCoin | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
670 | Étienne | Hébert | 01/01/1747 | Port Royal, Acadia | Marguerite Mouton | Jean Hébert | Married (1) Marie Lavergne, daughter of Jacques Lavergne and Françoise Pitre, at Le Havre, France, January 14, 1767. Married (2) Marie Bourg. Married (3) Anne Magdeleine (Magdeleine, Madeleine) Clouatre Brod (Breau), the widow of Amand Breau. | Cécille (born 1767), Louis (born 1770), Guillaume (Benony, Guillaume Benoni, Guillaume Belloni, Belomy) (born 1773), Gabriel (born 1775) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Breau (Bro), his forty-year-old wife, and the following children: ouis, 19 years old; Benony, 16 years old; Gabrielle, 13 years old; and Marie, 3 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Madeleine Braut, his wife, 41 years old; Jean Louis, his son, 20 years old; Belomy, his son, 17 years old; Gabriel, his son, 14 years old; and Marie, his daughter, 4 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 3-17. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
671 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) | Breau (Braud, Breaux, Bro) | 01/01/1749 | Marie Josèphe Guillot | Alexis Breau | Married Etienne Hébert. | Louis (born 1770), Guillaume (Benony, Guillaume Benoni, Guillaume Belloni, Belomy) (born 1773), Gabriel (born 1775), Cécille (born 1767) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Étienne Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Louis Hébert, her son, 19 years old; Benony Hébert, her son, 16 years old; Gabriel (Gabrielle) Hébert, her son, 13 years old; and Marie Hébert, her daughter, 3 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Étienne Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Jean Louis Hébert, her son, 20 years old; Benony (Belomy) Hébert, her son, 17 years old; Gabriel Hébert, her son, 14 years old; and Marie Hébert, her daughter, 4 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; .General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
672 | Louis (Jean Louis) | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Magdeleine Brod (Breau) | Étienne Hébert | Married Marie Victoire Doiron, daughter of Alexis Grégoire Doiron and Hélène Aucoin, at Assumption Parish, La., June 12, 1791. | Louis (born 1792), Étienne (born 1792), Charles (born ca. 1793), Marie Anne (born 1794), Marie Cécille (born ca. 1795), Cyrile (baptized December 26, 1796), Rosalie (born October 8, 1803), Hypolite (Hipolyte) (born December 21, 1804) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Benony (Guillaume) Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, Gabriel (Gabrielle) Hébert, his thirteen-year-old brother, and Marie Hébert, his three-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jean Louis Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. Ina addition to himself and his parents, the household included Guillaume (Belomy), his seventeen-year-old brother, Gabriel, his fourteen-year-old brother, and Marie, his four-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-26, 5-15; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
673 | Guillaume (Benony, Belomy, Guillaume Bellony, Louis Guillaume) | Hébert | 01/01/1773 | Havre de Grace (Le Havre), France | Magdeleine Brod (Breau) | Étienne Hébert | Married Marie (Marianne) Dentin (Dantin) at Ascension Parish, La., January 6, 1793. Identified as Guillaume Belloni (Guillermo Belloni) in the marriage record. Louis Dantin and Étienne Hébert (Eber) witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Jeanne Louise (born October 29, 1793), François Louis (born October 4, 1795), Jean Louis (born August 18, 1797), Eugénie Reine (born October 25, 1799), Marguerite Marcelite (born May 5, 1801), Augustin Louis (born August 15, 1803), Céleste (born March 17, 1805) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Benony Hébert in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Jean Louis Hébert, his nineteen-year-old brother, Gabriel (Gabrielle) Hébert, his thirteen-year-old brother, and Marie Hébert, his three-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Belomy Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Louis, his twenty-year-old brother, Gabriel, his fourteen-year-old brother, and Marie, his four-year-old sister. He was a resident of the Lafourche District at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:360; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:165-166; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-16; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | 08/01/1801 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||
674 | Gabriel (Gabrielle) | Hébert | 01/01/1765 | Magdeleine Brod (Breau) | Étienne Hébert | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Jean Louis Hébert, his nineteen-year-old brother, Benony (Guillaume) Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Marie Hébert, his three-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Gabriel Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Louis, his twenty-year-old brother, Guillaume (Belomy), his seventeen-year-old brother, and Marie, his four-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
675 | Cécille (Cecilia) | Hébert | 01/01/1767 | Normandy, France | Magdeleine Brod (Breau) | Étienne Hébert | Married Vincent Neveu (Neveau, Neveux), December 2, 1785. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Vincent Neveux. She and her twenty-three-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. (The census suggests that Cécille Hébert and her husband lived next door to her parents.) Cécille Hébert and Vincent Neveux owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouseof Vincent Neveu. She and her twenty-four-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census suggests that she lived next door to her parents. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:161. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
676 | Marie Magdeleine | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | Magdeleine Breau (Braud, Bro, Brod) | Étienne Hébert | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a three-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Jean Louis Hébert, her nineteen-year-old brother, Guillaume (Benony) Hébert, her sixteen-year-old brother, and Gabriel (Gabrielle) Hébert, her thirteen-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Jean Louis, her twenty-year-old brother, Guillaume (Belomy), her seventeen-year-old brother, and Gabriel, her fourteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
677 | Ambroise | Hébert | 01/01/1746 | Marie Madeleine Bourg(?) | Ambroise Hébert(?) | Resided at Pleslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana his his brother Jean Pierre Hébert. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a forty-two-year-old member of the household of Jean Pierre Hébert, his forty-year-old brother. In addition to himself and Jean Pierre Hébert, the household included Eudoxie Giroir, his forty-one-year-old sister-in-law, and Marie Rose Giroir, Eudoxie's twenty-six-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a forty-three-year-old member of the household of Jean Pierre Hébert, his forty-one-year-old brother, and Eudoxie (Adocille) Giroir, his forty-three-year-old sister-in-law. The household also included Marie Rose Giroir (Giroire), Euxodie Giroir's twenty-seven-year-old daughter. The members of the household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-four barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
678 | Jean Pre. (Pierre) | Hébert | 01/01/1747 | Marie Madeleine Bourg(?) | Ambroise Hébert(?) | Married Eudoxie (Eudocie) Giroir at the Church of the Ascension, Ascension Parish, La., October 1, 1787. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Isaac Hébert and Prosper Giroir (Girroir). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Ambroise. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household including Eudoxie (Adocill) Giroir, his forty-two-year-old spouse, Ambroise Hébert, his forty-three-year-old brother, and Marie Rose Giroir (Giroire), his twenty-seven-year-old stepdaughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-four barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and nine cows. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:324; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
679 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Blanchard | Veuve Bertrand | 01/01/1725 | Married Jean Bertrand. | Jean (born 1765) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
680 | Jn. (Jean) | Berthrand (Bertrand) | 01/01/1765 | Miquelon(?) | Margueritte Blanchard | Married Marguerite Pitre at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, La., December 25, 1785. Joseph Martinez witnessed the marriage document. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margueritte) Pitre, his twenty-six-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Jean Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margritta) Pitre, his twenty-seven-year-old wife, and Pierre Berthrand (Bertrand), his one-year-old son. Jean Berthrand (Bertrand) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-barrels of corn, one horse, one cow, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:28; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
681 | Benoît | Commeau (Comeau, Como) | 01/01/1737 | Marguerite Thibodeau | Maurice Comeau | Married Anne Blanchard. | Jean (born 1766), Marie Anne Victoire (born 1769), Anne Eleonnore (born 1771), Marguerite (Anastasie) (born 1773), Rose (born 1780), Claire (born 1786) | Resided at Cherbourg after arrival in France. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Benoît Como in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included Anne Blanchard, his forty-eight-year-old wife, and the following children: Marie, 18 years old; Anne, 16 years old; Anastasie (Marguerite), 14 years old; Rose, 8 years old; and Claire, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents of frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. His name is rendered as Benoit Como in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Blanchard, his forty-nine-year-old wife, Marie Como, his nineteen-year-old daughter, Anne Como, his seventeen-year-old daughter, anastasie Como, his fifteen-year-old daughter, Rose Como, his nine-year-old daughter, and Claire Como, his three-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
682 | Anne | Blanchard | 01/01/1740 | Married Benoit Commeau (Comeau, Como). | Jean (born 1766), Marie Anne Victoire (born 1769), Anne Eleonnore (born 1771), Marguerite (Anastasie) (born 1773), Rose (born 1780), Claire (born 1786) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Benoît Commeau (Como). In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old husband, her household included the following children: Marie, 18 years old; Anne, 16 years old; Anastasie (Marguerite), 14 years old; Rose, 8 years old; and Clarie, 2 years old. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-nine-year-old spouse of Benoît Como. In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Marie, her nineteen-year-old daughter; Anne, her seventeen-year-old daughter; Anastasie, her fifteen-year-old daughter; Rose, her nine-year-old daughter; and Claire, her three-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
683 | Jean | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1766 | Anne Blanchard | Benoit Commeau (Comeau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
684 | Anne Eleonnore | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1771 | Anne Blanchard | Benoit Commeau (Comeau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her eighteen-year-old sister, Anastasie (Marguerite), her fourteen-year-old sister, Rose, her eight-year-old sister, and Claire, her two-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Marie, her sister, 19 years old; Anastasie, her sister, 15 years old; Rose, her sister, 9 years old; and Claire, her sister, 3 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
685 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Anastasie) | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1773 | Anne Blanchard | Benoit Commeau (Comeau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her eighteen-year-old sister, Anne, her sixteen-year-old sister, Rose, her eight-year-old sister, and Claire, her two-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
686 | Marie Anne Victoire | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1769 | Anne Blanchard | Benoit Commeau (Comeau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Anne, her sixteen-year-old sister, Anastasie (Marguerite), her fourteen-year-old sister, Rose, her eight-year-old sister, and Claire, her two-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Anne, her sister, 17 years old; Anastasie, her sister, 15 years old; Rose, her sister, 9 years old; and Claire, her sister, 3 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
687 | Rose | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1780 | Anne Blanchard | Benoit Commeau (Comeau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her eighteen-year-old sister, Anne, her sixteen-year-old sister, Anastasie (Marguerite), her fourteen-year-old sister, Rose, her eight-year-old sister, and Claire, her two-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Marie, her sister, 19 years old; Anne, her sister, 17 years old; Anastasie, her sister, 15 years old; and Claire, her sister, 3 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
688 | Magdelaine | Blanchard | 01/01/1745 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her sister, Anne Blanchard. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
689 | Jean Charles | Benoît | 01/01/1749 | Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Charles Benoît | Married Marie Haché. | Jean Marie (born 1771), Paul Frédéric (born 1776), François Renné (René) (born 1778), Sophie Renné (Renée) (born 1783) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1761-1773. Occupied farm no. 37 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
690 | Marie Modeste | Haché | 01/01/1751 | Anne Olivier | Jean Baptiste Haché | Married Jean Charles Benoît at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France. Married (2) François Benoît (Benoist) at Ascension Parish, La., September 3, 1789. | Jean Marie (born 1771), Paul Frédéric (born 1776), François Renné (René) (born 1778), Sophie Renné (Renée) (born 1783) | Resided with her family at Boulogne, France, 1759-1766. Subsequently resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1766-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 1. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
691 | Jean Marie | Benoît | 01/01/1771 | Marie Haché | Jean Charles Benoit | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
692 | Paul Frédéric | Benoît | 01/01/1776 | Marie Haché | Jean Charles Benoit | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
693 | François Renné (René) | Benoît | 01/01/1778 | Marie Haché | Jean Charles Benoit | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
694 | Sophie Rennée (Renée) | Benoît | 01/01/1783 | Marie Haché | Jean Charles Benoit | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
695 | Étienne | Boudrot (Boudreaux, Boudereau) | 01/01/1743 | Marie Claire Aucoin | Étienne Boudrot | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Thibaudeau (Thibodeau). | Joseph (born 1766), Blaise (born 1770), Anne (born 1773), Étienne (born 1780), Yves (born 1786), Marie Emelie (born March 29, 1790) | Deported to England. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Thibaudeau (Thibodot), his forty-two-year-old wife, Blaise, his eighteen-yearold son, Étienne, his eight-year-old son, Yves, his two-year-old son, Anne, his fifteen-year-old daughter, and Étienne Boudreaut, his fifteen-year-old nephew. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. His name is rendered as Étienne Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Maragueritte (Margritta) Thibaudeau (Thibeaudeau), his wie, 30 years old; Blaise, his son, 19 years old; Étienne, his son, 9 years old; Yves, his son, 9 years old; Anne, his daughter, 3 yers old; and Étienne Boudrot (Boudereau), his nephew, 16 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:116. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
696 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margueritte) | Thibaudeau (Thibodeau, Thibeaudeau) | 01/01/1745 | Suzanne Comeau | Antoine Thibodeau | Married Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot). | Joseph (born 1766), Blaise (born 1770), Anne (born 1773), Étienne (born 1780), Yves (born 1786), Marguerite (Marie Emelie) (born March 29, 1790) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Margueritte Thobodot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot). In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Blaise, her eighteen-year-old son, Étienne, her eight-year-old son, Yves, her two-year-old son, Anne, her eight-year-old daughter, and Étienne Boudreaut, her husband's fifteen-year-old nephew. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. Identified as Margritta Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Étienne Boudreau (Boudereau). In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old husband, the household included Blaise, her nineteen-year-old son; Étienne, her nine-year-old son; Anne, her three-year-old daughter; and Étienne Boudrot (Boudereau), her husband's sixteen-year-old nephew. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:116. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
697 | Blaise | Boudrot (Boudreaux, Boudereau) | 01/01/1769 | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Married Perinne Barillot (Bariot, Variot) at Ascension Parish, La., February 20, 1792. Étienne Boudrot and Louis Desormeaux witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Josèphe (born January 14, 1794), Emilia (born January 24, 1796), Jean Baptiste (born October 4, 1798), François Marie (born December 1, 1800), Basile Mathurin (born January 6, 1803) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included the following siblings: Etienne, his eight-year-old brother, Yves, his two-year-old brother, Anne, his fifteen-year-old sister, and Étienne Boudreaut, his fifteen-year-old first cousin. Identified as Blaise Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Étienne, his nine-year-old brother, Yves, his three-year-old brother, Anne, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Étienne Boudereau, his sixteen-year-old cousin. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-114, 116' Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
698 | Yves | Boudrot (Boudreaux, Boudereau) | 01/01/1785 | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Blaise, his eighteen-year-old brother, Étienne, his eight-year-old brother, Anne, his fifteen-year-old sister, and Étienne Boudreaut, his fifteen-year-old first cousin. His name is rendered as Yves Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Blaise, his nineteen-year-old brother, Étienne, his nine-year-old brother, Anne, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Étienne Boudereau, a sixteen-year-old cousin. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
699 | Étienne | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1780 | Blaise Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
700 | Cécille | Boudrot (Boudreaux, boudereau) | 01/01/1768 | St. Malo, France | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Married Mathurin (Maturino) Ayo (Aliot), a native of La Rochelle, France, and the son of Pierre Ayo and Marguerite Rusod (Rousseau?), at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, La., December 11, 1785. Vicente Llorca and Joseph Martinez witnessed the marriage record. | Joseph (married February 2, 1812), Mathurin (married July 6, 1812) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Mathurin Ayo (Aliot). She and her twenty-five-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Cécille Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Mathurin Ayo (Aliot). She and her twenty-six-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-seven barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:13, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:45-46; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
701 | Anne | Boudrot (Boudreaux, Boudereau) | 01/01/1768 | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Blaise, her eighteen-year-old brother, Étienne, her eight-year-old brother, Yves, her two-year-old brother, and Étienne Boudreaut, her fifteen-year-old first cousin. Her name is rendered as Anne Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Blaise, her sixteen-year-old brother, Étienne, her nine-year-old brother, Yves, her three-year-old brother, and Éteinne Boudereau, her sixteen-year-old cousin. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
702 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1782 | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
703 | Anne | Olivier | Veuve Haché | 01/01/1729 | Françoise Bonnevie | Pierre Olivier | Married Jean Baptiste Haché. | Anne Marie (born 1751) | Resided at Boulogne, France, 1759-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1771-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
704 | Magdeleine Apauline | Haché | 01/01/1775 | Marie Dumont | Joseph Haché | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1771-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
705 | Jean | Tibodeau (Thibodeau) | 01/01/1765 | Married Marie Rose Damour. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
706 | Marie Rose | Damour | 01/01/1761 | Married Jean Tibodeau (Thibodeau). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | She appears to have died before November 4, 1804. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:1. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
707 | Isabelle | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Tibodeau | 01/01/1729 | Madeleine Hébert | Pierre Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Doiron. Married (2) Olivier Thibodeau, the widower of Madeleine Aucoin. | Marie (born 1768) | Resided at Langrolay, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Pleudihan, Brittany, France, 1760-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
708 | Marie | Tibodeau (Thibodeau) | 01/01/1768 | Isabelle Boudreau, Veuve Tibodeau | Olivier Thibodeau (Tibodeau) | Married (1) (?) Metra. Married (2) Philippe Henry. | Joseph Métra, Nicolas Métra (Mesrat) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Philippe Henry. In addition to herself and her twenty-three-year-old husband, her household included Nicolas Métra (Mesrat), her five-year-old son by a previous marriage. Marie Tibodeau and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
709 | Ursule | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | Veuve Pitre | 01/01/1740 | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Breau | Married Françoise Pitre | Ursule (born 1763) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1764-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
710 | Ursule | Pitre | 01/01/1763 | Ursule Brod, Veuve Pitre | François Pitre | Married Aimable Landry, an Acadian native of Cherbourg, France, February 3, 1788. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:422; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
711 | Eustache | Berthrand (Bertrand, Bertrant) | 01/01/1736 | Françoise Léger | Jean Bertrand | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Geneviève Landry. | Magdeleine (born 1766; married August 19, 1792), Marie Geneviève (born 1774), Marie Josèphe (born 1778), Louis Martin (born ca. 1785), Martin (born 1786) | Resided at Cherbourg, France, ca. 1764-1772. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included Margueritte Landry, his thirty-eight-year-old spouse, and the following children: Louis, 4 years old; Martin, 2 years old; and Marie, 9 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Ustache Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of the household including the following persons: Marguerite (Margritta) Landry, his wife, 39 years old; Louis Bergrand, his son, 5 years old; Martin Bertrand, his son, 3 years old; and Marie Bertrand, his daughter, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
712 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margritta) Geneviève | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1748 | Marguerite Babin | Benjamin Landry | Married Eustache Berthrand (Bertrand, Bertrant). | Louis Martin (born ca. 1785), Magdeleine (born 1766), Marie Geneviève (born 1774), Marie Josèphe (born 1778) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Eustache Berthrand (Bertrant). In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following children: Louis, 4 years old; Martin, 2 years old; and Marie, 9 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Margritta Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old wife of Eustache (Ustache) Bertrand. In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, the household included Louis Bertrand, her five-year-old son, Martin, her three-year-old son, and Marie Bertrand, her ten-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
713 | Louis Martin | Berthrand (Bertrand) | 01/01/1785 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Landry | Eustache Berthrand (Bertrand) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Martin, his two-year-old brother, and Marie, his nine-year-old sister. The family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned thirty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Louis Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Martin Bertrand, his three-year-old brother, and Marie Bertrand, his ten-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
714 | Magdeleine | Berthrand (Bertrand) | 01/01/1766 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Landry | Eustache Berthrand (Bertrand) | Married Moïse LeBlanc at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1786. Eustache (Eustachos) Bertrand and Joseph Guiennes witnessed the marriage record. q | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Moïse (Moÿse) LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, the household included Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, her six-year-old stepdaughter, and Jean Martin LeBlanc, her three-year-old stepdaughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Madelaine Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Moïse (Moÿse) LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her twenty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Marie Josèphe (Joseph), her seven-year-old daughter, and Jean Martin, her four-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine barrels of corn, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:479; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
715 | Marie Genevieve | Berthrand (Bertrand) | 01/01/1774 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Landry | Eustache Berthrand (Bertrand) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
716 | Marie Josèphe | Berthrand (Bertrand) | 01/01/1778 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Landry | Eustache Berthrand (Bertrand) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Louis, her four-year-old brother, and Martin, her two-year-old brother. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned thirty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Marie Bertrand in the 1988 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Louis Bertrand, her five-year-old brother, and Martin Bertrand, her three-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
717 | Charles | Giroir (Giroire) | 01/01/1729 | Marie Boisseau | Jacques Giroire | Married Michèle Petry (Petru, Pitre?). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
718 | Michéle (Michelle) | Petry (Pitre?) | 01/01/1727 | St. Servan, Brittany, France | Married (1) Pierre Pirou. Married (2) Charles Giroir (Giroire). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
719 | Athanase | Bourg (Bourque) | 01/01/1740 | Marguerite Hébert | François Bourg | Married Luce Brod (Breau). | Joseph (born 1772), Charles (born 1775) | Resided at Saint-Eno9gat, Brittany, France, 1759-1768. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1768-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. (He and his family are also listed as passengers aboard the Saint-Remi.) | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
720 | Luce | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | Veuve Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1752 | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Breau | Married Athanas (Athanase) Bourg. | Joseph (born 1772), Charles (born 1775) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. (She and her family are also listed as passengers aboard the Saint-Rémi.) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-two-year-old widow and the head of a household including Joseph Bourg (Bourq), her fifteen-year-old son, and Charles Bourg (Bourq), her twelve-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
721 | Jh (Joseph) | Bourg | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
722 | Charles | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1775 | Luce Brod (Breau) | Athanase Bourg | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of a household including Luce Brod (Breau, Breaut), his forty-two-year-old mother, and Joseph Bourg (Bourq), his fifteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
723 | Marie | Doucet (Doucé) | Veuve Moulaison | 01/01/1725 | Married Pierre Moulaison, son of Gabriel Moulaison and Marie Aubois. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Joseph (born 1740) | Resided at Le Havre following her arrival in France. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow living alone. She occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. She also owned ten barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1788 census suggests that she lived next door to her son Joseph. Identified as Marie Doucé, Veuve Mollaison in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-one-year-old widow living along. She occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. She owned fourteen barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
724 | Jh. (Joseph) | Moulaison (Moleson) | 01/01/1740 | Havre de Grace, France | Marie Doucet | Pierre Moulaison | Married Marie Gauterot (Gautreaut), daughter of Alexis Gauterot and Marguerite Haché. | Jean Amable (born August 15, 1796), Ursule (born November 5, 1798) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included Marie Gauterot (Gautreaut), his twenty-four-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. (The 1788 census suggests that Joseph Moulaison and his wife lived next door to his mother.) They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:198. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
725 | Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Blanchard | Veuve Charles Bourg | 01/01/1737 | Married Charles Bourg, son of Louis Bourg and Cécile Michel. | Charles (born 1774), Joseph Florent (born 1774) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-three-year-old widow and the head of a household including Charles Bourg (Bourq), her fourteen-year-old son, and Joseph Bourg (Bourq), her nine-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned sixteen barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Madelaine blanchard, Veuve Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-four-year-old widow and the head of a household including Charles Bourg, her fifteen-year-old son, and Joseph Bourg, her ten-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
726 | Charles | Bourg | 01/01/1774 | Dole, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Blanchard | Charles Bourg | Married Marie Louis Trahan, a native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, at the Attakapas church, October 9, 1798. | Marie Modeste (September 23, 1799) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's houshold. In addition to himself and his mother, his household included Joseph Bourg (Bourq), his nine-year-old brother. His family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned sixteen barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. His name is rendered as Charles Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Joseph Bourg, his ten-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 97; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
727 | Ignace | Amond (Hamon) | 01/01/1746 | Cécile Blanchard | Jean Hamon | Married Anne Josèphe Bourg. | Anne Magdeleine (Anne Josèphe) (born 1773), Marie Modeste (born 1775), Marthe (Martine) (born 1786) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Pleudihen, France, 1760-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included Anne Bourg (Bourq), his wife, and the following children: Anne, 24 years old; Marie, 18 years old; and Martine, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Ignace Hamon in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Bourg, his wife, 44 years; Anne, his daughter, 15 years old; marie, his daughter, 13 years old; and Marthe, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | (probably wigmaker) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
728 | Anne Jh (Josèphe) | Bourg | 01/01/1748 | Cécile Michel | Louis Bourg | Married Ignace Amond (Hamon), son of Jean Hamon and Cécile Blanchard. | Anne Josèphe (born 1773), Marie Modeste (born 1775), Marthe (Martine) (born 1786) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Ignace Hamon. In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old husband, her household included Anne, her twenty-four-year-old daughter, marie, her eighteen-year-old daughter and Martine, her two-year-old daughter. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Anne Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old wife of Ignace Hamon. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old spouse, the household included Anne, her fifteen-year-old daughter, Marie, her thirteen-year-old daughter, and Marthe, her three-year-old daughter. She and family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
729 | Anne Magdelaine | Amond (Hamon) | 01/01/1773 | Anne Josèphe Bourg | Ygnace (Ignace) Amond (Hamon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-four-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her eighteen-year-old sister, and Martine, her two-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Anne Hamon in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie Hamon, her thirteen-year-old sister, and Marthe Hamon, her three-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
730 | Marie Modeste | Amond (Hamon) | 01/01/1775 | Anne Jh (Josèphe) Bourg | Ygnace (Ignace) Amond (Hamon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Anne, her twenty-four-year-old sister, and Martine, her two-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Marie Hamon in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Anne Hamon, her fifteen-year-old sister, and Marthe, her three-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
731 | Jean (Cecilio Juan) | Bourg | 01/01/1760 | Marie Madeleine Blanchard | Charles Bourg (Bourque) | Married Catherine (Cathelina) Viaud (Vio). | Catherine (born ca. 1785), Jean (born 1787), Marie (baptized May 4, 1788), Louis Elie (Luís Elias) (born January 10, 1790), Joseph André (born February 28, 1792), Charles Olivier (October 12, 1795) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included Catherine Viaud (Vio), his forty-year-old spouse, and Jean Bourg (Bourq), his one-year-old son. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that the he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included Catherine (Quaterine) Viaud (Vio), his forty-one-year-old wife, and Jean Bourg, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owend forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 124, 125. | 1.785 | rope maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||
732 | Catherine (Quaterine) | Viaud (Vio) | 01/01/1752 | Marguerite Broussard | Helio Viaud (Bieaud, Vieaud) | Married Jean Bourg. | Catherine (born ca. 1785), Jean (born 1787), Marie (baptized May 4, 1788), Louis Elie (Luís Elias) (born January 10, 1790), Joseph André (born February 28, 1792), Charles Olivier (October 12, 1795) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Jean Bourg (Bourq). In addition to herself and her thirty-year-old husband, her household included Jean Bourg (Bourq), her one-year-old son. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Quaterine Vio in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Bourg. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, the household included Jean Bourg, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one horse, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 125. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
733 | Catherine | Bourg | 01/01/1785 | Catherine Viaud | Jean Bourg | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Evidently died before the 1788 census of the Lafourche District was compiled. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
734 | Marin | BoudReau (Boudrot) | 01/01/1733 | Marie Claire Aucoin | Etienne Boudrot | Married Pélagie Bariau (Barillot, Barrillot). | Étienne (born 1772) Marie (born ca. 1785) | Deported to England. After subsequently moving to France, he resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | cobbler | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
735 | Pélagie | Bariau (Barillot) | 01/01/1746 | Véronique Giroire | Pierre Barillot | Married Marin Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Étienne (born 1772) Marie (born ca. 1785) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
736 | Étienne | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1772 | Dole, France | Pélagie Bariau (Barillot) | Marin Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married Ursule Doiron, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Jean Jacques Doiron and Anne Breau, at Assumption Parish, La., March 3, 1794. Nicolas Hébert and Ambroise Hebert witnessed the marriage record. | Étienne Magloire (bornNovember 30, 1794), Marie Emilie (Emilia) (born January 8, 1798), David Valentin (born January 30, 1801), Marianne (Marina) (born August 1, 1802) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111, 115, 116. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
737 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1785 | Pélagie Bariau | Marin Boudreau (Boudrot) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. The passenger manifest indicates that she was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
738 | Jh (Joseph) | AuCoin | 01/01/1752 | May have departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. He may have arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. A marginal notation in the passenger manifest, however, suggests that he may not have departed France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
739 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Benjamin Pitre | 01/01/1739 | Catherine Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux) | Jean Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre, son of Claude Pitre and Marguerite Doiron. | Marie (born 1762), Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) (born 1765), Cécille (Olivette) (born 1769), Marguerite (born 1771), Étienne (born 1778), Jean (born 1781) | Resided at La Gouesnière, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1760-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-seven-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Marie, her daughter, 26 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleinne), her daughter, 23 years old; Olivette (Cécille), her daughter, 19 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte), her daughter, 17 year old; and Jean, her son, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. They owned no slaves. Her name is rendered as Margritta Boudereau, Veuve Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie, her daughter, 25 years old; Magdeleine (Madelaine), her daughter, 24 ye old; Cécille (Olivette), her daughter, 20 years old; Marguerite (Margritta), her daughter, 18 years old; and Jean, her son, 7 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
740 | Étienne | Pitre | 01/01/1778 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
741 | Jean | Pitre | 01/01/1781 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Married Marie Reine Bourg, daughter of Jean Bourg and Marguerite Bugeau, September 1, 1808. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a six-year-old child living with his forty-seven-year-old mother and the following siblings: Marie, his twenty-six-year-old sister; Magdeleine (Magdeleinne), his twenty-three-year-old sister; Olivette (Cécille), his nineteen-year-old sister; and Marguerite (Margueritte), his seventeen-year-old sister. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 85. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
742 | Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1762 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old living with her mother and the following siblings: Magdeleine (Magdeleinne), her sister, 23 years old; Olivette (Cécille), her sister, 19 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte), her sister, 17 years old; and Jean, her brother, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-five-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Magdelaine (Madelaine), her twenty-four-year-old sister, Cécille (Olivette), her twenty-year-old sister, Marguerite (Margritta), her eighteen-year-old sister, and Jean, her seven-year-old son. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 85. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
743 | Magdelaine (Magdeleinne, Madelaine) | Pitre | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Married Antoine Reynaud, son of François Reynaud and Marie Bertin of Bordeaux, France, August 17, 1792. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Magdeleinne Pitre in the 1788 census. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old mother, her household included the following siblings: Marie, her twenty-six-year-old sister, Olivette (Cécille), her nineteen-year-old sister, Marguerite (Margueritte), her seventeen-year-old sister, and Jean, her six-year-old brother. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Madelaine Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-four-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Marie, her twenty-five-year-old sister, Cécille (Olivette), her twenty-year-old sister, Marguerite (Margritta), her eighteen-year-old sister, and Jean, her seven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 85. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
744 | Cécille (Olivette) | Pitre | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old living with her forty-seven-year-old mother and the following siblings: Marie, her twenty-six-year-old sister; Magdeleine (Magdeleinne), her twenty-three-year-old sister; Marguerite (Margueritte), her seventeen-year-old sister; and Jean, her six-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. Identified as Olivette Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Marie, her twenty-five-year-old sister, Magdelaine (Madelaine), her twenty-four-year-old sister, Marguerite (Margritta), her eighteen-year-old sister, and Jean, her seven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
745 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margritta) | Pitre | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Boudreau (Boudrot) | Benjamin (Binjamin) Pitre | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old living with her forty-seven-year-old mother and the following siblings: Marie, her sister, 26 years pld; Magdeleine (Magdeleinne), her sister, 23 years old; Olivette (Cécille), her sister, 19 years old; and Jean, her brother, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. They owned no slaves. Her name is rendered as Margritta Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Marie, her twenty-five-year-old sister, Magdelaine, her twenty-four-year-old sister, Cécille, her twenty-year-old sister, and Jean, her seven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Jean Boudrot & Catherine Brasseur | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
746 | Monique | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1747 | Married Basile (Basille) Chiasson (Chaison). | Charles (born 1782), Louis (born ca. 1785; died September 17, 1785), Adélaïde (born 1774) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence the death of infant Louis Joseph on September 17, 1785 suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
747 | Charles | Chaison (Chiasson) | 01/01/1782 | Monique Commeau (Comeau) | Basille Basile) Chaison (Chiasson) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
748 | Louis (Louis Joseph) | Chaison (Chiasson, Chiaisson) | 01/01/1785 | Monique Commeau (Comeau) | Basille (Basile) Chaison (Chiasson) | He and his family were scheduled to leave France aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, suggest that he and his family did not sail from France aboard the Amitié. It fact, they note that he died, evidently in France, on September 27, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | 17/09/1785 | Evidently in France. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
749 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Chaison (Chiasson) | 01/01/1729 | Anne Doucet | François Chiasson | Married (1) Louis Marguerite Précieux. Married (2) Marguerite Josèphe Dugas (Dugast). Married (3) Anne Jouanne, the daughter of Jacques Joanne and Perrine Charpentier. | Second marriage: Joseph (born 1766), Pierre (born 1770) | Resided at Paramé, Brittany, France, 1759-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 28. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
750 | Anne | Jouanne | 01/01/1745 | Perrine Charpentier | Jacques Joanne | Married Jean Chaison (Chaisson), son of François Chiasson and Anne Doucet. | Joseph (born 1766), Pierre (born 1770) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
751 | Joseph | Chaison (Chaisson, Chiasson) | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Josèphe Dugas (Dugast) | Jean (Jean Baptiste) Chaison (Chiasson) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La., as Joseph Chiaisson. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that consisted of himself and Pierre Chaison (Chiasson), his six-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Joseph Chaisson in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Pierre Chaison (Chaisson), his seven-year-old brother. He and his brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | rope maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
752 | Pierre | Chaison (Chaisson, Chiasson) | 01/01/1770 | Marguerite Josèphe Dugas | Jean (Jean Baptiste) Chaison (Chiasson) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Pierre Chiaisson in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the six-year-old residing with his twenty-two-year-old brother, Joseph Chiaisson. (The age cited in the census is evidently in error, for other sources suggest that he was born in, or around, 1770. The age discrepancy raises the possibility that the Pierre Chaison in this household was a different brother, who in keeping with a command French practice of the period, would have shared a common given name.) Pierre Chaison and his brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Pierre Chaisson in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old child residing with Joseph Chaison (Chaisson), his twenty-two-year-old brother. He and his brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
753 | Charles | Blanchard | 01/01/1734 | Anne Dupuis | Joseph Blanchard | Married Marie Josèphe (sometimes Marguerite) Dugas (Dugast). | Souillac (Suliac) (born 1765; married [1] February 30, 1786), Charles (born 1770) | He and his family resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:100; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.785 | cobbler | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
754 | Souillac (Souliac, Suliac) | Blanchard | 01/01/1765 | Marie Josèphe Dugas (Dugast) | Charles Blanchard | Married (1) Céleste Boudrot, daughter of Pierre Boudrot and Magdeleine Bourg of St. Jean, Acadia, at Ascension Parish, La., February 30, 1786. Married (2) Marie Hébert, an Acadian and the daughter of Jean Hébert and Luce Bourg (Bourque), at Ascension Parish, La., October 22, 1787. Blanchard's wedding was part of a double marriage ceremony. Jean Olivier Hébert and Natalie Aucoin constituted the second couple. Ambroise Garidel was the witness. | Céleste Marie (born August 10, 1794; buried April 26, 1797, at the age of 2 years 9 months), Firmin (Fermin) (born November 12, 1796), Isidore (Isidoro) (a twin) (born March 13, 1799), Clarisse (a twin) (born March 13, 1799), Valéry (born November 13, 1801) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that also included Charles Blanchard, his nineteen-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Charles Blanchard, his twenty-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 93, 94, 100; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
755 | Ambroise | Hébert | 01/01/1731 | Marguerite Dugas | Charles Hébert | Married Phélicité (Félicité) LeJeune, daughter of Jean LeJeune and Françoise Guédry (Guidry). | Gertrude (born 1769) | Resided at Pleslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | carpenter / foreman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
756 | Phélicité (Félicité) | LeJeune | 01/01/1740 | Françoise Guédry (Guidry) | Jean LeJeune | Married (1) Ambroise Hébert, son of Charles Hébert and Marguerite Dugas (Dugast). Married (2) Jean Baptiste Salier. | Gertrude (born 1769) | Resided at Pleslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Her burial record indicates taht she was fifty-five years of age at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:240. | 1.785 | 22/09/1792 | 22/09/1792 | New Orleans | New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||
757 | Gertrude | Hébert | 01/01/1769 | Phélicité (Félicité) LeJeune | Ambroise Hébert | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | Jean LeJeune and Françoie Guédry (Guidry) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
758 | Angélique (Anne Angélique) | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1765 | Anne Lejeune | Jean Baptiste Gauterot (Gotreau) | Sailed to Louisiana aboard the Caroline, which departed France on October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | Jean LeJeune and Françoise Guédry (Guidry) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
759 | François | Blanchard | 01/01/1731 | Sts. Peter and Paul Parish, Acadia | Anne Dupuis | Joseph Blanchard | Married Elenne (Hélène) Giroir (Giroire), Honoré Giroire and Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot). | Françoise (born 1765; married February 2, 1793), Marie (born 1770; married January 28, 1793), Joseph (born 1775), and Margueritte (born 1780) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. (Mistakenly identified as "Françoise" Blanchard in the passenger manifest.) Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Hélène (Elenne) Giroir (Girois), his wife, 46 years old; Marie Blanchard, his daughter, 18 years old; Joseph Blanchard, his son, 12 years old; and Marguerite (Margueritte) Blanchard, his daughter, 7 years old. François Blanchard and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elenne (Hélène, Eleine) Giroir (Giroire), his wife, 40 years old; Marie Blanchard, his daughter, 19 years old; Joseph Blanchard, his son, 13 years old; and Marguerite (Margritta) Blanchard, his daughter, 8 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and nine hogs. He was a resident of Assumption Parish, La., at the time of his death. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-three years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:94; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.785 | 27/01/1794 | Assumption Parish, La. | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||
760 | Elenne (Hélène) | Giroir (Giroire) | 01/01/1742 | Marie Mosèphe Terriot (Theriot) | Honoré Giroire | Married François Blanchard. | Françoise (born 1765; married February 2, 1793), Marie (born 1770; married January 28, 1793), Joseph (born 1775), and Margueritte (born 1780) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1762-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of François Blanchard. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: François Blanchard, her husband, 58 years old; Marie Blanchard, her daughter, 18 years old; Joseph Blanchard, her son, 12 years old; and Marguerite (Margueritte) Blanchard, her daughter, 7 years old. Hélène Giroir and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. Identified as Eleine Giroire in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of François Blanchard. In addition to herself and her fifty-nine-year-old husband, the household included Marie Blanchard, her nineteen-year-old daughter, Joseph Blanchard, her thirteen-year-old son, and Marguerite (Margritta) Blanchard, her eight-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
761 | Joseph | Blanchard | 01/01/1775 | Elenne (Hélène) Giroir | François Blanchard | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
762 | Françoise | Blanchard | 01/01/1765 | Elenne (Elena, Hélène) Giroir | François Blanchard | Married (1) Jean Charles Gotreau (Gotro, Gauterot, Gauterau) at Ascension Parish, La., February 19, 1786. Eudox(?) Giroire (Girouard), Marie Blanchard, and Marie Rose Giroir (Girouard) witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Bourg (Bourque), the son of Jean Bourg (Bourque) and Jeanne Chalou, . Pierre Gauterot (Gautro) and Charles Bourg (Bourque) witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Jean François (born 1786, baptized February 17, 1788), Suzanne (Susanne) (born 1787), Joseph Nicolas (born November 16, 1789)Second marriage: Charles André (born December 17, 1793; buried July 12, 1798), Louis Ambroise (born March 4, 1796), Marie Françoise (evidently a twin) (born September 10, 1800; buried July 13, 1801), Jean Baptiste (evidently a twin) (born September 11, 1800) (note discrepancy in birthdate with that of Marie Françoise), Laurent David (born August 3, 1802) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Jean Charles Gauterot (Gautreaut). In addition to herself and her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included Jean Gauterot, her one-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. Her name is rendered as Françoise Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old wife of Jean Charles Gotreau (Gauterau). In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Jean, her son, 2 years old; Suzanne, her daughter, 1 year old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:94, 120, 124, 126, 314-321; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
763 | Marie | Blanchard | 01/01/1770 | Elenne (Hélène) Giroir | François Blanchard | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
764 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Blanchard | 01/01/1780 | St. Similiano, Diocese of Nantes, France | Elenne (Hélène) Giroir | François Blanchard | Married Alexandre (Alexis Simon) Comeau, a native of St. Servan, Diocese of St. Malo, France, and the son of Simon Comeau and Marguerite Aucoin, at Assumption Parish, La., February 4, 1799. Elias Blanchard and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:97. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
765 | Françoise | Doucet | femme de Louis Haché | 01/01/1739 | Marie Carret (Caret) | François Doucet | Married (1) Alexis Renault. Married (2) Louis Haché, son of Jean Baptiste Chaché and Marie Anne Gentil. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
766 | Pre. (Pierre Charles) | Haché | 01/01/1775 | Châtellereault, Poitou Province, France (one source indicates Nantes, France) | Françoise Doucet | Louis Haché | Married Marie Bourgeois, a native of Cabannocé and the daughter of Michel Bourgeois and Anne Landry. | Urbin (Urbano) (born September 9, 1798), Louis (born November 9, 1799), François Marie (born May 15, 1801?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:1-2. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
767 | Pre (Pierre) | Haché | 01/01/1769 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Daigle | Pierre Haché | Married (Anne Dantin, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Louis Dantin and Jeanne Gemier (Cormier?), at Assumption Parish, La., June 25, 1795. | Jean Pierre (baptized December 25, 1796), Argilo(?) (born January 5, 1799), Rosalie (born May 2, 1800), Carmelite (born December 29, 1801) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:1-2. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
768 | Jh (Joseph) | Hach | 01/01/1769 | Pierre Haché(?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
769 | Marie | Haché | 01/01/1766 | Anne Dumont (sometimes identified as Anne Dumondedel) | Pierre Haché (sometimes identified as Joseph Haché) | The identity of her first husband is not recorded in Louisiana's ecclesiastical records. She is described as a widow at the time of her 1790 Married (2) Pierre de Saint Ange, a native of Quebec and the son of Pierre de Saint Ange and Eva Flavia, at Ascension Parish, La., December 13, 1790. Married (3) Michel Barre, a native of Montreal and the son of Michel Barre and Josèphe Belleisle, at Assumption Parish, La., May 12, 1799. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:1. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
770 | Pierre (Pre) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1770 | Anne Josèphe LeBert | Pierre LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
771 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1733 | Married Pierre LeBlanc. | Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1769) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
772 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1769 | Marie Landry | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Jean Charles Boudrot at Ascension Parish, La., May 31, 1787. | Simon Hypolite (Hipolite) (born November 15, 1788), Jean Charles (born February 2, 1790) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 114, 118; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
773 | Honnoré (Honoré) | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1738 | Married Anne Trahan. | Augustin (born 1765), Jacques (born 1768), Jean Charles (born 1772) | Deported to Liverpool, England. After subsequently migrating to France, resided at Morlaix, Brittany. Occupied farm no. 57 at the village of Martha, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | At the time he was a resident of the English Turn area of St. Bernard Parish. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-seven years old at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104. | 1.785 | 04/10/1796 | St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
774 | Augustin | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1765 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France (one source suggests Nantes, France, but he is frequently identified as a native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer) | Anne Trahan | Honnoré (Honoré) Duhon (Duon) | Married Marguerite LeBlanc, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of François LeBlanc and Marie Marguerite Godeau(?). | Marie Jeanne (born February 15, 1797; buried October 10, 1799), Charles (born July 13, 1799), Jean Baptiste (baptized March 1, 1801, at the age of nine days), Jean (born September 14, 1803) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104; 7:115. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
775 | Jacques | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1768 | Anne Trahan | Honnoré (Honoré) Duhon (Duon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
776 | Jean Charles | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1772 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Anne Trahan | Honnoré (Honoré) Duhon (Duon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Charles Duon, his nephew, at St. Louis Catholic Church (now cathedral), New Orleans, July 14, 1799. | He was a bachelor at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104. | 1.785 | 24/09/1799 | St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||
777 | Joseph | Semer | 01/01/1725 | Married Anne Landry. | Marie (born 1760), Anne François[e] (born 1764) | Deported to England. Subsequently resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
778 | Marie | Semer | 01/01/1760 | Anne Landry | Joseph Semer | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
779 | Anne François (Françoise?) | Semer | 01/01/1764 | Anne Landry | Joseph Semer | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
780 | Chrisostome (Chrisosthome, Chrysostome) | Trahan | 01/01/1743 | Marie Blanchard | Joseph Trahan | Married Anne Granger (Grangé). | Jean Chrisostome (born 1775), Joseph (born 1778), Reine Sophie (Renne) (ca. 1785), Anne Julie (born 1765), Marie Magdeleine (born 1767), Margueritte (born 1780), Marie Marthe (born 1771) | Deported to Falmouth, England. After subsequently migrating to France, resided at Morlaix. Occupied farm no. 38 at the village of Kerlan, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household taht included the following persons: Anne Granger, his wife, 44 years old; Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine), his daughter, 19 years old; Marie Marthe, his daughter, 16 years old; Jean Chrisostome, his son, 12 years old; Joseph, his son, 10 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte), his daughter, 8 years old; Reine Sophie, his daughter, 4 years old. Trahan and his family owned six arpents frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn, five cows, four horses, and thirteen hogs. Identified as Christothome Trahan in the census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Anne Granger (Grangé), his wife, 44 years old; Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine), his daughter, 20 years old; Marie Marthe (Marie Marte), his daughter, 17 years old; Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), his son, 13 years old; Joseph, his son, 11 years old; Marguerite (Margritte), his daughter, 9 years old; and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 97. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
781 | Anne | Granger | 01/01/1744 | Madeleine Landry | Jean Baptiste Granger | Married Chrisostome (Chrisosthome, Chrysostome) Trahan, son of Joseph Trahan and Marie Blanchard. | Jean Chrisostome (born 1775), Joseph (born 1778), Reine Sophie (Renne) (ca. 1785), Anne Julie (born 1765), Marie Magdeleine (born 1767), Margueritte (born 1780), Marie Marthe (born 1771) | Deported to Falmouth, England. After subsequently migrating to France, resided at Morlaix. Occupied farm no. 38 at the village of Kerlan, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Chrisostome Trahan. In addition to herself and her husband, her household included the following persons: Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine), her daughter, 19 years old; Marie Marthe, her daughter, 16 years old; Jean Chrisostome, her son, 12 years old; Joseph, her son, 10 years old; Marguerite, her daughter, 8 years old; and Reine Sophie, her daughter, 4 years old. Granger and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, sixteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Chrisostome (Christothome) Trahan. In addition to herself and her forty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine), her twenty-year-old daughter, Marie Marthe (Marie Marte), her seventeen-year-old daughter, Jean Chrisostome (Christothome), her thirteen-year-old son, Joseph, her eleven-year-old son, Marguerite (Margritte), her nine-year-old son, and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), her five-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 97. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
782 | Jean Chrisostome | Trahan | 01/01/1775 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as Jean Chrisosthome Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine), his twenty-year-old sister, Marie Marthe (Marte), his seventeen-year-old sister, Joseph, his eleven-year-old brother, Marguerite (Margritte), his nine-year-old sister, and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), his five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
783 | Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1778 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine), his twenty-year-old sister, Marie Marthe (Marte), his seventeen-year-old sister, Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), his thirteen-year-old brother, Marguerite (Margritte), his nine-year-old sister, and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), his five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
784 | Reine Sophie (Renne Sophie, Berta Sophie) | Trahan | 01/01/1785 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District as Berta Sophie Trahan. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine), her twenty-year-old sister, Marie Marthe (Marte), her seventeen-year-old sister, Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), her thirteen-year-old brother, Joseph, her eleven-year-old brother, and Marguerite (Margritte), her nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
785 | Anne Julie | Trahan | 01/01/1765 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | She appears to have died shortly after arriving in Louisiana, for she does not appear with her family in 1788 and 1789 census reports. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
786 | Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine) | Trahan | 01/01/1767 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified as Marie Madelaine Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie Marthe (Marie Marte), he seventeen-year-old sister, Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), her thirteen-year-old brother, Joseph, her eleven-year-old brother, Marguerite (Margritte), her nine-year-old sister, and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), her five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
787 | Marie Marthe (Marte) | Trahan | 01/01/1771 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified as Marie Marte Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine), her twenty-year-old sister, Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), her thirteen-year-old brother, Joseph, her eleven-year-old brother, Marguerite, her nine-year-old sister, and Reine Sophie, her five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
788 | Marguerite (Margueritte, Margritte) | Trahan | 01/01/1780 | Anne Granger | Chrisostome (Chrysostome) Trahan | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her parents' houshold. Identified as Margritte Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine), her twenty-year-old sister, Marie Marthe (Marte), her seventeen-year-old sister, Jean Chrisostome (Chrisosthome), her hirteen-year-old brother, Joseph, her eleven-year-old brother, and Reine Sophie (Berta Sophie), her five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
789 | Jean | Métra (Metra, Metral) | 01/01/1739 | Lorraine | Jeanne Veuvre | Jacques Métra | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Bourg, daughter of Louis Bourg and Cécile Michel. | Anne Margueritte (born 1767) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1765-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included Margueritte Bourg, his fifty-five-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jean Maitra in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included Margueritte (Margrithe) Bourg, his fifty-six-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||
790 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margrithe) | Bourg | 01/01/1753 | Cécile Michel | Louis Bourg | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Guillot. Married (2) Jean Métra, son of Jacques Métra and Jeanne Veuvre. | Anne Margueritte (born 1767) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Métra (Metral). She and her fifty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District as Margrithe Bourg. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Métra (Maitra). She and her fifty-one-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
791 | Anne Margueritte | Métra | 01/01/1767 | Margueritte Bourg | Jean Metra | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
792 | Jh (Joseph) | Benard (Bénard) | 01/01/1739 | Prussia(?) | Married Jeanne Richard. | Martin (born 1778), Marie (born 1766), Anne (born 1783) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | tailor | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
793 | Jeanne | Richard | 01/01/1745 | Married Joseph Benard (Bernard?). | Martin (born 1778), Marie (born 1766), Anne (born 1783) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
794 | Martin | Benard (Bernard?) | 01/01/1778 | Jeanne Richard | Joseph Benard (Bernard?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
795 | Marie | Benard (Bernard?) | 01/01/1766 | Jeanne Richard | Joseph Benard (Bernard?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
796 | Anne | Benard (Bernard?) | 01/01/1783 | Jeanne Richard | Joseph Benard (Bernard?) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
797 | Bennoît (actually Bélonie, Bellonie, Belony, Bellony) | Blanchard | 01/01/1740 | Anne Dupuis (Dupuy) | Joseph Blanchard | Married Magdeleine Forest, daughter of Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent. | Marie Magdeleine (born 1767), Joachim (born 1769), Marie Bennony (Belony) (born 1772), Anne (born 1774), Céleste (born 1777), Moïse (born 1782) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Magdeleine Forest, his wife, 46 years old; Joacim (Joachim), his son, 19 years old; Belomy (Marie Bennony), his son, 16 years old; Annette (Anne), his daughter, 15 years old; Céleste, his daughter, 12 years old; and Anne Forest, the Widow LeBlanc, his sister-in-law, 40 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. They owned no slaves. Identified as Belomie Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madelaine) Forest (Foret), his wife, 47 years old; Joachim (Joacin) Blanchard, his son, 19 years old; Marie Bennony (Belomie) Blanchard, his son, 17 years old; Anne (Annette) Blanchard, his daughter, 15 years old; and Céleste Blanchard, his daughter, 13 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and fifteen hogs. In December 1799, he held the rank of corporal in the local militia. He was appointed corporal second class in the Lafourche District militia unit on November 20, 1798. He traveled to New Orleans on business, ca. May 22, 1799. He held the rank of corporal second class in the Valenzuela militia in December 1799. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Verret to the governor, May 22, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:563; Governor to Verret, December 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:582; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 234. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
798 | Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1743 | Claire Vincent | Jacques Forest (Forêt) | Married Bennoît (Benoît, but often rendered as Bélonie, Belony, and Bénonie) Blanchard, son of Joseph Blanchard and Anne Dupuis. | Marie Magdeleine (born 1767), Joachim (born 1769), Marie Bennony (Belony) (born 1772), Anne (born 1774), Céleste (born 1777), Moïse (born 1782) | Deported to England with her parents. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1770. Subsequently resided at Légué, near Saint-Brieuc, France, 1770-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Bennoît (Belony) Blanchard. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Joachim Blanchard, her nineteen-year-old son, Belony Blanchard, her sixteen-year-old son, Anne (Annette) Blanchard, her fifteen-year-old daughter, Céleste Blanchard, her twelve-year-old daughter, and Anne Forest (Forêt), her sister, whom the census identifies as the forty-year-old Widow LeBlanc. Magdeleine Forest (Forêt) and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Madelaine Foret in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old spouse of Bennoît (Belomie) Blanchard. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old husband, the household included Joachim (Joacin) Blanchard, her nineteen-year-old son, Marie Bennony (Belomie) Blanchard, her son, 17 years old; Anne (Annette) Blanchard, her daughter, 15 years old; and Cécille (Céleste) Blanchard, her daughter, 13 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and fifteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
799 | Joachim (Joacin, Joaquín) | Blanchard | 01/01/1769 | Saint-Souliac, Brittany, France | Magdeleine (Magdalena) Forest | Bennoit (Benoit, Beloni) Blanchard | Married Marie Magdeleine Templet (Templé), a native of St. Servan, Brittany, France, and the daughter of André Templet and Marguerite LeBlanc, at Assumption Parish, La., August 20, 1793. Jean Charles Broussard and Claisto(?) Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Charles Joachim (Joaquín) (baptized November 27, 1796), Augustin (born February 11, 1797), Florentin (born October 30, 1798), Ambroise (born July 4, 1800) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Belony Blanchard, his sixteen-year-old brother, Anne (Annette) Blanchard, his fifteen-year-old sister, Céleste Blanchard, his twelve-year-old sister, and Anne Forest (Forêt) (the Widow LeBlanc), his forty-year-old aunt. His name is rendered as Joacin Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Bennony (Belomie), his seventeen-year-old brother, Anne (Annette), his fifteen-year-old sister, and Cécille (Céleste), his thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 92, 94, 95. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
800 | Moïse | Blanchard | 01/01/1782 | Magdeleine Forest | Bennoit (Benoit) Blanchard | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | He is not listed in his family's household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
801 | Marie Magdeleine | Blanchard | 01/01/1767 | Magdeleine (Magdelena) Forest | Bennoit (Beloni, Belloni, Benoit) Blanchard | Married Charles Forest (Forêt), son of Charles Forest (Forêt) and Marguerite Saulnier (Saunier), at Ascension Parish, La., February 20,. 1786. | Charles Bélloni (baptized April 8, 1787), Scholastie (married April 4, 1809), Hypolite (married June 11, 1827) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:97; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
802 | Marie Bennony (Belomie, Belony) | Blanchard | 01/01/1772 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine (Magdalena) Forest | Bennoit (Benoit, Beloni) Blanchard | Married Marguerite Trahan, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Joseph Trahan and Mari Boudrot, at Assumption Parish, La., May 22, 1798. Louis Verret and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Anne Marguerite (a twin) (born at 10:00 a.m., October 17, 1798), Ignace Jacques (a twin) (born October 17, 1798), Alexis (Alexos) (born July 18, 1800), Paul Beloni (baptized November 15, 1801) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Joachim Blanchard, his nineteen-year-old brother, Anne (Annette) Blanchard, his fifteen-year-old sister, Céleste Blanchard, his twelve-year-old sister, and Anne Forest (Forêt), his forty-year-old aunt. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Belomie Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Joachim (Joacin), his nineteen-year-old brother, Anne (Annette), his fifteen-year-old sister, and Cécille (Céleste), his thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91-92, 95, 99. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
803 | Cécille (Céleste) | Blanchard | 01/01/1777 | Nantes, France | Magdeleine Forest | Bennoit (Benoit) Blanchard | Married Paul Pitre, a native of Poitou, France, and the son of Ambroise Pitre and Isabelle (Ysabel) Dugas (Dugat), at Assumption Parish, La., September 16, 1800. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Joachim Blanchard, her nineteen-year-old brother, Belony Blanchard, her sixteen-year-old brother, Anne (Annette) Blanchard, her fifteen-year-old sister, and Anne Forest (Widow LeBlanc), her forty-year-old aunt. Céleste Blanchard and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Céleste Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Joachim (Joacin), her nineteen-year-old brother, Marie Bennony (Belomie), her seventeen-year-old brother, and Anne (Annette), her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
804 | Anne (Annette) | Blanchard | 01/01/1774 | Saint-Souliac, France | Magdeleine Forest | Bennoit (Beloni, Belonio, Benoit) Blanchard | Marrie Joseph Moÿse (Moïse), son of Joseph Moÿse (Moïse) and Marie Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., June 28, 1803. Joseph Boudrot and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District identifies her as Annette Blanchard. The census indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Joachim Blanchard, her nineteen-year-old brother, Belony Blanchard, her sixteen-year-old brother, Céleste Blanchard, her twelve-year-old sister, and Anne Forest (Widow LeBlanc), her forty-year-old aunt. Anne Blanchard's family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Annette Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Joachim (Joacin), her nineteen-year-old brother, Marie Bennony (Belomie), her seventeen-year-old brother, and Cécille (Céleste), her thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
805 | Marie | LeBlanc | femme de Jean Daigle | 01/01/1760 | Bristol, England | Marie Blanche Landry | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Jean Daigle, son of Jean Daigle and Marie Judith Durel (Gurel?). | Marie (born 1784), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1785) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1770. Subsequently resided at Légué, near Saint-Brieuc, France, 1770-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
806 | Marie | Daigle | 01/01/1784 | Marie LeBlanc | Jean Daigle | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
807 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Daigle | 01/01/1785 | Marie LeBlanc | Jean Daigle | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
808 | Olivier | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1711 | Married (1) Henirette Guérin. Married (2) Anne Dugast (Dugas). | Jean (born 1768), Marie (born 1767) | Resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
809 | Anne | Dugast (Dugas, Dugat) | Veuve Boudreaut (Boudrot) | 01/01/1729 | Marie Benoist (Benoît) | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Married Olivier Boudreau (Boudrot), widower of Henriette Guérin. | Jean (born 1768), Marie (born 1767) | Resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Identified as Anne Dugat, Veuve Boudreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old head of a household including Jean Boudrot (Boudreaut), her twenty-year-old son, and marie Boudrot (Boudreaut), her twenty-one-year-old daughter. She and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. Identified in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District as Anne Duga, Veuve Boudereau. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old (sic) head of a household that included Jean Boudrot (Boudereau), her twenty-one-year-old son, and Marie Boudrot (Boudereau), her twenty-two-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-two barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
810 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1768 | Tregaoux (Tréméreuc?), Diocese of Saint-Malo, France | Anne Dugast (Dugas, Dugat) | Olivier Boudreau (Boudrot) | Married Françoise Olivier Pitre, daughter of Olivier Pitre and Marie Moïse and the widow of Mathurin Chevalier (Ferlaut), at Assumption Parish, La., December 26, 1802. The marriage record was witnessed by Etienne Poireau (Poirier?) and Charles Guillot. | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut), his twenty-one-year-old sister. His name is rendered as Jean Boudereau in the 1789 census fo the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Marie Boudrot (Boudereau), his twenty-two-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:593; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113. | 1.785 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) and Marie Benoît (Benoist) | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||
811 | Marie Jh. (Josèphe) | Terriot (Theriot) | Veuve Giroir | 01/01/1716 | Married Honoré Giroir (Giroire). | Eudore (Eudoxye, Eudoxile) (born 1747), Marie Rose (born 1762; married August 10, 1793) | Resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Subsequently resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1764-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
812 | Eudore (Adocille, Eudocie, Eudoxie, Eudoxye) | Giroir (Giroire) | 01/01/1747 | Marie Josèphe Giroir | Honoré Giroir (Giroire) | Married Jean Pierre Hébert at the Church of the Ascension, Ascension Parish, La., October 1, 1787. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Isaac Hébert and Prosper Giroir (Girroir). | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Identified as Eudoxie Giroir in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Pierre Hébert. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Jean Pierre Hébert, 40 years old; Ambroise Hébert, her brother-in-law, 42 years old; and Marie Rose Giroir, her sister, 26 years old. She and her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. She and her husband owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Identified as Adocille Giroire in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Pierre Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included Ambroise Hébert, her forty-three-year-old brother-in-law, and Marie Rose Giroir (Giroire), her twenty-seven-year-old daughter [sic]. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-four barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:324; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
813 | Marie Rose | Giroir (Giroire) | 01/01/1762 | Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot) | Honoré Giroir | Married François Landry, the widower of Marguerite LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., August 10, 1793. Pierre Landry and Jean Pierre Hébert, her brother-in-law, witnessed the marriage record. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The identity of this person is uncertain. In the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, she is described as the sister of Eudoxie Giroir, while in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District she is identified as Eudoxie Giroir's daughter. The identity of her parents on her marriage record would suggest that shes was Eudoxie Giroir's sister. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of the household of Jean Pierre Hébert, her brother-in-law, and Eudoxie Giroir, her sister. The household also included Ambroise Hébert, Jean Pierre Hébert's brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:325. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
814 | Joseph (Joseph Gabriel) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1755 | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Margueritte (Marguerite, Margritta) Templé (Templet). | Joseph (born 1776), Eulalie (born ca. 1785), Joseph, Pierre Marcel | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Subsequently resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1764-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Margueritte) Templé, his wife, 35 years old; and Joseph Breau, his son, 9 years old. Joseph Breau and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. Identiied as Joseph Braut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margritta) Templé, his thirty-six-year-old wife, and Joseph Breau (Braut), his ten-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arapents of land. They owned 100 barrels of corn, two cows, twenty-seven horses, and twenty-nine hogs. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he died in 1822. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
815 | Margueritte (Marguerite, Margritta) | Templé | 01/01/1753 | Marie Devaux | André Templé | Married Joseph Brod (Braud, Braut, Breaux), son of Joseph Breau and Ursule Bourg. | Joseph (born 1776), Eulalie (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1759-1770. Resided at Plouer, France, 1770-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Breau. In addition to herself and her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Breau, her nine-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old wife of Joseph Breau (Braut). In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Joseph Breau (Braut), her ten-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 barrels of corn, two cows, twenty-seven horses, and twenty-nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
816 | Joseph | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1776 | Margueritte Templé | Joseph Brod (Braud, Breaux) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
817 | Eulalie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1785 | Margueritte Templé | Joseph Brod (Braud, Breaux) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
818 | Jean | Fouquet | 01/01/1733 | Married Margueritte Quimine. | Marie Charlotte (born 1770), Jeanne Mageleine (born 1774) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
819 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Quimine | 01/01/1735 | Married Jean Fouquet. | Marie Charlotte (born 1770), Jeanne Mageleine (born 1774) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
820 | Marie Charlotte | Fouquet | 01/01/1770 | Margueritte Quimine | Jean Fouquet | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
821 | Jeanne Magdeleine | Fouquet | 01/01/1774 | Margueritte Quimine | Jean Fouquet | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
822 | Marie | Gotraud (Gauterot) | 01/01/1765 | Boulogne-sur-Mer, France | Marguerite Haché | Alexis Gauterot (Gotraud) | Married Joseph Moulaison, son of Pierre Moulaison and Marie Doucet. | Jean Amable (born August 15, 1796), Ursule (born November 5, 1798) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with her sister Magdeleine. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:198. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
823 | Magdeleine | Gotraud (Gauterot) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Haché | Alexis Gauterot (Gotraud) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with her sister Marie. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
824 | Marie Henriette | Potier (Pottier, Potier) | Veuve Rasicaud | 01/01/1739 | Cécile Nuirat | Louis Pottier (Poitier, Potier) | Married Jean Baptiste Rassicot (Rosicaud), son of René Rassicot and Marie Haché. | Jean François (born 1765), Anne Margueritte (born 1768), Marie Henriette (born 1766) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
825 | Jean François | Rasicaud | 01/01/1765 | Marie Henriette Potier | Jean Baptiste Rossicot (Rosicaud) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
826 | Anne Margueritte (Marguerite) | Rasicaud | 01/01/1768 | Marie Henriette Potier | Jean Baptiste Rossicot (Rosicaud) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
827 | Marie Henriette | Rasicaud | 01/01/1766 | Marie Henriette Potier | Jean Baptiste Rossicot (Rosicaud)* | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
828 | Élisabeth | Duon (Duhon) | Veuve AuCoin | 01/01/1742 | Madeleine Vincent | Jean Baptiste Duon (Duhon) | Married Alexandre Aucoin, son of Alexis Aucoin and Anne Marie Bourg and the widower of Marie Trahan. Elisabeth Duon (Duhon) was a widow at the time of her departure from France. | Anne Marie (born 1761), Geneviève (born 1765), Marie Magdeleine (born 1768), Marie Félicité (born 1770), Élisabeth (born 1772), Anne Augustine (born 1774), Marie Reyne (Reine) (born 1779) | Deported to Liverpool, England. After migrating to France, they resided at Morlaix, Brittany. She and her family occupied farm no. 49 at the village of Calastran, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Resided at Nantes, France, 1778. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
829 | Anne Marie | AuCoin | 01/01/1761 | Élisabeth Duhon (Duon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
830 | Geneviève | AuCoin | 01/01/1765 | Élisabeth Duhon (Duon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
831 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine, Reine) | Aucoin | 01/08/1768 | Belle Ile en Mer, France or St. Similien Parish, Nantes, France | Élisabeth Duhon (Duon) | Alexandre Aucoin | On November 8, 1785, Marie Magdeleine Aucoin, daughter of Alexandre Aucoin and Elisabeth Duon, signed an application to marry Jean Baptiste Simon, the twenty-two-year-old son of René Simon and Sébastienne Monnier. Simon was a native of Rennes, France. Married (2) Matthew Sellar, son of Matthew Sellar (Cellar probably Sellers) and Esther Nels of South Carolina, at the Attakapas church, February 8, 1796. | First marriage: Charles (born May 17, 1786)Second marriage: Beloni (born October 13, 1797), Marie Felonise (born November 11, 1795), Marie Urazie (born December 26, 1799) | She appears to have been born at Bangor, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, and she evidently later moved with her family to St. Similien Parish, Nantes, France, which she lists as her place of origin in her marriage record. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 23-24, 710-712; Hébert, Acadians in Exile, p. 15. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
832 | Marie Reyne (Reine) | AuCoin | 01/01/1779 | Élisabeth Duhon (Duon) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
833 | Anastacie | LeBrun | Veuve LeJeune | 01/01/1736 | Married Amand (Amant) LeJeune. | Joseph (born 1763), Alexis (born 1772), Marie Rose (born 1767), Margueritte (born 1769), Adelaide, Rosalie (born ca. 1785) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
834 | Jh (Joseph) | LeJeune | 01/01/1763 | Anastacie (Anastasie) LeBrun | Amant (Amand) LeJeune | Married Bonne Marie Adélaïde Landry, a native of Normandy, France, at New Orleans, November 24, 1785. | Jean Joseph (born 1787) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 19 years old; Jean Joseph LeJeune, his son, 1 year old. Joseph LeJeune and his family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn, and ten hogs. Identified as Josef Lejeune in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household including Marie Landry (Landri), his twenty-year-old wife, and Joseph LeJeune, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. They owned no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 518; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
835 | Marie Rose | LeJeune | 01/01/1767 | Anastacie LeBrun (Levron?) | Amant (Armand) LeJeune | Married Pierre Menous, a native of France and the son of Allain Menous and Marie Giroire, February 7, 1791. | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 75; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 80. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
836 | Anne | Pierçon (Pierson) | 01/01/1759 | Married Ygnace (Ignace) Boudreau (Boudreaux, Boudrot). | Charles (born 1783), a son (born ca. January 5, 1786), Louis (born September 8, 1789) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:115. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
837 | Jean Paul | Trahan | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Vincent (?) | Jean Baptiste Trahan (?) | If Jean Paul Trahan was indeed the son of Jean Baptiste Trahan and Marguerite Vincent, then he resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1769-1773. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
838 | Nicolas | Albert | 09/03/1731 | Ile d'Oléron, France | Marguerite Berbudeau | Nicolas Albert (Herbert) | Married (1) Marie Garceau (Garcon), a native of Beaubassin, Acadia, July 26, 1756. His first wife died ca. 1759. Married (2) Marie Marthe Benoît (Benoist), a native of Acadia, January 12, 1761. | Suzanne (Susanne) (born ca. 1761), Anne Perinne (born ca. 1762), Nicolas Gabriel, fils (born June 20, 1774), Marie Madeleine (baptized October 9, 1776), Jean Pierre (baptized October 28, 1778), Louis François (baptized October 27, 1782) | Occupied farm no. 22 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:8; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Nicolas Gabriel Albert and Marie Marthe Benoist." | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
839 | Marie Marthe | Benoît (Benoist) | 01/01/1745 | Acadia | Married Nicolas Albert. | Suzanne (Susanne) (born ca. 1761), Anne Perinne (born ca. 1762), Nicolas Gabriel, fils (born June 20, 1774), Marie Madeleine (baptized October 9, 1776), Jean Pierre (baptized October 28, 1778), Louis François (baptized October 27, 1782) | Her family occupied farm no. 22 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Nicolas Gabriel Albert and Marie Marthe Benoist." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
840 | Gabriel (Nicolas Gabriel) | Albert | 01/01/1773 | Châtellereault (sometimes Châteauneuf), Poitou Province, France | Marie Marthe Benoit | Nicolas Albert | Married Magdeleine (Madeleine) Bourg (Bourque), daughter of Jean Bourg (Bourque and Anne Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., February 3, 1800. Honoré Breau and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Melanie Anne (born December 18, 1801), Marie Josèphe (born August 16, 1804), Urbain (Urbin) François (born March 6, 1806), Elizabeth (born May 30, 1807), Joseph Valéry (born February 13, 1809), Jean Baptiste (born December 1, 1810), Azelie Théotiste (born February 18, 1812), Rosalie Anne (born February 18, 1821), Marie Marceline (born March 24, 1813) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:8; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Nicolas Gabriel Albert and Madeleine Perinne Bourg." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
841 | Pierre | Laurenty | 01/01/1744 | Germany(?) | Married Marie Videt. | Pierre (born 1768) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | arquebusier | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
842 | Marie | Videt | 01/01/1743 | Married Pierre Laurenty. | Pierre (born 1768) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
843 | Pre. (Pierre) | Laurenty | 01/01/1768 | Marie Videt | Pierre Laurenty | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | cobbler | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
844 | Pre. (Pierre) Joseph | Jacques | 01/01/1740 | Germany(?) | Married Anne Drappeau. | Joseph (born 1770), Jean (born 1775), Anne (born 1765), Victoire (born 1768), Marie (born 1783) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
845 | Anne | Drappeau | 01/01/1744 | Married Pierre Joseph Jacques. | Joseph (born 1770), Jean (born 1775), Anne (born 1765), Victoire (born 1768), Marie (born 1783) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
846 | Joseph | Jacques | 01/01/1770 | Anne Drappeau | Pierre Joseph Jacques | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
847 | Jean | Jacques | 01/01/1775 | Anne Drappeau | Pierre Joseph Jacques | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
848 | Anne | Jacques | 01/01/1765 | Anne Drappeau | Pierre Joseph Jacques | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
849 | Victoire | Jacques | 01/01/1768 | Anne Drappeau | Pierre Joseph Jacques | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
850 | Marie | Jacques | 01/01/1783 | Anne Drappeau | Pierre Joseph Jacques | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
851 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Louise Valet | Charles Hébert | Traveled to Louisiana with her half-brother Joseph Pitre and her brother, Joseph Hébert. She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of the household of Martin Pitre, her twenty-year-old half-brother, and Jeanne Dentin (Dantin, Dantain), Pitre's nineteen-year-old spouse. The household also included Joseph Hébert, Marie Hébert's fifteen-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of the household Martin Pitre, her half-brother, and Jeanne Dantin, her sister-in-law. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
852 | Jh. (Joseph) | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Marguerite Louise Valet | Charles Hébert | Traveled to Louisiana with his sister, Marie Hébert, and his half-brother Joseph Pitre. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Martin Pitre, his twenty-year-old half-brother, and Jeanne Dentin (Dantin, Dantain), Pitre's nineteen-year-old spouse. The household also included Marie Hébert, Joseph Hébert's twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
853 | Marie | Pars (Part?) | 01/01/1751 | Married Jean deLaune (Delaune). | Pierre (born 1784), Marie Céleste (born 1785) | One set of passenger lists indicates that she and her family sailed to Louisiana aboard the Amitié. She and her family, however, are also listed in the passenger manifests for the Caroline. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that she and her family actually sailed aboard the Caroline because the birth of her daughter Marie Céleste delayed their departure. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
854 | Louis Auguste | Delaune | 01/01/1783 | Marie Boudrot | Christophe Delaune | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. A second set of passenger lists indicates that they departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that they probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 50-62, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | Christophe deLaune and Marguerite Caissy | Pierre Boudrot and Cécile Véco | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
855 | Louis | L'Amoureux | dit Rochefort | 01/01/1741 | M arie Claire Pottier (Poitier, Potier) | Jean Baptiste L'Amoureaux | Married Marie Hébert, daughter of Jean Hébert and Marguerite Mouton. | Jean Louis (born 1765), Adélaïde (born 1775) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
856 | Jean Louis | L'Amoureux | 01/01/1765 | Marie Hébert | Louis L'Amoureux dit Rochefort | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste L'Amoureux and Marie Claire Pottier | Jean Baptiste Hébert and Marguerite Mouton | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
857 | Adélaïde | L'Amoureux | 01/01/1775 | Marie Hébert | Louis L'Amoureux dit Rochefort | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste L'Amoureux and Marie Claire Pottier | Jean Baptiste Hébert and Marguerite Mouton | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
858 | François Louis | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1773 | La Rochelle, France | Marie Hébert | Louis Godet (Gaudet) | Married Marie Caissy dit Roger, daughter of Joseph Caissy dit Roger and Anastasie Dugas, at Ascension Parish, La., July 11, 1796. | François (born September 15, 1798), Marie Rose (born April 15, 1800), Louis (born August 4, 1801) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to his parents, the household included Magdeleine (Madelaine) Gaudet, his thirty-one-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:307-309. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
859 | Michel | Doucet | 01/01/1740 | Marie Blanche Cousin. | Jean Baptiste (born 1773), Eleannore (born 1770), Marguerite (born 1776) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
860 | Marie Blanche | Cousin | 01/01/1748 | Married Michel Doucet. | Jean Baptiste (born 1773), Eleannore (born 1770), Marguerite (born 1776) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
861 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Doucet | 01/01/1776 | Marie Blanche Cousin (Cousine) | Michel Doucet | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
862 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1767 | Anne Dugast (Dugas) | Olivier Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married François Brunet, an Acadian and the son of Michel Brunet and Josèphe Chambly (Chambli), at Ascenson Parish, La., January 5, 1789. Manuel Ordonez and Nicolas Doublein (Dublin, Doublan) witnessed the marriage record. | Jean Olivier (born January 12, 1794), Jean Baptiste (born October 8, 1796), Marie Marcelline (born April 8, 1799), Pierre de Alcantara (baptized May 3, 1800), Alexandre (a twin) (born October 14, 1801), Paul Michel (born October 14, 1801) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included jean Boudrot (Boudreaut), her twenty-year-old brother. Her name is rendered as Marie Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Laforuche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Jean Boudrot (Boudereau), her twenty-one-year-old brother. | Her burial record indicates that she was sixty years of age at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:116, 165; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 24. | 1.785 | 21/03/1832 | Louisiana | Charles Dugast (Dugas) and Marie Benoît (Benoist) | NULL | ||||||||||||
863 | Charles | Blanchard | 01/01/1769 | St. Malo, France | Marie Josèphe Dugas (Dugast) | Charles Blanchard | Married (1) Jeanne Giroir, daughter of Prosper Giroir (Giroird) and Marie Dugas, at Ascension Parish, La., February 28, 1792. Married (2) Marie Anastasie Aucoin, a native of Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, and the widow of Joseph Terriot (Theriot), at Assumption Parish, La., February 1, 1802. Suliac (Souliac) Blanchard and Pedro Monte witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Mariane (born August 15, 1796), Henriette Isabelle (born July 8, 1797), Elie (Elias) Charles (born February 28, 1799), Jean Baptiste (born May 30, 1800) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old resident of the household of Souillac (Suliac) Blanchard, his twenty-three-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of the household of Suliac Blanchard, his twenty-four-year-old brother. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37, 92, 93, 95, 96; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.785 | cobbler / mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
864 | Ignace (Ygnace) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1749 | Married Anne Pierçon (Pierson). | Charles (born 1783), a son (born ca. January 5, 1786), Louis (born September 8, 1789) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:115. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
865 | Martin (Martin Bénonie) | Pitre | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Louise Valet | Paul Pitre | Married Jeanne Dentin (Dantin, Dantain). | Mathurin (born June 14, 1802) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1767-1773. Traveled to Louisiana with Marie Hébert and Joseph Hébert. He and his siblings appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that he and his siblings probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jeanne Dentin (Dantain), his nineteen-year-old wife, Joseph Hébert, his fifteen-year-old half-brother, and Marie Hébert, his twelve-year-old half-sister. Martin Pitre and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included Jeanne Dantin, his twenty-year-old wife, and Marie, evidently Marie Hébert, his thirteen-year-old half-sister. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:595; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
866 | Josef | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
867 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
868 | Claude Louis | Legaigneau | 01/01/1735 | Married Marie Josèphe Hallier. | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
869 | Marie Josèphe | Hallier (Hallière) | 01/01/1735 | Married Claude Louis Legaigneau. | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. The French government maintained a dossier on her. | Dossier, Marie Josèphe Hallière, Archives Nationales, Paris, France, Archives des Colonies, Series E (Personnel), volume 217:non-paginated; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
870 | Joseph | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1758 | Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux)(?) | Jean Charles Terriot (Theriot?) | If Joseph Terriot (Theriot) was actually the son of Jean Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Boudrot, then he was deported to England with his parents. He subsequently resided at SaintServan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
871 | Jean Baptiste | Doiron | 01/01/1760 | Anne Thibodeau(?) | Jean Doiron(?) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
872 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1763 | Married Juliane Moine. | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
873 | Juliane | Moine | 01/01/1765 | Married Joseph Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
874 | Charles | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1736 | Agnès LeBlanc | Pierre Gauterot | Married (1) Catherine Michel. Married (2) Marie Magdelaine (Madeleine) Melanson (Melanson). The 1788 census of the Lafourche District suggests that he was a widower. Married (3) Luce Bourg (Bourque), widow of Pierre Hébert and the daughter of François Bourg and Marie Magdeleine Hébert. Luce Bourg died before February 16, 1796. | First marriage: Joseph Benoît (born 1768), François Marie (born 1771), Rosalie (born 1780) | Deported to England. Subsequently resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1765. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph Gauterot, his son, 19 years old; François Gauterot, his son, 15 years old; and Rosalie Gauterot, his daughter, 6 years old. Charles Gauterot and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The 1788 census indicates that the family owned neither slaves nor livestock. Identified as Charles Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph, his son, 20 years old; François, his son, 16 years old; and Rosalie his daughter, 7 years old. Charles Gauterot and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. On November 5, 1793, he joined with numerous Acadian Coast residents in signing a formal complaint regarding the failure of Gilbert de St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc to build and maintain levees on their properties. On May 6, 1801, Dominique Bourgeois sold to Charles Gotreau a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, about two leagues below the parish church. This property was bounded above by the land of Pierre Carmouche and below by the property of Jean Mayers. Improvements on the property included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring twenty-five by fifteen feet. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:315; Petition to Resolve the Flooding Problem Caused by the Neglected Lands Owned by St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc, November 5, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:283; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 45. | 1.785 | 16/02/1796 | Assumption Parish, La. | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||
875 | Marie Magdelaine | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1736 | Cécile Aucoin | Jean Melanson (Melançon) | Married Charles Gotreau (Gauterot), son of Pierre Gauterot and Agnès LeBlanc. | François Marie (born 1771), Rosalie (born 1780) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1765. Occupied farm no.d 71 at Cosquet village, Locmaria parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
876 | François Marie | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1771 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Marie Magdelaine Melanson (Melançon) | Charles Gotreau (Gauterot) | Married Félicité Hébert, daughter of Jean Baptiste Hébert and Luce Bourg (Bourque), at Ascension Parish, La., March 5, 1792. | Amarante Félicité (baptized August 27, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785.f | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot, his fifty-year-old father, Joseph Gauterot, his nineteen-year-old brother, and Rosalie Gauterot, his six-year-old sister. Identified as François Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot (Gauterau), his fifty-one-year-old father, Joseph Gauterot (Gauterau), his twenty-year-old brother, and Rosalie Gauterot (Gauterau), his seven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:315, 316; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | Pierre Gauterot and Agnès LeBlanc | Jean Melanson and Cécile Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||
877 | Rosalie (Charlotte) | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1780 | Marie Magdelaine Melanson (Melançon) | Charles Gotreau (Gauterot) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot, her fifty-year-old father, Joseph Gauterot, her nineteen-year-old brother, and François Gauterot, her fifteen-year-old brother. Identified as Rosalie Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seven-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot (Gauterau), her fifty-one-year-old father, Joseph Gauterot (Gauterau), her twenty-year-old brother, and François Gauterot (Gauterau), her sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Pierre Gauterot and Agnès LeBlanc | Jean Melanson and Cécile Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
878 | Pierre | Montain (Montet, Montai, Montais) | Morlaux, Finistère, France | Marie Josèphe VIncent | Guillaume Montet | Married Anne Felicité Aucoin, daughter of Jean Baptiste Aucoin and Marie Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) at Assumption Catholic Church in present-day Plattenville, Louisiana. | Anne Eulalie (born January 29, 1789), Joseph Philippe (born January 29, 1789), Marie Josèphe Vincent (December 13, 1791), Anne Felicité (born May 1, 1792), Constance Emilie Emelie (born January 7, 1794), Jean Baptiste Olivier (born August 5, 1795), Celestine Céleste (born March 25, 1797), Jean Baptiste (born March 24, 1800), Leonardo (born November 20, 1804), Euchariste (born January 21, 1807) | His parents were deported to England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. The family occupied farm no. 59 at Kervarigeon village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Françoise Montain (Montet), his twenty-one-year-old sister. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and one hog. Identified as Pierre Montai in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household including Félicité, his sixteen-year-old sister. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Montet and Anne Felicite Aucoin." | 1.785 | 01/12/1810 | Ascension Parish, Louisiana | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||
879 | Joseph | Montain (Montet, Montais) | 01/01/1769 | Marie VIncent | Guillaume Montet | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Pierre. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
880 | Jean Baptiste (Guillaume) | Montain (Montet, Montais) | 01/01/1772 | Marie VIncent | Guillaume Montet | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Pierre. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
881 | Pierre Paul | Montain (Montet, Montais) | 01/01/1778 | Marie VIncent | Guillaume Montet | His parents were deported to England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. The family occupied farm no. 59 at Kervarigeon village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Pierre. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
882 | Françoise (Marie Françoise, Félicité) | Montain (Montet, Montais) | 01/01/1766 | Marie VIncent | Guillaume Montet | Her parents were deported to England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. The family occupied farm no. 59 at Kervarigeon village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the following siblings: Pierre, Joseph, Jean Baptiste, Pierre Paul, and Marguerite. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of the household headed by Pierre Montain (Montet, Montais), her twenty-three-year-old brother. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and one hog. Identified as Félicité Montai in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she and her brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
883 | Marguerite | Montain (Montet, Montais) | 01/01/1775 | Marie VIncent | Guillaume Montet | Her parents were deported to England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. The family occupied farm no. 59 at Kervarigeon village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her elder brother Pierre. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
884 | Joseph | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Landry (?) | Cyprien Duon (Duhon) (?) | His parents were deported to Liverpool, England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany. They occupied farm no. 56 at Calastren village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
885 | Claude Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1765 | Anne Landry | Charles LeBlanc | Married Marguerite Comeau of Cherbourg. | Resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. Occupied farm no. 12 at Borderhouant village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Identified as Glode (Claude) Marie LeBlanc in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned eighteen barrels of corn and three hogs. His name is rendered as Claude Marie LeBlanc in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and give hogs. Around June 17, 1788, Jérôme LeBlanc and Claude LeBlanc formally complained to the governor about Commandant Judice's failure to maintain his levees. Judice subsequently maintained that Claude LeBlanc's improperly maintained levees were the cause of local flooding. An official investigation on June 29, 1788, determined that Judice's counter-charge was indeed valid and that LeBlanc's levees were too small and were "very poorly constructed." | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judie, June 17, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:610; Procès-verbal of the inspection of June 29, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:613; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:475. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
886 | Basile Marie | Richard | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite LeBlanc(?) | Joseph Ignace Richard(?) | Married Marie Comeau, May 4, 1788. | If he was indeed the son of Joseph Ignace Richard and Marguerite LeBlanc, then his parents were deported to Liverpool, England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. They occupied farm no. 34 at Keroudé village, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The passenger manifest does not indicate his age. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Basil Richard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned fifteen barrels of corn, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 89. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
887 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Charles Terriot | 01/01/1745 | Married Charles Terriot. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France. | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
888 | Jean Charles | Benoît | 01/01/1749 | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
889 | Étienne François | AngiLbert | 01/01/1753 | Married Félicité Hébert. | Marie Adélaïde (a nursing infant at the time of her 1785 voyage to Louisiana) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
890 | Félicité | Hébert | 01/01/1757 | Married Etienne François Angilbert. | Marie Adelaide (a nursing infant at the time of her 1785 voyage to Louisiana) | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
891 | Marie Adélaïde | Angilbert | 01/01/1785 | Félicité Hébert | Etienne François Angilbert | Departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, December 12, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
892 | Geneviève | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Marie Anne Richard | Amable Hebert | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
893 | Jean Baptiste | Douarion (Doiron) | 01/01/1783 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Doiron | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
894 | Anne | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Haché | 01/01/1745 | Married Jacques Haché. She was a widow in 1785. | Marie (born ca. 1770), Marguerite (born ca. 1774) | Her husband resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1758-1765. He then resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1765-1773. He was granted farm no. 51 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, 1774. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 5; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
895 | Paul Marie | Boudrot (Doiron?) | 01/01/1785 | Marie Olive Landry | Paul Dominique Boudrot (Boudreau) | French genealogists and historians Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that Paul Marie Boudrot was actually Marie Doiron (Douairon). Paul Marie Boudrot departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived at Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
896 | Marie | Dugas | 01/01/1774 | Marie Grossin (Clausinet) | Jean Baptiste Dugas | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
897 | Jean Baptiste | Dugas | 01/01/1721 | Married (1) Marguerite Benoît. Married (2) Madeleine Moÿse. Married (3) Anne Bourg, the widow of Jean Baptiste Blanchard. | Anne (born ca. 1764) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Méloir-des-Ondes, France, 1760-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
898 | Anne | Bourg | 01/01/1721 | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Blanchard. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Dugas. | Anne (born ca. 1764) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, p. 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19. | 1.785 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||
899 | Anne (Anne Elizabeth) | Dugas | La Pahorie, Ile-et-Vilaine, France | Anne Bourg | Jean Baptiste Dugas | Marie Eulalie Adelaide (born March 12, 1792), Amand Bernard (born ca. 1794), François Marie (born January 15, 1796), Magloire (baptized December 10, 1797), Jean Baptiste Julien (born October 24, 1799), Eulalie Adelaide (born July 5, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Anne Elizabeth Dugas and Yves Jean Crochet II." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
900 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1780 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Traveled with her grandparents, Jean Baptiste Dugas and Anne Bourg, and her aunt, Anne Dugas. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
901 | Joseph | Aucoin | 01/01/1749 | Marie LeBlanc | Paul Aucoin | Married (1) Elisabeth Henry (Isabel Anrri, Henrry). Married (2) Euphrosine Barillot, the widow of Charles Broussard and the daughter of Pierre Barillot and Véronique Giroir, at Assumption Parish, La., October 17, 1797. Joseph Dupuis, Fabien Aucoin, and Jean Daigle witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Joseph Jean (born ca. 1778), François Toussaint (born ca. 1779), Isabelle Jeanne (born ca. 1774), Marie Modeste (born ca. 1781), Victoire Claire (born ca. 1783), Marguerite (born August 28, 1786), Appolinania (Apollonie?) (a twin) (born February 15, 1788; married May 1, 1809), Paul Marie (a twin) (born February 15, 1788), Rosalie (married August 18, 1806)Second marriage: François Eugène (buried February 1, 1802, at the age of 2 months) | Resiged at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1766-1770. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records suggest that he and his family were residents of Assumption Parish, La., in February 1802. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 35-39; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
902 | Élisabeth (Isabelle) | Henry | 01/01/1750 | St. Pleurtuit Parish, St. Malo, France | Marie Pitre | Jean Henry | Married (1) Joseph Aucoin. Married (2) Ambroise Terriot (Theriot), son of Joseph Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Melanson (Melançon), at the Pointe Coupée post, December 30, 1788. Maximilien Henry and Jean Henry witnessed the marriage certificate. | First marriage: Joseph Jean (born ca. 1778), François Toussaint (born ca. 1779), Isabelle Jeanne (born ca. 1774), Marie Modeste (born ca. 1781), Victoire Claire (born ca. 1783), Marguerite (born August 28, 1786), Appolinania (Apollonie?) (a twin) (born February 15, 1788), Paul Marie (a twin) (born February 15, 1788) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:687; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 37, 39. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
903 | Joseph Jean | Aucoin | 01/01/1778 | St. Similiano Parish, Nantes, France | Élisabeth (Isabelle) Henry | Joseph Aucoin | Married Anne Victoire Landry, a native of Ascension Parish, La., and the daughter of Vincent Landry and Suzanne Gaudin, at Assumption Parish, La., September 27, 1802. Grégoire Landry and Joseph Nicolas Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | His marriage record suggests that he was a resident of Assumption Parish in 1802. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-38, 416-417. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
904 | François Toussaint (Francisco) | Aucoin | 01/01/1779 | St. Similiano Parish, Nantes, France | Élisabeth (Isabelle) Henry | Joseph Aucoin | Married Rosalie Landry, a native of St. Gabriel, Iberville Parish, La., and the daughter of François Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc, at Assumption Parish, La., November 5, 1799. | Isabelle Sabine (born August 30, 1800), François Eugène (born November 16, 1801; buried February 1, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | He and his family appear to have been residents of Assumption Parish, La., in February 1802. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
905 | Isabelle Jeanne | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | Élisabeth (Isabelle) Henry | Joseph Aucoin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
906 | Marie Modeste | Aucoin | 01/01/1781 | Nantes, France | Élisabeth (Isabelle) Henry | Joseph Aucoin | Married Jean Baptiste Blanchard, a native of Nantes, France, and the son of Jean Baptiste (actually Jean Grégoire) Blanchard and Marie Magdeleine LeBois (actually Livoir), at Assumption Parish, La., January 12, 1802. Joseph Aucoin and Jean Richard witnessed the marriage record. | Jean Baptiste (born November 23, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37, 96. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
907 | Victoire Claire | Aucoin | 01/01/1783 | Élisabeth (Isabelle) Henry | Joseph Aucoin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 6. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
908 | Eustache | LeJeune | 01/01/1733 | Married (1) Marie Carret. Married (2) Jeanne Chiquet (Gicquel). | Servant (born ca. 1770), François (born ca. 1772), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1762), Marie Rose (born ca. 1783) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1764-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
909 | Jeanne | Chiquet | 01/01/1743 | Married Eustache LeJeune. | Servant (born ca. 1770), François (born ca. 1772), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1762), Marie Rose (born ca. 1783) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
910 | Pélagie | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1770 | Anne LeJeune | Jean Gauterot (Gautreaux) | Married Pierre Trahan, native of Louisbourg, Acadia, and the son of Honoré Trahan and Marie Corporon, at the Opelousas church, May 30, 1789. The married was witnessed by Blaise LeJeune, Philippe Trahan(?), and Louis Simard. | Alexandre (born July 25, 1795), Angélique (born ca. 1789) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Sailed to Louisiana with the family of her uncle, Eustache LeJeune. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 761-777. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
911 | Servant | LeJeune | 01/01/1770 | Jeanne Chiquet | Eustache LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
912 | François | LeJeune | 01/01/1772 | Jeanne Chiquet | Eustache LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
913 | Marie Magdelaine | LeJeune | 01/01/1762 | Jeanne Chiquet | Eustache LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
914 | Marie Rose | LeJeune | 01/01/1783 | Jeanne Chiquet | Eustache LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
915 | Jean Baptiste | LeJeune | 01/01/1760 | Marie Carret(?) | Eustache LeJeune(?) | Married Geneviève Doiron. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
916 | Geneviève | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1766 | Married Jean Baptiste LeJeune. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
917 | Grégoire | LeJeune | 01/01/1740 | Married (1) Charlotte Descroutes. Married (2) Elenne (Héléne) Damour (Dumont). | Grégoire (born ca. 1781), Julien (born ca. 1783), Marie (born ca. 1771) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, 1759-1760; Saint-Servan, France, 1760-1770; Pleurtuit, France, 1770-1772; and Saint-Enogat, France, 1772-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
918 | Elenne (Hélène) | Damour (Dumon) | 01/01/1749 | Married Grégoire LeJeune. | Grégoire (born ca. 1781), Julien (born ca. 1783), Marie (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
919 | Grégoire | LeJeune | 01/01/1781 | Elenne Damour | Grégoire LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
920 | Julien | LeJeune | 01/01/1783 | Elenne Damour | Grégoire LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
921 | Marie | LeJeune | 01/01/1771 | Elenne Damour | Grégoire LeJeune | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
922 | Marie Geneviève | LeJeune | 01/01/1766 | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Grégoire LeJeune and Elenne Damour. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
923 | Anselme | Landry | 01/01/1735 | Married Agathe Bariau (Barillot). | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | He appears to have been the Anselme (Enselme) Landry who filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. The official list of complainants indicates that he was Pierre Landry's cousin. Appointed sindic for the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District (Ascension Parish), October 2, 1792. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; Governor to Louis Judice, October 2, 1792, AGI, PPC, 205:311. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
924 | Agathe | Bariau (Barillot) | 01/01/1735 | Married Anselme Landry. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
925 | Jean Baptiste | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1756 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Marie Madeleine Vincent | Alexandre Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married (1) Marie Modeste Trahan. Married (2) Anne Josèphe Henry, the widow of Théodore Terriot (Theriot) and the daughter of Pierre Henry and Magdeleine Pitre, at St. Gabriel, La., February 27, 1786. | Jean Constant (born ca. 1779), Marie Félicité (born ca. 1777), Marguerite (born ca. 1783; married April 28, 1800) | Deported to England with his family in 1755. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113-115. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
926 | Marie Modeste | Trahan | 01/01/1749 | Married Jean Baptiste Boudrot. | Jean Constant (born ca. 1779), Marie Félicité (born ca. 1777), Marguerite (born ca. 1783; married April 28, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:115. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
927 | Jean Constant | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1779 | Marie Modeste Trahan | Jean Baptiste Boudrot | Married Ursule Henry, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Charles Henry and Marie Bernard, at Assumption Parish, La., April 28, 1800. | Evariste Joseph (born August 8, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 18; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111, 114. | 1.785 | Alexandre Boudrot and Marie Madeleine Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
928 | Marie Félicité | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1777 | Saint Similien Parish, France | Marie Modeste Trahan | Jean Baptiste Boudrot | Married (1) Fabien Bourg. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Henry, son of Charles Henry and Marguerite Josèphe Terriot and a native of Saint Servan, France, at St. Joseph Catholic Church, Baton Rouge, La., January 14, 1794. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Fabien Bourg (Bourq). She and her twenty-two-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn and one hogs. Identified as Marie Braut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Fabien Bourg. She and her twenty-four-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117-119; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Alexandre Boudrot and Marie Madeleine Vincent | NULL | |||||||||||||||
929 | Marguerite | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1783 | Marie Modeste Trahan | Jean Baptiste Boudrot | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | Alexandre Boudrot and Marie Madeleine Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
930 | Angelique | Pinel | Veuve Léger | 01/01/1741 | Married Jacques Michel Léger. | Louis (born ca. 1766), Jean (born ca. 1770) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
931 | Jean | Léger | 01/01/1770 | Angélique Pinet | Jacques Michel Léger | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
932 | Charles | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1743 | Married (1) Jacqueline Françoise Castel (Câtel). Married (2) Eufrosine (Euphrosine) Mariot (Barrillot), the widow of François Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Jean Charles (born ca. 1765), François ca. 1767), Pierre (born ca. 1771), Dominique (born ca. 1773) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Beauséjour around August 24, 1763. A small number of the prisoners at Fort Beauséjour subsequently traveled to France via St. Pierre and Miquelon. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | "Liste des Acadiens Prisonniers au Fort Beauséjour, en 1763," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 27ième cahier (mars, 1965): 21-25; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
933 | Eufrosine (Euphrosine) | Mariot (actually Barillot, Barrillot) | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Véronique Giroir | Pierre Barillot | Married (1) Charles Broussard. Married (2) Joseph Aucoin, son of Paul Aucoin and Marie LeBlanc and the widower of Isabelle Henry, at Assumption Parish, La., October 17, 1797. Joseph Dupuis, Fabien Aucoin, and Jean Daigle witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Jean Charles (born ca. 1765), François (born ca. 1767), Pierre, Dominique | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Her burial record indicates that she was fifty-five years old at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35-36, 60. | 1.785 | 16/01/1803 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
934 | Jean Charles | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1765 | Eufrosine Mariot | Charles Broussard | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
935 | François | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1767 | Eufrosine Mariot | Charles Broussard | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
936 | Pierre | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1771 | Eufrosine Mariot | Charles Broussard | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
937 | Dominique | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1773 | Eufrosine Mariot | Charles Broussard | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
938 | Paul | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1772 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Charles Broussard and Eufrosine Mariot. Identified as a stepchild in that family grouping. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
939 | Daniel | Benoît | 01/01/1749 | Élizabeth (Élisabeth) Terriot (Theriot) | Claude Benoît | Married Henriette Legendre. | Henriette (born ca. 1778) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
940 | Henriette | Legendre | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite (Margueritte) La Bauve | François Legendre | Married Daniel Benoît. | Henriette (born ca. 1778) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
941 | Henriette | Benoît | 01/01/1778 | Henriette Legendre | Daniel Benoit | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 18. | 1.785 | Claude Benoist and Elisabeth Terriot (Theriot) | François Legendre and Marguerite La Bauve | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
942 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1745 | Marie Aucoin | Victor LeBlanc | Married (1) Anne Josèphe LeBert. Married (2) Geneviève Richard, the widow of Victor Gauterot and the daughter of Charles Richard and Catherine Gauterot, at Pointe Coupée Parish, September 28, 1787. Charles Broussard (Brossar) and Olivier LeBlanc witnessed the marriage record. | Joseph (born ca. 1768), Pierre (born ca. 1770), Jean (born ca. 1772), Victor (born ca. 1775) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Méloir-des-Ondes, France, 1761-1762. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:481. | 1.785 | joiner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
943 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1768 | Anne Josèphe LeBert | Pierre LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
944 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1770 | Anne Josèphe LeBert | Pierre LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
945 | Jean | LeBlanc | 01/01/1772 | Anne Josèphe LeBert | Pierre LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
946 | Victor | LeBlanc | 01/01/1775 | Anne Josèphe LeBert | Pierre LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
947 | Anne Josèphe | LeBert | 01/01/1747 | Married Pierre LeBlanc. | Joseph (born ca. 1768), Pierre (born ca. 1770), Jean (born ca. 1772), Victor (born ca. 1775) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 7. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
948 | Jean | Trahan | 01/01/1750 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
949 | Jean Baptiste | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1749 | Married Marguerite LeBert (sometimes Hébert). | Pierre (born ca. 1777), François (born ca. 1771), Marguerite Félicité (born ca. 1785), Marguerite (born ca. 1771) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1762-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Jean Baptiste Guédry and his family are also listed as passengers aboard the Beaumont, which departed Paimboeuf, France, on June 11, 1785, and arrived at Louisiana on August 19, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that the family actually sailed aboard the Beaumont. They reason that Guédry's spouse, who does not appear in the Beaumont's passenger manifest, died, preventing them from sailing on the Bon Papa. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19, 30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
950 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Hébert | 01/01/1752 | Married Jean Baptiste Guédry. | Pierre (born ca. 1777), François (born ca. 1771)Marguerite Félicité (born ca. 1785), Marguerite (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
951 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1777 | Marguerite LeBert (Hébert?) | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. There is evidence, however, that he may have sailed instead aboard the Beaumont, which departed Paimboeuf, France, on June 11, 1785, and arrived at Louisiana on August 19, 1785. | He and his brother Jean Guédry visited the Attakapas and Opelousas districts in order to locate their long established and now prosperous uncle, from whom they hoped to secure some assistance. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, p. 30; Alexandre DeClouet to Estevan Mir¢, October 8, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:237. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
952 | François | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite LeBert (Hébert?) | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. There is evidence, however, that he may have sailed instead aboard the Beaumont, which departed Paimboeuf, France, on June 11, 1785, and arrived at Louisiana on August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, p. 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
953 | Marguerite Félicité | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1785 | Marguerite (Margueritte) LeBert (Hébert?) | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. There is evidence, however, that she may have sailed instead aboard the Beaumont, which departed Paimboeuf, France, on June 11, 1785, and arrived at Louisiana on August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, p. 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
954 | Marguerite | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite (Margueritte) LeBert (Hébert?) | Jean Baptiste Guédry(?) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Identified as an orphan at the time of the voyage. There is evidence, however, that she may have sailed instead aboard the Beaumont, which departed Paimboeuf, France, on June 11, 1785, and arrived at Louisiana on August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, p. 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
955 | Louis | Stivin (Stebens) | 01/01/1749 | Boston, Massachusetts | Married (1) Marie Weibert. Married (2) Marie Landry. Married (3) Marie Babin. | Louis (born ca. 1782), Marie (born ca. 1783) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
956 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1767 | Married Louis Stivrin. | Louis (born ca. 1782), Marie (born ca. 1783) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
957 | Louis | Stivin | 01/01/1782 | Marie Babin | Louis Stivrin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
958 | Marie | Stivin | 01/01/1783 | Marie Babin | Louis Stivrin | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
959 | François | Babin | 01/01/1769 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his sister, Marie Babin, wife of Louis Stivrin. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
960 | Elenne (Hélène) | Haché | 01/01/1764 | Marie Dumont | Joseph Haché | Her family resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1760, and, later, at Saint-Servan, France, 1761-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
961 | Marie Josèphe | Haché (Aché) | 01/01/1769 | St. Malo, Brittany, France | Married Antonio Ramirez. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Her burial record indicates that she was twenty years of age at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:1. | 1.785 | 18/08/1790 | St. Bernard Church, St. Bernard Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
962 | Élisabeth | Haché | 01/01/1777 | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 8. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
963 | Charles | Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle | 01/01/1731 | Married Anne Marie Vincent. | Resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | block maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
964 | Anne Marie | Vincent | 01/01/1730 | Married Charles Daigre. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:720. | 1.785 | 04/10/1785 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
965 | Françoise (Marie) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Dugas | 01/01/1745 | evidently Parish of the Holy Family, Acadia | Married (1) Joseph Clossinet. Married (2) Marin Dugas. Married (3) Charles Daigle, the widower of Anne Vincent, at St. Gabriel, La., February 5, 1786. | Pierre (born ca. 1774) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1765. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Her burial record indicates that she was fifty-six years old at the time of her death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 116, 213. | 1.785 | 10/09/1798 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
966 | Pierre | Dugas | 01/01/1774 | St. Servan Parish, St. Malo, France | Françoise Boudrot | Marin(?) (Manino) Dugas (Dugat) | Married Françoise Arcement (Arsement), a native of St. Suliac, Diocese of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Pierre Arcement (Arsement) and Marie Hébert, at Ascension Parish, La., May 12, 1794. Pierre Landry and Ambroise Mathurin Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:261; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
967 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | La Bauve (LaBeauve)) | Veuve Legendre | 01/01/1730 | Married François Legendre, who died before the departure of the Bon Papa. | Louis (born ca. 1763), Yves (born ca. 1768) | Resided at Meillac, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1760-1765. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1765-1769. Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1769-1771. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1771-1773. Her family occupied farm no. 55 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. In addition to Louis Legendre and Yves Legendre, two of her children Jean Baptiste Legendre and Henriette Legendre sailed to Louisiana aboard the Bon Papa. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
968 | Louis | Legendre | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite (Margueritte) La Bauve | François Legendre | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
969 | Yves | Legendre | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite (Margueritte) La Bauve | François Legendre | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
970 | Jean Baptiste | Legendre | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite (Margueritte) La Bauve | François Legendre | Married Marie Rose Tullier (LeTullier). | Rose (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 17-19; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
971 | Marie Rose | Tullier | 01/01/1765 | Married Jean Baptiste Legendre. | Rose (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
972 | Rose | Legendre | 01/01/1785 | Marie Rose Tullier | Jean Baptiste Legendre | Departed France aboard the Bon Papa, a 250-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 10, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, July 29, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 9. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
973 | Olivier | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Hélène Landry | Étienne Terriot (Theriot) | Married Marie Aucoin at St. Martin de Chantenay (part of present-day Nantes), France, July 29, 1777. The marriage required an ecclesiastical dispensation for consanguinity in the fourth degree. (The bride and groom were third cousins.) The dispensation, which is dated July 12, 1777, was signed by Vicar-General de La Tullaye. | Olivier Marie (born ca. 1778), Joseph Olivier (baptized April 13, 1780), Jean Toussaint (born ca. 1783), Martine (born after August 15, 1785; married January 2, 1821), Valentin (I) (baptized May 1, 1788; buried August 13, 1788), Valentin (II) (Celestin) (born November 1, 1789), Isidore (born November 22, 1791), Dionisia Marie Denise (born January 16, 1796; married January 27, 1823), Ferdinand Jacques (born January 18, 1794; married January 17, 1825) | Transported to France aboard five ships carrying Acadian exiles. Disembarked with his family at St. Malo, France, January 23, 1759. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Witnessed the marriage of Etienne Terriot and Magdeleine Bourgeois at St. Servan Parish, near St. Malo, France, February 13, 1770. Studied Latin, 1770-1772. According to an extant list, Terriot studied to be a priest in 1772. He subsequently abandoned his studies and returned to his father's residence. He was a shoemaker at the time of his marriage on July 29, 1777; his wedding record indicates that he had resided at St. Sebastien Parish, France, for the previous eighteen months. While working as a cobbler in Nantes, France, Olivier Terriot was approached by French soldier of fortune Henri Peyroux de la Coudrenière, who solicited the Acadian's cooperation in recruiting Acadians in France for Louisiana colonization. Terriot eventually succumbed to the Frenchman's promises of "honorable and lucrative" compensation from the Spanish government upon the project's successful conclusion. During the summer of 1783, Terriot circulated a petition supporting settlement of the French Acadians in Spanish Louisiana among the exile communities in Nantes, Morlaix, Rennes, St. Malo, Caen, and Cherbourg. Subsequently presented the petition to Spanish authorities. In October 1783, King Carlos III of Spain agreed to fund the project. When support of the colonization venture became public knowledge, French creditors of the Acadian exiles attempted to scuttle the project by having Terriot and Peyroux arrested. Terriot was consequently forced to go into hiding until May 11, 1784, when King Louis XVI of France formally announced his support of the proposed settlement of France's Acadian exiles in Louisiana. Terriot quickly resumed his promotional activities. In early August 1784, he called for signatures of all Acadian volunteers. Despite the sometimes violent opposition of a small, but vocal Acadian minority, Terriot eventually persuaded approximately 70 percent of the Acadians in France over 1,500 individuals to relocate in Louisiana. These Acadian volunteers sailed to Louisiana in 1785 aboard seven ships chartered for the purpose by the Spanish crown. Terriot and his family departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | On December 29, 1785, Olivier Terriot (Theriot) purchased from the Widow Mary O'Brien a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located between the lands of Charles Melanson (Melançon) and Joseph Landry. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by sixteen feet. The house had front and rear galleries and bousillage-between-post walls. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On April 8, 1805, Olivier Terriot sold to his son Olivier, fils, a portion of the land he acquired in December 1785. On June 15, 1805, Olivier Terriot sold a parcel of land with two arpents frontage to Dartoise Babin.. | His burial record indicates that he died at the age of seventy-five years. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2596; Robichaux, Acadian Marriages in France, 65, 103; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95; Brasseaux, The Founding of New Acadia, 66-70; Winzerling, Acadian Odyssey, 87, 94, 101-102, 130, 158; Albert Robichaux, Jr., The Acadian Exiles in Saint-Malo, 1758-1785 (Harvey, La.: Privately printed, 1978), pp. 156, 176; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record." | 1.785 | 06/09/1829 | 07/09/1829 | Ascension Catholic Church, Donaldsonville, Louisiana | shoemaker | NULL | ||||||||||
974 | Marie | Aucoing (AuCoin) | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Vincent | Olivier Aucoin | Married the famous Acadian cobbler/shoemaker Olivier Terriot (Theriot). | Olivier Marie (born ca. 1778), Jean (born ca. 1783) | She was deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
975 | Olivier Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1778 | Marie Aucoing (Aucoin) | Olivier Terriot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
976 | Jean Toussaint | Terriot (Theriot) | Jean-Jean | 01/01/1783 | France | Marie Aucoing (Aucoin) | Olivier Terriot | Married (1) Marie Madeleine Landry; married (2) Françoise Arthemise Gauterot. | First marriage: Matilde (Mathilde) Marie (born December 3, 1808), Hortence Victoire (born December 23, 1810), Jean Baptiste (born December 23, 1812), Justine (born August 5, 1814), Adeline (Adelina) (born April 10, 1817), Eleonise Madeleine (born September 28, 1819)Second marriage: Françoise Irma (born February 19, 1822), Jean Narcisse (born September 4, 1823), Olivier Aristide (born April 4, 1825) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | Sat, Nov 1, 1783 | 1.785 | 05/11/1830 | St. Jacques Church, Nantes, Dept. of Loire-Atlantique, France | Ascension Catholic Church, Donaldsonville, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||
977 | Olivier | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1726 | Anne Marie Dupuis | Charles Aucoin | Married (1) Marguerite Vincent. Married (2) Cécille (Cécile) Richard. | Natalie (born ca. 1768), Maguerite (born ca. 1769), Cécille (Céleste) (born ca. 1771) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Louisiana eccesiastical records suggest that the family subsequently lived in St. Malo, France. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the eighty-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Cécille, his wife, 60 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte), his daughter, 20 years old; and Céleste, his daughter, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He and his family owned twenty-five barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and eight hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the eighty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Cécille, his wife, 61 years old; Marguerite (Margritta), his daughter, 21 years old; and Céleste, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
978 | Cécille | Richard | 01/01/1737 | Married Olivier Aucoing. | Natalie (born ca. 1768), Maguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1769), Cécille (Céleste) (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old spouse of Olivier Aucoin (Aucoing). In addition to herself and her eighty-year-old husband, her household included Marguerite (Margueritte) Aucoin (Aucoing), her twenty-year-old daughter, and Céleste (Cécile) Aucoin (Aucoing), her ten-year-old daughter. Cécille Richard and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-one-year-old spouse of Olivier Aucoin (Aucoing). In addition to herself and her eighty-one-year-old husband, the household included Marguerite (Margritta, Margueritte) Aucoing, her twenty-one-year-old daughter, and Céleste Aucoin (Aucoing), her twelve-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
979 | Natalie | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1768 | Cecille Richard | Olivier Aucoin | Married Jean Hébert at Ascension Parish, La., October 22, 1787. Ambroise Garidet witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
980 | Marguerite (Margritta) | Aucoing (Aucoin, Ocoin) | 01/01/1769 | Cécille Richard | Olivier Aucoin | Married Pierre Blanchard, son of Joseph Blanchard and Anne Hébert, at Ascension Parish, La., July 25, 1790. Charles Aucoin, Laruent Blanchard, and Jean Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite (buried October 12, 1798, at the age of eleven years), Elise Bona (born December 27, 1792; buried July 15, 1797, at the age of five years), Henriette Marie (Henrieta María) (born June 23, 1794), Claire (born April 27, 1796), Pierre Firmin (born July 31, 1798), Elias (born August 5, 1800), Edouard (a twin) (born August 31, 1802); Pierre (Pedro) (a twin) (born August 31, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included her ten-year-old sister, Cécille (Céleste). She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and eight hogs. Identified as Margritta Aucoin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Céleste Aucoin, her twelve-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; .General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:93, 95, 99-100; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
981 | Cécille (Céleste) | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1771 | St. Malo, France | Cécille Richard | Olivier Aucoin | Married André (Servin) Tramplé (Templé), son of André Tramplé (Templé) and Marguerite LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., May 7, 1792. Pierre Aucoin, Pierre Blanchard, Joseph Breau, Jean Hébert, and Louis Blanchard witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marguerite (Margueritte) Aucoin, her twenty-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and eight hogs. Identified as Céleste Aucoin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marguerite (Margritta) Aucoin, her twenty-one-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, four cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
982 | Charles | Aucoing (au coing, Aucoin) | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Anne Marie Dupuis | Charles Aucoin | Married Marguerite Noël at Ascension Parish, La., January 16, 1786. Olivier Aucoin, Guillaume (Giuion) Mazerolle, and Paul Bellisle witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite Eugénie (born January 20, 1790), Marcelin Firmin (Marcelino) (born May 16, 1791; buried December 2, 1802, at the age of eleven years), Marie Melanie (born January 27, 1793), Augustin Babilas (January 24, 1795), Marguerite Farelia (probably Félicité) (born September 25, 1797), Anne Carmelite (July 3, 1799), Evariste Claude (born September 7, 1801) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his sister Félicité Aucoin. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite Noël, his twenty-four-year-old wife, and his twenty-four-year-old sister-in-law. Aucoin and his wife owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned five cattle, two horses, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margritta) Noël, his twenty-five-year-old wife. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. Ecclesiastical records suggest that he and his family were residences of Assumption Parish in July 1795. | His burial record indicates that the was fifty-six years of age at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-37; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | 22/01/1805 | Ascension Parish, La. | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||
983 | Félicité | Aucoing (auCoin) | 01/01/1750 | Anne Marie Dupuis | Charles Aucoin | Married Pierre Aucoin at Ascension Parish, La., July 3, 1786. Olivier Terriot (Theriot) and Ambroise Garidel witnessed the marriage record. | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her brother Charles Aucoin. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Pierre Aucoin, who was twenty-three-years-old at the time the census was compiled. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and our hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
984 | Marie | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1737 | Anne Marie Dupuis | Charles Aucoin | Married Michel Leblanc, a sailor. | Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1760), Apoline (Appolline) Eulalie (born ca. 1772) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. The passenger manifest for the Bergère indicates that her husband, a sailor, was "absent" at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
985 | Marie Josèphe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1760 | Marie Aucoing (Aucoin) | Michel LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
986 | Appolline (Apoline) Eulalie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1772 | Marie Aucoing (Aucoin) | Michel LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
987 | Margueritte (Margritta, Marguerite) | Noël | Veuve Roquemont | 01/01/1764 | St. Servan, Brittany, France, the child of Acadian exiles | Marie Madeleine Barbe | Pierre Noël | Married (1) Guillaume Jean Roquemont, who was thirty-six years older than his bride. Married (2) Charles Aucoin at Ascension Parish, La., January 16, 1786. Olivier Aucoin, Guillaume Mazerolle, and Paul Bellisle witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite Eugénie (born January 20, 1790), Marcelin Firmin (Marcelino) (born May 16, 1791; buried December 2, 1802, at the age of eleven years), Melanie, Augustin Babilas (January 24, 1795), Anne Carmelite (July 3, 1799), Evariste Claude (born September 7, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Aucoin. In addition to herself and her husband, the household included Aucoin's twenty-four-year-old sister-in-law. Noël and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, two horses and six hogs. Identified as Margritta Noël in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old wife of Charles Aucoin. She and her forty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-37. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
988 | Marie | Noël | 01/01/1757 | Madeleine Barbe | Pierre Noël | Married Blaise Rivet at St. Gabriel, April 1, 1788. The marriage was witnessed by Cirille Rivet, Blaise's brother. | Josèphe (born February 18, 1791), Célestine Rosalie (born November 1, 1794), Marie Carmelite (born May 14, 1789), Vidal Marcel (baptized January 13, 1793) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
989 | Simon | Mierolle (Mazerolle) | dit Saint-Louis | 01/01/1745 | Marie Josèphe Doiron | Joseph Mazerolle dit Saint-Louis | Married Marguerite (Marie) Trahan. | Étienne (born ca. 1777), Marie (born ca. 1767), Isabelle (born ca. 1769), Anne (born ca. 1771) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1764. Resided at Pieslin, France, 1764-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1767-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. French historians and genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that he subsequently assumed the identity of Simon Aucoin. | Identified as Simon Mazerolle in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie, his thirty-six-year-old wife, Étienne, his eleven-year-old son, and Anne, his sixteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occuopied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | rope maker | NULL | ||||||||||||||
990 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1747 | Married Simon Mierolle (Mazerolle). | Étienne (born ca. 1777), Marie (born ca. 1767), Isabelle (born ca. 1769), Anne (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Marie, wife of Simon Mazerolle, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old wife of Simon Mzaerolle. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old husband, the household included Etienne, her eleven-year-old son, and Anne, her sixteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine-barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 78. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
991 | Étienne | Mierolle | 01/01/1777 | Marguerite Trahan | Simon Mierolle | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
992 | Marie | Mierolle (Masserrole, Matserolle, Mazerot, Menserolle) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Trahan | Simon Mierolle | Married Jacques Barillot, son of Jean Baptiste Barillot and Marie Daigle. | Jacques (baptized June 20, 1789), François (born July 17, 1790) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Jacques Barillot. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Marie Mazerot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Jacques Barillot (Barrillot). According to the 1789 census, the couple owned neither land nor livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:65; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
993 | Isabelle | Mierolle | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Trahan | Simon Mierolle | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
994 | Anne | Mierolle | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Trahan | Simon Mierolle | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Éteinne, her eleven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
995 | Jacques | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1760 | Hélène Landry | Etiennt Terriot (Theriot) | Married Françoise Guerin. | Françoise Élisabeth (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Plaudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | On August 14, 1787, Jacques Terriot purchased a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Missisippi River, approximately twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. This property was bounded on side by the land of Olivier Terriot. On January 2, 1789, Terriot acquired from Pierre Arseneau a parcel of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. At the time of the 1789 purchase, said property was bounded above by the land of Jean Baptiste Bergeron and below by the property of Eusèbe Arseneau. Improvements on this property included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring twelve by twenty feet. On August 31, 1791, Jacques Terriot sold to Joseph Richard of Cabannocé the property he acquired in 1789. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95. | 1.785 | printed fabric maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||
996 | Françoise | Guérin | 01/01/1763 | Anne LeBlanc | Dominique Guérin | Married Jacques Terriot. | Françoise Élisabeth (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
997 | Françoise Élisabeth | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1785 | Françoise Guerin | Jacques Terriot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21. | 1.785 | Etienne Terriot (Theriot) and Hélène landry | Dominique Guérin and Anne LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
998 | Dominique | Guérin | 01/01/1722 | Married Anne LeBlanc. He was a widower by the time of the Bergère's departure in 1785. | Joseph (born ca. 1745), Françoise (born ca. 1763), Isabelle (born ca. 1763), Brigide (Brigitte) (born ca. 1770) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Trigavou, France, 1760-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
999 | Isabelle | Guérin | 01/01/1763 | Dominique Guerin | Married Jean Pierre Landry, February 20, 1786. | Élizabeth (married April 14, 1806) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Isabelle Guérin was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Jean Pierre Landry. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five-barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and one hog. | She died sometime before the 1789 census of the Lafourche District was compiled. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 61. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.000 | Brigide (Brigitte) | Guérin | 01/01/1770 | Dominique Guerin | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.001 | Joseph | Guérin | 01/01/1745 | Anne LeBlanc | Dominique Guérin | Married Agnès Pitre. | Françoise (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included Agnès Pitre, his twenty-six-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned hirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included Agnès Pitre, his twenty-seven-year-old wife, and Joseph Guerin, his one-year-old son. Guérin and his family occupied a atract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.002 | Françoise | Guérin | 01/01/1785 | Agnès Pitre | Joseph Guerin | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21. | 1.785 | Dominique Guérin and Anne LeBlanc | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.003 | Françoise | Guillot | 01/01/1766 | Françoise Bourg(?) | René Guillot(?) | Married Félix Boudrot at Ascension Parish, La., October 16, 1786. (Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that the marriage ceremony occurred on October 17, 1786.) Pierre Guillot and Pierre Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.004 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Hébert | Veuve Bourg | 01/01/1730 | Married Alexandre Bourg. She was a widow by May 12, 1785. | Marguerite (born ca. 1751) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Bourg (Bourq), her daughter, 37 years old; Firmin Aucoin, her grandson, 8 years old. Marguerite Hébert, the Widow Bourg (Bourq), and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.005 | Marguerite | Bourg | Veuve Aucoin | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Hébert | Alexandre Bourg | Married Firmin Aucoin, the son of Olivier Aucoin and Marguerite Vincent. She was a widow by May 12, 1785. | Firmin (born ca. 1779) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-seven-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself, the household included Marguerite Hébert (Veuve Bourg), her fifty-eight-year-old mother, and Firmin (Firmain) Aucoin, her eight-year-old son. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.006 | Antoine | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1730 | Anne Breau(?) | Antoine Aucoin(?) (Aucoing) | Married Françoise Hébert, the widow of Elie LeBlanc. He was a widower by May 12, 1785. | Pierre (born ca. 1765), Louis (born ca. 1770; married August 11, 1789) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:36; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.007 | Firmin | Aucoin | 01/01/1779 | Nantes, France | Marguerite Bourg | Married Pélagie Arseneau, daughter of Joseph Arseneau and Marie Dupuis, at St. James Parish, La., February 3, 1806. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of the household that included Marguerite Bourg (Bourq), his thirty-seven-year-old mother, and Marguerite Hébert, his fifty-eight-year-old maternal grandmother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:29. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.008 | Pierre | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1765 | Antoine Aucoin (Aucoing) | Married Félicité Aucoin at Ascension Parish, La., July 3, 1786. Olivier Terriot (Theriot) and Ambroise Garidel witnessed the marriage certificate. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that also included Félicité Aucoin, his thirty-eight-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Félicité Aucoin, his twenty-nine-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse,a nd fifteen hogs. In 1790, he joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 39; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 3. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.009 | Louis | Aucoin | 01/01/1770 | Antoine Aucoin(?) (Aucoing) | Married Marie Bourg. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned fifteen arrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. Louis Aucoin lived next door to Pierre Aucoin, his twenty-three-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the eighteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Simon Dugas, no relationship indicated, 51 yea old; Marie Bourg, Simon Dugas' wife, 25 years old; Anne Bourg, Dugas' sister-in-law, 17 years old; and Anne Dugas, Simon Dugas' sister, 25 years old. He and his companions occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.010 | Laure (Luce) | Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1745 | Françoise Benoît(?) | Jean Bourg(?) | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert. She was a widow by May 12, 1785. | Jean (Jean Olivier) (born ca. 1770), Félicité (born ca. 1772), Marie (born ca. 1768), Françoise (born ca. 1774) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Olivier Hébert, her son, 19 years old; Marie Hébert, her daughter, 21 years old; Félicité Hébert, her daughter, 17 years old; and Françoise Hébert, her daughter, 13 years old. Identified as Luce Bourg, Veuve Hébert, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph, identified (evidently mistakenly) as her son, 16 years old; and Charles, also identified (evidently mistakenly) as her son, 13 years old. Luce Bourg and the members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.011 | Jean | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Laure (Luce) Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included the following persons: Marie Hébert, his sister, 21 years old; Félicité Hébert, his sister, 17 years old; and Françoise Hébert, his sister, 13 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.012 | Félicité | Hébert | 01/01/1772 | Laure (Luce) Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married François Gauterot, son of Charles Gauterot and Magdeleine Melanson (Melançon), March 5, 1792. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The household also included the following persons: Jean Olivier Hébert, her brother, 19 years old; Marie Hébert, her sister, 21 years old; and Françoise Hébert, her sister, 13 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.013 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Laure (Luce) Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Suliac (Souliac) Blanchard, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Charles Blanchard and Marguerite Dugas, at Ascension Parish, La., October 22, 1787. Their wedding ceremony was part of double marriage. Jean Olivier Hébert and Natalie Aucoin constituted the second couple. Ambroise Garidel witnessed the marriage record. | Céleste Marie (born August 10, 1794; buried April 26, 1797, at the age of 2 years 9 months), Firmin (Fermin) (born November 12, 1796), Isidore (Isidoro) (a twin) (born March 13, 1799), Clarisse (a twin) (born March 13, 1799), Valéry (born November 13, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The household also included the following persons: Jean Olivier Hébert, her brother, 19 years old; Félicité Hébert, her sister, 17 years old; and Françoise Hébert, her sister, 13 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92-94, 100, 101. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.014 | Françoise | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Laure (Luce) Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The household also included the following persons: Jean Olivier Hébert, her brother, 19 years old; Marie Hébert, her sister, 21 years old; and Félicité Hébert, her sister, 17 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.015 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1723 | Marie Yvette (born ca. 1752) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.016 | Marie Yvette | Hébert | Veuve Henry | 01/01/1752 | Charles Hébert | Pierre (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.017 | Pierre | Henry | 01/01/1771 | Marie Yvette Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.018 | Claude | LeBlanc | 04/11/1723 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Jeanne Bourgeois | Jean LeBlanc | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Longuépée. Married (2) Marie Josèphe Guédry (Guidry), the widow of Benjamin Mius d'Entremont. Married (3) Dorothée Richard, daughter of François Richard and Marie Martin. | Resided at La Gouesnière, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Méloir-des-Ondes, Brittany, France, 1760-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1764-1765. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | On January 27, 1794, Claude LeBlanc reportedly purchased from Étienne LeBlanc a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Following his purchase of this property, Claude LeBlanc sold it to Simon Ducournau. Claude LeBlanc received a donation from Joseph Bugeau. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-seven years od age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:87; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:462; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 68. | 1.785 | 09/08/1800 | 10/08/1800 | Ascension Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.019 | Dorothée | Richard | 01/01/1735 | Marie Martin | François Richard | Married Claude LeBlanc. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with Claire Landry, her belle-mère (either mother-in-law or stepmother). Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.020 | Claire | Landry | 01/01/1710 | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Travelled to Louisiana with Claude LeBlanc and Dorothée Richard. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.021 | Marie Magdelaine | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Blanche LeBlanc | Jean Landry | Married Jean Baptiste Comeau (Commeau), the son of Alexis Comeau (Commeau) and Dorothée Richard. The passenger manifest of the Bergère indicates that he was "absent" at the time of the ship's departure from France. | Jean Baptiste, fils (born ca. 1783) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.022 | Jean Baptiste | Comeau | 01/01/1783 | Marie Magdelaine Landry | Jean Baptiste Comeau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22. | 1.785 | Jean Landry and Blanche LeBlanc | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.023 | Jean | Aucoing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1712 | Married Jeanne Terriot. | Anne Félicité (born ca. 1766) | Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.024 | Jeanne (Jeane) | Terriot (Theriot, Teriot) | Veuve Aucoin | 01/01/1723 | Married Jean Aucoin. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Anne Félicité (born ca. 1766) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixty-seven-year-old widow. She lived with her twenty-one-year-old daughter, Félicité Aucoin. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jeane Teriot, Veuve Aucoin. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Félicitié, her daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.025 | Marie Anastasie | Aucoin g(Aucoin) | 01/01/1759 | Boulogne-sur-Mer, France | Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Aucoin | Married Joseph Terriot, probably the son of Jean Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux). Joseph Terriot (Theriot) was buried at Assumption Parish, La., on February 22, 1798. Married (2) Charles Blanchard, a native of St. Malo, France, and the widower of Jeanne Giroir, at Assumption Parish, La., February 1, 1802. Suliac Blanchard and Pedro Monte witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Terriot (Theriot). The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and six hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37, 690. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.026 | Pierre | Richard | 01/01/1737 | Married Blanche LeBlanc. | Marie (born ca. 1766), Pierre (born ca. 1769), Charles (born 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included Blanche LeBlanc, his forty-three-year-old spouse, Marie Richard, his twenty-two-year-old daughter, Charles Richard, his three-year-old son, and Rose Richard, a thirty-three-year-old "orphan." Pierre Richard and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.027 | Blanche | LeBlanc | 01/01/1739 | Married Pierre Richard. | Marie (born ca. 1766), Pierre (born ca. 1769), Charles (born 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Richard. In addition to herself and her fifty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marie Richard, her daughter, 22 years old; Charles Richard, her son, 3 years old; and Rose Richard, a thirty-three-year-old "orphan." She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.028 | Marie | Richard | 01/01/1766 | Blanche LeBlanc | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Charles Richard, her three-year-old brother, and Rose Richard, a thirty-three-year-old "orphan." Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.029 | Pierre | Richard | 01/01/1769 | Blanche LeBlanc | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.030 | Rose | Richard | 01/01/1755 | Marguerite Landry(?) | Jean Richard(?) | Married Olivier LeBlanc, the son of Victor LeBlanc and Marie Aucoin, November 7, 1790. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her cousin Pierre Richard. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-three-year-old member of the household of Pierre Richard and Blanche LeBlanc. The 1788 census maintains that she was an "orphan." | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 89. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.031 | Tranquille (Tranquil) | Pitre | 01/01/1749 | Geneviève Arsement | Amand Pitre | Married Elisabeth (Isabelle, Ysabel) Aucoing (Aucoin). | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1782), Jean Vincent (identified as Joseph in 1788) (born ca. 1784), Martine (Martinne) (born 1786), Constant Étienne (born November 8, 1788) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Elisabeth (Isabelle) Aucoin (Aucoing), his wife, 38 years old; Jean Baptiste Pitre, his son, 6 years old; Joseph Pitre, his son, 4 years old; and Martine (Martinne), his daughter, 2 years old. Tranquille Pitre and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. His name is rendered as Tranquil PItre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elisabeth (Isabelle) Aucoin (Aucoing), his wife, 39 years old; Jean Baptiste Pitre, his son, 7 years old; Joseph Pitre, his son, 5 years old; Martine (Martines) Pitre, his three-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eleven hogs. He was a resident of the Valenzuela District in May 1803. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-four years of age at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:593-595; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:259-260; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.785 | 07/06/1801 | Assumption Parish, La. | cooper | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.032 | Jean | Richard | 01/01/1717 | Married Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry. French genealogists speculate incorrectly that she was the widow of another Jean Richard, who, like the passenger aboard the Bergère, was exiled to England. The second Jean Richard also arrived at Saint-Servan, France, in 1763. He died at Saint-Servan, and was interred there on January 1, 1778. The deceased Richard had a son named Jean Pierre. | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1771) | Deported to England. Arrived at Saint-Servan, France, 1763. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-nine-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry, his fifty-year-old wife, and Jean Pierre Richard, his fifteen-year-old son. Jean Richard and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margritta) Landry (Landri), his fifty-one-year-old wife, and Jean Pierre Richard, his fifteen-year-old son. Jean Richard and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.033 | Élisabeth (Isabelle, Ysabel) | Aucoing (auCoin) | 01/01/1739 | Married Tranquille Pitre. | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1782), Jean Vincent (identified as Joseph in 1788) (born ca. 1784), Martine (Martinne) (born 1786), Constant Étienne (born November 8, 1788) | French genealigists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintained that Elisabeth Aucoin (auCoing) was born ca. 1748, not 1739 as indicated in the passenger manifest of the Bergère. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Isabelle Aucoin in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Tranquille Pitre. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Jean Baptiste Pitre, her six-year-old son, Joseph (Jean Vincent) Pitre, her four-year-old son; and Martine (Martinne) Pitre, her two-year-old daughter. Elisabeth Aucoin and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Tranquille (Tranquil) Pitre. In addition to herself and her thirty-nine-year-old husband, the household also included Jean Baptiste Pitre, her seven-year-old son, Joseph Pitre, her five-year-old son, and Martine (Martines) Pitre, her three-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eleven hogs. | Her burial record indicates that the was the widow of Tranquille Pitre and that she was seventy-four-years of age. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:593-595; 3:36; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.785 | 15/02/1818 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.034 | Jean Baptiste | Pitre | 01/01/1782 | Élisabeth Aucoing (Aucoin) | Tranquille Pitre | Married Marianne Boudrot, January 15, 1804. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a six-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Joseph (Jean Vincent) Pitre, his four-year-old brother, and Martine (Martinne) Pitre, his two-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Joseph Pitre, his five-year-old brother, and Martine (Martines) Pitre, his three-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.035 | Jean Vincent (Joseph Vincent) | Pitre | 01/01/1784 | Élisabeth Aucoing (Aucoin) | Tranquille Pitre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Joseph Pitre in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Jean Baptiste Pitre, his six-year-old brother, and Martine (Martinne) Pitre, his two-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Joseph Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his parents' household. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.036 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1736 | St. Charles Parish, Acadia | Married Jean Richard. | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-year-old wife of Jean Richard. In addition to herself and her fifty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Jean Pierre Richard, her fifteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. Her name is rendered as Margritta Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Richard. In addition to herself and her fifty-three-year-old husband, the household included Jean Pierre Richard, her fifteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | She was a widow at the time of her death. Her death record maintains that she was fifty-eight years old when she died. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:436; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | 23/09/1797 | Assumption Parish, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.037 | Jean Pierre | Richard | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry | Jean Richard | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.038 | Marie Jeanne (Marie Josèphe) | Richard | Veuve Hilaire Landry | 01/01/1739 | Married Hilaire Landry. | Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1769), Rose (Marie Rose) (born ca. 1775) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-year-old widow and the head of a household including Rose Landry, her fourteen-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Veuve Hilaire Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included Marie, her sixteen-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.039 | Marie Magdelaine | Landry | St. Malo, France | Marie Jeanne (Marie Josèphe, Marguerite) Richard | Hilaire Landry | Married Jean (sometime Jean Charles) Terriot (Theriot), son of Etienne Terriot and Magdeleine Landry and the brother of Olivier Terriot (Theriot), at Ascension Parish, La., February 27, 1786. | Marie (Marie Rosalie) (baptized August 11, 1787), Jean Charles, fils (born June 7, 1788), Henriette Carmelite (born June 7, 1790), Céleste Rosalie (born February 7, 1793), Jules Furcy(?) Florentin (born, ca. 1795), Jacques Tourville (born January 1796), Marie Anne (Mariana) (born September 1798), Claire (born September 27, 1801), Louis Lazare (born September 14, 1805) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Jean (sometimes identified as Jean Charles) Terriot (Theriot). In addition to herself and her twenty-two-year-old husband, her household included Marie Terriot (Theriot), her one-year-old daughter. Her name is rendered as Marie-Madelaine in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:690; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95. | Mon, Mar 16, 1767 | 1.785 | 08/10/1819 | St. Servan, Dept. of Ille-et-Vilaine, France | Donaldsonville, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.040 | Rose (Marie Rose) | Landry | 01/01/1775 | Marie Jeanne (Marie Josèphe) Richard | Hilaire Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her mother's household. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old residing with her mother. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 15; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.041 | Marin | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1747 | Married Gertrude Bourg (Bourq, Bourque). | Jean (born ca. 1771), Marie (born ca. 1776), Joseph Marin (married January 30, 1792)French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux indicate that, because her name does not appear in any other European records, the Marie Gauterot listed in the Bergère's passenger manifest may actually have been Joseph Marin Gauterot. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Marin Gauterot (Gautreaut) was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Gertrude Bourg (Bourq), his wife, 42 years old; Jean Gauterot, his son, 13 years old; and Marie Gauterot, his daughter, 11 years old. Marin Gauterot and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. Identified as Marin Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included he following persons: Gertrude Bourg, his wife, 42 years old; Jean Gauterot, his son, 14 years old; and Marie Gauterot, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twenty hogs. On January 21, 1799, the governor ordered Commandant Verret to force Marin Gauterot (Gaubreaux) to pay the interest he owed one Mr. Barilleaux. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Governot to Verret, January 21, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:571; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.042 | Gertrude | Bourg | 01/01/1747 | Married Marin Gauterot (Potreau). | Jean (born ca. 1771), Marie (born ca. 1776), Joseph Marin (married January 30, 1792) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year spouse of Marin Gauterot (Gautreaut). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Marin Gauterot, 42 years old; Jean Gauterot, her son, 13 years old; and Marie Gauterot, her daughter, 11 years old. Gertrude Bourg and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Marin Gauterot. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Jean Gauterot, her fourteen-year-old son, and Marie Gauterot, her twelve-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owend forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.043 | Jean | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1771 | Gertrude Bourg | Marin Gauterot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.044 | Marie | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1776 | Gertrude Bourg | Marin Gauterot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.045 | Jeanne | Chellon (Chaillou, CHAILLON) | Veuve Bourg | 01/01/1729 | Evidently married Jean Bourg. If this person is indeed the spouse of Jean Bourg, who died before May 1785, then her identity is Jeanne Chaillou (Chaillon). | Marie (born ca. 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1769), André (born ca. 1771), Charles (born ca. 1774) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household including Jean Baptiste Bourg, her eighteen-year-old son, André Bourg, her fifteen-year-old son, and Charles Bourg, her twelve-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and four hogs. Identified as Jeanne Chaillon, Veuve Bourg, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included Jean Baptiste Bourg, her nineteen-year-old son; André Bourg, her sixteen-year-old son; and Charles Bourg, her twelve-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Her family owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and three hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.046 | Jean Baptiste | Bourg | 01/01/1769 | La Rochelle, France | Jeanne Chellon (Chaillou? Chaillon? Sayu?) | Jean Baptiste Bourg | Married Françoise Blanchard, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Françoise Blanchard and Hélène Giroire. | Charles André (born December 17, 1793; buried July 12, 1798), Louis Ambroise (born March 4, 1796), Marie Françoise (evidently a twin) (born September 10, 1800; buried July 13, 1801), Jean Baptiste (evidently a twin) (born September 11, 1800) (note discrepancy in birthdate with that of Marie Françoise), Laurent David (born August 3, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old residing with his mother, the fifty-year-old widow of Jean Bourg, André Bourg, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Charles Bourg, his twelve-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included André, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Charles, his twelve-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 124, 126. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.047 | André | Bourg | 01/01/1771 | Jeanne Chellon (Chaillou? Chaillon?) | Jean Bourg(?) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. The household also included Jean Baptiste Bourg, his eighteen-year-old brother, and Charles Bourg, his twelve-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Jean Baptiste, his nineteen-year-old brother, and Charles, his twelve-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.048 | Charles | Bourg | 01/01/1774 | Menthoiron, Poitou Province, France | Jeanne Chellon (Chaillou? Chaillon?) | Jean Bourg(?) | Married Isabelle (Isabel) Dupuis, a native of Châtellereault, Diocese of Poitiers, France, and the daughter of Joseph Dupuis and Marie Landry, at Assumption Parish, La., February 14, 1797. Joseph Dupuis, Joseph Aucoin, and Charles Daigle witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Geneviève (born May 15, 1799), Jean Apolinar (born July 1, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old residing with his mother, a fifty-year-old widow. The household also included Jean Baptiste Bourg, his eighteen-year-old brother, and André Bourg, his fifteen-year-old brother. He and his family family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Jean Baptiste, his nineteen-year-old brother, and André, his sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 126. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.049 | Marie | Bourg | 01/01/1767 | Miquelon | Jeanne Chellon (Chaillou? Chaillon?) | Jean Bourg(?) | Married Antonio Moulart at New Orleans, September 27, 1785. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:38. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.050 | Anne (Anne Simphorose) | Hébert | Veuve Blanchard | 01/01/1738 | Sts. Peter and Paul Parish, Cobequid, Acadia | Françoise Bourque | Pierre Hébert | Married Joseph Blanchard. She became a widow before May 1785. | Laurent (born ca. 1766), Marie (born ca. 1768), Pierre (born ca. 1770), Moïse (Louis) (born ca. 1772), Elie (Etie) (born ca. 1774), Anne (born ca. 1778) | Her family resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Pierre Blanchard, her son, 18 years old; Louis (Moïse) Blanchard, her son, 16 years old; Elie (Etie) Blanchard, her son, 14 years old; and Anne Blanchard, her daughter, 9 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-one-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Pierre Blanchard, her son, 18 years old; Louis Blanchard, her son, 17 years old; Elie Blanchard, he son, 15 years old; and Anne Blanchard, her daughter, 10 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-seven barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and eleven hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:355. | 1.785 | 22/09/1793 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.051 | Laurent | Blanchard | 01/01/1767 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Married Anne Hébert at Ascension Parish, La., July 3, 1786. Olivier Terriot (Theriot) and Simon Dugas witnessed the marriage certificate. | Laurent (Lorenzo) (baptized September 2, 1787), Marianne (born September 12, 1788), Étienne (a twin) (born August 20, 1790), Elie (Elias) Magloire (born November 11, 1792), Augustin Valéry (born September 13, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that also included Anne Hébert, his twenty-three-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1788 census suggests that Laurent Blanchard lived next door to his mother and siblings. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Anne Hébert, his twenty-four-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-one barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and ten hogs. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his family resided in Assumption Parish in 1793. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 96; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:93, 94, 96, 98; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.785 | joiner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.052 | Pierre | Blanchard | 01/01/1770 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Married Marguerite Aucoin at Ascension Parish, La., July 25, 1790. Charles Aucoin, Laurent Blanchard, and Jean Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite (buried October 12, 1798, at the age of eleven years), Elise Bona (born December 27, 1792; buried July 15, 1797, at the age of five years), Henriette Marie (Henrieta María) (born June 23, 1794), Claire (born April 27, 1796), Pierre Firmin (born July 31, 1798), Elias (born August 5, 1800), Edouard (a twin) (born August 31, 1802); Pierre (Pedro) (a twin) (born August 31, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included Anne Hébert, his fifty-year-old mother, Louis Blanchard, his sixteen-year-old brother, Elie Blanchard, his fourteen-year-old brother, and Anne Blanchard, his nine-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:93, 95, 97, 99-100; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.053 | Moïse (Louis) | Blanchard | 01/01/1772 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included Anne Hébert, his fifty-year-old mother, Pierre Blanchard, his eighteen-year-old brother, Elie Blanchard, his fourteen-year-old brother, and Anne Blanchard, his nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.054 | Elie (Etie) David | Blanchard | 01/01/1774 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Married Marie Blanchard, daughter of François Blanchard and Elenne (Hélène) Giroir, January 28, 1793. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The household also included Anne Hébert, his fifty-year-old mother, Pierre Blanchard, his eighteen-year-old brother, Louis (Moïse) Blanchard, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Anne Blanchard, his nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.055 | Marie | Blanchard | 01/01/1768 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Married (1) Mathurin Trahan. Married (2) Joseph Comeau, the widower of Anne Landry and the son of Alexandre Comeau and Marguerite Babin, at Assumption Parish, La., November 12, 1798. Laurent Blanchard, Louis Blanchard, Elie Blanchard, and Pierre Blanchard witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite (married May 5, 1806) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:97, 98; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.056 | Anne | Blanchard | 01/01/1778 | Nantes, France | Anne Hébert | Joseph Blanchard | Married Pierre Bourg (Bourque), a native of Nantes, France, and the son of Marin Blanchard and Osite Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., April 23, 1798. Pierre Blanchard, Laurent Blanchard, and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Pierre Laurent (Pedro Lorenzo) (baptized January 6, 1799), Rosalie Anne (born October 15, 1800), Louis (born November 12, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The household also included Anne Hébert, her fifty-year-old mother, Pierre Blanchard, her eighteen-year-old brother, Louis (Moïse) Blanchard, her sixteen-year-old brother, and Elie Blanchard, her fourteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 124, 127, 128. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.057 | Ursule | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | Veuve LeBlanc | 01/01/1720 | Married Jean Baptiste LeBlanc. | Simon (born ca. 1762), Magdelaine (born ca. 1774) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.058 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | England (born during the Grand Dérangement) | Ursule Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.059 | Magdelaine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1774 | Ursule Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.060 | Gabriel (Gabrielle) | Moreau (Moreaux) | 01/01/1724 | Married Marie Trahan. | Maximin (born ca. 1761), Anne (born ca. 1767) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-eight-year-old head of a household including Jean Landry, his son-in-law, and Anne Moreau (Moreaux), his twenty-two-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Anne Moreau, his twenty-three-year-old daughter, and Baptiste Landry, his two-year-old grandson. Gabriel Moreau and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.061 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1731 | Gabriel Moreau (Moreaux) | Maximin (born ca. 1761), Anne (born ca. 1767) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.062 | Maximin | Moreau | 01/01/1761 | Marie Trahan | Gabriel Moreau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.063 | Anne | Moreau | 01/01/1767 | Marie Trahan | Gabriel Moreau | Married Jean Athanase Landry at Ascension Parish, La., January 22, 1787. Laurent Michel and Jean Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Fancia(?), who married April 21, 1816. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Landry. She and her thirty-two-year-old husband were members of her father's household. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:556; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60, 61. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.064 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Married Marthe (Marguerite) LeBlanc. | Joseph (born ca. 1766), Jean Raphaël (born ca. 1768), Marie Marguerite (born ca. 1770), Anne Susanne (born ca. 1776) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Contemporary documents identify Pierre Landry as a carpenter and day laborer at the time of his arrival in Brittany. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marthe LeBlanc, his wife, 54 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 22 years old; Raphael Landry, his son, 20 years old; Marie Landry, his daughter, 17 years old; and Susanne Landry, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. His name is rendered as Pierre Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marthe (Margrithe) LeBlanc, his wife, 55 years old; Raphaël, his son, 21 years old; Marie, his daughter, 18 years old; and Susanne (Suzanne), his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and ten hogs. He was evidently a resident of Assumption Parish at the time of his death. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-three years of a age at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:446; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65. | 1.785 | 03/09/1798 | Assumption Parish, La. | colorist | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.065 | Marthe (Marguerite) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1736 | Married Pierre Landry. | Joseph (born ca. 1766), Jean Raphaël (born ca. 1768), Marie Marguerite (born ca. 1770), Anne Susanne (born ca. 1776) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her son, 22 years old; Raphael Landry, her son, 20 years old; Marie Landry, her daughter, 17 years old; and Susanne Landry, her daughter 12 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of corn, one horse, one cow, and ten hogs. Her name is rendered as Margrithe Le Blanc in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry (Landri). In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old husband, the household included Raphaël, her twenty-one-year-old son, Marie, her eighteen-year-old daughter, and Susanne (Suzanne), her twelve-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.066 | Jean Raphaël | Landry | 01/01/1768 | Marthe LeBlanc | Pierre Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Joseph Landry, his twenty-two-year-old brother, Marie Landry, his seventeen-year-old sister, and Susanne Landry, his twelve-year-old sister. Identified as Raphaël Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie, his eighteen-year-old sister, and Susanne (Suzanne), his twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.067 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Marthe LeBlanc | Pierre Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Raphael Landry, his twenty-year-old brother, Marie Landry, his seventeen-year-old sister, and Susanne Landry, his twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | engraver | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.068 | Marie Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1770 | Marthe LeBlanc | Pierre Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Joseph Landry, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Raphael Landry, her twenty-year-old brother, and Susanne Landry, her twelve-year-old sister. Identified as Marie Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Raphaël, her twenty-one-year-old brother, and Susanne (Suzanne), her twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.069 | Anne Susanne (Suzanne) | Landry | 01/01/1776 | Marthe LeBlanc | Pierre Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Joseph Landry, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Raphael Landry, her twenty-year-old brother, and Marie Landry, her seventeen-year-old sister. Her name is rendered as Suzanne Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Raphaël, her twenty-one-year-old brother, and Marie, her eighteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.070 | Marie Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) | Le Prince (Leprince) | Veuve Trahan | 01/01/1742 | Judith Boudrot | Antoine Le Prince | Married Joseph Trahan. She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Julie (born ca. 1763), Antoine Joseph (born ca. 1766), Susanne (born 1778) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-five-year-old widow and the head of a household including Susanne, her ten-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a small tract of land with only three arpents frontage. T\hey owned six barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Marie Magdelaine Leprince in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household including Suzanne, her eight-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They occupied three arpents of land. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.071 | Antoine Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1766 | Marie Le Prince | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.072 | Julie | Trahan | 01/01/1763 | Marie Le Prince | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.073 | Pierre Jacques | Bertrand | 03/05/1734 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Magdeleine (Marie) Moulaison | Pierre Bertrand | Married Catherine Bourg (Bourque) at Cherbourg, Normandy, France, 1764. | Ambroise Beloni (born ca. 1767), Jean Augustin (born ca. 1770), Louis (born ca. 1783), Catherine (Marie) (born ca. 1772; married January 9, 1809), Marie (Marianne) (born ca. 1774; married February 4, 1793), Adélaïde (born ca. 1778), Anne Magdelaine (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Catherine (Catherinne) Bourg (Bourq), his wife, 37 years old; Ambroise Beloni (Belomy), his son, 21 years old; Marie, his daughter, 16 years old; Mari[a]nne, his daughter, 14 years old; and Adélaïde, his daughter, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Catherine Bourg, his wife, 37 years old; Beloni (Belomy) Bertrand, his son, 22 years old; Marie Bertrand, his daughter, 17 years old; Marianne Bertrand, his daughter, 14 years old; and Adélaïde Bertrand, his daughter, 11 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:13; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13. | 1.785 | journeyman | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.074 | Catherine (Catherinne) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Landry | Charles Bourg | Married Pierre Bertrand at Cherbourg, France, 1764. | Ambroise Beloni (born ca. 1767), Jean Augustin (born ca. 1770), Louis (born ca. 1783), Catherine (Marie) (born ca. 1772; married January 9, 1809), Marie (Marianne) (born ca. 1774; married February 4, 1793), Adélaïde (born ca. 1778), Anne Magdelaine (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Catherinne Bourq in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old spouse of Pierre Bertrand. In addition to herself and her fifty-six-year-old husband, her household included Ambroise Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-one-year-old son, Marie, her sixteen-year-old daughter, Mari[a]nne, her fourteen-year-old daughter, and Adélaïde, her ten-year-old daughter. Her name is rendered as Catherine Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old wife of Pierre Bertrand. In addition to herself and her fifty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Belony (Belomy) Bertrand, her twenty-two-year-old son, Marie Bertrand, her seventeen-year-old daughter, Marianne Bertrand, her fourteen-year-old son, and Adélaïde Bertrand, her eleven-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.075 | Ambroise Beloni (Belomy) | Bertrand | 01/01/1768 | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his sixteen-year-old sister, Mari[a]nne, his fourteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, his ten-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. His name is rendered as Belomy Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie, his seventeen-year-old sister, Marianne, his fourteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, his eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.076 | Jean Augustin | Bertrand | 01/01/1770 | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.077 | Louis | Bertrand | 01/01/1783 | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.078 | Catherine (Marie) | Bertrand | 01/01/1772 | Catherine Bourg (Bourque) | Pierre Bertrand | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Marie Bertrand in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Ambroise Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-one-year-old brother, Mari[a]nne, her fourteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. Identified as Marie Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-two-year-old brother, Marianne, her fourteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.079 | Marie (Marianne) | Bertrand | 01/01/1774 | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Married Jean Charles Boudrot, son of Joseph Boudrot and Marguerite Richard, at Ascension Parish, La., February 4, 1793. Jean Daigle, Ambroise Bertrand, and Joseph Robichaud witnessed the marriage document. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Mari(a)nne Bertrand in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Ambroise Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-one-year-old brother, Marie (Catherine), her sixteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. Identified as Marianne Bertrand in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-two-year-old brother, Marie, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:87-88; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.080 | Adélaïde | Bertrand | 01/01/1778 | Nantes, France | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Married François Bourg, son of Marin Bourg and Osite Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., March 27, 1797. Pierre Bourg (Bourque) and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Julie Scholastique (Julia Escolastica) (born July 14, 1797), Rose Adélaïde (baptized January 8, 1799), Ursin Narcisse (born October 29, 1800), Valéry (born August 1, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Ambroise Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-one-year-old brother, Marie (Catherine), her sixteen-year-old sister, Mari[a]nne, her fourteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde, her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Beloni (Belomy), her twenty-two-year-old brother, Marie, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Marianne, her fourteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:87, 121, 124; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:128, 129. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.081 | Anne Magdelaine | Bertrand | 01/01/1785 | Catherine Bourg | Pierre Bertrand | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | She does not appear in her parents' household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. This suggests that she was deceased. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | Pierre Jacques Bertrand and Magdeleine Moulaison | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.082 | Anne (Anne Madeleine) | Savary (Savaray) | Veuve Potier (Pottier) | 01/01/1747 | Madeleine Michel | Bernard Savary | Married (1) Pierre Potier, who died before May 1785. Married (2) Joseph (Constant) Granger, son of Joseph Granger and Marie Cyr, at Ascension Parish, La., June 5, 1786. Abraham Landry and Jean Charles Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Olivier (born ca. 1775), Jacques Silvin (born ca. 1778) | Resided at Pleudihen, France, 1759-1771. Resided at Plouer, France, 1771-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Joseph Granger (Grangées). In addition to herself and her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included Olivier Potier, her fifteen-year-old son by a previous marriage, and Silvin (Silvain) Potier, her nine-year-old son by a previous marriage. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Anne Savaray in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Granger (Grangé). In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, the household included two of her sons by a previous marriage Olivier Potier (Pitre), 16 years old; and Silvin (Silvain) Potier, 10 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:334-335; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.083 | Olivier | Potier (Potiée, Pottier) | 01/01/1775 | Anne Savary | Pierre Potier (Pottier) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Joseph Granger (Grangées), his stepfather, and Anne Savary (Savarry), his mother. The household also included Silvin (Silvain) Potier, his nine-year-old brother. Misidentified as Olivier Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Joseph Granger (Grangé), his stepfather, and Anne Savary (Savaray), his mother. The household also included Silvin (Silvain) Potier, his ten-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Bernard Savary and Madeleine Michel | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.084 | Jacques Silvin (Silvain) | Potier (Potiée, Pottier) | 01/01/1778 | Anne Savary | Pierre Potier (Pottier) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of the household of Joseph Granger (Grangées), his stepfather, and Anne Savary (Savarry), his mother. The household also included Olivier Potier (Potiée), his fifteen-year-old brother. His given name is rendered as Silvain in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of the household of Joseph Granger (Grangé), his stepfather, and Anne Savary (Savaray), his mother. The household also included Olivier Potier (Pitre), his sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Bernard Savary and Madeleine Michel | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.085 | Pierre | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1763 | Jeanne LeBert(?) | Honoré Gautrot(?) | Evidently resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. His residence appears to have been next door to that of Marin Gauterot. Pierre Gauterot occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and three cows. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned ten barrels of corn and one horse. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.086 | Agnès (often Anne) | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1759 | Marguerite Robichaud(?) | Honoré Gautrot(?) | Married Joseph Nicolas Hébert at Ascension Parish, La., May 6, 1786. | Evidently resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her brother Pierre Gauterot. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Nicolas Hébert. She and her thirty-four-year-old husband occupied a tract o land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Agnès Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spou of Joseph Nicolas Hébert. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:364; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.087 | Pierre | Gauterot (Gautreaux, Gauterau) | 01/01/1732 | Married Marie Duplessis (Duplessy). | Adélaïde (born ca. 1776; married February 6, 1792) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1773. Pierre Gautrot and his spouse occupied farm no. 46 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Duplessis (Duplessy), his forty-five-year-old spouse, and Adélaïde Gauterot (Gautreaut), his thirteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and five hogs. His name is rendered as Pierre Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Marie Duplessis (Duplessi), his forty-six-year-old wife, and Adélaïde (Delaide), his fourteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.088 | Marie | Duplessis (Duplessy) | 01/01/1738 | Married Pierre Gauterot. | Adélaïde (born ca. 1776; married February 6, 1792) | She and her husband resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1773. The couple occupied farm no. 46 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, 1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Gauterot (Gautreaut). In addition to herself and her fifty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Adélaïde Gauterot (Gautreaut), her thirteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and five hogs. Her name is rendered as Marie Duplessi in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Gauterot (Gauterau). In addition to herself and her fifty-nine-year-old husband, the household included Adélaïde (Delaide), his fourteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.089 | Adélaïde (Delaide) | Gauterot (Gautreaux, Gauterau) | 01/01/1776 | Marie Duplessis | Pierre Gauterot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and five hogs. Her name is rendered as Delaide Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old residing with her parents. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.090 | Jean Baptiste | Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1735 | Married Marie Daigle. | Jacques (born ca. 1766), Jean (born ca. 1770), François (born ca. 1777), Perrine (born ca. 1775) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.091 | Marie | Daigle | Veuve Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1740 | Marie Breau | Jean Daigle | Married Jean Baptiste Barillard (Barillot) at Pleudihen, France, June 19, 1764. He8. died sometime before 1788. | Jacques (born ca. 1766), Jean (born ca. 1770), François (born ca. 1777), Perrine (born ca. 1775) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District as the Widow Barillot (Barillard). The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household including Perrine (Perinne) Barillot (Barillard), her fifteen-year-old daughter, and François Barillot (Barillard), her eleven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. She is identified as Veuve Barillot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Perrine (Perine) Barillot (Barillard), her sixteen-year-old daughter, and François Barillot (Barillard), her twelve-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 213-214; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21-25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.092 | Jacques | Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1766 | Marie Daigle | Jean Baptiste Barillot (Barillard) | Married Marie Mierolle (Masserrole, Matserolle, Menserolle). | Jacques (baptized June 20, 1789; married April 14, 1806), François (born July 17, 1790) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-one-year-old head of a household including Marie Mierolle, his twenty-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and one hog. The 1788 census suggests that he lived next door to his mother and his siblings Perrine and François. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included Marie Mierolle (Mazerot), his twenty-one-year-old wife. The census suggests that he and his wife lived next door to his mother. The census also suggests that he may have lived on his mother's land, because he evidently owned neither land nor livestock in 1789. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Bayou Lafourche area, May 26, 1791. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:65; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 11. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.093 | Jean | Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1770 | Marie Daigle | Jean Baptiste Barillard (Barillot) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.094 | François | Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1777 | Marie Daigle | Jean Baptiste Barillard (Barillot) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-eight-year-old mother, the household included Perrine (Perinne) Barillot (Barillard), his fifteen-year-old sister. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Perrine (Perine) Barillot (Barillard), his sixteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.095 | Perrine (Perinne, Perine) | Barillard (Barillot) | 01/01/1775 | Marie Daigle | Jean Baptiste Barillard (Barillot) | Married Blaise Boudrot at Ascension Parish, La., February 20, 1792. Étienne Boudrot and Louis Desormeaux witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Josèphe (born January 14, 1794), Emilia (born January 24, 1796), Jean Baptiste (born October 4, 1798), François Marie (born December 1, 1800), Basile Mathurin (born January 6, 1803) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included François Barillot (Barrillot, Barillard), her eleven-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and six hogs. Her name is rendered as Perine Barillot (Barillard)) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included François Barillot (Barillard), her twelve-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-114, 116; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.096 | Veuve | Hébert | 01/01/1728 | Pierre Joseph (born ca. 1768) | Appears to have resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, 1759-1760. Evidently resided at Pleslin, France, 1760-1765. Evidently resided at Tréméreuc, France, 1765-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.097 | Pierre Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Widow Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 17. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.098 | Honoré | Braud (Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1733 | Marguerite Gauterot (one source indicates incorrectly that his mother was Marie Josèphe Bourgeois) | Pierre Braud (Breau) | Married Elisabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc dit Maillet, daughter of Victor LeBlanc and Marie Aucoin. | Pierre (born ca. 1780), Charles (born ca. 1782), Olive Élisabeth (born ca. 1769), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1771), Jeanne (born ca. 1777), Rose Marie (born ca. 1782)Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Honoré Breau had five sons: "Jean Charles Pierre, Pierre Paul, Elie, a second Pierre Paul and Jean Charles but only the last two survived to carry on his line." | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1767-1772. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1772-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were residents of the St. Gabriel area in September 1799. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:35; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.099 | Élisabeth | LeBlanc | 01/01/1740 | Marie Aucoin. | Victor LeBlanc | Married Honoré Breau. | Pierre (born ca. 1780), Charles (born ca. 1782), Olive Élisabeth (born ca. 1769), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1771), Jeanne (born ca. 1777), Rose Marie (born ca. 1782) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.100 | Pierre | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1780 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | On October 31, 1791, he appears to have joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403. | 1.785 | Marie Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.101 | Charles | Braud (Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1782 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Braud (Breau) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.102 | Olive Élisabeth | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1769 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.103 | Marie Magdelaine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1771 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.104 | Jeanne | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1777 | Nantes, France | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:35. | 1.785 | 15/09/1799 | Marie Aucoin | St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.105 | Rose Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1782 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Honoré Breau | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.106 | Prosper (Prospère) | Landry | 01/01/1725 | Acadia | Married (1) Anne Josette Boudrot (Boudreaux). Married (2) Marie Josèphe Bourg. Married (3) Elisabeth (Isabelle) Pitre. | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1763; married January 27, 1790), Simon (born ca. 1766) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1760-1773. Ecclesiastical records at Assumption Parish, La., suggest that he and his family subsequently resided at St. Malo, France. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Prospère Landry in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-four-year-old head of a household includiing Elisabeth (Isabelle) Pitre, his sixty-year-old wife, and Simon Joseph Landry, his twenty-two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. His name is rendered as Prosper Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-five-year-old head of a household that included Elisabeth (Isabelle) Pitre, his sixty-year-old wife, and Simon Joseph Landry (Landri), his twenty-three-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-four years of age at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:447, 449; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65. | 1.785 | 03/10/1797 | Assumption Parish, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.107 | Élisabeth (Isabelle) | Pitre | 01/01/1730 | Elisabeth Pitre was the third wife of Prosper (Prospère) Landry. | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1763; married January 27, 1790), Simon (born ca. 1766) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old spouse of Prosper (Prospère) Landry. In addition to herself and her sixty-four-year-old husband, her household included Simon Joseph Landry, her twenty-two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. Her name is rendered as Isabelle Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old spouse of Prosper Landry (Landri). In addition to herself and her sixty-five-year-old husband, her household included Simon Joseph Landry (Landri), her twenty-three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.108 | Jean Pierre | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1763 | Élisabeth Pitre | Prosper Landry | Married Isabelle Guérin, February 20, 1786. She died sometime before the 1789 census of the Lafourche District was compiled. | Élizabeth (married April 14, 1806) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Isabelle Guerin, his twenty-seven-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and one hog. The 1788 census suggests that Jean Pierre Landry lived next door to his parents. His name is rendered as Jean Pierre Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-six-year-old widower living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 61. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.109 | Simon Joseph | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1766 | Élisabeth Pitre | Prosper Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, three horses, and six hogs. His name is rendered Simon Joseph Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old member of his parents' household. He and his parents occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontae. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.110 | Marie Joseph (Josèphe) | Landry | 01/01/1753 | Cécile LeBlanc(?) | Charles Landry(?) | François Julien (Jullien) (born ca. 1782) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.111 | François Julien (Jullien) | Landry | 01/01/1782 | Marie Joseph Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.112 | Geneviève | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Cécile LeBlanc(?) | Charles Landry(?) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Marie Joseph Landry. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.113 | Jean Pierre | Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | 01/01/1745 | Acadia | Marie Josèphe Gautrot | Pierre Bourg | Married Marguerite Richard, daughter of Michel Richard and Françoise Terriot (Theriot) of Acadia, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., June 22, 1789. Jean Richard and Marie LeBlanc witnessed the marriage record. | Resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his sister Françoise Bourg and his cousin Isabelle Bourg. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Françoise Bourg (Bourq), his forty-six-year-old sister. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of rice, two cows, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Françoise Bourg, his forty-seven-year-old sister. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twelve hogs. In 1790, he joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. He is identified as Jean Pierre Bourg in the 1790 list. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18.; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:127. | 1.785 | foreman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.114 | Françoise | Bourg | 01/01/1736 | Marie Josèphe Gautrot(?) | Pierre Bourg(?) | Resided at Pieslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her brother Jean Pierre Bourg and her cousin Isabelle Bourg. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was forty-six-years old and that she resided with Jean Pierre Bourg (Bourq), her forty-eight-year-old brother. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of rice, two cows, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old sister of Jean Pierre Bourg and a member of his household. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.115 | Isabelle | Bourg | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Claude | Married François Frilloux (Freyoux, Friaud, Frio) at New Orleans, September 27, 1785. | Stepchildren: Isabelle Frilloux (born 1771), François Frilloux (born 1780) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her cousins Jean Pierre Bourg and Françoise Bourg. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of François Frilloux. In addition to her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included Isabelle Frilloux, her seventeen-year-old stepdaughter. The family, which resided next door to the household of Jean Pierre Bourg and Françoise Bourg, occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of rice, thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. Identified as Isabelle Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of François Frilloux (Friaud). In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, her household included François Frilloux, who was evidently her eighteen-year-old stepson. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:38. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.116 | Olivier | LeBlanc | 01/01/1747 | Marie Aucoin | Victor LeBlanc | Married Marie LeBert. | Pierre (born ca. 1785), Marie (born ca. 1782) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | joiner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.117 | Marie | LeBert | 01/01/1762 | Married Olivier LeBlanc. | Pierre (born ca. 1785), Marie (born ca. 1782) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.118 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1785 | Marie LeBert | Olivier LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Victor LeBlanc and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.119 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1782 | Marie LeBert | Olivier LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.120 | Louis | LeTollière (LE TOLLIÔRE) | 01/01/1744 | probably France | Married Elisabeth LeBlanc. | Marie Adelaïde (born 1774), Marie Julie (born 1775), Marie Sophie (born 1780), Henry Aimable (born ca. 1784) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18. | 1.785 | joiner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.121 | Élisabeth | LeBlanc | 01/01/1756 | Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot) | Félix LeBlanc | Married Louis LeTollière (Tholieresse). | Marie Adélaïde (born 1774), Marie Julie (born 1775), Marie Sophie (born 1780), Henry Aimable (born ca. 1784) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Louis LeTollière (Tholieresse). In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included Marie LeTollière, her six-year-old daughter. Elisabeth LeBlanc and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, five cows, two horses, and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21-25; Rieder General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.122 | Henry Aimable | LeTollière | 01/01/1784 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Louis LeTollière | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23. | 1.785 | Félix LeBlanc and Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.123 | Marie Adélaïde | LeTollière | 01/01/1781 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Louis LeTollière | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. THey owned forty barrels of corn, five cows, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.124 | Étienne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Marie Josèphe(?) | Félix LeBlanc(?) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1772. Resided at Piélo, France, 1772-1773. Traveled from Boulogne, Brittany, France, to Paimboeuf, France, in order to sail to Louisiana aboard the Bergère. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a forty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a forty-six-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned eight cows, two horses, and ten hogs. | His burial record indicates that he was a fifty-year-old bachelor at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 18; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:171. | 1.785 | 16/08/1799 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | ploughman | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.125 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Ozelé (Oselé, Oselet) | 01/01/1742 | Married Marguerite Landry. | Jean Charles (born ca. 1767), Mathurin (born ca. 1772), Marie Charlotte (born ca. 1775), Julien (Jullien) (born ca. 1781) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry, his forty-five-year-old spouse, Jean Charles, his twenty-year-old son, Mathurin, his fifteen-year-old son, Marie, his thirteen-year-old daughter, and Julien, his seven-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. His name is rendered Jean Baptiste Oselet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Margritta) Landry (Landri), his wife, 45 years old; Jean Charles, his son, 21 years old; Mathurin, his son, 16 years old; Marie, his daughter, 14 years old; and Julien, his son, 8 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six barrels of corn, three hogs, eight horses, and fifteen hogs. On July 31, 1799, Commandant Verret reported that he had received notification of a judicial judgment against Joseph Breaux, Jean Hébert, and Jean Ozelé (Ozelet). | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:316; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680.; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Verret to Nicolas Vidal, August 13, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:566; (?) to Verret, August 19, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:577. | 1.785 | sawyer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.126 | Marguerite (Margritta, Margueritte) | Landry | 01/01/1742 | Married Jean (Jean Baptiste) Ozelé (Oselet, Ossellet). | Jean Charles (born ca. 1767), Mathurin (born ca. 1772), Marie Charlotte (born ca. 1775), Julien (Jullien) (born ca. 1781) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Ozelé (Oselet). In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, the household included Jean Charles, her twenty-year-old son, Mathurin, her fifteen-year-old son, Marie, her thirteen-year-old daughter, and Julien, her seven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Margritta Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Ozelé (Oselet). In addition to herself andher forty-three-year-old husband, the household included Jean Charles, her twenty-one-year-old son, Mathurin, her sixteen-year-old son, Marie, her fourteen-year-old daughter, and Julien, her eight-year-old son. Marguerite Landry and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six barrels of corn, three cows, eight horses, and fifteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:316; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.127 | Jean Charles | Ozelé (Oselé, Ossellet, Oselet) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Landry | Jean Ozelé | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included Mathurin Ozelé, his fifteen-year-old brother, Marie Ozelé, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Julien Ozelé, his seven-year-old brother. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Jean Charles Oselet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he wa a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Mathurin, his sixteen-year-old brother, Marie, his fourteen-year-old sister, and Julien, his eight-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.128 | Mathurin | Ozelé (Oselé, Ossellet, Oselet) | 01/01/1772 | Marguerite Landry | Jean Ozelé | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included Jean Charles, his twenty-year-old brother, Marie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Julien, his seven-year-old brother. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Mathurin Oselet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Charles, his twenty-one-year-old brother, Marie, his fourteen-year-old sister, and Julien, his eight-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.129 | Marie Charlotte | Ozelé (Oselé, Ossellet, Oselet) | 01/01/1775 | Marguerite Landry | Jean Ozelé | Married François Gauterot, son of Joseph Gauterot and Anne Pitre and a native of St. Nicholas Parish, Nantes, France. The marriage occurred at Assumption Parish, La., February 3, 1803. Pierre Gauterot and Jean Pitre witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The household also included Jean Charles, her twenty-year-old brother, Mathurin, her fifteen-year-old brother, and Julien, her seven-year-old brother. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Marie Oselet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Charles, her twenty-one-year-old brother, Mathurin, her sixteen-year-old brother, and Julien, her eight-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:316; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.130 | Julien (Jullien) | Ozelé (Oselé, Ossellet, Oselet) | 01/01/1781 | Marguerite Landry | Jean Ozelé | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included Jean Charles, his twenty-year-old brother, Marie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Mathurin, his fifteen-year-old brother. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two horses, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Julien Oselet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Charles, his twenty-one-year-old brother, Mathurin, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Marie, his fourteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.131 | Jacques | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1745 | Anne Girouard (Giroir, Giroire) | Thomas Doiron | Married Anne Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux), daughter of Joseph Breau and Ursule Bourg. | Jean (born ca. 1768), Joseph (born ca. 1771), Ursule (born ca. 1772) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1758-1759. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1759-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1766-1772. Resided at Saint-Suliac, 1772-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Brod (Breau), his wife, 46 years old; Jean Douairon (Doiron), his son, 17 years old; Joseph Douairon (Doiron), his son, 16 years old; and Ursule (Ursulle) Douairon (Doiron), his daughter, 15 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of rice, eleven barrels of corn, one cow, and twenty-three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne (Ann) Breau (Braut), his twenty-four-year-old wife, Marie Doiron, his sixteen-year-old daughter, Joseph Doiron, his eighteen-year-old son, and Jean Doiron, his seventeen-year-old son. Jacques Doiron and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and twenty-four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.132 | Anne (Anne Josèphe) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Breau (Braud) | Married Jacques Douairon (Doiron). | Jean (born ca. 1768), Joseph (born ca. 1771), Ursule (born ca. 1772) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1764-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1772. Resided at Saint-Suliac, 1772-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Jacques Doiron. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Jacques Douairon (Doiron), her husband, 46 years old; Jean Douairon (Doiron), her son, 17 years old; Joseph Douairon (Doiron), her son, 16 years old; and Ursule (Ursulle) Douairon (Doiron), her daughter, 15 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of rice, eleven barrels of corn, one cow, and twenty-three hogs. Identified as Ann Braut in the 17789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old wife of Jacques Doiron. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Marie Doiron, her daughter, 16 years old; Joseph Doiron, her son, 18 years old; and Jean Doiron, her son, 17 years old. The members of the household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, two horses, and twenty-four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.133 | Jean | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1768 | St. Malo, France | Anne Brod (Breau) | Jacques Douairon (Doiron) | Married Marguerite Dugas, daughter of Ambroise Dugas and Marie Pitre, at Ascension Parish, April 16, 1792. Jean Bertrand and Suliac Blanchard witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, his household included Joseph Douairon (Doiron), his sixteen-year-old brother, and Ursule (Ursulle) Douairon (Doiron), his fifteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' houshold. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Doiron, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Joseph Doiron, his eighteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:243; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 33. | 1.785 | Thomas Doiron and Anne Giroire | Joseph Breau and Ursule Bourg | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.134 | Joseph | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1771 | Anne Brod (Breau) | Jacques Douairon (Doiron) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Douairon (Doiron), his seventeen-year-old brother, and Ursule (Ursulle) Douairon (Doiron), his fifteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Doiron, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Jean Doiron, his seventeen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Thomas Doiron and Anne Giroire | Joseph Breau and Ursule Bourg | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.135 | Ursule (Marie, Ursulle, Ursule Olive) | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1772 | Anne Brod (Breau) | Jean Jacques Douairon (Doiron) | Married Étienne Boudrot, a native of Dole, France, and the son of Marin Boudrot and Pélagie Bariau (Barillot), at Assumption Parish, La., March 3, 1794. Nicolas Hébert and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Étienne Magloire (bornNovember 30, 1794), Marie Emilie (Emilia) (born January 8, 1798), David Valentin (born January 30, 1801), Marianne (Marina) (born August 1, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Douairon (Doiron), her seventeen-year-old brother, and Joseph Douairon (Doiron), her sixteen-year-old brother. Identified as Marie Doiron in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Joseph Doiron, her eighteen-year-old brother, and Jean Doiron, her seventeen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 23; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111, 115, 116. | 1.785 | Thomas Doiron and Anne Giroire | Joseph Breau and Ursule Bourg | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.136 | Isaac | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | Ambroise Hébert | Married Marie Daigre (Daigle). | Rémi (Rémy, Remie, Remis) (born ca. 1782), Marie Reine (Rene) (born May 5, 1785), Timothé (Thimothé, Thimolin) (born 1786; married January 23, 1809) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Pieslin, France, 1760-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Daigle, his wife, 24 years old; Rémi (Remie) Hébert, his son, 6 years old; Reine Hébert, his daughter, 3 years old; and Timothé (Thomothé) Hébert, his son, 1 year old. Isaac Hébert and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. In addition, they owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household including Marie Daigle, his twenty-five-year-old wife, Rémi (Remis) Hébert, his seven-year-old son, Reine (Rene) Hébert, his four-year-old daughter, and Timothé (Thimolin) Hébert, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn, one cow, and fifteen hogs. On July 30, 1791, Commandant Verret reported to the governor that Isaac Hébert, Eustache Daigre's (Daigle's) son-in-law had filed a complaint about his father-in-law. According to the complaint, Daigre had divided his estate among his children because he could no longer work the land as a result of his advanced age. In return for the donation, Daigre expected his children to support him the rest of his life. Isaac Hébert did not object to supporting his ekderkt father-in-law, but he refused to meet Daigre's demand that this support take the form of cash rather than a percentage of the crops produced on his former lands. Verret requested gubernatorial instructions. On August 8, 1791, the governor requested additional information about the dispute. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25, 51; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Verret to the governor, July 30, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:278; Governor to Verret, August 8, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | printer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.137 | Marie | Daigle | 01/01/1763 | England | Madeleine Dupuis | Eusatache Daigle | Married Isaac Hébert. | Rémi (Rémy, Remie, Remis) (born ca. 1782), Marie Reine (Rene) (born May 5, 1785), Timothé (Thimothé, Thimolin) (born 1786; married January 23, 1809) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Isaac Hébert. In addition to herself, the household included the following persons: Isaac Hébert, 38 years old; Rémi (Remie) Hébert, her son, 6 years old; Reine Hébert, her daughter, 3 years old; and Timothé (Thimothé) Hébert, her son, 1 year old. Marie Daigle and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Isaac Hébert. In addition to herself and her thirty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Rémi (Remis) Hébert, her seven-year-old son, Reine (Rene) Hébert, her four-year-old daughter, and Timothé (Thimolin) Hébert, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn, one cow, and fifteen hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.138 | Rémi (Rémy, Remie, Remis) | Hébert | 01/01/1782 | Marie Daigle | Isaac Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a six-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Reine (Rene) Hébert, his four-year-old sister, and Timothé (Thimolin) Hébert, his two-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.139 | Marie Reine (Rene) | Hébert | 05/05/1785 | Nantes, France | Marie Daigle | Isaac Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a three-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she wa a two-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Rémi (Remis) Hébert, her seven-year-old brother, and Timothé (Thimolin) Hébert, her two-year-old brother. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.140 | Natalie | Pitre | Veuve LeBlanc | 01/01/1735 | Married (1) Paul Boudrot. Married (2) Jean Jacques LeBlanc, the widower of Ursule Aucoin.. | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1768), Marie Geneviève (born ca. 1770) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.141 | Jean Baptiste | LeBlanc | 01/01/1768 | Natalie Pitre | Jean Jacques LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.142 | Marie Geneviève | LeBlanc | 01/01/1770 | Natalie Pitre | Jean Jacques LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.143 | Cécile (sometimes Cecille) | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Veuve Richard | 01/01/1747 | Cécile Terriot (Theriot) | Charles Boudrot | Married Charles Richard at Boulogne-sur-Mer, France. Richard died sometime before May 12, 1785. | Marie Rose (born ca. 1771) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.144 | Marie Rose | Richard | 01/01/1771 | Cecile (sometimes Cecille) Boudrot | Charles Richard | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.145 | Jean | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1767 | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his sister Cecile (Cecille) Boudrot and his niece Marie Rose Richard. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.146 | Amand | Pitre | 01/01/1725 | Married Geneviève Arsement. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate that she died before May 12, 1785, because she does no appear in any of the passenger manifests for the seven Acadian expeditions to Louisiana in 1785. | Tranquille (born 1749), Marguerite (born 1754), Marie Victoire (born 1754) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.147 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Pitre | 01/01/1761 | Amand Pitre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.148 | Ambroise | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1753 | Ile St. Jean | Marguerite Henry | Ambroise Dugast (Dugas) | Married Marie Victoire Pitre. | Marguerite (married April 16, 1792), Anne Marie (born ca. 1775), Louise Ambroise (born ca. 1780), Céleste (born ca. 1784), Eulalie (born 1786; married June 28, 1803), Constant (Constance [sic]) (baptized February 4, 1787), Louis (born 1787), Marie Josèphe (baptized July 6, 1788), Augustin (born January 27, 1790), Olivier Ambroise (born October 29, 1792) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Pitre, his wife, 35 years old; Constant Dugas, his son, 4 years old; Louis Dugas, his son, 1 year old; Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugas, his daughter, 11 years old; and Eulalie Dugas, his daughter, 2 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Pitre (who is misidentified as Margritta Richard in the census), his wife, 45 years old; Joseph Dugas (Dugat), his son, 12 years old; Simon Dugas (Dugat), his son, 2 years old; and Louis Dugas (Dugat), his son, 3 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. Ecclesiastical records indicate that Ambroise Dugas and his wife Marie Pitre were residents of the Valenzuela District (around present-day Plattenville), La., in July 1790. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253-262; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:108, 141; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.149 | Marie Victoire | Pitre | 01/01/1754 | Ile St. Jean | Geneviève Arsement | Amand (Amant) Pitre | Married Ambroise Dugas (Dugat). | Marguerite (married April 16, 1792), Anne Marie (born ca. 1775), Louise Ambroise (born ca. 1780), Céleste (born ca. 1784), Eulalie (born 1786; married June 28, 1803), Constant (Constance [sic]) (baptized February 4, 1787), Louis (born 1787), Marie Josèphe (baptized July 6, 1788), Augustin (born January 27, 1790), Olivier Ambroise (born October 29, 1792) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Ambroise Dugas (Dugat). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Ambroise Dugas (Dugat), 36 years old; Constant Dugas, her son, 4 years old; Louis Dugas, her son, 1 year old; Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugas, her daughter, 11 years old; and Eulalie Dugas, her daughter, 2 years old. The members of her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. Misidentified as Margritta Richard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Ambroise Dugas (Dugat). In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Joseph Dugas (Dugat), her twelve-year-old son, Simon Dugas (Dugat), her two-year-old son, and Louis Dugas (Dugat), her three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. Ecclesiastical records indicate that Marie Pitre and her family resided in the Valenzuela District (around present-day Plattenville), La., July 1790. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253-262; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.150 | Louis Ambroise | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1780 | Marie Victoire Pitre | Ambroise Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 24; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Ambroise Dugas and Marguerite Henry | Amand Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.151 | Anne Marie | Dugas | 01/01/1775 | Marie Victoire Pitre | Ambroise Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 24. | 1.785 | Ambroise Dugas and Marguerite Henry | Amand Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.152 | Céleste | Dugas | 01/01/1784 | Marie Victoire Pitre | Ambroise Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 19; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 24. | 1.785 | Ambroise Dugas and Marguerite Henry | Amand Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.153 | Olivier | Trahan | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Isabelle LeJeune, who died before May 12, 1785. Married (2) Marie Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux) at Ascension Parish, January 27, 1788. Louis Deshormaux (Desormeaux) and Joseph Terriot (Theriot) witnessed the 1788 marriage record. | First marriage: Anne (born ca. 1763), Grégoire (born ca. 1767) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), his wife, 39 years old; Grégoire Trahan, his son by a previous marriage, 23 years old; and Osite (Ositte) Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), his sister-in-law, 26 years old. Olivier Trahan and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Marie Brasseur, his thirty-nine-year-old wife, Grégoire Trahan, his twenty-four-year-old son, and Osite Brasseur, his twenty-six-year-old sister-in-law. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. In 1790, he joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:707; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.154 | Grégoire | Trahan | 01/01/1767 | Isabelle (Ysabel, Élisabeth) LeJeune | Olivier Trahan | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old member of the household of Olivier Trahan, his fifty-seven-year-old father, and Marie Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), his thirty-nine-year-old stepmother. The household also included Ozite (Ositte) Brasseur, his stepmother's twenty-six-year-old sister. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of the household of Olivier Trahan, his fifty-eight-year-old father, and Marie Brasseur, his thirty-nine-year-old stepmother. The household also included Osite Brasseur, his stepmother's twenty-six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:707; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | shoemaker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.155 | Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1763 | Isabelle (Ysabel, Élisabeth) LeJeune | Olivier Trahan | Married Louis Desormeaux (Deshormaux), a native of St. James Parish, La., and the son of Pierre Desormeaux, at Ascension Parish, La., December 14, 1785. The marriage record was witnessed by Ignace Hamon and Jean Metio. | Olivier (baptized April 17, 1787) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Louis Desormeaux (Dezormeaux). In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, the household included Olivier, her two-year-old son. The family occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of rice, forty barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:238, 703-704; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.156 | Marie | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1750 | Marie Rose Daigle | Joseph Brasseur | Married Olivier Trahan at Ascension Parish, La., January 27, 1788. Louis Deshormaux (Desormeaux) and Joseph Terriot (Theriot) witnessed the marriage record. | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her sister Ozite Brasseur. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Olivier Trahan. In addition to herself and her fifty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Grégoire Trahan, her twenty-three-year-old stepson, and Ozite (Ositte) Brasseur, her twenty-six-year-old sister. Marie Brasseur and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Olivier Trahan. In addition to herself and her fifty-eight-year-old husband, the household included Grégoire Trahan, her twenty-four-year-old stepson, and Osite Brasseur, her twenty-six-year-old sister. Marie Brasseur and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:707; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.157 | Ozite (Osite, Ositte) | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1761 | Marie Rose Daigle | Joseph Brasseur | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her sister Marie Brasseur. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of the household of Olivier Trahan, her fifty-seven-year-old brother-in-law, and Marie Brasseur, her thirty-nine-year-old sister. The household also included Grégoire Trahan, Olivier Trahan's twenty-three-year-old son by a previous marriage. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Osite Brasseur in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a member of the household of Olivier Trahan and Marie Brasseur. The household also included Grégoire Trahan. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.158 | Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1726 | Married Marie Boudrot. | Mathurin (born ca. 1761), Ancelme (Anselme) (born ca. 1766), Marie (born ca. 1767), Marguerite (born ca. 1774) | Deported to England. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1763-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.159 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1728 | Married Joseph Trahan. | Mathurin (born ca. 1761), Ancelme (Anselme) (born ca. 1766), Marie (born ca. 1767), Marguerite (born ca. 1774) | Deported to England. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, 1763-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.160 | Ancelme (Anselme) | Trahan | 01/01/1766 | Marie Boudrot | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Trahan, his twelve-year-old sister. Ancelme (Anselme) Trahan occupied a trat of land with six arpents frontage. The census indicates that he owned no slaves or livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.161 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1767 | Marie Boudrot | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old child residing with her twenty-five-year-old brother Ancelme (Anselme). | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.162 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1774 | St. Malo, France | Marie Boudrot | Joseph Trahan | Married Beloni (Marie Bennony) Blanchard, son of Beloni Blanchard and Madeleine Forest, at Assumption Parish, La., May 22, 1798. Louis Verret and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Anne Marguerite (a twin) (born at 10:00 a.m., October 17, 1798), Ignace Jacques (a twin) (born October 17, 1798), Alexis (Alexos) (born July 18, 1800), Paul Beloni (baptized November 15, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 92, 95, 99. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.163 | Mathurin | Trahan | 01/01/1761 | Marie Boudrot | Joseph Trahan | Married (1) Marguerite Ory. Married (2) Marie Blanchard, at Ascension Parish, La., July 3, 1786. | Second marriage: Marguerite (married May 5, 1806) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included himself and Marie Blanchard, his eighteen-year-old wife. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Blanchard, his nineteen-year-old wife; and Marie Trahan, his twelve-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one cow. | His burial record indicates that he was thirty-one years old at the time of his death. The date of the burial record is obviously erroneous, for his is listed in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The death date is probably 1796, for his wife remarried in 1798. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98. | 1.785 | 03/07/1786 | Assumption Parish, La. | printer | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.164 | Margueritte (Perrine Marguerite) | Ory | 01/01/1766 | Nantes, France | Perrine Hervé | Charles Ory | Married Mathurin Trahan. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.165 | Alexis (sometimes Mathurin) | Daigle (D'Aigle) | 01/06/1763 | Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France | Élizabeth (Élisabeth, Isabelle) Granger | Alexandre Daigle (D'Aigle) | Married Marie Josèphe Françoise Levron (LeBron, Levrot), whose parents were Acadians, at Ascension Parish, La., January 29, 1788. The marriage record was witnessed by François Landry. Marie Levron had sailed to Louisiana aboard the St. Remi. | Joseph Alexandre (born November 11, 1788), Charles Marie (born March 22, 1790), Jean Baptiste (born April 5, 1792), Joseph Silvestre (born September 13, 1794), Claire Clarisse (born ca. 1796), Mathurin Pascal (born March 25, 1799), Pierre Michel (born November 2, 1800), Marie Scholastique (born July 18, 1803) | Probably resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, Frrance, 1763-1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Late eighteenth-century Louisiana records frequently misidentify Alexis Daigle as Jean Daigle, Alexis's brother. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District, which identifies Alexis as Jean Daigle, indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household including Marie Levron, his twenty-five-year-old spouse. He and his wife owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage, fifteen barrels of corn, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Alexis Daigle was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household including Marie Levron (Levrot), his twenty-six-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one horse, and ten hogs. The 1791 census of the Lafourche region lists Mathurin Daigle, the twenty-six-year-old head of a household including Marie Levron, his twenty-six-year-old spouse, Joseph, his two-year-old son, and Charles, his one-year-old son. The 1795 census of the Lafourche region lists Mathurin (Maturino) Daigle as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household including his thirty-three-year-old spouse, Marie Levrons (sic), Jean Baptiste, his three-year-old son, and Joseph, his one-year-old son. The 1797 census of the Lafourche region lists Mathurin Daigle as the thirty-four-year-old head of a household including Marie Levron, his thirty-four-year-old wife, Jean Baptiste, his four-year-old son, and Joseph, his two-year-old son. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:212; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:70; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 31; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Grouop Record: Alexis Mathurin Daigle and Marie Josephe Levron." | Fri, Jan 7, 1763 | 1.785 | 22/10/1815 | St. Nicolas Church, Boulogne, Pas-de-Calais, France | Assumption Catholic Church, Plattenville, Louisiana | engraver | NULL | ||||||||||
1.166 | Charles | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1739 | Married (1) Marguerite Granger. Married (2) Marguerite Daigle (D'Aigle). | Jean Charles (born ca. 1765), Pierre Olivier (born ca. 1767), Joseph (born ca. 1769), Marie Josèphe (born ca. 1763), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1781) | Initially resided at Boulogne-sur-Mer, France. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1768. Resided at Plouer, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | sawyer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.167 | Jean Charles | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1765 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.168 | Pierre Olivier | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1767 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.169 | Joseph | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1769 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.170 | Marie Josèphe | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1763 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.171 | Marguerite | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1781 | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.172 | Pierre | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1728 | Claude Dugast (Dugas) | Married Marguerite Daigle. | Anne (born ca. 1762), Marie (born ca. 1765) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.173 | Marguerite | Daigle | 01/01/1725 | Married Pierre Dugas. | Anne (born ca. 1762), Marie (born ca. 1765) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.174 | Anne | Dugas | 01/01/1762 | Marguerite Daigle | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 24. | 1.785 | Claude Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.175 | Marie | Dugas | 01/01/1765 | Marguerite Daigle | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 24. | 1.785 | Claude Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.176 | Anne Ozite (Osite) | Dugast (Dugas) | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1755 | Marguerite Daigle (D'Aigle) | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Married Charles Hébert. | Charles (born ca. 1780), Anne (born ca. 1781), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1783) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | Claude Dugas | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.177 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1780 | Anne Ozité Dugast (Dugas) | Charles Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.178 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1781 | Anne Ozité Dugast (Dugas) | Charles Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.179 | Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1783 | Anne Ozité Dugast (Dugas) | Charles Hébert | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 20. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.180 | Joseph | Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | 01/01/1733 | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Dugas. Married (2) Marie Magdelaine Granger. | Pierre (born 1761; married February 6, 1786), Sebastien Joseph (born ca. 1766), Jean Baptiste (ca. 1768), Marie Josèphe (ca. 1764; married February 6, 1786), Élisabeth (born ca. 1771) | Resided at Plouer and Pleurtuit in Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1771. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1771-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Granger (Grangée), his fifty-six-year-old wife, Jean Baptiste Bourg (Bourq), his nineteen-year-old son, and Elisabeth Bourg (Bourq), his seventeen-year-old daughter. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Granger (Grangé), his wife, 54 years old; Jean Baptiste Bourg, his son, 19 years old; and Elisabeth Bourg, his daughter, 18 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty-two barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125, 127; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.785 | sawyer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.181 | Marie Magdelaine | Granger (Grangé, Grangée) | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Allain Bugeaud. Married (2) Joseph Bourg. | Pierre (born 1761; married February 6, 1786), Sebastien Joseph (born ca. 1766), Jean Baptiste (ca. 1768), Marie Josèphe (ca. 1764; married February 6, 1786), Élisabeth (born ca. 1771) | Resided in the Breton communities of Plouer and Pleurtuit, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1771. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, 1771-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-six-year-old member of a household that included the following persons: Joseph Bourg (Bourq), her husband, 55 years old; Jean Baptiste Bourg (Bourq), her son, 19 years old; and Elisabeth Bourg (Bourq), her daughter, 17 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. THey owned sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. Identified as Marie Grangé in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Bourg. In addition to herself and her fifty-six-year-old husband, the household included Jean Baptiste Bourg, her nineteen-year-old son, and Elisabeth Bourg, her eighteen-yer-old daughter. Marie Granger and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty-two barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.182 | Sebastien Joseph (Fabien, Fabian) | Bourg | 01/01/1766 | Marie Magdelaine Granger | Joseph Bourg | Married Marie Boudrot, daughter of Jean Boudrot and Marie Daigle, at Ascension Parish, La., April 25, 1786. Alexis Daigle, Joseph Hébert, and Joseph Granger witnessed the marriage certificate. | Marie (born February 19, 1789), Isabel (born April 14, 1791; buried August 2, 1793), Joseph Donnon (born June 8, 1795), Magloire (baptized August 14, 1796; buried September 21, 1803), Isabel Léocadie (born May 29, 1798; buried September 30, 1799), Narcisse (born January 8, 1800), Marie Carmelite (born October 1, 1801), Marie Claire (born April 22, 1803) | Identified in Louisiana census reports and ecclesiastical records as Fabien Bourg (Bourq). The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included Marie Bourdrot, his twenty-three-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned eighteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1788 census suggests that Fabien Bourg (Bourq) resided next door to his parents and two siblings. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household including Marie Breau (Braut), his twenty-four-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119-129. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.183 | Jean Baptiste (often Baptiste) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1768 | St. Malo, France | Marie Magdelaine Granger | Joseph Bourg | Married Marie Hébert, daughter of Jean Baptiste Hébert and Marie Magdeleine Dugas, at Ascension Parish, La., June 29, 1789. | Jean Baptiste (born April 15, 1790), Rosalie (born April 1, 1792), Marie Basilisa (born May 12, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of the household that included Joseph Bourg (Bourq), his fifty-five-year-old father, Marie Granger (Grangée), his fifty-six-year-old mother, and Elisabeth Bourg (Bourq), his seventeen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Elisabeth Bourg, his eighteen-year-old sister. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his family were residents fo the Lafourche District in July 1792. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123, 125, 128; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.184 | Marie Josèphe | Bourg | 01/01/1764 | Marie Magdelaine Granger | Joseph Bourg | Married Jean Bigost (Bigot), son of Étienne Bigost and Anne Forest (Forêt), at Ascension Parish, La., February 6, 1786. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.185 | Élisabeth (Marie Josèphe) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1771 | Marie Magdelaine Granger | Joseph Bourg | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of the household that included Joseph Bourg (Bourq), her fifty-five-year-old father, Marie Granger (Grangée), her fifty-six-year-old mother, and Jean Baptiste Bourg (Bourq), her nineteen-year-old brother. Identified as Elisabeth Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Baptiste Bourg, her nineteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.186 | Luce | Daigle | 01/01/1761 | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Joseph Bourg and Marie Magdelaine Granger. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.187 | Marguerite | Daigle | 01/01/1768 | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Joseph Bourg and Marie Magdelaine Granger. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.188 | Pierre | Bourg | 01/01/1764 | Marie Madeleine Granger | Joseph Bourg | Married (1) Marie Bugeau (Bigou, Bujol), daughter of Étienne Bugeau and Brigitte Chevais, at Ascension Parish, La., February 6, 1786. Marie Bugeau was buried at Ascension Parish on August 13, 1788. Married (2) Marie Félicité Landry, daughter of Vincent Landry and Suzanne Godeau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., October 26, 1789. (The groom's mother is mistakenly identified as Marie Daigle in the marriage record.) | Second marriage: Marguerite (born July 22, 1792), Charles Auguste (baptized December 1, 1795), Marie Cléonise (born April 15, 1798), Anne Melanie (born August 19, 1800), Pierre (born June 3, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | On December 28, 1786, Pierre Bourg purchased from Firmin Blanchard and Madeleine Bugeau a tract of land with two arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The property was bounded above by Pierre Bourg's land and below by the land of Jean Bugeau. His home was evidently sold to Jean Bugeau at his wife's probate sale; it consisted of a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The property contained a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by fourteen feet. The house had bousillage walls. Pierre reacquired the foregoing property by purchase from Jean Bugeau on May 20, 1791. On March 9, 1792, Pierre Bourg sold most of this land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River to Firmin Blanchard of the Iberville District. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 125, 127, 168; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17, 24, 25. | 1.785 | clerk | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.189 | Marguerite | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1754 | Marguerite Daigle (D'Aigle) | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Married Pierre Bourg. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | Claude Dugas | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.190 | Jean Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1721 | Married (1) Elizabeth Aucoin. Married (2) Isabelle Dugas (Dugast). | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1763), Isabelle (born ca. 1761), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1766), Anne (born ca. 1776) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.191 | Isabelle | Dugas | 01/01/1741 | Married Jean Baptiste Landry. | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1763), Isabelle (born ca. 1761), Marguerite (born ca. 1766), Anne (born ca. 1776) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.192 | Jean Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Élizabeth Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Baptiste Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | cooper | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.193 | Isabelle | Landry | 01/01/1761 | St. Malo, France | Élizabeth Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married Joseph Dugas (Dugat) at New Orleans, October 23, 1785. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:180. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.194 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Élizabeth Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Baptiste Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.195 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1776 | Élizabeth Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Baptiste Landry | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.196 | Marie | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | Veuve Boudrot | 01/01/1741 | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Boudrot (Boudreaux). She was a widow at the time of her departure from France. Evidently married (2) Pierre Terriot (Theriot). | Jean (born ca. 1774), Marie Rose (born ca. 1761) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1764-1767. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1767-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Terriot. In addition to herself, the household included Pierre Terriot, forty-five years old, Pierre Terriot, her eighteen-year-old stepson, and Jean, a fifteen-year-old boy who, although he is identified as Pierre Theriot's child, was probably her own son who had accompanied her from France. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Marie Daigle in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old spouse of Pierre Terriot (Teriot). In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Terriot (Teriot), 19 years old; and Jean Terriot (Teriot), 14 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.197 | Jean | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1774 | Marie Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | Jean Baptiste Boudrot | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Terriot (Theriot), his stepfather, and Marie Daigre (Daigle), his mother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.198 | Marie Rose | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1764 | Marie Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | Jean Boudrot | Married Fabien (Sebastien Joseph) Bourg (Bourq), at Ascension Parish, La., August 14, 1786. | Marie (born February 19, 1789), Isabel (born April 14, 1791; buried August 2, 1793), Joseph Donnon (born June 8, 1795), Magloire (baptized August 14, 1796; buried September 21, 1803), Isabel Léocadie (born May 29, 1798; buried September 30, 1799), Narcisse (born January 8, 1800), Marie Carmelite (born October 1, 1801), Marie Claire (born April 22, 1803) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117-129. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.199 | Paul | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1710 | Married (1) Marguerite Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux). Married (2) Hélène Blanchard. | Simon (born ca. 1748), Anne (born ca. 1766) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his second wife were "of the new establishment of Acadians at Bayou Lafourche." | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.200 | Simon | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Paul Dugast (Dugas) | Married Marie Geneviève Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) at the Church of the Ascension, Ascension Parish, La., June 11, 1787. The marriage was witnessed by Prosper Giroir. | Jean Baptiste (died November 23, 1829, at the age of 49 years), Marie Magdeleine (baptized September 14, 1788), Magloire (born August 2, 1789), Paul (born February 13, 1792), Marie Rose (born September 15, 1793), Anne (born May 30, 1795), Isabel (Isabelle, Élizabeth) (born November 21, 1797), Marguerite Marie (born January 27, 1800), Pélagie Geneviève (born October 23, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie (Geneviève) Bourg (Bourq), his wife, 24 years old; Anne Bourg (Bourq), his sister-in-law; and Anne Dugas (Dugal), his sister. Simon Dugas (Dugal) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifty-one-year-old member of the household of Louis Aucoin. In addition to himself and Louis Aucoin, the household included the following persons: Marie Bourg, his twenty-five-year-old wife, Anne Bourg, his seventeen-year-old sister-in-law, and Anne Dugas, his twenty-five-year-old sister. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253-262; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.201 | Anne | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1766 | Hélène Blanchard | Paul Dugas (Dugast) | Married Vincent Dumène (Dufresne?), a widower from Nantes, France, and the son of André Dumène and Vincenta Pichon, at Ascension Parish, La., May 14, 1792. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a member of the household of Simon Dugas, her fifty-year-old brother, and Marie Bourg, her twenty-four-year-old sister-in-law. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she as a twenty-five-year-old member of Louis Aucoin's household. In addition to herself the household included the following persons: Louis Aucoin, no relationship indicated, 18 years old; Simon Dugas (Duga), her brother, 51 years old; Marie Bourg, her sister-in-law, 25 years old; and Anne Bourg, Marie Bourg's sister, 17 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.202 | Joseph | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1746 | Marie Madeleine Trahan | Charles Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married (1) Marie Rose Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle). Married (2) Marie Landry. He appears to have been a widower in 1788. | Isabelle (born ca. 1775) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that also included Isabelle Dupuis, his fourteen-year-old daughter. Joseph Dupuis and his daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned eighteen barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household including Isabelle Dupuis, his sixteen-year-old daughter. He and his daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.203 | Isabelle | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1775 | Châtellereault, Diocese of Poitiers, Poitou Province, France | Marie Landry | Joseph Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married Charles Bourg, a native of Menthoiron, Poitou Province, France, and the son of Jean Baptiste Bourg and Jeanne Chellon, at Assumption Parish, La., February 14, 1797. Joseph Dupuis, Joseph Aucoin, and Charles Daigle witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Geneviève (born May 15, 1799), Jean Apolinar (born July 1, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her father's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her father's household. She and her father occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 126. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.204 | Prosper (Prospère) | Girouard (Giroire, Girois, Giroir) | 01/01/1764 | Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot) | Honoré Girouard (Giroire, Giroir) | Married Marie Dugas (Dugast), daughter of Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot. | Marie Paul (born ca. 1765), Anne (born ca. 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1770), Jeanne (born ca. 1772; buried June 6, 1800), François (born ca. 1774), Pierre (born ca. 1778) | Resided at Pleslin, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1764-1770. Resided at Saint-Jouan-des-Guérets, 1770-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Dugas (Dugats), his wife, 42 years old; Marie Girouard (Giroire), his daughter, 23 years old; Jean Girouard (Giroire), his son, 18 years old; Jeanne (Jannette) Girouard (Giroire), his daughter, 16 years old; François Girouard (Giroire), his son, 14 years old; and Pierre Girouard (Giroire), his son, 9 years old. Prosper (Prospère) Girouard (Giroire) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, four cows, two horses, and ten hogs. Identified as Prosper Giroire in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household thaincluded the following persons: Marie Giroire Dugal, his wife, 23 years old; Jean Giroire, his son, 19 years old; Jeanne (Jeanette) Giroire, his daughter, 17 years old; François Giroire, his son, 15 years old; and Pierre Giroire, his son, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, four cows, two horses, and twelve hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:325. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.205 | Marie | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Paul Dugast (Dugas) | Married Prosper Girouard (Giroire), son of Honoré Girouard and Marie Josèphe Terriot (Theriot). | Marie Paul (born ca. 1765), Anne (born ca. 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1770), Jeanne (born ca. 1772), François (born ca. 1774), Pierre (born ca. 1778) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1770. Resided Saint-Jouan-des-Guérets, France, 1770-1773. Her family occupied farm no. 49 in the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Prosper Girouard (Giroire). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Prosper Girouard, her husband, 30 years old [sic]; Marie Girouard (Giroire), her daughter, 23 years old; Jean Girouard (Giroire), her son, 18 years old; Jeanne Girouard (Giroire), her daughter, 16 years old; François Girouard (Giroire), her son, 14 years old; Pierre Girouard (Giroire), her son, 9 years old. Marie Dugas and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, four cows, two horses, and ten hogs. Identified as Marie Giroire Dugal in the 1769 census of the Lafourche District. The census mistakenly indicates that she was only twenty-three-years old. In addition to herself and Prosper Giroir (Giroire), her forty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Jean Giroir (Giroire), her nineteen-year-old son; Jeannette (Jeanne) Giroir (Giroire), her seventeen-year-old daughter; François Giroir (Giroire), her seventeen-year-old son; and Pierre Giroir (Giroire), her ten-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, four cows, two horses, and twelve cows. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.206 | Jean Baptiste | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1770 | St. Coulan Parish, Dole, France | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Married Isabelle Landry, daughter of François Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc, at Ascension parish, February 8, 1790. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of her father's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his father's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:428; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46. | 1.785 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.207 | François | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1774 | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his father's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his father's household. On February 20, 1804, François Girouard (Giroire) sold to Thomas de Villenueva a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the left bank of Bayou Lafourche. This property, situated 3/4 league below the Ascension Parish church, was bounded above by the land of Joseph Landry and below by the property of François Girouard. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 45. | 1.785 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.208 | Pierre | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1778 | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the nine-year-old member of his father's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his father's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.209 | Marie Paul | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1765 | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Married Joseph Landry, son of Pierre Landry and Marthe LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, December 29, 1788. Pierrre Landry and Prosper Girouard (Girroir) witnessed the marriage record. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of her father's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:325. | 1.785 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.210 | Anne | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1767 | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Married Fabien (Fabian) Guillot after a dispensation for consanguinity in the third degree. According to published ecclesiastical sources, the marriage occurred at Assumption Parish on September 3, 1797, but the 1788 census of the Lafourche District (which included present-day Assumption Parish), indicates that Fabien Guillot and Anne Girouard were already married and parents of a child. | Fabien (Fabian) Thomas (baptized May 17, 1787), Jean Baptiste (baptized May 12, 1788), Joseph (born September 1789), Louis Ambroise (born March 31, 1795), Marguerite (born February 14, 1797), Louis Gil (probably Gilbert) (born September 1, 1798), Anne (born September 5, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Her name is rendered as Anne Giroire in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Fabien Guillot. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, the household included Fabien Guillot, fils, her one-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:347-350; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 48. | 1.785 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.211 | Jeanne (Jannette) | Giroir (Giroire, Girouard) | 01/01/1772 | Marie Dugast (Dugas) | Prosper Girouard (Giroir) | Married Charles Blanchard, son of Charles Blanchard and Marie Josèphe Dugas, at Ascension Parish, February 28, 1792. | Henriette Isabelle (born July 8, 1797), Elie (Elias) Charles (born February 28, 1799), Jean Baptiste (born May 30, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her father's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. | Her burial record indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old wife of Charles Blanchard at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:93, 95, 96, 324-325; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14, 46. | 1.785 | 06/06/1800 | Honoré Girouard (Giroire) and Marie Josèphe Terriot | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
1.212 | Magdelaine (Madeleine, Magdelena) | DugasT (Dugas) | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1742 | Acadia | Marguerite Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Paul Dugast (Dugas) | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert, who died before May 1785. | Jean Baptiste (born 1760), Marie Madeleine (born 1762), Anne Suzanne (born ca. 1765), Pierre Michel (born ca. 1767), Anne Marie (born ca. 1768), Élizabeth Jeanne (this is possibly Isabelle) (born ca. 1770), Joseph Servan (born ca. 1771), Isabelle (born ca. 1772), François (born ca. 1780), Étienne (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1767. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1767-1771. Resided at Saint-Méloir-des-Ondes, France, 1771-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District at "Magdeleinne Dugats, Veuve Hébert." The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Pierre Hébert, her son, 22 years old; Joseph Hébert, her son, 14 years old; François Hébert, her son, 8 years old; Etienne Hébert, her son, 3 year old; Marie Hébert, her daughter, 20 years old; and Isabelle Hébert, her daughter, 13 years old. Magdelaine Dugas and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-one-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Pierre Hébert, her twenty-three-year-old son; Joseph Hébert, her fifteen-year-old son; François Hébert, her nine-year-old son; Étienne Hébert, her four-year-old son; Marie Hébert, her twenty-one-year-old daughter; and Isabelle Hébert, her fourteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and nine hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:258; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5. | 1.785 | 18/10/1793 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.213 | Pierre (Pierre Michel) | Hébert | 01/01/1767 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Isabelle Maserolle (Mazerolle), daughter of Simon Maserolle (Masserol) and Marguerite Trahan, September 19, 1791. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old member of his mother's household. The household also included his brothers Joseph, François, and Étienne, and his sisters Marie and Isabelle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | journeyman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.214 | Joseph (Joseph Servan) | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Madeleine Adélaïde Landry at Assumption Parish, September 2, 1793. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household also included his brothers Pierre, François, and Étienne and his sisters Marie and Isabelle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | journeyman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.215 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1780 | St. Malo, France | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Céleste LeBlanc at Assumption Parish, La., July 22, 1800. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included his brothers Pierre, Joseph, and Étienne and his sisters Marie and Isabelle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5. | 1.785 | 10/06/1801 | Baton Rouge, La. | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.216 | Étienne | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | St. Malo, France | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Marie Clémence Robichaud at Assumption Parish, La., April 17, 1811. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the ship's passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included his brothers Pierre, Joseph, and François and his sisters Marie and Isabelle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.217 | Anne (Anne Suzanne) | Hébert | 01/01/1765 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Laurent Blanchard at Ascension Parish, La., July 3, 1786. Olivier Terriot (Theriot) and Simon Dugas witnessed the marriage certificate. | Félicité (baptized December 16, 1770; married November 8, 1791), Maurice (born May 2, 1774), Joseph (baptized February 19, 1775), Frédéric Silvin (Frédéricque Silvain) (baptized September 29, 1777; married February 17, 1800), Anne Modeste (born February 8, 1783), Marianne (born September 12, 1788) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Laurent Blanchard. She and her twenty-two-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Laurent Blanchard. She and her twenty-three-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-one barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 93, 94, 96, 98; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.218 | Marie (Anne Marie) | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Jean Baptiste Bourg, son of Joseph Bourg and Marie Magdeleine Granger, at Ascension Parish, La., June 29, 1789. | Jean Baptiste (born April 15, 1790), Rosalie (born April 1, 1792), Marie Basilisa (born May 12, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included her brothers Pierre, Joseph, and François and her sister Isabelle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123, 125, 128; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.219 | Isabelle (Élizabeth Jeanne?) | Hébert | 01/01/1772 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Dugast (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Jean Dugat, August 16, 1796. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her mother's household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included her brothers Pierre, Joseph, François, and Étienne and her sister Marie. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-5. | 1.785 | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.220 | Marguerite | Ségoliau (Ségoillot) | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Naquin | Emilien Ségoliau (Ségoillot) | Her family occupied farm no. 75 in Locmaria parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.221 | Eustache (Ustache) | Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | 05/07/1728 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Angélique Richard | Bernard Daigre (Daigle) | Married Magdelaine (Magdeleine) Dupuis (Dupuy). | Jean (born ca. 1770; married April 30, 1792), Charles (born ca. 1772), Marie, Étienne (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Dupuis (Dupuy), his wife, 45 years old; Jean Daigre (Daigle), his son, 18 years old; Charles Daigre (Daigle), his son, 15 years old; and Etienne Daigre (Daigle), his son, 13 years old. According to the 1788 census, Eustache Daigle and his family owned six slaves. The Daigre family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. Identified as Ustache Daigle in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-one-year-old head of a household that included Magdelaine (Madelaine) Dupuis (Dupuy), his forty-seven-year-old wife, Jean Daigle (Daigre), his nineteen-year-old son, Charles Daigle (Daigre), his sixteen-year-old son, and Étienne Daigle (Daigre), his five-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. On July 30, 1791, Commandant Verret reported to the governor that Isaac Hébert, Eustache Daigre's (Daigle's) son-in-law had filed a complaint about his father-in-law. According to the complaint, Daigre had divided his estate among his children because he could no longer work the land as a result of his advanced age. In return for the donation, Daigre expected his children to support him the rest of his life. Isaac Hébert did not object to supporting his ekderkt father-in-law, but he refused to meet Daigre's demand that this support take the form of cash rather than a percentage of the crops produced on his former lands. Verret requested gubernatorial instructions. On August 8, 1791, the governor requested additional information about the dispute. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:34; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Verret to the governor, July 30, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:278; Governor to Verret, August 8, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 31. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.222 | Magdelaine (Madelaine) | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1741 | Marie Trahan | Charles Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married Eustache Daigre (Daigle). | Jean (born ca. 1770), Charles (born ca. 1772), Étienne (born ca. 1785) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Madelaine, wife of Ustache Daigle (Daigre), in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old wife of Eustache (Ustache) Daigle (Daigre). In addition to herself and her sixty-one-year-old husband, the household included Jean Daigle (Daigre), her nineteen-year-old son, Charles Daigle (Daigre), her sixteen-year-old son, and Étienne Daigle (Daigre), her five-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.223 | Jean | Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | 01/01/1770 | Magdelaine Dupuis (Dupuy) | Eustache Daigre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as Jean Daigle (Daigre) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Charles Daigle (Daigre), his sixteen-year-old brother, and Étienne Daigle (Daigre), his five-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Dupuis and Marie Trahan | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.224 | Charles | Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle | 01/01/1772 | Magdelaine Dupuis (Dupuy) | Eustache Daigre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as Charles Daigle (Daigre) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Daigle (Daigre), his nineteen-year-old brother, and Étienne Daigle (Daigre), his five-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:213. | 1.785 | 02/12/1799 | Charles Dupuis and Marie Trahan | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.225 | Étienne | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1785 | Magdelaine Dupuis (Dupuy) | Eustache Daigre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Identified in the ship's passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as Étienne Daigle in the 1789 cenus of the Lafourche District, La. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that a five-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Daigle, his nineteen-year-old brother, and Charles Daigle, his sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Dupuis and Marie Trahan | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.226 | Étienne | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1749 | Marie Trahan | Charles Dupuis | Married Marie (Marie Osite) Dugas (Dugast). | Marie (born 1786), Fabien (born 1787) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Osite Dugast (Duga, Dugas), his wife, 27 years old; Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), his daughter, 2 years old; and Fabien Dupuis (Dupuy), his son, 1 year old. Etienne Dupuis (Dupuy) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of rice, ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household including Marie Osite Dugast (Duga, Dugas), his twenty-eight-year-old wife, Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), his three-year-old daughter, and Fabien Dupuis (Dupuy), his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.227 | Marie (Marie Osite) | Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1765 | Hélène Blanchard | Paul Dugas | Married Etienne Dupuis (Dupuy), son of Charles Dupuis (Dupuy) and Marie Trahan. | Marie (born 1786), Fabien (born 1787) | Resided at Saint-Coulomb, Brittany, France, 1761-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Etienne Dupuis (Dupuy). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Etienne Dupuis (Dupuy), her husband, 40 years old; Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), her daughter, 2 years old; and Fabien Dupuis (Dupuy), her son, 1 year son. Marie Dugas (Dugast) and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of rice, ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and five hogs. Identified as Marie Osite Duga (Dugast) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old wife of Étienne Dupuis (Dupuy). In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old spouse, her household included Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), her three-year-old daughter, and Fabien Dupuis (Dupuy), her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.228 | Fabien (Fabian) | Aucoin | 01/01/1747 | Hélène (Elena) Blanchard | Alexis Aucoin | Married Marguerite Dupuy (Dupuis). | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Margueritte) Dupuy (Dupuis), his wife, 31 years old; and Mathurin Aucoin, a bachelor. Fabien Aucoin and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, two cows and twelve hogs. Identified as Fabien Aucoin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margritta) Dupuy (Dupuis), his thirty-two-year-old wife, and Mathurin Aurcoin, a thirty-three-year-old "laborer." He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen cows. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-three-years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34. | 1.785 | 08/08/1799 | Assumption Parish, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.229 | Marguerite | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1751 | Married Fabien Aucoin. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Fabien (Faban) Aucoin. In addition to her forty-two-year-old husband, the household included Mathurin Aucoin, a thirty-three-year-old bachelor. Marguerite Dupuis (Dupuy) and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, two cows, and twelve hogs. Identified as Margritta Dupuis (Dupuy) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Fabien Aucoin. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included Mathurin Aucoin, a thirty-three-year-old "laborer." She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.230 | Ambroise | Pitre | 01/01/1750 | Geneviève Arsement | Amand (Amant) Pitre | Married Elisabeth (Isabelle) Dugas (Dugast), daughter of Paul Dugas (Dugast) and Marguerite (Margueritte) Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux), at Pleurtuit, France, 1774. | Paul Ambroise (born ca. 1776), Marie (born ca. 1779), Jean Marie (born ca. 1784), Colette (Collette) (born 1786) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.231 | Élisabeth (Isabelle) | DugasT (Dugas) | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Marie Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Paul Dugast (Dugas) | Married (1) Ambroise Pitre at Pleurtuit, France, 1774. She is identified as a widow in the ecclesiastical records of Ascension Parish, La., February 1789. Married (2) Juan María Campo at Ascension Parish, La., February 9, 1789. (Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the marriage occurred on February 19, 1789.) The marriage was witnessed by Etienne Dupuis and Simon Dugast (Dugas). | Paul Ambroise (born ca. 1776), Marie (born ca. 1779), Jean Marie (born ca. 1784), Colette (Collette) (born 1786) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Paul (Pol), her thirteen-yar-old son; Marie, her nine-year-old daughter; Jean Marie, her four-year-old son; and Collette, her three-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:256; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.232 | Paul Ambroise (Paulle, Pol) | Pitre | 01/01/1776 | Poitou Province, France | Élisabeth Dugast (Dugas) | Ambroise Pitre | Married Céleste Blanchard, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Beloni (Belonie) Blanchard and Magdeleine Forest (Forêt), at Assumption Parish, La., September 16, 1800. | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Identified as Paulle Pitre in the 1778 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old child residing with his widowed mother, his brother Jean Marie Pitre, his sister Marie Pitre, and his sister Colette (Collette). Identified as Pol in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:100. | 1.785 | Amand (Amant) Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.233 | Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1779 | Nantes, France (one source indicates Châtellereault, France) | Élisabeth Dugast (Dugas) | Ambroise Pitre | François LeBlanc, an Acadian native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France and the son of Jean Baptiste LeBlanc and Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère, at Assumption Parish, La., September 16, 1800. Étienne Dupuis and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite, Jean Valentin (brn October 2, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old child living with her widowed mother, her brother Paul Pitre, her brother Jean Marie Pitre, and her sister Colette (Collette) Pitre. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her mother's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:471, 594; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Amand (Amant) Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.234 | Jean Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1784 | Élisabeth Dugast (Dugas) | Ambroise Pitre | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old child residing with his widowed mother, his brother Paul Pitre, his sister Marie Pitre, and his sister Colette (Collette) Pitre. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his mother's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 25; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Amand (Amant) Pitre and Geneviève Arsement | Paul Dugas and Marguerite Marie Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.235 | Joseph Benoît | Gauterot (Goudreau, Gautreaux) | 01/01/1768 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Marie Magdelaine Melanson (Melançon) | Charles Gotreau (Gauterot) | Married Isabelle Bergeron, a native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana. | His parents received a grant to farm no. 71 near the village of Cosquet, Locmaria parish, Brittany, France. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot, his fifty-year-old father, François Gauterot, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Rosalie Gauterot, his six-year-old sister. Identified as Joseph Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of the household including Charles Gauterot (Gauterau), his fifty-one-year-old father, François Gauterot (Gauterau), his sixteen-year-old brother, and Rosalie Gauterot (Gauterau), his seven-year-old sister. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 21-25, 51-52; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 22; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:315. | 1.785 | Pierre Gauterot and Agnès LeBlanc | Jean Melanson and Cécile Aucoin | ploughman | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.236 | Marie Rose | Livoire (Libois, Livois) | 01/01/1767 | Marie Madeleine Poirier | Pierre Livois | Married (1) Charles Templet (Templé). She was a widow at the time of her second marriage. Married (2) Pierre Olivier Bourg (Bourque), son of Pierre Bourg and Marie Naquin, at Assumption Parish, La., October 20, 1794. | Pierre (born September 21, 1795), Marie Modeste (born June 18, 1797), Clementine Marguerite (Clementina Margarita) (baptized November 23, 1799), Rosalie Victoire (born December 27, 1801) | Resided at Paramé, Brittany, France, 1764-1771. Resided at Saint-Ideuc, France, 1771-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 23; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121-129. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.237 | Prudence | Rodrigue | 01/01/1754 | Married Henri Peyroux de la Coudrenière, a native of Mortagne in Poitou Province, France, and one of the persons most responsible for organizing the 1785 Acadian migration from France to Louisiana. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 25. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.238 | Simon (Simon Pierre) | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1736 | Françoise Granger | Olivier Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | Married (1) Marie Madeleine Terriot (Theriot). Married (2) Anne Michel, daughter of Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt). | Edouard (born ca. 1764), Simon Pierre (born ca. 1767), Joseph Michel (born ca. 1776), Marie Marguerite (born ca. 1761), Anne Geneviève (born ca. 1763), Élizabeth (born ca. 1772), and Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1774) | Deported to Falmouth, England. Subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany. Received a grant to farm no. 27, Kervellant village, Sauzon parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:219. | 1.785 | 01/10/1792 | St. Gabriel, La. | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.239 | Anne | Michel | 01/01/1727 | Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | Louis Michel | Married (1) Jean Landry. Married (2) Simon (Simon Pierre) Daigre, son of Olivier Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) and Françoise Granger. | Edouard (born ca. 1764), Simon Pierre (born ca. 1767), Joseph Michel (born ca. 1776), Marie Marguerite (born ca. 1761), Anne Geneviève (born ca. 1763), Élizabeth (Elisabeth) (born ca. 1772), and Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1774) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.240 | Edouard | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1764 | Morlaix, France | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Married Marianne (Marie Anne) Henry, a native of St. Malo, France. | Marie (born October 3, 1793) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were residents of New Orleans in November 1795. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:94. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.241 | Simon Pierre | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1767 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Married Elnora Marie Landry. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | He was a resident of Manchac at the time of his death. | His burial record maintains that he was twenty-six years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:219. | 1.785 | 02/10/1794 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | St. Joseph Catholic Church Cemetery, Baton Rouge, La. | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||
1.242 | Joseph Michel | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1776 | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.243 | Marie Marguerite | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1761 | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.244 | Anne Geneviève | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1763 | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.245 | Élizabeth | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1772 | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.246 | Marie Magdelaine | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1774 | Anne Michel | Simon Daigre (Daigle) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Olivier Daigre (Daigle) and Françoise Granger | Louis Michel and Marguerite Forest (Forêt) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.247 | Olivier | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1732 | Françoise Granger | Olivier Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | Married (1) Marie Landry. Married (2) Marie Blanche LeBlanc. He was widowed for the second time sometime before May 1785. | Victor (born ca. 1762), François (born ca. 1766), Simon (born ca. 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1770), Honoré (born ca. 1782), Marie (born ca. 1774), Pélagie (born ca. 1776), Eulalie (born ca. 1777) | Deported to Falmouth, England. Subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. Received a grant to farm no. 26 at Chubiguer village, Palais parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | He was a resident of Manchac at the time of his death. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:218. | 1.785 | 12/08/1787 | St. Gabriel, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.248 | Victor | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1762 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.249 | François | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1766 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.250 | Simon | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1767 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | cooper | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.251 | Jean Baptiste | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1770 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.252 | Honoré | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1782 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.253 | Marie | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1774 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.254 | Pélagie | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1776 | Marie Daigle(?) | Olivier Daigre | Married Pierre Aucoin, son of Jean Baptiste Aucoin and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot). | Pélagie Céleste (baptized May 22, 1801, at the age of 2 years) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:39. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.255 | Eulalie | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1777 | Olivier Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.256 | Charles | Henry | 01/01/1734 | Acadia | Christine Peter (Pitre?0 | Joseph Henry | Married (1) Françoise Josèphe Terriot. Married (2) Marie Magdelaine Bernard at Cherbourg, France, January 27, 1761. Married (3) Marie LeBlanc. | Marie Magdeleine (born ca. 1764), Rose Anastasie (born ca. 1771), Ursule (born ca. 1775) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-five year years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Hébert, Acadians in Exile, 192; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:376; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:149. | 1.785 | 09/04/1794 | St. Joseph Catholic Church Cemetery, Baton Rouge, La. | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.257 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1740 | Married (1) Charles Robichaud. Married (2) Charles Henry. | First marriage: Charles (born ca. 1768)Second marriage: Rose Anastasie (born ca. 1771), Ursule (born ca. 1775) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.258 | Charles | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1768 | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Robichaud | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.259 | Marie Magdeleine | Henry | 01/01/1764 | Nantes, France | Marie Magdelaine Bernard | Charles Henry | Married (?) Fournier. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Died at Charity Hospital in New Orleans. Her burial record indicates that she was forty years of age at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:149. | 1.785 | 17/03/1797 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.260 | Rose Anastasie | Henry | 01/01/1771 | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Henry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.261 | Ursule | Henry | 01/01/1775 | Nantes, France | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Henry | Married Jean Constant Boudrot, son of Jean Baptiste Boudrot and Marie Modeste Trahan, at Assumption Parish, La., April 28, 1800. | Evariste Joseph (born August 8, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26;Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111, 114. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.262 | Pierre | Richard | 01/01/1711 | Married Françoise Daigle, the widow of (?) Terriot (Theriot). | Anselme (born ca. 1765), Joseph (born ca. 1767), Auguste (born ca. 1774), Marie (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.263 | Françoise | Daigle (Daigre, D'AIGLE) | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Françoise Granger | Olivier Daigle (Daigre, D'Aigle) | Married (1) (?) Terriot (Theriot). Married (2) Pierre Richard. | Anselme (born ca. 1765), Joseph (born ca. 1767), Auguste (born ca. 1774), Marie (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:34; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.264 | Anselme | Richard | 01/01/1765 | Françoise Daigle | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.265 | Joseph | Richard | 01/01/1767 | Françoise Daigle | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.266 | Auguste | Richard | 01/01/1774 | Françoise Daigle | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.267 | Marie | Richard | 01/01/1771 | Françoise Daigle | Pierre Richard | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 26. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.268 | Pierre | Lavergne | 01/01/1731 | Françoise Pitre | Jacques Lavergne | Married (1) Anne Laure, daughter of Pierre Laure and Jeanne Doucet. Married (2) Marguerite Daigle (Daigre, D'Aigle). Married (3) Gillette Caudan (Gaudin?). | Pierre (born ca. 1773), Victoire (born ca. 1763), Marie Magdelaine (born ca. 1773), Marguerite (born 1775) | Resided at Cherbourg, France, and Le Havre, France, after 1763. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 68; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2535-2536. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.269 | Pierre | Lavergne | 01/01/1773 | Pierre Lavergne | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Jacques Lavergne and Françoise Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.270 | Victoire | Lavergne | 01/01/1763 | Pierre Lavergne | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Jacques Lavergne and Françoise Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.271 | Marie Magdelaine | Lavergne | 01/01/1773 | Pierre Lavergne | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27. | 1.785 | Jacques Lavergne and Françoise Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.272 | Marie Josèphe | Granger | Veuve Trahan | 01/01/1739 | Married Pierre Simon Trahan, who died before May 1785. | Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1760), Paul Raymond (born ca. 1766), Marie Renée (born ca. 1772), Marie Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1777) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.273 | Jean Baptiste | Trahan | 01/01/1760 | Marie Josèphe Granger | Pierre Simon Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.274 | Paul Raymond | Trahan | 01/01/1776 | Marie Josèphe Granger | Pierre Simon Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.275 | Marie Renée | Trahan | 01/01/1772 | Marie Josèphe Granger | Pierre Simon Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.276 | Marie Marguerite (Margueritte) | Trahan | 01/01/1777 | Marie Josèphe Granger | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.277 | Anne | Granger | Veuve Trahan | 01/01/1736 | Married Joseph Trahan, who died before May 1785. | Joseph (born ca. 1764), François Marie (born ca. 1773), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1761), Marie Anne (born ca. 1769), Julie (born ca. 1771) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.278 | Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1764 | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.279 | François Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1773 | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.280 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Trahan | 01/01/1761 | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.281 | Marie Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1769 | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.282 | Julie | Trahan | 01/01/1771 | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.283 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1749 | Anne LeJeune | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Married Magdelaine (Madeleine, Magdeleine) Comeau (Comeaux), daughter of Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert. | Joseph (born ca. 1783), Marie (born ca. 1776), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1778), Renne (probably Reine) Élisabeth (born ca. 1785), Victoire (born 1787) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1762-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Comeau (Como), his wife, 36 years old; Marie Guédry (Guidry), his daughter, 11 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte) Guédry (Guidry), his daughter, 9 years old; Joseph Guédry (Guidry), his son, 5 years old; Renne (Reine Elisabeth) Guédry (Guidry), his daughter, 3 years old; and Victoire Guédry (Guidry), his daughter 1 year old. Joseph Guédry (Guidry) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, 1 cow, one horse, and nine hogs. Identified as Joseph Guidri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine (Madelaine) Comeau, his wife, 37 years old; Marie, his daughter, 12 years old; Marquerite (Margritta), his daughter, 10 years old; Joseph, his daughter, 6 years old; Renne (Reine), his daughter, 4 years old; and Victoire, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.284 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Commeau (Comeau, Comeaux) | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Hébert | Joseph Commeau (Comeau, Comeaux) | Married Joseph Guédry (Guidry), son of Claude Guédry and Anne LeJeune. | Joseph (born ca. 1783), Marie (born ca. 1776), Marguerite (born ca. 1778), Renne (probably Reine) Élisabeth (born ca. 1785), Victoire (born 1787) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Guédry (Guidry). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Joseph Guédry (Guidry), her husband, 39 years old; Marie Guédry (Guidry), her daughter, 11 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte) Guédry (Guidry), her daughter, 9 years old; Joseph Guédry (Guidry), her son, 5 years old; Renne (Reine Elisabeth) Guédry (Guidry), her daughter 3 years old; and Victoire Guédry (Guidry), her daughter, 1 year old. Magdelaine Comeau and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old wife of Joseph Guédry (Guidri). In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, the household included Marie, her twelve-year-old daughter, Marguerite (Margritta), her ten-year-old daughter, Joseph, her six-year-old son, Renne (Reine), her four-year-old daughter, and Victoire, her two-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.285 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1783 | Magdelaine Comeau (Comeaux) | Joseph Guédry (Guidry) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a six-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.286 | Marie | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1776 | Magdelaine Comeau (Comeaux) | Joseph Guédry (Guidry) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.287 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1778 | Magdelaine Comeau (Comeaux) | Joseph Guédry (Guidry) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified as Margritta Guidri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.288 | Renne (probably Reine) Élisabeth (Renée on the wall of names) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1785 | Magdelaine Comeau (Comeaux) | Joseph Guédry (Guidry) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Identified as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a three-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.289 | Charles | Commeau (Comeau) | 01/01/1748 | Married Marie Clausinet. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.290 | Marie | Clausinet | Married Charles Comeau. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Her age is not indicated on the passenger manifest. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.291 | Jean Baptiste (Jean Pierre) | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | Anne Benoît (Benoist) | Pierre Hébert | Married (1) Marguerite Moulaison. Married (2) Anne Dorothée Doiron, daughter of Jean Doiron and Anne Thibodeau. | Anne Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1760-1770. Resided at La Rochelle, France, after 1770. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | ploughman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.292 | Anne Marguerite (Margueritte) | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | Anne Dorothée Doiron | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.293 | Anne Dorothée | Doiron | 01/01/1751 | Anne Thibodeau | Jean Doiron | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert, son of Pierre Hébert and Anne Benoît (Benoist). | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.294 | Amand | Broussard (Brossard) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement (near present-day Broussard, La.). The census indicates that he was the only member of his household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 125; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.295 | Firmin | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1753 | ` | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish), as a thirteen-year-old orphan residing in the Pierre Arseneau household. A mysterious second entry in the April 9, 1766, census indicates that he was the sole member of a left bank household. This second entry the last in the Cabannocé census was probably an afterthought to indicate that Firmin owned a tract of land measuring four arpents of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27; 3:23; Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 9, 1766. AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.765 | 01/10/1776 | St. James Church, Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.296 | Pierre | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1735 | Beaubassin, Nova Scotia | Anne Cyr(?) | Jean Baptiste Arseneau(?) | Marie Josèphe Gaudin (Godin) dit Lincour, ca. 1760 | Eusèbe (born ca. 1762), Pierre (born ca. 1765) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The census lists his wife, Marie Gaudin dit Lincourt, and his sons Eusèbe and Pierre as the other members of his household. The census also indicates that his farmstead included six arpents of frontage along the river. Arseneau had five hogs and one firearm. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:25-27; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2402; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Arsenault and Marie Modeste Josèphe Godin dit Lincour." | 01/01/1769 | Cabannocé | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.297 | Eusèbe (Euzèbe, Usèbe) | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1762 | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Marie Josèphe Gaudin dit Lincour | Pierre Arseneau | Married Rosalie Bergeron at St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish), August 6, 1788. | Alexandre (born May 2, 1803), Eusèbe Alexandre (born July 22, 1789), Constance (born July 22, 1794), Jean Baptiste (born April 3, 1798), Louis Narcisse (November 2, 1790), Marie Emilie (born January 13, 1802), Marie Modeste (born June 29, 1796), Michel (born June 2, 1792), and Valery Joseph (born February 2, 1800) | Appears in the April 9, 1766, census as a two-year resident the Cabannocé post (present-day St. James Parish). His household included his father, mother, and his brother Pierre. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old residing with his stepfather, Basile Préjean, and his mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Basile Préjean, his stepfather, and Marie (Gaudin dit) Lincour, his mother. Acquired a tract of land along the Mississippi River from Jean broussard, ca. 1787. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On September 18, 1788, Eusèbe (Euzèbe) Arseneau (Arsenaut) and Charles Bergeron formally accused Joseph Mollère of stealing cypress timber from their properties. Sold to Jacques LeBlanc a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the east bank of the Mississippi River. The property was bounded above by that of Jacques Terriot and below by the land of one Fieurce(?). Purchased a trace of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River from Antoine Maxent, September 25, 1790. This property was bounded above by the land of Du Rousseau and below by the property of the Widow Forest. The improvements on the property included a house of poteau-en-terre (post-in-ground) construction, a small shed, and a slave cabin. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27; 4:15; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Euzèbe Arsenaut and Charles Bergeron to Estevan Mir¢, September 18, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:641; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 2; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Arsenault and Marie Modeste Josèphe Godin dit Lincour." | 1.765 | 11/10/1825 | St. James Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.298 | Alexis | Dugas | 01/01/1723 | Sts. Peter and Paul Parish, Cobequid, Nova Scotia | Anne Marie Hébert | Joseph Dugas | Married (1) Marguerite Noise. Married (2) Anne Bourg. | His burial record indicates that he seventy-two years old at the time of his death. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2476; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 36. | 23/09/1795 | 23/09/1795 | Ascension Parish, La. | Church of the Ascension (present-day Donaldsonville) | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.299 | Marguerite | Dugas | Veuve Bergeron | 01/12/1706 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite Bourg | Claude Dugas | Married Barthelémy Bergeron at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, April 21, 1721. | Jean Baptiste dit d'Amboise (born 1722), Marguerite (born ca. 1724), an unidentified son (born ca. 1726), Charles (born March 23, 1728), Judith (born ca. 1734), Cecile (born ca. 1737), Barthelemy (born ca. 1740), Marie Anne (born ca. 1741), Germain Charles (born in 1743) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, where she resided with her daughter Anne and her son-in-law, Pierre Arsenau. | She died sometime between compilation of the 1766 and 1769 censuses of St. Jacques de Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish, Louisiana). | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2418; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | In 1736, she and her husband were identified as residents of the village of Sainte-Anne, along the St. John River, in present-day New Brunswick. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.300 | Veuve | Bernard | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of the right bank of the Cabannocé District as a widow residing in Pierre Arseneau's household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.301 | Marie Josèphe | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Lincour | 01/01/1744 | Françoise Dugas | Jean Godin dit Bellefontaine (also dit Lincour) | Married (1) Pierre Arseneau ca. 1760. Arseneau died 1768. Married (2) Basile Préjean, ca. 1769. | First marriage: Eusèbe (born ca. 1762), Pierre (born ca. 1765) Second marriage: Louis (born January 30, 1773; baptized April 11, 1773), Éléonore (married October 21, 1793), Marguerite (born ca. 1775); Antoine Céleste (born September 23, 1777); Emilie Anne (born February 2, 1780) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocè as a twenty-two-year-old member of Pierre Arseneau's household on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Her household owned six arpents of frontage along the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Basile Préjean. Her household included her twenty-four-year-old spouse and the following individuals: Eusèbe Arseneau, her son from a previous marriage, 7 years old; and Pierre Arseneau, another son from a previous marriage, 5 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned six cattle and four hogs. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Basile Préjean. In addition to herself and her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Louis Préjean, her son, 3 years old; Léonorre Préjean, her daughter, 6 years old; Marguerite Préjean, her daughter, 2 years old; Eusèbe Arseneau, her son, 15 years old; and Pierre Arseneau, her son, 13 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eleven cows, four horses, eight sheep, ten hogs, and two muskets. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.302 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Anne Poirier | Joseph Hébert | Married (1) (?). Married (2) Anne Préjean, widow of Joseph Savoie, at Cabannocé, December 22, 1767. | First marriage: Marguerite (born 1760) Second marriage: Joseph (born 1768), Jean Baptiste (born 1770), Jean (born 1772) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Anne Préjean, his wife, 38 years old; Paul, his son, 8 months old; Joseph Savoie, his stepson, 3 years old; Marguerite, his stepdaughter, 9 years old. His household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned one slave, four cattle, two horses, eighteen sheep, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-four-year-old married man. He resided 1 1/4 leagues from he residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Anne Préjean, his wife, 42 years old; Joseph Hébert, his son, 9 years old; Paul Hébert, his son, 7 years; Jean Hébert, his son, 5 years old; and Marguerite Hébert, his daughter, 17 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned three slaves, twenty-five cows, and five horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2508-2509; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.303 | Amand (Amant) | Hébert | 04/05/1740 | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2508-2509; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354, 355; Wood, Guide, 196; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-12. | 30/09/1776 | Cabannocé | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.304 | Jean | Arosteguy | Marie Robichaud | Pierre Arosteguy | Identified as a member of Verret's militia company in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. Listed among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767; he was in New Orleans with his sisters Marie and Marguerite. Extant records indicate that he received his quota of rations from the government in July, 1767. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.305 | Marguerite | Arosteguy | Marie Robichaud | Pierre Arosteguy | Listed among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767; she was in New Orleans with her sister Marie and her brother Jean. Extant records indicate that she received her quota of rations from the government in July, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.306 | Jean | Baptiste | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community along Bayou Tortue. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.307 | Joseph | BARTHÉLEMY | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Judice's militia district. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.308 | Germain (Germain Charles) | Bergeron | 01/01/1743 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Marguerite LeBlanc at Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish, Louisiana), May 3, 1768. | Élizabeth (Isabel, Isabelle) (born 1770), Jean Louis (born 1772), Marie (born 1774), Susanne (born 1779), Geneviève Rosalie (baptized December 31, 1780 ), Augustin Beloni (born October 15, 1788; married July 28, 1806) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 18 years old; Baptiste D'Amours, a nephew, 14 years old; and François D'Amours, a nephew, 10 years old. He and his household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cows, thirteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-five-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 25 years old; Jean Louis Bergeron, his son, 5 years old; Elizabeth Bergeron, his daughter, 7 years old; and Marie Bergeron, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cattle and two horses. He appears to have been the Ascension Parish settler identified only as "Germin" who filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Margueritte) LeBlanc, his wife, 36 years old; Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Bergeron, his daughter, 17 years old; Jean Louis Bergeron, his son, 15 years old; Susanne Bergeron, his daughter, 9 years old; and Germain Bergeron, his son, 3 years old. Germain Bergeron and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned ten barrels of rice, 100 barrels of corn, twenty cows, eight horses, and eight hogs. Their property holdings made them one of the wealthiest families in the Lafourche District. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife resided along Bayou Lafourche, October 15, 1788. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite (Margritta) LeBlanc, his wife, 37 years old; Elisabeth Bergeron, his daughter, 18 years old; Jean Louis Bergeron, his son, 15 years old; Susanne (Suzanne) Bergeron, his daughter, 9 years old; and Germain Bergeron, his son, 3 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned twelve barrels of rice, thirteen barrels of corn, twelve cows, two horses, and eight hogs. | Died before November 21, 1796. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2419; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:73, 75; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron II and Marguerite Dugas." | 1.766 | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.309 | Charles | Bergeron | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Isabelle (Elizabeth) Arseneau (Arceneaux), ca. 1752. | Simon (born 1753), Jean Théodore (born 1762), Marguerite (born 1763) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the Bergeron family resided on a farmstead measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned one hog and one firearm. On January 28, 1769, his children sold to Philippe La Chaussée a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located twenty-one leagues from New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Veuve Gaudin (Godin) and below by one Bonaventure. | Evidently died before January 28, 1769. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron II and Marguerite Dugas." | Sun, Jun 13, 1728 | 1.765 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | NULL | |||||||||||
1.310 | Isabelle | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1733 | Married Charles Bergeron. | Simon (born 1753), Jean Théodore (born 1762), Marguerite (born 1763) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the Bergeron family resided on a farmstead measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned one hog and one firearm. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.311 | Simon | Bergeron | 01/01/1753 | Isabelle Arseneau | Charles Bergeron | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the Bergeron family resided on a farmstead measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned one hog and one firearm. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.312 | Jean Théodore | Bergeron | 01/01/1762 | Isabelle Arseneau | Charles Bergeron | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the Bergeron family resided on a farmstead measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of the household of Joseph Arseneau and Marie Bergeron, his aunt. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Joseph Arseneau and Marie Bergeron. He is identified as Théodore Bergeron in the 1777 census. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.313 | Jean Baptiste (Baptiste) | Bergeron | dit d'Amboise (Damboises) | 01/01/1722 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Marguerite Bernard, ca. 1749. | Jean Baptiste (born 1750), Marie (born 1752), Marin (born 1756), Mathurin (born 1758), Rosalie (born 1768), Victoire (born 1772) | Possibly among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, Nova Scotia, August 16, 1763. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Bergeron family occupied a farmstead, encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned five hogs and two firearms. Théotiste Thibodeau (the Widow Gaudin) and her daughter Barbe resided with them. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Bernard, his wife, 40 years old; Mathurin, his son, 15 years old; Marin, his son, 13 years old, Marie, his daughter, 17 years old; and Rosalie, his daughter, 9 months. old. His household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, one horse, twenty hogs, and three muskets. A 1770 list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Bernard, his wife, 47 years old; Marin Bergeron, his son, 22 years old; Mathurin Bergeron, his son, 20 years old; Rosalie Bergeron, his daughter, 8 years old; and Victoire Bergeron, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with fifteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He and his family owned twenty-four cows and four horses. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal. His name is rendered as Baptiste Damboises in the list. He appears to have been the Baptiste Bergeron who, on July 28, 1786, joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. He is identified as Demboise in the October 27, 1786 petition. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Died before November 7, 1811. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron and Marguerite Dugas." | 1.766 | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | NULL | |||||||||||
1.314 | Marguerite | Bernard | 01/01/1730 | Married Jean Baptiste Bergeron. | Jean Baptiste (born 1750), Marie (born 1752), Marin (born 1756), Mathurin (born 1758), Rosalie (born 1768), Victoire (born 1772) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Bergeron. Her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Bergeron, her husband, 47 years old; Mathurin, her son, fifteen years old, Marin, her son, 13 years old; Marie, her daughter, seventeen yers old; and Rosalie, her daughter, 9 months old. Her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eight cattle, one horse, twenty hogs, and three muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Bernard d'Amboise. In addition to her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marin Bergeron, her son, 22 years old; Mathurin Bergeron, her son, 20 years old; Rosalie Bergeron, her daughter, 8 years old; Victoire Bergeron, her daughter, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with fifteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-four-cows and four horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.315 | Jean Baptiste | Bergeron | 01/01/1750 | Marguerite Bernard | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Bergeron family occupied a farmstead, encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned five hogs and two firearms. Théotiste Thibodeau (the Widow Gaudin) and her daughter Barbe resided with them. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. The 1769 census suggests that this property was adjacent to that occupied by his parents and siblings. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.316 | Marie | Bergeron | 01/01/1752 | Marguerite Bernard | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Bergeron family occupied a farmstead, encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned five hogs and two firearms. Théotiste Thibodeau (the Widow Gaudin) and her daughter Barbe resided with them. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.317 | Marin | Bergeron | 01/01/1754 | Marguerite Bernard | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Bergeron family occupied a farmstead, encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned five hogs and two firearms. Théotiste Thibodeau (the Widow Gaudin) and her daughter Barbe resided with them. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.318 | Mathurin | Bergeron | 01/01/1756 | Marguerite Bernard | Jean Baptiste Bergeron | Married Marie Gaudin. | Marie Justine (married May 11, 1807) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Bergeron family occupied a farmstead, encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned five hogs and two firearms. Théotiste Thibodeau (the Widow Gaudin) and her daughter Barbe resided with them. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.319 | Marguerite | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1735 | Married Pierre Bernard. | Jean Baptiste (born 1754), Pierre (born 1758), Marie (born 1760) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a thirty-one-year-old member of Pierre Bernard's household. In addition to her husband, the household included her children Jean Baptiste, Marie, and Pierre. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2421; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 54-58. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.320 | Jean Baptiste | Bernard | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Marguerite Arseneau (Archeneaux) | Pierre Bernard | Married Madeleine Dugas, daughter of Joseph Dugas and Cécile Bergeron, at Cabannocé, September 23, 1776. | Anne (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1781), Eugénie Josèphe (born March 19, 1800), Félicité (Feliciana) (born Decemer 10, 1794) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in the household of his father Pierre Bernard. The family resided on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old member of his father's household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a fifteen-year-old bache.or He lived 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included his eighteen-year-old wife, who is misidentified as Magdeleine (Madeleine) Bergeron (her mother's surname) in the census. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and four horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, March 7, 1801. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2421; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:25. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.321 | Pierre | Bernard | 01/01/1731 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Cécile Gaudet | Jean Baptiste Bernard | Married (1) Marguerite Arseneau. He was evidently a widower in the 1769 census of Cabannocé. Married (2) Cécile Bergeron, the widow of Joseph Dugas and the daughter of Barthelémy Bergeron and Marguerite Dugas, at Cabannocé, June 13, 1770. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1754), Pierre (born 1758), Marie (born 1760) Second marriage: Adélaïde (born 1773), Louis (born 1774) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife Marguerite Arseneau, his sons Jean baptiste and Pierre, and his daughter Marie. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following children: Jean Baptiste, his son, 15 years old; and Pierre, his son, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned four cows, sixteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. This 1770 list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-eight-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Cécile Bergeron, his wife, 42 years old; Joseph Dugas, his stepson, 22 years old; Pierre Bernard, his son, 18 years old; Nicolas Lahure, 8 years old; Louis Bernard, his son, 3 years old; and Adélaïde Bernard, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned twent-six cows and four horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2421; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.322 | Marie | Bernard | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Arseneau | Pierre Bernard | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a six-year-old child residing in the household of her parents, Pierre Bernard and Marguerite Arseneau. The family resided on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Not listed in her father's household in the 1769 census of Cabannocé. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2421; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.323 | Pierre | Berteau (Bertaud) | 01/01/1739 | Acadia | Married Rose Savoie (Savoy), August 25, 1766. | Françoise (born 1767), Charles (born 1768), Joseph (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), Marguerite (1774), Élizabeth (born 1774) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-nine-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rose Savoie, his wife, 36 years old; Charles Berteau, his son, 9 years old; Joseph Berteau, his son, 5 years old; Françoise Berteau, his daughter, 10 years old; Marie Berteau, his daughter, 4 years old; Marguerite Berteau, his daughter, 3 years old; Elizabeth Berteau, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-four cows and two horses. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.324 | Rosalie (Rose) | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1741 | Married Pierre Berteau, August 25, 1766. | Françoise (born 1767), Charles (born 1768), Joseph (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), Marguerite (1774), Élizabeth (born 1774) | Evidently a resident of Cabannocé at the time of her marriage, August 25, 1766. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Berteau. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Berteau, her son, 9 years old; Joseph Berteau, her son, 5 years old; Françoise Berteau, her daughter, 10 years old; Marie Berteau, her daughter, 4 years old; Marguerite Berteau, her daughter, 3 years old; and Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Berteau, her daughter, 3 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-four cows and two horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.325 | Pierre | BELLIVEAU | dit Bideau | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that four members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 2 2/3 full rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Identified in the 1766 census as a resident of Judice's militia district at Cabannocé, 1766. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.326 | Joseph | Blanchard | 01/01/1748 | Judith Saulnier (Saunier, Sonnier) | Paul Blanchard | Marie Dupuis (Dupuy). | Rosalie (baptized March 27, 1774; married April 26, 1795), Marie Anastasie (baptized November 24, 1776; married 1793; died December 8, 1794), Marie Henriette (Henriqueta) (born following the death of her father; baptized September 27, 1778; married August 28, 1797) | Resided in Verret's militia district, Cabannocé, 1766. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had ten barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), his wife, 25 years old; Rosalie Blanchard, his daughter, 3 years old; Anastasie Blanchard, his daughter, 2 years old; and Elizabeth (Blanchard?), an orphan, 8 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | He died sometime before February 3, 1778. His daughter Marie Henriette was baptized following his death. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 95, 99, 100; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.327 | L'Aimable | Blanchard | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.328 | Anatalia (Natalie) | Girouard | 01/01/1745 | Married Amable (Aimable) Blanchard. | Marin (born 1765), Pierre (born 1767; married April 24, 1792), Anastasie (born 1768), Marguerite (baptized July 24, 1774), Jean Baptiste (baptized October 28, 1777), Céleste (Celestina) (buried August 30, 1797, at the age of 17 years) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Aimable Blanchard. In addition to her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marin Blanchard, her son, 12 years old; Anastasie Blanchard, her daughter, 9 years old; Pierre Blanchard, her son, 7 years old; and Marguerite Blanchard, her daughter, 3 years old. Anastasie Girouard and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-one cows, and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92-93, 95. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.329 | Victor | Blanchard | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Comeau | René Blanchard | Married Anne Perpétue Duon (Duhon) at the Attakapas church, September 22, 1786. | A resident of Verret's militia district, Cabannocé, April 8, 1766. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Semer's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On March 30, 1807, Victor Blanchard sold to Paul LeBlanc a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located twenty-four leagues above New Orleans, was bounted above by the land of Joseph LeBlanc and below by that of Joseph Duon (Duhon). | Census of Cabannocé, April 8, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 67; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.330 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.331 | Marie | Pitre | Married Joseph Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Died sometime before October 4, 1787. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.332 | Olivier | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Cécile LeBlanc | Michel Boudrot | Married (1) Ludivine Landry. Married (2) Anne Gaudet, October 2, 1767. | First marriage: Simon (born 1753) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his son Simon. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. A resident of Cabannocé at the time of his marriage in October 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Gaudet, his wife, 44 years old; Simon Boudrot, his son, 14 years old; Marie Dupuis, his stepdaughter, 17 years old; Monique Dupuis, his stepdaughter, 14 years old; Joseph Dupuis, evidently his wife's nephew, 18 years old. He and his family occupied a tract ofl land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, one horse, eighteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Anne Gaudet, his fifty-one-year-old wife. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen cows and two horses. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-two years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:20, 117; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2426; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | 01/11/1782 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.333 | Simon | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1753 | Ludevine Landry | Olivier Boudrot | Married Monique (Monica) Dupuis, daughter of Michel Dupuis and Anne Gaudet, May 2, 1774. | Marie Henriette (baptized December 5, 1775; married January 19, 1795), Simon Pierre (baptized December 14, 1778; married April 21, 1800), Olivier (born July 2, 1788), Françoise Emiliana (born November 16, 1790), Jean Baptiste (born April 19, 1793; buried August 14, 1794), Antoine (baptized May 29, 1796), Anne (buried April 12, 1797, at the age of 9 months) | Identified as a member of Olivier Boudrot's household in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Olivier Boudrot, his forty-three-year-old father, and Anne Gaudet, his forty-four-year-old stepmother. In 1769, the household also included the following persons: Marie Dupuis, his stepsister, 17 years old; Monique Dupuis, his stepsister (and future bride), 14 years old; and Joseph Dupuis, evidently Anne Gaudet's nephew. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included Monique Dupuis, his twenty-one-year-old wife, and Marie Boudrot, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2426-2428; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109, 112, 116-118. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.334 | Joseph | Bourg | 01/01/1740 | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his cousins Magdeleine, Marie, and Joseph Bourg. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) a petition by the Opelousas Acadians to Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768. The petition reports the Acadians' successful attempt to grow wheat at Opelousas, and they request governmental assistance in procuring oxen and plows to produce bountiful crops and thereby improve their miserable standard of living. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. His residence appears to have been next door to that of L'Ange Bourg. At the time of the 1774 census, Joseph Bourg owned twelve cows and six horses or mules. The April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit indicates that he was exempt from active duty because of either advanced age or infirmities. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included two unidentified males of unspecified ages, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned one slave. They also owned 120 cows and 20 horses. They occupied a tract of land with 12 arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included three girls under the age of fifteen years, three boys under the age of fifteen years, one man fifteen years of age or older, and one woman fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. He and his family owned one male slave fifteen years of age or older and one female slave fifteen years of age or older. | Petition from the Opelousas Acadians to Antonio de Ulloa, March 13, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 246; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.335 | Magdelaine | Bourg | Cousin | Identified as a member of the household of her cousin Joseph Bourg. The Bourgs resided on the left bank of the Mississippi River. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.336 | Joseph (2) | Bourg | 01/01/1753 | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in the household of his cousin Joseph Bourg. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.337 | Joseph (2) | Bourg | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | ATGZ-77, SII, 4 p 99 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.338 | Marie | LANDRY | 68/04/00 | ATGZ-77, SII, 4 p 99 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.339 | Marguerite | BOURG | 68/04/00 | ATGZ-77, SII, 4 p 99 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.340 | Joseph (3) | Bourg | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A, ASD 2585. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
1.341 | L'Ange (Lange) | Bourg (Bourque) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Boudrot | Charles Bourg | Married Anne Marie Thibodeau, daughter of Pierre Thibodeau and Françoise Saulnier. | Marie Louise (baptized November 11, 1782) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Was a resident of the Opelousas district at the time of his death. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. At the time of the 1774 census, he owned twenty-six cowsx and nine horses or mules. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. | His succession proceedings were opened on June 30, 1788. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 98-99, 745; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 48; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | 28/06/1788 | 29/06/1788 | Opelousas District | Opelousas Church | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.342 | Pierre | Bourg | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Marie Landry (Landris) | Joseph Bourg | Married Anastasie Cormier, daughter of Jean Baptiste Cormier and Magdeleine Richard, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., January 27, 1772. Jean Savoie, Paul Martin, François Savoie, and Jean Cormier witnessed the marriage record. | Félicité (born ca. 1772; baptized July 14, 1776), Marguerite (baptized April 4, 1773), Rosalie (baptized August 19, 1774; married February 9, 1793), Magdeleine (Magalena) (born 1774; buried September 5, 1802), Jean Joseph (baptized April 19, 1778), Pélagie (baptized June 1, 1780), Pierre (baptized October 29, 1781), Anastasie (born ca. 1781; buried November 13, 1798), Alexandre (born January 27, 1788), Marie Ipolita (born April 5, 1791) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 4, 1766, census of Cabannocé. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and an eighteen-year-old married man living three-fourths of a league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that Pierre Bourg, his wife, and three children lived with Jean Baptiste Cormier and Marie Richard, his father-in-law and mother-in-law. The household also included Charles Bourg, a fifteen-year-old orphan. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119, 120, 121, 122, 124, 125, 126, 128. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.343 | Jean | Bourgeois | 01/01/1739 | Married Ludivine Granger, January 30, 1768. | Dominique (born 1770), Félicité (born 1773), Jean Louis (born 1775) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Ludivine Granger, his wife, 27 years old; Dominique Bourgeois, his son, 7 years old; Jean Louis Bourgeois, his son, 2 years old; and Félicité Bourgeois, his daughter, 4 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. THey also owned one slave, twelve cows, and four horses. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.344 | Ludivine | Granger | 01/01/1750 | Married Jean Bourgeois, January 30, 1768. | Dominique (born 1770), Félicité (born 1773), Jean Louis (born 1775) | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.345 | Anne | Bourgeois | Married Athanse Broussard. | Isabelle (married July 13, 1781) | Acadie | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 131. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.346 | Isabelle | Broussard (Brossard) | Acadia | Anne Bourgeois | Athanase Broussard | Married Cosme LeBlanc, a native of Acadia and the son of Simon LeBlanc and Catherine Thibodeau, at the Attakapas church, July 13, 1781. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 131. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.347 | François | Broussard (Brossard) | orphelin | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community along Bayou Tortue. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.348 | Firmin (Firmain, Jean Firmin) | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Anne Landry | Jean Broussard | Married Marie Magdeleine Landry, daughter of Abraham Landry and Marguerite Flan, at Ascension Parish, May 16, 1775. | Françoise (baptized May 25, 1777; married February 12, 1798), Simon (born January 1, 1779), Henriette, born April 4, 1780), Marie Magdeleine (born November 12, 1781), François Thomas (baptized December 21, 1782; buried January 4, 1783), Augustin (born December 29, 1783), Firmin (born July 16, 1785) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Beauséjour around August 24, 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the seventeen-year-old head of a household that included his nine-year-old brother, Jean. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned three cattle and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he owned a tract of land with arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie Landry, his eighteen-year-old wife, and Françoise Broussard, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, two horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Firmain Broussard in the July 27, 1777, petition. On November 4, 1777, Firmin Broussard bought from Basile Landry a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The property, located about twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was situated between the lands of Joseph Meanson (Melançon) and Amant Babin. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-one feet by fourteen feet. On April 4, 1778, Firmin roussard sold to Joseph Landry dit Chinoux a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located approximately twenty five leagues above New Orleans. Standing on the property was a nouse of sur sol construction, measuring eighteen feet by twelve feet. A four-foot-wide front gallery stretched across the front of the residence. On December 15, 1778, Commandant Louis Judice wrote to Louisiana's governor complaining about Maurice Canoée (Conway), Jean Firmin Broussard, and Marin Landry of the Cabannocé District. According to Judice, these three landholders had failed to build a levee, a drainage ditch, and a roadway across their as required by Governor Alejandro O'Reilly's 1770 land regulations. The lack of a levee resulted in annual flood damage for their neighbors. Judice, therefore, asked the governor to order the work to be done on the three aforementioned landholdings and to assess the delinquent landholders for the costs. He is listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Firmin Brossard in the 1779 militia list. He is listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780; the list indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On August 17, 1786, Commandant Louis Judice notified Governor Estevan Mir¢ that Jean Broussard had been the object of complaints by neighbors who grumbled that Broussard had failed to comply with the colony's land grant regulations. Promulgated by Governor Alejandro O'Reilly in February 1770, these regulations required settlers to levees, roads, and drainage ditches along the waterfronts of their long-lot grants within a three-year period in order to obtain permanent titles. Judice noted that Broussard had occupied the property for thirteen years and had not completed any of the necessary improvements. When summoned to Judice's residence to answer charges of negligence, Broussard, who was accompanied by his uncle, Pierre Landry, told Judice "many disagreeable things, and insulted me greviously." Broussard and Landry then threatened to carry their own complaints against Judice to the governor. Judice concluded his report by complaining that Broussard and Landry were "insubordinate people who do not believe that there is any law other than their wishes." Firmin Broussard's estate was inventoried and appraised on November 22, 1786. The probate inventory indicates that he and his wife still owned the land they had acquired from Basile Landry in 1777. | His burial record indicates that he was a thirty-four-year-old resident of the Lafourche District at the time of his death. The date on the record, however, is clearly erroneous, for Firmin Broussard had a confrontation with Louis Judice in August 1786. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:42; "Liste des Acadiens Prisonniers au Fort Beauséjour, en 1763," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 27ième cahier (mars, 1965): 21-25; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:160-164; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Judice to the governor, December 15, 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:472; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, August 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:308; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23. | 1.766 | 05/04/1785 | New Orleans, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.349 | Paul | Broussard (Brossard) | Anne Landry | Jean Broussard | Ephrème Balagne (probably Landry) and Anne Bugeaud (Bigeot) served as his baptismal sponsors, November 24, 1766. Paul Broussard evidently died before the 1769 census, for his name is not listed in the census with his widowed mother. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:35. | Mon, Nov 24, 1766 | 1.766 | St. Louis Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.350 | Louis | Caissy | dit Roger | Canada | Married (1) Marie Louise LeBlanc. Married (2) Marie Landry, a resident of St. Gabriel, La., and the daughter of Basile Landry and Brigitte Boudrot, at Ascension Parish, October 29, 1774. The marriage was witnessed by Joseph Landry and Joseph Babin. | The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:645; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 91. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.351 | Jean | Caissy | dit Roger | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Alexis Caissy dit Roger | Married Rosalie Richard, a native of Acadia and the daughter of Jean Richard and Catherine Cormier, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, November 6, 1780. The marriage was witnessed by Jean Poirier and Baptiste Bourgeois. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and an eighteen-year-old bachelor. He lived one-third of a league from Commandant Nicolas Verret's residence. He is identified as Jean Roger in the January 23, 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-year-old worker living in the household of Simon LeBlanc and Anne Bergeron. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old man living in the household of Pierre Breau and Brigitte Forest (Forêt). Because no family relationship is indicated in the census, it appears that he was either working as a laborer on the host family's farm, or that he was a boarder. The census also indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Sometime around Mardi Gras, 1781, Jean Caissy dit Roger lost 100 piastres to one La Chaussée. Responding to a complaint filed by Caissy around February 14, 1781, Lieutenant Governor Pedro Piernas condemned La Chaussée and one Arseneau (probably Pierre Arseneau) to pay fines the former 50 piastres for engaging in gambling and the latter 40 piastres for permitting gambling in his tavern. The fines were subsequently entrusted to Étienne Melanson for delivery to Piernas in New Orleans. Served as a government courier, ca. May 2, 1781. Purchased an African slave (a native of Angola) from Paul Azema, August 5, 1787. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:645; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Pedro Piernas to Michel Cantrelle, ca. February 14, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:287; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, ca. February 14, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:292; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, April 6, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:294-295; Pedro Piernas to Michel Cantrelle, April 17, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:298; Michel Cantrelle to Pedro Piernas, May 2, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:300-301; Slave Sale, August 5, 1787, St. James Parish Original Acts. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.352 | Joseph | Caissy | dit Roger | 01/01/1745 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Rosalie Comeau | Michel Caissy | Married Anastasie Dugas. | François (a twin, born 1772), Georges (Grégoire?), (born May 30, 1774), Joseph (a twin, born 1772; married 1796), Marie Anastasie (baptized January 6, 1771), Rosalie (born in either September or November 11, 1777) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year old resident of the household headed by his sister Catherine Caissy (Widow Jean Baptiste Bergeron). This household was located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned two cattle, four pigs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-eight-year head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Dugas, his wife, 32 years old; Henry Robichaud, his stepson, 8 years old; Jean Baptiste Robichaud, his stepson, 7 years old; and Louis Robichaud, his stepston, 3 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Dugas, his wife, 38 years old; Joseph Roger, his son, 5 years old; François Roger, his son, 5 years old; Marie Roger, his daughter, 7 years old; Henri Robichaud, his stepson, 16 years old; Jean Baptiste Robichaud, his stepson, 15 years old; and Louis Robichaud, his stepson, 9 years old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows, four horses, twelve sheep, nine hogs, and two muskets. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Joseph Roger in the 1779 militia list. Identified as a contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. He is identified as Joseph Roger in the February 17, 1789 list. On April 29, 1799, Joseph Caissy dit Roger sold to Louis Mollere a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. This property was located one-half league below the Ascension Parish church. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1763, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2583-2584; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:644-645; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 91. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.353 | Charles | COMEAU | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census as a resident of the Opelousas District. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.354 | Anastasie | Savoie (Savoy) | Married Charles Comeau. | Auguste (married February 18, 1797), Marie Dorothée (born March 17, 1771) | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Opelousas District, April 9, 1771. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:200; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 42. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.355 | Jean | COMEAU | 01/01/1764 | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household also included his nine-year-old brother Thomas. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.356 | Suzanne | CORMIER | 71-05/11 | OP77/Dev #109 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.357 | Felicie | CORMIER | 71-05/11 | OP77/Dev #109 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.358 | Marie | Cormier | 71-05/11 | OP77/Dev #109 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.359 | Geneviève | Bergeron | Veuve d'Amours dit Louvrière | 01/01/1730 | Port Royal(?) | Married Jean Baptiste d'Amours de Louvrière. | Charles (born 1751), Jean Baptiste (born 1754), Antoine (born 1758), François (born 1759), Isidore (born 1763), Suzanne (born 1765) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including her sons, Charles, Baptiste, François, Isidore; her daughters Anastasie and Suzanne; Marie Dugas; and Anne Bergeron. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that she owned one hog and one firearm. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.360 | Charles | d'Amours (Damour, Damours) | dit Louvrière (Louvière) | 01/01/1751 | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Married Isabelle Melanson. | Anne (born 1771, married March 7, 1791), Daniel (buried June 9, 1795), David (baptized November 11, 1781), Félicité (baptized 1773), Marie Geneviève (baptized December 25, 1774), Louis (baptized July 27, 1776), Rosalie (baptized July 22, 1770), Théotiste (baptized December 27, 1778) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that Charles owned a second tract of land on the left bank including four arpents of frontage on the left bank. He also owned a firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He owned two cows, seven hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elizabeth (Isabelle Melanson), his wife, 30 years old; Louis, his son, 6 months old; Anne, his daughter, 6 years old; Félicité, his daughter, 4 years old; Geneviève, his daughter, 2 years old; and Jacques Lahbit (Landry?), 14 years old. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.361 | Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) | d'Amours (Damours) | dit Louvrière | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Germain Bergeron and Marguerite LeBlanc. The census indicates that he was a nephew of either Bergeron or LeBlanc. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a fifteen-year-old bachelor. He lived 2 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. He is identified as Jean Bte Damour in the January 23, 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old hired hand living in the household of François Mollère, a surgeon. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.362 | Anastasie | d'Amours (Damours) | dit Louvrière | 01/01/1758 | Acadia | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Married Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, a native of Montreal, Canada, and the son of Jacob LeBlanc adn Marie Josèphe Ruleau, at Cabannocé, January 30, 1775. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eight-year-old child residing in her widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.363 | Isidore | d'Amours (Damours) | dit Louvrière | 01/01/1763 | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Married Françoise Landry. | Rosemond (born December 1, 1801) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a three-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of the household of Pierre Hébert and Marie Bergeron. The 1769 census indicates that he was a "nephew" evidently the nephew of Marie Bergeron. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Joseph Arseneau and Marie Bergeron. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.364 | François | d'Amours (Damours) | dit Louvrière | 01/01/1759 | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seven-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of the household of Germain Bergeron and Marguerite LeBlanc. The census indicates that he was the nephew of either Bergeron or LeBlanc. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old orphan living in the household of Pierre Part and Marguerite Melanson (Melançon). | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.365 | Suzanne | d'Amours (Damours) | dit Louvrière | 01/01/1765 | Geneviève Bergeron | Jean Baptiste d'Amours dit Louvrière | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a one-year-old child residing in her widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.366 | Marie | Dugas | Veuve Bergeron | 01/01/1711 | Anne (born 1749) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Geneviève Bergeron's household, located on the left bank of the Mississippi River. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.367 | Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1749 | Marie Dugas | (?) Bergeron | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Geneviève Bergeron's household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2469-2470; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:508-509. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.368 | Genevieve | Hébert | Identified as an Acadian in the city of New Orleans, July 1767. | PPC 114 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.369 | Anne | DAVID | Identified as an Acadian in the city of New Orleans, July 1767. | PPC 114 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.370 | Madeleine | DAVID | Identified as an Acadian in the city of New Orleans, July 1767. | PPC 114 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.371 | Basile | Boucher | dit Desroches | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Marguerite Marie Arseneau | Julien Desroches | Married (1) Marie Edelmayre, a widow from St. John the Baptist Parish, at Cabannocé, September 16, 1778. Married (2) Marguerite Legant (sometimes rendered Legau), widow of Vital Goyaux from St. John the Baptist Parish, at Cabannocé, November 14, 1801. | First marriage: Agathe (baptized March 3, 1780), Marie Angélique (baptized September 5, 1781) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old orphan living in the household of Charles Savoie and Judith Arseneau. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:236-237. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.372 | Pierre | DOIRON (Douairon) | Married Marie Bourgeois | Olivier, Marguerite | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that five members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 3 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Beauséjour around August 24, 1763. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; "Liste des Acadiens Prisonniers au Fort Beauséjour, en 1763," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 27ième cahier (mars, 1965): 21-25; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.373 | Anne (Marie) | Bourgeois | 01/01/1750 | Married Joseph Poirier. | Pierre (born 1767), Louis (born 1769), Marie (born 1771), Marguerite (born 1773) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Poirier. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Pierre, her son, 10 years old; Louis, her son, 8 years old; Marie, her daughter, 6 years old; and Marguerite, her daughter, 4 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cattle and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.374 | Ollivier (Olivier) | DOIRON | The September 14, 1769 census indicates that he was a resident of Cabannocé. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.375 | Anne (Nanette) | Doucet | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Agnès Brun | Paul Doucet | Signed a marriage contract with Jean Baptiste Huval, September 23, 1786. Married Jean Baptiste Huval, native of New Orleans and the minor son of Jean Huval and Véronique Légère, at the Attakapas church, September 24, 1786. Huval was buried at the Attakapas church on September 11, 1796. | Célestine (born September 15, 1787), Jean Baptiste (baptized March 29, 1795, at age of two months), Marguerite (born March 31, 1790), Marie Magdelaine (baptized April 5, 1795, at age of four years), Placide (born February 20, 1793) | 86-09/23 | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Olivier Thibodeau, her stepfather. A resident of the Fausse Pointe area at the time of her husband's death in September 1796. | SMOA v 4.5 #76 mg; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 257, 426-427; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.376 | Paul | Doucet | 01/01/1744 | Acadia | He was listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-six-year-old bachelor. He lived 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Nicolas Verret, the Cabannocé District commandant. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirty-three-year-old hired hand living with the family of Joseph Terriot (Theriot) and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Bourgeois. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.377 | Charles | Dugas | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 1 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community along Bayou Tortue. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.378 | Marguerite | Broussard (Brossard) | Married Charles Dugas. | Marie Magdeleine (born April 22, 1773) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 277. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.379 | Jean | Dugas | frère | He is listed among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.380 | Pierre | Dugas | frère | 01/01/1749 | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community along Bayou Tortue. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of Charles Dugas' household. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.381 | Honoré | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1716 | Port Royal, Acadia | Agnès Hébert | Jean Baptiste Duon | Married Marie Vincent, ca. 1742. | Marie Josèphe ((born 1744), Anne Perpétue (born 1745), Jean Baptiste (born 1747), François (born 1749), Marie (born 1749), Pierre (born ca. 1750) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a fifty-year-old head of a household. His household included his wife, Marie Vincent, and three of his children: Jean, François, and Anne Perpetué. His family occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned two firearms. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Vincent, his wife, 56 years old; Perpétue, his daughter, 24 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine pigs and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Vincent, his wife, 57 years old; Perpétue Duon, his daughter, 26 years old. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District, he reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. Commandant Louis Judice informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that, of all the settlers in the district, only Desire LeBlanc and Honoré Duon (Duhon) were satisfied with the local land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a sixty-one-year-old member of the household of Jean Duon (Duhan), his son, and Anne LeBlanc, his daughter-in-law. The household also included his sixty-four-year-old wife, Marie Vincent, and three grandchildren: François Duon, Anne Duon, and Marie Duon. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | Burial record indicates that he was sixty-nine years of age at the time of his death. Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contends that Honoré Duon died at the age of sixty-nine years on December 31, 1783. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2481; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:263; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 3, 1772, AGI, PPC, 189A:418; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.766 | 01/01/1784 | Church of the Ascension (Donaldsonville) | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.382 | Anne Perpétue | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1745 | Marie Vincent | Honoré Duon | Married Victor Blanchard, son of René Blanchard and Isabelle Comeau, at the Church of the Ascension, February 13, 1775. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old resident of her father's household, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-four-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-six-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:262; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.383 | Jean | Duon (Duan, Duhon) | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Marie Vincent | Honoré Duon | Married Anne LeBlanc, daughter of Joseph LeBlanc and Isabelle Gaudet at Cabannocé, May 28, 1770. | François Marie (born 1771), Anne (born 1771), Marie (born 1776), Joseph (married February 3, 1799) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old resident of his father's household, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one cow, one horse, four hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's first-ranking sous caporal. The muster roll also indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. His name is rendered as Jean Duan in the January 23, 1770 list. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife, Anne LeBlanc. Unlike numerous other Acadian residents of the Cabannocé District, he reportedly approved of Chevalier de Bellevue's land survey, which drastically reduced some waterfront properties, while drastically increasing the size of others, ca. May 27, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne LeBlanc, his wife, 30 years old; François Duon (Duhan), his son, 6 years old; Anne Duon (Duhan), his daughter, 6 years old; Marie Duon (Duhan), his daughter, 1 years old; Honoré Duon (Duhan), his father, 61 years old; Marie Vincent, his mother, 64 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-eight cows, four horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On March 25, 1778, Jean Duon and his wife sold to George Urquhart a tract of land with six and a half arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was located between the land of Étienne LeBlanc and François Duon. Improvements on the foregoing tract of land included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-four feet by fifteen feet and a store house measuring fifteen feet by eleven feet. On March 8, 1802, Jean Duon purchased a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located between the land of Simon Gauterot and that of one Favre. Improvements on the foregoing and included a house measuring twenty-six feet by sixteen feet. The house was raised on piers. The house also featured galleries on the front and rear facades. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:263; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.384 | François | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Marie Vincent | Honoré Duon | Married Elisabeth (Isabelle) Landry, daughter of Abraham Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc(?), at the Church of the Ascension (in present-day Donaldsonville, La.), June 23, 1771. Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contends that the couple was married on November 9, 1772. | Marie Juie (born 1774), Adélaïde (born 1775), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born ca. January 1777) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old resident of his father's household, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Jean himself owned a parcel of land measuring four arpents frontage and also a firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one hog and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. He lived one-fourth league from the residence of Louis Judice, commandant of the Cabannocé District. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-eight-year-old (sic) bachelor living alone. On April 22, 1771, Cabannocé co-commandant Louis Judice informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that a six-arpent tract adjacent to the property of François Duon (Duhon) had been abandoned by Jean Jeansonne two years earlier. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, 22 years old; Marie Duon (Duhan), his daughter, 3 years old; Adélaïde Duon (Duhan), his daughter, 2 years old; Isabelle (Elizabeth) Duon (Duhan), his daughter, 4 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with seven months frontage. They also owned nine cows, two horses, three hog, and two muskets. On April 29, 1777, François Duon (Duhon) abandoned to Jacob Cowperthwait and Robert Jones a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-four leagues above New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Jean Martin and below by the property of Firmin Landry. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On December 12, 1780, François Duon (Duhon) acquired a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The land, located approximately twenty-five leages above New Orleans, was bounded below by the property of Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty by fifteen feet. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of second corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On December 13, 1789, François Duon's estate was sold at public auction held at the front door of the parish church. His estate included a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of Antoine Peytavin and below by the property of Eugène Barré. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty feet by sixteen feet. The house had bousillage walls. Two slave cabins also stood on Duon's former property. Antoine Peytavin purchased the Duon farmstead for 532 piastres. | His burial record indicates that he died at the age of forty. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:262-263; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:80; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37. | 1.766 | 23/11/1789 | Ascension Parish | Ascension Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.385 | Marie Josèphe | Dupuis | 01/01/1751 | Anne Gaudet | Michel Dupuis | Married (1) Joseph Blanchard. Married (2) Ignace Babin, the widower of Marguerite Breau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 3, 1778. | First marriage: Rosalie (baptized March 27, 1774; married April 26, 1795), Marie Anastasie (baptized November 24, 1776; married 1793; died December 8, 1794), Marie Henriette (Henriqueta) (born following the death of her father; baptized September 27, 1778; married August 28, 1797) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old girl residing in her widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Olivier Boudrot, her forty-three-year-old stepfather, and Anne Gaudet, her forty-four-year-old mother. Her household also included Simon Boudrot, her stepbrother (and future brother-in-law), 14 years old; Monique Dupuis, her fourteen-year-old sister; and Joseph Dupuis, evidently the nephew of Anne Gaudet, 18 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, one horse, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Blanchard. In addition to her twenty-nine-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Rosalie Blanchard, her daughter, 3 years old; Anastasie Blanchard, her daughter, 2 years old; and Elizabeth (Blanchard?), an orphan, 8 years old. Marie Dupuis and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen cattle and two horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:95, 99; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.386 | Monique | Dupuis | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Anne Gaudet | Michel Dupuis | Married Simon Boudrot, son of Olivier Boudrot and Anne Dupuis, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., May 2, 1774. Joseph Blanchard, Pierre Blanchard, Jean Baptiste Dupuis, and Joseph Melanson witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Henriette (baptized December 5, 1775; married January 19, 1795), Simon Pierre (baptized December 14, 1778; married April 21, 1800), Olivier (born July 2, 1788), Françoise Emiliana (born November 16, 1790), Jean Baptiste (born April 19, 1793; buried August 14, 1794), Antoine (baptized May 29, 1796), Anne (buried April 12, 1797, at the age of 9 months) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in her widowed mother's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as fourteen-year-old member of the household of Olivier Boudrot, her forty-three-year-old stepfather, and Anne Gaudet, her forty-four-year-old mother. The household also included the following persons: Simon Boudrot, her stepbrother (and future husband), 14 years old; Marie, her sister, 17 years old; and Joseph Dupuis, evidently the nephew of Anne Gaudet, 18 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Simon Boudrot. In addition to her twenty-one-year-old husband, her household included Marie Boudrot, her one-year-old daughter. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2426-2428; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-118. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.387 | Joseph | Dupuis | dit Neveu | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Married Marie Poirier. | Marie (born 1775), Monique (born ca. December 1776) | Identified as a member of the household of his aunt Anne Gaudet, Veuve Dupuis. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Olivier Boudrot and Anne Gaudet, his aunt. The household also included the following persons: Simon Boudrot, Olivier's son, 14 years old; Marie Dupuis, Anne Gaudet's daughter, 17 years old; and Monique Dupuis, Anne Gaudet's daughter, 14 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The household owned six cows, one horse, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Poirier, his wife, 21 years old; Marie Dupuis, his daughter, 2 years old; and Monique Dupuis, his daughter, 5 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows and two horses. The census indicates that they owned no slaves. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.388 | Joseph | Forest (Faures, Forêt) | 01/01/1729 | Acadia | Married Isabelle Léger | Marguerite (baptized July 25, 1774) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a forty-one-year-old married man, and a native of Acadia. He lived 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé commandant Nicolas Verret. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.389 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Léger | Married Joseph Forest. | Marguerite (baptized July 25, 1774) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:294. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.390 | Pierre (Piere) | Forest (Faures, Faurette, Forêt) | 01/01/1739 | Acadia | Married (1) Anne Dupuis. Married (2) Marie Josèphe Landry, ca. 1768. | Second marriage: Théotiste (born 1771), Constance (born 1775) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife, Anne Dupuis. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-one-year-old wife, Marie Josèphe Landry. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-two-year-old married man. | He appears to have died before the April 15, 1777, census of Ascension Parish. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2489; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.391 | Anne | Dupuis | 01/01/1741 | Married Pierre Forest. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Pierre Forest's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2489. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.392 | Pierre | Forest (Forêt) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.393 | Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Veuve Gaudet | Married Jean Gaudet. | Charles, Rosalie, Jérôme | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Judice's militia district. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.394 | Charles | Gaudet | 01/01/1730 | Acadia | Marie Breau | Jean Gaudet | Married Cécile Breau, the Widow Clouatre. | Michel (born 1773), Jérôme (born 1775), Auguste (married June 22, 1801) | Resided with his widowed mother and his sister Rosalie on a farmstead encompassing six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, April 9, 1766. The family owned one hog and one firearm. He was evidently a member of the Acadian militia unit dispatched by Louis Judice to apprehend the Breau family, which had defied Governor Antonio de Ulloa's order to settle at San Luís de Natchez. Instead of arresting the family, the militiamen notified them of Judice's attempt to arrest them. Their warning permitted the Breau family members to flee to the safety of British Manchac. Charles Gaudet was evidently sent to New Orleans to report the incident to the Spanish governor. Ulloa scolded Gaudet and informed him that he would not be punished for the incident, but that if he again exhibited such insubordination, he and his family would be deported from the colony. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Cécile Breau, his wife, 30 years old; Joseph Clouatre, his stepson, 9 years old; Charles Clouatre, his stepson, 4 years old; and Magdeleine Clouatre, his stepdaughter, 7 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten cattle, ten hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a thirty-six-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Cécile Breau, his wife, 39 years old; Joseph Clouatre, his stepson, 15 years old; Charles Clouatre, his stepson, 12 years old; Michel Clouatre (sic), his son, 4 years old; Gerome (Jérôme) Clouatre (sic), his son, 2 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Clouatre, an orphan, 14 years old. Charles Gaudet and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty-eight cows, and two horses. On July 2, 1778, Michel Cantrelle, acting commandant of the Cabannocé District, complained to the governor that Charles Gaudet, who was in New Orleans on business, had torn down his neighbor's fence as a means of "widening his lands." Cantrelle asks that the governor imprison Gaudet for several days as an example to the local population. The commandant also asks the governor to also enforce the fine levied by Cantrelle: a new land survey at Gaudet's expense. (Note: Two adult Cabannocé District settlers carried the name Charles Gaudet in 1778. Circumstantial evidence points to this one as the culprit.) He appears to have been the Charles Gaudet listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. On April 24, 1787, Pierre Michel, Joseph Terriot (Theriot), Hypolite Hébert, and Charles Gaudet of St. Jacques de Cabannocé informed the governor that they had spend the previous winter working on a levee across a large unoccupied area in the center of the district. The former lack of a levee had resulted in the annual inundation of large parts of the district. Michel, Terriot, Hébert, and Gaudet complained that their work had largely been destroyed in the period of two hours by the passage of a cattle herd bound for New Orleans under the direction of drovers led by Philippe Boutté of the Attakapas District. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Antonio de Ulloa to Louis Judice, June 6, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Michel Cantrelle to the governor, July 2, 1778, AGI, PPC, 191:350; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Petition, April 24, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:426; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.395 | Rosalie | Gaudet | Marie Breau | Jean Gaudet | Resided with her widowed mother and her brother Charles on a farmstead encompassing six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, April 9, 1766. The family owned one hog and one firearm. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.396 | Jérôme (Gerome) | Gaudet | 01/01/1740 | Marie Breau | Jean Gaudet | Married Marie Doucet. | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, he resided alone on a farmstead encompassing six arpents of frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Marie Breau, his mother, 67 years old, and Rose Gaudet, his sister. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cows, seven pigs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included Marie Doucet, his wife. His wife's age appears to be seventy-six years, but it was probably twenty-six. Jérôme Gaudet and his wife owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.397 | Claude | Gaudet | Married Catherine Forest Forêt) | Joseph (born 1739; married December 10, 1765) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family was provided only 2 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.398 | Catherine | Forest (Forêt) | Married Claude Gaudet. | Joseph (born 1739; married December 10, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:134. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.399 | Charles (2) | Gaudet | Married Blanche Breau, May 16, 1768. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixteen barrels of surplus corn. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.400 | Firmin (Firmain) | Girouard (Giroire) | 01/01/1749 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Thibodeau | Louis Paul Girouard | Married Marguerite Cormier, daughter of Jean Cormier and Madeleine Richard, at Cabannocé, January 7, 1771. | Simon Joseph (born 1771), Jacques (born 1772), Pierre (born 1776), Joseph (born 1778), Marie Madeleine (born 1780), Scholastique (born 1783), Félicité (born 1785), Anastasie (born 1787), Marguerite (born 1789), Jean Baptiste (born 1792) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a single-member household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 3 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-year-old bachelor. He lived 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Cormier, his wife, 25 years old; Simon Girouard, his son, 5 years old; Jacques Girouard, his son, 4 years old; and Pierre Girouard, his son, 5 months old. Firmin Girouard and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. In 1791, Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard), elders of the Acadian community, were interrogated regarding the performance of the commandant and church warden in the performance of their duties with regard to repairs to the Attakapas church. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2492; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 208; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:324; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Proceedings of the interrogation of Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard) Regarding Repairs to the Attakapas Church, (1791), AGI, PPC, 204:220-239. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.401 | Barthélemy | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Marie Anne Bergeron | Joseph Gaudin dit Bellefontaine | Married Marie Claire Martin, the daughter of Jean Baptiste Martin and Marie Brun and a native of Acadia, ca. 1760 | Louis (born 1767), Barthelémy (born 1769; buried July 26, 1774), Marguerite (born 1771) | Among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household consisting of himself and his wife, Marie Martin. They occupied a tract of land measuring five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census indicates that Gaudin owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Martin, his wife, 34 years old; Louis, his son, 2 years old; and Barthélemy, his son, 7 months old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned two cows, fifteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-three-year-old married man. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:310. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.402 | Marie Claire | Martin | 01/01/1734 | Acadia | Marie Brun | Jean Baptiste Martin | Married (1) Barthelémy Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine, ca. 1760. Married (2) Joseph Richard, son of Joseph Richard and Marie Comeau, August 24, 1772. | First marriage: Louis (born 1767), Barthelémy (born 1769; buried July 26, 1774), Marguerite (born 1771) | Among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Martin and her husband occupied a five-arpent tract of land measuring five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Barthélemy Gaudin (Godin). Her household included the following persons: her husband, 32 years old; Louis, her son, 2 years old; Barthélemy, her son, 7 months old. The family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned two cows, fifteen hogs, and one musket. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43, 78; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:310. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.403 | Bonaventure | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1715 | along the St. John River, in present-day New Brunswick | Andrée Angélique Joannes | Gabriel Gaudin | Married Marguerite Bergeron, ca. 1740. | Théotiste (born 1749), Marie (born 1751), Bonaventure, fils (born 1753), Michel (born 1756) | He and his family were held as prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a settler on the right bank of the Mississippi River. His household included his wife and the following children: Bonaventure, Michel, Théotiste, and Marie. The census indicates that his property consisted of six arpents of frontage along the river. He owned one cow, two hogs, and one firearm. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians, August 1769. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Marguerite Bergeron, his wife, 46 years old; Bonaventure, his son, 14 years old; Michel, his son, 12 years old; Théotiste, his daughter, 19 years old; Marie, his daughter, 17 years old; Jean Baptiste Bergeron, his wife's nephew, 13 years old. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned six cattle, one horse, thirty-four sheep, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifty-six-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Marguerite Bergeron, his wife, 57 years old; Bonaventure Gaudin, fils, his son, 20 years old; Michel Gaudin, his son, 18 years old; Théotiste Gaudin, his daughter, 26 years old; and Marie Gaudin, his daughter, 22 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, forty cows, and three horses. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243, 244, 255; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2494; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.404 | Marguerite | Bergeron | 01/01/1723 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine. | Théotiste (born 1749), Marie (born 1751), Bonaventure, fils (born 1753), Michel (born 1756) | The April 9, 1766, census identifies her as the forty-three-year-old wife of Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine, residing on the family farm, located on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Her household consisted of her husband and four children. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old wife of Bonaventure Gaudin. In 1769, her household included the following persons: Bonaventure Gaudin, her husband, 46 years old; Bonaventure, her son, 14 years old; Michel, her son, 12 years old; Théotiste, her daughter, 19 years old; Marie, her daughter, 17 years old; and Jean Baptiste Bergeron, her nephew. With Magdeleine Trahan (Mrs. Alexis Breau), she filed a formal complaint against François Croizet, who publicly called a group of Acadian women returning from church "bitches and whores" for having failed to close his fence gate, May 20, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-seven-year-old spouse of Bonavanture Gaudin. In addition to herself and her fifty-six-year-old husband, her household included Bonaventure Gaudin, her son, 20 years old; Michel Gaudin, her son, 18 years old; Théotiste Gaudin, her daughter, 26 years old; and Marie Gaudin, her daughter, 22 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, forty cows, and three horses. | Died sometime after April 15, 1777. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2494; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Magdeleine Trahan (Mrs. Alexis Breau) and Marguerite Bergeron (Mrs. Bonaventure Gaudin) to Verret, May 20, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:165; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | Louisiana | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.405 | Théotiste | Gaudin (Godin) | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Bergeron | Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine | Married Gilles LeBlanc. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, she resided with her parents and three siblings on the family farm, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:310-313; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | 01/05/1783 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.406 | Marie | Gaudin (Godin) | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Bergeron | Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, she resided with her parents and three siblings on the family farm, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.407 | Bonaventure | Gaudin (Godin) | fils | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Bergeron | Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine | Married Marie Broussard. | Bonaventure (born September 4, 1794), Marcela (born born February 27, 1792), Marie Cleoncia (born October 3, 1798, Michel Bernard (born April 15, 1794), Rosemond (born November 16, 1788) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, he resided with his parents and three siblings on the family farm, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244, 255; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.408 | Michel (Pierre) | Gaudin (Godin) | 01/01/1756 | Marguerite Bergeron | Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) dit Bellefontaine | Married Françoise Barbé (sometimes rendered Barbay), daughter of Louis Barbé and Charlotte Falgoust, at Cabannocé, October 28, 1787. | Emelia (buried September 22, 1799, at the age of twelve years), Dorothea (born August 11, 1788), Edouard (born May 7, 1792), Jean Baptiste (born July 16, 1790; married October 16, 1809), Marie (born December 20, 1794), Melanie (buried January 22, 1799, at the age of 15 months) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, he resided with his parents and three siblings on the family farm, located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his parents household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Identified (perhaps misidentified) as Pierre Gaudin (Godin) in his burial record. His burial record indicates that he was a forty-year-old resident of the Acadian Coast. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:310-313; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:59; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:133, 136; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.766 | 08/10/1798 | St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.409 | Théotiste | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Veuve Gaudin (Godin) | 01/01/1740 | Married Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin). | Anne Barbe (born 1761) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with the family of Jean Baptiste Bergeron on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that she had twenty barrels of surplus corn. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.410 | Jacques | Gaudin (Gaudain, Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Marie Anne Bergeron | Joseph Gaudin dit Bellefontaine | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Ordered by Cabannocé commandant Louis Judice to lead a party of four men to capture Acadians fugitives Honoré Breau (Braud) and his family, who had defied Spanish governor Antonio de Ulloa's order to settle at San Luís de Natchez. Instead of executing the order, Gaudin and his three companions alerted Breau of the commandant's attempt to have him arrested. This allowed Breau and his family to flee to safety at British Manchac. Judice subsequently sent Gaudin and his three companions to New Orleans to answer to the governor for their insubordinate behavior. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-seven-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned three cattle, eighteen sheep, and one musket. Appears to have been the person misidentified by Cabannocé officials as Jacques Bonnaventure, a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. If so, the 1770 list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. (He is misidentified as Jacques Bonnaventure in the list.) The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-seven-year-old married man. He lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. His name is rendered as Jacques Gaudain in the January 23, 1770 list. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:310-312; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa April 25, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa, April 29, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.411 | Jean | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-five-year-old bachelor. He lived 2 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirty-year-old bachelor living in the household of Ambroise Martin, his brother-in-law, and Magdeleine Gaudin, his sister. The census shows that he owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned eight cows and one horse. | Census of Cabannocé, April 8, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.412 | Joseph | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1740 | Marie Anne Bergeron | Joseph Gaudin dit Bellefontaine | Married Marie Forest, April 10, 1766. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife Marie Forest. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing five arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé, February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.413 | Marie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1748 | Married Joseph Gaudin dit Bellefontaine, April 10, 1766. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of her husband's household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.414 | Joseph | Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) | 01/01/1731 | Acadia | Married Catherine Comeau, October 2, 1767. | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the only occupant of his household on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census indicates that he owned a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage along the river as well as one firearm. A resident of Cabannocé at the time of his marriage in October 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his forty-one-year-old wife, Catherine Comeau. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, twelve hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-nine-year-old married man. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 247; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:346; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.415 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1725 | Magdeleine Trahan. | Élizabeth (born 1765), Honoré (born 1767), Charles (born 1772), Joseph (born 1776) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Trahan, his wife, 44 years old; Honoré Hébert, his son, 10 years old; Charles Hébert, his son, 5 years old; Joseph Hébert, his son, 1 year old; and Elizabeth Hébert, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and four horses. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.416 | Jean | Hébert | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only two-thirds of a full ration. | He is listed as a resident of the Opelousas District in the April 4, 1766 census. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.417 | Jean Louis | Hébert | 01/01/1763 | Magdeleine Breche (Robichaud?) | Jean Hébert | Married Rose Richard, native of Cabannocé and the daughter of Joseph Richard and Agnès Hébert, at St. Martinville, April 5, 1790. | Arthemise (baptized June 20, 1795), Claire dit Clarice (baptized June 20, 1795), Exuperé (born September 28, 1799), Jean Lacroix (baptized June 20, 1795) | Identified by the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the evidently orphaned three-year-old grandchild of Claire Robichaud, with whom he was residing. Evidently moved with Robichaud's family to the Attakapas District in the 1780s. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 405-418; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.766 | Jean Baptiste Hébert and Claire Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.418 | Françoise | Hébert | 01/01/1745 | Married Joseph Hébert, ca. 1762. | Louis (born 1764), Joseph (born 1769), André (born 1772), Nicolas (born ca. 1773), Alexandre (born 1774), Marguerite Adélaïde (born 1776), Constance (born 1778), Marie Madeleine (born 1782), Marie (born 1784), Placide (born 1788), Euphrisine (born ca. 1789), Louise (born 1801) | Detained at Halifax, Nova Scotia, until 1763. | The September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was twenty-three years old. Her household included the following persons: Joseph Hébert, her husband, 32 years old; Louis, her son, 5 years old; and Joseph, her son, 2 months old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned two cows, two horses, ten hogs, and one musket. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.419 | Joseph | Hébert | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Judice's militia district. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.420 | Joseph | Hébert | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.421 | Pierre | Hébert | 01/01/1737 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Poirier | Joseph Hébert | Married Marie Jeanne (Anne) Bergeron, July 16, 1767. | François (born 1768), Rosalie (born 1770) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole occupant of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land measuring five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bergeron, his wife, 22 years old; François, his son, 1 year old; Marie Dugas, the Widow Bergeron, his mother-in-law, 59 years old; and Isidore D'Amours, a nephew, 7 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned two cows, ten hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had fifteen barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-year-old married man. He lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. Around July 13, 1794, one Mrs. Henri complained to Governor Carondelet that Pierre Hébert and his cousin, Pierre Blanchard, had induced her husband to drink and to gamble at billiards at a local cabaret. During the course of the evening, Henri had spent three piastres on beverages, and he had lost thirty piastres at billiards. On July 13, 1794, Carondelet ordered the Cabannocé commandant to launch a formal investigation into the matter. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2509; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Baron de Carondelet to Verret, July 13, 1794, AGI, PPC, 209:254. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.422 | Charles | Jeanson (Jeansonne) | Marie Aucoin(?) | Charles Jeanson(?) | Married Marie Rose Brasseur. | Charles (baptized November 18, 1781), Françoise (baptized May 5, 1777), Joseph (born June 28, 1784), Louis Marie (baptized May 30, 1779), Marguerite (born July 21, 1789), Marie Louise (baptized January 22, 1793) | He and his family appear to have been among the prisoners of war held at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned one horse or mule. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. His name is rendered as Charle Jeanssone in the 1777 list. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included four boys, one man, one woman, and one girl. The members of his household owned no slaves. They possessed seventy--five cows, twelve horses, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. | He died sometime before the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 433-436; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2517; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.423 | Jean | Jeanson (Jean, Sonne, Jeansonne, Johonson) | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Marie Aucoin | Charles Jeansonne | Married Anastasie Préjean. | Rosalie (married November 22, 1790), Andréa (born December 3, 1777), Marie Josèphe (baptized March 19, 1780), Augustin (baptized September 2, 1782), Jean (married November 21, 1797), Hypolite (born 1787, buried January 23, 1799), Félicie (baptized August 24, 1789), Euphrosine (born May 15, 1794), Céleste (born December 10, 1798) | Identified in the 1766 census as a resident of Judice's militia district. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. On April 30, 1770, Marie Marthe LeBlanc, the widow of Jacques La Chaussée, transferred to Jean Jeansonne her claim to a tract of land approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans. The widow declared that she could neither occupy the property nor construct a roadway across it, as required by Louisiana's 1770 land regulations. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Anastasie Préjean, who was evidently his wife, and Pierre Jeansonne, his brother. Cabannocé co-ommandant Louis Judice reported to Governor Luís de Unzaga on April 22, 1771, that Jean Jeansonne had abandoned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, adjacent to the property of François Duon (Duhon), approximately two years earlier. Complained vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. On March 21, 1774, Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that the arguments put forth by Amand Landry, Jean Jeansonne, and Firmin Breau (Braud) of Cabannocé for relocation at Attakapas or Opelousas were indeed valid, being based upon legitimate needs. Judice acknowledges that their relatives have offered to provide assistance of the aforementioned Acadians were allowed to settle alongside more established friends and relatives in the Attakapas and Opelousas districts. But Judice cautioned the governor that permitting the three Acadians to relocate would set a dangerous precedent, leading to a massive migration of Acadians to the prairie country. Unzaga subsequently overruled Judice and permitted the Acadians to relocate. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District lists two households headed by men named Jean Jeansonne. Because the 1788 census does not indicate ages, or the names of other household members, it is difficult to identify positively the households of the subject of this sketch. The second household, however, appears to be the most likely candidate because of the birthdates of the subject's children correlates best with the number of children in the second houeshold. One of the aforementioned houesholds included two men, one woman, and one girl. The members of his household owned one slave, sixty-eight cows, seventeen horses, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The second household included four boys, one man, one woman, and four girls. This household owned no slaves, but it did own eighty cows, ten horses, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. Both households were located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included two boys under the age of fifteen, three girls under the age of fifteen, three males fifteen years of age or older, and five women fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned one male slave fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:80; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, March 21, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:540; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 433-436; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 52. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.424 | Paul | Jeanson (Jeansonne) | frère | Listed in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household headed by Claude Duon (Duhon) and Marie Josèphe Vincent. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned two cows and one horse or mule.Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.425 | François(e) | Pitre | orphelin | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a resident of Cabannocé. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.426 | Catherine | LaFaye | Veuve | 01/01/1726 | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of the household of Abraham Roy. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.427 | Marie | Marquis | nièce | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of the household of Abraham Roy. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of Michel Bernard's household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.428 | Pierre | LAMBERT | Married Marguerite Doiron, May 5, 1766. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A.; Oath of Allegiance, August 28, 1769, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.429 | Pierre (2) | LAMBERT | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River. The muster roll indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor and that he lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.430 | Joseph (1) | Landry | dit à Petit Abram (Abraham) | 01/01/1740 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Élizabeth (Isabel, Isabelle) LeBlanc | Abraham Landry | Married (1) Magdeleine (Madeleine) Gaudin. He was a widower at the time of his second marriage. Married (2) Marie Anne Granger, daughter of Pierre Granger and Euphrosine Gauterot, August 10, 1768. Anne Granger died on August 19, 1781. Married (3) Marie Breaux, widow of Pierre Forest (Forêt) of St. Gabriel, at the Church of the Ascension (in present-day Donaldsonville), May 21, 1782. | Second marriage: Joseph (born ca. 1762), Pierre (born 1764). Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the children born of this union were Guillaume Raphael and Eloy.Third marriage: Marguerite (born ca. February 1770; evidently died before 1777); Eloy (interred October 14, 1772), Grégoire Raphaël (born October 23, 1773; interred October 28, 1773), Gilles (probably Guillaume Raph„el) (born January 10, 1775), Guillaume Raphaël (born ca. 1775; married November 26, 1792), François (1779), Madeleine (born 1781)The Baton Rouge diocesan church records also record the birth of Anne Magdeleine Landry, born to Joseph Landry and Anne Granger, possibly the subject of this sketch and his spouse. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a settler of the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned six arpents of frontage along the river and had one firearm at the time of the census. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Granger, his wife, 26 years old; Joseph, his son, 7 years old; and Pierre, his son, 5 years old. This household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The owned four cows, eighteen cattle, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a thirty-year-old bachelor. The compiler of the January 23, 1770, muster roll, however, erred in this entry. The subject of this sketch is the only one of twelve Joseph Landry's in the district to match the individual's age profile; hence, either the person identified in the list was actually married as was the subject of this sketch or his age was listed inaccurately. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Anne (Marianne) Granger, his wife, 26 years old; Pierre Landry, his son , 8 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 6 years old; and Marguerite Landry, his daughter, 6 months old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of sixty-five barrels of surplus corn. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Landry owned one slave. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Granger, his wife, 34 years old; Joseph Granger, his son, 13 years old; Pierre Landry, his son, 11 years old; Raphael Landry, his son, 2 years old; and Jean Baptiste Milhomme, a blacksmith, 40 years old. Joseph Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-six cows, five horses, eight sheep, thirty hogs, and two muskets. He appears to have been the Joseph Landry listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780; the list indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. Identified as a contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 New Orleans fire. Joseph Landry dit à Petit Abram's estate was inventoried and appraised on February 24, 1785. Among his property hodings was a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was situated between the lands of Mathurin Landry and Veuve Marie Breau Landry. Improvements on Joseph Landry's land included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-four by sixteen feet. The house, which had bousillage walls, had front and rear galleries. There was also evidently a detached kitchen. | He died before February 24, 1785. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2527-2528; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55, 61; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2527-2528. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.431 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1762 | Marie Granger | Joseph Landry | Resided with his father and brother Pierre on the right bank of the Mississippi River, according to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.432 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1764 | Marie Granger | Joseph Landry | Resided with his father and brother Joseph on the right bank of the Mississippi River, according to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.433 | Pierre | Lanoue (Lanoux) | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Marie Judith Belliveau | Michel Lanoue | Married Catherine LeBlanc. | Simon (born 1771), Michel (born 1773), Marianne (born ca. November 1775), Carmelite (married December 26, 1810) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned four cows, ten hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-three-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Catherine LeBlanc, his wife, 25 years old; Simon Lanoue, his son, 6 years old; Michel Lanoue, his son, 4 years old; and Marianne Lanoue, his daughter, 18 months old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 67. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.434 | Andres (André) | LeBlanc | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. On October l7, 1771, Cabannocé co-commandant Nicolas Verret forwarded to Governor Luís de Unzaga André LeBlanc's request to leave Louisiana "because of illness." Verret notified the governor that LeBlanc had sold all of his property and paid all of his debts. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Verret to Unzaga, October 7, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:122. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.435 | Marcel (Marselle) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1734 | Catherine (Marie) Josèphe Forest (Forêt) | Jacques LeBlanc | Married Marie Josèphe Breau, a native of Cobequid, Acadia, at Ristigouche (in present-day New Brunswick), November 10, 1760. | Adelaide (baptized February 6, 1780), Angelique (baptized May 7, 1772), Apolonie (baptized January 1778), Marguerite (born 1763), Marie Josèphe (married September 21, 1784), Paul Olivier (baptized September 15, 1776), Silvestre Marie (baptized December 8, 1770) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he received only two-thirds of a full ration. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the family resided on the right bank of the Mississippi and occupied a farm measuring six arpents frontage. The family owned two hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Breau, his wife, 33 years old; Marguerite, his daughter, 6 years old; Marie, his daughter, 3 years old; Osite, his daughter, 7 months old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one slave, nine cattle, eighteen pigs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a thirty-seven-year-old married man. He lived 2 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Breau, his wife, 41 years old; Silvin LeBlanc, his son, 7 years old; Paul LeBlanc, his son, 1 year old; Marguerite LeBlanc, his daughter, 14 years old; Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, his daughter, 11 years old; Osite Barbe LeBlanc, his daughter, 8 years old; and Angélique LeBlanc, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned five slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Marselle Leblanc in the list. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Ecclesiastical records at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicate that he died before November 22, 1796. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 202; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:460-485; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 72. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.436 | Marie Josèphe | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1737 | Cobequid | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Breau | Married Marcel LeBlanc, son of Jacques LeBlanc and Josèphe Forest (Forêt), at Ristigouche (in present-day New Brunswick), November 10, 1760. | Adelaide (baptized February 6, 1780), Angelique (baptized May 7, 1772), Apolonie (baptized January 1778), Marguerite (born 1763), Marie Josèphe (married September 21, 1784), Paul Olivier (baptized September 15, 1776), Silvestre Marie (baptized December 8, 1770) | She was at Ristigouche, Acadia (in present-day New Brunswick), in November 1760. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the family resided on the right bank of the Mississippi and occupied a farm measuring six arpents frontage. The family owned two hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Marcel LeBlanc. In addition to her thirty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marguerite, her daughter, 6 years old; Marie, her daughter, 3 years old; and Osite, her daughter, 7 months old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They family owned one slave, nine cattle, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Marcel LeBlanc. In addition to her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Silvin LeBlanc, her son, 7 years old; Paul LeBlanc, her son, 1 year old; Marguerite LeBlanc, her daughter, 14 years old; Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, her daughter, 11 years old; Osite Barbe LeBlanc, her daughter, 8 years old; and Angélique LeBlanc, her daughter, 5 years old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned five slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. On November 5, 1793, he joined with numerous Acadian Coast residents in signing a formal complaint regarding the failure of Gilbert de St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc to build and maintain levees on their properties. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 59; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:460-485; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Resolve the Flooding Problem Caused by the Neglected Lands Owned by St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc, November 5, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:283; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 72. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.437 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1763 | Marie (Josèphe) Breau | Marcel LeBlanc | Married Joseph Dugas, son of Joseph Dugas and Cecille Bergeron, at Cabannocé, October 16, 1780. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the family resided on the right bank of the Mississippi and occupied a farm measuring six arpents frontage. The family owned two hogs and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:474; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.438 | René (Renez) | LeBlanc (Le Blanc) | 01/01/1753 | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that five members of his famly were held as prisoners, but the family received only 3 1/3 rations. He is listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old resident of Joseph Broussard's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Renez Le Blanc in the May 10, 1777 list. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246, 258; Census of the Attakapas District, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.439 | Jean | LéGER | 01/01/1722 | Anne Amireau (Amirault) | Jacques Léger | Married Cécile (Cécille) Poirier, widow of Olivier Landry, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 26, 1774. Jean Poirier and Joseph Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Cécile Poirier, his wife, 52 years old; the Widow Forest, 56 years old; Jean Baptiste Forest, an orphan, 4 years old; Marguerite Forest, an orphan, 3 years old; and Pierre Poirier, an orphan, 13 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, ten cows, and three horses. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:491. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.440 | Anne (Ann) | Amirault | Married (1) Jacques Léger. Léger died in 1731. Married (2) Jean Benoît. | Jean | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:491. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.441 | Nicole | Léger | Witnessed the marriage of Pierre Michel and Marie Léger at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, March 3, 1766. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:205. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.442 | Escholastique (Scholastique) | LÉger | 01/01/1745 | probably Port Royal, Acadia | Magdeleine Comeau | François Léger (Légère) | Married Saturnin Bruno, son of Saturnin Bruno and Marguerite Joinis (actually Janis), April 1, 1768. | Joseph (born ca. March 1769) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Saturnin (Sathurnin) Bruno, the twenty-three-year-old head of her household. Her household also included Pierre Bruno, her sun, 6 years old. Resident of Bayou de Mallet (Bayou Mallet, near Eunice, La.) at the time of her death. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 588.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 75 | 1.766 | 28/01/1817 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.443 | Louis | Levron (Leveron) | dit Luci | 01/01/1722 | He was incarcerated as a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Identified in the 1766 census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the Bayou Tortue settlement. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was a fifty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned two cows and three horses. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a member of Joseph Broussard's household. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of the Attakapas District, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.444 | Joseph | Marant (Marans, Marand) | 01/01/1729 | Married Angélique Dugas. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife, Joseph Orillion, and Marguerite Orillion. The census indicates that Marant and his family occupied a parcel of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River in Cabannocé. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-four-year-old wife, Angélique Dugas. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, one horse, sixteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old head of a household thatincluded his thirty-year-old wife, Angélique Dugas. He served as baptismal sponsor for Marie Magdelaine Marant, daughter of Nicolas Marant and Christine Ovis, at Cabannocé, September 2, 1770. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had ten barrels of surplus corn. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the boundaries were not restored. Identified as Joseph Marand in Bellevue's letter. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a fifty-year-old tavern-keeper. He and Angélique Dugas, his forty-six-year-old wife, lived with the family of Paul Forest and Marguerite Orillon. Marant and Dugas owned two slaves, two cows, two horses, for hogs, and two muskets. On June 27, 1775, Joseph Marant (Marans) and his wife sold a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River to François Mollère. The property was located approximately twenty-four leagues above New Orleans. Improvements on the property included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring twenty-three by fifteen feet and a small slave cabin. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:515; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 76. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.445 | Angélique | Dugas | 01/01/1736 | Married Joseph Marant (Moran). | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as the thirty-year-old wife of Joseph Marant. Her household included Joseph Orillion and Marguerite Orillion. Resided on the family farm, measuring six arpents frontage, on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Marant. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, one horse, sixteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-year-old spouse of Joseph Marant, the forty-eight-year-old head of her household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Marant. She and her husband lived with the family of Paul Forest and Marguerite Orillon. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:254; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | 04/09/1787 | Cabannocé | Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.446 | Joseph | Orillion (Aurillon, Orillon) | dit Champagne | 01/01/1748 | Port Royal | Marguerite Dugas | Joseph Orillion dit Champagne | Married Marie Rose Breau, daughter of Pierre Breau and Marguerite Gauterot, September 16, 1770. | Marie Josèphe (born November 19, 1772), Joseph (born February 6, 1775), Marguerite Élisabeth (baptized January 1, 1780) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old residing with Joseph Marant and his wife Angélique Dugas. The Marant household was located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one cow, one horse, two hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. (Identified as Joseph Orillon in Bellevue's letter.) Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the boundaries were not restored. Identified in Joseph Orillion's baptismal record as a resident of St. Gabriel, in Iberville Parish, April 17, 1775. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-nine-year-old wife and a three-year-old daughter. He and his family owned twelve cows, fourteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the river. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-nine-year-old married man. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Orillon lost five of his seventeen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2564; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:570-571; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 83. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.447 | Marguerite | Orillon | dit Champagne | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Dugas | Joseph Orillion dit Champagne | Married Paul Forest. | Marguerite (born ca. 1768, buried January 23, 1773), Clement Anaclet (born November 24, 1773), Félicité (born November 23, 1773), Paul (born November 25, 1775), François Achille (born February 7, 1784), Joseph (married February 6, 1793), Angélique (married January 8, 1801), Louis (married February 28, 1802), Marie Reine (born December 3, 1788), Magdeleine | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old residing with Joseph Marant and his wife Angélique Dugas. The Marant household was located on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nineteen-year-old spouse of Paul Forest. Her household included her three-month-old daughter Marguerite. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, eight hogs, and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Paul Forest. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Forest, her son, 6 years old; Joseph Marans, a cabaret operator, 50 years old; and Angélique Dugas, the wife of Marans, 46 years old. Marguerite Orillon and her family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, two horses, seven sheep, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. Following her death, Marguerite Orillon's estate was sold at public auction held at the front door of the parish church. Joseph LeBlanc purchased much of the property. On January 16, 1800, Paul Forest and Marguerite Orillon sold to Joseph Orillon a tract of land with frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, one league below the Ascension Parish church. This property was located between the lands o the Widow Anselme Forest and Victor Blanchard. Improvements on the said property included a house measuring twenty-two by fifteen feet. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:292-296, 571; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 42; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 83. | 1.766 | 18/03/1800 | 19/03/1800 | Ascension Parish, La. | Ascension Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.448 | Joseph | Martin | dit Barnabé | 01/01/1739 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Cyr | Ambroise Martin dit Barnabé | Married Marguerite Pitre. | Joseph (born 1765), Marguerite (born April 30, 1768), Marie (born 1771), Michel (born 1771), Pélagie (born 1775) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn and ten barrels of rice. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-three-year-old married man. He lived across the river from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Pitre, his wife, 37 years old; Joseph Martin, his son, 12 years old; Michel Martin, his son, 4 years old; Marguerite Martin, his daughter, 8 years old; Marie Martin, his daughter, 6 years old; and Pélagie Martin, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, and three horses. | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 130; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | Evidently moved with her family to Malpeque, Ile St-Jean, ca. 1742. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.449 | Marguerite | Pitre | 01/01/1740 | Married Joseph Martin. | Joseph (born 1765), Marguerite (born April 30, 1768), Marie (born 1771), Michel (born 1771), Pélagie (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Martin. In addition to her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Martin, her son, 12 years old; Michel Martin, her son, 4 years old; Marguerite Martin, her daughter, 8 years old; Marie Martin, her daughter, 6 years old; and Pélagie Martin, her daughter, 2 yeasr old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, and three horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:198; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.450 | Marie Josèphe | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Veuve Melanson | 01/01/1731 | Married Honoré Melanson, ca. 1748. | Joseph (born 1752), Marie (born 1753), Jean Baptiste (born 1756), Anastasie (born 1759), Dominique (born 1762) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Melanson family occupied a farm, encompassing six arpents of frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The household consisted of the Widow Melanson, Jean Baptiste, Marie, and Anastasie. The family owned four hogs. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-seven-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following individuals: Joseph Melanson (Melançon), her son, 17 years old; Baptiste (actually Jean Baptiste), her son, 13 years old; Dominique, her son, 7 years old; Marie, her daughter, 16 years old; and Nastazie (Anastasie), her daughter, 10 years old. Her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned three cattle, fifteen sheep, and one musket. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2554; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.451 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | dit Vieux | 01/01/1751 | Marie Josèphe Breau | Honoré Melanson | Anne Barbe Babin, daughter of Jean Baptiste Babin and Ursule Landry, at Cabannocé, October 28, 1778. | Angélina Marguerite (born 1779), Osite Barbe (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1782), Alexandre (born 1784), Joseph (born 1786), Charles (born ca. 1787) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. He appears to have been the Joseph Melanson (Melençon) sent by Commandant Louis Judice to the Attakapas District to obtain important reports. Judice reported that Melanson had arrived at the commandant's Cabannocée home with the Attakapas Dispatches and a packed of documents from Mexico, January 11, 1780. This Joseph Melanson also reported to Louis Judice that, during his journey through the Atchafalaya Basin, he had discovered along Grand River thirty to forty head of cattle that had become separated from a cattle drive en route to New Orleans. Judice assigned two men to accompany Melanson in an attempt to round up the strays, January 16, 1780. On October 13, 1781, Joseph Melanson (Melançon) dit Vieux and his wife, Anne Barbe Babin, sold to Anne Landry, the widow of René Landry, a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. He was probably the Joseph Melanson who "insulted" Commandant Louis Judice in November 1787, during the early days of a local smallpox epidemic. Around November 13, 1787, he reportedly offered to buy a local slave woman who had contracted the disease in order to have her burned alive. When Judice confronted Melanson about his alleged statement, the Acadian had the "audacity" to say that he did not intend to burn her, he intended to drown her. The commandant immediately wrote to the governor that he had been "insulted" by Melanson's attitude and impudent response, which he had made in the presence of others. Judice asked that Melanson be disciplined by the governor. On December 1, 1787, Governor Estevan Mir¢ responded, authorizing Judice to place Melanson in chains for twenty-four hours. On December 10, 1787, Judice notified that Melanson had been released and that he had apologize for his earlier actions. Joseph Melanson's estate was sold at public auction on June 30, 1807. The items in the estate suggest that he was a merchant in the twilight years of his life. The estate sale brought $2,464. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2556; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Louis Judice to the governor, January 11, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:321; Louis Judice to the Bernardo de G lvez, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, November 13, 1787, AGi, PPC, 200:586-587; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judice, December 1, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:592; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, December 10, 1787, AGi, PPC, 200:593; Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, pp. 5-7; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.452 | Marie | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1753 | Marie Josèphe Breau | Honoré Melanson | Married Pierre Broussard of the Attakapas District. | Joseph, Julien (baptized July 25, 1779), Louis (born January 15, 1782), Ludivine (sometimes Divine) (born January 8, 1786), Ursin (sometimes Ursain) (baptized May 3, 1795) | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Melanson family occupied a farm, encompassing six arpents of frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The household consisted of the Widow Melanson, Jean Baptiste, Marie, and Anastasie. The family owned four hogs. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Evidently moved to the Attakapas District with her family sometime before February 1778. | Died of dropsy. Her dead record maintains that she was thirty-six years old at the time of her death. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2554; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 127, 136, 140, 150, 563-564; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | 14/01/1797 | Attakapas District | Attakapas Church | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.453 | Jean Baptiste (often just Baptiste) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Married Osite Dupuis, May 2, 1768. | Eusèbe (born ca. May 1769), Marie (born 1772), Geneviève (born 1774) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in April 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Dupuis, his wife, 24 years old; Eusèbe, his son,4 months old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned one cow, ten hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Dupuis, his wife, 33 years old; Eusèbe (Uzèbe) Melanson, his son, 8 years old; Marie Melanson, his daughter, 5 years old; and Geneviève Melanson, his wife, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that they owned no livestock or slaves. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.454 | Anastasie | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1759 | Marie Josèphe Breau | Honoré Melanson | Married Joseph Babin, son of Dominique Babin and Marguerite Boudrot, at the Attakapas church, February 20, 1778. | Adelaide (baptized May 9, 1779), Alexandre (born October 25, 1792, Joseph (born September 22,1783), Julien (born September 21,1786), Louise Céleste (born February 25, 1795, unidentified daughter (born August 18, 1799). | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Melanson family occupied a farm, encompassing six arpents of frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The household consisted of the Widow Melanson, Jean Baptiste, Marie, and Anastasie. The family owned four hogs. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Moved with her family to the Attakapas District sometime before February 1778. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2554; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 561-562; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 125-126; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | 25/05/1828 | 26/05/1728 | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.455 | Jean Baptiste (Jean) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1762 | Marie Josèphe Breau | Honoré Melanson | Married Rose Lucie Doiron, daughter of Jean Baptiste Doiron and Marie Blanche Bernard, at the Attakapas church, May 23, 1789. | According to the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, the Melanson family occupied a farm, encompassing six arpents of frontage along the right bank of the Mississippi River. The household consisted of the Widow Melanson, Jean Baptiste, Marie, and Anastasie. The family owned four hogs. Moved with his family to the Attakapas District sometime before February 1778. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2554; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 249; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.456 | Pierre | Michel | 01/01/1738 | Port Royal, Nova Scotia (Acadia) | Married Marie Léger at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, March 3, 1766. | François (born 1768), Marie (born 1770), Joseph (born 1773), Colas (probably Scholastique) (born 1776) | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twelve barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-two-year-old married man. He resided one-third of a league from the home of Commandant Nicolas Verret. His name is rendered as Pierre à Michel in the January 23, 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé identifies him as Pierre à Michel. The census indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Léger, his wife, 33 years old; François Michel, his son, 9 years old; Joseph Michel, his son, 4 years old; Marie Michel, his daughter, Anastasie Dugas, 5 years old; and Colas (probably Scholastique) Michel(?), 1 year old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, ten cows, and four horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. Received a Spanish land grant, 1782. Identified as Pierre à Michel in the October 27, 1786 list. On April 24, 1787, Pierre Michel, Joseph Terriot (Theriot), Hypolite Hébert, and Charles Gaudet of St. Jacques de Cabannocé informed the governor that they had spend the previous winter working on a levee across a large unoccupied area in the center of the district. The former lack of a levee had resulted in the annual inundation of large parts of the district. Michel, Terriot, Hébert, and Gaudet complained that their work had largely been destroyed in the period of two hours by the passage of a cattle herd bound for New Orleans under the direction of drovers led by Philippe Boutté of the Attakapas District. Sold his Spanish land grant to Isaac Hays, October 18, 1804. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:205 mg; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Sketch of Several Tracts of Land Surveyed by "Andry," in T12S, R4E, South Eastern District, East of the River, Claims Section, State Land Office Records, Baton Rouge, La.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Petition, April 24, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:426. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.457 | Marie | Léger | dit La Rozette | Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Magdeleine Comeau | François Léger | Married Pierre Michel at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, Louisiana, March 3, 1766. | François (born 1768), Marie (born 1770), Joseph (born 1773), Colas (probably Scholastique) (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Michel. In addition to herself and her thirty-nine-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: François Michel, 9 years old; Joseph Michel, 4 years old; Marie Michel, 7 years old; Anastasie Dugas, 5 years old; and Colas (probably Scholastique) Michel(?), 1 year old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned two slaves, ten cows, and four horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:182; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.458 | Benonie (Bellony, Belhony, Belonny) | Mire | 01/01/1736 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Forest | Pierre Mire | Married Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson, daughter of Jacques Melanson and Marguerite Broussard. | Scholastique (born ca. July 1769), Marie Madeleine (born 1770), Félicité (born 1771), Benjamin (born 1772), Rosalie (born 1773), Jean Baptiste (born 1774) | Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Benonie Mire was the head of a household including fourteen-year-old orphan François Part. Mire owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson (Melançon), his wife, 25 years old; Scholastique (Collastie), his daughter, 3 months old; François Part, his brother-in-law, 16 years old; Marguerite Broussard, the Widow Melanson, his mother-in-law, 50 years old; Isabelle (Elizabeth) Melanson, his sister-in-law, 23 years old; and Marguerite Melanson, his sister-in-law, 21 years old. The members of this large household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, one horse, nineteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-three-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) Melanson, his wife, 33 years old; Benjamin Mire, his son, 5 years old; Jean Baptiste Mire, his son, 1 year old; Scholastique Mire, his daughter, 8 years old; Marie Mire, his daughter, 7 years old; Félicité Mire, his daughter, 7 years old; Rosalie Mire, his daughter, 4 years old; and Joseph Mire, his brother, 34 years old. Benonie (Bellony, Belhony) Mire and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, and four horses. On November 3, 1788, Pierre Part requested asked the local commandant for permission to sell a tract of land owned by his brother-in-law, Benonie (Belonie) Mire. This property had five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, it was situated between the lands of Maurice Conway and Joseph Saulnier (Saunier). | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 84. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.459 | Joseph | Part | 01/01/1738 | Acadia | Angélique Gaudin | Pierre Part | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household that included his brother Pierre and his sister Marie. The census indicates that he owned a tract of land measuring five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned ten hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor. He lived one league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret in the Cabannocé District. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558, 2565; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579-581; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.460 | Olivier | Part | 01/01/1746 | Angélique Gaudin | Pierre Part | Married Marie Dupuis, the widow of Prosper Hébert and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Dupuis and Anne Richard, January 15, 1786. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand indicates that the marriage took place on January 4, 1787.) | Joseph (married August 20, 1810) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé identifies him as the head of a household located on the left bank. He occupied a tract of land encompassing five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The census indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He owned three cows, two hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-four-year-old bachelor. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirty-five-year-old member of the household of Pierre Part, his brother, and Marguerite Melanson, his sister-in-law. The census indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned ten cows and two horses. The census indicates that he owned no slaves. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558, 2565; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50, 84. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.461 | Pierre | Part | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Angélique Gaudin | Pierre Part | Married Marguerite Melanson. | Marie Rosalie (born 1771), François (born 1773), Pierre (born 1774), Joseph (born 1775), Marguerite (born 1777), Pierre (born 1779) | Among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Joseph Part's household. The census indicates that he shared the residence with his brother Joseph and his sister Marie. He owned a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He also owned ten hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. On May 20, 1773, Pierre Part gave a deposition regarding François Croizet's insulting behavior toward a group of Acadian women returning from church in St. Jacques de Cabannocé. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Melanson (Melançon), his wife, 30 years old; François Part, his son, 4 years old; Joseph Part, his son, 3 years old; François D'Amours, an orphan, 17 years old; Marguerite Broussard, mother-in-law, 57 years old; and Olivier Part, his brother, 30 years old. Pierre Part and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. They owned no slaves. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On November 3, 1788, Pierre Part asked Commandant Louis Judice for permission to sell on behalf of his brother-in-law, Benonie Mire, a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. On March 21, 1791, Pierre Part and William Conway exchanged parcels of land. On March 16, 1793, Paul Breau complained to the governor that Pierre Part and Étienne LeBlanc, both residents of Cabannocé, had ignored the sindic's orders to improve their levees. Alarmed by the daily rise in the river's water level, Breau asked the governor to order Part and LeBlanc, who were evidently absentee landowners, to report to their properties immediately and to make the necessary repairs. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558, 2565; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579-581; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Deposition of Pierre Part, May 20, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:169; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Paul Braux to the governor, March 16,1793, AGI, PPC, 208:233; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 84. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.462 | Marie | Part | soeur | 01/01/1751 | Angélique Gaudin | Pierre Part | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Joseph Part's household on the left bank of the Mississippi River. She shared the residence with her brothers Joseph and Pierre, and she lived next door to yet another brother, François Part. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558, 2565; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579-580. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.463 | François | Part | 01/01/1752 | along the St. John River, in present-day New Brunswick | Angélique Gaudin | Pierre Part | Married Anne Marie Bergeron, widow of Pierre Hébert, at Cabannocé, August 7, 1775. | Marie Madeleine (born 1776), Constance (born 1778) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé identifies his as an orphan residing with his brother-in-law Benonie Mire, whose household was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River. He lived next door to two of his brothers (Joseph and Pierre) and his sister Marie. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of the household of his brother-in-law, Benonie (Bellony) Mire, and Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Bergeron, his wife, 27 years old; Rosalie Part, his daughter, 6 years old; and Isidore D'Amours, an orphan, 13 years old. François Part and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned seven cows and two horses. The census indicates that they owned no slaves. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558, 2565; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:579. | 1.766 | 22/02/1795 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.464 | Isabelle | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Married Charles Pellerin. | Marie (baptized January 11, 1766) | Identified in the records of St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church of St. Martinville, La., as the mother of Marie Pellerin, who was baptized on January 11, 1766. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 615. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.465 | Marie | Pellerin | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Thibodeau | Charles Pellerin | Baptized at the age of four months. Simon LeBlanc and Marguerite Martin served as her baptismal sponsors. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 615. | Sat, Jan 11, 1766 | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.466 | Catherine (Françoise) | Pitre | Agathe Doucet | Pierre Pitre | Married (1) Maurice Albert. Married (2) François Joubert. | First marriage: Hélène (baptized April 3, 1776) Second marriage: Isabelle (baptized August 17, 1779), Jean Baptiste (born April 9, 1776), François (baptized December 27, 1781, at the age of 8 months) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 443-444; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2566; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:8. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.467 | Joseph | Poirier | 01/01/1746 | Married Anne (Marie) Bourgeois. | Pierre (born 1767), Louis (born 1769), Marie (born 1771), Marguerite (born 1773) | Possibly among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor. He resided 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Co-Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie (Anne) Bourgeois, his wife, 27 years old; Pierre Poirier, his son, 10 years old; Louis Poirier, 8 years old; Marie Poirier, his daughter, 6 years old; and Marguerite Poirier, his daughter, 4 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.468 | Marie | Bourgeois | Married Pierre Doiron | Olivier, Marguerite | 77-04/15 | AGI, PPC 190. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.469 | Basile (Bazile, Bazille) | Préjean | 01/01/1744 | Shepody, Acadia | Louise (Marie Louise) Comeau | Joseph Préjean | Married Marie Josèphe Gaudin dit Lincour, ca. 1768. | Éléonore (born 1771; married October 21, 1793); Louis (born January 30, 1773; baptized April 11, 1773), Marguerite (born ca. 1775); Antoine Céleste (born September 23, 1777); Emilie Anne (born February 2, 1780) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the occupant of a farm measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Lincourt (Lincour), his wife, 25 years old; Eusèbe Arseneau, his stepson, 7 years old; and Pierre Arseneau, his stepson, 5 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned six cattle and four horses. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a twenty-four-year-old married man. He complained vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. On December 4, 1771, Louis Judice, commandant of Assumption Parish, filed a formal complaint with the governor about Basile Préjean's unruly behavior regarding François Verret, Judice's relative by marriage and Préjean's neighbor. In early November 1771, Judice had issued an order that, because recent flooding had delayed planting and thus the harvest, no one in the district was permitted to allow their livestock to forage freely until after December 25 to insure that all of the crops had been gathered. In early December, however, Basile Préjean had released his hogs, which caused considerable damage to the corn crop in François Verret's neighboring fields. Préjean had released his hogs to forage despite the commandant's ban and Verret's repeated warnings. Judice consequently upbraided Préjean, but to no avail. Verret soon grew tired of seeing Préjean's hogs in his corn fields, so he enclosed them in a corral and informed Préjean that he expected reimbursement for the damages caused by the hogs. Enraged by Verret's actions, Basile Préjean and his brothers released the hogs from the corral. Basile Préjean then assailed Verret with a "thousand insults" and called his neighbor out into the road to settle the matter. Verret, who appears to have declined the invitation, instead carried a personal complaint to the governor, ca. December 4, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Lincour, his wife, 32 years old; Louis Préjean, his son, 3 years old; Léonnore Préjean, his daughter, 6 years old; Marguerite Préjean, his daughter, 2 years old; Eusèbe Arseneau, his stepson, 15 years old; and Pierre Arseneau, his stepson, 13 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eleven cows, four horses, eight sheep, ten hogs, and two firearms. They owned no slaves. Commandant Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a neighbor had accused Basile Préjean of disturbing the peace. According to the complaint, Préjean had "fought with a settler." When Judice summoned Préjean to answer the charges, the Acadian "had the audacity to strike that settler with a blow to the stomach" in the commandant's quarters. Judice asked that the governor make an example of Préjean, "to show to the Acadians that they must never strike anyone again, much less in from of their betters." On March 2, 1774, Governor Unzaga notified Judice that he had sentenced Préjean to three days imprisonment. Identified by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet as a great musician ("grand joueur de violon and clarinette"). The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of first corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. Around October 16, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice summoned Basile Préjean to his residence to answer questions submitted by the colonial government regarding the activities of Préjean's brother Joseph. Joseph Préjean had been exiled to France and had subsequently become a successful pirate operating out of Martinique. Evidently unbeknownst to the colonial administrators, Joseph Préjean had been killed in action against an English frigate around 1775. Sometime before February 1, 1787, Basile Préjean complained to Governor Estevan Mir¢ that Commandant Louis Judice had not paid him for his work as an auctioneer at "two or three auctions." Around March 11, 1787, Basile Préjean's wife filed a formal complaint with the governor about the local commandant's failure to pay back wages for Préjean's services as auctioneer. On March 11, 1787, Commandant Louis Judice acknowledged that he had employed Préjean on numerous occasions as an auctioneer (evidently at estate sales), but he insisted that Préjean actually owed Judice money because of purchases the Acadian had made at the sales. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. Around September 21, 1788, Basile Préjean accused Louis Mollère and Joseph Mollère of stealing cypress timber from his property. Around November 29, 1788, Commandant Louis Judice, responding to gubernatorial orders issued on November 29, 1788, conducted a formal investigation into Préjean's charges against the Mollère brothers. All of the witnesses interviewed by Judice corroborated Préjean's account. Judice then interviewed the Mollères who could offer in their defense only the charge that the local Acadians "did not like the Mollères or the Frenchmen who had settled in their vicinity." After the interviews, Judice recommended that the matter be settled by arbitration. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On March 3, 1795, Basile Préjean filed a formal complaint with Commandant Louis Judice about Michel Brousssard. According to the the complainant, Broussard, an Attakapas District resident, had borrowed Préjean's pirogue on July 8, 1794, for a trip to New Orleans. Préjean had subsequently seen Broussard pass his house on numerous occasions, but Broussard had never stopped to return the vessel. Préjean asked that Judice contact the Attakapas District commandant about the matter. Judice addressed a letter to the Attakapas commandant on Préjean's behalf on March 3, 1795. Around February 11, 1796, Basile Préjean filed a complaint with Commandant Louis Judice, noting that Michel Brousssard had "grievously insulted him," evidently by calling him a "coquin" (a rascal, rogue, or scoundrel). On February 11, 1796, Louis Judice wrote a letter to the governor at Préjean's request, indicating that Préjean would be traveling to New Orleans to appear personally before the governor's tribunal in a quest for satisfaction. Judice noted that, throughout the thirty years in which Préjean had lived in his jurisdiction, the Acadian "had always conducted himself as an honest man." An official inquiry subsequently ordered by the governor determined that Préjean had filed false charges against Broussard. The governor ordered Broussard to pay a fine of thirty piastres on April 12, 1796. The fine was to be paid to Broussard. | His burial record indicates that he was ninety years of age at the time of his death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2571; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:607-608; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, November 8, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:129; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, December 4, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:278; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, February 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:535; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Judice, March 2, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:536; Alexandre DeClouet to Estevan Mir¢, October 8, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:237; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Louis Judice to the governor, October 16, 1785, AGI, PPC, 188A 4:8/7; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judice, February 1, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:497; Louis Judice to the governor, March 11, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:511; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, September 21, 1788, AGI, PPC, 218:177-178; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, November 29, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:6520-653vo; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, November 29, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:651; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Petition from Basile Préjean to Louis Judice, March 3, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264; Louis Judice to the Attakapas District commandant, March 3, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264; Basile Préjean v. Michel Broussard, October 8, 1795, AGI, PPC, 33:264vo; Governor to Louis Judice, April 12, 1796, AGI, PPC, 212A:446-447; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 87. | 1.766 | 05/01/1823 | 06/01/1823 | Ascension Parish, La. | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||
1.470 | Agnès | Hébert | dit Manuel | Married Joseph Richard, November 28, 1766. | Served as a baptismal sponsor for Marie Rose Arosteguy at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, August 17, 1765. A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. | Died sometime before her widowed husband's marriage to Claire Marie Martin, the widow of Barthélemy Gaudin, at Ascensio Parish, August 24, 1772. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:622; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:7; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.471 | Louis | RICHARD | The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included to males of unspecified ages and one woman. He and his family owned fifty cows, twelve horses, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including two boys under the age of fifteen years, one girl under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. The family owned no slaves. Richard and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.472 | Marguerite | Dugas | 77-05/11 | OP77/Dev #108 | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.473 | Fabien | Richard | Marguerite Dugas | Pierre Richard | Married Françoise Thibodeau, daughter of Pierre Thibodeau and Françoise Saulnier (Sonnier), at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. The marriage was witnessed by Victor Richard, Joseph Granger, and Joseph Cormier. Father Ange de Revillagodos performed the marriage ceremony. | Unidentified boy (buried April 30,1799), François (baptized October 25, 1796), Françoise (baptized April 6, 1780, at the age of 2 months), Jean (born May 14, 1782), Joseph (baptized April 1, 1792), Justine (baptized June 29, 1798), Marie Angélique (born April 14, 1786), Pierre Cyrille (Cirille) (born February 20, 1788) | He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three males of unspecified ages, one woman, and three girls. He and his family owned eighty cows, fourteen horses, and a tract of land with twenty arpents frontage. They owned no slaves. The census indicates that Richard and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, Richard was the head of a household that included four boys under the age of fifteen years, three girls under the age of fifteen years, one man fifteen years of age or older, and one woman fifteen years of age or older. The members owned no slaves. Richard and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 657-667; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.474 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. | PPC 190/CAB77; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.475 | Anastasie | Dugas | Veuve Robicheau | 01/01/1739 | Married (1) Amable (Aimable) Robichaud, son of Joseph Robichaud and Marie Forest, ca. 1760. Married (2) Joseph Caissy dit Roger. | First marriage: Henri (born 1761), Jean Baptiste (born 1763), Marie (born 1764), Louis (born 1768)Second marriage: François (a twin, born 1772), Georges (Grégoire?), (born May 30, 1774), Joseph (a twin, born 1772; married 1796), Marie Anastasie (baptized January 6, 1771), Rosalie (born in either September or November 11, 1777) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she and her family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Her household included her sons Henri and Jean Baptiste and her daughter Marie. The census also indicates that the family owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-one-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Henry Robichaud, her son, 8 years old; Jean Baptiste, her son, 6 years old; Louise Eusèbe, her son, 2 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 2 cows, eight hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Joseph Caissy dit Roger. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.476 | Henry (Henri) | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1760 | Anastasie Dugas | Amable (Aimable) Robichaud | Married Marie Madeleine (Magdeleine) LeBlanc, daughter of Étienne LeBlanc and Isabelle Boudrot, September 8, 1787. Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand indicates that she was the widow of Joseph Landry dit Dios. | Étienne (born 1788) | The April 9, 1766, census indicates that he was a six-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household, located on the right bank of the Cabannocé District. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Joseph Caissy dit Roger, his stepfather, and Anastasie Dugas, his mother. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Henry Robicho in the 1779 militia list. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2582; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 63, 90. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.477 | Jean Baptiste | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1762 | Anastasie Dugas | Amable (Aimable) Robichaud | Married Marthe LeBlanc, daughter of Étienne LeBlanc and Isabelle Boudrot, August 28, 1787. | Jean Baptiste 1788 | The April 9, 1766, census indicates that he was a four-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household, located on the right bank of the Cabannocé District. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Joseph Caissy dit Roger, his stepfather, and Anastasie Dugas, his mother. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On September 21, 1794, Jean Baptiste Robichaud sold to William Hatkinson a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, between the properties of Joseph Caissy (Quéssy) dit Roger and François Dugas. Improvements on the property sold by Robichaud included a small house of sur sol construction. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2582; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.478 | Marie | Robichaud (Robicheau) | 01/01/1764 | Anastasie Dugas | Amable (Aimable) Robichaud | The April 9, 1766, census indicates that she was a two-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household, located on the right bank of the Cabannocé District. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a two-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was a seven-year-old member of the household of Joseph Caissy dit Roger, her stepfather, and Anastasie Dugas, her mother. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.479 | Joseph | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1739 | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Madeleine Haché Gallant | Pierre Saulnier | Married (1) Marie Landry, November 6, 1767. Married (2) Marie Thibodeau, ca. 1778. | First marriage: Marguerite (born 1768), Ludivine (born 1771), Donat (born 1773) Second marriage: Marie (born 1780), Joseph (born 1781), Marie Madeleine (born 1782), Jean Baptiste (born 1785), Céleste (born 1788), Alexandre (born 1790), Cyrille (born 1795), Marie (born 1797) | Identified in the April 4, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Judice's militia district. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 40 years old; Marguerite Saulnier, his daughter, 1 year old; Magdeleine (Madeleine) Granger, his stepdaughter, 12 years old; and Agnaise Daigre (Daigle), a cousin, 17 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-four-year-old married man. He lived 2 1/4 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. Saulnier and his family moved to the Attakapas District sometime before 1803. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was a fifty-year-old widower and the head of a household including the following persons: Joseph Saulnier (Sonnier), fils,22 years old; Pierre Saulnier (Sonnier), 19 years old; Baptiste Saulnier (Sonnier), 17 years old; Alexandre Saulnier (Sonnier), 14 years old; Marie Saulnier (Sonnier) (actually Thibodeau), 40 years old; Marie Saulnier (Sonnier), jeune, 21 years old; Magdelaine Saulnier (Sonnier), 22 years old; and Céleste (Doralise) Saulnier (Sonnier), 16 years old. Joseph Saulnier, père, and his family occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They owned 400 semi-wild beef cattle and 40 tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2586; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie, Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.480 | Anne | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | Veuve Babin | 01/01/1741 | Madeleine Haché Gallant | Pierre Saulnier | Married (1) Joseph Babin. Married (2) Michel Cormier. | First marriage: Four children, including Lise Marie Josèphe (Elise, Lizette) (born ca. 1761), Marie (born 1764) | Identified in the 1766 census of Cabannocé as a member of the household of her brother Joseph Saulnier. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. By 1773, she and her husband were residents of the Opelousas District. Her succession was opened on January 7, 1773. | Her succession is dated January 7, 1773. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:52, 72-81; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 26, 719; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 1; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.481 | Lise (Elise) | Babin | 01/01/1763 | Anne Saulnier | Joseph Babin | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2586; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:52, 72-81. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.482 | Marie Elmire | Babin | 01/01/1764 | Anne Saulnier | Basile Babin | Married Jean Baptiste Bergeron, son of Jean Baptiste Bergeron and Catherine Caissy, at Cabannocé, June 1, 1778. | Marie Françoise Julienne (baptized July 13, 1779), Henriette (January 26, 1781), Genevieve (born ca. 1781), Jean Pierre (born February 20, 1787), Constance (born November 3, 1788), Edouard (born December 4, 1792), Clemence, Eloise Carmelite (born January 4, 1798), Arthemise (Artemise) (born April 6, 1800), François Maximilien (born August 20, 1802), Drosin (Drausin) (born March 5, 1809) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a two-year-old child residing with her widowed mother in Joseph Saulnier's household. The census indicates that the household occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old orphan in the household of widower Joseph Saulnier. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2586; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:52, 72-81; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Jean Baptiste Bergeron and Marie Elmire Babin." | 1.766 | 15/09/1832 | Thibodaux, Lafourche Parish, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.483 | Jean | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1763 | Judith Arseneau | Charles Savoie | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a three-year-old child living in Charles Savoie's household on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.484 | Jean | Savoie (Savoir, Savoy) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a nineteen-year-old bachelor. He lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Co-Commandant Nicolas Verret. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a houeshold that included four unidentified males of unspecified ages, one woman, and four girls. He and his family owned four slaves. They also owned twenty-four cows, twenty horses, and they occupied a tract of land with thirteen arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included three boys under the age of fifteen years, three girls under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and three females fifteen years of age or older. Savoie (Savoy) and his family owned four slave boys under the age of fifteen years, one slave girl under the age of fifteen years, and one slave woman fifteen years of age or older. The 1796 census indicates that his household was located in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.485 | Françoise | Melanson (Melançon) | Veuve Jos. Terriot (Theriot) | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Blanchard | Pierre Melanson | Married Joseph Terriot. | Alexis (born 1726), Joseph (born ca. 1730), Étienne (born 1731), Marie Josèphe Françoise (born 1733), Jacques (born 1737), Marguerite Suzanne (born 1740), Thomas (born 1745), Ambroise (born 1748), Paul (born 1751), Xavier (born 1754) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including her sons Thomas, Ambroise, Paul, and Xavier. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:110; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.486 | Thomas | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1745 | Acadia | Françoise Melanson | Joseph Terriot | Married Anne (Agnès) Daigle. | César (Cézar) (born 1772), Hubert (born 1774), François (born ca. June 1776), Charles (married June 25, 1805) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 5 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Paul Terriot (Theriot), his brother, 18 years old; and François Terriot (Theriot), 16 years old. He and his siblings occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cows, nine hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he wa a twenty-five-year-old bachelor. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that Thomas Terriot was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Daigle, his wife, 25 years old; César Terriot, his son, 5 years old; Hubert Terriot, his son, 3 years old; and François Terriot, his son, 10 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 96. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.487 | Ambroise | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Françoise Melanson | Joseph Terriot (Theriot) | Married Elisabeth Henry, daughter of Jean Henry and Marie Pitre, at the Pointe Coupée post, December 30, 1788. The marriage record was witnessed by Maximilien Henry and Jean Henry. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. The census indicates that he owned a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He owned two cows, nine hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. His home was located 2 3/4 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-seven-year-old member of a household of three bachelors, including, besides himself, Xavier Terriot and Jean Baptiste Adant (Avant?). He owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned four cows. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-seven years of age at the time of his death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:687. | 1.766 | 27/08/1794 | St. Joseph Catholic Church, Baton Rouge, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.488 | Paul (Hypolite) | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1753 | Cobequid, Acadia | Françoise Melanson (Melançon) | Joseph Terriot | Married Françoise (Françoise Gertrude) Guillot, the widow of Félix Boudrot, on May 22, 1787. His bride's surname is mistakenly rendered as Melanson in the marriage record. | Joseph (born March 28, 1788), Suzanne (born ca. 1790), Paul [I] (born May 10, 1792), Julien (born ca. March 1795), Martin (born ca. 1797), Marie Marthe (born January 28, 1800), Paul [II] (born November 15, 1802), Charles Raphael (born January 1, 1808) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old child residing in his widowed mother's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of the household including the following persons: Thomas Terriot (Theriot), his brother, 25 years old; and François Terriot (Theriot), his brother, 16 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cows, nine hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. He lived 2 3./4 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. The inventory of his estate, compiled on May 19, 1817, includes the following property: a tract of land measuring three arpents width by forth arpents depth, bounded above by the land of Auguste Bijeau and below by the property of Michel Cormier; a second tract of land with the same dimensions; a sixty-year-old slave named Penny, who was appraised at $50; an old loom; and assorted livestock. The estate, valued at $1,148.50, was sold to Françoise Guillot, Terriot's widow. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594-2596; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:535, 691-692; Glenn R. Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, 1804-1818, 2, pt. 2, p. 157; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record." | Fri, Jan 1, 1751 | 1.766 | 19/12/1816 | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.489 | François Xavier (Xavier) | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1758 | Françoise Melanson | Joseph Terriot | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Ambroise Terriot (Theriot), 27 years old; and Jean Baptiste Adant (Avant?), 36 years old. Xavier Terriot owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He also owned four cows. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.490 | Joseph | Terriot (Terriau, Theriot) | 01/01/1731 | Acadia | Married Magdeleine (Madeleine) Bourgeois. | Rosalie (born 1759; married May 4, 1778), Marie (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767; married July 26, 1789), Joseph (born 1769; married February 27, 1797), Charles (baptized 1771), Jean (Fulgence) (born 1773; baptized September 5, 1773), Marie Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) (baptized January 6, 1776) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only two rations. Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the 1766 census of Cabannocé. Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a thirty-two-year-old married man, and a native of Acadia. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) Bourgeois, Pierre Terriot, his son, 10 years old; Joseph Terriot, his son, 8 years old; Jean Terriot, his son, 4 years old; Rosalie Terriot, his daughter, 18 years old; Marie Terriot, his daughter, 13 years old; Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) Terriot, his daughter, 1 year old; and Paul Doucet, a hired hand, 33 years old. Joseph Terriot and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-four cows, and six horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On April 24, 1787, Pierre Michel, Joseph Terriot (Theriot), Hypolite Hébert, and Charles Gaudet of St. Jacques de Cabannocé informed the governor that they had spend the previous winter working on a levee across a large unoccupied area in the center of the district. The former lack of a levee had resulted in the annual inundation of large parts of the district. Michel, Terriot, Hébert, and Gaudet complained that their work had largely been destroyed in the period of two hours by the passage of a cattle herd bound for New Orleans under the direction of drovers led by Philippe Boutté of the Attakapas District. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Petition, April 24, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:426; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.491 | Medeleine (Magdelaine) | Bourgeois | 01/01/1740 | Married Joseph Terriot (Theriot). | Marie Rose (Rosalie) (born 1759; married May 4, 1778), Marie (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767; married July 26, 1789), Joseph (born 1769; married February 27, 1797), Charles (baptized 1771), Jean (Fulgence) (born 1773; baptized September 5, 1773), Marie Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) (baptized January 6, 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Terriot. In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old husband, her houshold included the following persons: Pierre Terriot, her son, 10 years old; Joseph Terriot, her son, 8 years old; Jean Terriot, her son, 4 years old; Rosalie Terriot, her daughter, 18 years old; Marie Terriot, her daughter, 13 years old; Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) Terriot, her daughter, 1 year old; and Paul Doucet, a hired hand, 33 years old. Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) Bourgeois and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-four cows, and six horses. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:688; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.492 | Rozalie (Rosalie) | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1759 | Magdeleine Bourgeois | Joseph Terriot (Theriot) | Married Mathurin LeBlanc, son of Étienne LeBlanc and Elizabeth Boudrot, at Cabannocé, May 5, 1778. | Marie Rose (born 1785), Marie Farcile (married July 6, 1807) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 72-73. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.493 | Baptiste | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.494 | Charles | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). He appears to be the Charles Thibodeau listed as a fusilier in the June 20, 1774, muster roll of the Attakapas District. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.495 | Jean Baptiste | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor. He resided three-fourths of a league from Commandant Nicolas Verret's home. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.496 | Magdelaine | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.497 | Françoise | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | Married Pierre Thibodeau. | Adelaide, Anne Marie (married [2] July 20, 1789), Françoise (married January 10, 1779), Marie Josèphe, Pierre Cyrille (born August 29, 1776) | Died sometime before June 23, 1790, when her husband's succession was filed. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 743-759. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.498 | Françoise | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Françoise Saulnier | Pierre Thibodeau | Married Fabien Richard, a resident of the Opelousas District and the son of Pierre Richard and Marguerite Dugas, at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 748. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.499 | Pierre (2) | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Identified as a resident of Verret's militia district in the April 8, 1766, census of Cabannocé. | Census of Cabannocé, 1766, AGI, ASD, 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.500 | Anne Marie (Marie) | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Veuve | Married Timothé (Thimothée) Guénard. | Identified as a resident of the Opelousas district in the April 25, 1766, census. | Census of the Opelousas District, April 4, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.501 | Jean (Jean Charles) | Trahan | Identified in the April 25, 1766, census of the Attakapas District as a resident of the pioneer community at La Pointe (the area around present-day Breaux Bridge, La.). Trahan participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned fifteen cows and four horses or mules. | Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, Audiencia de Santo Domingo, legajo 2595; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.502 | Magdelaine (Magdeleine, Madeleine) | Trahan | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Broussard | Jean Trahan | Married Joseph Pepin Hébert, a native of Acadia and the son of Belloni Hébert and Jeanne Savoie, at the Attakapas church, April 25, 1771. | Adélaïde (born May 2, 1774), Agricole (born October 8, 1776), Célestin (baptized May 9, 1779), François (born April 27, 1784), Joseph (born March 25, 1772), Julie (born November 6, 1786), Louis (born May 10,1789), Marie Magdalene (born January 1, 1782) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to her father, who was a widower when the census was compiled, the household included her brother Germain and her sister Marguerite. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 761-776. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.503 | Germain | Trahan (Trahant) | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Broussard | Jean Trahan | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Marthe Castille, a native of maryland and the daughter of Joseph Castille and Osite (Rosette) Landry, at the Attakapas post, February 4, 1781. | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his father's household. The household included his father (a widower), and his sisters Magdeleine and Marguerite). The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Germain Trahant in the July 10, 1777 list. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 760-777; Conover, Trahan, 48; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; . | 1.765 | 22/08/1784 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.504 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Brousssard | Jean Trahan | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to her father, who was a widower at the time of the census, the household included her brother Germain and her sister Magdeleine. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Conover, Trahan, 48; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.766 | 09/07/1832 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.505 | Marguerite | Bergeron | 01/01/1762 | Isabelle Arseneau | Charles Bergeron | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that the Bergeron family resided on a farmstead measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The family owned one hog and one firearm. She was evidently the Marguerite Bergeron who was identified in the 1771 census of Cabannocé as a six-year-old orphan in the household of Simon LeBlanc and Anne Arseneau. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.506 | Barbe | Gaudin (Godin) | 01/01/1761 | Théotiste Thibodeau | Bonaventure Gaudin (Godin) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she and her mother resided with the family of Jean Baptiste Bergeron on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.507 | Madeleine (Magdeleine, Magdelaine, Marie Magdeleine) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1743 | Married Simon Gauterot. | Louis (born ca. January 1766), Jean Baptiste (born 1768), Charles (born 1770; married January 26, 1818), Simon (born 1772), Marie Madeleine (born 1774), Amand (born 1778), Joseph (married August 12, 1805) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with her husband and son Louis on the family farm on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Simon Gauterot. In addition to her husband, her household included Louis, her son, 3 years old; and Jean Baptiste, her son, 18 months old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine cattle, fourteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Simon Gauterot. In addition to her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Louis Gauterot, her son, 11 years old; Jean Baptiste Gauterot, her son, 7 years old; Simon Gauterot, her son, 5 years old; and Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) Gauterot, her daughter, 1 year old. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 45. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.508 | Paul | Duon (Duhon) | 01/01/1752 | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an orphan residing with Claude Duon and his wife, Marie Vincent. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.509 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1746 | Married Marie (Marie Anne) Roy, daughter of Abraham Roy and Anne Auboi (Houboi), at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, May 23, 1773. | Rosalie (baptized March 13, 1774), Jean Baptiste (baptized August 25, 1776), Marie Marguerite (baptized October 25, 1778), Félicité (baptized June 30, 1789), Jean Espiritu (born July 5, 1791) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old settler occupying a parcel of land measuring four arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. His neighbors included Jean Duon and Honoré Duon. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from the Cabannocé residence of Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that also included Marie Roy, his seventeen-year-old wife, Jean Baptiste Saulnier, his four-year-old son, and Rosalie Saulnier, his three-year-old daughter. He appears with his wife and son Jean in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District, but their ages are consistently underestimated by ten to fifteen years. The 1789 census of the left bank of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included Marie Roy (Abraham), his twenty-three-year-old (sic) wife, and Jean, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-eight barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:678-679. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.510 | Marie | Vincent | 01/01/1713 | Married Honoré Duon (Duhon). | Marie Josèphe ((born 1744), Perpétue (born 1745), Jean Baptiste (born 1747), François (born 1749), Marie (born 1749), Pierre (born ca. 1750) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she resided with her husband Honoré Duon and three of her children (Jean, François, and Anne Perpetué) on the family farm on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-six-year-old member of a household that included the following persons: Honoré Duhon, her husband, 54 years old; and Perpétue, her daughter, 24 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned nine hogs and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the fifty-seven-year-old wife of Honoré Duon (Duhon). Her household included her fifty-five-year-old spouse of Perpétue Duon, her twenty-six-year-old daughter. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the sixty-four-year-old spouse of Honoré Duon. She and her husband were members of the household of Jean Duon, her son, and Anne LeBlanc, her daughter-in-law. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.511 | Mathurin | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Acadia | Élizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc | Abraham Landry | Married (1) Marie Babin ca. 1763. Marie Babin died in the Attakapas district on July 28, 1765. Married (2) Anne Landry, ca. 1768. | First marriage: Louise Divine (Ludivine) (married October 5, 1778), Marie (born 1762), Marcel (born 1766) Second marriage: Anne Marie (born ca. January 1769), Isabelle (Élizabeth) Sophie (born 1771), Anastasie Rosalie (born 1773), Joseph (born 1775), Marie Louise (born 1776) | He appears to have been the Mathurin Landry identified in the April 9, 1766, census as a head of household in the Cabannocé District. He was the only member of his household. The census also indicates that he occupied a six-arpent tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm in 1766. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. According to the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez, his household included himself, his wife, his daughter Marie, his son Marcel, and twenty-year-old orphan Marguerite Breau (Braud). Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Served as one of the delegates elected by the San Luís de Natchez Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included Anne Landry, his thirty-three-year-old spouse, and Marie, his eight-month-old daughter. The members of the household occupied a tract of land with six-arpents frontage. They owned two cows, twenty-five hogs, and one musket. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly subsequently approved the request. (Note: Landry and his family had already relocated without permission.) Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included Anne Landry, his wife, 34 years old; Marie Landry, his daughter, 1 1/2 years old; and Michel Dugas, his stepson, 14 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a fifty-six-yer-old (actually thirty-six-year-old) married man. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 41 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 2 years old; Marie Landry, his daughter, 8 years old; Isabelle Landry, his daughter, 6 years old; Anastasie Landry, his daughter, 4 years old; Marie Louise Landry, his daughter, 1 year old; Barbe Babin, his sister-in-law by virtue of his first marriage, 19 years old. Mathurin Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-eight cows, two horses, ten sheep, twenty-five hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as a contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. He held the rank of sergeant in the Lafourche district militia, 1798. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Jehn, Acadian Descendants, 1 (1972): 118; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 149; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769092801; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2527; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 245; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23, 55, 63, 64. | 1.765 | Abraham Landry and Marie Guilbeau | Charles LeBlanc and Marie Gauterot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.512 | Michel | Bourgeois | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Married (1) Marie LeBlanc(?). Married (2) Rose (often rendered Osite) Gauterot (Gautherau) at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, May 20, 1767. The second marriage was witnessed by the Chevalier Louvigny. (One source, dated 1768, mistakenly indicates that he married Osite Landry.) | Paul (born 1769), Marguerite (born 1775), Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) (born 1775) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he receved only two-thirds of a full ration. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a thirty-four-year-old married man, and a native of Acadia. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Osite Gauterot, his wife, 42 years old; Paul Bourgeois, his son, 8 years old; Marguerite Bourgeois, his daughter, 2 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine), his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi RIver. They also owned two slaves, fifteen cows, and two horses. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:66; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.513 | Joseph | Bourgeois | 01/01/1736 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Brun | Paul Bourgeois | Married Marie Girouard (Giroire), daughter of Laurent Girouard (Giroire) and Madeleine Vincent, at Ristigouche, November 5, 1759. Because of the ages of both his wife and his daughter Marie in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé, it appears that there was an earlier marriage. | Marie (born 1752), Scholastique (born 1770), Céleste (baptized October 22, 1774), Simon (married October 24, 1803) | At Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, November 1759. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that three memers of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received rations for only two persons. | Received from New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent a receipt for 1,681.08 livres in Canadian paper money sent to Bordeaux on behalf of the Louisiana Acadians for possible redemption by the French crown. (The attempt was evidently unsuccessful.) Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife, Marie Girouard (28 years of age) and his daughter Marie (14 years of age). The family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Joseph Bourgeois owned one sheep and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Girouard, his wife, 32 years old; and Marie Broussard, an orphan, 2 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned seven cows, two horses, twenty-five hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a thirty-three-year-old married man. He resided three-fourths of a league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. Bourgeois served as the local churchwarden, ca. February 16, 1776. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Girouard (Giroire), his wife, 40 years old; Scholastique (Scolastie) Bourgeois, his daughter, 7 years old; Céleste Bourgeois, his daughter, 2 years old; Marie Broussard, an orphan, 10 years old; and Jean Rabier, an orphan, 13 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and four horses. On October 29, 1784, he joined with four other Acadian leaders in denouncing the tyranny of the local curé. In the October 29, 1784, memorandum, Bourgeois is identified as the local church warden. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 55; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1763. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:130-139; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Cantrelle to Unzaga, February 16, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:316vo; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Jean Doucet, Jean Richard, Pierre Arseneau, Philippe La Chaussée, and Joseph Bourgeois to Governor Estevan Mir¢, October 29, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:271-272; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.514 | Marie | Bourgeois | 01/01/1752 | Joseph Bourgeois | Her father's dealings with New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. She is listed as the fourteen-year-old daughter of Joseph Bourgeois in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé. The census indicates that she and her family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1763. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:130-139. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.515 | Michel | Bourgeois | 01/01/1745 | La Pointe de Beauséjour, Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Brun (one source indicates that her surname was LeBlanc) | Paul Bourgeois | Married (1) Osite Landry. Married (2) Anne Landry, a native of Pisiquid, Acadia, and the daughter of Charles Landry and Marie LeBlanc, May 2, 1768. | Second marriage: Louis (ca. 1769), Sophie (born 1770), Angélique (born 1771), Victoire (born 1773), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Marie Anne (baptized April 14, 1776) | He and his family appear to have been among the prisoners of war imprisoned at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a single-person household on the left bank of the Mississippi RIver. The census indicates he owned no real estate, but possessed one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-six-year-old wife, Osite Landry. The couple occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cows, one horse, eighteen hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-nine-year-old married man. He lived one-half league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 33 years old; Jean Baptiste Bourgeois, his son, 2 years old; Sophie (Soffie) Bourgeois, seven years old; Angélique Bourgeois, his daughter, 5 years old; and Victoire Bourgeois, his daughter, 4 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi RIver. They also owned one slave, fourteen cows, and two horses. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:66; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434-2435; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:130-139; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.516 | Marie Magdelaine | Girouard (Giroire) | 01/01/1738 | Madeleine Vincent | Laurent Girouard | Married Joseph Bourgeois at Ristigouche, November 5, 1759. | Scholastique (born 1770), Céleste (baptized October 22, 1774), Simon (married October 24, 1803) | Her husband's dealings with New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent indicate that the family arrived in Louisiana in 1765. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was a twenty-eight-year-old member of her husband's household. The census indicates the presence in the household of a fourteen-year-old daughter named Marie, whose age suggests an earlier marriage by her husband. The family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Bourgeois. Her household included her thirty-three-year-old husband and two-year-old orphan Marie Broussard. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned seven cows, two horses, twenty-five hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Joseph Bourgeois. In addition to her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Scholastique (Scholastie) Bourgeois, her daughter, 7 years old; Céleste Bourgeois, her daughter, 2 years old; Marie Broussard, an orphan, 10 years old; and Jean Rabier, an orphan, 13 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and four horses. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 55; Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1763. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:130-139; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.517 | Paul | Bourgeois | 01/01/1732 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Brun | Paul Bourgeois | Married Rosalie LeBlanc. | Magdeleine (born 1767), Marie (born 1771), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Joseph (born 1774), Rosalie (born 1776), Constance (born 1778) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Paul Bourgeois's household included himself and his twenty-one-year-old wife Rosalie LeBlanc. The family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census indicates that they owned one sheep and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie LeBlanc, his wife, 25 years old; Magdeleine, his daughter, 2 years old. The members of his family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. The family owned four cows and fifteen hogs. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty-five barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-nine-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie (Rozalie) LeBlanc, his wife, 31 years old; Jean Baptiste Bourgeois, his son, 4 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, his son, 4 years old; Magdeleine Bourgeois, his daughter, 10 years old; Marie Bourgeois, his daughter, 6 years old; and Rosalie Bourgeois, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and three horses. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.518 | Rosalie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1745 | Married Paul Bourgeois. | Magdeleine (born 1767), Marie (born 1771), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Joseph (born 1774), Rosalie (born 1776), Constance (born 1778) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Paul Bourgeois's household included himself and his twenty-one-year-old wife Rosalie LeBlanc. The family occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census indicates that they owned one sheep and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Paul Bourgeois. Her household included her thirty-eight-year-old husband and her two-year-old daughter Magdeleine. The family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned four cattle and fifteen hogs. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Paul Bourgeois. In addition to her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Bourgeois, her son, 4 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, her son, 4 years old; Magdeleine (Madeleine) Bourgeois, her daughter, 10 years old; Marie Bourgeois, her daughter, 6 years old; and Rosalie Bourgeois, her daughter, 1 year old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and three horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2434; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.519 | Pierre | Bourgeois | frère | 01/01/1746 | La Pointe de Beauséjour, Beaubassin, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Brun (one source indicates that her surname was actually LeBlanc) | Paul Bourgeois | Married Marie Bergeron, daughter of Michel Bergeron and Marie Hébert, at Cabannocé, November 6, 1767. | Pierre (born August 1769), Anne Marie (Marianne) (born 1773), Louise (born 1775), Olivier (born 1777) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that he occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bergeron, his wife, 19 years old; Pierre, his son, 1 month old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-three-year-old married man. Misidentified in the April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé as Pierre Arseneau. The census indicates that he was twenty-eight years old. His household also included Marie Bergeron, his , 22 years old; Pierre Bourgeois, his son, 7 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, his son, 5 years old; Marianne Bourgeois, his daughter, 3 years old; and Louise Bourgeois, his daughter, 2 years old. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2435; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.520 | Claire | Robichaud (Robicheau) | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1714 | Cobequid | Marie Bourg | Charles Robichaud | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel, ca. 1734 | Agnès (?), Marie Blanche (born 1750), Marie Théotiste (born February 10, 1755), Mathurin (born February 10, 1755) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a three-generational household that included her children Mathurin, Marie, and Théotiste, her grandson Jean-Louis Hébert, and Agnès Hébert (the Widow Bourgeois), who genealogists Bona Arsenault suggests may have been her daughter. The household occupied a tract of land measuring four arpents in frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The family also owned one hog. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifty-six-year-old widow living in a household headed by her sisteen-year-old son Mathurin Hébert. The household also included the following persons: Jean Louis, her son (earlier documents indicate he was her grandson), 8 years old; Marie, her daughter, 19 years old; and Théotiste, her daughter, 16 years old. Her family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned fifteen hogs and one musket. She apparently moved with her family to the Attakapas District by the late 1780s. | Her burial record maintains that she was actually ninety-seven years old at the time of her death. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2507; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 415, 677; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-4. | 1.766 | 22/10/1786 | Attakapas Church | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.521 | Agnès | Hébert | Veuve Bourgeois | 01/01/1742 | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Claire Robichaud's household, residing on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Canadian genealogist Bona Arsenault suggests that she might have been the daughter of Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel and Claire Robichaud. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2507. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.522 | Marie Blanche | Hébert | 01/01/1750 | Claire Robichaud | Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel | Married (1) Married Anselme Martin, a native of Acadia and the son of Paul Martin and Marie Thibodeau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 14, 1774. . Married (2) Philippe Verret, a native of New Orleans and the son of Pierre Nicolas Verret and Marie Cantrelle, at St. Martinville, December 26, 1783. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was residing with her mother, her siblings, nephew Jean Louis Hébert, and Agnès Hébert on a parcel of land measuring four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of the household headed by her sixteen-year-old brother Mathurin Hébert. The household also included her fifty-six-year-old widowed mother, Claire Robichaud, and her sixteen-year-old sister, Théotiste. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-4. | 1.766 | 22/02/1801 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.523 | Marie Théotiste | Hébert | 02/10/1755 | Cobequid, Acadia; one source indicates Petitcodiac (Petitcoudiac), Acadia | Marie Claire Robichaud | Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel | Married (1) Joseph Horwer at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., September 15, 1774. Married (2) Joseph Oubre at the Attakapas church, May 7, 1787. Married (3) Joseph Milhomme, a native of the Ohio Valley and the son of François Milhomme and Catherine Griford, April 20, 1798. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that she was residing with her mother, her siblings, nephew Jean Louis Hébert, and Agnès Hébert on a parcel of land measuring four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of the household headed by her sixteen-year-old twin brother Mathurin. The household also included Claire Robichaud, her fifty-six-year-old widowed mother, and Marie (Marie Blanche), her nineteen-year-old sister. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:370; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-4. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.524 | Mathurin | Hébert | 02/10/1755 | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Claire Robichaud | Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel | Married Catherine Doré, daughter of Gaspard Doré and Marguerite Crèbe, at Attakapas church, January 25, 1787. | Céleste (born October 20, 1787), Aspasie (born January 28, 1796; died March 7, 1808), Edouard (born Mary 4, 1798), Nicolas (born May 17, 1803) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old in the household of his mother, Claire Robichaud, veuve Hébert. The family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the sixteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Claire Robichaud, his mother, 56 years old; Jean Louis, his nephew, 8 years old; Marie, his sister, 19 years old; and Théotiste, his sister, 16 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned fifteen hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a sixteen-year-old bachelor. Moved to the Attakapas District sometime around 1776. On September 14, 1776, he signed a contract in which he agreed to raised two cows, one horse, and four hogs for his mother. In return, Hébert was to receive all of the animals born to his mother's livestock holdings. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 252, 415; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Contract, September 1, 1776, Original Acts, Book A, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-4, 5-6. | Sun, Mar 2, 1755 | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.525 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Married Françoise Hébert, ca. 1762. | Louis (born 1764), Joseph (born ca. July 1769), André (born 1772), Nicolas (born ca. 1773), Alexandre (born 1774), Marguerite Adélaïde (born 1776), Constance (born 1778), Marie Madeleine (born 1782), Marie (born 1784), Placide (born 1788), Euphrisine (born ca. 1789), Louise (born 1801) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that he was the only member of his family group (i.e., he was a bachelor) and that he received one full ration. He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. Detained at Halifax, Nova Scotia, ca. 1763. | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé identifies him as the head of a household established upon a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Hébert, his wife, 23 years old; Louise, his son, 5 years old; and Joseph, his son, 2 months old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the east bank of the Mississippi. The family owned two cows, two horses, ten hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty-five barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-two-year-old married man. His residence was across the river from that of Commandant Nicolas Verret. | His succession is dated February 1810 at the St. Martin Parish Courthouse. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2509; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1B, p. 374; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.526 | Louis | Hébert | 01/01/1764 | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Françoise Hébert | Joseph Hébert | Signed a marriage contract with Françoise Broussard, October 3, 1789. Married (1) Françoise Broussard (died ca. January 18, 1817), daughter of Augustin Broussard and Anne Landry, October 6, 1789. Married (2) Marie Victoire Guilbeau, widow of Hypolite Savoie and daughter of François Guilbeau and Magdeleine Broussard, August 12, 1817. | First marriage: Eugénie (born 1795), Nicolas (born 1798), Alexandre (born 1800), Louis (born 1802), Placide (born 1804), Marcellin (born 1807), Marguerite Aspasie (born 1810) Second marriage: Joseph (born 1818) | Identified as a two-year-old resident of Joseph Hébert's household on the left bank of the Mississippi River, Cabannocé, April 9, 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in his 1817 marriage record as a resident of the Vermilion area (along the Vermilion River). The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Françoise Broussard, his wife, 32 years old; Eloise Hébert, 12 years old; Alexandre Hébert, 3 years old; and Louis Hébert, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned 80 semi-wild beef cattle and 35 tame cattle. They also owned a thirty-five-year-old slave named André. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2512; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 129; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 2A, p. 500, 502; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.527 | Jean Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Jeanne Savoie | Bénoni Hébert | Married Madeleine Robichaud, daughter of René Robichaud and Marguerite Martin, at the Attakapas church, April 27, 1773. | Eulalie (born ca. 1774), Scholastique (born 1776), Solange (born 1781), Moïse (born 1784), Julia (born 1787), Jean (born 1789), Ursin (born 1792), Jean Valmont (born 1795), Marguerite (born 1797) | His family appears to have been at Halifax during the summer of 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an orphan living in Joseph Hébert's household on the left bank of the Mississippi River. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Jean Hébert was an eighteen-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Hébert's household. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a member of Jean Baptiste Hébert's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia; he is identified as Charles Ebert in the 1774 militia list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included Jean Charles Hébert, his wife, and one unidentified child. His family owned ten cows, two horses or mules, and two pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Madeleine (Magdeleine) Robichaud (Robichau), his wife, 48 years old; Moïse Hébert, 20 years old; Ursin (Ursain) Hébert, 9 years old; Valmont Hébert, 6 years old; Marie Hébert, 4 years old; and Marguerite Hébert, 2 yeasr old. Jean Charles Hébert and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontrage. They owned 250 semi-wild beef cattle and 20 tame cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Rosette, 30 years old; François, 18 years old; and Pierre, 5 years old. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 403-419; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188c:43vo; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-10. | 1.765 | 24/10/1830 | Lafayette Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.528 | Antoine | La Bauve (LaBauve) | 01/01/1726 | Catherine LeJeune | Antoine La Bauve | Married Anne Vincent, ca. 1758. | Adédaïde (born 1770; married December 22, 1785), Anne Céleste (baptized October 25, 1778), Isidore (baptized December 25, 1771), Jean (twin of Marin) (born 1759), Marie Divine (sometimes Ludivine) (baptized February 20, 1774), Marie Modeste (twin of Paul) (baptized September 28, 1776), Marin (twin of Jean) (born 1759), Paul (twin of Modeste) (baptized September 28, 1776), Pierre (born 1768; married February 17, 1793) | Appear to have been among the Acadians held as prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife Anne, son Marin, and nephew Baptiste. The household occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. La Bauve and his family owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Vincent, his wife, 35 years old; Marin, his son, 10 years old; Jean, his son, 6 years old; Pierre, his son, 2 years old; and Françoise Pitre, an orphan, 6 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Vincent, his wife, 40 years old; Marin La Bauve, hi son, 18 year old; Jean La Bauve, his son, 18 years old; Pierre La Bauve, his son, 9 years old; Isidore La Bauve, his son, 5 years old; Paul La Bauve, his son, 5 months old; Ludivine La Bauve, his daughter, 3 years old; Adélaïde La Bauve, his daughter, 7 years old; and Modeste La Bauve, his daughter, 5 months old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, and three horses. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 243; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:401-402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2519; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:179. | 1.765 | 13/03/1779 | Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.529 | Anne | Vincent | Veuve La Bauve | 01/01/1738 | Married Antoine La Bauve. | Adédaïde (born 1770; married December 22, 1785), Anne Céleste (baptized October 25, 1778), Isidore (baptized December 25, 1771), Jean (twin of Paul) (born 1759), Marie Divine (sometimes Ludivine) (baptized February 20, 1774), Marie Modeste (twin of Paul) (baptized September 28, 1776), Marin (twin of Jean) (born 1759), Paul (twin of Modeste) (baptized September 28, 1776), Pierre (born 1768; married February 17, 1793) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Antoine La Bauve's household which included her son Marin and Baptiste Vincent. The household occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. La Bauve and his family owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Antoine La Bauve. Her household included the following persons: Antoine La Bauve, 44 years old; Marin, her son, 10 years old; Jean, her son, 6 years old; Pierre, her son, 2 years old; and Françoise Pitre, an orphan, 6 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Antoine La Bauve. In addition to her fifty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marin La Bauve, her son, 18 years old; Jean La Bauve, her son, 18 years old; Pierre La Bauve, her son, 9 years old; Isidore La Bauve, her son, 5 years old; Paul La Bauve, her son, 5 months old; Ludivine La Bauve, her daughter, 3 years old; Adélaïde (Adelayde) La Bauve, her daughter, 7 years old; and Modeste La Bauve, her daugher, 5 months old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. In addition they owned one slave, twenty cows, and three horses. Purchased an African slave (native of Angola) from Paul Azema, August 11, 1787. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:401-402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Slave Sale, August 11, 1787, St. James Parish Original Acts. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.530 | Marin | La Bauve (LaBauve) | 01/01/1759 | Acadia | Anne Vincent | Antoine La Bauve | Married Françoise Richard at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 6, 1786 | Marin (born September 10, 1787), Eulalie (buried at New Orleans, October 20, 1796) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of Antoine La Bauve's household, which included his cousin Baptiste Vincent. The household occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. La Bauve and his family owned one hog and one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The census also indicates that he was the twin brother of Jean La Bauve. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:401-402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:160. | 1.766 | 10/02/1797 | St. Louis Cathedral, New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.531 | Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) | La Bauve (LaBauve) | 01/01/1758 | Acadia | Marie Hébert | Charles La Bauve (LaBauve) | Married Françoise Broussard. | Jean (born April 8, 1771), Anne (born September 28, 1772), François (baptized May 5, 1776), Christine (born September 20, 1782) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a resident of his uncle Antoine La Bauve's household. The household occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. La Bauve and his family owned one hog and one firearm. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that Baptiste La Bauve was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his wife. The couple owned eight cows, one horse, and three hogs. Baptiste La Bauve signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph(?) Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. La Bauve participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife. The couple owned twenty cows, six horses or mules, and twenty pigs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Baptiste Labeuve in the May 10, 1777, list. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:401-402; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 454-455; vol. 1B, p. 410; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 1, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | 15/02/1803 | St. Martin de Tours Church Cemetery, St. Martinville, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.532 | Charles | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1722 | Port Royal, Acadia (marriage record says Shepody) | Marie Richard | François Savoie | Married (1) Marie Madeleine Richard, daughter of Pierre Richard and Marie Madeleine Girouard. Married (2) Judith Arseneau, daughter of Claude Arseneau and Marguerite Richard, at Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, January 7, 1761. | Second marriage: Amédée (born 1779; married May 30, 1790), François Paul (baptized February 20, 1774), Geneviève (baptized March 22, 1772), Isabelle (baptized May 28, 1780), Jean (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born 1763; married April 18, 1796), Joseph (born 1779; married July 27, 1794), Marie Modeste (baptized October 19, 1777), Simon Pierre (baptized October 19, 1777) | At Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, January 1761. Appears to have been among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the head of a household including his wife Judith Arseneau, son Jean, and orphan Basile Desroches. The household occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Savoie owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Judith Arseneau, his wife, 32 years old; Jean Baptiste, his son, 6 years old; Pierre, his son, 2 months old; Jean, his son, 2 months old; and Basile Deroche, an orphan, 14 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned ten hogs and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Judith Arseneau, his wife, 40 years old; Jean Baptiste Savoie, his son, 14 years old; Joseph Savoie, his son, 8 years old; Amédée Savoie, his son, 8 years old. He and his family owned no real estate at the time of the census, but they did own twelve cows and three horses. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 281; Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 246; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2588; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:665-667; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.533 | Judith | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1736 | Married Charles Savoie at Ristigouche, January 7, 1761. | Amédée (born 1779; married May 30, 1790), François Paul (baptized February 20, 1774), Geneviève (baptized March 22, 1772), Isabelle (baptized May 28, 1780), Jean (born 1769), Jean Baptiste (born 1763; married April 18, 1796), Joseph (born 1779; married July 27, 1794), Marie Modeste (baptized October 19, 1777), Pierre (born 1769), Simon Pierre (baptized October 19, 1777) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as Charles Savoie's thirty-year-old wife. Their household was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Charles Savoie. Her household included the following persons: Charles Savoie, 46 years old; Jean Baptiste, her son, 6 years old; Pierre, her son, 2 months old; Jean, her son, 2 months old; and Basile Deroche, an orphan, 14 years old. Her household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned ten hogs and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Charles Savoie. In addition to her fifty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Savoie, her son, 14 years old; Joseph Savoie, her son, 8 years old; and Amédée Savoie, her son, 8 years old. She and her family owned no real estate, but they did nown twelve cows and three horses. | Her burial record indicates that she was the widow of Charles Savoie and that she was approximately eighty-five years old at the time of her death. | Gallant, Les Registres de la Gaspésie (1752-1850), 202; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2588; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:26; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Judith Arsenault and Charles Savoie." | 1.766 | 30/10/1819 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.534 | Pierre | Vincent | 01/01/1745 | Pisiquid(?), Nova Scotia | Married Marguerite Cormier, April 11, 1768. | Jean (born ca. June 1769), Joseph (born 1770), Charles (baptized March 31, 1771), Félix (baptized March 29, 1773), Marguerite Rosalie (baptized July 20, 1775), Félicité (May 5, 1778), Magdeleine (baptized May 20, 1780), Pierre Charles (married June 14, 1797) | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a head and sole occupant of a household. He occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census indicates that he owned one firearm. A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in April 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Cormier, his wife, 25 years old; Jean Vincent, his son, 3 months old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-five-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that also included Marguerite Cormier, his wife, 34 years old; Joseph Vincent, his son, 7 years old; Charles Vincent, his son, 5 years old; Félix Vincent, his son, 4 years old; and Rosalie Vincent, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. The census indicates that they owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2611; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:720-721; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.535 | Simon | Mire | père | 01/01/1744 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Isabelle Thibodeau | Pierre Mire | Married Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Cormier, March 31, 1768. | Marie Anne (born 1767), Joseph (born January or February 1769), Pierre (born 1770), Simon (born 1773), Pélagie (born 1774), Isabelle (born 1780), Constance (born 1781), Benjamin (born 1783) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Simon's household consisted of himself and his wife. They occupied a six-arpent tract of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Simon Mire lived next door to his half-brother Benonie, while his wife lived next door to her sister Marie, wife of Michel Poirier. The census also indicates that Simon Mire owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Cormier, his wife, 25 years old; Joseph Mire, his son, 8 months old; Marie (Marie Anne) Mire, his daughter, 2 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, nine hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-five-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Cormier, his wife, 36 years old; Joseph Mire, his son, 8 years old; Pierre Mire, his son, 6 years old; Simon Mire, his son, 4 years old; Marianne Mire, his daughter, 10 years old; and Pélagie Mire, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. The census indicates that they owned no slaves. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | His estate was inventoried and appraised on October 4, 1808. The farm was appraised at $700 and community property was appraised at $1,640. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2559; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé, February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, Vol. 2, Pt. 2, p. 14. | 1.766 | 26/12/1807 | Côte Gelée | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.536 | Madeleine (Magdelaine, Magdeleine) | Cormier | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite (Marie Madeleine) Richard | Jean Baptiste Cormier | Married Simon Mire, March 31, 1766. | Marie Anne (born 1767), Joseph (born January or February 1769), Pierre (born 1770), Simon (born 1773), Pélagie (born 1774), Isabelle (born 1780), Constance (born 1781), Benjamin (born 1783) | The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Simon's household consisted of himself and his wife. They occupied a six-arpent tract of frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that Magdeleine lived next door to her sister Marie, wife of Michel Poirier. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Simon Mire. Her household included her husband, 25 years old; Joseph Mire, her son, 8 months old; and Marie (Marie Anne) Mire, her daughter, 2 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, nine hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Simon Mire. In addition to her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Mire, her eight-year-old son, Pierre Mire, her six-year-old son, Simon Mire, her four-year-old son, Marianne Mire, her ten-year-old daughter, and Pélagie Mire, her two-year-old daughter. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned twenty cows and four horses. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2559; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé, February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.537 | Pierre | Bernard | fils | 01/01/1758 | Marguerite Arseneau | Pierre Bernard | Married Anastasie Breaux, daughter of Athanase Bernard and Marie LeBlanc, at St. Martinville, ca. 1785. | Jean Louis (born ca. 1787), Simon (born November 6, 1789), Eloïse (born January 5, 1794), Eufroy (born December 16, 1796), Joseph Maximilien (born February 15, 1798), and Pierre (born 1802) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as an eight-year-old child residing in his parents' household. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his father's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Bernard, his father, and Cécille (Cécile) Bergeron, his stepmother. On October 24, 1784, Pierre Bernard gave a deposition in which he accused "Mr. Labbé" of blasphemy. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie (Anasthasie) Breau (Brod), 40 years old; Jean Louis Bernard, 20 years old; Piere Bernard, 18 years old; Bernard Bernard, 12 years old; Héloïse Bernard, 11 years old; Lufroi (Lufrois) Bernard, 7 years old; Maxile Bernard, 5 years old; and Treville Bernard, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned 150 cattle and 11 slaves. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Deposition by Pierre Bernard, October 24, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:274; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.538 | Baptiste (sometimes Jean Baptiste) | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Bellefontaine | 01/01/1746 | Acadia | Marie Anne Bergeron | Joseph Gaudin dit Bellefontaine | Married (1) Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson (died ca. 1777), ca. 1768. Married (2) Elizabeth Fontenot, the widow of David Marks, at Cabannocé, July 27, 1778. | First marriage: Rosalie (born 1769), Jean Baptiste (born 1770), Marguerite (born 1771), Raphaël (born 1773), Théotiste and Louise Françoise (born 1774), Marie Madeleine (born 1775) Second marriage: Clotilde (born October 20, 1786) | Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the sole member of his household. The census indicates that he occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The census also indicates that he owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife, Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson. The couple occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cattle, eight hogs, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixty barrels of surplus corn. (He is misidentified as Jean Baptiste Bonnaventure in the list.) The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-four-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Gaudin, his son, 7 years old; Marguerite Gaudin, his daughter, 5 years old; Françoise Gaudin, his daughter, 2 years old; and Rosalie Gaudin, his daughter, 8 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, and two horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2495; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:310-313; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:141. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.539 | Osite (Ozite) Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Married Pierre Chiasson. | Basile (born 1757), Michel (born 1758), Jean Baptiste (born 1769), Basile (born 1771), Simon Pierre (born 1774), Marie (born October 12, 1765) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that the family was in New Orleans in December 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as a member of Pierre Chiasson's household including her son Michel, her daughter Marie, and her husband's nephew Jean Baptiste Chiasson. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 6 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Pierre Chiasson. Her household included the following persons: her husband, 41 years old; Michel Chiasson, her son, 10 years old; Basile Chiasson, her son, 11 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, fifteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Chiasson. In addition to her forty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Jean Baptiste Chiasson, her eight-year-old son, Basile Chiasson, her six-year-old son, Simon Chiasson, her three-year-old son, and Monique Eustache (Ustache), an eighteen-year-old orphan. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. They owned no slaves. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:56; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2458; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:187-188; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.540 | Marie | Bergeron | 01/01/1743 | Married Joseph Arseneau. | Françoise (born 1767), Jean Charles (baptized July 3, 1774), Joseph (baptized August 21, 1777), Josèphe (baptized February 26, 1776), Marianne (Marie) (born 1769, married November 16, 1789), Marie Modeste (baptized January 10, 1779), Scholastique (baptized February 16, 1772) | Her husband's dealings with New Orleans merchant Antoine de St. Maxent indicate that the family was in Louisiana in 1765. Identified in the April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old wife of Joseph Arseneau. The census indicates that the family occupied a tract of land encompassing 4 arpents on the left bank of the Mississippi. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Arseneau. In addition to her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Charles, her son, 3 years old; Françoise, her daughter, 10 years old; Marianne (Marie), her daughter, 8 years old; Collastie (Scholastique), 5 years old; and Théodore Bergeron, an orphan, 14 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six apents frontage. They also owned one slave, twenty-four horses, and four cows. | Her burial record indicates that she was fifty-four years old at the time of her death. Her burial record also identifies her as the widow of Joseph Arseneau. | Recapitulation of the receipts Maxent furnished the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2404; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:79. | 1.765 | 07/06/1799 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.541 | Marie | Bourg | 01/01/1754 | Identified as a member of the household of her cousin Joseph Bourg. The household resided on the left bank of the Mississippi River. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.542 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Marie Landry | Pierre Babin | Married Claude Martin. | Jean André (born September 1, 1770), Joseph Marin (born January 27, 1773), Marie Appolonie (born baptized May 5, 1776), Michel (born March 6, 1777), Marie Angelle (Angélique) (baptized July 25, 1779), Valéry (born December 8, 1782), Dositée (born April 8, 1784) | Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 132-136. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.543 | Pierre | Allain | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite LeBlanc | Pierre Allain | Married Catherine Hébert of Grand Pré, Acadia, ca. 1750. | Jean Baptiste (born 1751), Simon (born 1760), Pierre (born 1764), Marguerite (born 1751), Vivienne (born ca. 1766), Marie Madeleine (born March 20, 1774) | Exiled to Maryland. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a forty-four-year-old head of a household that included his wife Catherine, and the following children: Jean Baptiste, Simon, Pierre, Marguerite, and Vivienne. At the time of his settlement, his family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 30 barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, a twenty-year-old son, a ten-year-old son, a seven-year-old son, an eighteen-year-old daughter, and a four-month-old daughter. He and his family owned fourteen cattle, twenty hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring twenty arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, an eighteen-year-old son, a ten-year-old son, a nineteen-year-old daughter, and an eighteen-month-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned twenty cattle, fifteen hogs, and 100 chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 40 years old; his son, 12 years old; his daughter, 7 years old; and a daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned eighteen cows, four horses, eighteen hogs, and thirty chickens. They also owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Allain lost nine of his twenty-six cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. Around June 27, 1792, he served as a delegate representing the Acadian settlers of the Iberville District. He traveled to New Orleans with five other prominent Acadian Coast Acadians to petition the governor for assistance in improving local flood protection. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2401; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:1; 2:9-12; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; List of Settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Surette, Petcoudiac, Généalogies section, non-paginated; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.544 | Catherine | Hébert | 01/01/1727 | Married Pierre Allain. | Jean Baptiste (born 1751), Simon (born 1760), Pierre (born 1764), Marguerite (born 1751), Vivienne (born ca. 1766), Marie Madeleine (born March 20, 1774) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirty-nine-year old member of a household that included her husband Pierre Allain and the following children: Jean Baptiste, Simon, Pierre, Marguerite, and Vivienne. At the time of his settlement, his family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Pierre Allain. Her household included a twenty-year-old son, a ten-year-old son, a seven-year-old son, an eighteen-year-old daughter, and a four-month-old daughter. She and her family owned fourteen cattle, twenty hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. | Her burial record maintains that she died at the age of seventy-six years. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2401; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:12, 356. | 1.767 | 13/09/1803 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.545 | Jean Baptiste (Batiste, Baptiste, Janbatiste) | Allain (Alain, Alin) | 01/01/1751 | Catherine Hébert | Pierre Allain | Married Marguerite Blanchard. | Jean Baptiste (orn July 26, 1781), Pierre (born October 23, 1782), Marie Elyde (born September 17, 1784), Marie Marguerite (born January 8, 1786), Landry (born May 4, 1787, buried August 21, 1790), Bernard Sosthène (born September 8, 1789) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old residing with his parents. The documents also indicate that, at the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-two years of age. His name is rendered as Janbatiste Alain in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned six hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned twelve cows, one horse, ten hogs, fourteen chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-two years of age. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. His name is rendered as Batiste Alin in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost six of his twenty cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a corporal on active duty. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was the "major domo" of the Iberville District church in 1791. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2401; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:9-13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | 24/03/1791 | Iberville District | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.546 | Simon | Allain | 01/01/1760 | Baltimore, Maryland | Catherine Hébert | Pierre Allain | Married Marguerite Babin, a native of Baltimore, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Babin and Isabelle LeBlanc, at Pointe Coupée Parish, Louisiana, July 17, 1785. A marginal notation indicates that the couple traveled to Pointe Coupée from Manchac because there was no resident priest at the latter location. Isaac LeBlanc and Charles Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Jean Baptiste (born August 8, 1786), Marie Hélène (born January 6, 1788), Janvier (born January 1, 1790), marianne (born November 5, 1791), Adélaïde (born November 12, 1793), Simon (baptized September 16, 1797), Jean Julien (born June 12, 1802) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a seven-year-old child residing with his parents. The documents also indicate that, at the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. On June 27, 1792, he joined with twelve other prominent Iberville District residents in signing a memorandum supporting a mission by Acadian delegates to persuade the governor to undertake a public works project to improve flood protection in the Acadian Coast settlements. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:9-13; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.547 | Pierre | Allain | 01/01/1764 | Catherine Hébert | Pierre Allain | Married Geneviève Anne Gauterot. | Pierre (born February 20, 1787), Marguerite Collette (born March 2, 1789; died 1790) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old child residing with his parents. The documents also indicate that, at the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:10-11; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.548 | Marguerite | Allain | 01/01/1751 | Catherine Hébert | Pierre Allain | Married Pierre Landry dit Pitre, a resident of Ascension Parish and the son of Abraham Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc, at St. Gabriel, La., January 11, 1773. Mathurin Landry and Firmin Broussard witnessed the marriage record. | Victoire Constance (Marie VIctoire Constance) (born November 2, 1774; married January 8, 1798), Henriette Elise (Ulise, Zlise) (baptized February 11, 1777; married June 21, 1796), Allain (Allein) (born October 18, 1778), Pierre Augustin (born July 4, 1780), Pierre Grégoire (born November 17, 1782); Marie Adélaïde (baptized February 19, 1786), Reine (Rienne) (baptized December 8, 1788); Marie del Carmel Dorothée (born January 7, 1790), Marie del Carmel Marguerite (born April 1, 1792), Marie Eugénie (born November 13, 1794) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a sixteen-year-old residing with her parents. The documents also indicate that, at the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry dit Pitre. In addition to herself and her twenty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Constance Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; Elise (Uline) Landry, her daughter, 9 months old; and Marie Andrau, an orphan, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows, one horse, nine hogs, and two muskets. In February 1806, she sold to William Donaldsonville the "original townsite of Donaldson Town" (now Donaldsonville, La.); she reserved for herself a parcel of land with one arpent frontage. On March 14, 1806, the tract of land with one arpent frontage on Bayou Lafourche to Sebastien Landry. On October 24, 1806, she purchased lot 79 on Houmas Street in present-day Donaldsonville. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:11, 415-451; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marguerite Allain and Pierre Abraham [dit Pitre] Landry." | 1.767 | 26/08/1813 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.549 | Vivienne (Bibiana) | Allain | 01/01/1766 | Baltimore, Md. | Catherine Hébert | Pierre Allain | Married Moïse Forest, son of Jean Baptiste Forest and Marguerite Richard, at St. Gabriel, La., April 12, 1790. Pierre Allain, Théodore Dugas, Firmin Landry, and Simon Babin witnessed the marriage record. | Pierre (born December 26, 1796), Marie Magdeleine Adeline (born May 25, 1799) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-month-old child residing with her parents. The documents also indicate that, at the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a four-month-old [sic] member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:9, 294; Wood, Guide, 119; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.550 | Anselme (Enselme) | Blanchard | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | René Blanchard | Married Esther LeBlanc. | Rose (born 1763), Osite Barbe (born ca. 1764; married April 20, 1783), Jérôme (born ca. 1766; married February 11, 1787) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included his wife Esther and his children Jérôme and Rose. The documentation also indicates that the family owned one axe, one gun, and one trunk. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixty barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years of age. Appointed sergeant first-class of the Iberville District militia, March 1, 1770. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his eighteen-year-old wife, an unidentified six-year-old boy, an unidentified three-year-old boy, and an unidentified eight-year-old girl. He and his family owned eleven cattle, twenty hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant and that he was twenty-nine years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-seven-year-old wife, an eight-year-old son, a six-year-old son, and a twelve-year-old daughter. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 30 years old; a daughter, 13 years old; a son, 10 years old; and a son, 8 years old. He and his family owned one male slave, one female slave, twelve cows, three horses, eight hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On July 13, 1777, Commandant Louis Dutisné recommended Anselme Blanchard for appointment as militia lieutenant. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of lieutenant en pied (full lieutenant). On October 12, 1777, Louis Dutisné, commandant of the Iberville District, recommended Anselme Blanchard for appointment as militia lieutenant. Dutisné noted that Blanchard and Simon Richard, whom he nominated for appointment as sublieutenant, were the only literate militiamen in his district. Dutisné also indicated that their "good conduct and good moral character" also made them worthy of the proposed commissions. On December 2, 1777, Louis Judice, commandant of the Lafourche District, complained that Anselme Blanchard and Simon Leblanc were "entirely devoted to the service of the English." Named an adjutant, evidently during the Spanish campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge, January 5, 1779. He served in the Spanish campaigns against Manchac and Fort Bute (1779) and Mobile (1780). Breveted sublieutenant of infantry, February 17, 1780. On December 12, 1780, Commandant Louis Dutisné of the Iberville District compiled a list of local settlers who had contributed cattle on credit to the government during the colonial war effort. The list indicates that Anselme (Enselme) Blanchard, acting on behalf of the government, issued receipts to Madelaine Chelatre, Jean Reine, and Amand (Amant) Melanson (Melenson). On July 30, 1781, the Spanish crown issued a letter of appointment naming Anselme Blanchard as captain of the Valenzuela District militia. The letter reached Louisiana several months later. In a letter to Pedro Piernas, Commandant DeVerbois of the Iberville District indicates that Anselme Blanchard was a militia lieutenant who had been named acting civil commandant at the Valenzuela District, November 1, 1781. On March 24, 1783, Blanchard sold to Michel de Verbois a tract of land which he had acquired as a land grant. This property, which included six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River, was located in the Iberville District, between the properties of Paul Chiasson and Ignace Babin. Standing on the property was a large house of sur sol construction measuring thirty-five by sixteen feet. Appointed militia captain, Feruary 12, 1792. His military dossier, compiled by the Spanish government on June 30, 1792, indicates that he enjoyed "robust" health. He was married, and he held the rank of militia captain. He had served in the Louisiana militia for twenty-one years, eleven months, and eleven days. He had served in the Provincial Mixed Legion for four months and nineteen days. Identified in the 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana as a middle-aged adult living alone. The census also indicates that he manufactured 1,500 pounds of the 3,400 pounds of indigo produced by the Acadian residents at Nueva Feliciana in 1793. He held the rank of lieutenant in the Spanish military service at the time of his death. On March 5, 1797, Anselme Blanchard sold to Laurent Sigur a huge tract of land with thirty-five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The property, which sold for 5,000 piastres, was bounded above by the land of Honoré Breau and below by that of Joseph Athanase Landry. On February 24, 1800, Anselme Blanchard's estate was inventoried and appraised at 15,000 piastres. | His burial record indicates that he was a native of St. Charles Parish, Les Mines, Acadia. The document also indicates that he was a lieutenant in the Spanish army, and that he had formerly served as commandants of the Lafourche (actually Valenzuela) and Nueva Feliciana districts. His burial record also states that Blanchard was sixty-four years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:13; 2:95, 99; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Louis Dutisné to the governor, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189B:260; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Dutisné to Bernardo de G lvez, October 12, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:272; Louis Judice to the governor, December 2, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:307-308vo; Exact Copie of the List of Livestock that the Iberville District Settlers Have Furnished to the Army for the Campaign Against Baton Rouge, December 12, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193A:383; DeVerbois to Piernas, November 1, 1781, AGI, PPC, 194:389; Memorandum by Anselme Blanchard, November 11, 1781, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Service Record, legajo 161A; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 168-169; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:28; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14. | 1.767 | 25/11/1799 | New Orleans, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.551 | Esther | LeBlanc | 01/01/1744 | Married Anselme Blanchard. | Rose (born 1763), Osite Barbe (born ca. 1764), Jérôme (born ca. 1766) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of a household that included her husband Anselme Blanchard and her children Rose and Jérôme. At the time of settlement, the family owned one axe, one gun, and one trunk. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the eighteen (probably twenty-eight)-year-old wife of Anselme Blanchard. Her household included her thirty-year-old husband, an unidentified six-year-old boy, an unidentified three-year-old boy, and an unidentified eight-year-old girl. She and her family owned eleven cattle, twenty hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:28. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.552 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1757 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-year-old orphan living in Anselme Blanchard's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.553 | Jérôme | Blanchard | 01/01/1765 | Esther LeBlanc | Anselme Blanchard | Married Marianne Clouatre, daughter of Pierre Clouatre and Magdeleine Boudrot, at St. Gabriel, La., February 11, 1787. | Henriette Adélaïde (born February 21, 1789), Carmelite (born August 17, 1791), Jérôme (born April 12, 1793) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was one year and ten months old at the time of his family's settlement. He was evidently the unidentified six-year-old boy listed in Anselme Blanchard's household in the January 30, 1771. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 94, 95. | 1.767 | 12/03/1793 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.554 | Rose | Blanchard | 01/01/1763 | Esther LeBlanc | Anselme Blanchard | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a four years old member of her parents' household. The documentation indicates that her family owned one axe, one gun, and one trunk at the time of settlement. She was evidently the unidentifed eight-year-old girl listed in Anselme Blanchard's household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. She may also have been the daughter subsequently identified as Osite Barbe. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:28. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.555 | Jean Baptiste | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1735 | Married Marguerite Vivienne Richard. | Moïse (born 1766), Marie (born 1764) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included his wife Marguerite and his children Moïse and Marie. The documentation indicates that the family was destitute, lacking the few amenities of other 1767 Acadian immigrants, at the time of settlement. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | Evidently died sometime before May 7, 1770, when his wife remarried at Pointe Coupée. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 118. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.556 | Marguerite Vivienne | Richard | 01/01/1746 | Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Joseph Richard | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Forest. Married (2) Cirille Rivette, son of Michel Rivette and Anne Landry, St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée, La., May 7, 1770. | First marriage: Moïse (born 1766), Marie (born 1764) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Forest's household. Her children Moïse and Marie resided with her. | Wood, Guide, 118; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.557 | Moïse | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1766 | "Malbre" (Upper Marlboro, Maryland) | Marguerite Vivienne Richard | Jean Baptiste Forest | Married Vivienne Allain, daughter of Pierre Allain and Catherine Hébert, at St. Gabriel, La., April 12, 1790. | Marie Magdeleine Adeline (born May 25, 1799) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a one-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Forest's household. The documentation also suggests that his family was destitute. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:294; Wood, Guide, 119. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.558 | Marie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Vivienne Richard | Jean Baptiste Forest | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a three-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Forest's household. The documentation also suggests that her family was destitute. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.559 | Paul Gaston | Hébert | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré | Marie Josèphe Dupuis | Guillaume Hébert | Married Josèphe Marguerite Melanson, daughter of Philip Melanson and Marie Dugas, at Grand Pré, May 14, 1736. | Pierre (born November 1, 1737), Charles (born December 30, 1741), Marie Marguerite (Magdalen) (born October 22, 1743), Anne Marie (born September 5, 1745), Ignace (born September 6, 1747), Joseph (born ca. 1749), Madeleine (born ca. 1751), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1752; married June 6, 1774), Armand (Amant, Amand) (born ca. 1754), Antoine (born ca. 1755), Paul (born ca. 1758; married December 25, 1782) | At Georgetown, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household including his wife and the following children: Ignace, Jean Baptiste, Armand, Paul, Anne, Marie, Marguerite, and orphan Marie Blanchard. The documentation also indicates that the family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of their settlement. Given a land grant encompassing eight arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 15 barrels of unshucked corn. With Pierre Hébert, Paul Hébert appealed to Louisiana's Spanish governor for a new land grant, claiming that erosion by the Mississippi River which claimed one arpent per year made his existing land grant uninhabitable. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the fifty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his fifty-four-year-old wife and four sons aged twenty-two, nineteen, seventeen, and thirteen years. He and his family owned thirteen beef cattle, twenty hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:68; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 130-131; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2508; List of Settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Louis Dutisné to Luís Unzaga, July 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/2; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.560 | Josèphe Marguerite | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1717 | Marie Dugas | Philippe Melanson | Married Paul Gaston Hébert, daughter of Philip Hébert and Marie Dugas, at Grand Pré, May 14, 1736. | Pierre (born November 1, 1737), Charles (born December 30, 1741), Marie Marguerite (Magdalen) (born October 22, 1743), Anne Marie (born September 5, 1745), Ignace (born September 6, 1747), Joseph (born ca. 1749), Madeleine (born ca. 1751), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1752; married June 6, 1774), Armand (Amant, Amand) (born ca. 1754), Antoine (born ca. 1755), Paul (born ca. 1758; married December 25, 1782) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that her household included her fifty-nine-year-old husband and four sons aged twenty-two, nineteen, seventeen, and thirteen years. She and her family owned thirteen beef cattle, twenty hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.561 | Marie (Marie Anne) | Guilbeau | 01/01/1727 | Port Royal | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Married Michel Bernard, son of Jean Baptiste Bernard and Marie Cécile Gaudet. | Jean Baptiste (born 1762), Pierre (born 1762), MIchel (born 1764), François (born 1766), Marie Anne (born September 7, 1770), Félicité (born 1772), Marie (born 1774) | Listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the thirty-six-year-old wife of Michel Bernard. Her household included an unidentified nine-year-old boy, an unidentified five-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old girl, and an unidentified six-month-old girl. Her family owned sixteen cattle and seven horses. They occupied but did not own twelve arpents frontage. | T8S, R4E, secs. 79 and 121 | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 245, 255; Recapitulation of receipts furnished by Maxent to the Acadians, April 1, 1765. AC, C 13a, 45:29; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 57-58; Martin and Martin, Remember Us, 64-65; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | 01/01/1809 | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.562 | Michel | Bernard | fils | 01/01/1764 | probably Halifax, Nova Scotia | Marie Anne Guilbeau | Michel Bernard | Married Marguerite Broussard, daughter of Simon Broussard and Marguerite Blanchard, at the Attakapas church, June 10, 1788. | Marie Louise (born 1791), Adélaïde (born 1794), Edouard (born 1796), Anne (born 1798), Alexandre (born 1801) | His family is listed among the Acadian prisoners of war at Halifax, August 16, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. He participated in a hunting expedition, including Jean Doucet, Dominique Babineau (Babinot), and Michel Bernard, ca. June 12, 1780. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2422; Joseph Castille to Alexandre DeClouet, June 12, 1780, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La. | 1.765 | 11/11/1801 | Attakapas District | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.563 | Marie | Blanchard | 01/01/1754 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Paul Hébert and Josèphe Marguerite Melanson. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.564 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Hébert (Ebert, Heber) | 01/01/1739 | Acadia | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married Anne Marie Landry, probably the daughter of Jean and Marguerite Landry who exiled to Oxford, Maryland, at Maryland, December 26, 1765. They were married after dispensations for consanguinity in the second and third degree. Father Joseph Mosley performed the ceremony. The marriage was witnessed by John Blake and Mrs. Witherstrand. | Anne (baptized in Maryland, October 16, 1766), Marie Josèphe (born October 8, 1768) | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household consisting of his twenty-seven-year-old wife Anne Marie Landry, and his six-month-old daughter Anne. The documentation indicates that the family arrived in Louisiana with one trunk. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old spouse, and an unidentified three-year-old girl. He and his family owned five cows, ten hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty years of age. His name is rendered as Jausephe Hebert in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-two-year-old wife and three-year-old daughter. The family occupied a tract of land with seven arpents frontage. They owned seven cattle, eighteen hogs, and fifteen chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-two-year-old wife, a six-year-old daughter, a two-year-old daughter, and a six-month-old son. He and his family owned twelve cattle, four horses, ten hogs, twenty-five chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Hébert (Ebert) lost eight of his twenty-six cows. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 131; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:177; 2:362; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Wood, Guide, 196; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | 29/04/1799 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.565 | Ignace | Hébert | 09/06/1747 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married (1) Marie LeBlanc. Married (2) Rosalie Babin, widow of Joseph Babin, at St. Gabriel, January 11, 1773. Married (3) Marie Madeleine (sometimes Magdalena) Forest, daughter of Bonaventure Forest and Claire Rivet, at St. Gabriel, November 26, 1781. | Third marriage: Anne Marie (born March 3, 1786), Antoine (born October 17, 1784), Joseph Raphaël (born January 22, 1788), Jean Louis (born December 17, 1782) | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old resident of his parents' household. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.566 | Jean Baptiste (Baptiste) | Hébert | 01/01/1752 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married Marguerite Richard, daughter of Claude Richard and Cécile Melanson, at Ascension Parish, June 6, 1774. | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old child residing in his parents' household. At the time of their settlement at St. Gabriel, his family owned one axe and two trunks. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.567 | Amant (Aman, Amand) | Hébert (Ébert) | 01/01/1753 | Louisbourg, Acadia (according to his service record, but probably incorrect) | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married Marie Boudrot, daughter of Benjamin Boudrot and Cécile Melanson, September 30, 1776. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée post. | Adélaïde (Delaida) buried November 6, 1799, at the age of 14 years), Irene (born July 22, 1800), Joseph Zacharie (baptized January 2, 1780), Manoue (probably Manon) (born January 1, 1788), Marie (born February 5, 1791), Marie Céleste (born February 27, 1790; buried March 17,1790), Marine Adélaïde (born February 18, 1786), Michel (born February 3, 1782), Paul (born February 1, 1796), Valéry (born October 9, 1793). Louis Hébert, six-year-old son of Amant (Amand) was buried at St. Gabriel, Louisiana, on November 23, 1789. It is unclear if he was the son of Amant Hébert, the husband of Marie Boudrot, or Amant Hébert, spouse of Anne Isabelle (Élizabeth) Babin. | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old resident of his parents' household. At the time of their settlement at St. Gabriel, his family owned one axe and two trunks. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 30 barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant and that he was a nineteen-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Aman Ébert in the March 6, 1777 muster roll. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that also included his eightee-year-old wife. He and his wife owned thirteen cows, twelve hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Fort Butte, at Baton Rouge. His cumulative military service sheet, compiled in 1800, indicates that he was approximately forty-eight years of age. It also indicates that he was of "midling ability." He enjoyed robust health. He entered the colonial militia on February 12, 1770. In 1800, he held the rank of first sergeant in the Iberville District militia unit. His cumulative service record, compiled on December 31, 1800, provides the following information: He was married and enjoyed "robust" health. He had served in the Iberville District militia for twenty-one years, eleven months, and twenty-nine days; and in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for eight years, ten months, and nineteen days. He had displayed valor. His superiors noted that he exhibited poor application to duty, "good capacity; [and] average conduct." | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Cumulative Service Record, December 31, 1800, AGI, PPC, 161A; Holmes Honor and Fidelity, 193. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.568 | Paul | Hébert | 01/01/1758 | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married Marguerite Breau, daughter of Joseph Charles Breau and Marie Josèphe Landry, at Ascension Parish, December 25, 1782. | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a nine-year-old resident of his parents' household. At the time of their settlement at St. Gabriel, his family owned one axe and two trunks. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he had lost two of his five cattle. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1. | 1.767 | 03/11/1796 | New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.569 | Anne Marie | Hébert | 09/05/1745 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson (Melançon) | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married (1) Augustín Morin, a native of Spain and the son of Pablo Morin and María Delara, at St. Francis Catholic Church of Pointe Coupée, September 26, 1767. Married (2) Joseph Dupuis, son of Antoine Dupuis and Marie Anne Dugas, March 27, 1769. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée post. Simon Richard, Sieur Missonnière, and Joseph Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Anne Melanie (born March 23, 1775), Hélène Louise (born July 13, 1781), Hippolyte (born January 27, 1779), Jean (born January 24, 1773), Joseph (married April 15, 1792), Paul (married January 7, 1800) | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-two-year-old resident of her parents' household. At the time of their settlement at St. Gabriel, his family owned one axe and two trunks. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:169, 177; 2:266-273, 354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.570 | Marie Marguerite (Magdalena) | Hébert | Grant Pré, Acadia | Josèphe Marguerite Melanson | Paul Gaston Hébert | Married Benoni (Beloni) LeBlanc. | At Georgetown, Md., 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a seven-year-old resident of her parents' household. At the time of their settlement at St. Gabriel, his family owned one axe and two trunks. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-1. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.571 | Anne Marie | Landry | 01/01/1739 | Marguerite Landry(?) | Jean Landry(?) | Married Joseph Hébert, son of Paul Gaston Hébert and Josèphe Marguerite Melanson, at Mosley, Maryland, December 26, 1765. | Anne (baptized in Maryland, October 16, 1766), Marie Josèphe (born October 8, 1768) | With her parents at Oxford, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert. The documentation also indicates that the family owned only one trunk at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was thirty years old. Her household included her thirty-year-old husband and an unidentified three-year-old girl. The household owned five cattle, ten hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Her burial record indicates that she was sixty-two years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 131; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2511; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:177; 2:362, 418; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | 29/09/1802 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.572 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1766 | Anne Marie Landry | Joseph Hébert | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a six-month-old child residing with her parents. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.573 | Paul (often Pierre or Pierre Paul) (Piere) | Hébert (Heber) | 11/01/1737 | Grand Pré | Marie Josèphe Melanson | Paul Hébert | Married Marguerite LeBlanc. | Charles (born 1762), Marianne (born 1764), Marguerite (born ca. 1766), Paul (born 1772), Joseph (born 1773), Pierre (born 1778), Jean Elie (born 1779) | At Georgetown, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household including his wife Marguerite and his children Charles, Marianne, and Marguerite. The family evidently arrived at the settlement site with only one axe and one trunk in its possession. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-two years of age. A 1770 list indicates that he had 12 barrels of unshucked corn. In July 1770, Commandant Dutisné of the Iberville District petitioned Governor Luís de Unzaga on his behalf, asking that Hébert be given a new land grant because erosion by the Mississippi River claimed one arpent per year. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-one-year-old wife, an unidentified eight-year-old son, and an unidentified five-year-old daughter. He and his family owned three beef cattle and twenty-chickens. They occupied a tract measuring eight arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-two years of age. His name is rendered as Piere Heber in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, a twelve-year-old son, a ten-year-old daughter, a four-year-old son, and an eight-month-old son. He and his family owned fourteen cows, thre horses, twelve hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Paul (Polle) Hébert (EtBert) lost sixteen of his thirty-two cows. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 132-133; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, July 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/2; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.574 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1739 | Married Paul (Pierre Paul) Hébert. | Charles (born 1762), Marianne (born 1764), Marguerite (born ca. 1766), Paul (born 1772), Joseph (born 1773), Pierre (born 1778), Jean Elie (born 1779) | At Georgetown, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Paul (Pierre Paul) Hébert. Her family evidently arrived at the settlement site with only one axe and one trunk in its possession | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 132-133. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.575 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1762 | probably Georgetown, Maryland | Marguerite LeBlanc | Paul (Pierre Paul) Hébert | Married (1) Magdelaine Breau, a native of Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the daughter of Janvier Breau and Osite Landry, at St. Gabriel, May 18, 1785. Married (2) Anne Gauterot | At Georgetown, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a five-year-old child residing in his parents' household, which included his siblings Marianne and Marguerite. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 132-133. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.576 | Marianne | Hébert | 01/01/1764 | probably Georgetown, Maryland | Marguerite LeBlanc | Paul (Pierre Paul) Hébert | Married Jean Baptiste Hbert, son of François Hébert and Marie LeBlanc, at St. Gabriel, May 18, 1785. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a three-year-old child residing with her parents, her brother Charles, and her sister Marguerite. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 132-133. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.577 | Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1766 | probably Georgetown, Maryland | Marguerite LeBlanc | Paul (Pierre Paul) Hébert | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a six-month-old infant. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 132-133. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.578 | Jean (Jean Charles) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1734 | Married Judith (Marguerite) Landry. | Jean Baptiste (born 1752), Joseph (born 1755), Simon (born 1762), Marie (born 1763), and Anne (born 1766) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Misidentified as Jean Blanchard in the 1767 census of St. Gabriel. Extant documents indicate that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included his wife Judith and the following children: Jean Baptiste, Joseph, Simon, Marie, and Anne. The family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | Died sometime before the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.579 | Judith (Marguerite) | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Married Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc. | Jean Baptiste (born 1752), Joseph (born 1755), Simon (born 1762), Marie (born 1763), and Anne (born 1766) | Deported to Maryland. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Charles LeBlanc, who is misidentified as Jean Blanchard in the census, and mother of six children. Her family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2538. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.580 | Jean Baptiste (Jan Batiste) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1752 | Judith (Marguerite) Landry | Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifteen-year-old child residing in his parents' household. His family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years old. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old residing with his family. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years of age. His name is rendered as Jan Batiste LeBlanc in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. He owned one cow, one calf, eight hogs, and twenty chickens. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned two cattle and twelve hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife and a four-month-old son. He and his family owned one male slave, eight cows, ten hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, LeBlanc lost eight of his twenty-four cows. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; CMuster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; ensus of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.581 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | Judith (Marguerite) Landry | Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twelve-year-old child residing in his parents' household. His family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was fifteen years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old residing with his family. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.582 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Judith (Marguerite) Landry | Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a five-year-old child residing in his parents' household. His family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his family's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.583 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1763 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Judith (Marguerite) Landry | Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc | Married Jean Baptiste landry. | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a four-year-old child residing in her parents' household. Her family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her family's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:474. | 1.767 | 05/12/1787 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.584 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1766 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Judith (Marguerite) Landry | Jean (Jean Charles) LeBlanc | Married Daniel Provenche (probably Provence), son of Jean Provenche and Thérèse La Croise of Canada, at Cabannocé, October 31, 1796. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a one-year-old child residing in her parents' household. Her family owned one axe and two trunks at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a three-year-old member of her family's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 159; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.585 | François | Hébert | 04/02/1710 | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite Landry | Jacques Hébert | Married Marie Josèphe Melanson, daughter of Jean Melanson and Marguerite Dugas, November 17, 1732. | Paul (born 1733), Alexandre (born December 12, 1735), François (born 1738), Amant (Amand) (born April 5, 1740), Jean Baptiste (born June 23, 1742), Étienne (born October 3, 1744), Pierre Caietan (born August 8, 1747), Joseph (born ca. 1748), Marie Madeleine (born 1753; married February 7, 1775) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifty-six-year-old widower. His family owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 100 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was fifty years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a sixty-year-old widower and the head of a household that included an unidentified twenty-one-year-old son and an unidentified nineteen-year-old son. He and his sons owned five cattle, nineteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as a sixty-three-year-old widower. His household included a twenty-two-year-old son (probably Amant) and a twenty-year-old son (probably Jean Baptiste). The family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The household owned eight cattle, seven hogs, and ten chickens. | His burial record maintains that he was seventy-nine years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:62; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:359; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49; Arsenault, Histoire et genealogie,. | 1.767 | 28/03/1789 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.586 | Jean Baptiste | Hébert | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Melanson (Melançon) | François Hébert | Married Marie Madeleine Dupuis, a native of Acadia and the daughter of Antoine Dupuis and Marguerite Boudrot, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., March 27, 1769. Joseph Dupuis, Simon Richard, and Joseph Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Madeleine (baptized 1773), Dominique (born August 4, 1775), Marie Geneviève (born December 27, 1777), Jean Polite (Hypolite) (baptized February 22, 1780), Melanie (born October 30, 1785), Paul (born ca. 1786), Jean Baptiste (born March 5, 1788), François (baptized October 22, 1790), Marie Rose (born January 25, 1793) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-five-year-old member of his father's household. The household owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 15 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. He is identified as Baptiste Hébert in the February 7, 1770 list. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old spouse and an unidentified eight-year-old girl. He and his family owned three beef cattle, ten hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-one-year-old wife and an eighteen-month-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned seven cattle, twelve hogs, and thirteen chickens. The census suggests that he lived next door to his father and brother François. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:64, 169, 177; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.587 | Étienne | Hébert | 10/03/1744 | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | Married Anne Magdelaine Landry, daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Richard and a former resident of Port Tobacco, Maryland, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, June 28, 1771. | Donat Paul (born 1772; married January 4, 1799; died June 1, 1827), Narcisse (born November 7, 1776), Anne Magdeleine (baptized October 16, 1779), Anne Adelaïde (Adélaÿde) (baptized October 16, 1779), Marie Constance (born April 1782; married December 1, 1802), Janvier (Januario) (baptized November 7, 1785), Abraham, Étienne (Estienne) (married June 10, 1805) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-year-old member of his father's household. The household owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 40 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years old. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor. According to the 1771 census, he owned two cattle and four hogs. He occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with seven arpents frontage. They owned four cattle, twelve hogs, and eighteen chickens. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Hébert (Ebert) lost ten of his twenty-one cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. Around June 27, 1792, he served as a delegate representing the Acadian settlers of the Iberville District. He traveled to New Orleans with five other prominent Acadian Coast Acadians to petition the governor for assistance in improving local flood protection. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:62; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.588 | Pierre Caieton (Caietans, CaSidan, Casiden) | Hébert (Ebert) | 08/08/1747 | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | Married Marguerite Babin, daughter of Dominique Babin and Marguerite Boudrot, in Iberville Parish, 1771. | Paul (born August 8, 1772), Henri (born ca. 1773), Joseph (born December 4, 1774), Magdeleine (born August 8, 1779) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his father's household. The household owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his father's household. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-two years of age. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned nine hogs and four chickens. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Casiden Ebert in the March 6, 1777 list. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was twenty-years old. He appears to have been the Pierre Hébert whom Commandant Louis Dutisné nominated for appointment as lieutenant of the Iberville District militia, May 12, 1780. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Dutisné to Bernardo de G lvez, May 12, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:300; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-13. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.589 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1751 | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an sixteen-year-old member of his father's household. The household owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his father's household. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that included his seventy-year-old father. He and his father owned one female slave, fourteen cattle, four horses, eighteen hogs, and thirty chickens. They owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. On June 27, 1792, he joined with twelve other prominent Iberville District residents in signing a memorandum supporting a mission by Acadian delegates to persuade the governor to undertake a public works project to improve flood protection in the Acadian Coast settlements. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.590 | Madeleine (Marie Madeleine) | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | Married Olivier Landry, son of René Landry and Marie Terriot (Theriot), February 7, 1775. | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an fourteen-year-old member of her father's household. The household owned two axes, two guns, and two trunks at the time of its settlement. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128-129; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.591 | Joseph (Aulivié, Joseph Olivier) | Blanchard | 06/05/1730 | Grand Pré | Marguerite Terriot | René Blanchard | Married Marie Josèphe Landry, daughter of Alexandre Landry and Ann Flan. | Firmin (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762; married May 31, 1792), Joseph (born 1766), Marie Josèphe, Anselme Isidore (baptized August 19, 1767), Anne Marthe (Marguerite) (1770), Pierre Isidore Richard (born October 12, 1772), Victor (born February 3, 1774), Richard Pierre (married August 5, 1793) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a thirty-two-year-old head of household that included the following children: Firmin, Joseph, and Marguerite. His family owned one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-nine years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, an unidentified ten-year-old boy, and an unidentified three-year-old boy. He and his family owned six beef cattle, ten hogs, and twenty-five chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old wife, an eleven-year-old son, and a four-year-old son. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eleven cattle, twenty-five hogs, and eighty chickens. The neighboring households were headed by Anselme Blanchard and Firmin Landry. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. His nas rendered as Aulivié Blanchard in the July 10, 1783 list. | Died sometime before February 3, 1778, when his widow remarried. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:13; 2:97, 100, 101; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Wood, Guide, 89-90; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Joseph Blanchard and Marie Josephe Landry." | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.592 | Marie Josèphe | Landry | Veuve Joseph Blanchard | 01/01/1738 | Married (1) Joseph Blanchard. Married (2) Ignace Babin, widower of Marguerite Breau and a former resident of Port Tobacco, Maryland, February 3, 1778. | Firmin (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762; married May 31, 1792), Joseph (born 1766), Marie Josèphe, Anselme Isidore (baptized August 19, 1767), Anne Marthe (Marguerite) (1770), Pierre Isidore Richard (born October 12, 1772), Victor (born February 3, 1774), Richard Pierre (married August 5, 1793) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Joseph Blanchard and the mother of Firmin, Marguerite, and Joseph. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old wife of thirty-nine-year-old Joseph Blanchard, an unidentified ten-year-old boy, and an unidentified three-year-old boy. She and her family owned six beef cattle, ten hogs, and twenty-five chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old widow of Joseph Richard. The census also indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: a son, 20 years old; a son, 3 years old; a daughter, 15 years old; a daughter, 8 years old; a daughter, 6 years old. He and his family owned eighteen cows, ten hogs, eighty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. In her marriage contract with Jean Baptiste Cormier, dated January 2, 1779, Anne Blanchard is identified as a resident of the Attakapas district. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Wood, Guide, 89-90; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:101. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.593 | Firmin (Firmain) | Blanchard | 01/01/1760 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie Josèphe Landry (sometimes Melanson) | Joseph Blanchard | Married Marie Magdelaine Bugeaud (Bigeo), a former resident of Oxford, Maryland, and the daughter of Etienne Bugeaud and Brigitte Chevais (Chené, Chevett), at Ascension Parish, May 28, 1781. Anselme Blanchard, Abraham Landry, and Joseph Bugeau (Bijeaud) witnessed the marriage record. | Henriette (born 1783), Marie Constance (born 1786; married October 1, 1803), Pierre Joseph (born May 17, 1788), Marie Rose (María Rosa) (sometimes Clémence) (born August 2, 1791), Melanie (born 1794), Augustin Valéry (Balerio) (born October 19, 1797), Marie Marthe (buried October 4, 1803, at the age of 7 months), Paul Firmin (born January 13, 1803) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was seventeen years old. His name is rendered as Firmain Blanchard in the July 13, 1777 list. On December 28, 1786, Firmin Blanchard and his wife sold to Pierre Bourg a tract of land with two arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The land was bounded above by the Blanchard's property and below by the land of Jean Bugeau.. On September 28, 1803, Firmin Blanchard's estate was inventoried and appraised. His holdings included a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This land was located one league above the Ascension Parish church. The land was bounded above by the property of Silvin (Silvain) LeBlanc and below by that of Jean Bugeau. Standing on Blanchard's property was a house measuring thirty by fifteen feet. The house featured front and rear galleries. | His burial record maintains that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Wood, Guide, 89-90; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 94, 98, 99, 100; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14, 24-25. | 1.767 | 06/03/1803 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.594 | Joseph | Blanchard | 01/01/1766 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie Josèphe Melanson | Joseph Blanchard | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a one-year-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Wood, Guide, 89-90. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.595 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1761 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie Josèphe Melanson | Joseph Blanchard | Married Étienne Comeau, son of Alexis Comeau and Marguerite Babin and a former resident of Port Tobacco, Maryland, at St. Gabriel, May 31, 1792. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2423; Wood, Guide, 89-90. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.596 | Anne | Flan | Veuve Alexandre Landry | 01/01/1711 | Rivière aux Canards, near Grand Pré | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean François Flan | Married Alexandre Landry, son of Abraham Landry and Marie Guilbeau, February 24, 1732. Abraham Landry, the groom's father, witnessed the marriage record. | François (born 1741), Paul (Paul Marie) (born 1745), Firmin (born 1749), Jean (born 1753), Marguerite (born 1751) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a fifty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household that included her following children: Paul, Firmin, Jean, and Marguerite. The documentation indicates that the family owned only two trunks at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:47; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-137. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.597 | Paul (Paul Marie, Paulle Marie) | Landry | 01/01/1745 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Anne Flan (sometimes LeBlanc) | Alexandre Landry | Married Brigitte Babin, daughter of Paul Babin and Marie Landry, January 9, 1772. | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. His siblings FIrmin, Jean, and Marguerite were also members of the household. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had seventy barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-six-year-old bachelor living alone. The census also shows that he owned three cattle and six hogs. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. His surname is omitted from his entry in the June 21, 1777 list, while his given names are rendered as Paulle Marie. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, twelve hogs, and twenty chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-eight-year-old wife and two-year-old son. He and his family owned twelve cows, ten hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-six-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Paulle Mari Landry in the March 6, 1777 militia list. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-two years of age. His name is rendered as Polle Marie Lendry in the July 13, 1777 list. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. | He died at the age of sixty years. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-137; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10, 56. | 1.767 | 25/11/1829 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.598 | Anselme (Anselme Alexandre, Enselme) | Landry (Landrie) | Anne Flan (sometimes LeBlanc) | Alexandre Landry | Married Marie Madeleine Landry, daughter of Jean Baptiste Landry and Anne Babin and a former resident of Oxford, Maryland, on April 10, 1769. The married was recorded at St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée. She appears to have died before the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | Céleste (married May 5, 1794) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Evidently among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that was not a member of his widowed mother's household. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had six barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old widower. His household included an unidentified ten-month-old boy. They owned four cattle, six hogs, and six chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife and a three-year-old son. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned ten cattle, eighteen hogs, and thirty chickens. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-five years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry lost six of his sixteen cows. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-137; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.599 | Firmin (Firmain) | Landry | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Anne Flan | Alexandre Landry | Evidently married (1) Marie LeBlanc. Married (2) Louise (Divine, Ludivine) Babin, daughter of Pierre Babin and Magdelaine (Magdeleine) Richard and a former resident of Upper Marlboro, Maryland, at Ascension Parish, February 8, 1774. Married (3) Marie Hélène Hamilton, native of Philadelphia and daughter of Joseph Hamilton and Anastasie Comeau, at St. Gabriel, February 6, 1792. | Second marriage: Pierre Ferdinand (married November 25, 1805) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-two years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, fifteen calves, and twelve hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife, a two-year-old son, and a four-month-old daughter. He and his family owned one male slave, twelve cows, three horses, nine hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry lost six of his twenty cows. | He may have been the Firmin Landry who died in Ascension Parish, La., on December 4, 1806. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-137; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:424; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10, 58-59. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.600 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1753 | Anne Flan | Alexandre Landry | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-138. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.601 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Anne Flan | Alexandre Landry | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-138. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.602 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1755 | probably Assumption Parish, Acadia | Anne Flan (sometimes LeBlanc) | Alexandre Landry | Married Joseph Richard, son of Claude Richard and Cécile Melanson, at Ascension Parish, June 6, 1774. | Marguerite (married June 2, 1794) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-138; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.603 | François (François Sébastien) | Landry (Landrie) | 01/01/1741 | probably Assumption Parish, Acadia | Anne Flan (sometimes LeBlanc) | Alexandre Landry | Married (1) Marguerite LeBlanc, perhaps the daughter of Jacques LeBlanc and Henriette Dupuis and a former resident of Baltimore, Maryland. Married (2) Marie Rose Girouard (Giroir), daughter of Honoré Girouard and Marie Josèphe Terriot, at Ascension Parish, August 10, 1793. | First marriage: Rose (born ca. 1764), Isabelle (born ca. 1766), Luc Alexandre (married February 4, 1793). Ignace Landry, born at St. Gabriel on February 1, 1773, may have been his son. | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included his wife Marguerite, and his children Isabel and Rose. The household also included orphans Pierre Blanchard, Rose Blanchard, and Marie Leblanc (surname is uncertain?). His family owned only one trunk at the time of their establishment in Louisiana. Served as one of the delegates elected by the Iberville District Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 20 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-nine-year-old wife, an unidentified six-year-old girl, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. He and his household owned eight cattle, thirteen hogs, and seventeen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years of age. His name is rendered as François Landrie in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, a ten-month-old son, a seven-year-old daughter, a two-year-old daughter, and an unidentified ten-year-old orphan. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned six cattle, twenty hogs, fifteen chickens, and three horses. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 30 years old; a daughter, 10 years old; a daughter, 6 years old. He and his family owned two male slaves, one female slave, twelve cows, three horses, twelve hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-seven years old. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 140-142; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769090901; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56, 59. | 1.767 | 03/12/1808 | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.604 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1744 | Henriette Dupuis(?) | Jacques LeBlanc(?) | Married François (François Sébastien) Landry, son of Alexandre Landry and Anne Flan. | Rose (born ca. 1764), Isabelle (born ca. 1766), Luc Alexandre (married February 4, 1793). Ignace Landry, born at St. Gabriel on February 1, 1773, may have been her son. | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-three-year-old wife of François Landry and the mother of Rose and Isabel. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was twenty-nine years old. Her household included her husband, thirty-year-old François Landry, and two unidentified girls six and one year of age. Marguerite LeBlanc and her family owned eight cattle, thirteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 141; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 59. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.605 | Rose | Landry | 01/01/1764 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marguerite LeBlanc | François Landry | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a child (aged 2 years, 6 months) in her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 141. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.606 | Isabelle (Isabel) | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite LeBlanc | François Landry | Married Jean Baptiste Girouard, son of Prosper Girouard and Marie Dugas, at Ascension Parish, La., February 8, 1790. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was nine months old in mid-1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 140-142; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:428. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.607 | Pierre | Blanchard | 01/01/1753 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old orphan residing in the household of François Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 140-142. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.608 | Rose | Blanchard | 01/01/1757 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-year-old orphan residing in the household of François Landry and Rose LeBlanc. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 140-142. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.609 | Marie | LeBlanc (?) | 01/01/1752 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a fifteen-year-old orphan in the household of François Landry and Marguerite LeBlanc. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 140-142. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.610 | Hyacinthe (Hiacinte, Hiasainte, Jans Yasainte) | Landry (Landrie, Lendry) | 01/01/1743 | Jean Landry | Married Marguerite Landry. | Jean Baptiste (married May 10, 1790), Françoise (married November 28, 1796), Marine (Marianne?) married November 21, 1803), Marguerite Adélaïde (married January 28,1804), Rosalie (married December 12, 1808) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included his wife Marguerite Landry. The household owned one axe and one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had five barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years old. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-seven-year-old wife, an unidentified three-year-old boy, and an unidentified ten-month-old girl. He and his family owned four cattle, twelve pigs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife and five-year-old son. The family occupied a tract of land with seven arpents frontage. They owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, a ten-year-old son, a four-year-old daughter, and a one-year-old daughter. He and his family owned one female slave, thirteen cows, three horses, twelve hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-five years of age. His name is rendered as Jans Yasainte Landry in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry (Lendry) lost fifteen of his thirty-one cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On January 30, 1786, departed the Iberville District for New Orleans, where he was to deliver a captured fugitive slave. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | The identity of the Hyacinthe Landry buried on the date below is uncertain. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:427; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, January 30, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:252; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 59. | 1.767 | 19/12/1792 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.611 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1742 | Married Hyacinthe Landry. | Jean Baptiste (married May 10, 1790), Françoise (married November 28, 1796), Marine (Marianne?) married November 21, 1803), Marguerite Adélaïde (married January 28,1804), Rosalie (married December 12, 1808) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Hyacinthe Landry. The household owned one axe and one trunk at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was twenty-seven years old. Her household included her twenty-seven-year-old husband, Hyacinthe Landry; an unidentified three-year-old boy; and an unidentified ten-month-old girl. She and her family owned four cattle, twelve pigs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.612 | Bonaventure | LeBlanc | 01/01/1727 | Married Marie Terriot. | Joseph (born 1751), Hyacinthe (born 1763), Anne (born 1753), Marie Madeleine (born 1767) Esther (born 1761) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his wife Marie and his children Joseph, Hyacinthe, Anne, Marie Madeleine, and Esther. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Served as one of the delegates elected by the Iberville District Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his forty-two-year-old spouse, a twenty-year-old son, a seven-year-old son, an eleven-year-old daughter, and an eight-year-old daughter. He and his family owned sixteen cattle, fifteen horses, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included his forty-seven-year-old wife, an eight-year-old son, a thirteeen-year-old daughter, and an eleven-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned fifteen cattle, fifteen hogs, forty chickens, and one horse. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 40 years old; his son, 12 years old; his daughter, 18 years old; his daughter, 16 years old; and his daughter, 8 years old. He and his family owned nineteen cows, three horses, fourteen hogs, and thirty chickens. They also owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, LeBlanc lost three of his fifteen cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. Around June 27, 1792, he served as a delegate representing the Acadian settlers of the Iberville District. He traveled to New Orleans with five other prominent Acadian Coast Acadians to petition the governor for assistance in improving local flood protection. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 154-155; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769090901; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.613 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1727 | Married Bonaventure LeBlanc. | Joseph (born 1751), Hyacinthe (born 1763), Anne (born 1753), Marie Madeleine (born 1767) Esther (born 1761) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Bonaventure LeBlanc and the mother of Joseph, Hyacinthe, Anne, Marie Madeleine, and Esther. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Bonaventure LeBlanc. Her household included a twenty-year-old son, a seven-year-old son, an eleven-year-old daughter, and an eight-year-old daughter. She and her family owned sixteen cattle, fifteen hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.614 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1751 | Marie Terriot | Bonaventure LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-one-year-old wife. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned seven cattle, fifteen hogs, and twenty chickens. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.615 | Hyacinthe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1763 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie Terriot | Bonaventure LeBlanc | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.616 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Marie Terriot | Bonaventure LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.617 | Marie Madeleine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1757 | Marie Terriot | Bonaventure LeBlanc | Married Étienne Babin on January 20, 1778. | 2 children | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.618 | Esther | LeBlanc | 01/01/1761 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie Terriot | Bonaventure LeBlanc | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 155. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.619 | Amant (Amand) | Hébert | Louisbourg, New France | Marguerite Landry | Jacques Hébert | Married Geneviève Babin, daughter of René Babin and Elizabeth Gauterot, February 4, 1744. | René (born October 30, 1744), Geneviève (Anne Geneviève) (born January 20, 1747), Marie Josèphe (born 1748),Charles (born 1752), Marguerite (born 1761) | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Died en route to Louisiana from Maryland, 1767 | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 127-128; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:59; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-11. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.620 | Geneviève | Babin | Veuve Hébert | Married Amant Hébert, February 4, 1744. | René (born October 30, 1744), Geneviève (Anne Geneviève) (born January 20, 1747), Marie Josèphe (born 1748),Charles (born 1752), Marguerite (born 1761) | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a forty-three-year-old widow. Her household included the following children: Charles, Geneviève, Marie Josèphe, and Marguerite. The documentation suggests that her family was destitute at the time of their arrival in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 127-128; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-11. | Mon, Jan 10, 1724 | Pierre Babin and Marguerite Gauterot were her baptismal sponsors. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.621 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1752 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Geneviève Babin | Amant (Amand) Hébert | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifteen-year-old child living with his recently widowed mother. Available documentation suggests that his family was destitute. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 127-128; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-11. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.622 | Geneviève (Anne Geneviève) | Hébert | Grand Pré, Acadia | Geneviève Babin | Amant (Amand) Hébert | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate incorrectly that she was twenty-two years old. She is identified as a member of her recently widowed mother's household. Available documentation indicates that her family was destitute. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 127-128; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-11. | Joseph Thibodeau and Anne babin were her baptismal sponsors. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.623 | Marie Josèphe | Hébert | 01/01/1749 | Geneviève Babin | Amant (Amand) Hébert | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her recently widowed mother's household. Her family was destitute. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 127-128. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.624 | Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1761 | probably at Newtown, Maryland | Geneviève Babin | Amant (Amand) Hébert | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Jannot, a native of Canada, at the Opelousas church. Married (2) Étienne Forest (Forêt), a native of St. Malo, France, at the Opelousas church, March 20, 1720. | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a six-year-old resident of her recently widowed mother's household. Her family was destitute. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 4-11. | 1.767 | 13/07/1832 | Lafayette Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.625 | Jean Baptiste (Janbatiste) | Babin (Babbain) | 01/01/1740 | Marie Babin | Married Isabel (Isabelle, Marguerite) LeBlanc, the daughter of Michel LeBlanc and Marie Josèphe Trahan. | Marguerite (born 1765), Pierre (born ca. 1766) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household including his wife, son Pierre, and daughter Marguerite. His family owned one axe and one trunk at the time of its settlement. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household. (Age discrepancies are commonplace in colonial census reports.) His household included his twenty-five-year-old spouse, a fifteen-month-old son, and a five-year-old daughter. He and his family owned five cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-six-year-old wife, a three-year-old son, a nine-month-old son, and a seven-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, eighteen hogs, and twelve chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his thirty-year-old wife, a four-year-old boy, a two-year-old girl. He and his faily owned one female slave, twenty cattle, two horses, twelve hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Subsequently moved with his family to the Attakapas District. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Babin (Babain) lost ten of his twenty-seven cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. On June 27, 1792, he joined with twelve other prominent Iberville District residents in signing a memorandum supporting a mission by Acadian delegates to persuade the governor to undertake a public works project to improve flood protection in the Acadian Coast settlements. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.626 | Isabel (Isabelle, Marguerite) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1744 | Marie Josèphe Trahan | Michel LeBlanc | Married Jean Baptiste Babin. | Marguerite (born 1765), Pierre (born ca. 1766) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Babin. She had two children Pierre and Marguerite. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Babin. (Age discrepancies are not unusual in colonial census reports.) The census maintains that she had two children: a fifteen-month-old son and a five-year-old daughter. She and her family owned five cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.627 | Pierre | Babin | 01/01/1766 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Isabel LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Babin | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a six-month-old child in Jean Baptiste Babin's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.628 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1765 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Isabel LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Babin | Married Simon Allain, son of Pierre Allain and Catherine Hébert, July 17, 1785. Her marriage was recorded at St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the two-year-old daughter of Jean Baptiste Babin. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.629 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1758 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a nine-year-old orphan residing in Jean Baptiste Babin's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.630 | Marie Josèphe | Veuve Blanchard | 01/01/1722 | Married (?) Blanchard. | Marguerite (born 1749), Joseph (born 1757) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the forty-five-year-old head of a household including her two children. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.631 | Joseph | Blanchard | 01/01/1757 | Marie Josèphe, veuve Blanchard | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the ten-year-old son of the Widow Blanchard. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.632 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1749 | Marie Josèphe, veuve Blanchard | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the eighteen-year-old daughter of the Widow Blanchard. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.633 | François | Hébert | fils | 06/10/1738 | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | Married Marie LeBlanc. | Charles (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born 1764), Rosalie (born ca. 1766), Benony (born ca. 1770), Anne Marie (born December 23, 1773), Colette (born ca. 1776), Jacques (born June 23, 1782) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household including his wife Marie LeBlanc and sons Charles and Jean Baptiste. His family owned one axe and one trunk at the time of settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 40 barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, an unidentified seven-year-old son, an unidentified four-year-old son, and an unidentified one-year-old daughter. He and his family owned two cattle, sixteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-two-year-old wife, an eight-year-old son, a six-year-old son, and a four-year-old son. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned ten cattle, twelve hogs, and fifteen chickens. The census suggests that he lived next door to his father and his brother, Jean Baptiste. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his thirty-year-old wife, his eight-year-old son, his six-year-old son, and his four-year-old daughter. The census also indicates that they owned eighteen cows, three horses, sixteen hogs, and nineteen chickens. He and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. Around June 27, 1792, he served as a delegate representing the Acadian settlers of the Iberville District. He traveled to New Orleans with five other prominent Acadian Coast Acadians to petition the governor for assistance in improving local flood protection. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 116; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-11. | His birthdate is uncertain. The identity of his parents is also a matter of conjecture. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.634 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1742 | Married François Hébert, fils. | Charles (born 1763), Jean Baptiste (born 1764) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of François Hébert. Her sons Charles and Jean Baptiste were present in the household. Given a land grant encompassing 4 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old wife of François Hébert, fils. Her household also included a seven-year-old son, a four-year-old son, and a one-year-old daughter. She and her family owned two cattle, sixteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 116; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.635 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1763 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marie LeBlanc | François Hébert | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 116; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.636 | Jean Baptiste | Hébert | 01/01/1764 | Marie LeBlanc | François Hébert | On May 18, 1785, he married Marianne Hébert, daughter of Pierre Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc and a former resident of Georgetown, Maryland. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 116. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.637 | Pierre | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1747 | Married (1) Marguerite Blanchard. Married (2) Marie Breau, widow of Olivier Babin, at Ascension Parish, December 11, 1775. | First marriage: Pierre (born 1761), Marie Victoire (1763, married October 11, 1784), Simon (born 1764) (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that Pierre Forest and Marie Breau had a son named Sincère. This is probably Simon.) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household including his wife Marguerite, and children Pierre, Simon, and Victoire. The records indicate that his household owned one axe and two trunks. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 8 barrels of unshucked corn. Identified as a resident of St. Gabriel at the time of his second marriage, December 11, 1775. | The death date cited below is uncertain, but he is known to have died before his widow remarried on August 20, 1781. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 120; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:295-296; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 42. | 1.767 | 07/05/1781 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.638 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1739 | Married Pierre Forest. | Pierre (born 1761), Simon (born 1764), Victoire (born 1763) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Pierre Forest and the mother of Pierre, Simon, and Victoire. | Died sometime before her widowed husband's marriage to Marie Braud on December 11, 1775. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 120; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:295-296. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.639 | Pierre | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1761 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marguerite Blanchard | Pierre Forest | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a six-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 120. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.640 | Simon | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1764 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Marguerite Blanchard | Pierre Forest | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 120; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.641 | Victoire | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Blanchard | Pierre Forest | Married Théodore Dugas, son of Jean Dugas and Marie Charlotte Gaudin, at Ascension Parish, October 11, 1784. | Reine (married January 9, 1806), Anne Céleste (married May 19, 1806), Pierre Doctrove(?) (married December 30,1821), Isidore (died April 27, 1826) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a four-month-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 120; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.642 | Joseph | Castille | 01/01/1735 | Mah¢n (sometimes rendered Port Mahon), Menorca | Married Osite (sometimes rendered Ozite, Rose, Rose Osite) Landry. | Pierre (born 1753), Joseph (born 1763), Marguerite (born 1755), Marie Marthe (born 1761), Marie Madeleine (born September 27, 1768), Jean Baptiste (married July 11, 1797), Manuel (married May 11 or 12, 1800) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the thirty-two-year-old had of a household including his wife and the following children: Pierre, Joseph, Marguerite, and Marie. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was forty-two years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-five-year-old wife, an unidentified eight-year-old son, an unidentified fifteen-day-old son, an unidentified sixteen-year-old daughter, an unidentified nine-year-old daughter, and an unidentified two-year-old daughter. He and his family owned nine beef cattle, eight hogs, and ten chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring eight arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his wife, two sons aged nine and two years; and three daughters aged eighteen, eleven, and four years. His family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned eleven cows, twenty hogs, twenty-four chickens, and two horses. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his thirty-eight-year-old wife, an eighteen-year-old daughter, a thirteen-year-old daughter, a nine-year-old son, and a six-year-old son. He and his family owned one female slave, ten cattle, twelve hogs, and eighteen chickens. They also owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | His burial record indicates that he was from "Port Mahon". His burial record also indicates that he was approximately fifty years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104-105; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 170-175; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 43, 55; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 138-139; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:150. | 1.767 | 20/10/1784 | La Pointe, St. Martin Parish, La. | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.643 | Joseph | Castille (Castil) | 01/01/1763 | Maryland | Osite (Rose Osite) Landry | Joseph Castille | Signed a marriage contract with Scholastique Bordat in the Attakapas district, March 28, 1785. Married Scholastique Bordat, daughter of Antoine Bordat and Marguerite Martin, at the Attakapas church, March 29, 1785. | Gervais (born ca. November 4, 1797), Joseph (baptized May 24, 1795), Marie (born February 1, 1792), Marie Agathe (born July 1787) | Probably at Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a four-year-old child in his parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Joseph Castil in the May 10, 1777 list. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 170-175; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.644 | Pierre | Castille | 01/01/1753 | Osite (Rose Osite) Landry | Joseph Castille | Probably at Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.645 | Marguerite | Castille | 01/01/1755 | Osite (Rose Osite) Landry | Joseph Castille | Probably at Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 170-175; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.646 | Marie (Marie Marthe) | Castille | 01/01/1761 | Maryland, probably Upper Marlboro | Osite (Rose Osite) Landry | Joseph Castille | Signed a marriage contract with Germain Trahan, February 4, 1781. Married Germain Trahan, son of Jean Trahan and Marguerite Brousard, February 4, 1781. Married (2) Laurent Ducrest, son of Louis Ducrest and Anne Catherine Wiltz, at the Attakapas church, August 25, 1787 April 10, 1787, in one source). Married (3) August Bugeaud, son of Augustin Bugeaud and Gertrude Landry, May 25, 1807. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a six-year-old child in her parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. On May 28, 1780, Marthe Castille filed a formal complaint with Commandant Alexandre DeClouet, charging Jean Guilbeau with spreading slanderous rumors about her moral character and Jean Doucet who had approached her to see if these rumors were true. She filed this complaint with her father's written permission. On December 3, 1784, she signed a contract with Jean Baptiste Dupuis. In the contract, she agreed to give Dupuis one-sixth of her herd's increase; in return, Dupuis was to manage the herd. Division of the surviving cattle born to the herd would occur annually. Over the course of the three-year contract, Dupuis was to enjoy full usage of the widow's property, including her home and pastures. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 104; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 170-175; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Marthe Castille to Alexandre DeClouet, may 28, 1780, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.647 | Joseph | Babin | 01/01/1713 | Married Anne Landry. Babin was a widower by 1763. | Élizabeth (born 1743), Étienne (born 1749), Cyprien (born 1750) | He and three of his children were at Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the widowed fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included his three children (Elizabeth, Etienne, and Cyprien). The records note that his family owned one trunk. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Served as one of the delegates elected by the Iberville District Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that was a thirty-seven-year-old (sic) widower. He was the head of a household that included an unidentified twenty-one-year-old son, an unidentified nineteen-year-old son, and an unidenified seventeen-year-old girl. He and his family owned five beef cattle and two horses. The census indicates that they did not own any land. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769090901; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2408-2409; Wood, Guide, 77-78. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.648 | Élizabeth (Élisabeth) | Babin | 01/01/1743 | Anne Landry | Joseph Babin | Married Amant Hébert, widower of Marie Claire Landry and the son of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson, at Cabannocé, June 5, 1777. Amant Hébert died on December 20, 1784. Married (2) Thomas Hébert, who predeceased her. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-four-year-old member of her widowed father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:44. . | 1.767 | 22/12/1799 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.649 | Étienne (Estevan) | Babin (Babain) | 01/01/1749 | Canada | Anne Landry | Joseph Babin | Married Marie Magdeleine LeBlanc, an Acadian formerly exiled to Baltimore and the daughter of Bonaventure LeBlanc and Marie Terriot, at Cabannocé, January 20, 1778. | two sons, one born ca. 1774 and another born in 1776 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an eighteen-year-old resident of his widowed father's household. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-one years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. he occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-one years of age. His surname is rendered as Babain in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, a three-year-old son, and an eight-month-old son. He and his family owned two cows, two horses, eight pigs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | His burial record indicates that he was thirty-nine years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:45; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | 1.767 | 19/12/1788 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.650 | Cyprien (Siprian, Siperien) | Babin (Babain) | 01/01/1750 | Anne Landry | Joseph Babin | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. His name is rendered as Siprian Babin in the February 7, 1770 list. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old resident of his widowed father's household. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. His name is rendered as Siperien Babain in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned two cows, three horses, six hogs, ffiteen chickens, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Babin (Babain) lost six of his fifteen cows. | His burial record indicates that he was a bachelor about seventy years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:49; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | 30/01/1814 | St. Joseph Catholic Church, Baton Rouge, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.651 | Augustin | Landry | père | 01/01/1725 | Married Marie (Marie Madeleine) Babin. | Joseph Marie (born ca. 1748), Joseph Ignace (born 1753), Mathurin (born 1753), Marie (born 1747), Marguerite (born 1762), Madeleine (born 1764) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included his wife Marie, and the following children: Joseph Marie, Joseph Ignace, Mathurin, Marie, Marguerite, and Madeleine. The records also indicate that his family owned two trunks at the time of settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Served as one of the delegates elected by the Iberville District Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included his forty-two-year-old wife, an unidentified twenty-eight-year-old man, an unidentified eighteen-year-old boy, an unidendified fourteen-year-old boy, an unidentified ten-year-old girl, and an unidentified eight-year-old girl. The household owned thirteen cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, a nineteen-year-old son, a thirteen-year-old daughters, and an eleven-year-old daughter. He and his family owned one male slave, eighteen cows, fifteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a fifty-two-year-old married man. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry lost three of his twenty-two cows. He was a resident of Manchac at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769090901; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:418. | Greg Wood has questioned his birthdate, as indicated in the 1767 immigration records. | 1.767 | 02/05/1781 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.652 | Marie Madeleine (Marie Jeanne) | Babin | 01/01/1725 | Married Augustin Landry. | Joseph Marie (born ca. 1748), Joseph Ignace (born 1753), Mathurin (born 1753), Marie (born 1757), Marguerite (born 1762), Madeleine (born 1764) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a forty-two-year-old member of her husband's household. The household included the following children: Joseph Marie, Joseph Ignace, Mathurin, Marie, Magruerite, and Madeleine. | Her burial record indicates that she was approximately ninety-five years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | Greg Wood has questioned her birthdate, as indicated in the 1767 immigration records. | 1.767 | 24/03/1814 | Saint Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.653 | Joseph Marie | Babin | 01/01/1748 | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Married Marguerite Thibodeau. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.654 | Joseph Ignace | Babin | 01/01/1753 | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Married (1) Scholastique Breau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the daughter of Antoine Breau and Marguerite Landry, at Ascension Parish, February 12, 1776. Married (2) Isabelle Breau, daughter of Honoré Breau and Isabelle LeBlanc. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old resident of his parents' household. Identified simply as Joseph Ignace in the 1770 militia muster roll for the Iberville District. He was evidently the person identified as Josine Babin, a fusilier on active duty in the Iberville District militia, July 10, 1783. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.655 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1747 | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.656 | Mathurin | Babin | 01/01/1755 | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Married (1) Perpétue Breau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the daughter of Antoine Breau and Marguerite Landry, at Ascension Parish, May 30, 1779. Married (2) Marie Apollonie Hébert, an Acadian formerly exiled to Georgetown, Maryland, and the daughter of Amant Hébert and Marie Claire Landry, at St. Gabriel, February 10, 1800. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twelve-year-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.657 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1762 | probably in Upper Marlboro, Maryland | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Married Joseph LeBlanc, son of Michel LeBlanc and Marie Josette Trahan, at St. Gabriel, June 18, 1781. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a five-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.658 | Madeleine | Babin | 01/01/1764 | probably in Upper Marlboro, Maryland | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a three-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 138-139. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.659 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1701 | Jean Baptiste (born 1740), Marie (born 1741), Ignace (born 1742) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a sixty-six-year-old widow and the head of household. Her twenty-two-year-old daughter Marie resided with her. Given a land grant encompassing 2 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.660 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1741 | Marie Babin | Paul S. Martin, Sr., maintains that she married Claude Martin, son of Charles Martin and Jeanne Comeau, at the Attakapas church, 1770. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-six-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | Her death record maintains that she was 80 years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79-80. | 1.767 | 29/09/1823 | St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.661 | Anselme (Enselme) | Bellisle (Belle-Isle, Bellîle) | 01/01/1738 | Alexandre Bellisle(?) | Married Marie Josèphe Dupuis. | Paul (born ca. 1764; interred August 23, 1791), Marie (born 1771), Françoise Hélène (Elena) (born 1773; married February 4, 1793), Marguerite (baptized September 11, 1775), Augustin (born 1777), Joseph Anselme (baptized May 22, 1778) | At Annapolis Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-nine-year-old head of household. His son Paul, identified in the 1767 records as a nine-month-old infant, resided with him, but his wife Anne Marie does not appear in the list. The records indicate that his family owned one axe and one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 100 barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that Anselme Bellisle was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife and an unidentified seven-year-old boy. He and his family owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and seventeen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-nine-year-old wife, an eight-year-old son, and a ten-month-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, twelve hogs, and forty-three chickens. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. His name is rendered as Enselme Delislle in the June 17, 1777, list. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household a included the following persons: Mare Dupuis, his wife, 35 years old; Paul Bellisle (Belisle), his son, 13 years old; Marie Bellisle (Belisle), his daughter, 6 years old; Françoise Bellisle (Belisle), his daughter, 4 years old; and Marguerite Bellisle (Belisle), his daughter, 2 years old. Anselme Bellisle (Belisle) and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, thirteen cows, three horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Enselme Bellisle in the July 27, 1777, petition. On April 22, 1780, Anselme Bellisle and his wife sold dto Charles Plissaux a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Standing on the property was a house of poteaux-en-terre construction, measuring 24 feet by 16 feet. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Dupuis, his wife, 46 years old; Paul (Paulle), his son, 24 years old; Marie, his daughter, 16 years old; François, his son, 14 years old; (name illegible), 12 years old; (name illegible), 10 years old; and Augustin, 8 years old. He and his family owned one slave. They also owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, fifteen barrels of rice, fifty barrels of corn, fourteen cattle, four horses, and twenty hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Dupuis, his wife, 47 years old; Paul (Pol), his son, 27 years old; Marie, his daughter, 17 years old; François, his son, 15 years old; Marguerite (Margritte), his daughter, 14(?) years old; Joseph, his son, 13 years old; and Augustin, his son, 9 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned one slave. They also owned fifteen barrels of rice, sixty barrels of corn, fifteen cows, four horses, and twenty-one hogs. Their property holdings ranked them as one of the wealthiest Acadian families in the Lafourche District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 83; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:70. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.662 | Paul | Bellisle (Belle-Isle, Bellîle) | 01/01/1766 | probably Annapolis, Maryland | Annee Dupuis | Anselme Bellisle (Bellîle) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a nine-month-old infant living in his father's household. His mother is neither identified, nor is she listed as a member of the household. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-seven-year-old member of his parents' household. | Died a bachelor; the burial record erroneously gives his age as twenty years at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 83; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.767 | 23/08/1791 | Ascension Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.663 | Pierre (Piere) | Brasseur (Brasseaux, Brasette, Brasset, Braseur) | 01/01/1742 | Elisabeth (Élizabeth) Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | Married Elisabeth (Isabelle, Élizabeth) Richard sometime during the period of exile, but probably ca. 1760. | Marguerite (born 1766); Joseph (born ca. 1770; married July 12, 1794); Olivier (born ca. 1772); Marie Rose (born January 17, 1774; Jean-Baptiste (baptized at St. Gabriel, Sept. 12, 1779); and Marie Magdeleine (sometimes Magdelena) (born Oct. 10, 1777) | Exiled with his family from Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, in September 1755. Lived in Cecil County, Maryland, from 1755 until 1767. At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. His family brought with them two trunks at the time of their immigration. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Settled on Section 51, T.9S, R.1E (see Commissioners' Report No. 54 for the area east of the Mississippi in the state land records), across the river from present-day White Castle. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years of age. His name is rendered as Pierre Brasset in the February 7, 1770 list. Served as a government courier in the 1770s; also occasionally escorted prisoners from Iberville District to New Orleans. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife. (He is identified in the census as Pierre Brassette; one branch of the family subsequently took this form of the surname.) In 1771, Brasseur and his wife owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years old. His name is rendered as Pierre Brasette in the June 21, 1771 list. His property was surveyed by Louis Andry in 1772, and, in 1775, he was given a Spanish land grant to a parcel of land (10 arpents frontage by 40 arpents depth) by Governor Luis de Unzaga. (His grant was bounded above by the land of Mathurin Richard and below by that of Joseph Comeau, Jr.) His property at that time was bounded above by Mathurin Richard and below by Joseph Comeaux, Jr. (The river frontage of the property lies on the east bank, directly across the river from the northernmost tip of the Bayou Goula Towhead, a large island in the Mississippi River, and the town of White Castle.) The 1772 census of Iberville District indicates that Pierre was thirty-two years of age and that his wife was twenty-five years of age. His household contained one eleven-year-old girl, and three-year-old boy, and a ten-month-old boy. In 1772, Pierre owned five horned [beef] cattle, eighteen hogs, twenty chickens, and a farmstead measuring ten arpents frontage along the Mississippi. On February 23, 1773, Pierre Brasseur and Mathurin Richard approached the Iberville District commandant and requested permission to depart Louisiana for Cap Français (modern-day Cap Haïtien), Saint-Domingue, where Pierre's sister reportedly resided. Brasseur and Richard were given an audience with Governor Luís de Unzaga at New Orleans on March 1, 1773. Unzaga rejected their request and ordered Brasseur and Richard to return to their homes. A governmental list dated March 23, 1779, indicates that there were seven persons in Pierre Brasseur's household; the list also indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-eight-year-old wife, a nine-year-old daughter, a six-year-old son, and a four-year-old son. He and his family owned no slaves. The census, however, indicates that they possessed seventeen cattle, four horses, sixteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-seven years of age. His name is rendered as Piere Braseur in the July 13, 1777 list. Served in the American Revolution as a soldier in Bernardo de G lvez's campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge, 1779. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Brasseur lost three of his seventeen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. Became embroiled in a legal dispute with Juan Morales over a parcel of land mistakenly granted to both Morales and Brasseur by the Spanish government, June 1792. Despite the swampy topography of his land, he managed to clear sufficient land with the help of several slaves he acquired in the 1780s to establish a small indigo plantation by 1794. Also raised and evidently trained horses for sale. At the time of his death, he owned 2 tracts of land including 320 superficial arpents. | T9S, R1E, sec. 51 | Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:140-142; St. Gabriel Catholic Church Registers, Vol. 8, pp. 31, 171; American State Papers, Public Lands Series, vol. II, p. 263; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, May 27, 1770, AGI, PPC, 193B:287; Nicolas De Verbois to Luis de Unzaga, (Feb. 12, 1770?), PPC, 206; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to Ile aux Marais, May 10, 1772, PPC, 202:244vo; Luís de Unzaga to Dutisné, March 1, 1773, AGI, PPC, 193B:252; List of settlers on the Iberville Coast who propose and have proposed growing tobacco next year and who have sown seed this year, [1777], PPC, 190:258vo; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of persons who have surplus corn in the [Iberville] district, ca. Mar. 23, 1779, PPC, 213:258; Slave sale, David Munro to Pierre Brasseux, Oct. 30, 1782, Original Acts, Book A-1, vol. 42, Iberville Parish Courthouse; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Probate Sale, Jean Olivier Landry Estate, Oct. 30, 1791, Original Acts, Book A-2, doc. no. 29, Iberville Parish Courthouse; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Nicolas De Verbois to Governor Carondelet, June 13, 1792, PPC, 206:406-407; Baron de Carondelet to De Verbois, June [actually July] 2, 1792, PPC, 215A:550; Statement of a report for delegates sent to New Orleans, June 27, 1792, PPC, 206:413; Nicolas DeVerbois to the governor, June 13, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:406; Public Auction of the Tirsso Bermejo Estate, August 26, 1792, Book A-2, doc. no. 45, Iberville Parish Courthouse; Succession of Pierre Brasseux, November 27, 1795, Book A2, document #66, Clerk of Court's Office, Iberville Parish Courthouse, Plaquemine, Louisiana; Joseph Brasset to Joseph Charp, June 4, 1796, Book A-5, page 183, Acquitance, Iberville Parish Original Acts; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.767 | 30/09/1794 | Ascension Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.664 | Elisabeth (Isabel, Isabelle, Élizabeth) | Richard | 01/01/1743 | Married Pierre Brasseur, son of Cosme Brasseur and Elizabeth Thibodeau. | Marguerite (born 1766); Joseph (born ca. 1770; married July 12, 1794); Olivier (born ca. 1772); Marie Rose (born January 17, 1774; Jean-Baptiste (baptized at St. Gabriel, Sept. 12, 1779); and Marie Magdeleine (sometimes Magdelena) (born Oct. 10, 1777) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-four-year-old resident of Pierre Brasseur's household, which included her ten-month-old daughter Marguerite. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was twenty-eight years old. Her household included her thirty-year-old husband. In 1771, the couple owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The 1772 census of Iberville District maintains that she was twenty-five years old (an obvious error), and that her household included her husband Pierre and three children: an eleven-year-old girl, a three-year-old boy, and a ten-month-old boy.l Her family owned five beef cattle, eighteen hogs, twenty chickens, and a farmstead along the Mississippi River measuring ten arpents frontage by forty arpents depth. A governmental list compiled on March 23, 1779, indicates that her household had grown to include seven persons. On September 20, 1783, she and her husband purchased from Thomas Warren a farm, measuring three arpents frontage by forty arpents depth on the east bank of the Mississippi River, for 150 piastres. On September 20, 1785, Elizabeth and her husband purchased from Richard Rodey a tract of land adjoining the former Warren property and measuring three arpents frontage by forty arpents depth. On July 9, 1787, she and Pierre Brasseur appeared before the Iberville District commandant to record the sale of the former Warren and Rodey lands to their son Joseph for the price of 300 piastres, due in ten years. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:140-142; St. Gabriel Catholic Church Registers, Vol. 8, p. 31, 171; American State Papers, Public Lands Series, vol. II, p. 263; Nicolas De Verbois to Luis de Unzaga, (Feb. 12, 1770?), PPC, 206; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; General census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to Ile aux Marais, May 16, 1772, PPC, 202:244vo; List of settlers on the Iberville Coast who propose and have proposed growing tobacco next year and who have sown seed this year, [1777], PPC, 190:258vo; List of persons who have surplus corn in the [Iberville] district, ca. Mar. 23, 1779, PPC, 213:258; Slave sale, David Munro to Pierre Brasseux, Oct. 30, 1782, Original Acts, Book A-1, vol. 42, Iberville Parish Courthouse; Probate Sale, Jean Olivier Landry Estate, Oct. 30, 1791, Original Acts, Book A-2, doc. no. 29, Iberville Parish Courthouse; Nicolas De Verbois to Governor Carondelet, June 13, 1792, PPC, 206:406-407; Baron de Carondelet to De Verbois, June [actually July] 2, 1792, PPC, 215A:550; Statement of a report for delegates sent to New Orleans, June 27, 1792, PPC, 206:413; Public auction of the Tirsso Bermejo estate, Aug. 26, 1792, Book A-2, doc. no. 45, Iberville Parish Courthouse; Joseph Brasset to Joseph Charp, June 4, 1796, Book A-5, page 183, Acquitance, Iberville Parish Original Acts; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.665 | Marguerite | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1766 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) Richard | Pierre Brasseur | Married Paul Babin, son of Dominique Babin and Marguerite Boudrot, at Ascension Parish, February 24, 1784. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-month-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.666 | Elisabeth (Élizabeth, Isabelle) | Thibodeau | Veuve Cosme Brasseur | 01/01/1718 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Anne Aucoin | Pierre Thibodeau | Married Cosme Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), a resident of Beaubassin, Acadie, and the son of Mathieu Brasseur and Jeanne Bellemère, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, January 7, 1738. | Pierre (born 1742), Blaise (born 1752), Marie Marguerite (born 1745), Marie Madeleine (born 1747), Marie (born 1749), Anne (born 1753), and Marie Rose (born 1755) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following children: Blaise, Marie Marguerite, Marie Madeleine, Marie, Anne, and Marie Rose. Her family carried all of their belongings in one trunk at the time of their arrival in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District, which misidentifies her as Marie Brassette, indicates that she was a sixty-year-old widow. (The 1771 census suggests that she and her minor children resided next door to her eldest son, Pierre Brasseur.) Her household included four unidentified girls aged twenty-three, twenty-two, nineteen, and fifteen years an unidentified eighteen-year-old boy. She and her family owned three cattle, fifteen hogs, and seventeen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. On March 2, 1773, Honoré Trahan, one Langrois (Langlois?), Vincent Dalpinau, Veuve Brasseur, and Antoine Bellard appeared before Iberville commandant Dutisné and requested permission to relocate at the Opelousas District, where they claimed to have relatives who could assist them. Governor Luís de Unzaga refused them permission to move pending receipt of the commandant's opinion regarding their relocation and the availability of settlers to fill the void created by their departure, March 4, 1773. On May 24, 1773, after having received Dutisné's response and having been assured that replacement settlers had been found, Unzaga agreed to allow the Acadian petitioners to relocate in the Opelousas District. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:130; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, March 2, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:358; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, March 4, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:359; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, May 24, 1773, AGI, PPC, 193B:246; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.667 | Marie Marguerite | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1745 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.668 | Anne | Brun | 01/01/1739 | Married Jean Baptiste Broussard. | Perpétue (born April 14, 1771), Jean (born ca. 1765), Marie (born January 20, 1789), Michel (born ca. 1768) | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a thirty-seven-year-old resident of her husband's household. The household included her husband, an unidentified eight-year-old boy, an unidentified seven-year-old boy, an unidentified two-year-old boy, twenty-one-year-old Mathurin Broussard, and twenty-one-year-old Madeleine Thibodeau. Her family owned twenty-nine beef cattle and ten horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Her burial record maintains that she was fifty-nine years old at the time of her death. | Voorhies, comp., Some Late Eighteenth-Century Louisianians, 124; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 151, Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 2:146; Reaux and Reaux, "The Children of Jean François Broussard and Catherine Richard," 133-134; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2447; Conover, Broussard, 1:15; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 135-136; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | 06/11/1798 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.669 | Marie Madeleine | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Élizabeth (Isabelle) Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-year-old woman residing in her widowed mother's household along with the following siblings: Blaise, Marie Marguerite, Marie, Anne, and Marie Rose. She appears to have been the unidentifed twenty-three-year-old woman in her mother's household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.670 | Anne (Rose) | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1753 | Élizabeth Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | Married Pierre Trahan. | Charles (born October 10, 1777), Étienne Simon (born January 4, 1782), Marie Rose (married August 4, 1794) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household, along with the following siblings: Blaise, Marie Marguerite, Marie Madeleine, Marie, and Marie Rose. She appears to have been the unidentified nineteen-year-old girl in her mother's household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.671 | Marie Rose | Brasseur (Brasseaux) | 01/01/1755 | Élizabeth Thibodeau | Cosme Brasseur | Married Charles Jeansonne. | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twelve-year-old member of her widowed mother's household, along with the following siblings: Blaise, Marie Marguerite, Marie Madeleine, and Anne. She appears to have been the unidentified fifteen-year-old in her mother's household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, she was a widow and the head of a household that included three boys under the age of fifteen years, three girls under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and two females fifteen years of age or older. She and her family owned no slaves. The census indicates that her household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 92-93; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.672 | René | Blanchard | 01/01/1701 | Anne Landry | René Blanchard | Married Marguerite Terriot, daughter of Germain Terriot (Theriot) and Anne Richard, at St. Charles des Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, July 9, 1726. | Françoise (born December 25, 1746), Madeleine, and Marguerite (born 1749) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the sixty-six-year-old head of a household including his wife Marguerite Terriot and his eighteen-year-old daughter Marguerite. His family carried all of its belongings in one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 4 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:14; 2:100; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 91-92. | 1.767 | 27/09/1788 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.673 | Marguerite | Terriot (Theriot) | 06/08/1709 | Anne Richard | Germain Terriot | Married René Blanchard, July 9, 1726. | Françoise (born December 25, 1746), Madeleine, Marguerite (born 1749) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the sixty-year-old wife of René Blanchard. Her eighteen-year-old daughter Marguerite was a member of her household in 1767. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:128; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 91-92. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.674 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Terriot | René Blanchard | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an eighteen-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 91-92. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.675 | Madeleine | Blanchard | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Terriot | René Blanchard | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 91-92. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.676 | Ignace (Ignasce, Ygnace) | Babin (Babain) | 01/01/1742 | Marie, veuve Babin | Married (1) Marguerite Breau. Married (2) Marie Josèphe Landry(?), widow of Joseph Blanchard, February 3, 1778. The marriage was witnessed by Paul Babin, Anselme Landry, and Firmin Blanchard. | First marriage: Paul (born ca. 1766), Joseph (born December 22, 1768) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-five-year-old head of household. His twenty-eight-year-old wife Marguerite and seven-month-old son Paul lived with him. His family carried its belongings in one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. He wrote to Governor Luís de Unzaga, ca. October 1770, complaining that his land grant was uninhabitable. He claimed that the grant lacked sufficient depth and that it was so interlaced with small bayous that it was unsuitable for farming. He attached an affidavit signed by Amant Richard, S. Rivet, Simon Richard, and Amant Blanchard verifying that his claim was legitimate. Babin's letter indicates that his riverfront property was bounded by the lands of Amant Richard and Pierre Babin. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old wife, and an unidentified two-year-old boy. He and his family owned four cattle, five hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. His name is rendered as Ygnace Babain in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-four-year-old wife and a three-year-old son. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The household owned five cattle, fourteen hogs, and thirty chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a thirty-six-year-old widower. The census also indicates that he was the head of a household that included a six-year-old son. He and his son owned eight cattle, four hogs, twelve chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-seven years old. His name is rendered as Ygnace Babin in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Babin had lost seven of his twenty cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. His name is rendered as Ygnace Babin in the July 10, 1783 list. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. His name is rendered as Ignasce Babin in the October 23, 1785, list. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; 2:46; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Ignace Babin to Luís de Unzaga, October 18, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188B:175; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.677 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1739 | Married Ignace Babin. | Paul (born ca. 1766), Joseph (born December 22, 1768) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-eight-year-old wife of Ignace Babin and the mother of seven-month-old Paul. Her family carried all of its belongings in one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. She appears to have been Ignace Babin's thirty-three-year-old wife in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. Her household included an unidentified one-year-old boy. She and her family owned four cattle, five hogs and twelve chickens. They occupied six arpents of land. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District identifies her as the thirty-six-year-old widow of Ignace Babin. Her household included a twelve-year-old boy and a one-year-old girl. She and her family owned twelve cows, fourteen hogs, and seventeen chickens. They also owned a ract of land with six arpents frontage. | Died sometime before her husband's second marriage on February 3, 1778. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; 2:46; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.678 | Paul | Babin | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Breau | Ignace Babin | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a seven-month-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 79. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.679 | Amant (Amand) | Richard | 01/01/1742 | Pierre (sometimes Amant) Richard | Married Marie Breau. Janet Jehn, an Acadian genealogical expert, has determined that she might have been the daughter of Jean Baptiste Breau and Elizabeth Henry. | Simon (born 1764), Joseph (born 1767) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household that included his wife Marie Breau; his sons Simon and Joseph; his father, Pierre Richard; and orphan Marie Boudrot. The household owned two axes and two trunks at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 10 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he and his twenty-nine-year-old wife were residents of his father's household. The household also included three unidentified boys, aged seven, four, and two years. The family owned thirteen beef cattle, one steer, fifteen hogs, and twenty-seven chickens. They also occupied a large tract of land with sixteen arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was twenty-seven years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-one-year-old wife, a seven-year-old son, a six-year-old son, and a three-year-old son. The household occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The family owned seventeen cattle, twenty-two hogs, twenty chickens, and three horses. Served as sindic of the Iberville District in June 1775-June 1776. Served as sergeant in the local militia unit, June 1776. Elected by the local population as a delegate to the governor's tribunal in an effort to force absenteen landlords living in New Orleans to pay back taxes for the construction of the local church, ca. June 23, 1776. Purchased at auction a local cabaret license, ca. June 23, 1776. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sous-lieutenant (sublieutenant). His name is rendered as Mons Richard in the July 13, 1777 militia list. | Died sometime before his wife's remarriage on August 4, 1777. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 23, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:234; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 23, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:234; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.680 | Marie (Marie Marthe) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1742 | Élizabeth Henry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married (1) Amant Richard. Married (2) Joseph Saulnier, widower of Marie Landry, at St. Gabriel, August 4, 1777. | Simon (born 1764), Joseph (born 1767) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Amant Richard. Her household included her husband; her sons Simon and Joseph; Pierre Richard, and orphan Marie Boudrot. All of the member of this large household carried all of their belongings in two trunks at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Amant (Amand) Richard. She and her husband were residents of Pierre (Amant) Richard's (her father-in-law's) household. The household also included three unidentified boys aged seven, four, and two years. The family owned thirteen beef cattle, one steer, fifteen hogs, and twenty-seven chickens. On February 7, 1776, Iberville Commandant Louis Dutisné informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that Veuve Amans (sic) Richard had voluntarily decided to sell the three and one-half apents that she owned because she could neither maintain the land nor pay the church taxes levied on it. | Her burial record indicates that she was thirty-four years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, February 2, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:250; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.767 | 28/02/1782 | Ascension Parish, La.(?) | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.681 | Simon | Richard | 01/01/1764 | Marie Breau | Amant Richard | Married Scholastique Mire, an Acadian formerly exiled to Snowhill, Maryland, and the daughter of Joachim Mire and Magdeleine Melanson, at Cabannocé, January 16, 1786. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.682 | Joseph | Richard | 01/01/1767 | Marie Breau | Amant Richard | Married Pélagie Babin, daughter of Jacques Babin and Marguerite Landry, at Cabannocé, June 18, 1787. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a one-month-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.683 | Pierre | Richard | 01/01/1711 | Amant (born 1742) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifty-six-year-old resident of his son Amant's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.684 | Marie | Boudrot | 01/01/1755 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twelve-year-old orphan residing in Amant Richard's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 177-178. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.685 | Pierre (Piere, Pierote) | Babin | 01/01/1724 | Married Madeleine Richard. | Ludivine (Louise Divine?) (born 1754, married February 8, 1774), Simon (born 1764), Joseph Dosite (born January 12, 1774, married October 8, 1798), Magdelaine Adélaïde (Delaide) (baptized May 17, 1777, married November 8, 1798) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included his wife Madeleine Richard, his son Simon, his daughter Ludivine (Louise Divine?), and orphan Paul Babin. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Around August 8, 1770, Pierre Babin volunteered to have the local church rectory established on his property. Babin agreed to cede his property in exchange for another parcel of vacant land with seven arpents frontage. Governor Luís de Unzaga approved of the proposal on October 24, 1770. Around January 20, 1771, Commandant Dutisné of the Iberville District assigned Pierre Babin the tract of land abandoned by Pierre Lormier. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old wife, an unidentified six-year-old boy, and an unidentified sixteen-year-old girl. He and his family owned nine cattle, thirteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-four-year-old wife, a seven-year-old son, and a seventeen-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The family owned nine cattle, twenty-five hogs, and twenty chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 39 years old; a son, 12 years old; a son, 2 years old. He and his family collectively owned fourteen cattle, twelve hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On November 24, 1777, Loiuis Dutisné, commandant of the Iberville District, informed the governor that Pierre Babin whom he identifies as Piere Babin had died of "fevers" at the age of fifty-two years, leaving a widow and three children (two sons and a daughter). Dutisné informed the governor that he had placed Babin's widow in possession of the "few belongings that the deceased left behind." | Died of "fevers." | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 81-82; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, September 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 193B:279; Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, October 24, 1770, AGI, PPC, 193B:200; Louis Dutisné to Unzaga, January 20, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:195; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Louis Dutisné to the governor, November 24, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:275. | 1.767 | 24/11/1777 | Iberville District, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.686 | Madeleine | Richard | 01/01/1738 | Married (1) Pierre Babin. Married (2) Théodore Dugas, son of Claude Dugas and Marie Bourg, at Cabannocé, April 24, 1778. | First marriage: Simon (born 1764), Ludivine (Louise Divine?) (born 1754). | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was thirty-three years old. Her household included her forty-six-year-old husband, an unidentified six-year-old boy, and an unidentified sixteen-year-old girl. She and her family owned nine cattle, thirteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 81-82; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.687 | Ludivine (Louise Divine?) | Babin | 01/01/1754 | probably Upper Marlboro, Maryland | Marie Madeleine Richard | Pierre Babin | Married Firmin Landry, widower of Marie LeBlanc, at St. Gabriel, February 8, 1774. | Pierre Ferdinand (married November 25, 1805) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. She appears to have been the unidentified sixteen-year-old girl in her parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 81-82; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:424; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10, 58. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.688 | Simon Pierre (Joseph) | Babin | 01/01/1764 | Marie Madeleine Richard | Pierre Babin | Married Constance Richard, daughter of Joseph Babin and Anne Landry, at St. Gabriel, April 27, 1795. | Simon (born December 14, 1796), Simon Pierre (born August 15, 1801), Joseph Valéry (born May 7, 1803) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 81-82; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:621; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Simon Pierre Babin and Marguerite Constance Richard." | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.689 | Paul (Paulle, Polle) | Babin (Babain) | 01/01/1751 | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an orphan residing in the household of Pierre Babin. Genealogist and historian Greg Wood indicates that he was orphaned after 1763. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years of age. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned two cows, six hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years old. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 81-82; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.690 | Marie | LeBlanc(?) | Veuve Richard | 01/01/1754 | Anne Landry(?) | Antoine LeBlanc(?) | Appears to have married Joseph Richard after being given a dispensation for consanguinity in the third degree, August 6, 1773. | Simon (born 1740), Paul (born 1747), Mathurin (born 1741), Isabelle (born 1737) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the head of a household including her sons Simon, Paul, and Mathurin; her daugher Isabelle; and orphan Marie Landry. Given a land grant encompassing 4 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.691 | Simon | Richard | 01/01/1740 | Marie LeBlanc(?) | Joseph Richard(?) | Married Marie Rose Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Landry and Anne Babin, May 7, 1770. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée District, La. | Paul (married April 12, 1803), Simon, fils (married January 7, 1806) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-seven-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 40 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant. He is also listed as a thirty-year-old fusilier in the unit. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-two-year-old wife. The couple owned five cattle, five hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant and that he was twenty-eight years of age. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old wife and an eleven-month-old son. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents. owned four cattle, twenty-four-hogs, and six chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included his twenth-three-year-old wife, a six-year-old son, a four-year-old son, and a two-year-old daughter. He and his family owned eleven cows, ten hogs, thirty chickens, and a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On October 12, 1777, Louis Dutisné, commandant of the Iberville District, nominated Simon Richard for appointment as sublieutenant in the local militia unit. In justifying the nomination, Dutisné noted that Richard and Anselme Blanchard, whom he had nominated for appointment as lieutenant, were the only literate militiamen in the district. The "good behavior and good moral character" also suited them well for the positions to which they had been nominated. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Richard lost six of his twenty-two cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Louis Dutisné to the governor, October 12, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:272; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.692 | Paul (Polle) | Richard | 01/01/1748 | Marie LeBlanc(?) | Joseph Richard(?) | Married Magdeleine Marthe Babin, daughter of Dominique Babin and Marguerite Boudrot. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. At the time of the 1771 census, he owned four cattle and twelve hogs. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned three cattle and sixteen hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his sixteen-year-old wife. The couple owned eighteen cattle, twelve, hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty years of age. He is identified as Polle Richard in the July 13, 1777 census. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Richard lost four of his twelve cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.693 | Mathurin (Maturain) | Richard | 01/01/1741 | Marie LeBlanc(?) | Joseph Richard(?) | Married Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry. | Jean Baptiste (born March 26, 1769) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twenty-six-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. Another list indicates that he was present with his wife at the time lands were distributed among the St. Gabriel Acadians in 1767. Given a land grant encompassing 4 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his family were residents fo the Manchac area in March 1769. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-one-year-old spouse and an unidentified eighteen-month-old boy. He and his family owned three cattle, sixteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. His name is rendered as Maturain Richar in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-four-year-old spouse and three-year-old son. On February 23, 1773, Pierre Brasseur and Mathurin Richard approached the Iberville District commandant and requested permission to depart Louisiana for Cap Français (modern-day Cap Haïtien), Saint-Domingue, where Pierre's sister reportedly resided. Brasseur and Richard were given an audience with Governor Luís de Unzaga at New Orleans on March 1, 1773. Unzaga rejected their request and ordered Brasseur and Richard to return to their homes. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned four cattle, eighteen hogs, fourteen chickens, and one horse. Identified as a corporal in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that e was the head of a household that included three men and one woman. He and his family owned forty-five cows and twenty-seven horses. They occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included one male fifteen years of age or older and one female fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. The 1796 census indicates that his household was located in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:213; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179-180; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, March 1, 1773, AGI, PPC, 193B:252; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.694 | Isabelle (Élisabeth, Élizabeth) | Richard | 01/01/1737 | Marie LeBlanc | Joseph Richard | Married Jean Louis Daigre (Daigle), son of Jean Daigle and Marguerite Anne Dubois. | Louis (born September 2, 1800) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirty-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:76. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.695 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1742 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-five-year-old "orphan" residing in the household of the Widow Marie Richard. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 179. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.696 | Jean Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1711 | Married Anne Babin. He was a widower in 1767. | Jean (born 1751), Marguerite (born 1737), Madeleine (born 1747), Marie Rose (born 1749), Marie (Marie Perpétue) (born 1764) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following children: Jean, Marguerite, Madeleine, Marie Rose, and Marie (Marie Perpétue). His family owned one axe, one gun, and two trunks at the time of their settlement. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were residents of the Manchac settlement in May 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a sixty-eight-year-old widow. | Died before his dauther Marie's (Marie Perpétue's) marriage in 1777. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:444. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.697 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1751 | St. John River, Acadia | Anne "Nanette" Babin | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married Nanette Murot, a native of Brittany, France, and the daughter of Gabriel Muro and Marie Trahan. | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:430. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.698 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Anne Babin | Jean Baptiste Landry | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirty-year-old resident of her father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.699 | Madeleine (Marie Magdeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Anne Babin | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married Anselme Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Baltimore, Maryland, and the son of Alexandre Landry and Anne Flan, April 10, 1769. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée. | Céleste (married May 5, 1794) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-year-old resident of her father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.700 | Marie Rose | Landry | 01/01/1749 | Anne Babin | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married Simon Richard, an Acadian formerly exiled to Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and the son of Joseph Richard and Marie LeBlanc, May 7, 1770. | Paul (married April 12, 1803), Simon, fils (married January 7, 1806) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an eighteen-year-old resident of her father's household. She appears to have been the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Simon Richard in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:444; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.701 | Marie (Marie Perpétue) | Landry | 01/01/1764 | Probably Oxford, Maryland | Anne Babin | Jean Baptiste Landry | Married Michel Breau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the son of Jean Charles Breau and Marie Benoit. | Michel, fils (married May 11, 1807), Marie Rose (married August 20, 1810, Marie Angelle (married August 20, 1810), Étienne Urbin (Urbain) (born ca. 1778; married August 20, 1810; died July 23, 1823), Jean Baptiste (married February 14, 1820), Marie Clémence (born ca. 1797; married April 24, 1820; died December 31, 1826), Raphaël (died November 3, 1812, at the age of nineteen years), Manuel (died January 20, 1813, at the age of twenty-two years)Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand notes that "the marriage of two sisters and a brother on the same day seems to establish a record." | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a three-year-old resident of her father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 143-144; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.702 | Charles | Comeau | père | 01/01/1709 | Married Madeleine Landry. He was a widower in 1767. | Charles (born 1749), Firmin (born 1753), Marianne (born 1745) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his children Charles, Firmin, and Marianne. Isabelle Comeau, an orphan, resided with his family. His family carried its belongs in two trunks at the time of their arrival in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Served as one of the delegates elected by the Iberville District Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a fifty-year-old widower. His household included an unidentified twenty-year-old boy, an unidentified five-year-old boy, and an unidentified twenty-seven-year-old girl. The household owned fifteen cattle, sixteen hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of and with eight arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District suggests that he was a widower. The census also indicates that he was a fifty-nine-year-old member of the household of Jean Charles Comeau, his twenty-three-year-old son. The members of this household collectively owned two male slaves, one female slave, twenty cows, six horses, twenty-one hogs, forty chickens, and a large tract of land with sixteen arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Comeau (Caumo) lost four of his nineteen cows. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 110; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769090901; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.703 | Charles (Jean Charles, Charles) | Comeau (Caumo, Caumon, Como) | fils | 01/01/1749 | Madeleine Landry | Charles Comeau | Married (1) Cécile Dugas, daughter of Joseph Dugas and Cécile Bergereau (Bergeron?), at Cabannocé, September 23, 1776. Married (2) Anne Catherine Buch (probably Bush or Busch), a Protestant from Virginia and the daughter of Daniel Buch and Diane Luisse, at St. Gabriel, July 9, 1781. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an eighteen-year-old resident of his father's household. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty two years of age. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his eighteen-year-old wife; his fifty-nine-year-old father, Charles Comeau, père; and an unidentified, seventeen-year-old brother. He and his family owned two male slaves, one female slave, twenty cows, six horses, twenty-one hogs, forty chickens, and a very large tract of land with sixteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-three-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Comeau (Caumo) lost three of his fourteen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. He is identified as Jean Charles Como in the November 15, 1788 list. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 110; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.704 | Firmin | Comeau (Common) | 01/01/1753 | Madeleine Landry | Charles Comeau | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his father's household. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-seven-year-old bachelor. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.767 | 11/03/1781 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.705 | Marianne (Anne) | Comeau | 01/01/1745 | Madeleine Landry | Charles Comeau | Married Jean Baptiste Doucet, son of Jean Doucet and Elisabeth Hébert, at St. Gabriel, January 11, 1773. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 110. | 1.767 | 14/08/1788 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.706 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Comeau | 01/01/1758 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a nine-year-old orphan living in Charles Comeau's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 110. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.707 | Athanase | Landry | 01/01/1742 | Married Marie Madeleine Hébert. | unnamed child (perhaps Denis) (born March 2, 1774), Denis (married Septemer 22, 1795), Jérôme Louis (born July 10, 1781), Joseph (born September 15, 1777) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household including himself and his twenty-four-year-old wife, Marie Madeleine Hébert. His family carried all of its belongings in one trunk at the time of settlement. The government provided him one axe for land clearing. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Appears to have been the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household identified only as "Athanaze." His household included his twenty-five-year-old spouse and an unidentified nine-year-old girl. He and his family owned two beef cattle, fifteen hogs, and ten chickens. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 152; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:415-451; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.708 | Marie Madeleine | Hébert | 01/01/1743 | Married Athanase Landry. | unnamed child (perhaps Denis) (born March 2, 1774), Denis (married Septemer 22, 1795), Jérôme Louis (born July 10, 1781), Joseph (born September 15, 1777) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Athanase Landry. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old wife of Athanase Landry. Her household included her twenty-eight-year-old husband and an unidentified nine-year-old girl. She and her family owned two cattle, fifteen hogs, and ten chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 152; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:415-451. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.709 | Bonaventure | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1723 | Married Claire Rivet. | Marguerite (born 1749), Madeleine (born 1764), Anne Rose (born 1760), Anne Sophie, Marie (born 1752) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household that included his wife and three daughters. His family carried all of its belongings in one trunk at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The government evidently provided him with one axe for land clearing. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included his forty-four-year-old wife and four unidentified girls aged twenty-one, eighteen, sixteen, and ten years. The household owned six beef cattle, six hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.710 | Marguerite | Rivet | 01/01/1725 | Married (1) Bonaventure Forest. Married (2) Abraham Landry, widower of Elizabeth LeBlanc. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the spouse of Bonaventure Forest and the mother of three daughters. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117. | 1.767 | 22/03/1780 | Ascension Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.711 | Marguerite | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1749 | Claire Rivet | Bonaventure Forest | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.712 | Marie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1752 | Claire Rivet | Bonaventure Forest | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.713 | Madeleine | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1764 | probably Upper Marlboro, Maryland | Claire Rivet | Bonaventure Forest | Married (1) Pierre Landry, son of Joseph Landry and Marie Richard, at Cabannocé, February 3, 1777. Married (2) Ignace Hébert, an Acadian formerly exiled to Georgetown, Maryland, and the son of Paul Hébert and Marguerite Melanson, at St. Gabriel, November 26, 1781. Married (3) Antoine Plide, a native of Québec and the son of François Plide and Marie Lafois, at St. Gabriel, October 28, 1795. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was an three-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.714 | Anne Sophie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1755 | Claire Rivet | Bonaventure Forest | Married Michel Dugas, son of Jean Dugas and Marie Charlotte Gaudin, at Cabannocé, February 23, 1778. | Marie Céleste (born 1779), Marguerite Pélagie (born 1779), Michel Edouard (born 1781), Julie Clothilde (born 1782), Marie Louise (born 1784), Joseph (born 1787), Félicité (born 1788) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Evidently among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767, but she does not appear in her parents' household in the 1767 census of St. Gabriel. She was evidently the sixteen-year-old daughter listed in her parents/ household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 36. | 1.767 | 11/09/1796 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.715 | Anne Rose | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1760 | Claire Rivet | Bonaventure Forest | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.716 | Joseph | Prince | 01/01/1755 | Marie Boudrot | Olivier Prince | Married Magdeleine Bonin. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a twelve-year-old orphan residing with the Bonaventure Forest family. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of Claude Martin's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.767 | 07/04/1793 | Attakapas District | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.717 | Amant (Amand) | Hébert | 04/05/1740 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie-Josèphe Melanson (Melançon) | François Hébert | Historian and genealogist Greg Wood suggests that he married (1) Marie Claire Landry in Maryland, June 3, 1766. Married (2) Anne Isabelle (Elizabeth) Babin, an Acadian formerly exiled to Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and the daughter of Joseph Babin and Anne Landry, June 5, 1777. | First marriage: daughter (born ca. 1769), Anne Marine (born April 7, 1774), Marie Apollonie (born April 7, 1774), Thomas (born January 18, 1771) Second marriage: Anne Elise (born October 28, 1781), Joseph (baptized 1780), Marie Léocade (married July 23, 1801). Louis Hébert, six-year-old son of Amant (Amand) was buried at St. Gabriel, Louisiana, on November 23, 1789. It is unclear if he was the son of Amant Hébert, the husband of Marie Boudrot, or Amant Hébert, spouse of Anne Isabelle (Élizabeth) Babin. | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included himself and his wife Marie. His family carried all of its belongs in two trunks at the time of settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eightt years old. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-six-year-old wife and an unidentified fifteen-year-old girl. He and his family owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-six-year-old spouse, a five-month-old son (Thomas), and a three-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned nine cattle, ten hogs, and thirty chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a thirty-two-year-old widower. His household included a four-year-old son, and six-month-old twins (a son and a daughter). He and his family eighteen cows, three horses, fourteen hogs, and twenty-eight chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost nine of his twenty-one cows. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:354-375; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2511; Wood, Guide, 196; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-12. | 1.767 | 20/12/1784 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.718 | Marie (Marie Claire) | Landry | 01/01/1745 | Married Amant (Amand) Hébert, son of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson in Maryland, June 3, 1766. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was Amant Hébert's twenty-two-year-old spouse. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of her husband's household. The household also included an unidentified fifteen-month-old girl. She and her family owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring 6 arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.719 | Marie | Landry | Veuve Alexis Granger | 01/01/1730 | Married (1) Alexis Granger. Married (2) Joseph Saulnier. | First marriage: Madeleine (born 1757), Marguerite (born 1768) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the head of a household that included herself; her daughter, Madeleine; her brother, Pierre Landry; and her sister, Isabelle Landry. Given a land grant encompassing 2 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 125. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.720 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a thirty-year-old member of the household of his widowed sister, Marie, veuve Alexis Granger. Given a land grant encompassing 2 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 125, 152. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.721 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a thirty-three-year-old member of the household of his widowed sister, Marie, veuve Alexis Granger. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 125, 152. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.722 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1728 | Marie Blanchard(?) | Abraham Landry(?) | Married Ursule Landry. | Anastasie (born 1748), Élizabeth (Isabelle) (born 1755), Magdeleine (born 1759), Marie (born 1763) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household that included himself, his wife, two daughters, Joseph Landry, and Jean Baptiste LeBlanc. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.723 | Ursule | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Married Jean Landry. | Anastasie (born 1748), Élizabeth (Isabelle) (born 1755), Magdeleine (born 1759), Marie (born 1763) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Her household included herself, her husband, two daughters, Joseph Landry, and Jean Baptiste LeBlanc. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:450; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60. | 1.767 | 01/01/1786 | Ascension Parish | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.724 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Ursule Landry | Jean Landry | Married Jacques (Pierre Jacques) Melanson, son of Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) and Osite Hébert, July 26, 1773. | Joseph (born 1775), Paul (born ca. January 1777), Henriette (married February 25, 1811) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Amant (Amand) Babin and Anastasie Landry, her sister. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Jacques Melanson. In addition to her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Melanson, two-year-old her son, jand Paul Melanson, her eight-month-old son. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60, 78. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.725 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.726 | Joseph (Jausephe Marie, Joseph Marie) | Landry (Landrie) | fils | 01/01/1743 | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was an "orphan" living with his sister Ursule and brother-in-law Jean Landry. Given a land grant encompassing four arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years old. His name is rendered as Joseph Marie Landry in the February 7, 1770 list. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple owned four cattle, eighteen hogs, and sixteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-one years of age. His name is rendered as Jausephe Marie Landrie in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten cattle, eighteen hogs, and eight chickens. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-two-year-old bachelor. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.727 | Jean Baptiste | LeBlanc | 01/01/1749 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's second sergeant. Extant documents indicate that he was an eighteen-year-old residing with Jean Landry's family. (He is perhaps the Jean Charles LeBlanc, son of Jean LeBlanc and Marie Theriot [Terriot], who married Osite [Ausite] Landry, daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Richard, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé on August 5, 1770.) | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 144; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:467; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.728 | Amant (Amand, Armand) | Melanson (Melançon) | Marguerite LeBlanc | Joseph Melanson | Married Anne Babin. | Joseph (born 1752), Simon (born 1764), Mathurin (born 1765 or 1766), Olivier (born 1767), Anne (born 1760), Marguerite | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household including his wife Anne, and the following children: Joseph, Simon, Mathurin, Olivier, and Anne. His family carried all their belongings in two trunks at the time of their arrival in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-seven-year-old wife, an unidentified nineteen-year-old boy, an unidentified seven-year-old boy, an unidentified eleven-year-old girl, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. The household owned ten cows, fifteen chickens, and ten hogs. The household occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, a sixteen-year-old son, a twelve-year-old daughter, and a four-year-old daughter. He and his family owned one male slave, twenty cows, four horses, sixteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Amant (Aman) Melanson (Melenson) lost six of his twenty-one cows. Around December 12, 1780, Anselme (Enselme) Blanchard, acting on behalf of the colonial government, issued Amant (Armand) Melanson (Melenson) a receipt for four cows appropriated to feed the Spanish army during the campaign against Baton Rouge. The receipt obliged the colonial government to pay Melanson eighty piastres at an unspecified future date. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Exact Copie of the List of Livestock that the Iberville District Settlers Have Furnished to the Army for the Campaign Against Baton Rouge, December 12, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193A:383; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:533; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 78. | 1.767 | 10/12/1781 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.729 | Anne | Babin | 01/01/1730 | Married Amand (Amant) Melanson. | Joseph (born 1752), Simon (born 1764), Mathurin (born 1765 or 1766), Olivier (born 1767), Anne (born 1760), Marguerite | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was the thirty-seven-year-old spouse of Amant Melanson. Her household included the following children: Joseph, Simon, Mathurin, Olivier, and Anne. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy-nine years of age and a widow at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:42. | 1.767 | 30/04/1803 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.730 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1752 | Anne Babin | Amant (Amand) Melanson | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.731 | Simon | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1764 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Anne Babin | Amant (Amand) Melanson | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.732 | Mathurin | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1765 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Anne Babin | Amant (Amand) Melanson | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a member of his parents' household. In 1767, his age is given as one-and-a-half years. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.733 | Anne | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1760 | probably Baltimore, Maryland | Anne Babin | Amant (Amand) Melanson | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 173. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.734 | Ignace | Hébert | père | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Josèphe Dupuis | Guillaume Hébert | Married (1) Marie LeBlanc. Married (2) Rosalie Babin, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the widow of Joseph Babin, at St. Gabriel, January 11, 1773. | Jean Baptiste (born 1752), Marie (born 1762) | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a widower whose household included his children Jean Baptiste and Marie as well as orphan Marguerite LeBlanc. Given a land grant encompassing 8 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as a forty-three-year-old widower and the head of a household that also included an unidentified seventeen-year-old boy. The census also indicates that Hébert owned fifteen hogs. His household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included his forty-year-old wife and an eighteen-year-old son. He and his family owned sixteen cattle, fifteen hogs, thirty chickens, and six arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost four of ten cows. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:63; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 130; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.735 | Jean Baptiste | Hébert | 01/01/1752 | Marie LeBlanc | Ignace Hébert | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 130. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.736 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1762 | probably Georgetown, Maryland | Marie LeBlanc | Ignace Hébert | At Georgetown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a five-year-old member of his father's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 130. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.737 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1751 | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a sixteen-year-old orphan living in Ignace Hébert's household. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 130. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.738 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Richard | 01/01/1744 | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the head of a household that included his sister Marguerite. The family owned one axe and one trunk at the time of their settlement in Louisiana. Given a land grant encompassing 4 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 10 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years of age. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included his sister Marguerite. They owned six hogs and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included two sisters, aged twenty-two and fifteen years. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The household owned eight cattle, eighteen hogs, thirty chickens, and two horses. On June 23,. 1775, Commandant Louis Dutisné informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that Joseph (Jausèphe) Richard had decided to relinquish the cabaret license that he had won at auction earlier in the year. Richard asked the governor to permit another auction to select his successor as tavern-keeper. Richard's request was granted. Around June 23, 1776, Amant Richard purchased the cabaret license at an auction. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: his wife, 24 years old; his daughter, 2 years old; and his son, 8 months old. He and his family owned one male slave, twelve cows, two horses, twelve hogs, and twenty chickens. They also owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Richard lost three of his sixteen cows. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 178; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 23, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:234; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 23, 1776 AGI, PPC, 189B:234; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.739 | Marguerite | Richard | 01/01/1746 | At Newtown, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her brother Joseph's household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her brother Joseph's household. According to the 1771 census she and her brother Joseph owned six hogs and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 178; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.740 | Alexandre | Hébert (Heber) | 12/12/1735 | Marie Josèphe Melanson | François Hébert | Married (1) Anne (last name is not indicated in extant records, but possibly Landry). Married (2) Marie Jeanne Thibodeau, daughter of Joseph Thibodeau, January 27, 1789. | Second marriage: Jean (born October 25, 1789) | At Baltimore, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his wife Anne. Given a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 36 barrels of unshucked corn. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-two years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-nine-year-old wife. (He age in the 1771 census is evidently a clerical error.) No children are indicated in the census. According to the 1771 census, he and his wife owned three beef cattle, ten hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-two years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife and a four-year-old son. He and his family owned ten cows, two horses, twelve hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the Mississippi. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 5-11. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.741 | Anne | Mme Alexandre Hébert | 01/01/1740 | Married Alexandre Hébert. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the twenty-nine-year-old wife of Alexandre Hébert. No children are indicated in the census. According to the 1771 census, she and her husband owned three beef cattle, ten hogs, and twenty chickens. | Died sometime before January 27, 1789. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 128; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||
1.742 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Dupuis (Dupuy) | dit Oncle | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Marie Anne Dugas | Antoine Dupuis | Married Anne Marie Hébert, daughter of Paul Gaston Hébert and Josèphe Marguerite Melanson (Melançon), at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., March 27, 1769. Simon Richard, Sieur Missonnière, and Joseph Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Anne Melanie (born March 23, 1775), Hélène Louise (born July 13, 1781), Hippolyte (born January 27, 1779), Jean (born January 24, 1773), Joseph (married April 15, 1792), Paul (married January 7, 1800) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Extant documents indicate that his household included four of his nephews. Received a land grant encompassing 6 arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-four-year-old wife and an unidentified three-month-old boy. The household owned two cattle, eleven hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a forty-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Jausephe Dupuis in the March 6, 1777 militia list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost twenty-one of his thirty-seven cows. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. His name is rendered as Joseph Dupuy in the October 23, 1785 list. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:169; 2:266-273; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.743 | Charles | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1783 | Anne Piercon | Ygnace (Ignace) Boudreau (Boudrot) | He and his family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that his family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.744 | Jh. (Joseph) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1772 | St. Malo, France | Luce (Lucia) Brod (Breau) | Athanase Bourg | Married Geneviève (Genobeba) Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Jean Baptiste Melanson and Osite Dupuis (Dupuy), at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, June 3, 1793. Joseph Breau, Adélaïde (Adelayde) LeBlanc, and Paul Melanson witnessed the marriage record. | Paul Joseph (born February 9, 1796), Jean Baptiste (born November 6, 1797), Étienne Léonard (born October 25, 1799), Clémence (born October 10, 1801; buried January 20, 1802) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of a household including Luce Brod (Breau, Breaut), his forty-two-year-old mother, and Charles Bourg (Bourq), his twelve-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121-123, 127. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.745 | Pierre (Pre) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1736 | Married Marie Landry. | Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1769) | Deported to England. Resided at SaintServan, Brittany, France, 1763-1770. Resided at Le Légué, near Saint-Brieuc, France, 1770-1772. Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.746 | Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1769 | Departed St. Malo, France aboard the La Ville d'Archangel, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, on August 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.747 | Jean | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1728 | Marguerite Barillot | Louis Douairon (Doiron) | Married Anne Thibodeau, who died before May 1785. | Anne Dorothée (born 1751), Margueritte Josèphe (born 1765) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1759-1763. Received a land grant to farm no. 67 at Bortereau village, Locmaria parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his daughter Margueritte Josèphe and Paul Daigle. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.748 | Anne Dorothée | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1765 | Jean Douairon (Doiron) | Anne Marguerite (Margueritte) (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.749 | Paul (Paul Olivier) | Daigle | 01/01/1767 | probably Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Marie Melanson (Melançon) | Miniac Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Jean Douairon (Doiron). Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.750 | Anne | Benoît | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1737 | Élisabeth (Élizabeth) LeJuge | Pierre Benoît (Benoist) | Married (1) Pierre Hébert. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Hébert, the son of Jean Hébert and Marguerite Trahan and the widower of Anne LeBlanc. | Jean Charles (born 1772) | Resided with her first husband at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1760-1770. Departed for La Rochelle, France with her second husband, 1770. Her second husband occupied farm no. 23 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, 1774. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.751 | Jean Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1772 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Anne Benoit | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.752 | Marie | Martin | Veuve Courtin | 01/01/1738 | Married Louis Courtin, a surgeon. He died sometime before May 1785. | Jacques Marie (born 1769), Françoise (born 1763), Mathurine Olive (born 1765), Charlotte Louise (born 1774) | She and her husband occupied farm no. 58 at Triboutoux, Sauzon parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.753 | Jacques Marie | Courtin | 01/01/1769 | Marie Martin | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.754 | Françoise | Courtin | 01/01/1763 | Marie Martin | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.755 | Mathurine Olive | Courtin | 01/01/1765 | Marie Martin | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.756 | Charlotte Louise | Courtin | 01/01/1774 | Marie Martin | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.757 | Pierre | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1740 | Marie Doucet | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Married (1) Anne Marie Bernard. Married (2) Agnès Broussard, the daughter of Joseph Broussard and Ursule LeBlanc. | Charles Victor (born 1769), Pierre Laurent (born 1775), François Constant (born ca. 1785), Constance (born 1771), Anne Pauline (born 1773) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.758 | Agnès | Broussard | 01/01/1754 | Ursule LeBlanc | Joseph Broussard | Married (1) Dominique Girouard (Giroire). Married (2) Pierre Potier, son of Pierre Potier and Marie Doucet. | Charles Victor (born 1769), Pierre Laurent (born 1775), François Constant (born ca. 1785), Constanct (born 1771), Anne Pauline (born 1773) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.759 | Charles Victor | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1769 | Agnès Broussard (Brossard) | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | He served as a sindic in the Attakapas District, July 1799. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28; Louis DeBlanc to Gayoso de Lemos, July 23, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:371-372. | 1.785 | Pierre Potier (Poitier) and Marie Doucet | Joseph Boussard and Ursule LeBlanc | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.760 | François Constant | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1785 | Agnès Broussard (Brossard) | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Pierre Potier (Poitier) and Marie Doucet | Joseph Boussard and Ursule LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.761 | Constance | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1771 | Agnès Broussard (Brossard) | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Pierre Potier (Poitier) and Marie Doucet | Joseph Boussard and Ursule LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.762 | Anne Pauline | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1773 | Agnès Broussard (Brossard) | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Pierre Potier (Poitier) and Marie Doucet | Joseph Boussard and Ursule LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.763 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1740 | Married Marie Blanche Bernard. | Louis Toussaint (born 1782), Jean Charles (born 1783), Marie (born 1768), Rose (born 1772), Ursule (born 1779) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.764 | Marie Blanche | Bernard | 01/01/1748 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.765 | Jean Charles | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1783 | Marie Blanche Bernard | Jean Douairon (Doiron) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.766 | Ursule | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1779 | Marie Blanche Bernard | Jean Douairon (Doiron) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.767 | François | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1745 | Anne Boudrot (Boudreau, Boudreaux) | Abraham Daigle (Daigre) | Married Jeanne Aulai (Holley). | Louis (born 1767), Jeanne (born 1769), Adélaïde (born 1770), Louise (born 1775) | Resided at Cherbourg, France. Occupied farm no. 17 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30;. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.768 | Jeanne | Aulai | 01/01/1738 | Married François Daigle. | Louis (born 1767), Jeanne (born 1769), Adélaïde (born 1770), Louise (born 1775) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.769 | Louis | Daigle | 01/01/1767 | Jeanne Aulai | François Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Abraham Daigle and Anne Boudrot | caulker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.770 | Jeanne | Daigle | 01/01/1769 | Jeanne Aulai | François Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Abraham Daigle and Anne Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.771 | Adélaïde | Daigle | 01/01/1770 | Jeanne Aulai | François Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Abraham Daigle and Anne Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.772 | Louise | Daigle | 01/01/1775 | Jeanne Aulai | François Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Abraham Daigle and Anne Boudrot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.773 | François | Arbourg (Harbourg) | 01/01/1740 | Thérèse Descouteaux | François Arbourg (Harbourg) | Married Marie Hervory (Henry). | François Henry (born 1767), Jean Louis Firmin (born 1770), Frédéric Edouard (born 1772) | He and his family occupied farm no. 20 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2402. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.774 | Marie | Hervory (Henry) | 01/01/1745 | Christine Pitre | Joseph Henry | Married François Arbourg. | François Henry (born 1767), Jean Louis Firmin (born 1770), Frédéric Edouard (born 1772) | Her family resided at Le Havre after arriving in France. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.775 | François Henry | Arbourg (Harbourg) | 01/01/1767 | Marie Hervory (Henry) | François Arbourg (Harbourg) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | François Arbourg and Thérèse Descouteaux | Joseph Henry and Christine Pitre | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.776 | Jean Louis Firmin | Arbourg (Harbourg) | 01/01/1770 | Marie Hervory (Henry) | François Arbourg (Harbourg) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | François Arbourg and Thérèse Descouteaux | Joseph Henry and Christine Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.777 | Frédéric Edouard | Arbourg (Harbourg) | 01/01/1772 | Marie Hervory (Henry) | François Arbourg (Harbourg) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | François Arbourg and Thérèse Descouteaux | Joseph Henry and Christine Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.778 | Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1741 | Anne LeBlanc | Claude Trahan | Married Margueritte Lavergne, the daughter of Pierre Lavergne and Anne Laure. | Joseph Renei (René) (born 1781), Antoinette (born 1783) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.779 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Lavergne | 01/01/1755 | Anne Laure | Pierre Lavergne | Married Joseph Trahan, son of Claude Trahan and Anne LeBlanc. | Josepph Renei (Joseph René) (born 1781), Antoinette (born 1783) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Jacques Lavergne and Françoise Pitre | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.780 | Joseph Renei (René) | Trahan | 01/01/1781 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Lavergne | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Claude Trahan and Anne LeBlanc | Pierre Lavergne and Anne Laure (Lord) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.781 | Antoinette | Trahan | 01/01/1783 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Lavergne | Joseph Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Claude Trahan and Anne LeBlanc | Pierre Lavergne and Anne Laure (Lord) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.782 | Pélagie | Douairon (Doiron) | Veuve LaLande | 01/01/1754 | Married Joseph LaLande. | Jean Edouard (Joseph Edouard) (born 1777), Emelie (Emilie) (born 1774) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.783 | Jean Edouard (Joseph Edouard) | LaLande | 01/01/1777 | Pélagie Douairon (Doiron) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.784 | Emelie (Emilie) | LaLande | 01/01/1774 | Pélagie Douairon (Doiron) | Joseph LaLande | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.785 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Josèphe | Douairon (Doiron) | Veuve Dugast (Dugas) | 01/01/1735 | Married Jean Baptiste Dugast (Dugas). | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.786 | Pierre | Hébert | père | 01/01/1740 | Marie Bernard | Pierre Hébert | Married Charlotte Potier (Poitier). | Anne (born 1774), Pierre Joseph (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the sixty-one-year-old head of a household that included the folowing persons: Charlotte Hébert (actually Potier), 56 years old; and Pierre Hébert, fils, 18 years old. Pierre Hébert, père, and his family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned sixty cattle, but no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.787 | Charlotte | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1744 | Anne Boudrot (Boudreau, Boudreaux) | Christophe Potier (Poitier) | Married Pierre Hébert, son of Pierre Hébert and Marie Bernard. | Anne (born 1774), Pierre Joseph (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the fifty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Hébert. In addition to herself and her sixty-one-year-old husband, the household included eighteen-year-old Pierre Hébert, fils. Her family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. The family owned sixty cattle, but no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.788 | Anne | Patry | 01/01/1774 | Charlotte Potier | Paul Patry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother and her stepfather, Pierre Hébert. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.789 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Charlotte Potier | Pierre Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with her family and with the family of her uncle, Jean Hébert. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | Pierre Hébert and Marie Bernard | Christophe Potier (Poitier) and Anne Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.790 | Jean | Hébert | 01/01/1745 | Marie Bernard | Pierre Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his brother Pierre Hébert and with his infant son Pierre Louis Hébert. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.791 | François Alexandre | Daigle | 01/01/1763 | Jeanne Holley (Aulai) | François Daigle | Married Rose Adélaïde Bourg. | Emelie (Emilie) Adélaïde (born 1784), François Joseph (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27-30. | 1.785 | Abraham Daigle and Anne Boudrot | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.792 | Rose Adélaïde | Bourg | 01/01/1766 | Rose Doiron | Joseph Bourg | Married François Alexandre Daigle. | Emelie (Emilie) Adélaïde (born 1784), François Joseph (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.793 | Emelie (Emilie) | Daigle | 01/01/1784 | Rose Adélaïde Bourg | François Alexandre Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.794 | François Joseph | Daigle | 01/01/1785 | Rose Adélaïde Bourg | François Alexandre Daigle | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.795 | Moïse (Moÿse) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1761 | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc | Married (1) Angélique de la Foresterie. Married (2) Magdeleine Marguerite Bertrand at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1786. Eustache Bertrand and Joseph Quiennes witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Jean Martin (born 1784), Marie Josèphe (born 1782) | Deported to Southampton, England. Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1763-1765. His father received title to farm no. 18 at the ville of Karnast, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified as Moÿse LeBlanc in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Bertrand (Bertrant), his twenty-one-year-old wife, Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, his six-year-old daughter by a previous marriage, and Jean Martin LeBlanc, his three-year-old son by a previous marriage. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine (Madelaine) Bertrand, his twenty-two-year-old wife, Marie Josèphe (Joseph) LeBlanc, his seven-year-old daughter, and Jean Martin LeBlanc, his four-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine barrels of corn, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:479; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.796 | Angélique | de la Foresterie | 01/01/1761 | Marie Madeleine Bonnière | Jean de la Foresterie | Married Moïse LeBlanc. | Jean Martin (born 1784), Marie Josèphe (born 1782) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1774. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.797 | Jean Martin | LeBlanc | 01/01/1784 | Angélique de la Foresterie | Moïse LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old member of the household of Moïse (Moÿse) LeBlanc, his twenty-six-year-old father, and Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Bertrand (Bertrant), his twenty-one-year-old stepmother. In addition to himself, his father, and his stepmother, the household included Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc and Marguerite Célestin | Jean de la Foresterie and Marie Madeleine Bonnière | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.798 | Marie Josèphe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1781 | Angélique de la Foresterie | Moïse LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of the household of Moïse (Moÿse) LeBlanc, her twenty-six-year-old father, and Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Bertrand (Bertrant), her twenty-one-year-old stepmother. In addition to herself, her father, and her stepmother, the household included Jean Martin LeBlanc, her three-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc and Marguerite Célestin | Jean de la Foresterie and Marie Madeleine Bonnière | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.799 | Marie Josèphe | Belmer (bellemère) | 01/01/1775 | Anne Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Bruno Bellemère(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her cousin, Moïse LeBlanc. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.800 | Jean | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1735 | Married Marie LeBlanc. | Jean (born 1758), Jacques (born 1768) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.801 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1735 | Married Jean Guédry. | Jean (born 1758), Jacques (born 1768) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.802 | Jean | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1758 | Marie LeBlanc | Jean Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | He and his brother Pierre Guédry visited the Attakapas and Opelousas districts in order to locate their long established and now prosperous uncle, from whom they hoped to secure some assistance. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Alexandre DeClouet to Estevan Mir¢, October 13, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:251. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.803 | Jacques (Santiago) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1768 | Marie LeBlanc | Jean Guédry | Married Marie Bonvillain. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | He may have been the Jacques Guédry who on July 28, 1786, joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | His burial record indicates that he died at the ate of thirty-four years. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:342. | 1.785 | 15/10/1801 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.804 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère(?) | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.805 | Jacques | LeBlanc | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère(?) | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.806 | François | LeBlanc | 01/01/1772 | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc | Married Marie Pitre, an Acadian native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Ambroise Pitre and Elizabeth (Ysabel) Dugas (Dugat), at Assumption Parish, La., September 16, 1800. Étienne Dupuis and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite, Jean Valentin (brn October 2, 1802) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 27-30; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:465, 471, 594; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104. | 1.785 | rope maker | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.807 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère(?) | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.808 | Geneviève | LeBlanc | 01/01/1776 | Marguerite Célestin dit Bellemère(?) | Jean Baptiste LeBlanc(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.809 | Charles | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1728 | Port Royal, Acadia | Susanne Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux) | Pierre Guédry (Guidry) | Married (1) Madeleine (Magdeleine) Hébert. Married (2) Agnès Bourg. | First marriage: Anne Laurence (born 1761), Joseph (born 1767), Jean (born 1768), Jacques (born 1770), Marguerite (married February 18, 1793) | Resided at Bonaban, Brittany, 1759-;1760. Resided at La Bouesnière, France, 1760-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:144; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47. | 1.785 | 16/09/1797 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | sawyer | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.810 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1767 | probably St. Malo, France | Anne Bourg (Bourque) | Charles Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.811 | Jean | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1768 | probably St. Malo, France | Anne Bourg (Bourque) | Charles Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.812 | Jacques | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1770 | probably St. Malo, France | Anne Bourg (Bourque) | Charles Guédry | Married Isabelle Babin, the widow of Paul Breau, September 18 1797. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.813 | Anne Laurence | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1759 | probably St. Malo, France | Madeleine (Magdeleine) Hébert | Charles Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.814 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1762 | Married Louise Blandin. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.815 | Louise | Blandin | 01/01/1758 | Married Pierre Guédry. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.816 | Joseph | Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1762 | Bristol, England | Marie Madeleine Vincent | Joseph Brod (Braud, Breau, Breaux) | Married Marie (Marie Blanche) Trahan. | Jean Faustin (Justin), Joseph, Marcel, Marie François Arsène | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he died in 1813. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.817 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite LeBlanc | Louis Athanase Trahan | Married Joseph Brod (Breau, Braud). | Jean Faustin (Justin), Joseph, Marcel, Marie François Arsène | Her family was deported to Liverpool, England. They subsequently resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France. Her family occupied farm no. 47 at the village of Borderen, Sauzon parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.818 | François Xavier (sometimes Xavier) | Boudreau (Boudrot) | 01/01/1760 | Brigitte Part (Eparte) | Antoine Boudrot (Boudreau, Boudreaux) | Married (1) Margueritte Dugast (Dugas). Married (2) Françoise Marie (sometimes Marie Françoise) LeBlanc, daughter of Joseph LeBlanc and Anne Hébert, at St. Gabriel, La., May 23, 1787. | Second marriage: Joseph (born July 1, 1788), Jérôme (born June 12, 1791), Marie (born March 29, 1792), Pierre (born February 27, 1797), Louis (born February 26, 1798) | Resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1l759-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 113, 116, 117, 118. | 1.785 | 06/02/1798 | St. Gabriel, La. | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.819 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Dugast | 01/01/1761 | Married François Xavier (Janvier) Boudreau (Boudrot). | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:258. | 1.785 | 05/09/1786 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.820 | Jacques | Moulaison | 01/01/1747 | Cécile Melanson (Melançon) | Jacques Moulaison | Married twice-widowed Marie Douairon (Doiron). | Jacques (born 1779), Rose (born 1775), Sophie (born 1776) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.821 | Marie | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1744 | Marguerite Michel | Paul Douairon (Doiron) | Married (1) Bonaventure Terriot (Theriot). Married (2) Sylvain Aucoin. Married (3) Jacques Moulaison (Molaison). | Jacques (born 1779), Rose (born 1775), Sophie (born 1776) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.822 | Jacques | Moulaison | 01/01/1779 | Marie Douairon (Doiron) | Jacques Moulaison | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | Paul Doiron and Marguerite Michel | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.823 | Rose | Moulaison | 01/01/1775 | Marie Douairon (Doiron) | Jacques Moulaison | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | Paul Doiron and Marguerite Michel | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.824 | Sophie | Moulaison | 01/01/1776 | Marie Douairon (Doiron) | Jacques Moulaison | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 30; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | Paul Doiron and Marguerite Michel | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.825 | Pierre Janvier | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1754 | Anne LeJeune | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Married Marie Josèphe LeBert. | Pierre Joseph (born 1775), Jean Pierre (born 1781), Joseph Firmin (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1779) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1762-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:342. | 1.785 | 15/09/1793 | Assumption Parish, La. | workman | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.826 | Jean Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1781 | Marie Josèphe LeBert | Pierre Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.827 | Marie Josèphe | LeBert | 01/01/1756 | Marie LaPierre | Paul LeBert | Married Pierre Guédry. | Pierre Joseph (born 1775), Jean Pierre (born 1781), Joseph Firmin (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1779) | Resided initially at Morlaix, Brittain, France. Subsequently resided at Plouer, France, 1765-1774. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.828 | Pierre Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1775 | Marie Josèphe LeBert | Pierre Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Paul LeBert and Marie LaPierre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.829 | Joseph Firmin | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1785 | Marie Josèphe LeBert | Pierre Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Paul LeBert and Marie LaPierre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.830 | Marie Rose | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1779 | Marie Josèphe LeBert | Pierre Guédry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Claude Guédry (Guidry) and Anne LeJeune | Paul LeBert and Marie LaPierre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.831 | Pierre (Pierre Jean Joseph Joachim?) | LeBert | 01/01/1772 | Marguerite Boudrot(?) | Pierre LeBert(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his aunt, Marie Josèphe LeBert. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.832 | Paul | LeBlanc | 01/01/1747 | Madeleine Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Claude LeBlanc | Married Anne Boudreau (Boudrot). | Adélaïde (born 1782), Rosalie (born ca. 1785), Eulalie (married February 12, 1809) | Following his arrival in France, he resided initially at Boulogne. Subsequently resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1766-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.833 | Anne | Boudreau (Boudrot) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Marie Thibodeau | François Boudrot | Married (1) Paul LeBlanc. Married (2) Jean Boudrot, son of Amant Boudrot and Marie Gouyart, at Assrish, La., February 19, 1798. | Adélaïde (born 1782), Rosalie (born ca. 1785), Eulalie (married February 12, 1809) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.834 | Adélaïde | LeBlanc | 01/01/1782 | Anne Boudreau (Boudrot) | Paul LeBlanc | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Claude LeBlanc and Madeleine Boudrot | François Boudrot and Anne Marie Thibodeau | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.835 | Rosalie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1785 | Nantes, France | Anne Boudreau (Boudrot) | Paul LeBlanc | Married Noël Victor Boudrot, a native of St. Malo France and the son of Victor Boudrot and Genoviève Richard, at Assumption Parish, La., February 31, 1803. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117, 482. | 1.785 | Claude LeBlanc and Madeleine Boudrot | François Boudrot and Anne Marie Thibodeau | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.836 | Rose | Trahan | 01/01/1762 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Paul LeBlanc and Anne Boudreau. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.837 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Ange | Dubois | Veuve Jean Daigre | 01/01/1756 | Anne Michel | Joseph Dubois | Married Jean Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle). | Jean Louis (born 1775) | Resided at Le Havre, France, and, later, at Saint-Servan, France, 1768-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.838 | Jean Louis | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1775 | Brittany, France | Margueritte Ange Dubois | Jean Daigle | Married Elisabeth Richard, a native of Brittany, France and the daughter of Joseph Richard and Marie LeBlanc (Daniel). | Louis (born September 2, 1800) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:76. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.839 | Allain (Alain) | Bourg | 01/01/1742 | Madeleine Hébert | François Bourg | Married Marie Commeau (Comeau). | Geneviève (born 1765), François (born 1774), Alexis (born 1784), Anne (date of birth unknown) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Comeau (Como), his wife, 43 years old; and François Bourg (Bourq), his son, 15 years old. Allain Bourg (Bourq) and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. Identified as Alain Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Marie Comeau, his forty-four-year-old wife, and François Bourg, his sixteen-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-seven barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.840 | Marie (Anne Marie) | Commeau (Comeau, Como) | 01/01/1745 | Marguerite Hébert | Joseph Comeau | Married Allain Bourg. | Geneviève (born 1765), François (born 1774), Alexis (born 1784), Anne (date of birth unknown) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Allain (Alain) Bourg (Bourq). In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Allain (Alain) Bourg (Bourq), her husband, 46 years old; and François Bourg (Bourq), her son, 15 years old. Marie Comeau and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. Identified as Marie Comeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Allain Bourg. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, the household included François Bourg, her sixteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-seven barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.841 | François | Bourg | 01/01/1774 | Marie Commeau (Comeau) | Allain Bourg | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.842 | Alexis | Bourg | 01/01/1784 | Marie Commeau (Comeau) | Allain Bourg | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.843 | Geneviève (Marie Geneviève) | Bourg (Bourq, Bourque) | 01/01/1765 | Marie Commeau (Comeau) | Allain Bourg | Married Simon Dugas, son of Paul Dugas and Marguerite Boudrot, at the Church of the Ascension, Ascension Parish, La., June 11, 1787. The marriage document was witnessed by Prosper Giroir. | Marie Magdeleine (baptized September 14, 1788), Magloire (born August 2, 1789), Paul (born February 13, 1792), Marie Rose (born September 15, 1793), Anne (born May 30, 1795), Isabel (Isabelle, Élizabeth) (born November 21, 1797), Marguerite Marie (born January 27, 1800), Pélagie Geneviève (born October 23, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Simon Dugas (Dugal). Her household included the following persons: Simon Dugas, 50 years old; Anne Bourg (Bourq), her sister; and Anne Dugas, her sister -in-law. She and her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Identified as Marie Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Simon Dugas and a member of the household headed by Louis Aucoin. In addition to herself, the household included the following persons: Louis Aucoin, no relationship indicated, 18 years old; Simon Dugas (Duga), her husband, 51 years old; Anne Bourg, her sister, 17 years old; and Anne Dugas, her sister-in-law, 25 years old. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:122, 253-262; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.844 | Pierre | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1760 | Anne Blanche Robichaud (Robichaux) | Pierre Joseph Forest (Forêt) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1760-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.845 | Charles | Granger | 01/01/1752 | Marguerite Gauterot(?) | Joseph Granger(?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his nephew, Joseph Daigre. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.846 | Joseph | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1771 | Ellisabeth Granger (?) | Alexandre Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) (?) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his uncle, Charles Granger. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.847 | Jean Baptiste | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1740 | Married Marie Claudine Valet. | Jean René (born 1784) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.848 | Marie Claudine | Valet | 01/01/1754 | Married Jean Baptiste Daigre. | Jean René (born 1784) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.849 | Jean René | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1784 | Marie Claudine Valet | Jean Baptiste Daigre | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.850 | Joseph | Caillouet | 01/01/1754 | Married Elisabeth LeBlanc. | Jacques (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.851 | Élisabeth | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Gauterot | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Joseph Caillouet. | Jacques (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.852 | Jacques | Caillouet | 01/01/1785 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | Joseph Caillouet | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.853 | Jean Pierre | Dugast | 01/01/1765 | Married Jeanne Cabon. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.854 | Jeanne | Cabon | 01/01/1751 | Married Jean Pierre Dugast. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.855 | Pierre | Vincent | 01/01/1749 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | cooper | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.856 | Jean Baptiste | Duhon | 01/01/1760 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.857 | Jean Charles | Richard | 01/01/1766 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned fourteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1788 census suggests that he lived next door to two other bachelors Glode (Claude) Marie LeBlanc and Basile (Basille) Richard. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty-five-barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. The 1789 census suggests that he lived next door to Basile Richard. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.858 | Jean Marie | Granger | 01/01/1766 | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.859 | Pierre | Henry | 01/01/1724 | Cécile Deveau | Germain Henry | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Trahan. | Ciril François (born 1768) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1772. Subsequently resided at Morlaix, France. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.860 | Margueritte (Marguerite) | Trahan | 01/01/1731 | Marie Tillard | Claude Trahan | Married Pierre Henry, son of Germain Henry and Cécile Deveau. | Ciril François (born 1768) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1772. Subsequently resided at Morlaix, France. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.861 | Ciril (Cyrille) François | Henry | 01/01/1767 | Margueritte (Marguerite) Trahan | Pierre Henry | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 32; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 29. | 1.785 | Germain Henry and Cécile Devaux | Claude Trahan and Marie Tillard | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.862 | Jean Baptiste | Hébert | 01/01/1735 | probably Port Royal, Nova Scotia | Anne Orillon(?) | Antoine Hébert | Signed a marriage contract with Rose Thibodeau, a former resident of Rivière aux Canards near Grand Pré, Acadia, and the daughter of Pierre Thibodeau and Marguerite Trahan, September 27, 1760. | Signed a married contract with Rose Thibodeau on September 27, 1760. | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that, in addition to himself, included the following persons: his wife, who was not named in the census; Jean Hébert, no relationship indicated, 18 years old; and Elizabeth Hébert, no relationship indicated, 15 years old. Jean Baptiste Hébert and his family owned fifteen cows, four horses, and fifteen hogs. Jean Baptiste Hébert signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having twenty barrels of unhusked corn for sale. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the head of a household that included his unnamed wife, and an unnamed, one-year-old son. Joseph Hébert (23 years of age), Charles Hébert (19 years of age), and Louise Hébert (17 years of age) also resided in the household. Finally, the census indicates that Jean Baptiste Hébert owned 25 head of horned (beef) cattle, 6 horses, and a parcel of land with twelve arpents of frontage. He did not have a title to the land in 1771. Hébert participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Jean Bte Hebert in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife and two children. He and his family owned thirty cows, five horses or mules, and five hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He is identified as Jean Bapte Herbert in the May 10, 1777 list. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 403-419; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188c:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.863 | Louise Lissette (Céleste) | Hébert | 01/01/1754 | Canada | Married Claude Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil and Agnès Thibodeau. | Apolline, Jean Baptiste, Valéry, Louis (born August 25, 1777), Suzanne (born 1778), Alexandre (baptized May 9, 1779), Élizabeth (Isabelle), Pélagie, Louise (Lise), Beloni (baptized March 20, 1785, at the age of 5 months), Anastasie, Victoire | Her family appears to have been at Halifax during the summer of 1763. | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a seventeen-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Hébert's household. | Her burial record maintains that she was thirty-five years old at the time of her death. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 403-419; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188c:43vo. | 1.765 | 16/03/1788 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.864 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a nineteen-year-old member of François Broussard's household. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.865 | Joseph | Broussard | dit Petit Joe, also dit Beausoleil | 01/01/1729 | Agnès Thibodeau | Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil | Married (1) Anastasie LeBlanc (died ca. 1756). Married (2) Marguerite Savoie. | First marriage: René, Anastasie (born in New Brunswick, March 24, 1756)Second marriage: Marguerite (born April 23, 1765), Edouard (born 1768), Louise Ludivine (born ca. 1767), Anastasie (born ca. 1769), Josaphat (born March 26, 1772), Magdeleine, Joseph (born March 15, 1774), François Alexandre (born March 20, 1777), Eloy Edouard dit Petit Joseph | He and his family were prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 1 1/3 rations. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Identified in Marguerite Broussard's baptismal record, dated April 24, 1765, as an Acadian "from Attakapas." This indicates that he and his family accompanied Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil to the Attakapas District in April 1765. A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his unnamed wife; René Broussard, his son, 15 years old; Marguerite Broussard, his daughter, 4 years old; Ludivine (Lucdivine) Broussard, his daughter, 2 years old; Anastasie Broussard, his newborn daughter; René LeBlanc, no relationship indicated, 17 years old; and Anne Thibodeau, no relationship indicated, 14 years old. Joseph Broussard and his family owned twenty-six cows, six horses, and fifteen hogs. Joseph Broussard signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having unhusked corn for sale. Bérard's list indicates that he had thirty barrels of corn. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a large household that included himself, his wife, René LeBlanc, Anne (Nanette) Thibodeau, Louis Levron dit Luci, and three unidentified girls aged 5, 3, and 2 years. He owned 45 beef cattle, 10 horses, and 4 sheep. His family occupied but did not own a parcel of land measuring 12 arpents frontage. Broussard participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Joseph Broussard, his wife, and six unidentified children. Broussard and his family owned eighty cattle, eight horses or mules, and fifteen hogs. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On July 1, 1792, Ebenezer Craine, a resident of the Attakapas District, gave a deposition about a fight that had occured several years earlier between Joseph Beausoleil (actually Broussard) dit Petit Joe and Louis Pellerin, fils, evidently over some cypress timber that Pellerin had taken illegally from Broussard's property. Craine testified that he "saw Mr. Petit Jo[e] fall and Mr. Pellerin strike him with a stick." On July 14, 1792, Jean Blondin witnessed the "quarrel and fight" between Louis Pellerin, fils, and Joseph Beausoleil (actually Broussard) dit Petit Jo[e]. Blondin indicated that Broussard struck Pellerin first. Pellerin then struck Broussard with a stick and knocked him down. Unidentified members of the Delahoussaye family then went to Broussard's assistance. | Evidently died of pneumonia. His burial record maintains that he was 62 years of age at the time of his death. His succession at the St. Martin Parish courthouse is dated November 8, 1800. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 134; Conover, Broussard, 8-9; General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Deposition of Ebeneser (Ebenezer) Craine, a Resident of the Attakapas District, July 14, 1792, Original Acts, St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Deposition of Jean Blondin, July 14, 1792, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La. | 1.765 | 20/12/1788 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||
1.866 | Marguerite | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1751 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) LeBlanc | Joseph Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married Jean Dugas, son of Charles Dugas and Anne Thibodeau. | Augustin (born February 20, 1770), Céleste (baptized April 30, 1780, at the age of 9 months), Charles (baptized April 22, 1780, at the age of 3 months), Félicité (born July 4, 1774), Jean (born July 10, 1777), Joseph (born July 2, 1788), Julie (born April 16, 1772), Louis (born February 15, 1794), Marguerite (baptized October 15, 1786), Marie Sophie (born February 2, 1785) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the twenty-year-old wife of Jean Dugas (Dugast). Her household included herself, her husband, a one-year-old son, and twenty-two-year-old Pierre Dugas (Dugast). Her family owned 14 cattle, 4 horsese, and they occupied a plot of land measuring 12 arpents frontage. The census indicates that they did not own title to the land. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 268-279. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.867 | Marie Rose | Benoît | 01/01/1761 | Diocese of Baltimore, Maryland probably Port Tobacco | Susanne Boudrot | Olivier Benoit | Married (1) Marin Préjean. Entered into a marriage contract with Daniel Boone in the Attakapas district, July 27, 1800. Married (2) Daniel Boone, son of Jonathan Boone and Marie Carter, at the Attakapas church, August 12, 1800. Boone, an Anglican, is described in the original records as a native of either Kentucky or North Carolina. | First marriage: Joseph (born April 25, 1786), unnamed child (interred April 24, 1781), Hortense (born November 15, 1784), Marguerite (baptized June 4, 1795), Marie (married June 25, 1799), Marie Eloise (born February 26, 1797), Marie Modeste (born February 17, 1788), | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers subsequently discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy. Indeed, the passengers were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 49, 80, 636-640; vol. 1B, p. 43; Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 84-85. | 1.769 | 03/04/1801 | Opelousas district | Opelousas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.868 | Louis | Latier | 01/01/1730 | Married Anne Trahan, sister of Honoré Trahan and the widow of Jean Baptiste Benoîit, at Louisbourg, Acadia, 1751. | Antoine (born 1762), Paul (born 1763), Isabelle (Elisabeth, Élizabeth) (born 1765) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.869 | Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1731 | Married Louis Latier at Louisbourg, Acadia, 1751. | Antoine (born 1762), Paul (born 1763), Isabelle (Elisabeth, Élizabeth) (born 1765) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.870 | Antoine | Latier | 01/01/1762 | Anne Trahan | Louis Latier | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.871 | Paul | Latier | 01/01/1763 | Anne Trahan | Louis Latier | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.872 | Isabelle (Elisabeth, Élizabeth) | Latier | 01/01/1765 | Anne Trahan | Louis Latier | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.873 | Marie | Latier | 01/01/1756 | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.874 | Marie Rose | Benoît | 01/01/1756 | Susanne Boudrot | Olivier Benoit | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified as an orphan traveling with the family of Louis Latier upon her arrival at Natchitoches on October 24, 1769. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.875 | Marguerite | Benoît | 01/01/1760 | Susanne Boudrot | Olivier Benoit | Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified as an orphan traveling with the family of Louis Latier upon her arrival at Natchitoches on October 24, 1769. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 154. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.876 | Étienne | Rivet | père | 01/01/1723 | Married (1) Claire Forest. Married (2) Elisabeth Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and Claire Babin, at Ascension Parish, ca. July 4, 1774. | First marriage: Étienne (born 1748), François (born 1751), Jean Pierre (born 1753), Théodore (born 1755) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. Gave a deposition about the group's ordeals, November 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as a fifty-two-year-old widower and the head of a household that included an unidentified twenty-one-year-old man, an unidentified eighteen-year-old boy, and an unidentified sixteen-year-old boy. The household owned nine hogs and seven chickens. A resident of St. Gabriel at the time of his second marriage ca. July 4, 1774. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife and a fourteen-year-old boy. He and his family owned twelve cows, two horses, twelve hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 180; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:634; Deposition of Étienne Rivet November 11, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2543:426; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.877 | Étienne | Rivet | fils | 01/01/1748 | Claire Forest | Etienne Rivet | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. he occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-four years old. His name is rendered as Etiene Rivette in the June 21, 1771 list. | "Stephanus" Rivet of St. Gabriel was buried at Ascension Parish on April 10, 1779; this was probably Etienne Rivet. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 180; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:635; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.878 | François | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1751 | Claire Forest | Etienne Forest | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned foru cows, eight hogs, twelve chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years old. His name is rendered as François Rivette in the March 6, 1777 militia list. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 180; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.879 | Pierre | Rivet | 01/01/1755 | Claire Forest | Etienne Rivet | Married Anne Breau (Braud), daughter of Simon Breau and Marguerite Landry, at Cabannocé, February 3, 1777. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 180; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:634; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.880 | Théodore | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1755 | Claire Forest | Etienne Forest | Married Esther LeBlanc, daughter of Bonaventure LeBlanc and Marie Terriot, at St. Gabriel, December 1, 1779. | Theodore (born October 27, 1792) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Rivet (Rivette) lost four of fourteen cows. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 180; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:634; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.769 | 22/08/1792 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.881 | Honoré | Trahan | 01/01/1724 | Married Marie Corporon. | Pierre (born 1751) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Gave a deposition about the group's ordeals, November 11, 1769. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District as the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-five-year-old wife and an unidentified eight-year-old boy. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. On March 2, 1773, Honoré Trahan, one Langrois (Langlois?), Vincent Dalpinau, Veuve Brasseur (Brasseux, Brasseaux), and Antoine Bellard appeared before Iberville commandant Dutisné and requested permission to relocate at the Opelousas District, where they claimed to have relatives who could assist them. Governor Luís de Unzaga refused them permission to move pending receipt of the commandant's opinion regarding their relocation and the availability of settlers to fill the void created by their departure, March 4, 1773. On May 24, 1773, after having received Dutisné's response and having been assured that replacement settlers had been found, Unzaga agreed to allow the Acadian petitioners to relocate in the Opelousas District. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that he household consisted of himself, his wife and one unidentified child. The family owned fifteen cows and six hogs. The April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit indicates that he was exempt from active duty because of either advanced age or infirmities. He was a resident of the Opelousas District in 1777. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included one man and one woman. They owned fifty cows, twenty horses, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 767; Deposition of Honoré Trahan, November 11, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2543:428; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, March 2, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:358; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, March 4, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:359; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, May 24, 1773, AGI, PPC, 193B:246; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.769 | 16/07/1791 | Opelousas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.882 | Marie | Corporon (Corperon) | 01/01/1719 | Married Honoré Trahan. | Pierre (born 1751) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | A resident of the Opelousas district, 1777. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186. | 1.769 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.883 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1751 | Louisbourg, Acadia | Marie Corporon | Honoré Trahan | Married (1) Anne (Rose) Brasseur, daughter of Cosme Brasseur and Elisabeth Thibodeau. Married (2) Pélagie Gauterot, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Jean Gauterot and Anne LeJeune, at the Opelousas church, May 30, 1789. The married was witnessed by Blaise LeJeune, who was also a passenger on the Britain; Philippe Trahan(?), and Louis Simard. | First marriage: Charles (born October 10, 1777), Étienne Simon (born January 4, 1782), Marie Rose (married August 4, 1794)Second marriage: Alexandre (born July 25, 1795), Angélique (born ca. 1789). | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, 1763. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household including four males of unspecified ages and one girl. He and his family owned fifty cows, twenty horses, and a tract of land with seventeen arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household including one boy under the age of fifteen years, one girl under the age of fifteen years, three males fifteen years of age or older, and one female fifteen years of age or older. Trahan and his family owned no slaves. They resided in the Faquetaic area of the Opelousas District. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 761, 775; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 98. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.884 | Antoine | Bellard (Belard) | 01/01/1733 | Picardy, France | Marie Françoise Galland | Antoine Bellard | Married (1) Marie Trahan. Signed a marriage contract with Marie Forest, widow of Baptiste Aucoin, October 20, 1797. Marie Forest was a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Jacques Forest and Marguerite Comeau. Married Marie Forest at the Opelousas church, October 24, 1797. | First marriage: Étienne Simon (born 1767), Céleste (born June 16, 1777), Esther, (married June 28, 1796), Louis (born August 24, 1782), Modeste (married January 6, 1789), Pélagie (married October 8, 1792) | Evidently exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District as Antoine Bellaire, the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-seven-year-old wife and an unidentified two-year-old boy. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years of age. On March 2, 1773, Honoré Trahan, one Langrois (Langlois?), Vincent Dalpinau, Veuve Brasseur, and Antoine Bellard appeared before Iberville commandant Dutisné and requested permission to relocate at the Opelousas District, where they claimed to have relatives who could assist them. Governor Luís de Unzaga refused them permission to move pending receipt of the commandant's opinion regarding their relocation and the availability of settlers to fill the void created by their departure, March 4, 1773. On May 24, 1773, after having received Dutisné's response and having been assured that replacement settlers had been found, Unzaga agreed to allow the Acadian petitioners to relocate in the Opelousas District. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of himself, his wife, and two unidentified children. He and his family owned four cows and five pigs. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He was a resident of the Opelousas District in 1777. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included five males of unspecified ages and four girls of unspecified ages. He and his family owned sixty cows and thirty-eight horses. They occupied a tract of land with twenty arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, Bellard (Belard) was the head of a household including three boys under the age of fifteen years, one male fifteen years of age or older, and two females fifteen years of age or older. The family owned no slaves. Bellard (Belard) and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | His burial record indicates that he was approximately sixty-three years of age at the time of his death. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 42-44; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, March 2, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:358; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, March 4, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:359; Luís de Unzaga to Dutisné, May 24, 1773, AGI, PPC, 193B:246; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | Ecclesiastical records at St. Landry Catholic Church in Opelousas consistently indicate that he was a native of Picardy, France. He was identified by public officials upon his arrival at Natchitoches on October 24, 1769, as an Acadian, but his surname does not appear in Stephen White's compilation of pre-dispersal Acadian families. In addition, his son's marriage record maintains that he was from Maryland. His wife nevertheless was unquestionably an Acadian. | 1.769 | 12/02/1805 | Opelousas church | NULL | |||||||||||
1.885 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1747 | Married Antoine Bellard. | Étienne Simon (born 1767), Céleste (born June 16, 1777), Esther, (married June 28, 1796), Louis (born August 24, 1782), Modeste (married January 6, 1789), Pélagie (married October 8, 1792) | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 42-44. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.886 | Étienne Simon | Bellard | 01/01/1767 | probably Maryland | Marie Trahan | Antoine Bellard | Married Marie Louise (Elise) Comeau, daughter of Michel Comeau and Marie Girouard, at the Opelousas church, August 7, 1790. | Jean (born March 6, 1795), Marie Marthe (baptized June 1, 1794), Marie Susanne (born February 28, 1792) | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, his household included two men over the age of fifteen years. He and his family did not own any slaves. The census indicates that he lived in the North Plaquemine (Brulé) area. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Wood, Guide, 186; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 42-44; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.887 | Jean Vincent (actually Jean Baptiste) | LeJeune | fils | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Baptiste LeJeune, père | Married Isabelle Outre (Elizabeth Hooter), daughter of Michel Outre and Mary Barbara Kimball, ca. 1749. Isabelle Outre was born ca. 1762; her family was from Fayette County, Pennsylvania. They appear to have traveled to Louisiana via Natchez, Mississippi. | Marie (baptized October 24, 1779), Jean Baptiste (baptized September 2, 1781, at the age of three weeks), Anne (born May 12, 1786), Céleste (born January 13, 1788), Élizabeth (born November 14, 1793), Barbe (born June 24, 1796) | Exiled to Maryland, but he does not appear in the 1763 list of Acadians in Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Accompanied by his brother Blaise at the time of their arrival at Natchitoches, October 24, 1769. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777, but he does not appear in the 1777 census of the Opelousas District. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. His name is rendered as J. Bte Le Jeune in the 1779 list. Identified as a resident of the Avoyelles District on October 19, 1788. His two youngest children were baptized at the Catholic church in present-day Mansura, indicating that he and his family moved to the Avoyelles District around 1790. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 516-519; Young, The Lejeunes of Acadia and the Youngs of Southwest Louisiana, 58, 68-70. | He appears as a three-year-old child in his parents' household in the 1752 census of Port Royal. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.888 | Blaise | LeJeune | père | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Baptiste LeJeune, père | Married Marie Josèphe Breau (Braud), Pierre Breau and Marguerite Gauterot of St. Gabriel, La., sometime before November 3, 1773. (One source indicates that the marriage occurred on October 25, 1774.) | Blaise I (born 1773; died August 17, 1848), Anne (born May 12, 1786), Blaise II (married [2] February 7, 1802), Céleste (Célestine) (born January 11, 1783), Hilaire (baptized July 28, 1782), Jean Baptiste (born December 15, 1777), Joseph (baptized July 2, 1780), Marie Angélique (born August 13, 1786) | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Accompanied his brother Jean Vincent (Jean Baptiste) and his sister Marguerite at the time of their arrival at Natchitoches, October 24, 1769. Settled temporarily at the Iberville District. Received a land grant with five arpents frontage and forty arpents depth at the Iberville District, 1772. Blaise LeJeune received a full Spanish title to the Iberville property in 1774. Subsequently settled in the Opelousas District. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of himself and his wife. According to the census they did not own any livestock. He appears as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. Sold a parcel of land in the Opelousas district to Joseph LeJeune, July 23, 1783. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included four unidentified men of unspecified ages. He and his family owned twenty-four cows and seven horses. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included one boy under the age of fifteen years, two females under the age of fifteen years, three males fifteen years of age or older, and one male fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned no slaves. They resided in the Faquetaic area of the Opelousas District. | Blaise LeJeune is believed to have died ca. 1812. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 516-519; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 19; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:494; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364; Young, The Lejeunes of Acadia and the Youngs of Southwest Louisiana, 58, 71-73; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 75. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.889 | Marguerite | LeJeune | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Baptiste LeJeune, père | Married John Crooks, son of William Crooks and Anne Coutral, ca. 1770. | Marie (born ca. 1770), Marie Théotiste (born ca. 1774), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1776), Joseph, Étienne, Manon, Céleste, Léonard, and John, Jr. (born July 1, 1796) | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Accompanied her brothers Jean Vincent (Jean Baptiste) and Blaise at the time of their arrival at Natchitoches, October 24, 1769. Arrived in the Iberville District during the summer of 1770. She appears to have married shortly after her arrival at the Iberville District. She and her husband subsequently moved the the Opelousas District, where they appear in the 1777 census. Following their arrival at Opelousas, her family lived near the residence of Blaise LeJeune, her brother. She and her family moved to the Bayou Chicot area around 1789. The property upon which they resided near Bayou Chicot is identified as being section 21, Township 3 South, Range 1 East. The family moved to the Rapides District sometime between June 15, 1789, and January 1, 1790. In Rapides, they occupied a tract of land for which they received title in the American period. Her youngest child was baptized at St. Paul's Catholic Church in Mansura. It is unclear if the family moved to the Avoyelles District, or if they remained in the Rapides area. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Young, The Lejeunes of Acadia and the Youngs of Southwest Louisiana, 58, 73-75. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.890 | Anne (Nanette) | LeJeune | 01/01/1756 | Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Baptiste LeJeune, père | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | The official report of the arrival of the Britain passengers at Natchitoches indicates that she remained "at the Coquiats" perhaps the Presidio de Nuestra Señora de la Luz de Orcoquisac, located fifty leagues south of Nacogdoches, where the Acadians had paused briefly during their journey from Goliad to Natchitoches. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.891 | Prinne (Prince? Primeau?) | Pierre | 01/01/1745 | Married Susanne Plant. | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | Died before April 14, 1795. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 629; Wood, Guide, 176. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.892 | Susanne | Plant (Plante) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Spencer | Jacques Plant | Married (1) Pierre Prinne (Prince? Primeau?). Married (2) Christoval Simon Abreo, son of Domingo Abreo of Aragon, Spain, and Josèphe Rivière, at the Attakapas church, April 14, 1795. | Exiled to Maryland. Among the Acadian exiles and German Catholics who pooled money to buy passage to Louisiana, late 1768. The passengers soon discovered that the vessel upon which they were to sail was unseaworthy, and they were obliged to refit the ship. Departed Port Tobacco, Maryland, for Louisiana aboard the Britain, January 5, 1769. The ship's provisions were dangerously low when the ship sailed. Arrived off the Louisiana coast on February 21, but the ship's commander refused to put ashore; instead the vessel sailed aimlessly throughout the Gulf of Mexico until the passengers, who had been reduced to eating rats and shoe leather, mutinied and forced the sailors to make landfall as quickly as possible. Upon landing at Matagorda Bay, the crew and passengers were arrested and detained as smugglers by Spanish authorities at Goliad, Texas. The Acadians subsequently worked at local ranches during days, returning to their detention center in the presidio at night, until their release on August 11, 1769. The Acadians subsequently traved overland to Natchitoches, where they arrived October 24, then to the Iberville District. Many of the Acadians in this party continued on to the Opelousas District, where they finally settled. | In the Attakapas district in 1795. | Brasseaux, "Britain Incident," 24-38; Kinnaird, ed., Spain in the Mississippi Valley, Pt. I, p. 141; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 629; Wood, Guide, 176. | 1.769 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.893 | Vincent | Landry | 01/01/1732 | Married Susanne (Suzanne) Godin (Gaudin) at Oxford, Maryland, October 13, 1765. Father Joseph Mosley performed the wedding ceremony. The marriage was witnessed by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Browning and "many" Acadians. | Charles Caliste (born 1765), Marguerite (born ca. January 1769), Marie Félicité (born 1770), Magdeleine (born 1771), Grégoire (born 1773), Marie Magdeleine (a twin, born 1773), Marie (born 1774), Marguerite (born 1775) | In New Orleans with his wife Susanne and son Charles Caliste, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Susanne Gaudin, his wife, 32 years old; Charles Caliste, his son, 3 years old; Félicité, his daughter, 9 months old; and Brigitte Trahan, an orphan, 12 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-four-year-old head of the household that included the following persons: Susanne Gaudin, his wife, 32 years old; Charles Caliste Landry, his son, 4 years old; Félicité Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; and Brigitte Trahan, an orphan, 13 years old. The 1770 census indicates that Vincent Landry was an invalid. On February 2, 1777, Ursule Landry donated to her brother Vincent Landry a tract of land with two arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Suzanne Godin (Gadon), his wife, 40 years old; Caliste Landry, his son, 10 years old; Grégoire Landry, his son, 4 year old; Félicité Landry, his daughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Landry, his daughter, 6 years old; Marie Magdeleine Landry, his daughter, 4 years old; Marie Landry, his daughter, 3 years old; Marguerite Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; and Mrs. Siraxe, his sister-in-law. The census indicates that Vincent Landry was the choir director for the local church. Vincent Landry and his family owned a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, one horse, ten hogs, and one musket. On January 9, 1792, the estate of Vincent Landry and Susanne (Suzanne) Godin (Gaudin) was liquidated at a probate auction held at the front door of the parish church. Among the items sold was a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located between the lands of Joseph Melanson (Melançon) and Joseph Babin. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by sixteen feet. The house had a front gallery and bousillage walls. Joseph Babin purchased the property for 490 piastres. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Wood, Guide, 196; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:450; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 67. | 1.767 | 28/03/1798 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.894 | Charles Caliste | Landry | Susanne Godin | Vincent Landry | In New Orleans with parents, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.895 | Marie Josèphe | Bourg | Veuve Joseph Landry | 01/01/1713 | Married Joseph Landry. | Anne Gertrude (born 1751), Joseph (born 1753), Madeleine, Marguerite | In New Orleans with her daughters Magdeleine, Marguerite, and Gertrude, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifty-nine-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Anne Gertrude Landry, her eighteen-year-old daughter. The family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned two cows and fourteen hogs. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the fifty-six-year-old, widowed head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her son, 17 years old; and Gertrude Landry, her daughter, 19 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a sixty-six-year-old widow in the household of Joseph Landry dit Belhomme, her son, and Isabelle Landry, her daughter-in-law. | Her burial record maintains that she was eighty-six-years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:126; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 61. | 1.767 | 05/09/1792 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.896 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Marie Magdeleine) | Landry | Marie Josèphe Bourg | Joseph Landry | Married (1) Thomas Comes. Married (2) Jérôme LeBlanc. Married (3) Jean Baptiste Pechoud (Pechoux), a native of Brest, France, and the son of Joseph Pechoux and Marie Lacoue, February 4, 1792. | Second marriage: Joseph | In New Orleans with her mother and her sisters Marguerite and Gertrude, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. | She died at the age of fifty-three years. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 61, 72. | 1.767 | 05/10/1800 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.897 | Marguerite | Landry | Marie Josèphe Bourg (Bourc) | Joseph Landry | Married (1) Augustin Licara (Sierra?). She was a widow by early 1779. Married (2) Joseph Melanson, an Acadian and the son of Pierre Melanson and Rose Blanchard, at Ascension Parish, La., February 8, 1779. | In New Orleans with her mother and her sisters Madeleine and Gertrude, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:435; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 61, 93. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.898 | Gertrude | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marie Josèphe Bourg | Joseph Landry | Married Augustin Bugeaud, son of Joseph Bugeau and Anne LeBlanc, February 7, 1774. | Marie (born 1774) | In New Orleans with her mother and her sisters Madeleine and Marguerite, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They also owned two cows and fourteen hogs. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Augustin Bugeaud. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included Marie Bugeaud, her three-year-old daughter. Gertrude Landry and her family owned a tract of land with fie arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows, two horses, seven hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25, 61. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.899 | Étienne (Michel) | David | 01/01/1719 | Married eighteen-year-old Geneviève Hébert, daughter of Michel Hébert and Marguerite Gauterot, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, January 20, 1744. | Paul (born 1754), Jean (born 1759), Claude (born 1761), Angélique (born 1765), Paul (2) (born 1769), Rosalie (born 1772), Marie (I) (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767; married January 7, 1774), Marie (II) (born 1774), Anne (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767), Madeleine (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767) | Identified as an Acadian in the city of New Orleans, July 1767. A 1767 list of Acadian exiles in New Orleans indicates that he and his family had arrived at the colonial capital on October 6, 1766. Because he was a blacksmith who had always worked in towns, Michel David did not request farmlands in rural Louisiana. He and his family were reportedly living on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, ca. July, 1767. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Geneviève Hébert, 50 years old; Jean David, his son, 18 years old; Claude David, his son, 16 years old; Pierre David, his son, 6 years old; Angélique David, his daughter, 12 years old; Rosalie David, his daughter, 5 years old; and Marie David, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows and two horses. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:37; List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | blacksmith | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.900 | Geneviève | Hébert | 01/01/1727 | Marguerite Gauterot | Michel Hébert | Married Michel (Étienne Michel) David, the twenty-year-old son of Jean David and Magdeleine Monmaillon, residents of Louisbourg, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, January 20, 1744. | Paul (born 1754), Jean (born 1759), Claude (born 1761), Angélique (born 1765), Paul (2) (born 1769), Rosalie (born 1772), Marie (I) (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767; married January 7, 1774), Marie (II) (born 1774), Anne (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767), Madeleine (birth date unknown, at New Orleans in 1767) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-year-old spouse of Michel David. In addition to herself and her fifty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean David, her son, 18 years old; Claude David, her son, 16 years old; Pierre David, her son, 6 years old; Angélique David, her daughter, 12 years old; Rosalie David, her daughter, 5 years old; and Marie David, her daughter, 3 years old. Geneviève Hébert and her family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twn cows and two horses. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:63; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Hébert, comp., Some Descendants of Étienne Hébert, 3-12. | 1.766 | Charles Gauterot & Françoise Rimbeau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.901 | Paul | David | 01/01/1754 | St. Charles Parish, Acadia, Diocese of Québec | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Married Marie Pélagie Oubre, a native of St. Charles Parish, Louisiana, and the daughter of André Oubre and Marie Elisabeth Bonvillain, at Cabannocé, February 21, 1775. | Félicité (baptized November 25, 1779), Henri (baptized June 30, 1780), Isabelle (married July 7, 1800), Marie (married August 2, 1802), Marie Dorothée (baptized October 25, 1775), Ursule (born January 12, 1789) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Pélagie Oubre, his wife, 18 years old; and Marie David, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned no real estate, but they did own four cows and one horse. He and his wife served as baptismal sponsors for his niece, Célestine Oubre, at Cabannocé, January 12, 1788. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:224-228, 574; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | His sister Marie's marriage record indicates that his parents were from St. Charles Parish, Acadia. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.902 | Anne | David | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Resided with her family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.903 | Marie | David | St. Charles Parish, Acadia | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Married Antoine Chauffe, native of St. Charles Parish, Louisiana, and the son of Antoine Chauffe and Marguerite Schingre, at Cabannocé, January 7, 1774. | Resided with her family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:226. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.904 | Madeleine | David | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Resided with her family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.905 | Angélique | David | 01/01/1765 | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Married Henri Oubre, a native of St. Charles Parish, Louisiana, at Cabannocé, September 24, 1787. | Célestine (born January 12, 1788), Christophe (born December 15, 1789), Geneviève (born March 17, 1793), Henri (born May 30, 1800), Isabelle (born 1782), Jean Baptiste (born May 19, 1795), Marie (born January 24, 1788). Note: twins Célestine and Marie were baptized on the same date (April 14, 1788), but their birthdates do not coincide in their respective baptismal records. | Resided with her family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:224-228, 573-575; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.906 | Jean Baptiste | David | 01/01/1759 | Acadia | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Married Hélène Haché, daughter of Joseph Haché and Marie Emon of Acadia, at Cabannocé, October 14, 1788. | Resided with his family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:226; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:249. | 1.766 | 13/06/1810 | Saint Michael Catholic Church, Convent, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.907 | Claude | David | 01/01/1761 | Geneviève Hébert | Étienne (Michel) David | Resided with his family on the royal plantation adjacent to New Orleans, 1767. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.908 | Marie | Savoie (Savoy) | Among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767. A notation indicates she had not yet received rations from the government for the month of July, 1767. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.909 | Marie | Robichaud (Robicheaux) | Married Pierre Arosteguy. | Anne, Jean, Marguerite, Marie (Théotiste), Marie Rose (born August 17, 1765) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:6; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.910 | Marie Théotiste | Arosteguy | Marie Robichaud | Pierre Arosteguy | Listed among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767; she was in New Orleans with her sister Marguerite and her brother Jean. Extant records indicate that she received her quota of rations from the government in July, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.911 | Joseph | Dupuis | Listed among the Acadian exiles in New Orleans, 1767. He was joined in New Orleans by Jean Baptiste Dupuis, Pierre Dupuis, Simon Dupuis, and Marie Dupuis. Extant documents indicate that he had received his monthly quota of rations from the government for July, 1767. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.912 | Marie | Dupuis | Listed among the Acadians in New Orleans, 1767. She was joined in New Orleans by Joseph Dupuis, Jean Baptiste Dupuis, Pierre Dupuis, and Simon Dupuis. An extant document indicates that she received her quota of rations from the government for July, 1767. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
1.913 | Jean Baptiste | Dupuis | Marguerite (Anne) Boudrot (Boudreau) | Antoine Dupuis | Married Elizabeth (Isabelle) Benoît, daughter of Alexndre Benoît (Benoist) and Marie Comeau, February 7, 1775. | Simon (married October 5, 1778) | His parents died in Saint-Domingue. It is not clear if he was in Saint-Domingue before going to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians in New Orleans, 1767. He was joined in New Orleans by Joseph Dupuis, Marie Dupuis, Pierre Dupuis, and Simon Dupuis. An extant document indicates that he received his quota of rations from the government for July, 1767. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had 10 barrels of unshucked corn. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-one years old. He is identified as Batiste (sic) Dupuis in the June 21, 1771 list. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. He appears to have settled in the Attakapas / Opelousas area by 1784. On December 3, 1784, Dupuis signed a contract with the Veuve Germain Trahan. In the contract he agrees to care for the widow's cattle, in return for one-sixth of the herd's increase over the course of a three-year period. During the course of the contract, Dupuis was to enjoy full use of the widow's property, including her house and pastures. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12, 38. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.914 | Pierre | Dupuis | Marguerite (Anne) Boudrot (Boudreau) | Antoine Dupuis | His parents died in Saint-Domingue, but it is not clear if he was in Saint-Domingue before going to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians in New Orleans, 1767. He was joined in New Orleans by Joseph Dupuis, Marie Dupuis, Jean Baptiste Dupuis, and Simon Dupuis. An extant document indicates that he received his quota of rations from the government for July, 1767. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.915 | Simon | Dupuis | Marguerite (Anne) Boudrot (Boudreau) | Antoine Dupuis | His parents died in Saint-Domingue. It is not clear if he was in Saint-Domingue before going to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians in New Orleans, 1767. He was joined in New Orleans by Joseph Dupuis, Marie Dupuis, Jean Baptiste Dupuis, and Pierre Dupuis. An extant document indicates that he received his quota of rations from the government for July, 1767. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.916 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Babineau | dit Des Lauriers | Listed among the Acadian exiles at New Orleans, 1767. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.917 | Marie Marguerite | Babineau | dit Des Lauriers | Married Joseph Comeau, January 9, 1768. | Listed among the Acadian exiles at New Orleans, 1767. A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in December 1767. | List of Acadians in New Orleans, 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.918 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1736 | Married Madeleine (Marie Madeleine) Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Joseph (born 1755), Simon (born 1763), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1765) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luis de Natchez indicates that he was the head of a household including his wife, his sons Joseph and Simon, his daughter Magdeleine, and Marguerite Babin, an orphan. Given a land grant measuring six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | Wood, Guide, 145-146; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.919 | Madeleine | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1733 | Married Joseph Landry. | Joseph (born 1755), Simon (born 1763), Madeleine (Magdeleine) (born 1765) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that her household included her husband Joseph, her sons Joseph and Simon, her daughter Madeleine, and Marguerite Babin, an orphan. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.920 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Madeleine Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Joseph Landry | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his parents, his brother Simon, his sister Madeleine, and Marguerite Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.921 | Simon | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Madeleine Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Joseph Landry | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his parents, his brother Joseph, his sister Madeleine, and Marguerite Babin, an orphan. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.922 | Madeleine | Landry | 01/01/1765 | Madeleine Boudrot | Joseph Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her parents, her brothers Joseph and Simon, and Marguerite Babin, an orphan. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.923 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1753 | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old orphan living in Joseph Landry's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.924 | Brigitte | Boudrot (Boudreau) | 01/01/1732 | Acadie | Married Basile Landry. | Marie (born 1756), Marianne (Madeleine) (born 1766) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her husband Basile, and her daughters Marie and Marianne. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56`. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.925 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1754 | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her parents and her two-year-old sister Marianne. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.926 | Joseph | Babin | 07/10/1730 | Jean Babin | Married Rose (Rosalie) LeBlanc. | Joseph (born 1754), Simon (born 1763), Marie Rose (born 1766) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included himself, his wife Rose, his son Simon, his daughter Marie Rose, and orphan Joseph Babin. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. On September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to St. Jacques de Cabannocé. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. | Died sometime before his widow's marriage to Ignace Hébert at St. Gabriel on January 11, 1773. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:361; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to St. James Parish, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.927 | Rose (Rosalie) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Joseph Babin. Married (2) Ignace Hébert, the widower of Marie LeBlanc, at St. Gabriel, January 11, 1773. | First marriage: Simon (born 1763), Marie Rose (born 1766) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her husband Joseph Babin, her son Simon, her daughter Marie Rose, and orphan Joseph Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.928 | Simon | Babin | 01/01/1763 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Rose (Rosalie) Babin | Joseph Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his parents, his sister Marie Rose, and orphan Joseph Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | 15/02/1768 | San Luís de Natchez | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.929 | Marie Rose | Babin | 01/01/1766 | Rose (Rosalie) Babin | Joseph Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her parents, her brother Simon, and orphan Joseph Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.930 | Joseph | Babin | 01/01/1754 | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as an orphan in the household of Joseph and Rose (Rosalie) Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 77. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.931 | Marguerite | Babin | Veuve Alexis Comeau | 01/01/1730 | Married Alexis Comeau. | Joseph (born 1751), Étienne (born 1760), Pierre (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1755) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her daughter Marguerite and her sons Joseph, Etienne, and Pierre. Granted a parcel of land measuring four arpents frontage along the Mississippi River, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 109-110; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.932 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Comeau (Caumon, Como, Comon) | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Babin | Alexis Comeau | Married (1) Anne Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and Elizabeth Dupuis, at Cabannocé, June 8, 1778. Anne Landry was interred at Assumption Parish on October 11, 1797. Married (2) Marie Blanchard, widow of Mathurin Trahan and the daughter of Joseph Blanchard and Anne Hébert, at Assumption Parish, November 12, 1798. | Victoire (born 1779), Rosalie (born 1781), Joseph (born 1783), Marie (born 1786) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his mother, his sister Marguerite, and his brothers Etienne and Pierre. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included two twin brothers twelve years of age. He and his siblings owned ten cows, eight hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was twenty years of age. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years old. He is identified as Jausephe Caumon in the July 13, 1777 list. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 28 years old; Victoire Comeau, his daughter, 9 years old; Rosalie Comeau, his daughter, 7 years old; Joseph Comeau, his son, 5 years old; and Marie Comeau, his daughter, 2 years old. Joseph Comeau and his family owned two slaves and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn, eight cattle, two horses, and twenty hogs. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Comeau lost four of his ten cows. On October 15, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice informed Governor Estevan Mir¢ that failed to built levees, ditches, and a roadway on his land grant, as required by the colony's 1770 land regulations. Identified as Joseph Como in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Anne Landry (Landri), his wife, 29 years old; Victoire Comeau, his daughter, 9 years old; Rosalie Comeau, his daughter, 8 years old; Joseph Comeau, his son, 5 years old; and Marie Comeau, his daughter, 3 years old. Joseph Comeau and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned eight barrels of rice, 200 barrels of corn, eight cows, ten horses, and fifty hogs. These property holdings placed Joseph Comeau and his family among the most aflluent families in the Lafourche District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 109-110; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; List of Lands Found in the Lafourche District, Otober 15, 1785, AGI, PPC, 188A:8/6; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 29. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.933 | Étienne (Étiene) | Comeau (Common) | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Babin | Alexis Comeau | Married Marguerite Blanchard, daughter of Joseph Blanchard, and Marie Landry, at St. Gabriel, May 31, 1792. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his mother, his sister Marguerite, and his brothers Joseph and Pierre. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 109-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | Sat, Nov 1, 1760 | 1.768 | Maryland | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.934 | Pierre (Piere) | Comeau (Common) | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Babin | Alexis Comeau | Married Claire Breau (Braud), daughter of Joseph Breau (Braud) and Marie Landry, at St. Gabriel, January 10, 1785. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. His household included his mother, his sister Marguerite, and his brothers Joseph and Etienne. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years old. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years old. His name is rendered as Piere Common in the July 13, 1777 list. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On October 23, 1785, the Iberville District commandant informed the governor that he had not maintained the levee, drainage ditch, and public road across his land grant as required by the colonial land regulations of 1770. His name is rendered as Pierre Comau in the October 23, 1785 list. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 109-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; List of Persons Who Have Failed to Maintain Their Levees and the Public Road in the Iberville District, October 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:137vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.935 | Marguerite | Comeau | 01/01/1755 | Marguerite Babin | Alexis Comeau | Married Jean Baptiste LeBlanc at Ascension Parish, December 11, 1775. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her mother and her brothers Joseph, Pierre, and Etienne. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 109-110; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 28. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.936 | Mathurin (Maturin) | Landry (Lendry) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | The identity of this person is uncertain. He could be the Acadian who married Perpétue Breau, but notable discrepancies in age and residential location suggest that it is another person bearing the same name in the Iberville District. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-three years old. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife and an unidentified ten-year-old girl. His household owned seven hogs and three chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, and his fifteen-year-old daughter. He and his family owned two male slaves, one female slave, twelve cows, fourteen hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was forty-three years of age. His name is rendered as Maturin Lendry in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry lost twelve of his twenty-five cows. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 277; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:445; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.937 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1740 | Married Mathurin Landry. | Marie (born 1762), Marcel (born 1766), Ludivine (married October 5, 1778) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. According to the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez, his household included herself, her husband, her daughter Marie, her son Marcel, and twenty-year-old orphan Marguerite Breau (Braud). | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 149. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.938 | Marcel | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Marie Babin | Mathurin Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. According to the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez, his household included his parents, his sister Marie, and twenty-year-old orphan Marguerite Breau (Braud). | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 149. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.939 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1762 | Marie Babin | Mathurin Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that her household included her parents, her brother Marcel, and twenty-year-old "orphan" Marguerite Breau (Braud). | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 149. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.940 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1748 | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-year-old "orphan" living in the household of Mathurin Landry and Marie Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 149. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.941 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1735 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married Simon Pierre Breau (Braud), who died en route to Louisiana from Maryland. | Pierre (Pierre Jean Baptiste) (born 1755), Anne (born 1754), Hélène (born 1766), Augustin (born ca. 1768), Marianne (born ca. 1768) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included the following children: Pierre, Anne, Hélène, Augustin, and Marianne. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 102; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.942 | Pierre (Piere, Pierre Jean Baptiste) | Breau (Braud, Braux, Breaux) | 01/01/1755 | Marguerite Landry | Simon Pierre Breau (Braud) | Married Marguerite Dardenne (Dardene), daughter of Charles Dardenne and Marie Louise LaGée, at Ascension Parish, July 27, 1799. | Children listed by Clarence T. Breaux: Fostin (Faustin), Athanase, Charles, Jean Pierre, André Treville, Jean Solomon, Jean Olésime (Onésime?), Félix (I), Félix (II) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he lived with his widowed mother and four siblings. Described in ecclesiastical records as a resident of St. Gabriel at the time of his marriage to Marguerite Dardenne. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had eight barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. His name is rendered as Piere Braux in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He owned eight hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned three cows, six hogs, ten chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the river. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-two-year-old bachelor. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-eight years old. His name is rendered as Piere Braux in the July 13, 1777 list. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he died in 1822. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 102; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:155; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3, 5. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.943 | Anne | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1754 | Marguerite Landry | Simon Breau (Braud) | Married Pierre Rivet, son of Etienne Rivet and Claire Forest, at Cabannocé, February 3, 1777. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she lived with her widowed mother and four siblings. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:143. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.944 | Hélène | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1766 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Marguerite Landry | Simon Breau (Braud) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she lived with her widowed mother and four siblings. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 102. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.945 | Augustin | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Landry | Simon Breau (Braud) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he lived with his widowed mother and four siblings. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 102. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.946 | Marianne | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Landry | Simon Breau (Braud) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she lived with her widowed mother and four siblings. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 102. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.947 | Augustin (Augustain) | Landry (Landrie) | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married (1) Anne Marie Forest, daughter of Bonaventure Forest and Claire Rivet, in the Iberville DIstrict, 1773. Married (2) Isabelle Landry, the widow of Etienne Rivet and the daughter of Pierre Landry and Claire Babin, at St. Gabriel, 1786. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he resided with six siblings: Alexandre, Pierre, Anne Madeleine, Geneviève, Cécille, and Madeleine. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor who owned four hogs and seven chickens. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. His name is rendered as Augustain Landrie in the June 21, 1771 list. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:418. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.948 | Alexandre | Landry (Landrie) | 01/01/1758 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married Marie Modeste Hébert, a native of Morlaix, France, and the daughter of Amado (Amant?) Hébert and Marie Richard, at St. Gabriel, February 6, 1786. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he resided with six siblings: Augustin, Pierre, Anne Madeleine, Geneviève, Cécille, and Madeleine. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. His name is rendered as Alexandre Landrie in the June 21, 1771 list. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.949 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married Madeleine Forest, daughter of Bonaventure Forest and Claire Rivet (Rivette), at Cabannocé, February 3, 1777. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he resided with six siblings: Augustin, Alexandre, Anne Madeleine, Geneviève, Cécille, and Madeleine. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty-one barrels of surplus corn. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:447. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.950 | Anne Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1741 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | It is unclear if Anne Madeline or her sister Madeleine married Etienne Hébert, son of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson, at Cabannocé, June 28, 1771. | If she were indeed married to Étienne Hébert, then her children where: Donat Paul (born 1772; married January 4, 1799; died June 1, 1827), Narcisse (born November 7, 1776), Anne Magdeleine (baptized October 16, 1779), Anne Adelaïde (Adélaÿde) (baptized October 16, 1779), Marie Constance (born April 1782; married December 1, 1802), Janvier (Januario) (baptized November 7, 1785), Abraham, Étienne (Estienne) (married June 10, 1805) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she resided with six siblings: Augustin, Alexandre, Pierre, Geneviève, Cécille, and Madeleine. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:434. | 1.768 | 27/03/1788 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.951 | Madeleine | Landry | 01/01/1754 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | It is unclear if Madeline or her sister Anne Madeleine married Etienne Hébert, son of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson, at Cabannocé, June 28, 1771. | If she were indeed married to Étienne Hébert, then her children where: Donat Paul (born 1772; married January 4, 1799; died June 1, 1827), Narcisse (born November 7, 1776), Anne Magdeleine (baptized October 16, 1779), Anne Adelaïde (Adélaÿde) (baptized October 16, 1779), Marie Constance (born April 1782; married December 1, 1802), Janvier (Januario) (baptized November 7, 1785), Abraham, Étienne (Estienne) (married June 10, 1805) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she resided with six siblings: Augustin, Alexandre, Pierre, Geneviève, Cécille, and Anne Madeleine. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.952 | Geneviève | Landry | 01/01/1745 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married Jean Baptiste Bellot, native of Pavia, Italy, and the son of Charles Bellot and Angèlle Montigny, August 9, 1768. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church of Pointe Coupée. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she resided with six siblings: Augustin, Alexandre, Pierre, Anne Madeleine, Cécille, and Madeleine. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.953 | Cécille | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Marie Josèphe Richard | Joseph Landry | Married Michel Rivet, son of Michel Rivet and Anne Landry, January 23, 1769. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church of Pointe Coupée. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she resided with six siblings: Augustin, Alexandre, Pierre, Anne Madeleine, Geneviève, and Madeleine. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 144-145. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.954 | Rose | Landry | Veuve Janvier Breau | 01/01/1738 | Married Janvier Breau (Braud) | Marguerite (born 1763), Madeleine (born 1765), Marie (born 1767) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Her household included her daughters Marguerite, Madeleine, and Marie. Received a land grant measuring four arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.955 | Marguerite | 01/01/1763 | Rose Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.956 | Madeleine | 01/01/1765 | Rose Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.957 | Marie | 01/01/1767 | Rose Landry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a member of her widowed mother's household. She was eleven months old in February 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312. | 1.768 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.958 | Jean Baptiste | Dupuis | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Granger | Germain Dupuis | Married Anne Richard, daughter of Jacques Richard and Anne Granger. | Firmin (born 1753; married February 15, 1790), Marie (born 1755; married May 2, 1773), Cécille (Cécile) (born 1764; married February 11, 1782), Valéry (married May 29, 1826) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, his household included his wife Anne, his son Firmin, and his daughters Marie and Cécille. Given a grant of four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River, 1768. San Luís de Natchez commandant Delavilleboeuvre reported on September 29, 1768, that Jean Baptiste Dupuis had died of dropsy. | Died of dropsy at San Luís de Natchez, ca. September 29, 1768. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:44; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 115-116; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Brasseaux, et al., Quest for the Promised Land, 162; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.959 | Anne | Richard | 10/09/1744 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contends that she was born in Pisiquid, Acadia.) | Anne Granger (Grangé) | Jacques Richard | Married Jean Baptiste Dupuis, son of Germain Dupuis and Marie Granger. Dupuis died before the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish. | Firmin (born 1753; married February 15, 1790), Marie (born 1755; married May 2, 1773), Cécille (Cécile) (born 1764; married February 11, 1782) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her husband Jean Baptiste, her son Firmin, and her daughters Marie and Cécille (Cécile). Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a forty-five-year-old widow living in the household headed by Firmin Dupuis, her eighteen-year-old son. The household also included Marie Dupuis, her fifteen-year-old daughter, and Cécille (Cécile) Dupuis, her six-year-old daughter. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a forty-eight-year-old widow and a member of the household of Firmin Dupuis, her twenty-three-year-old son. The household also included Cécile Dupuis, her fifteen-year-old daughter. | Her burial record indicates that she was eighty-six years of age at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:118/; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 115-116; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | 1.768 | 01/11/1811 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.960 | Firmin | Dupuis | 01/01/1753 | Anne Richard | Jean Baptiste Dupuis | Married Marie Terriot (Theriot), daughter of Jean Jacques Terriot and Marguerite Richard of St. Gabriel, La., February 15, 1790. | Olivier Joseph (married August 20, 1810), Rose (married August 20, 1810), Jean Noël (married Apr9il 24, 1820), Marie Céleste (married April 24, 1820), Marie Henriette (married February 6, 1816), Reine Rosalie (married February 6, 1816) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the eighteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Richard, his widowed mother, 45 years old; Marie Dupuis, his sister, 15 years old; and Cécille (Cécile) Dupuis, his sister, 6 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of twenty-six barrels of surplus corn. In addition, he had sold sixteen barrels to one Mr. Lamatte. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Veuve Dupuis, a widow and his forty-eight-year-old mother, and Cécile Dupuis, his fifteen-year-old sister. Firmin Dupuis owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned six cows, one horse, eight hogs, and two muskets. He reportedly killed Joseph Hébert, a resident of Bayou des Écores, in a brawl at an Iberville District cabaret, ca. August 21, 1787. He was evidently exonerated in a subsequent inquest. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourche District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On March 17, 1807, Firmin Dupuis sold to Jean Kling a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River, approximately twenty-eight leagues above New Orleans. Firmin Dupuis was accused of killing a resident of the Baton Rouge District. Because of the ensuing judicial proceedings, Louis Judice inventoried and appraised Dupuis' estate. The inventory, dated August 1, 1787, indicates that Firmin Dupuis owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by fifteen feet. On March 17, 1807, Firmin Dupuis sold to Antoine Robichaud (Robaud) a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The property, located about twenty-five leagues above New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Donat Hébert and below by the property of the vendor. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-four years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 115-116; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Investigation into the Killing of Joseph Hébert, August 21, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:468-470vo; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | 1.768 | 28/10/1819 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.961 | Marie | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1755 | Anne Richard | Jean Baptiste Dupuis | Married (1) Prosper Hébert, son of Pierre Hébert and Isabelle (Elizabeth, Elisabeth) Cormier, May 2, 1773. Married (2) Olivier Part, son of Pierre Part and Angélique Gaudin (Godin), January 4, 1787. | First marriage: Pierre Paul (baptized July 26, 1777, Michel Cyprien (baptized September 27, 1779), Jacques Prosper (married February 8, 1802), HenrietteSecond marriage: Joseph (married August 20, 1810) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of her brother Firmin's household. In addition to her eighteen-year-old brother, the household included the following persons: Anne Richard, the Widow Dupuis, her widowed mother, 45 years old; and Cécille (Cécile) Dupuis, her sister, 6 years old. On July 8, 1790, Marie Dupuis acknowledged receipt of a tract of land from the succession of her deceased former husband, Olivier Part, and from Pierre Part. The foregoing property was located between the lands of Firmin Guédry (Guidry) and Firmin Dupuis. On March 28, 1795, he issued a receipt to Pierre Part. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 115-116; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39, 50, 84. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.962 | Cécille (Cécile, Cecelia) | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1764 | Anne Richard | Jean Baptiste Dupuis | Married (1) Joseph Breau, son of Amant (Amand) Breau and Marie Landry, February 11, 1782. Married (2) Joseph Richard, son of Claude Richard and Cécille Melanson (Melançon). Joseph Richard was the widower of Anne Landry. Married Santiago Mercoler. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of the household of Firmin Dupuis, her eighteen-year-old brother. The household also included Anne Richard, her forty-five-year-old, widowed mother, and Marie Dupuis, her fifteen-year-old sister. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Firmin Dupuis, her brother. The household also included the Veuve Dupuis, her forty-eight-year-old mother. On March 23, 1792, Cécille (Cécile) Dupuis signed an affidavit declaring that her first husband, the late Joseph Breau, had owned a farmstead that had fallen into ruin. She formally abandoned title to the farm, thereby allowing Pierre LeConte to claim the property. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 115-116; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:267; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | 1.768 | 07/03/1799 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.963 | Anne | Dupuis | 05/07/1733 | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Élizabeth LeBlanc | Charles Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married Jean Baptiste Guédry, who died sometime before the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish. | Firmin (born 1752), Jean Baptiste (born 1759), Madeleine (born 1754), Monique (sometimes rendered Marie) (born 1762), Isabelle (Élisabeth) (born 1765) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as the head of a household that included the following change: Firmin, Jean Baptiste, Madeleine, Monique, and Isabelle. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a forty-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Firmin Guédry, her son, 18 years old; Jean Guédry, her son, 8 years old; Madeleine (Magdeleine) Guédry, her daughter, 16 years old; and Monique Guédry, her daughter, 6 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a forty-four-year-old widow living in the household of Firmin Guédry (Guidry), her twenty-seven-year-old son. The household also included Jean Guédry, her seventeen-year-old son, and Marie Guédry, her fifteen-year-old daughter. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:44; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339; Wood, Guide, 120-121; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.964 | Firmin | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1752 | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Married Marguerite Landry, daughter of Charles Landry and Marguerite Boudrot (Boudreaux), at St. Gabriel, February 19, 1786. | Jean Baptiste (born 1787), Sebastian (born 1789), Marie Modeste (buried January 18, 1791), Céleste (born 1791), Jean (a twin) (born 1795), Edouard (a twin) (born 1795) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez at a member of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eighteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of twenty-six barrels of surplus corn, which he had sold to Mr. Lamatte. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Veuve Guédry (Guidry), his mother, 44 years old; Jean Guédry, his brother, 17 years old; and Marie Guédry, his sister, 15 years old. Firmin Guédry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows, three horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. The 1777 census indicates that Firmin Guédry (Guidry) owned a second tract of land (plot number 81) with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of second corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourche District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On December 21, 1793, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Firmin Guédry had been assigned to transport a captured fugitive slave to the governor's office in New Orleans. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-six years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339, 341; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Louis Judice to Baron de Carondelet, December 21, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21, 47. | 1.768 | 01/02/1799 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.965 | Jean Baptiste | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1759 | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Married Marie Madeleine Breau, a native of Assumption Parish and the daughter of Firmin Breau and Marguerite Breau, at the Attakapas church, June 15, 1785. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez at a member of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Firmin Guédry, his brother. The household also included Veuve Guédry (Anne Dupuis), his forty-four-year-old mother, and Marie Guédry, his fifteen-year-old sister. Served as baptismal sponsor for Anne Henriette Hébert at Ascension Parish, November 10, 1781. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339; Wood, Guide, 120-121; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.966 | Madeleine | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1754 | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez at a member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.967 | Monique (Anne Monique) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1762 | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Married Charles Breau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the son of Antoine Breau and Marguerite Landry, at Ascension Parish, December 30, 1782. | Joseph Urbin (Urbain) (married June 12, 1809), Charles Cleondre (married February 6, 1816) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez at a member of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339; Wood, Guide, 120-121; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18-19, 47. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.968 | Isabelle (Elisabeth) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1765 | Anne Dupuis | Jean Baptiste Guédry | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez at a member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:339; Wood, Guide, 120-121. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.969 | Anne | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1708 | Married Jean Dupuis. | Pierre (born 1750), Marie (born 1739), Monique (born 1744) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as the head of a household that included her son Pierre and her daughters Marie and Monique. Received a land grant measuring four arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 114-115; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.970 | Pierre | Dupuis | 01/01/1750 | Anne Breau (Braud) | Jean Dupuis | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a member of his widowed mother's household. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had ten barrels of surplus corn. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 114-115; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.971 | Marie | Dupuis | 01/01/1739 | Anne Breau (Braud) | Jean Dupuis | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 114-115. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.972 | Monique | Dupuis | 01/01/1744 | Anne Breau (Braud) | Jean Dupuis | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Wood, Guide, 114-115. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.973 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1742 | Married Marguerite Dupuis | Marie (born 1765) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was the head of a household that included himself, his wife Marguerite, his three-year-old daughter Marie, and eighteen-year-old orphan Olivier Babin. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.974 | Marguerite | Dupuis | 01/01/1741 | Married Pierre Guédry. | Marie (born 1765) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as the member of a household that included her husband, her three-year-old daughter Marie, and eighteen-year-old orphan Olivier Babin. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.975 | Marie | Guédry | 01/01/1765 | Marguerite Dupuis (Dupuy) | Pierre Guédry (Guidry) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez identifies her as a three-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.976 | Olivier | Babin | 01/01/1751 | Appears to have been at Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as an eighteen-year-old orphan in the household of Pierre Guédry (Guidry). | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 81. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
1.977 | Michel (Michel Maxime, Maxime, Michelle) | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1740 | probably Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Married Cécille (Cécile) Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Dugas, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1769. Firmin Babin, Catherine Landry, and Claire Babin witnessed the marriage record. | Alexandre Vital (baptized December 14, 1773), Michel Marcel (baptized April 19, 1778) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. All of the members of the household were orphaned before their journey to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez identifies him as the head of a household that included his brothers Cirille and Blaise and his sisters Marianne and Marguerite. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. The list of land gant recipients maintains (incorrectly, unless the list is actually dated 1769) that his household included "his wife and three brothers." Identifed as Maxim Rivet in a list of land grantees in the upper Iberville District, 1770. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years old. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Identified in the 1771 census of the Iberville District as Maxime Rivet, the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-three-year-old spouse. The couple owned twenty-three chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 37 years old; an unnamed daughter, 13 years old; and fraternal twins one boy and one girl, 1 year old. He and his family owned nine dcows, seven hogs, twelve chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:215; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 181-182; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:258. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.978 | Cirille (Cyrille, Sirille) | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1743 | Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Married Marguerite Richard, the widow of Jean Baptist Forest (Forêt) and the daughter of Joseph Richard and Marie LeBlanc, May 7, 1770. Marguerite Richard, like Cirille Rivet, was a native of Holy Family Parish, Acadia. Their marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée. | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. All of the members of the household were orphaned before their journey to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he lived with four siblings: Michel, Blaise, Marianne, and Marguerite. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-nine-year-old wife, a six-year-old son, and an eight-year-old daughter. (The children were evidently stepchildren.) The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cattle, nine hogs, and ten chickens. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-five years old. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-seven-year-old wife and a thirteen-year-old son. He and his family owned ten cows, fifteen hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-three years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Rivet (Rivette) lost two of his fourteen cows. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 181-182; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:633-634; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.768 | 02/10/1792 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.979 | Blaise (Belis) | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1747 | probably Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Married Marie Madeleine Noël, daughter of Pierre Noël and Marie Madeleine Babin (sometimes rendered Barbe), at St. Gabriel, April 1, 1788. The marriage was witnessed by Cirille Rivet, Blaise's brother. | Josèphe (born February 18, 1791), Célestine Rosalie (born November 1, 1794), Marie Carmelite (born May 14, 1789), Vidal Marcel (baptized January 13, 1793) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. All of the members of the household were orphaned before their journey to Louisiana. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he lived with four siblings: Michel, Cirille, Marianne, and Marguerite. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years of age. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years of age. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned seven cows, seventeen hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-three-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant reported that his cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost ten of his twenty cows. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Iberville District, May 14, 1789. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Wood, Guide, 181-182; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:633-634; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780,AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 90. | 1.768 | 29/09/1797 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.980 | Marianne | Rivet | 01/01/1740 | probably Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she lived with four siblings: Michel, Cirille, Blaise, and Marguerite. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 181-182. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.981 | Marguerite | Rivet | 01/01/1751 | probably Holy Family Parish, Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she lived with four siblings: Michel, Cirille, Blaise, and Marianne. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 181-182. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.982 | Catherine | Landry | Veuve Antoine Babin | 01/01/1721 | Married Antoine Babin. | Firmin (born 1747), Charles (born 1750), Claire (born 1744), Anne (born 1746), Rose (born 1754), Élizabeth (Isabelle) (born 1764) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was the head of a household that included the following children: Firmin, Charles, Claire, Anne, Rose, and Elizabeth. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:420. | 1.768 | 12/03/1783 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.983 | Firmin (Firmain) | Babin | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married (1) Vivienne (sometimes rendered Babienne) Breau (Braud), daughter of Amant (Amand) Breau and Marie Landry, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1769. Married (2) Isabelle Brusse (sometimes rendered Bouché), a native of Philadelphia and the daughter of A. Brusse and Isabelle Brusse, at Ascension Parish, November 26, 1781. | First marriage: Paul (born ca. February 1770), Marie (Marie Anne) (born 1772; signed a marriage contract [second marriage], September 26, 1815), Joseph Belloni (born 1773; married July 21, 1800), Firmin (born 1776), Madeleine Anastasie (married February 4, 1799), Second marriage: Simon (born 1785), François (born 1786), Isabelle Cécille (Élizabeth) (born 1787) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a twenty-one-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. A resident of Ascension Parish in 1770. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Vivienne Breau, his wife, 26 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 6 months old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had four barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Vivienne (Babienne) Breau, his wife, 33 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 7 years old; Belloni Babin, his son, 4 years old; Firmin Babin, his son, 1 year old; and Marie Babin, his daughter, 1 year old. Firmin Babin and his family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned seven cows, three hogs, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle Brusse (Bouché), his wife, 26 years old; Paul (Pol) Babin, his son, 18 years old; Belloni (Belomy) Babin, his son, age is illegible; Firmin (Firmain) Babin, his son, age is illegible; Anastasie Babin, his daughter, age is illegible; Simon Babin, his son, 3 years old; François Babin, his son, 2 years old; and Isabelle Babin, his daughter, 1 year old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Isabelle Brusse (Bouché), his wife, 29 years old; Paul (Pol) Babin, his son, 19 years old; Belloni (Beloni) Babin, his son, 15 years old; Firmin (Firmain) Babin, his son, 13 years old; Anastasie Babin, his daughter, 11 years old; Simon Babin, his son, 6 years old; François Babin, his son, 3 years old; and Isabelle Babin, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of rice, fifty barrels of corn, nine cows, four horses, and twenty-five hogs. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; 2:45; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 6-7. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.984 | Charles | Babin | 01/01/1750 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a twenty-one-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. A resident of Ascension Parish in 1770. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Catherine Landry, the Widow Babin, his mother, 50 years old; Rose Babin, his sister, 16 years old; Elizabeth Babin, his sister, 6 years old. The August 1, 1770, census suggests that his residence was next door to that of his brother Firmin. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. He appears to have also sold fifty barrels to Louis Judice, a local commandant. Around September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.985 | Marie | Babin | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married Francisco Dies (Diez), a native of Spain and the son of Francisco Dies (Diez) and Marie Larose, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., June 20, 1768. Ellizabeth Duaron (Doiron), Antonio Rodriguez, and Pélagie Douaron (Doiron) witnessed the marriage record. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Her mother and siblings settled at San Luís de Natchez in 1768, before subsequently relocating in Ascension Parish. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.986 | Claire (Clair) | Babin | 01/01/1744 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married Pierre Guédry (Guidry), son of Augustin Guédry and Jeanne Hébert, January 23, 1769. Their married is recorded as St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée. She was a resident of the Opelousas District in 1777. | Pierre (born ca. March 1770), David (born 1770), Olivier (born 1772), Joseph (born 1774), Jean Baptiste (born 1776) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a twenty-four-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Guédry (Guidry). In addition to her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Guédry, fils, her five-month-old son. A resident of the Opelousas District in 1777. | Her burial record maintains that she was twenty-eight years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 26. | 1.768 | 19/06/1780 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.987 | Anne | Babin | 01/01/1746 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a twenty-two-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
1.988 | Rose | Babin | 01/01/1754 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married Charles Dugas, son of Jean Dugas and Marie Gaudin, at Ascension Parish, September 28, 1772. | Marie Françoise (born 1773), Charles Grégoire (born 1774), Sophie Adélaïde (born 1776), Victor (born 1779; died October 10, 1779), Anastasie (born 1780), Marie Angèle (born 1783), Paul (born 1785), Laurent (born 1787), Joseph (born ca. 1789; died October 8, 1819), Jérôme (married February 24, 1811), Rosalie (died July 7, 1797) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a fourteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of the household that included the following persons: Charles Babin, her brother and the head of her household, 19 years old; Catherine Landry, the Widow Babin, her mother, 50 years old; Elizabeth Babin, her sister, 6 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Dugas. In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Dugas, her son, 2 years old; Adélaïde Dugas, her daughter, 8 months old; and Théodore Dugas, her brother-in-law, 18 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned eleven cows, two horses, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | Her burial record indicates that she was a sixty-year-old widow at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:62; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 5, 35. | 1.768 | 08/10/1819 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
1.989 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Babin | 01/01/1764 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married (1) Paul Breau (Braud), widower of Marthe LeBlanc, the daughter of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Landry, at Ascension Parish, December 23, 1782. Married (2) Jacques Guédry (Guidry), September 18, 1797. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a four-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of the household that included the following persons: Charles Babin, her brother and the head of the household, 19 years old; Catherine Landry, the Widow Babin, her mother, 50 years old; and Rose Babin, her sister, 16 years old. | Her burial record indicates that she was sixty years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47. | 1.768 | 10/11/1824 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
1.990 | François | Babin | 01/01/1742 | Catherine Landry | Antoine Babin | Married Marguerite Breau (Braud). | Charles (born 1764), Paul (born 1766), Henriette Philonese (married August 13, 1827) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife, two sons, and two orphans Mathurin Babin and Anne Babin. The census also indicates that he lived next door to his widowed mother and his siblings. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Breau, his wife, 34 years old; Charles Babin, his son, 7 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 4 years old; and Pierre Breau, a nephew (evidently his wife's), 14 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of twenty-six barrels of surplus corn which he had sold to Mr. Lamatte. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On October 15, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice reported that François Babin had abandoned his land grant about six years earlier, without having constructed a levee, ditch, and roadway across the property as required by colonial law. On December 20, 1790, François Babin sold a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River to Veuve Simon Beloni (Belony) Landry. Bounded by the lands of Louis Parent (Parens) and Pierre LeComte, this property constituted the dividing line between the Iberville and Lafourche districts. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of Lands Found in the Lafourche District, October 15, 1785, AGI, PPC, 188A:8/6; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.991 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1738 | Marguerite Gauterot | Married François Babin. | Charles (born 1764), Paul (born 1766) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that her househoIdentified as Mari Brau by Delabeuvre on September 18, 1768. On September 18, 1768, Delavilleboeuvre informed Ulloa that he had been forced to send Breau to Pointe Coupée because the San Luís de Natchez had been unable to cure her "grey flux" (probably dysentery) because he had exhausted the post's supply of picuana. ld included her husband, two sons, and two orphaned siblings Mathurin Babin and Anne Babin. On September 29, 1768, San Luís de Natchez commandant Jean Delavilleboeuvre informed Spanish governor Antonio de Ulloa that he had been forced to send François Babin's wife to Pointe Coupée for "a change of air" in an attempt to cure her illness, which the local commandant characterized as grey flux (probably diarrhea). Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of François Babin. In addition to her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Babin, her son, 7 years old; Paul Babin, her son, 4 years old; and Pierre Breau, a nephew, 14 years old. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Delavillebueuvre to Antonio de Ulloa, September 18, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Delavilleboeuvre to Antonio de Ulloa, September 29, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22. | 1.768 | 10/08/1773 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.992 | Charles | Babin | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Breau (Braud) | François Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a four-year-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included his younger brother Paul and Pierre Breau. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
1.993 | Paul | Babin | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Breau (Braud) | François Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a six-month-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a four-year-old member of his parents household. The houshold also included Charles Babin, his brother, and Pierre Babin, a cousin. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2: 54. | 1.768 | 28/01/1802 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.994 | Mathurin | Babin | 01/01/1756 | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a twelve-year-old resident of François Babin and Marguerite Breau. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.995 | Anne | Babin | 01/01/1761 | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a seven-year-old resident of François Babin and Marguerite Breau. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
1.996 | Marguerite | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | Veuve Pierre Breau | 01/01/1705 | Married Pierre Breau (Braud). | Jean (born 1736), Marguerite (Marguerite Hélène) (born 1738), Marie Josèphe (Josette) (born 1746), Marie Rose (born 1748) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was the sixty-three-year-old head of a household that included her daughters Marie Josèphe and Marie Rose. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | Her burial record maintains that she was sixty-seven years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22. | 1.768 | 11/08/1773 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
1.997 | Marie Josèphe (Josette) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite Gauterot | Pierre Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Blaise LeJeune, son of Jean LeJeune and Marguerite Trahan, at Ascension Parish, November 3, 1773. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:494; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 75. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
1.998 | Marie Rose | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1748 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marguerite Gauterot | Pierre Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Joseph Orillon, son of Joseph Orillon and Marguerite Dugas, at Ascension Parish, September 16, 1770. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 75-76; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 83. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
1.999 | Jean | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1736 | Marguerite Gauterot | Pierre Breau (Braud) | Married Marie (?). | Marie (born 1765), Jean Baptiste (born 1767) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as the head of a household including himself, his wife Marie, his son Jean Baptiste, and his daughter Marie. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. On October 18, 1769, Jean Breau (Bro) made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. It is uncertain if the person identified in this document was Jean Breau or Jean Charles Breau. Both men, of approximately the same age, were residents of San Luís de Natchez at the time the petition was sent. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 102; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | 11/03/1784 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.000 | Marie | Madame Jean Breau | 01/01/1736 | Married Jean Breau (Braud). | Marie (born 1765), Jean Baptiste (born 1767) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that her household included her husband, her five-month-old son Jean Baptiste, and her three-year-old daughter Marie. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 102. | 1.768 | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||
2.001 | Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1765 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Marie (?) | Jean Breau (Braud) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a three-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 102. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.002 | Jean Baptiste | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1767 | probably born en route to Louisiana | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau (Braud) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a five-month-old resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 102; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.003 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | Veuve Pierre Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1702 | Married Pierre Clouatre (Cloatre). | Louis (born 1742), Anne (born 1746), Joseph (born 1750), Marie, Marthe (born 1748) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was the head of a household including her sons Pierre and Joseph and her daughters Anne and Marthe. She received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage along the Mississippi, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 108-109; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:192-194. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.004 | Pierre (Piere) | Clouatre (Cloatre, à Clouatre, Clauatre, Clouastre) | 12/01/1742 | Acadia | Marie Landry | Jean Clouatre (Cloatre) | Appears to have married Madeleine (Magdeleine, Magdalene) Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Marianne (Marie, Marine) (born October 26, 1772) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a twenty-six-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. Served as one of the delegates elected by the San Luís de Natchez Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a thirty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned four cattle and eleven hogs. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years old. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old spouse, a sixteen-year-old son and a six-year-old daughter. (The children were evidently stepchildren.) The family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, twenty-five hogs, and six chickens. Pierre Clouatre (Clouastre) charged Charles Babin with having sex with his wife, ca. June 5, 1774; Babin subsequently committed suicide by drowning himself in the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included his forty-year-old spouse. He and his wife owned nine cows, twelve hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a forty-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-six years old. His name is rendered as Piere Clouatre in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Clouatre lost six of his seventeen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 108-109; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769092801; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unhusked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Procès-verbal Regarding the Examination and Identification of Charles Babin's Corpse, June 5, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:403; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, June 7, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:541; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 8, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:401; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:192-194; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | 1.768 | 07/05/1798 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.005 | Joseph | Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1750 | Marguerite LeBlanc | Pierre Clouatre (Cloatre) | Married (1) Marguerite Babin, daughter of Dominique Babin and Marguerite Baudrios (Boudrot?), at St. Gabriel, June 13, 1780. Married (2) Marie Isabelle (Elizabeth, Elisabeth) Thibodeau, daughter of Olivier Thibodeau and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Boudrot, at St. Gabriel, February 11, 1787. | First marriage: Second marriage: Marguerite Marceline (born April 13, 1788), Joseph (born December 29, 1789), Louis (born January 28, 1798), Marie born April 6, 1798 [sic]), Marie Josèphe (born February 12, 1800), Marie Virginia (born June 20, 1802) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned one cow and four hogs. He also occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He owned seventeen hogs. Helped apprehend and subdue Charles Babin, accused of seducing Pierre Clouatre's wife, June 2, 1774. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Clouatre lost one of his nine cows. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:194; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 108-109; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Procès-verbal Regarding the Examination and Identification of Charles Babin's Corpse, June 5, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:403; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, June 7, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:541; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 8, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:401; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.006 | Anne | Clouatre (Cloatre) | Ile St. Jean, Acadia | Marguerite LeBlanc | Pierre Clouatre (Cloatre), a gunsmith (marriage record indicates Jean Clouatre [Cloatre]) | Married Bernard Capdeville, a native of Berne, Switzerland, the widower of Anne de Chigerail, and the son of Antoine Capdeville and Catherine Cousan (Coussan), December 31, 1768. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée. Pierre Clouatre and one Clausse witnessed the marriage record. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:30, 152; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 108-109. | Fri, Mar 27, 1744 | 1.768 | St. Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.007 | Marthe | Clouatre (Cloatre) | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite LeBlanc | Pierre Clouatre | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who HavDiocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:30; e Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 108-109. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.008 | Jean Charles | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1732 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud) | Married Marie Benoît. | Michel (born 1755), Simon (born 1766), Marguerite (born 1758), Ludivine (born 1762) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife Marie Benoit, his sons Michel and Simon, and his daughters Marguerite and Ludivine. Orphans Etienne Benoît and Remi Boudrot lived with his family. He received a land grant measuring eight arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. On October 18, 1769, Jean Breau (Bro) made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. It is uncertain if the person identified in this document was Jean Breau or Jean Charles Breau. Both men, of approximately the same age, were residents of San Luís de Natchez at the time the petition was sent. Jean Charles Breau may also have been the Charles Brau who signed the petition. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twelve barrels of unshucked corn. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, an unidentified fifteen-year-old boy, an unidentified ten-month-old boy, an unidentified thirteen-year-old girl, and an unidentified seven-year-old girl. His household owned four cattle, twelve hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the forty-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, a sixteen-year-old son, a three-year-old son, a fourteen-year-old daughter, an eight-year-old daughter, and a one-month-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned eight cattle, twenty hogs, and sixty chickens. Helped subdue and arrest Charles Babin, who was accused of seducing Pierre Clouatre's wife, June 2, 1774. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included his forty-year-old wife, an eighteen-year-old daugher, a twelve-year-old daughter, and an eight-year-old son. He and his family owned one male slave, twenty cows, six horses, nineteen hogs, forty chickens, and a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was forty-two years of age. Identified as Jens Braux in the July 13, 1777 list. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Breau (Braux) lost none of his fiftteen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Jean Charles Breau died before 1785. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, June 8, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:401; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.009 | Marie | Benoît | 01/01/1730 | Married Jean Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux). | Michel (born 1755), Simon (born 1766), Marguerite (born 1758), Ludivine (born 1762) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her husband, her sons Michel and Simon, her daughters Marguerite and Ludivine, and orphans Etienne Benoît and Remi Boudrot. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was forty years of age. Her household included her forty-year-old husband, an unidentified fifteen-year-old boy, an unidentified ten-month-old boy, an unidentified thirteen-year-old girl, and an unidentified seven-year-old girl. Her household owned four cattle, twelve hogs, and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:72. | 1.768 | 15/11/1795 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.010 | Michel (Charles Michel, Michelle) | Breau (Braud, Braux Breaux) | père | 01/01/1755 | Marie Benoît | Jean Charles Breau | Married Marie Perpétue Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Landry and Anne Babin, February 5, 1777. | Michel, fils (married May 11, 1807), Marie Rose (married August 20, 1810, Marie Angelle (married August 20, 1810), Étienne Urbin (Urbain) (born ca. 1778; married August 20, 1810; died July 23, 1823), Jean Baptiste (married February 14, 1820), Marie Clémence (born ca. 1797; married April 24, 1820; died December 31, 1826), Raphaël (died November 3, 1812, at the age of nineteen years), Manuel (died January 20, 1813, at the age of twenty-two years)Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand notes that "the marriage of two sisters and a brother on the same day seems to establish a record." | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. He appears to have been the unnamed fifteen-year-old boy in his parents' household the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included his sixteen-year-old wife. He and his spouse owned nine cows, three horses, twelve hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-two-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-two years of age. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Breau (Braux) lost eleven of his fourteen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On March 1, 1806, Michel Breau, père, sold to Michel Breau, fils, a tract of land with two arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of the vendor and below by the property of Thomas Randall. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-nine years old at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21. | 1.768 | 19/11/1812 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.011 | Simon | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1764 | Marie Benoît | Jean Charles Breau | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a two-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.012 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1758 | Marie Benoît | Jean Charles Breau | Married Pierre Blanchard, son of Paul Blanchard and Judith Savoie, at Cabannocé, February 9, 1778. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. She appears to have been the unnamed thirteen-year-old girl in her parents' household the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.013 | Ludivine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1762 | Marie Benoît | Jean Charles Breau | Married (1) Etienne Melanson, an Acadian formerly exiled to Snow Hill, Maryland, and the son of Alexandre Melanson and Osite Hébert, at Cabannocé, April 14, 1780. Married (2) François Arseneau, son of Jean Arseneau and Judith Bergeron, at Cabannocé, January 20, 1789. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a six-year-old member of her parents' household. She appears to have been the unnamed seven-year-old girl in her parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.014 | Étienne (Étiene) | Benoît (Benois) | 01/01/1750 | Canada | Anne Cormier | Claude Benoit | Married Magdeleine Breau, daughter of Charles Breau and Claire Trahan, at St. Gabriel, January 20, 1771. Jean Breau, Jean Comeau, Olivier Babin, and Pierre Breau witnessed the marriage record. | Joseph (born ca. 1772), Étienne (born 1773), Marie Angèle (Angelle) (born 1775), Charles (born 1777), Marie Henriette (born ca. 1776), Éloi (born ca. 1778), Benoni (Beloni) (buried September 25, 1779), François Xavier (born ca. 1780), Augustin (Auguste) (born April 7, 1786), Marie Henriette (signed a marriage contract on November 5, 1799) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Jean Charles Breau and Marie Benoît. Identified by Iberville District officials as a local farmer with surplus corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twelve barrels of unhusked corn. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-one years of age. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-eight-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Étiene Benois in the March 6, 1777 list. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101; List of settlers at the Iberville Post Who Have Unshucked Ears of Corn, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 47; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2416. | 1.768 | 08/12/1787 | Attakapas church | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.015 | Rémi | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1755 | Evidently married Judith Martin, who died January 29, 1806. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez as a thirteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Jean Charles Breau and Marie Benoît. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 100-101. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.016 | Joseph (Joseph Charles) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1734 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Marie Josèphe Landry. | Joseph (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762), Claire (born 1765), Charles (born 1768) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife, his sons Joseph and Charles, and his daughters Marguerite and Claire. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. In late spring, 1768, Joseph Breau, a cousin of Acadian insurrectionaries Alexis Breau and Honoré Breau, led the very vocal Acadian resistance to continued settlement at San Luís de Natchez. Was one of three Acadian delegates from San Luís de Natchez sent to ask Governor Antonio de Ulloa for permission for the settlers to relocate. On June 17, 1768, Nicolas Verret reported to Spanish governor Antonio de Ulloa that Joseph Breau (Braud), an Acadian assigned to the San Luís de Natchez settlement, had left his wife and children with relatives at Cabannocé during his ascent of the Mississippi River. Once the Acadian settlement at San Luís de Natchez had been established, Breau returned to Cabannocé to transport his family upriver. Upon arrival at Cabannocé, he discovered that his wife and children were ill and unable to travel. Fearing that their illness was a subterfuge to avoid settling at the notoriously unhealthy San Luís post, Verret ordered Breau to obtain medical certification of his family's illness. Instead, Breau asked Verret to appeal to the governor for an exemption from settlement at San Luís de Natchez, because, Breau insisted, his family members' illness was of "long duration" and relocation of the family would deprive his wife and children of their relatives' assistance. On October 18, 1769, Charles Breau (Brau) made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. It is uncertain if the Charles Breau who signed the petition was Jean Charles Breau or Joseph Charles Breau. Both men, of approximately the same age, resided at San Luís de Natchez at the time the petition was signed. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old spouse, an unidentified ten-year-old boy, an unidentified three-year-old boy, an unidentified six-year-old girl, and an unidentified five-year-old girl. The household owned four cattle, ten hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-four-year-old wife, an eleven-year-old son, a four-year-old son, an eight-year-old daughter, a six-year-old daughter, and a four-year-old daughter. The family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned eight cattle, fifteen hogs, and twelve chickens. | Died sometime before the local commandant compiled a census of the Iberville District on March 6, 1777. | Brasseaux, The Founding of New Acadia, 85; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Nicolas Verret to Antonio de Ulloa, June 17, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Nicolas Verret to Antonio de Ulloa, June 17, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.017 | Marie Josèphe | Landry | Veuve Joseph Breau | 01/01/1738 | Married Joseph Charles Breau (Breaux, Braud). | Joseph (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762), Claire (born 1765), Charles (born 1768), son (a twin, 20 months old in March 1777), a daughter (a twin, 20 months old in March 1777) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household inclided her husband Joseph Charles Breau, her sons Joseph and Charles, and her daughters Marguerite and Claire. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was thirty-three years old. Her household included her thirty-seven-year-old husband, an unidentified ten-year-old boy, an unidentified three-year-old boy, an unidentified six-year-old girl, and an unidentified five-year-old girl. The household owned four cattle, ten hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District identifies her as the widow of Joseph Breau. She was approximately forty years old at the time of the 1777 census. Her household included a twenty-year-old son, a sixteen-year-old daughter, a twelve-year-old daughter, and fraternal twins a boy and a girl, aged twenty months. She and her family owned twenty cows, four horses, eighteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.018 | Joseph (Jausephe Marie, Joseph Marie) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | fils | 01/01/1760 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Marie Josèphe Landry | Joseph (Charles) Breau (Breaux, Braud) | Married (2) Maria Elena Hamilton, daughter of Joseph Hamilton and Anastasie Comeau, at St. Gabriel, July 4, 1786. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. He appears to have been the unidentified ten-year-old boy in his parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that included his seventeen-year-old wife. He and his spouse owned eight cows, two horses, twelve hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of sergeant and that he was a seventeen-year-old married man. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and was eighteen years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Breau lost fifteen of his twenty-eight cows. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Breau (Braux) lost four of his ten cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a corporal on active duty. Served as a corporal in the Iberville District militia, 1785. | Died sometime before his widow remarried on February 6, 1792. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 235. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.019 | Charles | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1768 | probably San Luís de Natchez | Marie Josèphe Landry | Joseph (Charles) Breau (Breaux, Braud) | Married Marie Rosalie Landry, daughter of Paul Marie Landry and Brigitte Babin, at St. Gabriel, February 8, 1796. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that he was a newborn child in his parents' household. He appears to have been the unidentified three-year-old boy in his parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.020 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1762 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Marie Josèphe Landry | Joseph (Charles) Breau (Breaux, Braud) | Married Paul Hébert, an Acadian formerly exiled to Georgetown, Maryland, and the son of Paul Hébert and Marguerite Josèphe Melanson, at Ascension Parish, December 25, 1782. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a six-year-old resident of her parents' household. She appears to have been the unidentified six-year-old girl in her parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.021 | Claire | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1765 | Marie Josèphe Landry | Joseph (Charles) Breau (Breaux, Braud) | Married (1) Pierre Comeau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the son of Alexis Comeau and Marguerite Babin, at St. Gabriel, January 10, 1785. Married (2) Charles Melanson, an Acadian formerly exiled to Snow Hill, Maryland, and the son of Alexandre Melanson and Osite Hébert, January 25, 1790. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez identifies her as a three-year-old resident of her parents' household. She appears to have been the five-year-old girl in her parents' household in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 101-102; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.768 | 11/01/1802 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.022 | Claire | Trahan | Veuve Charles Breau | 01/01/1705 | Married Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux). Greg Wood indicates that she was widowed by 1765. | Marie, Marguerite, Élizabeth (born 1743), Anne (born 1745), Madeleine (born 1747), Pierre (born 1751) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a widow whose household included her son Pierre and her daughters Elizabeth (Isabelle), Anne, and Madeleine. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 97-98; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.023 | Pierre | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1751 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Pierre Breau died a bachelor without issue. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 97-98; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:155; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | 13/03/1781 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.024 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1743 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-five-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 97-98. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.025 | Anne Gertrude | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1745 | Pisiquid, Nova Scotia | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The 1768 census of San Luís de Natchez indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. She subsequently entered the Ursuline religious order at New Orleans. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 97-98; James F. Geraghty, "Louisiana's First Acadian Religious," Attakapas Gazette, 12 (1977): 198-200. | 1.768 | Assumption Parish, Pisiquid, Nova Scotia | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.026 | Madeleine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married (1) Etienne Benoît, son of Claude Benoît and Anne Comeau, at St. Gabriel, January 20, 1771. Her first husband died in the Attakapas District on December 8, 1787. Married (2) Michel Cormier, widower of Catherine Stelly, at the Attakapas church, February 10, 1789. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 97-98. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.027 | Olivier | Babin | 01/01/1746 | Married Marie Breau. There is some debate in genealogical circles about her maiden name. Some published sources suggest that her surname was actually Landry. The confusion appears to stem from the fact that Marie Breau married three times. Her last husband was Joseph Landry. | Barbe, Marie Josèphe (born 1765), Marianne (born 1767) | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, his household included his wife Marie, his daughters Marie Josèphe and Marianne, and his orphaned sister-in-law, Geneviève Landry. Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 80-81; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 9. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.028 | Marie | Landry(?) | 01/01/1739 | Married Olivier Babin. | Marie Josèphe (born 1765), Marianne (born 1767) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768 her household included her husband Olivier, her daughters Marianne and Marie Josèphe, and an orphaned sister, Geneviève Landry. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 80-81. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.029 | Marie Josèphe | Babin | 01/01/1765 | Marie (Landry?) | Olivier Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a three-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 80-81. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.030 | Marianne | Babin | 01/01/1767 | Marie (Landry?) | Olivier Babin | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a one-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 80-81. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.031 | Geneviève | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Exiled to Maryland. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a twenty-one-year-old resident of the household of Olivier Babin and Marie Landry (her sister). | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 80-81. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.032 | Antoine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1730 | Claire Trahan | Charles Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Marguerite Landry. | Joseph (born 1754), Charles (born 1758; married December 30, 1782), Marie Perpétue (born 1761; married May 30, 1779), Scholastique (born 1751; married February 12, 1776), Marie Rose (born 1764) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, his household included his wife Marguerite, his sons Joseph and Charles, and his daughters Scholastique, Perpétue, and Marie Rose. Received a land grant measuring eight arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Served as one of the delegates elected by the San Luís de Natchez Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included his forty-two-year-old wife, an unidentified sixteen-year-old boy, an unidentified thirteen-year-old boy, an unidentified twenty-year-old woman, and an unidentified ten-year-old girl. He and his family owned three cattle, seven hogs, and four chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included his forty-five-year-old wife, a nineteen-year-old son, a fifteen-year-old son, a twenty-one-year-old daughter, and an eleven-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned seven cattle, thirty-seven hogs, and thirteen chickens. | Died sometime before the Iberville District census of March 6, 1777. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 95-96; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769092801; Petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.033 | Marguerite | Landry | Veuve Antoine Breau | 01/01/1736 | Married Antoine Breau, who died sometime before March 6, 1777. | Joseph (born 1754), Charles (born 1758; married December 30, 1782), Marie Perpétue (born 1761; married May 30, 1779), Scholastique (born 1751; married February 12, 1776), Marie Rose (born 1764) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her husband Antoine Breau, her sons Joseph and Charles, and her daughters Scholastique, Perpétue, and Marie Rose. She appears to have been the forty-two-year-old spouse of Antoine Breau in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District. Her household included an unidentified sixteen-year-old boy, an unidentified thirteen-year-old boy, an unidentified twenty-year-old woman, and an unidentified ten-year-old girl. The household owned three cattle, seven hogs, and four chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included an eighteen-year-old son, a twelve-year-old daughter, and a ten-year-old daughter. She and her family owned twenty cows, three horses, eighteen pigs, forty chickens, and a tract of land with nine arpents frontage. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 95-96; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18-19. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.034 | Joseph | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1758 | Marguerite Landry | Antoine Breau (Braud | Married Marie Josèphe Aucoin, daughter of Paul Aucoin and Marie LeBlanc, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 15, 1777. | Marie Constance (married February 3, 1804), Joseph, fils (married Febraury 6, 1816) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Wood, Guide, 95-96; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18-20. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.035 | Scholastique | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marguerite Landry | Antoine Breau (Braud | Married Joseph Ignace Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and the son of Augustin Landry and Marie Babin, at St. Gabriel, February 12, 1776. Genealogist Bona Arsenault indicates that their marriage occurred on September 12, 1776. | Louis (born 1777), Marie Madeleine Barbe (born 1778), Joseph Emmanuel (born 1780) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 95-96; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.036 | Marie Rose | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Landry | Antoine Breau (Braud | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 95-96. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.037 | Perpétue (Marie Perpétue) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1761 | Maryland | Marguerite Landry | Antoine Breau (Braud | Married Mathurin Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Upper Marlboro, Maryland, and the son of Augustin Landry and Marie Babin, at Ascension Parish, May 30, 1779. | Joseph Xavier (born 1780) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 95-96; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.768 | 29/11/1785 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.038 | Charles | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1754 | Maryland | Marguerite Landry | Antoine Breau (Braud | Married Anne Monique Guédry (Guidry), an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Guédry and Anne Madeleine Dupuis, at Ascension Parish, December 20, 1782. (Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that the marriage occured December 30, 1782.) | Joseph Urbin (Urbain) (married June 12, 1809), Charles Cleondre (married February 6, 1816) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18, 47. | 1.768 | Charles Breau and Claire Trahan | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.039 | Alexis | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1726 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Dugas | Alexandre Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Madeleine Trahan. Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Trahan was sometimes called Marie Marguerite. | Honoré (born 1747), Joseph (Joseph Achille) (born 1751), Charles (born 1754), Marie (born 1758), Anastasie (born 1763), Alexis (born 1766) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | He and his brother Alexis Breau led 152 friends and relatives from maryland to New Orleans aboard the Guinea. Arrived at New Orleans in February 1768. The Breau brothers balked at Spanish plans to settle the immigrant group at San Luís de Natchez, an isolated and unhealthy frontier post. Instead, the Breaus wished to settle at Cabannocé, where relatives were already established. After rejecting two guernatorial orders to travel to Natchez, the Breau brothers and their families were placed aboard the Guinea for deportation. Fearing fould play on the part of the Spanish government in retribution for their intransigence, the Breau families escaped from the Guinea one evening before the vessel's departure. They subsequently made their way into the Louisana countryside with the assistance of André Jung, a prominent New Orleans-area resident. The flight of the Breau families forced their erstwhile traveling companions to submit to settlement at San Luís de Natchez. Upon the departure of these Acadians, the Breau families came out of hiding. Alexis Breau then impudently purchased Joseph Ducros' farm at Cabannocé. Upon hearing of this, Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa ordered Cabannocé co-commandant Louis Judice to "send for and tie up" Breau and the remainder of his family. The Acadians dispatched to arrest the Breaus refused to comply and, instead, assisted the Breau family in fleeing to safety at British Manchac. Alexis Breau and his family appear to have remained at British Manchac until an October 1768 insurrection drove Ulloa from the colony. The information below, drawn from the San Luís de Natchez records, is thus fictitious, but it provides insight into the composition of the Breau family at the time of its arrival in Louisiana. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768; the February 2, 1768, list indicates that his family had only recently arrived at San Luís de Natchez. In 1768, his household included his wife Madeleine; his sons Honoré, Joseph, Charles, and Alexis; his daughters Marie and Anastasie; and twenty-five-year-old "orphan" Vivienne Breau. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Madeleine (Magdeleine) Trahan, his wife, 48 years old; Honoré, his son, 23 years old; Joseph, his son, 18 years old; Charles, his son, 16 years old; Alexis, his son, 4 years pld; Marie, his daughter, 12 years old; and Anastasie, his daughter, 7 years old. Around December 3, 1770, Alexis Breau (Brau) approached Louis Judice, co-commandant of the Cabannocé District, and informed him that his three sons were coming of age. Breau asked that his sons be given land grants with twenty-four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River, three leagures above Ile à Marais. Breau also asked that he be allowed to sell his existing far a tract of land with eight arpents frontage along the Mississippi River that he had acquired from Joseph Ducros, who had become "lieutenant-general of police at New Orleans." Once he had disposed of his farm, Breau intended to settle alongside his sons, whom he expected to assist him in his old age. Judice duly forwarded Breau's request to Governor Luís de Unzaga. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned four cattle, twenty hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Madeleine Trahan, his wife, 54 years old; Charles Breau, his son, 24 years old; Alexis Breau, his son, 11 years old; Anastasie Breau, his daughter, 14 years old; and Charles Trahan, an orphan, 11 years old. Alexis Breau and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned one slave, twenty-four cows, and six horses. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | Brasseaux, Founding of New Acadia, 81-85; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Conseil Supérieur, Procès-verbal des dépositions concernant les vexations commises par Antonio de Ulloa, November 8-15, 1768. AC, C 13a, 48:130-137; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa, May 30, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Antonio de Ulloa, "Observations sur le manifeste presenté par les habitants de la Louisiane au Conseil Supérieur," 1769. AC, C 13a, 47:121vo-131; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, December 3, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1a/34; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; François Croizet, fils, to Governor Estevan Mir¢, June 27, 1787, AGI, PPC, 191:366; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | Antoine Breau & Marguerite Babin | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.040 | Madeleine | Trahan | 01/01/1724 | Married Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux). | Honoré (born 1747), Joseph (born 1751), Charles (born 1754), Marie (born 1758), Anastasie (born 1763), Alexis (born 1766) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, list indicates that her family had only recently arrived at the post. In 1768, her household included her husband; her sons Honoré, Joseph, Charles, and Alexis; her daughters Marie and Anastasie; and orphan Vivienne Breau. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Alexis Breau. Her household included the following individuals: Alexis, her husband, 46 years old; Honoré, her son, 23 years old; Joseph, her son, 18 years old; Charles, hyer son, 16 years old; Alexis, her son, 4 years old; Marie, her daughter, 12 years old; and Anastasie, her daughter, 7 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned four cattle, twenty hogs, and one musket. With Marguerite Bergeron (Mrs. Bonaventure Gaudin), she filed a formal complaint against François Croizet, who publicly called a group of Acadian women returning from church "bitches and whores" for having failed to close his fence gate, May 20, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-four-year-old spouse of Alexis Breau. In addition to her fifty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Breau, her son, 24 years old; Alexis Breau, her son, 11 years old; Anastasie Breau, her daughter, 14 years old; and Charles Trahan, an orphan, 11 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-four cows, and six horses. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Magdelaine Trahan (Mme Alexis Breaud) and Marguerite Bergeron (Mme Bonaventure Godain) to Verret, May 20, 1773, AGI,PPC, 189A:165; Deposition of Pierre Part, May 20, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:169; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.041 | Honoré | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Madeleine Trahan (Sidney Marchand indicates that his mother was Marguerite Trahan. Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Madeleine [Magdeleine] Trahan was also known as Marie Marguerite Trahan.) | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Madeleine (Magdeleine) Breau (Braud, Breaux), an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Breau and Marie Rose Landry, at Ascension Parish, January 18, 1773. | Marie (born 1774) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, list indicates that his family had only recently arrived at the post. In 1768, he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenthy-three-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Madeleine Breau, his twenty-six-year-old wife, and Marie Breau, his three-year-old daughter. Honoré Breau and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:146. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.042 | Joseph (Gilles Joseph) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marie Madeleine (Madeleine) Trahan | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Marie Madeleine (Marie Magdeleine) Melanson, an Acadian formerly exiled to Snow Hill, Maryland, and the daughter of Paul Melanson and Marie Terriot, at Cabannocé, February 7, 1774. Married Marie Bourg, daughter of Joseph Bourg and Marguerite Landry, February 19, 1790. | Hilaire (born 1775), Paul (married February 17, 1806) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, list indicates that his family had only recently arrived at the post. In 1768, he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and an eighteen-year-old bachelor. He resided 2 3/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified as Gilles Joseph Braud, April 22, 1771. Governor Luís de Unzaga ordered Louis Judice, co-commandant of the Cabannocé District, to put Breau in possession of a tract of land with six arpents frontage, ca. April 22, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Melanson, his twenty-year-old wife; and Hilaire Breau, his two-year-old son. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 113; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:147; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:80; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.043 | Charles | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Madeleine Trahan | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Esther Breau (Braud, Breaux), an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Breau and Rose Landry, at Cabannocé, April 27, 1777. Married Judith Le Prince, daughter of Antoine Le Prince and Marianne Mire (sometimes rendered Cécile Mancepin), at Cabannocé, June 22, 1789. His second wife died July 11, 1803. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that a seventeen-year-old bachelor. Governor Luís de Unzaga ordered Louis Judice, co-commandant of the Cabannocé District, to put Breau in possession of a tract of land with six arpents frontage, ca. April 22, 1771. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of his parents' household. On May 20, 1780, Charles Breau sold to Baptiste Bergeron a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Located twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, the property was bounded above by the lands of Louis Judice and Michel Judice and below by the property of Basile Préjean. A house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty by sixteen feet, stood on the property. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | He died sometime before July 11, 1803. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:80; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:501; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.044 | Alexis | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1766 | Madeleine Trahan | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Marie Breau (Braud, Breaux), daughter of Athanase Breau and Marie LeBlanc, at Cabannocé, April 30, 1786. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a two-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a four-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.045 | Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1766 | Madeleine Trahan | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a ten-year-old resident of her parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.046 | Anastasie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1761 | Madeleine Trahan | Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Joseph Melanson, an Acadian formerly exiled to Snow Hill, Maryland, and the son of Alexandre Melanson and Osite Hébert, at Cabannocé, May 24, 1779. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1l768, she was a five-year-old resident of her parents' household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.047 | Bibianne (Bibiane, Bibien, Bibinenne, Vivienne) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Marie Landry | Amant (Armant) Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Firmin Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland, and the son of Antoine Landry and Catherine Landry, at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1769. Cécille Landry, Pierre Guédry (Guidry), and Augustin Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Paul (born ca. February 1770), Marie (born 1772), Belloni (born 1773), Firmin (born 1776) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a twenty-five-year-old resident of the household of Alexis Breau (Braud, Breaux) and Madeleine Trahan. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Firmin Babin. In addition to her twenty-three-year-old husband, her household included Paul Babin, her six-month-old son. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old wife of Firmin Babin. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, her household included Paul Babin, her seven-year-old son, Belloni Babin, her four-year-old son, Firmin Babin, her one-year-old son, and Marie Babin, her five-year-old daughter. Vivienne Breau and her family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned seven cows, three hogs, and one musket. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:148; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 94; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.048 | Cécille (Cécile) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1738 | Married (1) Georges Clouatre. Married (2) Charles Gaudin (Godin), ca. 1769. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1761), Charles (born 1766), Madeleine (born 1763)Second marriage: Michel (born 1773), Jérôme (born 1775), Auguste (married June 22, 1801) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her sons Joseph and Charles, her daughter Madeleine, and orphan Joseph Breau. Received a land grant meausirng five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-year-old spouse of Charles Gaudet. Her household included Charles Gaudet, 36 years old; Joseph Clouatre, her son, 9 years old; Charles Clouatre, her son, 4 years old; Madeleine, her daughter, 7 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Charles Gaudet. In addition to her forty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Clouatre, her son, 15 years old; Charles Clouatre, her son, 12 years old; Michel "Clouatre" (actually Breau), her son, 4 years old; "Gerome" (Jérôme) "Clouatre" (actually Breau), 2 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Clouatre, an orphan, 14 years old. Cécile Breau and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty-eight cows, and two horses. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 107-108; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.049 | Joseph | Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1761 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Cécile Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Georges Clouatre | Evidently married (1) Marie Poirier, daughter of Jean Poirier and Madeleine (Magdeleine) Richard, June 27, 1785. Married (2) Félicité Louvière, daughter of Charles Louvière and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Melanson, at Cabannocé, February 12, 1801. | Joseph (born October 25, 1786), Olidon (born May 20, 1789), Michel (born August 19, 1791), Anne Carmelite (Melite) (born August 6, 1793), Marie Rosalie (born November 13, 1795), an unnamed daughter (interred march 9, 1798), George Jérôme (born November 18, 1799) | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a seven-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudet, his stepfather, and Cécille (Cécile) Breau, his mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudet, his stepfather, and Cécile Breau, his mother. | Pollard, The Book of Clouatre, 1-28; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:192-193; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 107-108; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.050 | Charles | Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1766 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Cécille (Cécile) Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Georges Clouatre | Married Anne Arseneau at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 30, 1786. Michel Gaudet (Godé) and Marie Arseneau witnessed the marriage record. | Marie (born December 25, 1787), Constance (born September 23, 1791), Marie Eufroisine (Eufrosyna) (born January 17, 1795), unnamed daughter (buried January 6, 1797), Marianne Belisaria (Belisaire?) (born July 22, 1799) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a two-year-old resident of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a four-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudet, his stepfather, and Cécille (Cécile) Breau, his mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudet, his stepfather, and Cécile Breau, his mother. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five years od age at the time of his death. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 107-108; ; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:192-193. | 1.768 | 27/01/1802 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.051 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1763 | probably Port Tobacco, Maryland | Cécille (Cécile) Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Georges Clouatre | Married Amant Breau, an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the son of Jean Baptiste Breau and Marie Rose Landry, at Cabannocé, July 5, 1779. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a five-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudet, her stepfather, and Cécille (Cécile) Breau, her mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old "orphan" living in the household of Charles Gaudet, her stepfather, and Cécile Breau, her mother. | Died sometime before July 25, 1802. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Acadian Genealogy Exchange, 16 (January, 1987): 11; Wood, Guide, 107-108; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.052 | Joseph | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1753 | Marie Josèphe Landry | Amand (Amant) Breau | Marie Cécile Dupuis (Dupuy), 1782. | Exiled to Port Tobacco, Maryland. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a fifteen-year-old orphan residing in Cécille Breau's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 107-108; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 5. | 1.768 | 09/08/1782 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.053 | Honoré (Joseph Honoré) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1731 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Dugas | Alexandre Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Most genealogical sources indicate that Honoré Breau married Anne Magdeleine (Madeleine) Trahan, the daughter of Claude Trahan and Marie Tillard. Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux maintains that Honoré Breau married (1) Anne Trahan. Married (2) Magdeleine (Madeleine) Trahan. | Madeleine (Magdeleine) (born 1754; married January 15, 1781), Elisabeth (Élizabeth, Isabelle) (born 1765), Joseph Honoré (born 1767), Marie, Marguerite | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | He and his brother Alexis Breau led 152 friends and relatives from Maryland to New Orleans aboard the Guinea. Arrived at New Orleans in February 1768. The Breau brothers balked at Spanish plans to settle the immigrant group at San Luís de Natchez, an isolated and unhealthy frontier post. Instead, the Breaus wished to settle at Cabannocé, where relatives were already established. After rejecting two guernatorial orders to travel to Natchez, the Breau brothers and their families were placed aboard the Guinea for deportation. Fearing fould play on the part of the Spanish government in retribution for their intransigence, the Breau families escaped from the Guinea one evening before the vessel's departure. They subsequently made their way into the Louisana countryside with the assistance of André Jung, a prominent New Orleans-area resident. The flight of the Breau families forced their erstwhile traveling companions to submit to settlement at San Luís de Natchez. Upon the departure of these Acadians, the Breau families came out of hiding. Honoré Breau and his family took up residence on Jacques Enoul Duguay de Livaudais' farm on the German Coast, just downstream from Cabannocé. Upon hearing of their residence there, Spanish Governor Antonio de Ulloa ordered the arrest of the Breau family, but the local commandant "closed his eyes" to their presence. The following listings in the official records of the San Luís de Natchez post are thus fictitious, but they do provide insight into the composition of the family group at the time of its arrival at New Orleans in February 1768. Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. The February 2, 1768, list indicates that his family had only recently arrived at San Luís de Natchez. In 1768, he was the head of a household including his wife, his son Honoré, and his daughters Madeleine and Elizabeth (Isabelle). Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Honoré Breau died ca. 1769-1770. | Brasseaux, Founding of New Acadia, 81-85; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Conseil Supérieur, Procès-verbal des dépositions concernant les vexations commises par Antonio de Ulloa, November 8-15, 1768. AC, C 13a, 48:130-137; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa, May 30, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; Antonio de Ulloa, "Observations sur le manifeste presenté par les habitants de la Louisiane au Conseil Supérieur," 1769. AC, C 13a, 47:121vo-131; Wood, Guide, 98-99; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 3. | 1.768 | Antoine Breau & Marguerite Babin | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.054 | Anne Madeleine | Trahan | 01/01/1732 | Marie Tillard | Claude Trahan | Married Honoré Breau (Braud, Breaux). | Madeleine (Magdeleine) (born 1754; married January 15, 1781), Elisabeth (Élizabeth, Isabelle) (born 1765), Joseph Honoré (born 1767), Marie, Marguerite | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her husband, her son Joseph Honoré, and her daughters Madeleine and Elizabeth. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 98-99; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.055 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1765 | Anne Madeleine Trahan | Honoré Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a three-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 98-99. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | Claude Trahan and Marie Tillard | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.056 | Joseph Honoré | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1767 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) Trahan | Honoré Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married Marie Félicité Trahan, daughter of Joachim Trahan and Marie Duon (Duhon), at Cabannocé, April 20, 1789. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was one year and three months old and a resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 98-99; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:146. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | Claude Trahan and Marie Tillard | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.057 | Madeleine | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1754 | Anne Madeleine Trahan | Honoré Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Married (1) Louis Ququerier, a native of Montreal and the son of Jean Baptiste Ququerier and Véronique Toin, at Cabannocé, February 4, 1777. Married (2) January 15, 1781, married Manuel Quintero, widower of Marie Granger, at Ascension Parish, January 15, 1781. | At Port Tobacco, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a fourteen-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 98-99. | 1.768 | Alexandre Breau and Marie Dugas | Claude Trahan and Marie Tillard | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.058 | Joseph | Gribuan | 01/01/1756 | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a twelve-year-old orphan residing in the household of Honoré Breau and Anne Madeleine Trahan. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 98-99. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.059 | Anne | Vincent | Veuve Doiron (Douairon) | 01/01/1709 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Madeleine Levron | Clément Vincent | Married Alexandre Doiron (Douairon), son of Jean Doiron and Marie Trahan, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, October 20, 1727. | Agathe (born 1738), Elisabeth (Élizabeth) (born 1748), Pélagie (born 1752), André, Anne, and Véronique | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a widow and the head of a household including her daughters Agathe, Elizabeth, Pélagie; and orphan Jean Lanfan (Lenfant?) Received a land grant measuring six arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:134; List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 113-114; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.060 | Elisabeth (Élizabeth, Isabelle) | Doiron | 01/01/1748 | Anne Vincent | Alexandre Doiron | Married Vincent St. Pierre, native of Galicia, Spain, and the son of Dominique St. Pierre and Caietana Poteresse, June 20, 1768. | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a twenty-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. Identified as Isabelle Doiron in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Vincent St. Pierre. She and her forty-five-year-old husband occupied a tract of land on the left bank with four arpents frontage. They owned four barrels of corn, two cows, and four hogs. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 113-114; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.061 | Agathe | Doiron | 01/01/1738 | Halifax, Nova Scotia | Anne Vincent | Alexandre Doiron | Married Joseph Amache, a native of Naples, Italy, and the son of Antoine Amache and Catherine Mataraste, March 9, 1768. | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a thirty-year-old resident of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 113-114. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.062 | Pélagie | Doiron | 01/01/1752 | Anne Vincent | Alexandre Doiron | Married Antonio Rodriguez, native of Florida and the son of Juan Rodriguez and Marie Gonzales, June 20, 1768. | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was a sixteen-year-old daughter of her widowed mother's houshold. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 113-114. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.063 | Jean | Lanfan (Lenfant?) | 01/01/1748 | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a twenty-year-old orphan living in the household of Anne Doiron, the widow of Alexandre Doiron. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 113-114. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.064 | Charles | Trahan | 01/01/1721 | Married Marguerite Thibodeau. | Marguerite, Firmin (born 1764), Charles (born ca. 1765), Brigitte, Versi(?) (born 1760) | At Princess Anne County, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was the head of a household that included his wife, his sons Firmin and Charles, and his daughter Versi)?). Received a land gant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.065 | Marguerite | (?) | Mme Charles Trahan | 01/01/1742 | Married Charles Trahan. | Marguerite, Firmin (born 1764), Charles (born ca. 1765), Brigitte, Versi(?) (born 1760) | At Princess Anne County, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, her household included her husband, her sons Firmin and Charles, and her daughter Versi. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.066 | Firmin | Trahan | 01/01/1764 | Marie (?) | Charles Trahan | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was a four-year-old resident of his parents' household. In 1777, he resided with his brother-in-law Étienne Landry and his sister Brigitte. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.067 | Charles | Trahan | 01/01/1765 | Marie Thibodeau | Charles Trahan | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, he was two years and six months old and a resident of his parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.068 | Versi | Trahan | 01/01/1760 | Marie (?) | Charles Trahan | At Princess Anne County, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, she was an eight-year-old resident of her parents' household. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186. | 1.768 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.069 | Brigitte | Trahan | 01/01/1757 | Marie Thibodeau | Charles Trahan | Married (1) Étienne Landry, an Acadian formerly exiled to Oxford, Maryland, and the son of Abraham Landry and Elizabeth LeBlanc, at Ascension parish, May 2, 1776. Married (2) Philippe Bourier (Bourdier), a native of Paris, at Ascension Parish, La., July 9, 1787. | First marriage: Eloi, Rosalie, Anne, Marie Jeanne, Mathurin (buried November 14, 1790) | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old orphan in the household of Vincent Landry and Susanne Godin (Gaudin). Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a thirteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Vincent Landry and Susanne Gaudin (Godin). The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Étienne Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included Firmin Trahan, her twelve-year-old brother. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:313; Wood, Guide, 185-186; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57, 97. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.070 | Joseph Ignace | Hébert | 01/01/1748 | Marie Madeleine Doiron | Jean Hébert | Married Anne Dugat (Dugas). | Pierre (born 1770), Olivier (born 1774), Ambroise (born 1783), Isabelle (Élisabeth, Élizabeth) (born 1776), Marie (married October 18, 1808) | Resided at aSaint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He was accompanied on the voyage by his wife Anne; his sons Pierre, Olivier, and Ambroise; and his daughter Isabelle (Elizabeth). | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household including Anne Dugat (Dugas), his thirty-nine-year-old wife, Pierre Hébert, his eighteen-year-old son, Olivier Hébert, his thirteen-year-old son, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, hs eleven-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. They owned no slaves. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that hewas the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Dugas (Duga), his wife, 40 years old; Pierre Hébert, his son, 19 years old; Olivier Hébert, his son, 14 years old; and Isabelle (Elisabeth), his daughter, 11 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | foreman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.071 | Anne (Marie) | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Marie Hébert | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Joseph Ignace Hébert. | Pierre (born 1770), Olivier (born 1774), Ambroise (born 1783), Isabelle (Élisabeth, Élizabeth) (born 1776), Marie (married October 18, 1808) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, Frnace, 1759-1768. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1768-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She was accompanied during the voyage by her husband Joseph Ignace; her sons Pierre, Olivier, and Ambroise, and her daughter Isabelle (Elizabeth). | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Joseph Ignace Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, the household included Pierre Hébert, her eighteen-year-old son, Olivier Hébert, her thirteen-year-old son, and Isabelle Hébert, her eleven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. Identified as Marie Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Joseph Ignace Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, the household included Pierre Hébert, her nineteen-year-old son, Olivier Hébert, her fourteen-year-old son, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, her eleven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.072 | Pierre | Hébert | 01/01/1766 | Anne Dugat (Dugas) | Joseph Ignace Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Olivier Hébert, his thirteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, his eleven-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Oliver Hébert, his fourteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, his eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | Joseph Dugas and Anne Marie Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.073 | Olivier | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Anne Dugat (Dugas) | Joseph Ignace Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Pierre Hébert, his eighteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, his eleven-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Pierre Hébert, his nineteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle (Elisabeth) Hébert, his eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | Joseph Dugas and Anne Marie Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.074 | Ambroise | Hébert | 01/01/1783 | Anne Dugat (Dugas) | Joseph Ignace Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | Joseph Dugas and Anne Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.075 | Isabelle (Élisabeth, Élizabeth) | Hébert | 01/01/1776 | Anne Dugat (Dugas) | Joseph Ignace Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre Hébert, her eighteen-year-old brother, and Olivier Hébert, her thirteen-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre Hébert, her nineteen-year-old brother, and Olivier Hébert, her fourteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | Joseph Dugas and Anne Marie Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.076 | Pierre | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1734 | Joseph Dugas | Married (1) Anne Josèphe Henry. Married (2) Cécile Moÿse, the widow of Michel Bourg. Married (3) Rose LeBlanc. | Rose (born 1782), Anne Perinne (born ca. 1785), Marguerite (Margueritte) (baptized September 24, 1787) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by his wife and his daughters Rose and Anne Perinne. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he as the fifty-five-year-old head of a household including Rose LeBlanc, his forty-two-year-old spouse, Rose Dugat, his five-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, his daughter. (Positive identification of the latter child is difficult. Was she one-year-old Marguerite Dugat? Or, was she actually the child identified as Anne Perinne Dugat in the 1785 ship manifests? Anne Perinne would have been three years old in 1788.) He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one horse, and six cows. His name is rendered as Pierre Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included Rose LeBlanc, his forty-two-year-old wife, Rose Dugat (Duga), his six-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margritte) Dugat (Duga), his four-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and sixteen hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:258; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.077 | Rose | LeBlanc | 01/01/1745 | Marguerite La Bauve | Jacques LeBlanc | Married Pierre Dugat (Dugas). | Rose (born 1782), Anne Perinne (born ca. 1785), Marguerite (Margueritte) (baptized September 24, 1787) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband Pierre Dugat (Dugas) and her daughters Rose and Anne Perinne. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Dugat. In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, her household included Rose Dugat, her five-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, her daughter. (The 1788 census indicates that Marguerite was four years old. They raises a perplexing question. Whas the child actually Marguerite Dugat, who was only one year old? Or, was she the three-to-four-year-old child named Anne Perinne in the 1785 ship's manifest?) Rose LeBlanc and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one horse, and six hogs. Her name is rendered as Rose Le Blanc in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Dugat (Duga). In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, the household included Rose Dugat (Duga), her six-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga), her four-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, three cows, two horses, and sixteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:258; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.078 | Rose | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1783 | Rose LeBlanc | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marguerite Dugat, her three-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga), her four-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.079 | Anne Perinne (Marguerite? Margritta?) | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1785 | Rose LeBlanc | Pierre Dugast (Dugas) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents during the voyage. | Identified as Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Rose Dugat (Duga), her six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.080 | Anne | Hébert | Veuve Robichaud (Robicho) | 01/01/1740 | Marie Madeleine Doiron | Jean Hébert | Married Pierre Robichaud. She was a widow by May 1785. | Joseph (born 1773), Jean Pierre (born 1783), Marie (born 1768), Anne (born 1770) | Anne Hébert resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a widow and the forty-three-year-old head of a household including Marie Josèphe, her nineteen-year-old daughter, Anne, her seventeen-year-old daughter, Joseph, her fifteen-year-old son, and Jean Pierre, her four-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Anne Hébert, Veuve Robicho, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie Josèphe (Joseph), her twenty-year-old daughter, Anne, her eighteen-year-old daughter, Joseph, her sixteen-year-old son, and Jean Pierre, her five-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.081 | Joseph | Robichaud (Robicho) | 01/01/1773 | Saint-Souliac, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Anne Hébert | Pierre Robichaud | Married Marianne Préjean (Prechant), a native of Ascension Parish, Louisiana, and the daughter of Joseph Préjean and Marguerite Durel, at Assumption Parish, January 2, 1797. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his widowed mother on the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, a forty-three-year-old widow, the household included Marie Josèphe, his nineteen-year-old sister, Jean Pierre, his four-year-old brother, and Anne, his seventeen-year-old sister. His name is rendered as Joseph Robicho in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Marie Josèphe (Joseph), his twenty-year-old sister, Anne, his eighteen-year-old sister, and Jean Pierre, his five-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:637; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.082 | Jean Pierre | Robichaud (Robicho) | 01/01/1783 | Anne Hébert | Pierre Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, who was a forty-three-year-old widow, the household included Marie Josèphe Robichaud, his nineteen-year-old sister, Anne Robichaud, his seventeen-year-old sister, and Joseph Robichaud, his fifteen-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-four-year-old mother, the household included Marie Josèphe (Joseph), his twenty-year-old sister, Anne, his eighteen-year-old sister, and Joseph, his sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.083 | Marie (Marie Josèphe, Marie Joseph) | Robichaud (Robicho) | 01/01/1768 | Anne Hébert | Pierre Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Marie Josèphe Robichaud in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, a forty-three-year-old widow, the household included Anne, her seventeen-year-old sister, Joseph, her fifteen-year-old brother, and Jean Pierre, her four-year-old brother. Identified as Marie Joseph Robicho in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old mother, the household included Anne, her eighteen-year-old sister, Joseph, her sixteen-year-old brother, and Jean Pierre, her five-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.084 | Anne | Robichaud (Robicho) | 01/01/1770 | Anne Hébert | Pierre Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, a forty-three-year-old widow, the household included Marie Josèphe Robichaud, her nineteen-year-old sister, Joseph Robichaud, her fifteen-year-old brother, and Jean Pierre Robichaud, her four-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old mother, the household included Marie Josèphe (Joseph), her twenty-year-old sister, Joseph, her sixteen-year-old brother, and Jean Pierre, her five-year-old brother. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Marie Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.085 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Hébert (Ébert) | 01/01/1750 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Married Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas), daughter of Alexis Dugas and Anne Bourg. | Alexis Toussaint (born November 1, 1768), Jean Joseph (born April 6, 1771), Ambroise Mathurin (born November 9, 1772), Firmin Joseph (born October 13, 1774), Anne Marie Augustine (baptized August 28, 1776), Simon (baptized April 4, 1778), Marie Jeanne (March 3, 1781), Alexis Thomas (baptized December 21, 1782) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household including Anne Dugat (Dugas), his thirty-nine-year-old wife, Jean Hébert, his sixteen-year-old son, Ambroise Hébert, his fifteen-year-old son, Simon Hébert, his ten-year-old son, and Alexis Hébert, his five-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and ten hogs. They owned no slaves. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Dugat (Duga), his wife, 40 years old; Jean Hébert, his son, 17 years old; Ambroise Hébert, his son, 16 years old; Simon Hébert, his son, 11 years old; and Alexis Hébert, his son, 6 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. He appears to have been the Jean Ébert who, in 1790, joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. | Died sometime before May 20, 1819. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Karen Reader Theriot, "Family Group: Jean Baptiste Hebert and Anne Josèphe Dugas." | 1.785 | shoemaker | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.086 | Anne Josèphe | Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1749 | Cobequid, Acadia | Anne Bourg | Alexis Dugas | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert, the son of Jean Hebert and Marie Madeleine Doiron, February 9, 1768. | Alexis Toussaint (born November 1, 1768), Jean Joseph (born April 6, 1771), Ambroise Mathurin (born November 9, 1772), Firmin Joseph (born October 13, 1774), Anne Marie Augustine (baptized August 28, 1776), Simon (baptized April 4, 1778), Marie Jeanne (March 3, 1781), Alexis Thomas (baptized December 21, 1782) | Anne Josèphe Dugas resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Hébert. In addition to herself and her thirty-nine-year-old husband, the household included Jean Hébert, her sixteen-year-old son, Ambroise Hébert, her fifteen-year-old son, Simon Hébert, her ten-year-old son, and Alexis Hébert, her five-year-old son. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and ten hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-year-old husband, the household included Jean Hébert, her seventeen-year-old son, Ambroise Hébert, her sixteen-year-old son, Simon Hébert, her eleven-year-old son, and Alexis Hébert, her six-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Reader Theriot, "Family Group: Jean Baptiste Hebert and Anne Josèphe Dugas." | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.087 | Jean Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1771 | Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | identified as Jean Hébert in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Ambroise Hébert, his fifteen-year-old brother, Simon Hébert, his ten-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his five-year-old brother. Identified as Jean Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Ambroise Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, Simon Hébert, his eleven-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his six-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.088 | Ambroise Mathurin | Hébert | 01/01/1773 | Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Ambroise Hébert in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, Simon Hébert, his ten-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his five-year-old brother. Identified as Ambroise Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his seventeen-year-old brother, Simon Hébert, his eleven-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his six-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.089 | Simon | Hébert | 01/01/1778 | Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, Ambroise Hébert, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his five-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his seventeen-year-old brother, Ambroise Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Alexis Hébert, his six-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.090 | Alexis Thomas | Hébert | 01/01/1783 | Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Alexis Hébert in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, Ambroise Hébert, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Simon Hébert, his ten-year-old brother. Identified as Alexis Hébert in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a six-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Hébert, his seventeen-year-old brother, Ambroise Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Simon Hébert, his eleven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.091 | Alexis | Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1727 | Sts. Peter and Paul Parish, Cobequid, Acadia | Anne Marie Hébert | Joseph Dugas | Married (2) Marguerite Moÿse. | First marriage(?): Anne Josèphe (born 1749) Second marriage: Marie Rose (born 1765) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixty-four-year-old memer of the household of Louis Funcal, his son-in-law, and Marie Rose Dugat, his twenty-five-year-old daughter. The household also included Marie Funcal, his one-year-old granddaughter. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, six cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-two years when he died. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253. | 1.785 | 23/09/1795 | Ascension Parish, La. | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||
2.092 | Marie Rose | Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1765 | Alexis Dugat (Dugas) | Married Louis Funcal (Oncale), a native of Porte Vedra, Spain, at Ascension Parish, La., September 15, 1793. | Marie (born 1787), Louis (married November 10, 1808) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Marie Rose Dugat (Dugas) was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Louis Funcal. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, her household included Marie Funcal, her one-year-old daughter, and Alexis Dugat, her sixty-four-year-old father. She and her family occupied a tract of land on the left bank with four arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, six cows, one horse, and ten hogs. | Her death certificate maintains that she was thirty-two-years of age at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:260; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 83. | 1.785 | 07/04/1795 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.093 | Joseph | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1742 | Marie Hébert | Joseph Dugas | Married (1) Anastasie Henry. Married (2) Anastasie Barillot (Barrilleaux). | First marriage: Joseph (born 1762), Marie (born 1764), Cécille (born 1766), Élizabeth (born 1768)Second marriage: François (born 1771), Anastasie (born 1773; married May 14, 1792), Jean Pierre (born 1775), Anne (born 1779), Marguerite (born 1783) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. His wife and nine children included him during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household including Anastasie Barillot, his forty-four-year-old wife, François Dugat (Dugas), his sixteen-year-old son, Jean Pierre Dugat (Dugas), his twelve-year-old son, Céleste Dugat (Dugas), his fourteen-year-old daughter, Anne Dugat (Dugas), his ten-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat (Dugas), his four-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn and ten hogs. His name is rendered as Joseph Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Anastasie (Anasthasie) Barillot, his wife, 45 years old; François Dugat (Duga), his son, 17 years old; Jean Pierre Dugat (Duga), his son, 13 years old; Céleste Dugat (Duga), his daughter, 15 years old; Anne Dugat (Duga), his daughter, 11 years old; and Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga), his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, two horses, and eight hogs. He appears to have been the Joseph Hébert who, in 1790, joined with twelve other prominent settlers of the Valenzuela area of the Lafourche District in signing a memorandum urging the government to complete construction of a royal roadway along the entire length of Bayou Lafourche. Such a roadway was necessary because rafts on the bayou prevented navigation and because some settlers had failed to build and maintain a roadway across their land grants as required by law. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Remonstrance by Auguste Verret, Jean Pierre Bourg, Louis Tolieret, Ambroise Garidet, Marin Gautreaux, Pierre Aucoin, Jean Ébert, Jean Gautrau, Henry Tibodaux, Olivier Trahan, Jean Dugat, Pierre Dugat, and Joseph Hébert, 1790, AGI, PPC, 203:306; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 36. | 1.785 | sawyer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.094 | Anastasie | Barillot | 01/01/1742 | Véronique Giroire (Giroir, Girouard) | Pierre Barillot | Married Joseph Dugat (Dugas). | François (born 1771), Anastasie (born 1773), Jean Pierre (born 1775), Anne (born 1779), Marguerite (born 1783) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by her husband and nine children during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Dugat (Dugas). In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, the household included the following children: François Dugat, 16 years old; Jean Pierre Dugat, 12 years old; Céleste Dugat, 14 years old; Anne Dugat, 10 years old; and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, 4 years old. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn and ten hogs. Her name is rendered as Anasthasie Barillot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old wife of Joseph Dugat (Duga). In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old husband, the household included François Dugat (Duga), her fifteen-year-old son, Jean Pierre Dugat (Duga), her thirteen-year-old son, Céleste Dugat (Duga), her fifteen-year-old daughter, Anne Dugat (Duga), her eleven-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga), her five-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.095 | Joseph | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1762 | St. Malo, France | Anastasie Henry | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Isabelle Landry at New Orleans, La., October 23, 1785. Joseph Martinez and Vicente Llorca witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He accompanied his parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:108. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.096 | François | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1771 | St. Malo, France | Anastasie Barillot | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Marie Clément, daughter of Hilaire (Ylario) Clément and Tarsilla Naquin of France, at Assumption Parish, La., February 8, 1796. Joseph Aucoin and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite Céleste Intima (born April 27, 1799), Basile Atilano (born February 12, 1802) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He accompanied his parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Pierre Dugat, his twelve-year-old brother, Céleste Dugat, his fourteen-year-old sister, Anne Dugat, his ten-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, his four-year-old sister. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn and ten hogs. His name is rendered as François Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Pierre Dugat (Duga), his thirteen-year-old brother, Céleste Dugat (Duga), his fifteen-year-old sister, Anne Dugat (Duga), his eleven-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta) Dugat (Duga), his five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:254-259; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.097 | Jean Pierre | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1775 | Anastasie Barillot | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Mararied Raynalda Naquin, daughter of Charles Naquin and Anne Doiron, at Assumption Parish, La., February 18, 1800. Joseph Dugat adn Amroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He accompanied his parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included François Dugat, his sixteen-year-old brother, Céleste Dugat, his fourteen-year-old sister, Anne Dugat, his ten-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, his four-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included François, his seventeen-year-old brother, Céleste, his fifteen-year-old sister, Anne, his eleven-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta), his five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:257; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.098 | Marie | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | St. Suliac, Ille-et-Vilaine, France | Anastasie Henry | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Jean Baptiste Alexandre Daigle (D'Aigle, Daigre), native of Boulogne, France, and the son of Alexandre Daigle and Elizabeth (Isabelle) Granger, on June 6, 1786. | Marie (born 1787), Jean Baptiste (February 10, 1789), Anne (Annette) (born May 9, 1791), Marie Françoise (born November 12, 1793), Jean Pierre (baptized August 14, 1796), Joseph (born September 14, 1798), Marguerite (born February 21, 1801), Alexandre (born September 17, 1803), Théotiste (born July 3, 1805) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Daigle. In addition to herself, her household included her twenty-two-year-old husband and Marie Daigle, her one-year-old daughter. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of rice. Identified as Marie Dugal in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Daigle. In addition to herself and her twenty-three-year-old husband, the household included Marie Daigle, her daughter whose age is not indicated in the census report. Marie Dugas (Dugal) and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-one barrels of corn and one horse. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:214-220; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Jean Baptiste Alexandre Daigle and Marie Dugas." | Wed, Mar 21, 1764 | 1.785 | 15/11/1813 | St. Suliac, Ille-et-Vilaine, France | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | Assumption Catholic Church, Plattenville, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||
2.099 | Cécille | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1766 | Anastasie Henry | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.100 | Élisabeth | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1768 | Anastasie Henry | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.101 | Anastasie Céleste Marie | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1773 | Anastasie Barillot | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Simon Guillot, son of Charles Guillot and Magdaleine Boudrot, at Ascension Parish, La., May 14, 1792. Charles Guillot and Luis Juncal witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | Identified as Céleste Dugat (Duga) in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François, her seventeen-year-old brother, Jean Pierre, her thirteen-year-old brother, Anne, her eleven-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta), her five-year-old sister. | She died sometime before April 1, 1799. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:254, 349; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.102 | Anne | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1779 | Anastasie Barillot | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Married Alexis Aucoin, the widower of Françoise Henry, at Assumption Parish, La., January 8, 1799. Joseph Aucoin and François Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François Dugat, her sixteen-year-old brother, Jean Pierre Dugat, her twelve-year-old brother, Céleste Dugat, her fourteen-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Dugat, her four-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François, her seventeen-year-old brother, Jean Pierre, her thirteen-year-old brother, Céleste, her fifteen-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta), her five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31l; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:253; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.103 | Marguerite (Margritta, Margueritte) | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1783 | Anastasie Barillot | Joseph Dugat (Dugas) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and eight siblings during the voyage to Louisiana. | Identified as Margueritte Dugat in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François Dugat, her sixteen-year-old brother, Jean Pierre Dugat, her twelve-year-old brother, Céleste Dugat, her fourteen-year-old sister, and Anne Dugat, her ten-year-old sister. Her name is rendered as Margritta Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included François, her seventeen-year-old brother, Jean Pierre, her thirteen-year-old brother, Céleste, her fifteen-year-old sister, and Anne, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 37-38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Joseph Dugas (Dugast) and Marie Hébert | Pierre Barillot and Véonique Giroire | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.104 | Pierre Olivier | Pitre | 01/01/1739 | Marguerite Giroir (Girouard) | Germain Pitre | Married Rosalie Hébert. | Marie (Marie Rose), born 1767), Madeleine (Madeleine Rose), born 1781, Henriette (Anne Henriette) (born 1782), Pierre (Pierre André) (born 1784) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. At the time of the voyage, he was the head of a household that included his wife and four children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household including Rosalie Hébert, his forty-four-year-old spouse, and Pierre Pitre, his three-year-old son, Marie Pitre, his twenty-one-year-old daughter, Madeleine (Magdeleinne) Pitre, his eight-year-old daughter, and Henriette (Enriette) Pitre, his five-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie, his wife, 45 years old; Pierre, his son, 4 years old; Marie, his daughter, 22 years old; Madeleine, his daughter, 9 years old; and Henriette, his daughter, 6 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty-two barrels of corn, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.105 | Rosalie | Hébert | 01/01/1745 | Married Pierre Olivier Pitre. | Marie (Marie Rose), born 1767), Madeleine (Magdalaine, Madeleine Rose), born 1781, Henriette (Enrriete, Anne Henriette) (born 1782), Pierre (Pierre André) (born 1784) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. At the time of the voyage, her household included her husband and four children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Olivier Pitre. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old husband, her household included Pierre (Pierre André) Pitre, her three-year-old son, Marie Pitre, her twenty-one-year-old daughter, Madeleine (Magdeleinne) Pitre, her eight-year-old daughter, and Henriette (Enriette) Pitre, her five-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Olivier Pitre. In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old husband, the household included Pierre, her four-year-old son, Marie, her twenty-two-year-old daughter, Madeleine (Madelaine), her nine-year-old daughter, and Henriette, her six-year-old daughter. Rosalie Hébert and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty-two barrels of corn, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 86. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.106 | Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1769 | Rosalie Hébert | Pierre Olivier Pitre | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and three siblings on the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre (Pierre André) Pitre, her three-year-old brother, Madeleine (Magdeleinne) Pitre, her eight-year-old sister, and Henriette (Enriette) Pitre, her five-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old membe rof her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre, her four-year-old brother, Madeleine (Madelaine), her nine-year-old sister, and Henriette, her six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Germain Pitre and Marguerite Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.107 | Madeleine (Madelaine, Magdalaine, Magdeleine, Magdeleinne) | Pitre | 01/01/1781 | Rosalie Hébert | Pierre Olivier Pitre | Married Pierre Bourg, a native of the Diocese of Dole, France, and the son of Charles Bourg and Anne Thibodeau, at Assumption Parish, La., June 10, 1798. | Charles Olivier Valentin (born February 11, 1799), Jean Baptiste (born October 6, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and three siblings on the voyage. | Identified as Magdeleinne Pitre in the 1788 census of the Lafouche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre Pitre, her five-year-old brother, Marie Pitre, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Henriette (Enriette) Pitre, her five-year-old sister. Her name is rendered as Madelaine Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre, her four-year-old brother, Marie, her twenty-two-year-old sister, and Henriette, her six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 127. | 1.785 | Germain Pitre and Marguerite Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.108 | Henriette (Enriette) | Pitre | 01/01/1783 | Rosalie Hébert | Pierre Olivier Pitre | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. She accompanied her parents and three siblings on the voyage. | Identified as Enriette Pitre in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre Pitre, her five-year-old brother, Marie Pitre, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Madeleine (Magdeleinne) Pitre, her eight-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Pierre, her four-year-old brother, Marie, her twenty-two-year-old sister, and Madeleine (Madelaine), her nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Germain Pitre and Marguerite Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.109 | Pierre (Pierre André) | Pitre | 01/01/1784 | Rosalie Hébert | Pierre Olivier Pitre | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. During the voyage, he accompanied his parents and three siblings. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie, his twenty-two-year-old sister, Madeleine (Madelaine), his nine-year-old sister, and Henriette, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Germain Pitre and Marguerite Giroire | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.110 | Pierre | Michel | 01/01/1739 | Married Marguerite Pitre, the sister of Pierre Olivier Pitre. He was a widower by the time of his departure for Louisiana in 1785. | Joseph (born 1760), Gertrude (born 1766), Marie (born 1780) | He resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He was accompanied on the voyage by three children. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.111 | Joseph (Joseph François) | Michel | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Pitre | Pierre Michel | Married Geneviève LeBlanc, a native of Acadia, at Ascension Parish, La., May 16, 1786. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the wedding occurred on May 17, 1786.) Jérôme Theran (actually Guérin) and Pierre Gauterot witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his father and two siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. | Identified as Joseph François Michel in his marriage record. Identified as Joseph Michelle in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Geneviève LeBlanc, his twenty-three-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Geneviève (Jeneviève) LeBlanc, his twenty-four-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tracxt of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:543; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 80. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.112 | Gertrude | Michel | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Pitre | Pierre Michel | Married Joseph Cheramie at Ascension Parish, La., October 2, 1786. The marriage record was witnessed by Mathurin Comeau. Joseph Cheramie is identified as an Acadian in the marriage certificate. | Joseph Baptiste (born October 18, 1787), Marguerite Susanne (baptized February 20, 1793, at the age of four months), Jean Baptiste (born November 5, 1794) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father and two siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Cheramie. She and her twenty-six-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old wife of Joseph Cheramie. She and her spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.113 | Marie | Michel | 01/01/1780 | Marguerite Pitre | Pierre Michel | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father and two siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.114 | Pierre | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Hébert(?) | Alexandre Gauterot(?) | Married Magdelaine Michel. | Jean Baptiste (born 1787) | He seems to have resided at Trigavou, Brittany, France, 1759-1763; Pieslin, France, 1763-1769; and Trigavou, 1769-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. He was accompanied by his wife on the voyage to Louisiana. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Michel (Michelle), his twenty-four-year-old spouse, and Jean Baptiste Gautrau (Gautreaut, Gauterot), his one-year-old son. he and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.115 | Magdelaine (Magdeleine, Magdeleinne) | Michel (Michelle) | 01/01/1764 | Married Pierre Gautrau (Gauterot). | Jean Baptiste (born 1787) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her husband on the voyage to Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.116 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Hébert | Veuve Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1726 | Married Alexandre Gauterot. She was a widow by the time of her departure for Louisiana in 1785. | Pierre (born 1760), Jean (Jean Allain) (born 1764), Charles (born 1767), Victoire (born 1769) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. The family of Pierre Gauterot, her son, sailed to Louisiana aboard the same vessel. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by three children on the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixty-three-year-old widow and the head of a household including Charles Gautrau (Gauterot), her twenty-one-year-old son, and Victoire Gautrau (Gauterot), her nineteen-year-old daughter. Marguerite (Margueritte) Hébert and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Maragritta Hébert, Veuve Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-four-year-old head of a household that included Charles Gautrau (Gauterau), her twenty-one-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.117 | Jean | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Hébert | Married Magdelaine (Madeleine) Pitre. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Accompanied his widowed mother and two siblings on the voyage. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of the household that included Magdeleine Pitre, his twenty-three-year-old wife. Identified as Jean Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Magdelaine (Madelaine) Pitre, his twenty-four-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned no slaves and no livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.118 | Charles | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his widowed mother and two siblings on the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Victoire Gautrau (Gauterot), his nineteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his mother's household. He and his mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.119 | Victoire (Victoire Andrea) | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1769 | St. Malo, France | Marguerite Hébert | Alexandre Gautrau (Gauterot) | Married Étienne Boudrot (Boudreaux) at Ascension Parish, January 10, 1788. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Manuel Ordonez. | Charles (baptized February 24, 1789), Pierre Alexandre (born June 21, 1790), Augustin (born November 24, 1791), Stanislaus (born September 11, 1793), Étienne Magloire (born November 30, 1794), Françoise Anastasie (born September 14, 1797), Jean (baptized November 11, 1799), Étienne Simon (born May 27, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her widowed mother and two brothers during the voyage. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that she was a resident of the Valenzuela District around present-day Plattenville in Assumption Parish, Louisiana, January 10, 1788. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her sixty-three-year-old mother, the household also included Charles Gautrau (Gauterot), her twenty-one-year-old brother. She and her husband were residents of the Lafourche District in June 1790. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-113, 321; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.120 | Joseph | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1722 | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Hébert. Married (2) Anne Pitre. | First marriage: Rose (Rose Sébastienne) (born 1763) Second marriage: Joseph (born 1770), Pierre (born 1772), Charles (born 1765; married February 9, 1793), Jean (born 1777), François (born 1777) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied on the voyage by his wife Anne and six children. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.121 | Anne | Pitre | Veuve Gautreaut (Gauterot) | 01/01/1740 | Married (1) Louis Bourg. Married (2) Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot). | Second marriage: Joseph (born 1770), Pierre (born 1772), Charles (born 1765), Jean (born 1777), François (born 1777), Rose (born 1763) Note: The 1788 and 1789 census reports for the Lafourche District, La., indicate that Jean and François were twins. | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Louisiana's ecclesiastical records suggest that she subsequently resided at Poitiers, France. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband Joseph Gautrau and six children. | Identified as Anne Pitre, Veuve Gautreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-seven-year-old widow and the head of a household including Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot), her twenty-year-old son, Pierre Gautrau (Gauterot), her seventeen-year-old son, Charles Gautrau (Gauterot), her fifteen-year-old son, Jean Gautrau (Gauterot), her thirteen-year-old son, and François Gautrau (Gauterot), her thirteen-year-old son. Anne Pitre and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. Her name is rendered as Anne Pitre, Veuve Gauterau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. Her family's entry in the 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates is garbled. Her deceased husband Pierre Gauterot (Gauterau) is listed as being forty-seven years old. This was evidently her age, not twenty-nine as the census indicates. The household appears to have included the following persons: Pierre, her son, 19 years old; Joseph, her son, 21 yeasr old; Charles, her son, 16 years old; Jean, her son, 13 years old; and François, her son, 13 years old. As the ages suggest, the census indicates that Jean and François were twins. Anne Pitre and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:315; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.122 | Joseph | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1770 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-seven-year-old mother, his household included Pierre, his seventeen-year-old brother Charles, his fifteen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Pierre, his ninteen-year-old brother, Charles, his sixteen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.123 | Pierre | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1772 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-seven-year-old mother, his household included Joseph, his twenty-year-old brother, Charles, his fifteen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-one-year-old brother, Charles, his sixteen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.124 | Charles | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1775 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-seven-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-year-old brother, Pierre, his seventeen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François his thirteen-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Joseph, his nineteen-year-old brother, Pierre, his nineteen-year-old brother, Jean, his thirteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.125 | Jean | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1777 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-seven-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-year-old brother, Pierre, his seventeen-year-old brother, Charles, his fifteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old twin brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-one-year-old brother, Pierre, his nineteen-year-old brother, Charles, his sixteen-year-old brother, and François, his thirteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.126 | François | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1777 | St. Nicolas Parish, Nantes, France | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Married Marie (Marie Charlotte) Ozelé (Ossellet), a native of St. John the Evangelist Parish, Chatelerau, Poitou province, France, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Ossellet and Marguerite Landry, at Assumption Parish, La., February 3, 1803. Pierre Gauterot and Jean Pitre witnessed the marriage certificate. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-seven-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-year-old brother, Pierre, his seventeen-year-old brother, Charles, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Jean, his thirteen-year-old twin brother. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Joseph, his twenty-one-year-old brother, Pierre, his nineteen-year-old brother, Charles, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Jean, his thirteen-year-old twin brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:316; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.127 | Rose | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1763 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents and five siblings during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.128 | Théodore | Bourg | 01/01/1746 | Elizabeth Hébert | Jean Bourg | Married Anne Granger. | Théodore (born 1771), Anne (born 1766; married October 25, 1791), Magdelaine (born 1768) | Resided at Pieslin, Brittany, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, l1761-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by his wife Anne and three children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Granger (Grangée), his wife, 56 years old; Thédore Bourg (Bourq), his son, 16 years old; Anne Bourg (Bourq), his daughter, 22 years old; and Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Bourg (Bourq), his daughter, 20 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year old head of a household that included Anne Granger (Grangé), his fifty-seven-year-old spouse, Théodore,his seventeen-year-old son, Anne, his twenty-two-year-old daughter, and Magdelaine, his twenty-six-year-old daughter. Thédodore Bourg and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned seventy barrels of corn, one horse, one cow, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.129 | Anne | Granger (Grangé, Grangée) | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Pierre Bonnière. Married (2) Théodore Bourg. | Second marriage: Théodore (born 1771), Anne (born 1766; married October 25, 1791), Magdeleine (Magdelaine) (born 1768) | Following deportation, she resided initially at Boulogne, France. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1763. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband Théodore and three children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old spouse of Théodore Bourg (Bourq), the forty-one-year-old head of her household. Her household also included Théodore Bourg (Bouq), her son, 16 years old; Anne Bourg (Bourq), her daughter, 22 years old; and Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Bourg (Bourq), her daughter, 20 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-seven-year-old spouse of Théodore Bourg. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Théodore Bourg, her son, 17 years old; Anne Bourg, her daughter, 22 years old; and Magdelaine (Madelaine), her twenty-six-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned seventy barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.130 | Théodore Prosper | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1771 | St. Coulon, Diocese of Dole, France | Anne Granger | Théodore Bourg | Married Marie Rose LeBlanc, a native of St. Servan, Diocese of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Charles LeBlanc and Rosalie Trahan, at Assumption Parish, La., March 3, 1794. Theodore Bourg (Bourque) and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Rosalie Anne (born September 2, 1795), Magdeleine Constance (born November 30, 1796), Joseph Paul (baptized December 25, 1798), Mathurin Benoît (born March 21, 1799), Marcelin Grégoire (born May 9, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Anne Bourg (Bourq), his twenty-two-year-old sister, and Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Bourg (Bourq), his twenty-year-old sister. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Anne Bourg, his twenty-two-year-old sister, and Magdelaine (Madelaine) Bourg, his twenty-six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123, 124, 125, 126, 128. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Elisabeth Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.131 | Anne | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1766 | Anne Granger | Théodore Bourg | Married Mathurin D'Aunis, the widower of Rose Gauterot and the son of Jean D'Aunis and Françoise Cantrelle, at Ascension Parish, La., October 25, 1791. Théodore Bourg (Bourque), Pierre Dugas, and Pierre Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old resident of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Théodore Bourg (Bourq), her sixteen-year-old brother, and Magdelaine (Magdeleinne) Bourg (Bourq), his twenty-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Théodore Bourg, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Magdelaine (Madelaine) Bourg, her twenty-six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Elisabeth Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.132 | Magdelaine (Magdeleine, Magdeleinne) | Bourg (Bourq) | 01/01/1768 | Anne Granger | Théodore Bourg | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents and two siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Théodore Bourg (Bourq), her sixteen-year-old brother, and Anne Bourg (Bourq), her twenty-two-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Madelaine Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Théodore Bourg, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Anne Bourg, her twenty-two-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Elisabeth Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.133 | Jean Baptiste (Alexandre) | Daigre (Daigle) | Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France | Élizabeth (Elisabeth, Isabelle) Granger | Alexandre Daigle | Married Marie Dugas (Dugast, Dugat), daughter of Joseph Dugas (Dugat) and Anastasie Henry, at Ascension Parish, La., June 6, 1786. | Marie (born 1787), Jean Baptiste (February 10, 1789), Anne (Annette) (born May 9, 1791), Marie Françoise (born November 12, 1793), Jean Pierre (baptized August 14, 1796), Joseph (born September 14, 1798), Marguerite (born February 21, 1801), Alexandre (born September 17, 1803), Théotiste (born July 3, 1805) | Daigle resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Jean Baptiste Daigle was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included Marie Dugas (Dugat), his twenty-three-year-old wife, and Marie Daigle, his one-year-old daughter. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen barrels of rice. Identified as Jean Baptiste Daigle in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Marie Dugas (Dugal), his twenty-four-year-old spouse, and Marie Daigle, his two-year-old daughter. Jean Baptiste Daigle and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-one barrels of corn and one horse. The December 1795 census of the Valenzuela District along Bayou Lafourche lists Jean Baptiste (Juan Bautista) D'aigle as the thirty-year-old head of a household including Marie Dugat (Dugas), his thirty-two-year-old wife, and four children between the ages of eight and two. The 1797 census of the Valenzuela District (in present-day Assumption Parish, Louisiana), identifies Jean Baptiste Daigle as the thirty-one-year-old head of a household including Marie Dugats (Dugas), his thirty-three-year-old spouse, and four children. The 1798 census of the Lafourche region indicates that Jean Baptiste Daigle was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household including Marie Dugas, his thirty-four-year-old spouse, and five children. Daigle and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage along Bayou Lafourche. They owned no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:214-220; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Jean Baptiste Alexandre Daigle and Marie Dugas." | Wed, May 22, 1765 | 1.785 | 29/10/1805 | Boulogne-sur-Mer, Pas-de-Calais, France | Assumption Catholic Church, Plattenville, Louisiana | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||
2.134 | Anselme (Enselme) | Pitre | 01/01/1740 | Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Pitre | Married (1) Isabelle (Elizabeth) Dugas (Dugast). Married (2) Madeleine LeBlanc. Anselme Pitre was a widower at the time that he departed France for Louisiana. | First marriage: Jean Pierre (born 1764), Marie Françoise (born 1767), Marguerite (born 1771), Isabelle Olive (born 1773) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, 1760-1764. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1764-1766. Resided at Pleurtuit, 1766-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by four children. | Identified as Enselme Pitre in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household including Marie, his twenty-one-year-old daughter, Marguerite, his sixteen-year-old daughter, and Isabelle, his fourteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Anselme Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twenty-two-year-old daughter, Marguerite (Margritta), his seventeen-year-old daughter, and Isabelle, his fifteen-yer-old daughter. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.135 | Jean Pierre | Pitre | 01/01/1764 | Isabelle Dugas (Dugat) | Anselme Pitre | Married Marie Hébert. | Nicolas (born 1786) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his father and three siblings during the voyage. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Hébert, his twenty-five-year-old wife, and Nicolas Pitre, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Pitre and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.136 | Marie Françoise | Pitre | 01/01/1767 | Isabelle Dugas (Dugat) | Anselme Pitre | Married Charles(?) Gauterot, son of François Hilaire Gauterot and Hélène (?), at New Orleans, June 5, 1789. Vicente Llorca and Joseph Martinez witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father and three siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old father, her household included Marguerite (Margueritte), her sixteen-year-old sister, and Isabelle, her fourteen-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-two-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old father, the household included Marguerite (Margritta), her seventeen-year-old sister, and Isabelle, her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:145. | 1.785 | Jean Pitre and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.137 | Marguerite (Margueritte, Margritta, Ludvina) | Pitre | 01/01/1771 | Isabelle Dugas (Dugat) | Anselme Pitre | Married Joseph Boudrot, the widower of Marie Pitre and the son of Étienne Boudrot and Marguerite Thiodeau, at Ascension Parish, La., October 4, 1787. Étienne Boudrot (Boudrau) and Marie Rose LeBlanc witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite Marthe (born September 3, 1788), Joseph François (born January 6, 1790), Julien Marie (born February 14, 1791), Felonia Cécille (born January 7, 1793), Isidore (born March 26, 1794), Constance Rose (born October 13, 1795), Simon Valentin (born September 27, 1797), François Célestin (born March 9, 1799), Marie Rose (baptized April 5, 1801), René Toussaint (Raynaldo Todos Santos) (born October 1, 1802) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father and three siblings during the voyage. | Identified as Margueritte Pitre in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old father, her household included Marie, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Isabelle, her fourteen-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Her name is rendered as Margritta Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old father, the household included Marie, her twenty-two-year-old sister, and Isabelle, her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-118; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Pitre and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.138 | Isabelle (Élizabeth, Olive) | Pitre | 01/01/1773 | Isabelle Dugas (Dugat) | Anselme Pitre | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her father and three siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old father, her household included Marie, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margueritte), her sixteen-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Isabelle Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old father, the household included Marie, her twenty-two-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta), her seventeen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Pitre and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.139 | Anastasie | Levron | Veuve LeJeune | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Françoise Lanoue | Jean Baptiste Levron | Married Amand (Amant) LeJeune. | Alexis (born 1772; married January 8, 1794), Adélaïde (married January 28, 1799), Anastasie (married January 28, 1799), Joseph (born 1763; married [2] September 5, 1798), Marie Marguerite (born 1769; married January 7, 1797), Marie Rose (born 1767; married February 7, 1791) | Resided at Morlaix, Brittany. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Anastasie Levron's son Jean and her daughter-in-law Félicité Boudrot also sailed to Louisiana aboard the St. Rémi. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by six children during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Alexis LeJeune, her son, 12 years old; Marie Rose LeJeune, her daughter, 18 years old; Marguerite (Margugueritte) LeJeune, her daughter, 16 years old; and Adélaïde LeJeune, her daughter, 6 years old. Anastasie Levron and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-one-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Alexis LeJeune, her son, 13 years old; Marie (Mari) Rose (evidently Rosalie) LeJeune, her daughter, 19 years old; Marguerite (Margritta) LeJeune, her daughter, 17 years old; and Adélaïde LeJeune, her daughter, 7 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, and twelve hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:107; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.140 | Joseph | LeJeune | 01/01/1763 | Anastasie Levron | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his mother and five siblings during the voyage. He and his family also appear as passengers aboard the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government. The Amitie arrived at Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.141 | Alexis | LeJeune | 01/01/1772 | Anastasie LeBrun (sometimes Levron) | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Listed as a passenger aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his mother and five siblings during the voyage. He and his family also appear in the passenger lists of the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana. The Amitie arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-year-old mother, the household also included Marie Rose LeJeune, his eighteen-year-old sister, Marguerite (Margueritte) LeJeune, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Adélaïde LeJeune, his six-year-old sister. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-one-year-old mother, the household included Marie (Mari) Rose LeJeune, his sister, 19 years old; Marguerite (Margritta) LeJeune, his sister, 17 years old; and Adélaïde LeJeune, his sister, 7 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.142 | Marie Rose (Mari Rose) | LeJeune | 01/01/1767 | Anastasie Levron | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her mother and five siblings during the voyage. She and her family also appear in the passenger lists of the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana. The Amitie arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household also included Alexis LeJeune, her brother, 12 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte) LeJeune, her sister, 16 years old; and Adélaïde LeJeune, her sister, 6 years old. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Mari Rose LeJeune in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Alexis LeJeune, her brother 13 years old; Marguerite (Margritta) LeJeune, her sister, 17 years old; and Adélaïde LeJeune, her sister, 7 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.143 | Marguerite (Margritta, Margueritte) | LeJeune | 01/01/1769 | Anastasie Levron | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her mother and five siblings during the voyage. She and her family also appear in the passenger lists of the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana. The Amitie arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old mother, the household also included Alexis LeJeune, her twelve-year-old brother, Marie Rose LeJeune, eighteen-year-old brother, Adélaïde LeJeune, her six-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Margritta LeJeune in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old mother, the household also included Alexis LeJeune, her thirteen-year-old brother, Marie (Mari) Rose LeJeune, her nineteen-year-old brother, and Adélaïde LeJeune, her seven-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.144 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Adélaïde) | LeJeune | 01/01/1779 | Anastasie Levron | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her mother and five siblings during the voyage. She and her family also appear in the passenger lists of the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana. The Amitie arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. In the passenger manifests of the St. Rémi, she is identified as Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeJeune. In the passenger lists of the Amitié, she is called Adélaïde. | Identified as Adélaïde LeJeune in the 1788 census. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old mother, the household also included Alexis LeJeune, her twelve-year-old brother, Marie Rose LeJeune, her eighteen-year-old sister, and Marguerite LeJeune, her sixteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seven-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old mother, the household included the following persons: Alexis LeJeune, her brother, 13 years old; Marie (Mari) Rose LeJeune, her sister, 19 years old; and Marguerite (Margritta) LeJeune, her sister, 17 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.145 | Rosalie | LeJeune | 01/01/1783 | Anastasie LeBrun (sometimes Levron) | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her mother and five siblings during the voyage. She and her family also appear in the passenger lists of the Amitie, another ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana. The Amitie arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The passenger manifests of the St. Rémi indicates that she was two years old, while the Amitie's passenger lists maintain that she was a nursing infant in 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.146 | Jean | LeJeune (Le Jeune) | 01/01/1756 | Anastasie Levron | Amand (Amant) LeJeune | Married Félicité Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by his wife during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included Félicité Boudrot (Boudreaut), his thirty-three-year-old wife. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn and five hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Félicité Boudrot (Boudereau), his thirty-four-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.147 | Félicité | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1754 | Marie Josèphe LeBlanc | Félix Boudrot | Married Jean LeJeune. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her husband during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Jean LeJeune. She and her thirty-two-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn and five hogs. Identified as Félicité Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old wife of Jean LeJeune. She and her thirty-nine-year-old husband occupied a tract of and with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.148 | Jean Baptiste | Durambourg (Durembourg, Duraubourg) | 01/01/1735 | Married Magdeleine Henry (Henri). | Marie Jeanne (born 1767) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by his wife and one child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine Henry, his sixty-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. Identified as Jean Duraubourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-one-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine (Madelaine) Henri, his sixty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-two barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.149 | Magdeleine | Henry (Henrry) | 01/01/1740 | Married Jean Baptiste Durambourg. | Marie Jeanne (born 1767) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by her husband and one child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old spouse of Jean (Jean Baptiste) Durambourg (Durembourg). She and her sixty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The couple owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.150 | Marie Jeanne | Durambourg | 01/01/1767 | Magdeleine Henry | Jean Baptiste Durambourg | Married Joseph Hébert, fils, at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1786. | Marie Louise (born January 27, 1798) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents during the voyage. | Identified 1788 census of the Lafourche District as Jeanneton Durembourg. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert, fils. She and her twenty-seven-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six acres frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Jeanne Durambourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert, fils. She and her twenty-eight-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:363, 369; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.151 | Jean Charles | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1734 | Angélique Doiron | François Boudrot | Married (1) Agnès (Anne) Trahan. Married (2) Marguerite Guédry (Guidry). | First marriage: Enrriette (Henriette, Charlotte) (born 1772) , Joseph Marie, Marie (married September 24, 1787)Second marriage: Pierre David (born 1783), Marguerite (Marguerite Reine) (born 1782), Pierre (born 1784), Félix (Phelix) (born 1786), Marie Rosalie (born February 17, 1788) | Deported to Bristol, England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by his wife Marguerite and four children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margueritte) Guédry (Guidry), his forty-five-year-old wife, Pierre Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaut), his four-year-old son, Félix (Phelix) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaut), his two-year-old son, and Reine (Marguerite Reine) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaut), his six-year-old daughter. Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaut) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113, 115-117, 296. | 1.785 | paretteur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.152 | Marguerite (Marie) | Guédry (Guidry) | Veuve Boudereau | 01/01/1751 | probably St. Malo, France | Anne Bourg (Bourque) | Charles Guédry | Married Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux, Boudreaut). | Pierre David (born 1783), Marguerite (Marguerite Reine) (born 1782), Pierre (born 1784), Félix (Phelix) (born 1786), Marie Rosalie (born February 17, 1788) | Resided at Bonaban, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at La Gouesnière, France, 1760-1763. Resided at SaintServan, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband Jean Charles and four children. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), her four-year-old son, Félix (Phelix) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), her two-year-old son, and Reine (Marguerite Reine) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), her six-year-old daughter. Marguerite Guédry and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Marie Guedri, Veuve Boudereau, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household including the following persons: Pierre, her son, 41 (sic) years old (he was actually around 4 years old); Phelix (Felix), her son, 3 years old; and Étienne, her son (sic) (probably Marguerite), 7 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-two barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:116-117. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.153 | Pierre David | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1783 | Marguerite Guédry (Guidry) | Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and three siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a four-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included Félix (Phelix) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), his two-year-old brother, and Reine (Marguerite Reine) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | François Boudrot and Angélique Doiron | Charles Guédry and Madeleine Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.154 | Enrriette (Henriette) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1772 | Marguerite Guédry (Guidry) | Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents and three siblings during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | François Boudrot and Angélique Doiron | Charles Guédry and Madeleine Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.155 | Marguerite (Marguerite Reine) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1783 | Marguerite Guédry (Guidry) | Jean Charles Boudrau (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents and three siblings during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. The household also included Pierre Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), her four-year-old brother, and Félix (Phelix) Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), her two-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 39; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | François Boudrot and Angélique Doiron | Charles Guédry and Madeleine Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.156 | Félix | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Magdeleine Hébert. He was described as the widower of Magalena (Magdeleine) Hébert at the time of his second marriage. Married (2) Luce Perpétue Bourg (Bourq, Bourque), the widow of Pierre Hébert, at Ascension Catholic Church, Ascension Parish, La., August 30, 1787. Charles Aucoin and Magdeleine Hébert witnessed the marriage certificate. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by his wife Marguerite during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:124; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.157 | Magdeleine | Hébert | 01/01/1729 | Married Félix Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her husband Felix during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.158 | Augustin | Trahan | 01/01/1735 | Married Bibianne (Bibienne, Vivienne) LeBlanc. | Marie Modeste (born 1773) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by his wife and one child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included Bibienne (Bibianna, Vivienne) LeBlanc, his forty-year-old wife, and Marie Modeste Trahan, his fourteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included Bibianne (Bibienne), his forty-one-year-old wife, and Marie Modeste, his fifteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn, two horses, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.159 | Bibianne (Bibienne, Vivienne) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1745 | Married Augustin Trahan. | Marie Modeste (born 1773) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by her husband and one child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Augustin Trahan. In addition to herself and her fifty-three-year-old husband, her household included Marie Modeste Trahan, her fourteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Augustin Trahan. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old husband, the household included Marie Modeste, her fifteen-year-old daughter. Bibianne LeBlanc and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn, two horses, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.160 | Marie Modeste | Trahan | 01/01/1773 | Bibianne (Vivienne) LeBlanc | Augustin Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her parents during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.161 | Gerome (Jérôme) | Guérin | 01/01/1753 | Married Marie Pittre (Pitre). | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1785), Anne Marie (born 1787) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied by his wife and an infant child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household including Marie Pitre, his forty-year-old wife, and Anne marie Guérin, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. His name is rendered as Gerome Guerin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household including Marie Pitre, his forty-one-year-old wife, and Anne Marie Guérin, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.162 | Marie | Pitre (Pittre) | 01/01/1749 | Married Gerome (Jérôme) Guérin. | Jean Pierre (born ca. 1785), Anne Marie (born 1787) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied her husband and one child during the voyage. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Jérome Guérin. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included Anne Marie Guérin, her one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Her name is rendered as María Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Gerome Guérin (Guerin). In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-yer-old husband, the household included Anne Marie Guérin, her one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.163 | Jean Pierre | Guérin | 01/01/1785 | Marie Pittre (Pitre) | Gerome (Jérôme) Guerin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Jean Pierre Guerin was identified as a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.164 | Joseph | Robichaud | 01/01/1729 | Married Anne Osite Hébert. He was a widower at the time of his departure from France. | Jean Baptiste (born 1764), François Xavier (born 1769), Marie (born 1771), Rennée (Renée) (born 1776) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied during the voyage by four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.165 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) | Robichaud | 01/01/1764 | Anne Osite Hébert | Joseph Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and three siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included two of his siblings: François Xavier Robichaud (Robicho), 19 years old; and Marie Robichaud (Robicho), his twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | domestic servant | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.166 | François Xavier | Robichaud | 01/01/1769 | Anne Osite Hébert | Joseph Robichaud | Marrried Anne Magdeleine Boudrot at Ascension Parish, La., January 22, 1787. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and three siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of a household headed by Jean Baptiste Robichaud, his twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included Marie Robichaud, his twelve-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.167 | Marie | Robichaud | 01/01/1771 | Anne Osite Hébert | Joseph Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and three siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of a household headed by Jean Baptiste Robichaud (Robicho), her twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included François Xavier (Xavier) Robichaud (Robicho), her nineteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.168 | Rennée (probably Reine) | Robichaud | 01/01/1776 | Anne Osite Hébert | Joseph Robichaud | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and three siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.169 | Marie | Hébert | Veuve Moïse (Moÿse) | 01/01/1742 | Married Joseph Moïse (Moÿse). She was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Joseph (born 1773), Marie (born 1779) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by two children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-five-year-old widow residing with Joseph Moïse (Moÿse), her fourteen-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old Widow Moïse and that she was the head of a household including Joseph Moïse, her fifteen-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.170 | Joseph | Moïse (Moÿse) | 01/01/1773 | Marie Hébert | Joseph Moïse (Moÿse) | Married Anne Blanchard, a native of St. Suliac, Diocese of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Beloni Blanchard and Magdeleine Forest, at Assumption Parish, La., June 28, 1803. Joseph Boudrot and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his mother during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old child residing with his widowed mother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.171 | Marie | Moïse | 01/01/1779 | Marie Hébert | Joseph Moïse (Moÿse) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her mother during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.172 | Ambroise | Naquin | 01/01/1725 | Angélique Blanchard | François Naquin | Married Elizabet (Élizabeth) Bourg. | Joseph (a twin, born 1766), Pierre (a twin, born 1766) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1774. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by his wife and two children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.173 | Élizabeth | Bourg | 01/01/1727 | Married Ambroise Naquin. | Joseph (born 1766), Pierre (born 1766) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by her husband and two children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.174 | Joseph | Naquin | 01/01/1766 | Élizabeth Bourg | Ambroise Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and one sibling during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | François Naquin and Angélique Blanchard | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.175 | Pierre | Naquin | 01/01/1766 | Elizabet (Élizabeth) Bourg | Ambroise Naquin | Married Anne Robichaud (Robicho), daughter of Pierre Robichaud and Anne Hébert. Like Anne Robichaud, Pierre Naquin sailed to Louisiana aboard the St. Rémi. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and one sibling during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included Anne Robichaud (Robicho), his eighteen-year-old spouse. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage They also owned ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that also included Anne Robichaud (Robicho), his nineteen-year-old spouse. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and seven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Naquin and Angélique Blanchard | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.176 | Pierre | Bourg | 01/01/1729 | Madeleine Hébert | François Bourg | Married Marie Naquin. | Pierre (born 1767), Jeanne (born 1765), Gorsina Victoire (born 1774; married January 27, 1794) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by his wife and three children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:122. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.177 | Marie | Naquin | 01/01/1739 | Jeanne Melanson (Melançon) | Jacques Naquin | Married Pierre Bourg, son of François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert. | Pierre (born 1767), Jeanne (born 1765), Gorsina Victoire (born 1774; married January 27, 1794) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by her husband and three children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jeanne Bourg, her daughter, 21 years old; Pierre Bourg (Bourq), her son, 21 years old; and Vicctoire Bourg, her daughter, 14 years old. Marie Naquin, also identified in the census as the Widow Bourg (Bourq), and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned eighteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household including Jeanne, her twenty-one-year-old daughter, Pierre, her twenty-year-old son, and Victoire, her fifteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn two cows, two horses, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:122. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.178 | Pierre Olivier | Bourg | 01/01/1767 | Marie Naquin | Pierre Bourg | Married Marie Rose Livoire (Libois), widow of Charles Templet and the daughter of Pierre Livoir and Marie Magdeleine Poirier of Beaubassin, Acadia, at Assumption Parish, La., October 20, 1794. Joseph Breau and Jean Baptiste Cazebon witnessed the marriage record. | Pierre (born September 21, 1795), Marie Modeste (born June 18, 1797), Clementine Marguerite (Clementina Margarita) (baptized November 23, 1799), Rosalie Victoire (born December 27, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Jeanne Bourg, his twenty-one-year-old sister, and Victoire Bourg, his fourteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his forty-six-year-old mother, the household included Jeanne Bourg, his twenty-one-year-old sister, and Victoire Bourg, his fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121-129. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Jacques Naquin and Jeanne Melanson | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.179 | Jeanne | Bourg | 01/01/1765 | Marie Naquin | Pierre Bourg | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Pierre Bourg (Bourq), her twenty-one-year-old brother, and Victoire Bourg, her fourteen-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old mother, the household included Pierre Bourg, her twenty-year-old brother, and Victoire Bourg, her fifteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Jacques Naquin and Jeanne Melanson | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.180 | Victoire | Bourg | 01/01/1774 | Marie Naquin | Pierre Bourg | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Jeanne Bourg, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Pierre Bourg (Bourq), her twenty-one-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her forty-six-year-old mother, the household included Jeanne Bourg, her twenty-one-year-old sister, and Pierre Bourg, her twenty-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Jacques Naquin and Jeanne Melanson | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.181 | Charles Olivier | Guitrot (Gauterot) (actually Guillot) | 01/01/1747 | Anne Breau (Braud)(?) | Married Magdeleine Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Jean Michel (born 1771; married November 26, 1789), Simon François (born 1773; married May 14, 1792), Isabel (Isabelle, Élizabeth) (born 1775) | French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that if Charles Olivier Guitrot (Gauterot) was indeed the son of Anne Breau (Braud), then he was deported to England, and he resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by his and three children wife during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La., as Charles Olivier Guillot. Louisiana ecclesiastical records suggest that his surname was actually Guillot, not Guitrot and Gauterot, the forms in which his surname appears in 1785. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) Boudrau (Boudrot), his forty-four-year-old wife, Jean Guillot, his seventeen-year-old son, Simon Guillot, his fifteen-year-old son, and Isabel (Isabelle) Guillot, his thirteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. They owned no slaves. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) Boudrau (Boudereau), his wife, 45 years old; Jean Guillot, his son, 18 years old; Simon Guillot, his son, 16 years old; and Isabelle Guillot, his daughter, 13 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 48. | 1.785 | carpenter | 1 | ||||||||||||||||
2.182 | Magdeleine | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1745 | Married Charles Olivier Guitrot. (See his biographical sketch. His surname appears to have been Guillot.) | Jean Michel (born 1771; married November 26, 1789), Simon François (born 1773; married May 14, 1792), Isabel (Isabelle, Élizabeth) (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her husband and three children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Olivier Guillot (Guitrot, Gauterot). In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included Jean Guillot, her seventeen-year-old son, Simon Guillot, her fifteen-year-old son, and Isabel (Isabelle) Guillot, her thirteen-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Madelaine Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Charles Olivier Guillot (Guitrot). In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, the household included Jean Guillot, her eighteen-year-old son, Simon Guillot, her sixteen-year-old son, and Isabelle Guillot, her thirteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 40; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 48. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.183 | Jean Michel | Guitrot (Gauterot) (actually Guillot) | 01/01/1771 | St. Brigitte Parish, St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Charles Olivier Guitrot (Gauterot) | Identified as Juan Miguel Guillot in his 1789 marriage record. Married Marie Rose Pitre, the widow of Michel Goudreaux and the daughter of Olivier Pierre Pitre and Rosalie Hébert, at Ascension Parish, November 26, 1789. His spouse was a native of St. Julien Parish, St. Malo, France. | Olivier (born August 29, 1790), Isidore (born March 11, 1794), Jean Baptiste (baptized April 17, 1797), Narcisse André (baptized May 12, 1799), Louis Jean Baptiste (born June 24, 1800), Marie Carmelita (born April 27, 1802) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Jean Guillot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Simon Guillot, his fifteen-year-old brother, and Isabel (Isabelle) Guillot, his thirteen-year-old sister. His name is rendered as Jean Guillot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Simon Guillot, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle Guillot, his thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:348-349; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.184 | Simon François | Guitrot (Gauterot) (actually Guillot) | 01/01/1773 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Charles Olivier Guitrot (Gauterot) | Married (1) Anastasie Céleste Marie Dugat (Dugas), daughter of Joseph Dugat (Dugas) and Anastasie Barillot (Barillo), at Ascension Parish, La. Charles Guillot and Luis Juncal witnessed the marriage record. Identified as a widower in 1799. Married (2) Rose Comeau, a native of Nantes, France, and daughter of Benoît Comeau and Anne Blanchard, as Assumption Parish, April 1, 1799. | Second marriage: Céleste Eulalie (born November 9, 1797), Basilie Marie (Basilia Maria) (born December 28, 1800), Marie Modeste (born January 1,3 1803) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Simon Guillot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Guillot, his seventeen-year-old brother, and Isabelle (Isabel) Guillot, his thirteen-year-old sister. Identified as Simon Guillot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Guillot, his eighteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle Guillot, his thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:248-250, 349; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.185 | Isabel (Élizabeth, Isabelle) | Guitrot (Gauterot) (actually Guillot) | 01/01/1775 | Magdeleine Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Charles Olivier Guitrot (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Isabelle Guillot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Guillot, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Simon Guillot, her fifteen-year-old brother. Identified as Isabelle Guillot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Guillot, her eighteen-year-old brother, and Simon Guillot, her sixteen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.186 | Michel | Au Coing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1755 | Madeleine Dupuis | Pierre Aucoin | Married Marie Rosalie de la Forestrie. | Marie Françoise (born 1780), Michel (Michelle) (born 1781), Rose Adélaïde (born ca. 1785), Michel II (baptized December 7, 1786), Celestin (born December 1793) | Lived with the family of Jean Aucoin and Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1769-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. He was accompanied on the voyage by his wife Marie and his daughters Marie Françoise and Rose Adélaïde. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household including Marie Rosalie (Rose) de la Forestrie (Laforeterie), his thirty-two-year-old wife, and Michel Aucoin, his seven-year-old son. Michel Aucoin and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of rice and one hog. Identified as Michel Aucoin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rose de la Forestrie (La Foretrie), his wife, 32 years old; and Michel, his son, 8 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 38. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.187 | Marie Rosalie | de la Forestrie | 01/01/1756 | Marie Madeleine Bonnière | Jean de la Forestrie | Married Michel Aucoing (Aucoin). | Marie Françoise (born 1780), Michel (Michelle) (born 1781), Rose Adélaïde (born ca. 1785), Michel II (baptized December 7, 1786), Celestin (born December 1793) | She resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1774. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband and daughters Marie Françoise and Rose Adélaïde. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Rose Laforeterie in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census indicates that she was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Michel Aucoing (Aucoin). In addition to herself and her thirty-two-year-old husband, her household included Michel Aucoing (Aucoin), her seven-year-old son. Identified as Rose La Foretrie in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-two-year-old member of the household headed by Michel Au Coing (Aucoin), her thirty-three-year-old husband. The household also included Michel, her eight-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 38. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.188 | Marie Françoise | Au Coing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1780 | Marie Rosalie de la Forestrie | Michel Aucoing | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and her sister Rose Adélaïde during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | Pierre Aucoin and Madeleine Dupuis | Jean de la Forestrie and Marie Madeleine Bonnière | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.189 | Rose Adélaïde | Au Coing (Aucoin) | 01/01/1785 | Marie Rosalie de la Forestrie | Michel Aucoing | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and her sister Marie Françoise during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32. | 1.785 | Pierre Aucoin and Madeleine Dupuis | Jean de la Forestrie and Marie Madeleine Bonnière | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.190 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite LeBlanc | Charles Hébert | Married Jeanne de la Forestrie. | Joseph (born 1774), Charles (born 1775), Louis Jean (born 1780), Marie (born 1777), Anne Marguerite (born ca. 1785) | He resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1765. Resided at Saint-Malo, France, 1766-1769. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1770-1772. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by his wife Jeanne and the following children: Joseph, Charles, Louis Jean, Marie, and Anne Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.191 | Jeanne | de la Forestrie | Veuve Hébert | 01/01/1755 | Marie Bonière | Jean de la Forestrie (Forêtière) | Married (1) Joseph Hébert. She was a widow in 1788. Married (2) Sebastian Benoît (Benoist), son of Augustin Benoît and Françoise Terriot (Theriot), at Ascension Parish, La., August 16, 1789. Pierre Landry and François Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Joseph (born 1774), Charles (born 1775), Louis Jean (born 1780), Marie (born 1777), Anne Marguerite (born ca. 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by her husband Joseph and the following children: Joseph, Charles, Louis Jean, Marie, and Anne Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-four-year-old widow and the head of a household including Joseph Hébert, her fourteen-year-old son, Charles Hébert, her twelve-year-old son, Louis Hébert, her ten-year-old son, Marie Hébert, her eight-year-old daughter, and Anne Hébert, her two-year-old daughter. Jeanne de la Forestrie and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jeanne La Foreterie in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Joseph, her fifteen-year-old son, Charles, her thirteen-year-old son, Louis, her eleven-year-old son, Marie, her nine-year-old son, and Anne, her three-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 42; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:296. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.192 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Jeanne de la Forestrie | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and four siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his thirty-four-year-old mother, his household also including four of his siblings: Charles Hébert, 12 years old; Louis Hébert, 10 years old; Marie Hébert, 8 years old; and Anne Hébert, 2 years old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his thirty-four-year-old mother, the household included the following siblings: Charles Hébert, 13 years old; Louis Hébert, 11 years old; Marie Hébert, 9 years old; and Anne Hébert, 3 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.193 | Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1775 | Jeanne de la Forestrie | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and four siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. In addition to himself and his thirty-four-year-old mother, his household included the following siblings: Joseph Hébert, 14 years old; Louis Hébert, 10 years old; Marie Hébert, 8 years old; and Anne Hébert, 2 years old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his thirty-four-year-old mother, the household included, Joseph, his fifteen-year-old brother, Louis, his eleven-year-old brother, marie, his nine-year-old sister, and Anne, his three-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.194 | Louis Jean | Hébert | 01/01/1780 | Jeanne de la Forestrie | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and four siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of the household that included Jeanne de la Forestrie, his thirty-four-year-old mother, a widow, and the head of his household; Joseph Hébert, his fourteen-year-old brother; Charles Hébert, his twelve-year-old brother; Marie Hébert, his eight-year-old sister; and Anne Hébert, his two-year-old sister. Identified as Louis in the household of Jeanne La Foretrie in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to himself and his thirty-four-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, his fifteen-year-old brother, Charles, his thirteen-year-old brother, Marie, his nine-year-old sister, and Anne, his three-year-old daughter. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.195 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1777 | Jeanne de la Forestrie | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and four siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of the household headed by Jeanne de la Forestrie, her thirty-four-year-old mother and the widow of Joseph Hébert. The household also included Joseph Hébert, her fourteen-year-old brother, Charles Hébert, her twelve-year-old brother, Louis Hébert, her ten-year-old brother, and Anne Hébert, her two-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, her fifteen-year-old brother, Charles, her thirteen-year-old brother, Louis, her eleven-year-old brother, and Anne, her three-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.196 | Anne Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | Jeanne de la Forestrie | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and four siblings on the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a two-year-old member of the household headed by Jeanne de la Forestrie, her mother and the thirty-four-year-old widow of Joseph Hébert. The household also included Joseph Hébert, her fourteen-year-old brother, Charles Hébert, her twelve-year-old brother, Louis Hébert, her ten-year-old brother, and Marie Hébert, her eight-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a three-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old mother, the household included Joseph, her fifteen-year-old brother, Charles, her thirteen-year-old brother, Louis, her eleven-year-old brother, and Marie, her nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 32; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.197 | Jean (Christian) | Garnier (Spiger) | 01/01/1761 | Married (1) Stiagia Bergle. Married (2) Ozite Perpétue Theriot (Terriot). French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux maintain that Jean Garnier was actually an alias for a Swiss native by the name of Christian Spiger. | Jeanne Marie (born 1784), Marie Françoise (born 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by his wife and two daughters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.198 | Ozite Perpétue | Terriot (Theriot) | Rose | Bristol, England | Marie Boudrot | Jean Charles Terriot | Married (1) Christian Garnier, St. Similien Church, Nantes, France, October 8, 1782. Married (2) Jean Maillet, St. Louis Catholic Church, New Orleans, Louisiana, April 29, 1786. | First marriage: Jeanne Marie (born 1784), Marie Françoise (born 1785)Second marriage: Jean Simon (born Octogber 19, 1787), Marie Madeleine (born August 10, 1789), Joseph Nicolas (born August 2, 1791), Isabel Elizabeth Scholastique (born January 28, 1793), Auguste Augustin (baptized May 15, 1796), Josèphe Rosalie (born October 29, 1799) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by her husband and two daughters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Jean Maillet and Osite Perpetue Rose Theriot." | 1.785 | 12/03/1823 | St. Malo, France | present-day Thibodaux area, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.199 | Jean Marie | Garnier | 01/01/1781 | Ozite Perpétue Theriot (Terriot) | Jean Garnier | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and one sibling on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.200 | Marie Françoise | Garnier | 01/01/1785 | Ozite Perpétue Theriot (Terriot) | Jean Garnier | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and one sibling on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.201 | Charles | Naquin | 01/01/1737 | Angélique Blanchard | François Naquin | Married Anne Doiron. He as a widow at the time of his departure from France. | Paul (born 1782), Anne (born 1767), Jean (born 1771), Ludovinne (born 1775), Renne (sic) (probably Reine) (born 1777), Yves (Yvette?), and an unnamed daughter | He resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Suliac, France, 1764-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household including Jean Naquin, his nineteen-year-old son, Yves Naquin, his seventeen-year-old son, Anne Naquin, his twenty-year-old daughter, and Renette (probably Reine) Naquin, his ten-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, two cows, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included Jean Naquin, his twenty-year-old son, Yves Naquin, his seventeen-year-old son; Anne Naquin, his twenty-one-year-old daughter, and Renette (Reine?) Naquin, his eleven-year-old daughter. He and his children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty-seven barrels of corn, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.202 | Jean | Naquin | 01/01/1771 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Yves Naquin, his seventeen-year-old brother, Anne Naquin, his twenty-year-old sister, and Renette (probably Reine) Naquin, his ten-year-old daughter. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Yves Naquin, his seventeen-year-old brother, Anne Naquin, his twenty-one-year-old sister, and Renette (Renne) Naquin, his eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.203 | Paul | Naquin | 01/01/1783 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.204 | Anne | Naquin | 01/01/1767 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Jean Naquin, her nineteen-year-old brother, Yves Naquin, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Renette (probably Reine) Naquin, her ten-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Jean Naquin, her twenty-year-old brother, Yves Naquin, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Renette Naquin, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.205 | Yves | Naquin | 01/01/1769 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Jean Naquin, his nineteen-year-old brother, Anne Naquin, his twenty-year-old sister, and Renette (probably Reine) Naquin, his ten-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.206 | Ludovinne | Naquin | 01/01/1775 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.207 | Renne (Renette) (probably Reine) | Naquin | 01/01/1777 | Anne Doiron | Charles Naquin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Jean Naquin, her nineteen-year-old brother, Yves Naquin, her seventeen-year-old brother, and Anne Naquin, her twenty-year-old sister. Identified as Renette Naquin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Jean Naquin, her twenty-year-old brother, Yves Naquin, her seventeen-year-old son, and Anne Naquin, her twenty-one-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.208 | Charles | Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1725 | Married Anne Naquin. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accopanied on the voyage by his wife, his stepdaughter Rose Gautrau, and Anne LeBert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.209 | Anne | Naquin | Veuve Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1735 | Married (1) François Gauterot. Married (2) Charles Dugat (Dugas). | Rose (born 1764) | Anne Naquin resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1759-1764. Resided at aSaint-Suliac, 1764-1766. Resided at Saint-Méloir-des-Ondes, France, 1766-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband Charles, her daughter Rose, and Anne Lebert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Anne Naquin, veuve Dugat in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow and the head of a household including Rose Gauterot, her twenty-four-year-old daughter, Anne Hébert, an eleven-year-old orphan, and Mathurin Daunie (D'Aunis), her twenty-four-year-old son-in-law. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.210 | Rose | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1764 | Anne Naquin | François Gauterot | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her stepfather (Charles Dugat), her mother, and Anne LeBert during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.211 | Anne | Le Bert (LeBert) | 01/01/1776 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied Charles Dugat (Dugas), Anne Naquin, and Rose Gautrau during the voyage to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 41. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.212 | Jean Grégoire | Blanchard | 01/01/1748 | Marie Bourg(?) | Germain Blanchard(?) | Married Marie Magdeleine Livoir (Livois). | Jean Baptiste (born 1777), Marie (born 1776; married January 19, 1795), Pierre Charles (born ca. 1785) | If he was indeed the son of Germain Blanchard and Marie Bourg, as French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux speculate, then Jean Grégoire Blanchard resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 17591761; Langrolay, France, 1761-1764; and Pleudihen, France, 1764-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied during the voyage by his wife and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the head of a household that included the following persons: Marie, his wife, 30 years old; Marie, his daughter, 11 years old; Jean (Jean Baptiste), his son, 8 years old; and Pierre (Pierre Charles), his son, 5 years old. (Jean Grégoire Blanchard's age is illiegible in the original manuscript census.) The census also indicates that Jean Grégoire Blanchard and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and ten hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie, his wife, 31 years old; Marie, his daughter, 12 years old; Jean, his son, 9 years old; and Pierre, his son, 7 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:97. | 1.785 | paretteur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.213 | Marie Magdeleine | Livoir (Livois) | 01/01/1754 | Madeleine Poirier | Pierre Livoir (Livois) | Married Jean Grégoire Blanchard. | Jean Baptiste (born 1777), Marie (born 1776), Pierre Charles (born ca. 1785) | She resided at Paramé, Brittany, France, 1759-1771. Resided at Saint-Ideuc, France, 1771-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied during the voyage by her husband and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Grégoire Blanchard. In addition to herself and her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included Marie, her twelve-year-old daughter, Jean, her nine-year-old son, and Pierre, her seven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.214 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) | Blanchard | 01/01/1777 | Nantes, France | Marie Magdeleine Livoir | Jean Grégoire Blanchard | Married Marie Modeste Aucoin, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Joseph Aucoin and Elisabeth (Elizabeth) Henry, at Assumption Parish, La., January 12, 1802. Joseph Aucoin and Jean Richard witnessed the marriage record. | Jean Baptiste (born November 23, 1802) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included the following persons: Jean Grégoire Blanchard, his father, age illegible; Marie Livoir, his mother, 30 years old; Marie Blanchard, his sister, 11 years old; and Pierre Blanchard, his brother, 5 years old. Identified as Jean Blanchard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself, the household also included the following persons: Jean Grégoire Blanchard, his father, 41 years old; Marie Livoire, his mother, 31 years old; Marie Blanchard, his sister, 12 years old; and Pierre Blanchard, his brother, 7 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37, 96. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.215 | Marie | Blanchard | 01/01/1776 | Marie Magdeleine Livoir | Jean Grégoire Blanchard | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her parents and two siblings during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Jean Grégoire Blanchard, her father, age illegible; Marie Livoir, her mother, 30 years old; Jean (Jean Baptiste) Blanchard, her brother, 8 years old; and Pierre (Pierre Charles) Blanchard, her brother, 5 years old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old membe rof her parents' household. In addition to herself, the household included the following persons: Jean Grégoire Blanchard, her father, 41 years old; Marie Livoire, her mother, 31 years old; Jean (Jean Baptiste) Blanchard, her brother, 9 years old; Pierre Blanchard, her brother, 7 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.216 | Hilaire | Climent (Clément?) | 01/01/1746 | Marie Josèphe Rudouze. | Jean Clément | Married Tarsille Naquin, the sister of Charles Naquin. Hilaire Clément was a widower at the time of his depature for Louisiana. | Jean (born 1777), Marie (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied on the voyage by his son Jean and his daughter Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.217 | Jean | Climent (Clément) | 01/01/1777 | Jean Climent (Clément?) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and his sister Marie on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Jean Clément in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the eleven-year-old head of a household that included Marie Climent (Clément), his twelve-year-old sister. He and his sibling occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified as Jean Clément in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twelve-year-old head of a household that included Marie Clément, his thirteen-year-old sister. He and his sister occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They had no grain reserves and owned no livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.218 | Marie | Climent (Clément?) | 01/01/1775 | Jean Climent (Clément?) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and her brother Jean during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Marie Clément in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was twelve years of age and that she resided with her eleven-year-old brother, Jean Clément (Climent), who was the head of her household. She and her brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Her name is rendered as Marie Clément in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old residing with her twelve-year-old brother Jean. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned no livestock and had no grain reserves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.219 | Joachin (Joachim) | Trahan | 01/01/1735 | Marie Comeau | Pierre Trahan | Married (1) Marguerite Landry. Married (2) Marie Duon (Duhon). He was a widower at the time of his departure for Louisiana. | Augustin (born 1767), Jean Marie (born 1775), Marie Vincent (Anne) (born 1764), Félicité (born 1771), Catherine (born 1773) | Deported to Liverpool, England. Resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France, after 1763. Occupied farm no. 40 at the village of Magouric, Locmaria parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied by six children during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | plowman | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.220 | Augustin | Trahan | 01/01/1767 | Joachin (Joachim) Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and five siblings on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that also included Félicité Trahan, his seventeen-year-old sister. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The 1788 census indicates that they owned neither slaves nor livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.221 | Jean Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1775 | Joachin (Joachim) Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his father and five siblings on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.222 | Marie Vincent (Anne) | Trahan | 01/01/1761 | Joachin (Joachim) Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.223 | Félicité | Trahan | 01/01/1771 | Joachin (Joachim) Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old residing with Augustin Trahan, her twenty-three-year-old brother who was the head of their household. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The 1788 census indicates that they owned neither slaves nor livestock. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.224 | Catherine | Trahan | 01/01/1773 | Joachin (Joachim) Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied her father and five siblings on the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.225 | Marie | Vincent | 01/01/1784 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. She accompanied the family of Joachin (Joachim) Trahan during the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.226 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1737 | Acadia | Jeanne Daigle | Pierre Trahan | Married Marguerite Duon (Duhon). | Joseph (born 1777), Geneviève (born 1762), Paulinne (Pauline) (1767), Marguerite (born 1769), Anne (born 1773), Marie Françoise (born 1775) | Deported to Liverpool, England. Resided at Morlaix, France, after 1763. Occupied farm no. 46 at the village of Calastren, Bangor parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. His wife and six children accompanied him. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the sixty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: Marguerite Duon (Duhon), his wife, 62 years old; Geneviève Terrio, 38 years old; and Lise Terriot (Theriot), 9 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned fifty semi-wild beef cattle and thirteen tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-seven years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1B, p. 716; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.785 | 08/09/1803 | St. Martin de Tours Church, St. Martinville, La. | plowman | NULL | |||||||||||
2.227 | Marguerite | Duhon (DUON) | 01/01/1741 | Married Pierre Trahan. | Joseph (born 1777), Geneviève (born 1762), Paulinne (Pauline) (1767), Marguerite (born 1769), Anne (born 1773), Marie Françoise (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Pierre and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was the sixty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Trahan. In addition to herself and her sixty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Geneviève Terriot, 38 years old; and Lise Terriot (Theriot), 9 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned fifty semi-wild beef cattle and thirteen tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.228 | Joseph | Trahan | 01/01/1777 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.229 | Geneviève | Trahan | 01/01/1760 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.230 | Paulinne (Pauline) | Trahan | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.231 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.232 | Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1773 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.233 | Marie Françoise | Trahan | 01/01/1775 | Marguerite Duhon | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.234 | Blais (Blaise) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux, Thibeaudeau) | 01/01/1723 | Suzanne Comeau | Antoine Thibodeau | Married Catherine Degle (Daigle). | François (born 1767), Joseph (born 1768), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1775), Fermin (Firmin) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, three children, and Joseph Nicolas Hébert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Blaise Thibodot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household including François, his twenty-one-year-old son, Joseph, his nineteen-year-old son, and Isabelle, his seventeen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and two hogs. His name is rendered as Blaise Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: François, his twenty-twoo-year-old son, Joseph, his twenty-year-old son, and Isabelle, his eighteen-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.235 | Catherine | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE, Degle) | 01/01/1725 | Marie Anne Breau | Jean Daigle (Daigre, D'Aigle) | Married Blais (Blaise) Thibodau (Thibodeaux). | François (born 1767), Joseph (born 1768), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1775) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Blais (Blaise), three children, and Joseph Nicolas Hébert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.236 | François | Thibodau (Thibodeaux, Thibodot, Thibeaudeau) | 01/01/1767 | Catherine Degle (Daigle) | Blais (Blaise) Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, and cousin Joseph Nicolas Hébert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Joseph, his nineteen-year-old brother, and Isabelle, his seventeen-year-old sister. His name is rendered as François Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his father's household. In addition and his father, the household included Joseph, his twenty-year-old brother, and Isabelle, his eighteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.237 | Joseph | Thibodau (Thibodeaux, Thibodot, Thibeaudeau) | 01/01/1768 | Catherine Degle (Daigle) | Blais (Blaise) Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, and cousin Joseph Nicolas Hébert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Joseph Thibodot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included François, his twenty-one-year-old brother, and Isabelle, his seventeen-year-old sister. His name is rendered as Joseph Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included François, his twenty-two-year-old brother, and Isabelle, his eighteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.238 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux, Thibodot, Thibeaudeau) | 01/01/1775 | Catherine Degle (Daigle) | Blais (Blaise) Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, and cousin Joseph Nicolas Hébert. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Isabelle Thibodot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included François, her twenty-one-year-old brother, and Joseph, her nineteen-year-old brother. Identified as Isabelle Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included François, her twenty-two-year-old brother, and Joseph, her twenty-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.239 | Joseph Nicolas | Hébert | 01/01/1754 | Marie Magdeleine Daigle | Pierre Hébert | Married Agnès (Anne) Gauterot at Ascension Parish, La., May 6, 1786. Marie Gauterot witnessed the marriage record. | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his uncle Blais (Blaise) Thibodau (Thibodeaux). Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household including Agnès Gauterot, his thirty-two-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that also included Agnès Gauterot (Gautereau). He and his thirty-three-year-old wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eight hogs. He appears to have been the Nicolas Hébert who served as sindic in 1800-1801. Spanish military records contain a cumulative service record for one Joseph Nicolas Hébert of the Lafourche District. The age and years of service indicated in the sketch suggest that the service record was actually for another individual, but local ecclesiastical records list only one person by the name of Joseph Nicolas Hébert in the Lafourche District during the late 1780's and 1790's. The service record data is consequently presented below: The document maintains that Hébert, who was thirty-seven years of age and married in December 1800, volunteered for duty in the militia on February 12, 1780. He was promoted to the rank of sergeant first-class on February 12, 1792. By December 1800, he had served in the Lafourche militia for twelve years and one month. He had also served in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for eight years, ten months, and nineteen days. He had not served in any military campaigns. His superiors noted that he had "supposed valor; good application [to duty] & conduct; average capacity." | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:364; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo, Verret to the governor, January 10, 1801, AGI, PPC, 218:179; Service Record, December 31, 800, AGI, PPC, legajo 161A; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 193; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50. | 1.785 | joiner / carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.240 | Fermin (Firmin, Firmain, Firmin Charles) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux, Thibodot) | 01/01/1760 | Catherine Daigle (Daigre, D'Aigle) | Blaise Thibodeau | Married Marie Magdeleine Theriot (Terriot). | Fermin Blaise (Firmin Blais) (born ca. 1783, baptized November 16, 1783, appears to have died before 1788); Martin Mathurin (baptized at New Orleans, October 18, 1785); Marie Pelagie (born January 28, 1788); Jean Julien (born February 4, 1789) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Listed as the head of a household in the passenger manifest. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and his son Fermin Blais. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identiied as Firmain Thibodot in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household including Marie Theriot (Terriot), his twenty-three-year-old wife, and Martin, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and three hogs. Fermin Thibodau and his family resided next door to his father's household in 1788. His name is rendered as Firmain Thibdeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Magdeleine (Marie) Terriot (Theriot), his twenty-four-year-old wife, and Martin Thibodau (Thibeaudeau), his three-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Thibodeau died sometime before February 9, 1793. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Firmin Charles Thibodeau and Marie Madeleine Theriot ." | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.241 | Marie Magdelaine (Marie Madeleine) | Terriot (Theriot) | St. Servan, Ile-et-Vilaine Department, France | Marie Boudrot | Jean Charles Terriot (Theriot) | Married (1) Fermin (Firmin) Thibodau (Thibodeaux) at Nantes, France, February 25, 1783. Married (2) Joseph Morin Gauterot at Ascension Parish, Louisiana, February 9, 1793. | First marriage: Fermin Blaise (Firmin Blais) (born ca. 1783, baptized November 16, 1783, appears to have died before 1788); Martin Mathurin (baptized at New Orleans, October 18, 1785); Marie Pelagie (born January 28, 1788); Jean Julien (born February 4, 1789) | Her family lived at St. Servan, France, until 1772. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Fermin and her son Fermin Blais. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. They arrived at New Orleans on September 10, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Fermin (Firmain) Thibodau (Thibodeau). In addition to herself and her twenty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Martin Thibodau (Thibodeau), her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Marie Theriot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Firmin (Firmain) Thibodau (Thibdeaudeau). In addition to herself and her twenty-eight-year-old husband, the household included Martin Thibodau (Thibeaudeau), her three-year-old son. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | His death record maintains that he died at the age of 104, but he was actually ninety-three years old at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Firmin Charles Thibodeau and Marie Madeleine Terriot." | Sun, Nov 17, 1765 | 1.785 | 07/05/1859 | St. Servan, France | Terrebonne Parish, Louisiana | St. Lawrence Catholic Church, Chacahoula, La. | NULL | ||||||||||
2.242 | Fermin (Firmin) Blais (Blaise) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1783 | Loire-Atlanjtique Dept., France | Marie Magdeleine Theriot (Terriot) | Fermin (Firmin) Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Evidently died shortly after arriving in Louisiana, for he does not appear in his parents' household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Firmin Charles Thibodeau and Marie Madeleine Theriot." | Sun, Nov 16, 1783 | 1.785 | Chatenay (near Nantes), Loire-Atlantique Dept., France | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.243 | Antoine | Boutari (boutary) | 01/01/1737 | Married Marie Solnier (Soinier, Saulnier, Sonnier). | August (born 1776), Antoine (born 1778), Guillaume (born 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Identified in the passenger manifest as the head of a household that included his wife and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.244 | Marie | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1748 | Married Antoine Boutari. | August (born 1776), Antoine (born 1778), Guillaume (born 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.245 | Auguste | Boutari | 01/01/1776 | Marie Solnier (Sonnier, Saulnier) | Antoine Boutari | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.246 | Antoine | Boutari | 01/01/1778 | Marie Solnier (Sonnier, Saulnier) | Antoine Boutari | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.247 | Guillaume | Boutari | 01/01/1785 | Marie Solnier (Sonnier, Saulnier) | Antoine Boutari | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that he was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.248 | Guillaume | Hamont (Hamon) | 01/01/1761 | Marie Dameue | Joseph Hamon | Married Marguerite Solnier (Sonnier, Saulnier, Saunier). | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The passenger manifest indicates that he was the head of a household that included his wife. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margueritte) Solnier (Saunier), his thirty-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. Identified as Guillaume Hamon in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margritta) Solnier (Saunier), his thirty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.249 | Marguerite (Margritta) | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1758 | Euphrosine Lalande | Charles Saulnier (Sonnier) | Married Guillaume Hamont (Hamon). | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Guillaume Hamont. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and six hogs. Identified as Margritta Saunier in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Guillaume Hamont. She and her twenty-six-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.250 | Étiene (Étienne) | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1738 | Married Magdeleine Trahan. | Elizabet (Élizabeth I, Élisabeth) (born 1761), Marie (born 1767), Susanne (Suzanne) (born 1769), Elizabet (Élizabeth II, Isabelle) (born 1777) | He and his family resided at Morlaux, France, 1766-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Identified in the passenger manifest as the head of a household that included his wife and four daughters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-year-old head of a household including Magdeleine Trahan, his forty-seven-year-old wife, and the following children: Elisabeth (Elizabet I), his twenty-three-year-old daughter, Marie, his twenty-year-old daughter, Susanne, his eighteen-year-old daughter, and Isabelle (Elizabet II), his ten-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Étienne Darroer in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) Trahan, his wife, 48 years old; Elizabeth (Elisabeth), his daughter, 29 years old; Marie, his daughter, 21 years old; Susanne (Suzanne), his daughter, 19 years old; Isabelle, his daughter, 11 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | tanner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.251 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdeleinne) | Trahan | 01/01/1740 | Married Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois). | Elizabet (Élizabeth I) (born 1765), Marie (born 1767), Susanne (born 1769), Elizabet (Élizabeth II) (born 1777) | She and her family resided at Morlaix, Brittany, France, 1766-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four daughters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old spouse of Étienne Darois. In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old husband, her household included the following children: Elisabeth (Elizabet I), her twenty-three-year-old daughter, Marie, her twenty-year-old daughter, Susanne, her eighteen-year-old daughter, and Isabelle (Elizabet II), her ten-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Madeleine Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Étienne Daroir (Darroer). In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Elisabeth, her daughter, 29 years old; Marie, her daughter, 21 years old; Suzanne, her daughter, 19 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth II), her daughter, 11 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.252 | Élizabet (I) (Élizabeth, Élisabeth) | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1761 | Magdeleine Trahan | Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie Darois, her twenty-year-old sister, Susanne Darois, her eighteen-year-old sister, and Isabelle Daroi, her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Elisabeth Darroer in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-nine-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Marie, her sister, 21 years old; Suzanne, her sister, 19 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth II), her sister, 11 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.253 | Marie | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1767 | Magdeleine Trahan | Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois) | Married Mathurin Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Joseph Aucoin and Marie Hébert. | Joseph Firmin (baptized April 28, 1794; buried September 27, 1794), Désiré (Deseado) Mathurin Jean (born March 26, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Elisabeth (Elizabet I), her twenty-three-year-old sister, Susanne, her eighteen-year-old sister, and Isabelle (Elizabet II), her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Marie Darroer in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Elizabeth, her sister, 29 years old; Suzanne, her sister, 19 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth II), her sister, 11 years old. She and her family appear to have been residents of Assumption Parish, La., in 1803. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 36. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.254 | Susanne (Suzanne) | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1769 | Morlaix, France | Magdeleine Trahan | Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois) | Married Fabien Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Joseph Aucoin and Marie Josèphe Hébert. | Marguerite Suzanne (Susana) (born February 5, 1800), Fabien Alexis (Fabian Alexos) (born March 12, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Elisabeth (Elizabet I), her twenty-three-year-old sister, Marie, her twenty-year-old sister, and Isabelle (Elizabet II), her ten-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Suzanne Darroer in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Elisabeth, her sister, 29 years old; Marie, her sister, 21 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth II), her sister, 11 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 37. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.255 | Élizabet (II) (Élizabeth, Élisabeth, Isabelle) | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1777 | Magdeleine Trahan | Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Elisabeth (Elizabet I), her twenty-three-year-old sister, Marie, her twenty-year-old sister, Susanne, and her eighteen-year-old sister. Her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty-five barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Isabelle Darroer in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Elisabeth, her sister, 29 years old; Marie, her sister, 21 years old; and Suzanne, her sister, 19 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.256 | Pierre | Terriot (Theriot) | 06/01/1742 | Marguerite Landry | Cyprien Terriot (Theriot) | Married (1) Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Trahan, daughter of Joseph Trahan and Elizabeth Terriot, at St. Martin Parish, Morlaix, France, January 28, 1766. Terriot was a widower at the time of his departure from France. Married (2) Marie Daigle, the daughter of Acadians, at Ascension Parish, La., September 28, 1786. The marriage certificate was witnessed by François Xavier Robichaud. Marie Daigle was the widow of Jean Baptiste Boudrot. Married (3) Luce Breau at Ascension Parish, June 21, 1790. | First marriage: Marie Marguerite (born December 8, 1766); Pierre (Pierre Marie) (born July 7, 1769); Marie Jeanne (born August 31, 1771); Joseph Marie (born July 7, 1773; interred July 11, 1777); Augustin (baptized July 19, 1775; interred February 1, 1776); Anne Marie (baptized February 7, 1777); Marie Rose (baptized December 21, 1778; interred February 21, 1781); Similien (baptized October 13, 1781; interred October 5, 1783) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his son Pierre. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included Marie Daigle, his wife, Pierre Terriot (Theriot), his son, 18 years old; and Jean Boudrot, her son, 15 years old. Pierre Terriot (Theriot) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Pierre Teriot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Daigle, his wife, 47 years old; Pierre Terriot (Teriot), his son, 19 years old; Bpidrpt, his son, 14 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:692; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record." | 1.785 | paretteur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.257 | Pierre | Terriot (Theriot, Teriot) | 07/07/1769 | Finistère, France | Elizabeth Trahan | Pierre Theriot (Terriot) | Married Anne Marie Julienne Hébert, daughter of Pierre Hébert and Luce Bourg, at Ascension Parish, Louisiana, February 13, 1792. Charles Gauterot and Pedro Monte witnessed the marriage record. | Ambroise Bernard (born 1793); Charles Celestin (Angel) (born November 2, 1795); Louis (born September 22, 1797); Ursin (born January 19, 1800); Joseph Gilbert (born May 24, 1801); Rosalie Reine (born October 1, 1803); Constant Mathurin (born February 11, 1805); Marie Carmelite (born September 8, 1806); Théotiste Carmelite (born July 28, 1809); Anne Elise (January 18, 1811) | Thomas LeBlanc and Elizabeth Terriot served as his godparents. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Terriot (Theriot), his father, and Marie Daigle, his stepmother. The household also included Jean Boudrot, identified in the census as his fifteen-year-old stepbrother. Identified in the 1789 census as Pierre Teriot. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old member of Pierre Terriot's (Teriot's) household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Marie Daigle, his forty-seven-year-old stepmother, and Jean Boudrot, evidently his fifteen-year-old stepbrother. The December 1795 census of the Valenzuela District (in present-day Assumption Parish) indicates that twenty-six-year-old Pierre Terriot was living with twenty-three-year-old Anne Hébert and two children. The 1797 census of Valenzuela indicates that Pierre Terriot, then twenty-seven years of age, was living with his wife, Anne Hébert, aged 27 years, and his two sons, aged four and three years of age. The 1798 census of the Lafourche region indicates that Pierre Terriot, aged 28 years, was living with his twenty-four-year-old wife, Anne Hébert, and his son Ambroise, four years of age, and Celestin, two years of age. Terriot's household also included Julienne, his orphaned seventeen-year-old sister-in-law. The 1810 census of Ascension Parish indicates that Terriot's household included two males nine years of age or below and one male between the ages of twenty-six and forty-four. The household also included three females nine years of age or below and one female between the ages of sixteen and twenty-five. The 1840 census of Assumption Parish indicates that his household included one person a male between the ages of seventy and seventy-nine. | He died at the age of eighty-five years, ca. June 30, 1854. His burial record maintains that he was ninety years of age at the time of death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Theriot and Elizabeth Trahan." | Sat, Jul 8, 1769 | 1.785 | 30/06/1854 | Morlaix, Finistère, France | Assumption Parish, Louisiana | Cyprien Terriot and Marguerite Landry | Joseph Trahan and Elizabeth Terriot (Theriot) | St. Elizabeth Church, Paincourtville, Assumption Parish | NULL | |||||||
2.258 | Jean (Jean Baptiste) | Trahan | 01/01/1736 | Élizabeth (Élisabeth) Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Trahan | Married Magdeleine Hébert. | Michel (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767), Marie Louise (born 1769), Félicité (born 1771) | Deported to England. He and his family occupied farm no. 42 at the village of Bormanahic, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Identified in the passenger manifest as the head of a household including his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the sixty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included Magdeleine Hébert, his sixty-six-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned fifty semi-wild beef cattle and six tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.785 | laboureur | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.259 | Magdeleine | Hébert | 01/01/1738 | Married Jean Trahan. | Michel (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767), Marie Louise (born 1769), Félicité (born 1771) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.260 | Michel | Trahan | 01/01/1764 | Magdeleine Hébert | Jean Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.261 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1767 | Magdeleine Hébert | Jean Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.262 | Félicité | Trahan | 01/01/1771 | Magdeleine Hébert | Jean Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.263 | Pierre | La Bove (La Bauve, Labove) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Saulnier (Sonnier) | Jean La Bauve | Married (1) Madeleine Brun (LeBrun). Married (2) Anne (Jeanne) Bonfils. | Resided in Morlaix, Brittany, after his arrival in France. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and stepson. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jeanne Bonfils, his wife, 41 years old; and Jean Dugat (Dugas), his stepson, 13 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. His name is rendered as Pierre La Bauve in the 1789 census fo the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Jeanne Bonfils (Baufils), his wife, and Jean Dugas (Duga), his stepson. La Bove and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36.General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.264 | Anne (Jeanne) | Bonfils | 01/01/1753 | Marie Sevin | François Bonfils | Married (1) (?) Dugat. Married (2) Pierre La Bauve (La Bove, Labove). | First marriage: Jean Dugat (Dugas) (born 1772) | Resided at Morlaix, Brittany, following her arrival in France. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and son. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Pierre La Bauve (Labove). In addition to her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Jean Dugat (Dugas), a thirteen-year-old son by a previous marriage. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. Her name is rendered as Jeanne Baufils in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the spouse of Pierre La Bove (La Bauve). Her name is difficult to read, but appears to be 48 years old age. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Jean Dugat (Duga), her son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.265 | Jean | Dugat (Dugas) | 01/01/1772 | Anne (Jeanne) Bonfils | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his mother and stepfather. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre La Bauve (Labove), his forty-seven-year-old stepfather, and Jeanne (Anne) Bonfils, his forty-one-year-old mother. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.266 | Jean Batiste (Baptiste, Charles Baptiste) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1760 | England | Anastasie Bellemère | Jean Baptiste Boudrot | Married Marguerite Bedin (Bedel, Bedoin, Bevel). | Jean Baptiste (born 1783), Jean Charles (born 1785), Laurent (baptized February 17, 1787), Marie Léonore (born August 13, 1791), Marugerite (born December 12, 1793), Jean Baptiste II (born March 20, 1796), buried September 13, 1798), Elise Rosalie (a twin) (born February 3, 1798) | Born in England during the Grand Dérangement. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two sons. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite Bedin (Bedel), his wife, 27 years old; and Laurent Boudrau (Boudrot), his son, 10 years old. (According to local ecclesiastical records, Laurent Boudrau was actually only one year old.) Jean Baptiste Boudrau (Boudrot) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jean Baptiste Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household including Marguerite (Margritta), his twenty-eight-year-old spouse, and Laurent, his eleven-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine barrels of corn and two hogs. | His death record maintains that he was forty years of age at the time of his death. The record also indicates incorrectly that he and his wife were natives of Acadia. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114, 115; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111, 112, 114-116. | 1.785 | 03/08/1799 | Assumption Parish, La. | driller | NULL | |||||||||||
2.267 | Marguerite (Margritta) | Bedin (Bedel, Bevel) | 01/01/1762 | Married Jean Baptiste Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Jean Baptiste (born 1783), Jean Charles (born 1785), Laurent (baptized February 17, 1787), Marie Léonore (born August 13, 1791), Marugerite (born December 12, 1793), Jean Baptiste II (born March 20, 1796), buried September 13, 1798), Elise Rosalie (a twin) (born February 3, 1798) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and two children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old member of a household including Jean Baptiste Boudrau (Boudrot), her twenty-eight-year-old husband and the head of the household, and Laurent Baudrau (Boudrot), her ten-year-old son. (According to local ecclesiastical records, Laurent Baudrau was actually onely one year old.) She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Margritta, wife of Jean Baptiste Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Boudrot (Boudereau). In addition to herself and her twenty-nine-year-old husband, the household included Laurent Boudrot (Boudereau), her eleven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-nine barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 114, 115, 116; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.268 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1783 | Marguerite Bedin (Baudin?) | Jean Baptiste Boudrau | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and one sibling. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.269 | Jean Charles | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1785 | Marguerite Bedin (Baudin?) | Jean Baptiste Boudrau | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and one sibling. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.270 | Honnoré (Honoré) | Commau (Comeaux) | 01/01/1718 | Married (1) Marguerite Poirier. Married (2) Anastasie Belmer (Bellemère). | Occupied farm no. 39 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two stepsons. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.271 | Anastasie | Belmer (Bellemère) | Veuve Comeau | St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Landry | Jacques Bellemère | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Boudrot. Married (2) Honnoré (Honoré) Commau (Comeaux). | First marriage: Joseph Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) (born 1768), Charles Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) (born 1771) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Honnoré and two sons. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a widow and the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Joseph Boudrau (Boudrot), her twenty-one-year-old son, and Charles Boudrau (Boudrot), her nineteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and one hog. Identified as Anasthasie, Veuve Comeau, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Joseph, her twenty-one-year-old son, and Charles, her twenty-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn and one hog. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:10; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.272 | Joseph | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1768 | Anastasie Belmer | Jean Baptiste Boudrau (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his stepfather, mother, and one sibling. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of a household including Anastasie Belmer, the head of the household and his forty-seven-year-old mother, and Charles Boudrau (Boudrot), his nineteen-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of the household including Anasthasie, Veuve Comeau, his forty-eight-year-old mother, and Charles, his twenty-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.273 | Charles | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1771 | Anastasie Belmer | Jean Baptiste Boudrau (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his stepfather, mother, and one sibling. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of a household including Anastasie Belmer, the head of the household and his forty-seven-year-old mother, and Joseph Boudrau (Boudrot), his twenty-one-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of a household headed by Anasthasie, Veuve Comeau, his forty-eight-year-old mother. The household also included his twenty-one-year-old brother Joseph. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.274 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1734 | Madeleine Landry | Jacques Hébert | Married Marie Benoît (Benoist). | Joseph (born 1761), Marie (born 1763), Sophie (born 1770) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, three children, and a niece, Sophie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included Marie Benoît, his fifty-one-year-old wife, and Sophie Benoît, his nine-year-old niece. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels o corn, two cows, one horse, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.275 | Marie | Benoît | 01/01/1737 | Madeleine Terriot | Charles Benoît (Benoist) | Married (1) René Rassicot. Married (2) Joseph Hébert. | Joseph (born 1761), Marie (born 1763), Sophie (born 1770) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-servan, 1761-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, three children, and eight-year-old Sophie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Hébert. In addition to herself and her fifty-six-year-old husband, the household included Sophie Benoît, her nine-year-old niece. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.276 | Joseph | Hébert | fils | 01/01/1761 | Marie Benoît | Joseph Hébert | Married Marie Jeanne (Jeanneton) Durambourg (Durembourg, De Rambourg), a native of Acadia, at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1786. | Marie Louise (born January 27, 1798) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, and Sophie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | identified as Joseph Hébert, fils, in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Jeanne (Jeanneton) Durembourg, his twenty-year-old spouse. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Joseph Hébert, fils, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Jeanne Durambourg, his twenty-five-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and eleven hogs. He appears to have been the thirty-seven-year-old Joseph Hébert identified as the first sergeant of the Lafourche District militia in an 1800 cumulatie service sheet. If this is indeed the individual, then his service record indicates that he was a native of Louisbourg, Acadia. He was deemed to have only "mediocre ability." He enjoyed robust health. His service record indicates that he had "volunteered" for service on January 12, 1780. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:363, 369; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Cumulative Service Record, 1800, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.785 | Baptiste Hébert and Marie Richard | tanneur | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.277 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1763 | Marie Benoît | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, and Sophie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.278 | Sophie | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | St. Malo, France | Marie Benoît | Joseph Hébert | Married Mathurin Commau (Comeau, Como) at New Orleans, October 23, 1785. | Marie Élisabeth (born 1788) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, and Sophie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the eighteen-year-old spouse of Mathurin Commau. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Mathurin Commau (Como). In addition to herself and her twenty-eight-year-old husband, the household included Marie Elisabeth, her one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nineteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:113. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.279 | Sophie | Benoît | 01/01/1777 | Anne Marie Haché(?) | Jean Charles Benoît (Benoist)(?) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Joseph Hébert and Marie Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Appears to have been identified as a nine-year-old member of the Lafourche District household of Joseph Hébert and Marie Benoît, 1789. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.280 | Honnoré (Honoré) | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1735 | Cécile Henry | Ignace Caret (Carret) | Married Françoise Benoît. | Pierre (born 1761) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759; and at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1760-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Françoise, his son Pierre, Madeleine Theriot (Terriot), and Victoire Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was he was the seventy-year-old head of a household that included Françoise Benoît, his forty-two-year-old wife, and VIctoire Benoît, his fourteen-year-old niece. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. Identified as Honoré Carret in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-one-year-old head of a household that included Franoise Benoît, his forty-three-year-old wife, and Victoire Benoît, his fifteen-year-old niece. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.281 | Françoise | Benoît | 01/01/1745 | Marie Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Charles Benoît | Married Honnoré (Honoré) Caret (Carret). | Pierre (born 1761) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with is her husband Honnoré (Honoré), her son Pierre, Madeleine Theriot (Terriot), and Victoire Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Honoré Caret. In addition to herself, her household included her seventy-year-old husband and Victoire Benoît, her fourteen-year-old niece. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old wife of Honoré Carret. In addition to herself and her seventy-one-year-old husband, the household included Victoire Benoît, her fifteen-year-old niece. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.282 | Pierre | Caret | 01/01/1761 | Madeleine Theriot (Terriot) | Honnoré Caret | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, Madeleine Theriot (Terriot), and Victoire Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.283 | Victoire (Victoire Marie) | Benoît | 01/01/1771 | Marie Madeleine Gauterot | Augustin Benoît | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Honnoré Caret and Françoise Benoît, evidently her aunt. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Honoré Caret and Françoise Benoît, her aunt and uncle. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Honoré Caret (Carret) and Françoise Benoît, her aunt and uncle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.284 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1719 | Madeleine Comeau | Pierre Trahan | Married (1) Marguerite LeBlanc. Married (2) Elisabeh Darois. Married (3) Marie Clemensau (Clemenzau, Clémenceau). | Louise Rennee (possibly Renée, but probably Reine, a common given name at that time) | Deported to Liverpool, England. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie and his daughter Louise Rennée. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-year-old head of a household that included Marie Clemensau (Clémence, Clemenzau), his thirty-four-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-one-year-old head of a household that included Marie Clemensau (Clémence, Clemenzau), his thirty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.285 | Marie | Clemensau (Clemenzau , Clémence, ClemensEau) | 01/01/1753 | Françoise Gauterot | Jean Clemensau (Clemenseau) | Married Pierre Trahan. | Louise Rennee (possibly Renée, but probably Reine, a common given name at that time) | Deported to England. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Pierre Trahan and her daughter Louise Rennée (Renée). Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Trahan. She and her seventy-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Marie Clémence in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old wife of Pierre Trahan. She and her seventy-one-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.286 | Louise Rennée (Renée) | Trahan | 01/01/1783 | Marie Clemenzau (Clemensau) | Pierre Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.287 | Jean Bte. (Jean Baptiste) | Daigle (Daigre, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1737 | Married Marie Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Joseph (born 1774), Anne (born 1770; married January 27, 1790) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie and two sons. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | On January 27, 1790, ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were members "of the new establishment of Acadians from France." | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 31. | 1.785 | finisher / trimmer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.288 | Marie | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1735 | Married Jean Baptiste Daigle. | Joseph (born 1774), Anne (born 1770; married January 27, 1790) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Jean Baptiste and her children Joseph and Anne. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | On January 27, 1790, ecclesiastical records indicate that she and her husband were members "of the new establishment of Acadians from France." | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 31. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.289 | Joseph | Daigle | 01/01/1771 | Marie Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Jean Baptiste Daigle | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and his sister Anne. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fourteen-year-old head of a household consisting of himself and his sister Anne (Annette). They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifteen-year-old head of a household that included Anne Daigle, his sister. He and his sibling occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.290 | Anne (Annette) | Daigle | 01/01/1770 | Marie Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Jean Baptiste Daigle | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and her brother Joseph. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of a household consisting of herself and her fourteen-year-old brother Joseph. She and her brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned twelve barrels of corn, one cow, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a member of the household headed by Joseph Daigle, her fifteen-year-old brother. (Her own age is not indicated in the census report.) She and her brother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.291 | Atanase (Athanase) | Bourque | 01/01/1740 | Marguerite Hébert | François Bourg | Married Luce Braud (Breaux). | Joseph (born 1772), Charles (born 1775), Marie Rose (born ca. 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Luce, his sons Joseph and Charles, and his daughter Marie Rose. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.292 | Luce | Braud (Breau, Breaux) | 01/01/1752 | Ursule Bourg | Joseph Braud (Breaux) | Married Jean Baptiste Daigle. | Joseph (born 1772), Charles (born 1775), Marie Rose (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Suilac, Brittany, 1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. (She and her family are also listed in the passenger manifest of the Amitié.) Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Atanase, her sons Joseph and Charles, and her daughter Marie Rose. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.293 | Joseph | Bourque | 01/01/1772 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, his brother Charles, and his sister Marie Rose. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.294 | Charles | Bourque | 01/01/1775 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, his brother Joseph, and his sister Marie Rose. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one middle-aged or elderly man and one middle-aged or elderly woman. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.295 | Marie Rose | Bourque | 01/01/1785 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana his her parents and her brothers Joseph and Charles. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.296 | Mathurin | Commau (Comeaux, Como) | 01/01/1760 | Marie Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Simon Comeau (?) | Married Sophie Hébert. | Marie Élisabeth (born 1788) | Deported to England. Subsequently resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1764-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The ship's manifest indicates that he was traveling alone (i.e., without wife or children). Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Mathurin Como in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household including Sophie Hébert, his eighteen-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. His name is rendered as Mathurin Como in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household including Sophie, his nineteen-year-old wife, and Marie Elisabeth, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nineteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.297 | Marie | Trahan | fille | 01/01/1765 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The passenger manifest indicates that she traveled alone. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.298 | Charles | LeBlanc | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Madeleine (Magdeleine) Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Claude André LeBlanc | Married (1) Anne Benoît. Married (2) Rosalie Trahan. | Pierre Honnoré (Honoré) (born 1766), André (born 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1764), Marie Françoise (born 1769), Barbe (born 1773) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1762-1773. Occupied farm no. 48 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Rosalie; his sons Pierre Honnoré, André, Jean Baptiste; and daughters Marie Rose, Marie Françoise, and Barbe. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie Trahan, his wife, 42 years old; Pierre LeBlanc, his son, 22 years old; André LeBlanc, his son, 20 years old; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, his son, 2 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, his daughter, 23 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, his daughter, 18 years old; and Barbe LeBlanc, his daughter, 14 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie, his wife, 43 years old; Pierre, his son, 25 years old; André, his son, 21 years old; Jean Baptiste, his son, 3 yeasrs old; Marie Rose, his daughter, 24 years old; Françoise, his daughter, 19 years old; and Barbe, his daughter, 15 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 barrels of corn, two horses, and sixteen cows. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:87; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.299 | Rosalie | Trahan | 01/01/1745 | Marie Tillard | Claude Trahan | Married Charles LeBlanc. | Pierre Honnoré (Honoré) (born 1766), André (born 1767), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1764), Marie Françoise (born 1769), Barbe (born 1773) | French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux note that her family was "completely dispersed." Her brother, Augustin Trahan, resided at Boulogne-sur-Mer, France, during the period of exile; her sister, Elisabeth Trahan, married at Rochefort, France; Rosalie Trahan, on the other hand, married at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Charles; his sons Pierre Honnoré, André, Jean Baptiste; and daughters Marie Rose, Marie Françoise, and Barbe. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Charles LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: Charles LeBlanc, her husband, 53 years old; Pierre LeBlanc, her son, 22 years old; André LeBlanc, her son, 20 years old; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, her son, 2 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, her daughter, 23 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, her daughter, 18 years old; Barbe LeBlanc, her daughter, 14 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Charles LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old household, the household included the following persons: Pierre, her son, 25 years old; André, her son, 21 years old; Jean Baptiste, her son, 3 years old; Marie Rose, her daughter, 24 years old; Françoise, her daughter, 19 years old; and Barbe, her daughter, 15 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 barrels of corn, two horses, and sixteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.300 | Pierre Honnoré (Honoré) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1766 | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included the following persons: André LeBlanc, his brother, 20 years; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, his brother, 2 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, his sister, 23 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, her daughter, 18 years old; and Barbe LeBlanc, his sister, 14 years old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included the following siblings: André, 21years old; Jean Baptiste, 3 years old; Marie Rose, 24 years old; Françoise, 19 years old; and Barbe, 15 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.301 | André | LeBlanc | 01/01/1767 | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included the following persons: Pierre LeBlanc, his brother, 22 years old; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, his brother, 2 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, his sister, 23 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, his sister, 18 years old; and Barbe LeBlanc, his sister, 14 years old. He and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Pierre, his brother, 25 years old; Jean Baptiste, his brother, 3 years old; Marie Rose, his sister, 24 yeares old; Françoise, his sister, 19 years old; and Barbe, his sister, 15 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.302 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1785 | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a two-year-old member of his parents' household. The household also included the following persons: Pierre LeBlanc, his brother, 22 years old; André LeBlanc, his brother, 20 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, his sister, 23 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, his sister, 18 years old; and Barbe LeBlanc, his sister, 14 years old. He and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a three-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Pierre, his brother, 25 years old; André, his brother, 21 years old; Marie Rose, his sister, 24 years old; Françoise, his sister, 19 years old; and Barbe, his sister, 15 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.303 | Marie Rose | LeBlanc | 01/01/1764 | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Marired Théodore Bourg, son of Théodore Bourg and Anne Granger, at Assumption Parish, La., March 3, 1794. | Rosalie Anne (born September 2, 1795), Magdeleine Constance (born November 30, 1796), Joseph Paul (baptized December 25, 1798), Mathurin Benoît (born March 21, 1799), Marcelin Grégoire (born May 9, 1801) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of her parents' household. The household also included the following persons: Pierre LeBlanc, her brother, 22 years old; André LeBlanc, her brother, 20 years old; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, her brother, 2 years old; Françoise LeBlanc, her sister, 18 years old; and Barbe LeBlanc, her sister, 14 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-four-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Pierre, her brother, 25 years old; André, her brother, 21 years old; Jean Baptiste, her brother, 3 years old; Françoise, her sister, 19 years old; and Barbe, her sister, 15 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123, 124, 125, 126, 128. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.304 | Marie Françoise (Françoise) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1769 | St. Malo, France | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Married Jean Baptiste Boudrot, a native of St. Malo, and the son of Victor Boudrot and Josèphe Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., November 30, 1793. | Jean Baptiste (born June 24, 1796), Théodore (born June 14, 1798) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included: Pierre LeBlanc, her brother, 22 years old; André LeBlanc, her broher, 20 years old; Jean Baptiste LeBlanc, her brother, 2 years old; Marie Rose LeBlanc, her sister, 23 years old; and Françoise LeBlanc, 18 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Pierre, her brother, 25 years old; André, her brother, 21 years old; Jean Baptiste, her brother, 3 years old; Marie Rose, her sister, 24 years old; and Barbe, her sister, 15 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114, 118. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.305 | Barbe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1773 | Rosalie Trahan | Charles LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included the following persons: Pierre, her brother, 25 years old; André, her brother, 21 years old; Jean Baptiste, her brother, 3 years old; Marie Rose, her sister, 24 years old; and Françoise, her sister, 19 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.306 | Joseph Philipe (Philippe, Phillippe) | Henry | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Trahan | Pierre Henry | Married Marie Tibodau (Thibodeaux). | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 17l59-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie and two stepchildren. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household including Marie Tibodau (Thibodeaux), his thirty-year-old wife, and Nicolas Métra (Mesrat), his five-year-old stepson. Philippe Henry and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.307 | Marie | Tibodau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1753 | Hélène Gauterot | Pierre Thibodeau | Married (1) Nicolas Métra. Married (2) Joseph Philipe (Philippe) Henry. | First marriage: Nicolas (born 1782), Joseph (born ca. 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Joseph Philipe (Philippe) Henry and two sons from her first marriageq. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.308 | Nicolas | Métra | 01/01/1783 | Marie Tibodau (Thibodeaux) | Nicolas Métra | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his stepfather, mother, and one sibling. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of the household of Philippe Henry, his stepfather, and Marie Tibodau (Thibodeaux), his mother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.309 | Joseph | Métra | 01/01/1785 | Marie Tibodau (Thibodeaux) | Nicolas Métra | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his stepfather, mother, and one sibling. The passenger manifest indicates that he was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.310 | Jean | Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1748 | Hélène Gauterot | Pierre Thibodeau | Married (1) Françoise Heure (Haire) of France. Married (2) Marie Dugat (Dugas). | First marriage: Jacques (born 1767), Marie (Manette) (born 1771) Second marriage: Marie (born 1787) | Deported to England. Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie, his son Jacques, his daughter Marie, and Elizabet (Elizabeth) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), the widow Bourbon. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household including Marie Dugat (Dugas), his twenty-one-year-old spouse, Jacques Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his twenty-one-year-old son, Manette (Marie) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his sixteen-year-old daughter, and Marie Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his one-year-old daughter. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Jean Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Dugas (Duga), his twenty-two-year-old wife, Jacques, his twenty-two-year-old son, Manette, his seventeen-year-old daughter, and Marie, his two-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Theyowned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 96. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.311 | Marie | Dugas (Duga, Dugat) | 01/01/1767 | Françoise Durand | Michel Dugas | Married (2) Jean Thibodau (Thibodeaux). | Marie (born 1787), Jacques, Elizabet (Élizabeth) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Jean, her son Jacques, her daughter Marie, and Elizabet (Elizabeth) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), the widow Bourbon. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Thibodau (Thibodeaux). In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included Jacques Thibodau (Thibodeaux), her twenty-one-year-old stepson, Manette (Marie) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), her sixteen-year-old stepdaughter, and Marie Thibodau (Thibodeaux), her one-year-old daughter. Marie Dugat (Dugas) and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Marie Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Thibodau (Thibeaudeau). In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, the household included Jacques Thibodau, her twenty-two-year-old stepson, Manette Thibodau (Thibeaudeau), her seventeen-year-old stepdaughter, and Marie Thibodau (Thibeaudeau), her two-year-old daughter. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.312 | Jacques (Jacques Joseph Nicolas) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1767 | Françoise Heure (Hébert) | Jean Tibodau (Thibodeaux) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, his sister Marie, and Elizabet (Elizabeth) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), the widow Bourbon. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of the household of Jean Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his father, and Marie Dugat (Dugas), his stepmother. The household also included Manette (Marie) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his sixteen-year-old sister, and Marie Thibodau (Thibodeaux), his one-year-old sister. Identified as Jacques Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included his stepmother, his sister Manette, and his half-sister Marie. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | caulker | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.313 | Marie (Manette) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1771 | Brittany, France | Françoise Heure (Hébert) | Jean Tibodau (Thibodeaux) | Married François Boudrot, son of Amant Boudrot and Marie Coullard, at Assumption Parish, La., September 3, 1793. | Anne Marie (Ana María) (born September 17, 1797) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, her brother Jacques, and Elizabet (Elizabeth) Thibodau (Thibodeaux), the widow Bourbon. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Jean Thibodau, her father, and Marie Dugat (Dugas), her stepmother. Jacques Thibodau, her twenty-one-year-old brother, and Marie Thibodau, her one-year-old sister, constituted the other members of the household. Identified as Manette Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Marie Dugat, her stepmother, Jacques, her twenty-two-year-old brother, and Marie, her two-year-old half-sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.314 | Elizabet (Élizabeth) | Thibodau (Thibodeaux) | Veuve Bourbon | 01/01/1745 | Hélène Gauterot(?) | Pierre Thibodeau(?) | Married Jacques Bourbon. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Jean Thibodau (Thibodeaux) and Marie Dugat (Dugas). Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.315 | Ignace (Ygnace) | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1749 | Cécile Henry | Ignace Caret (Carret) | Married Madeleine (Marie Madeleine) Clemensau (Clémenceau, Clemenzau). | Jean (Jean Eustache) (born 1771), Marie (born 1778), Eustache (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1760-1773. Occupied farm no. 57 at the Ligne Acadienne in Poitou Province, France, 1774. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | He died sometime prior to the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.316 | Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) | Clemenzau (Clémenceau) | Veuve Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1751 | Françoise Gauterot | Jean Clemenceau | Married Ignace Caret (Carret). She was a widow in 1788. | Jean (Jean Eustache) (born 1771), Marie (born 1778), Eustache (born ca. 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Ignace, her sons Eustach and Jean, and her daughter Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household including Eustache Caret, her seventeen-year-old son, and Marie Caret, her eight-year-old daughter. She and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and three hogs. Identified as Magdelaine Clémence, Veuve Carret, in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Eustache (Ustache) Caret (Carret), her seventeen-year-old son, and Marie Caret (Carret), her nine-year-old daughter. She and her children occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels or corn and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.317 | Eustache | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1785 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Clemensau (Clemenzau) | Ignace Caret | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that he was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | This infant appears to have died before the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La., for he is not listed in his mother's household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.318 | Jean (commonly called Eustache) (Ustache) | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1771 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Clemensau (Clemenzau) | Ignace Caret | Married Marie Boudrot, daughter of Louis Boudrot and Perpetue Dugat, at Assumption Parish, La., March 30, 1796. Ambroise Dugat and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his mother's household. In additio to himself and his mother, the household included Marie Caret, his eight-year-old sister. Identified as Ustache Carret in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his mother's household. In addition to himself and his mother, the household included Marie Carret, his nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:178; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.319 | Marie (Marie Josèphe) | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1778 | St. Martin Parish, Nantes, France | Magdeleine Clemensau (Clemenzau) | Ignace Caret | Identified as Marie Josèphe Caret in her 1802 marriage record. Married Fermin (Firmin) Guédry (Guidry), also a native of St. Martin Parish, Nantes, France, and the son of Pierre Guédry and Marie Josèphe Lebert, at Assumption Parish, La., January 18, 1802. Ambroise Hébert and Joseph LeJeune witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old membe of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Eustache Caret, her seventeen-year-old brother. Identified as Marie Carret in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself and her mother, the household included Eustache (Ustache) Caret (Carret), her seventeen-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:178; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.320 | Pierre (Pierre François) | Le Coq (LeCoq) | 01/01/1745 | Madeleine Laurant | Jacques Le Coq (LeCoq) | Married Isabelle Vincent. | Marie (born 1774), Guillaume (born 1776), Victoire (born 1784), Françoise (born 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.321 | Isabelle (Ysabelle) | Vincent | 01/01/1757 | Euphrosine Duon (Duhon) | Charles Vincent | Married Pierre le Coq. | Marie (born 1774), Guillaume (born 1776), Victoire (born 1784), Françoise (born 1785) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.322 | Marie | Le Coq | 01/01/1774 | Isabelle Vincent | Pierre Le Coq | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.323 | Guillaume | Le Coq | 01/01/1776 | Isabelle Vincent | Pierre Le Coq | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.324 | Victoire | Le Coq | 01/01/1784 | Isabelle Vincent | Pierre Le Coq | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.325 | Françoise | Le Coq | 01/01/1785 | Isabelle Vincent | Pierre Le Coq | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that she was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 45. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.326 | Michel | Levron | 01/01/1730 | Françoise La Bauve | Jean Baptiste Levron | Married Marguerite Trahan. | Joseph Marie (born 1768), Marie (born 1763) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.327 | Marguerite (Marguerite Josèphe) | Trahan | 01/01/1735 | Marguerite Melanson (Melançon) | René Trahan | Married Michel Levron. | Joseph Marie (born 1768), Marie (born 1763) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and two children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.328 | Joseph Marie (Jean Marie) | Levron | 01/01/1768 | Diocese of Leon (Lyon?) | Marguerite Trahan | Michel Levron | Married Julie Genoviève Dantin, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Louis Dantin and Jeanne Comeau, at Assumption Parish, La., February 28, 1802. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and his sister Marie. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:487. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.329 | Marie Josèphe Françoise | Levron (LeBron, Levrot) | Boulogne, Picardy, France | Marguerite Trahan | Michel Levron | Married Alexis Daigle, son of Alexandre Daigle and Elizabeth Granger, at Ascension Parish, La. Their marriage record was witnessed by François Landry. | Joseph Alexandre (born November 11, 1788), Charles Marie (born March 22, 1790), Jean Baptiste (born April 5, 1792), Joseph Silvestre (born September 13, 1794), Claire Clarisse (born ca. 1796), Mathurin Pascal (born March 25, 1799), Pierre Michel (born November 2, 1800), Marie Scholastique (born July 18, 1803) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and her brother Joseph Marie. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Daigle [sic], who was also twenty-five-years old. She and her husband owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They also owned fifteen barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Marie Levrot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Daigle. She and her twenty-six-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one horse, and ten hogs. | She died sometime before 1810. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:212; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Alexis Mathurin Daigle and Marie Josèphe Françoise Levron." | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.330 | Eustache | Trahan | 01/01/1745 | Marguerite Melanson (Melançon) | René Trahan | Married Marie LeBlanc, a native of Grand Pré, Nova Scotia (Acadia). | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.331 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1727 | Grand Pré, Nova Scotia (Acadia) | Married (1) Cyprien Le Prince (LePrince). Married (2) Eustache Trahan. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.332 | Marin | Trahan | 01/01/1745 | Married (1) Madeleine LeBlanc. Married (2) Marguerite Ino (Duon?). | Jean Baptiste (born 1764), Jean Marie (born 1777), François (born 1768), Magdeleine (born 1762), Marguerite (born 1770), Barbe (born 1774) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.333 | Marguerite | Ino (Duon?) | 01/01/1745 | Married Marin Trahan. | Jean Baptiste (born 1764), Jean Marie (born 1777), François (born 1768), Magdeleine (born 1762), Marguerite (born 1770), Barbe (born 1774) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.334 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Trahan | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Ino | Marin Trahan | Married Marie Magdeleine Pinel (Pinette), daughter of Charles Pinel (Pinette) and Anne (Marion?) Durel (Durell), at Ascension Parish, La., January 6, 1789. Eustache Trahan and Jean Baptiste Daigle witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Marie Trahan, his twelve-year-old brother, Jean François Trahan, his eight-year-old brother; Marguerite Trahan, his sixteen-year-old sister; and Elisabeth Trahan, his sister whose age appears to have been thirteen years. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie Pinette (Pitot), his twenty-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-two barrels of corn, two horses, and eleven hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:705; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 97. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.335 | Jean Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1777 | Marguerite Ino | Marin Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of the household headed by Jean Baptiste Trahan, his twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included Jean François Trahan, his eight-year-old brother, Marguerite Trahan, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Elisabeth (Barbe) Trahan, his thirteen-year-old sister. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.336 | François (Jean François) | Trahan | 01/01/1778 | Marguerite Ino | Marin Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of the household headed by Jean Baptiste Trahan, his twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included Jean François Trahan, his eight-year-old brother, Marguerite Trahan, his sixteen-year-old sister, and Elisabeth (Barbe) Trahan, his thirteen-year-old sister. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.337 | Magdeleine | Trahan | 01/01/1762 | Marguerite Ino | Marin Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.338 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1770 | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Marin Trahan | Married André Aurocher. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of the household headed by Jean Baptiste Trahan, her twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included Jean Marie Trahan, her twelve-year-old brother, Jean François Trahan, her eight-year-old brother, and Elisabeth (Barbe) Trahan, her thirteen-year-old sister. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | 03/10/1796 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.339 | Barbe (Élisabeth) | Trahan | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Ino | Marin Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District as Elisabeth Trahan. The 1788 census indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of the household headed by Jean Baptiste Trahan, her twenty-three-year-old brother. The household also included Jean Marie Trahan, her twelve-year-old brother, Jean François Trahan, her eight-year-old brother, and Marguerite Trahan, her sixteen-year-old sister. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.340 | Charles | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1744 | Marie Josèphe Hébert | Charles Gauterot | Married Pélagie (Anne Pélagie) Trahan. | Charles (born 1769), Jean Marie (born 1778), Pierre Isidore (born 1771), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1785), Magdeleine (born 1767), Aspasie (probably Anastasie, sometimes called Nastasie) (born 1783) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Pélagie Trahan, his forty-three-year-old spouse, and the following children: Marie, his daughter, 20 years old; Anastasie (Nastasie), 4 years old; Jean Charles, his son, 22 years old; Jean Marie, his son, 10 years old; and Pierre, his son, 7 years old. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identifed as Charles Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included Pélagie Trahan, his forty-three-year-old wife, Marie, his twenty-one-year-old daughter, Jean Charles, his twenty-two-year-old son, Jean Marie, his eleven-year-old sn, Pierre, his seven-year-old son, and Nastasie, his five-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 224 barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twenty hogs. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On May 6, 1801, a Charles Gautrau sold a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi RIver. This property was bounded above by the land of Pierre Carmouche and below by the property of Jean Mayers. At the time of his death, Charles Gautrau's estate included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring twenty-five by fifteen feet. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy years of age at the time of his death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | 01/06/1837 | Ascension Parish, La. | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.341 | Pélagie (Anne Pélagie) | Trahan | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite Melanson (Melançon) | René Trahan | Married Charles Gautrau (Gauterot). | Charles (born 1769), Jean Marie (born 1778), Pierre (born 1771), Jean Baptiste (born ca. 1785), Magdeleine (born 1767), Aspasie (probably Anastasie, sometimes called Nastasie) (born 1783) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Gautrau (Gauterot), the forty-seven-year-old head of her household. In addition to herself and her husband, the household included Marie, her twenty-year-old daughter, Aspasie (Nastasie), her four-year-old daughter, Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old son, Jean Marie, her ten-year-old son, and Pierre, her seven-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Gautrau (Gautereau). In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old husband, the household included Marie, her twenty-one-year-old daughter, Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old son, Jean Marie, her eleven-year-old son, Pierre, her seven-year-old son, and Nastasie, her five-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents of land. They owned 224 barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and twenty hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.342 | Charles (Jean Charles) | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1766 | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his twenty-year-old sister, Nastasie (Aspasie), his four-year-old sister, Jean Marie, his ten-year-old brother, and Pierre, his seven-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Jean Charles Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie, his twenty-one-year-old siser, Jean Marie, his eleven-year-old brother, Pierre, his seven-year-old brother, and Nastasie, his five-year-old sister. He appears to have been the Charles Gautrau who was involved in a minor legal dispute with Patrick Conway in the early 1790s. Around October 5, 1792, brothers Charles and Jean Baptiste Gautrau (Gautros) filed a complaint with Commandant Louis Judice about Patrick Conway. According to the complaint, Conway's livestock annually caused considerable damage to the Gautrau brothers' crops. Every year, the brothers alleged, Conway promised to reimburse them for the damage, but he routinely reneged on his commitments. Responding to the complaint, Judice ordered an investigation by local militia members. The initial investigation determined that Conway's cattle had caused only minor damage. A second investigation following another complaint filed by Charles Gautrau around October 6, 1792, determined that Conway's herd had indeed caused significant crop damage. Investigators estimated the loss at four barrels of corn and four barrels of beans. On the night of October 7, 1792, Conways cattle entered Gautrau's fields yet again, prompting Judice to authorize Charles Gautrau to seize any of Conway's cattle that should enter his fields. Meanwhile, Patrick Conway traveled to New Orleans, evidently to avoid prosecution. On January 8, 1793, Judice asked the governor to intervene to force Conway to return to the Lafourche District to answer the charges against him. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Louis Judice to the governor, January 8, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:215-216vo. | 1.785 | poulieur | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.343 | Jean Marie | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1778 | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his twenty-year-old sister, Nastasie (Aspasie), his four-year-old sister, Jean Charles, his twenty-two-year-old brother, and Pierre, his seven-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Jean Marie Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven years old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his twenty-one-year-old sister, Jean Charles, his twenty-two-year-old brother, Pierre, his seven-year-old brother, and Nastasie, his five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.344 | Pierre (Pierre Isidore) | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1781 | Brittany, France | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Married Marie Rosalie Seville, daughter of René Seville and Anne Tassin, February 6, 1809. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his twenty-year-old sister, Nastasie (Aspasie), his four-year-old sister, Jean Charles, his twenty-two-year-old brother, and Jean Marie, his ten-year-old brother. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Pierre Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household also included Marie, his twenty-one-year-old sister, Jean Charles, his twenty-two-year-old brother, Jean Marie, his eleven-year-old brother, and Nastasie, his five-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.345 | Jean Bte (Baptiste) | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1785 | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that he was a nursing infant at the time of the voyage. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.346 | Magdeleine (Marie) | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1767 | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Nastasie (Aspasie), her four-year-old sister, Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Jean Marie, her ten-year-old brother, and Pierre, her seven-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Marie Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Jean Marie, her elevlen-year-old brother, Pierre, her seven-year-old brother, and Nastasie, her five-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.347 | Aspasie (Nastasie) | Gautrau (Gauterot, Gautereau) | 01/01/1783 | Pélagie Trahan | Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a four-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her twenty-year-old sister, Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Jean Marie, her ten-year-old brother, and Pierre, her seven-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned fifty barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Nastasie Gautereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household also included Marie, her twenty-one-year-old sister, Jean Charles, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Jean Marie, her eleven-year-old brother, and Pierre, her seven-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.348 | Joseph | Richard | 01/01/1746 | Married Anne Blanchard | Marie Élizabet (Élizabeth, Isabelle) (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his daughter Marie Elizabet (Elizabeth). Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Marie Isabelle (Marie Elizabeth) Richard, his twelve-year-old daughter. Joseph Richard and his daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included Marie Isabelle (Marie Elizabeth), his thirteen-year-old daughter. He and his daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On November 5, 1793, he joined with numerous Acadian Coast residents in signing a formal complaint regarding the failure of Gilbert de St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc to build and maintain levees on their properties. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Petition to Resolve the Flooding Problem Caused by the Neglected Lands Owned by St. Maxent, Pierre Part, and Pierre LeBlanc, November 5, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:283. | 1.785 | tonnelier | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.349 | Marie Élizabeth (Élizabet, Isabelle) | Richard | 01/01/1775 | Anne Blanchard | Joseph Richard | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her father. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twelve-year-old residing with Joseph Richard, her father and a thirty-nine-year-old widower. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old residing with Joseph Richard, her father and a twenty-nine-year-old widower. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.350 | Paul | Trahan | 01/01/1743 | Élizabeth (Élisabeth) Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Trahan | Married Marie Josèphe Trahan. | Paul (born 1769), Pierre (born 1780) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two sons. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.351 | Marie Josèphe | Trahan | 01/01/1741 | Marguerite Melanson (Melançon) | René Trahan | Married Paul Trahan. | Paul (born 1769), Pierre (born 1780) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and two sons. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.352 | Paul | Trahan | 01/01/1769 | Marie Josèphe Trahan | Paul Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and his brother Pierre. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.353 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1780 | Marie Josèphe Trahan | Paul Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and his brother Paul. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old orphan, evidently residing with the family of Charles Gautrau (Gauterot) and Pélagie Trahan. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 46; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.354 | Tranquille | Le Prince | 01/01/1722 | Married (1) Susanne Bourque. Married (2) Marie Josèphe (surname not indicated). | Isabelle (Ysabelle) (born 1755), Marguerite (born 1761) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two daughters. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the seventy-two-year-old head of a household that included Marie Josèphe, his sixty-year-old spouse, Isabelle, his twenty-seven-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margueritte), his twenty-six-year-old daughter. Tranquille Le Prince and his family occupied a small tract of land with only three arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.355 | Susanne | Bourque | 01/01/1728 | Married Tranquille Le Prince. | Isabelle (Ysabelle) (born 1755), Marguerite (born 1761) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and two daughters. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.356 | Isabelle (Ysabelle) | Le Prince | 01/01/1755 | Susanne Bourque | Tranquille Le Prince | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and her sister Marguerite. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-seven-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her seventy-two-year-old father, her household included Marie Josèphe, evidently her stepmother, and Marguerite (Margueritte), her twenty-six-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a small tract of land with only three arpents frontage. THey owned ten barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.357 | Marguerite | Le Prince | 01/01/1761 | Susanne Bourque | Tranquille Le Prince | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and her sister Isabelle. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-six-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her seventy-two-year-old father, the household included Marie Josèphe (surname not indicated), evidently her stepmother, and Isabelle Le Prince, her twenty-seven-year-old sister. Her family occupied a small tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of land, one cow, two horses, and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.358 | Charles | Richard | 01/01/1734 | Françoise Terriot (Theriot) | Michel Richard | Married Marie Josèphe Trahan. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household including Marie Trahan, his twenty-one-year-old wife. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, four horses, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Trahan, his twenty-two-year-old wife, and Marguerite (Margritta) Trahan, his fifty-five-year-old mother-in-law. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | tailor | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.359 | Marie Josèphe (Marie Jeanne) | Trahan | 01/01/1746 | Marguerite Trahan | Honoré Joseph Trahan | Married Charles Richard. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Charles Richard. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, four horses, and four hogs. Identified as Marie Trahan in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Charles Richard. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, the household included Marguerite (Maragritta) Trahan, her fifty-five-year-old mother. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.360 | Pierre | Trahan | 01/01/1757 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.361 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Trahan | 01/01/1751 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.362 | Thomas | LeBlanc | 01/01/1746 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:485. | 1.785 | 11/12/1786 | Ascension Parish, La. | tailor | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.363 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1748 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Appears to have been a forty-year-old member of François Landry's household in the Lafourche District, 1788. Other members of the household included: François Landry, Isabelle Landry, Luc Alexandre Landry, Marguerite Landry, Rosalie Landry, and Marie Richard. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a forty-year-old bachelor living with François Landry's family. In addition to himself, the household included the following persons: François Landry, 48 years old; Isabelle Landry, 19 years old; Alexandre Landry, 18 years old; Marguerite (Margritte) Landry, 12 years old; Rosalie Landry, 10 years old; and Marie (Mari) Richard, a spinster, 47 years old. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | employee | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.364 | Marguerite | Trahan | Veuve | 01/01/1736 | According to French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, she may have been the widow of Joseph Trahan. | Marie (born 1767), Augustine Pélagie (born 1773) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The St. Rémi departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the ship at Paimboeuf after traveling to that city from Morlaix. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughter Auguvine Pélagie. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-four-year-old widow and the head of a household including Augustine, her fourteen-year-old daughter. She and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifty-five-year-old widow and a member of the household of Charles Richard, her son-in-law, and Marie Trahan, her daughter. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.365 | Augustine Pélagie | Trahan | 01/01/1773 | Marguerite Trahan | Joseph Trahan | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old residing with Marguerite Trahan, her thirty-four-year-old, widowed mother. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.366 | Marie | Richard | fille | 01/01/1740 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her sisters Marguerite and Elizabet (Elizabeth). Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-eight-year-old spinster and the head of a household including Marguerite Richard, her forty-five-year-old sister, and Elisabeth Richard, her thirty-five-year-old sister. She and her siblings occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.367 | Marguerite | Richard | 01/01/1743 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her sisters Marie and Elizabet (Elizabeth). Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.368 | Élizabet (Élizabeth) | Richard | 01/01/1752 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her sisters Marie and Marguerite. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.369 | Alexis | Levron | 01/01/1761 | Boulogne-sur-Mer, Picardy, France | Marguerite Trahan | Michel Levron | Married Anne (Nanette) Trahan, who was born in England during the Grand Dérangement. | Joseph (born ca. 1786), Pierre Vincent Marie (born April 2, 1789), Marie Françoise Isabelle (born May 24, 1791), Jean Saturnin (born November 28, 1794) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household including Anne (Nanette) Trahan, his twenty-seven-year-old wife, and Joseph Levron, his two-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned thirty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included Nanette Trahan, his twenty-seven-year-old wife, and Joseph Levron, his three-year-old son. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cown, one horse, and fifteen hogs. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were residents of the Lafourche District in 1791. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:487. | 1.785 | carpenter | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.370 | Anne (Nanette) | Trahan | 01/01/1761 | England (during the Grand Dérangement) | Françoise Terriot (Theriot) | Charles Trahan | Married Alexis Levron, son of Michel Levron and Marguerite Trahan. | Joseph (born ca. 1786), Pierre Vincent Marie (born April 2, 1789), Marie Françoise Isabelle (born May 24, 1791), Jean Saturnin (born November 28, 1794) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Alexis Levron. In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Levron, her two-year-old son. occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned thirty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Alexis Levron. In addition to herself and her twenty-seven-year-old husband, the household also included Joseph Levron, her three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and fifteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:487. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.371 | Lambert | Billardin | 01/01/1745 | Married Marguerite Daigre. | Marie Jeanne (born 1779), Marguerite (born 1783), Étienne (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and three children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Étienne Billardin, his eleven-year-old son, Marie Jeanne Billardin, his eight-year-old daughter, and Marguerite Billardin, his five-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Étienne Billardin, his twelve-year-old son, Marie Jeanne Billardin, his nine-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margritta) Billardin, his six-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and twelve hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | employee | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.372 | Marguerite | Daigre (Daigle, D'Aigle) | 01/01/1748 | Married Lambert Billardin. | Marie Jeanne (born 1779), Marugierte (born 1783), Étienne (born 1775) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and three children. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.373 | Marie Jeanne | Billardin (Villardin) | 01/01/1779 | Morlaix, France | Marguerite Daigre | Lambert Billardin | Married Joseph Boudrot, son of Amant Boudrot and Marie Nogues, at Assumption Parish, La., October 24, 1803 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Étienne Billardin, her eleven-year-old brother, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Billardin, her five-year-old sister. She and her family occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Étienne Billardin, her twelve-year-old brother, and Marguerite (Margritta) Billardin, her six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 47; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.374 | Marguerite (Margueritte, Margritta) | Billardin | 01/01/1783 | Marguerite Daigre | Lambert Billardin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her siblings, the household also included Étienne Billardin, her eleven-year-old brother, and Marie Jeanne Billardin, her eight-year-old brother. Identified as Margritta Billardin in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Étienne Billardin, her twelve-year-old brother, and Marie Jeanne Billardin, her nine-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.375 | Étienne | Billardin | 01/01/1775 | Marguerite Daigre | Lambert Billardin | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Boarded the St. Rémi at Paimboeuf. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his siblings, the household also included Marie Jeanne Billardin, his eight-year-old daughter, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Billardin, his five-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Marie Jeanne Billardin, his nine-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margritta) Billardin, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.376 | Grégoire | Benoît | 01/01/1745 | Élisabeth Terriot (Theriot) | Claude Benoît (Benoist) | Married Marie Rose Caret. | Donnatien (born 1777), Raymond (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1776), Françoise (born 1780), Jean Marie (born 17550 | Resided at Mégrit, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1761-1771. Resided at St. Malo, France, 1771-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household including Marie Rose Caret, his thirty-four-year-old wife, Jean Marie Benoît, his eleven-year-old son, Donnatien (Danencien) Benoît, his nine-year-old son, Marie Rose Benoît, his ten-year-old daughter, and Françoise Benoît, his five-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Rose Caret (Carret), his thirty-four-year-old wife, Jean Marie Benoît, his twelve-year-old son, Donnatien (Donnacien) Benoît, his ten-year-old son, Marie Rose Benoît, his eleven-year-old daughter, and Françoise Benoît, his six-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.377 | Marie Rose | Caret (Carret) | 01/01/1753 | Rose Trahan | Jean Carret | Married Grégoire Benoît. | Jean Marie (born 1775), Donnatien (born 1777), Raymond (born ca. 1785), Marie Rose (born 1776), Françoise (born 1780), | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1771. Resided at St. Malo, France, 1771-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Grégoire Benoît. In addition to herself, her household included her forty-two-year-old husband, Jean Marie Benoît, her eleven-year-old son, Donnatien (Danencien) Benoît, her nine-year-old son, Marie Rose Benoît, her ten-year-old daughter, and Françoies Benoît, her five-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and six hogs. Identified as Marie Rose Carret in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old wife of Grégoire Benoît. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included Jean Marie, her twelve-year-old son, Donnatien, her ten-year-old son, Marie Rose, her eleven-year-old daughter, and Françoise, her six-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-five barrels of corn, two horses, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.378 | Jean Marie | Benoît | 01/01/1775 | Marie Rose Caret | Grégoire Benoît | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was an eleven-year-old residing with his parents. In addition to himself and his parents, his household included Donnatien (Danencien), his nine-year-old brother, Marie Rose, his ten-year-old sister, and Françoise, his five-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Donnatien (Donnacien), his ten-year-old brother, Marie Rose, his eleven-year-old sister, and Françoise, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.379 | Donnatien (Danencien, Donnacien) | Benoît | 01/01/1777 | Marie Rose Caret | Grégoire Benoît | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified as Danencien Benoît in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a nine-year-old residing with his parents. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Marie, his eleven-year-old brother, Marie Rose, his ten-year-old sister, and Françoise, his five-year-old sister. His name is rendered as Donnancien Benoît in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Marie, his twelve-year-old brother, Marie Rose, his eleven-year-old sister, and Françoise, his six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.380 | Raymond | Benoît | 01/01/1785 | Marie Rose Caret | Grégoire Benoît | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | He appears to have died shortly after arrival in Louisiana, for his is not listed in his parents' household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.381 | Marie Rose | Benoît | 01/01/1776 | Marie Rose Caret | Grégoire Benoît | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Marie, her eleven-year-old brother, Donnatien (Danencien), her nine-year-old brother, and Françoise, her five-year-old sister. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean marie, her twelve-year-old brother, Donnatien (Donnancien), her ten-year-old brother, and Françoise, her six-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.382 | Françoise (Françoise Félicité) | Benoît | 01/01/1780 | Nantes, France | Marie Rose Caret | Grégoire Benoît | Married Jean Baptiste Tozein (Tauzin), a native of Bayonne, France, and the son of Jean Baptiste Tozein and Jeanne Marie Lanbeaux, at Assumption Parish, La., May 6, 1811. Michel Pedeau and Charles Marie Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a five-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Marie, her eleven-year-old brother, Donnatien (Danencien), her nine-year-old brother, and Marie Rose, her ten-year-old sister. Identified as Françoise Benoît in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a six-year-old member of her parents' household. In addition to herself and her parents, the household included Jean Marie, her twelve-year-old brother, Donnatien (Donnancien), her ten-year-old brother, and Marie Rose, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:81; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.383 | Thérèse | Caret | 01/01/1756 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her sister, Marie Rose Caret (Mme. Grégoire Benoît). Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Gautier (Gauthier). She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and three hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.384 | Simon | Landry | 01/01/1735 | Married Margueritte (Marguerite) Gotreau (Gauterot). (Appears to have married her in England.) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36. | 1.785 | mariner | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.385 | Marguerite | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1726 | Married (1) one Leroy. Married (2) one Granger. Married (3) Simon Landry. | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.386 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1736 | Françoise Blanchard | Jean LeBlanc | Married Françoise Trahan. | Simon (born 1776), Marie (born 1763), Geneviève (born 1764), Françoise (born 1785) | Exiled to Liverpool, England. Occupied farm no. 22, Berderun village, Sauzon parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.387 | Françoise | Trahan | 01/01/1738 | Élisabeth (Élizabeth) Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Trahan | Married (1) Pierre LeBlanc. Married (2) Simon Landry at Ascension Parish, La., May 21, 1787. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Jacques Mius D'Entremont and Joseph Michel. | Marie (born 1763), Geneviève (born 1764), Simon (born 1776), Françoise (born 1785) | Deported to Liverpool, England. Occupied farm no. 22 at the village of Borderun, Sauzon parish, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | She died sometime before the 1788 census of Lafourche District was compiled. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:704. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.388 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1776 | Françoise Trahan | Pierre LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.389 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1763 | Françoise Trahan | Pierre LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.390 | Geneviève | LeBlanc | 01/01/1764 | Françoise Trahan | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Joseph Michel (Michelle) at Ascension Parish, La., May 16, 1786. Jérôme Theran (actually Guérin) and Pierre Gauterot witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old wife of Joseph Michel (Michelle). She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontag.e They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. Her name is rendered as Jeneviève Le Blanc in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old wife of Joseph Michel. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and nine hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:543; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.391 | Françoise | LeBlanc | 01/01/1785 | Françoise Trahan | Pierre LeBlanc | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 48. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.392 | Charles | LeBlanc | 01/01/1718 | Jeanne Landry | René LeBlanc | Married (1) Anne Boudrot (Boudreaux). Married (2) Magdeleine Gotreau (Gauterot). | Margueritte (born 1767) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and daughter Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | day laborer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.393 | Magdeleine | Gotreau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1717 | Married (1) Pierre Daigle. Married (2) Charles LeBlanc. | Margueritte (born 1767) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and daughter Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.394 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1767 | St. Malo, France | Magdeleine Gotreau (Gauterot) | Charles LeBlanc | Married Augustin Duon (Duhon) at New Orleans, December 4, 1785. | Marie Jeanne (born February 15, 1797; buried October 10, 1799), Charles (born July 13, 1799), Jean Baptiste (baptized March 1, 1801, at the age of nine days), Jean (born September 14, 1803) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Ecclesiastical records indicate that she and her family were residents of New Orleans in October 1803. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:186; 7:115. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.395 | Anne | Daigle | Veuve (François) Michel | 01/01/1742 | Married François Michel. | Marie (born 1765), Anne (born 1770) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1773. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughters Marie and Anne. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-five-year-old widow and the head of a household including Anne Michel (Michelle), her eighteen-year-old daughter. Anne Daigle and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-six-year-old widow and the head of a household including Anne Michel, her nineteen-year-old daughter. Anne Daigle and her daughter occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fourteen barrels of corn and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.396 | Marie | Michel (Michelle) | 01/01/1765 | St. Malo, France | Anne Daigle | François Michel | Married Jacques Dubois, son of Olivier Dubois and Marguerite Valois. | Marinne (Marianne?) (born 1788), Paul (born February 28, 1800) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother and her sister Anne. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Identified in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La., as Marie Michelle. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jacques Dubois. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jacques Dubois. In addition to herself and her twenty-three-year-old husband, her household included Marinne (Marianne?) Dubois, her one-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:112. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.397 | Anne | Michel | 01/01/1770 | Anne Daigle | François Michel | Married (1) Lorenzo Lanzon dit Michale, son of Boligno Lanzon and Anna Marguerite Micale, July 31, 1790. Married (2) Juan Maronge, native of the island of Sardinia the widower of Marguerite Pitre, at Assumption Parish, La., August 22, 1796. | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother and her sister Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of a household headed by Anne Daigle, her forty-five-year-old mother. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 542. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.398 | Aimable (Laimable, Étienne) | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Cherbourg, France | Jeanne Marie Madeleine Varongues | Joseph Landry | Married Ursule Pitre, a native of St. Malo, France, February 3, 1788. | Elias (baptized March 27, 1803) | Resided at Cherbourg, France, 1765-1772. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Isaac and his sisters Jeanne Margueritte and Bonne Louise Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-one-year-old head of a household including Isaac Landry, his fourteen-year-old brother. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Laimable Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of the household that included himself and his fifteen-year-old brother, Isaac. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:422; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.785 | engraver | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.399 | Isaac Abraham | Landry | 01/01/1772 | "Charlesbourg" probably Cherbourg, France | Jeanne Marie Madeleine Varongues | Joseph Landry | Married Anne Olive Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Simon Aucoin and Marie Geneviève Terriot (Theriot), at Assumption Parish, La., November 3, 1795. Joseph Terriot (Theriot) and Amable Landry witnessed the document. | Resided at Cherbourg, France, 1765-1772. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his brother Aimable and his sisters Jeanne Margueritte and Bonne Louise Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | There is some confusion about Isaac Landry's identity and his whereabouts in 1788, for the 1788 census of the Lafourche District identifies the Acadian as a member of the households of two different siblings. One 1788 entry indicates that he was the fourteen-year-old member of a household headed by Aimable (Laimable) Landry, his twenty-one-year-old brother. The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and two hogs. The second 1788 entry indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Pietro (Pierre) Cancienne and Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry, his twenty-year-old sister. The household also included Pierre Cancienne, Isaac Landry's one-year-old nephew. The members of this household occupied a small tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned three slaves, fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. His name is rendered as Isaac Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. His name appears twice in the census. One entry indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old living with his twenty-two-year-old brother, Aimable (Laimable). The siblings occupied a tract of land with six arpents fontage. They owned twenty-four barrels of corn, one horse, and five hogs. The other entry indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Pietro (Pierre) Cancienne (Juansiany), his brother-in-law, and Marguerite (Margritta) Landry (Landri), his sister. This household occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 31-36; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:427. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.400 | Jeanne Margueritte (Marguerite) | Landry | 01/01/1765 | Cherbourg, France | Jeanne Marie Madeleine Varongues | Joseph Landry | Married Pietro (Pedro) Cancienne, a native of Venice, Italy, and the son of Jorge Cancienne (Cancieni) and Marguerita Catherina, at Ascension Parish, La., February 15, 1786. | Pierre (I) (born 1787), Marie (buried September 1, 1791), Pierre (II) (born December 31, 1791), Ambroise Olivier (born January 1, 1793), Rosalie (baptized April 6, 1801), Joseph (born April 13, 1799), Isaac (interred December 29, 1803, at the age of 26 days) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her brothers Aimable and Isaac and her sister Bonne Louise Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Pietro (Pierre) Cancienne (Quiansiany). In addition to herself and her thirty-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Cancienne, her one-year-old son, and Isaac Landry, her sixteen-year-old brother. The members of her household occupied a small tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned three slaves. They also owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and five hogs. Her name is rendered Margritta Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Pietro (Pierre) Cancienne (Juansiany). In addition to herself and her thirty-year-old husband, the household included Pierre, her two-year-old son, and Isaac Landry (Landri), her seventeen-year-old brother. She and her family occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of rice, sixty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:172, 435-436; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 27. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.401 | Bonne Louise Marie | Landry | 01/01/1768 | Jeanne Marie Madeleine Varongues | Joseph Landry | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her brothers Aimable and Isaac and her sister Jeanne Margueritte. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 49; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.402 | Marie (Blanche) | Richard | Veuve Claude Pitre | 01/01/1743 | Marie Josèphe Boudrot | Pierre Richard | Married Claude Pitre, son of Claude Pitre and Marguerite Doiron. Claude Pitre was the widower of Rosalie Landry (sometimes rendered Henry). Marie Richard was a widow at the time of her departure from France in 1785. | Marie (born 1769) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1758-1764. Resided at Pleudihen, France, 1764-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.403 | Marie (Charlotte) | Pitre | 01/01/1769 | Marie Richard | Claude Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 43-49. | 1.785 | Claude Pitre & Marguerite Doiron | Pierre Richard & Marie Josèphe Boudrot | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.404 | Joseph | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1721 | Cobequid, Acadia | Marie Bourg | Alexis Aucoin | Married (1) Anne Blanchard, daughter of Pierre Blanchard and Françoise Breaux, ca. 1743. Married (2) Anne Hébert, daughter of Jean Hébert and Claire Dugast (Dugas), ca. 1764. | Alexandre (born ca. 1765), François (born 1772), Anne (born 1764) Gabriel (born 1772), Fabien (married April 8, 1799), Marie Magdelaine (born 1774), Françoise (born 1777), Guillaume (married April 28, 1800), Jacinte (Hyacinthe) (born 1785) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 35; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2405. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.405 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1737 | Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert | Married (1) Jean Blanchard. Married (2) Joseph Aucoin, son of Alexis Aucoin and Marie Bourg. | François (born 1772), Anne (born 1764) Gabriel (born 1772), Fabien (married April 8, 1799), Marie Magdelaine (born 1774), Françoise (born 1777), Guillaume (married April 28, 1800), Jacinte (Hyacinthe) (born 1785) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She was a widow at the time of her death. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35, 355. | 1.785 | 12/08/1802 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.406 | François | Aucoin | 01/01/1770 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.407 | Anne | Aucoin | 01/01/1754 | St. Malo, France | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Married Pierre Jean Hébert, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Pierre Hébert and Susanne Pitre, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 26, 1788. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Her marriage record suggests that she was a resident of the Bayou des Écores settlement in 1788. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.408 | Gabriel | Aucoin | 01/01/1772 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.409 | Marie Magdelaine | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | St. Malo, France | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Married Joseph Bourg, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Marin Bourg and Marie Daigle, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 20, 1790. Gabriel Aucoin, Mathurin Pierre Bourg, and François Dugue witnessed the marriage record. | Marin François (born April 16, 1792; baptized May 8, 1792), Amant Louis (born May 7, 1794), Rose Anastasie (baptized April 30, 1797), Marianne (Mariana) (born September 30, 1798), Marie Carmelite (baptized May 3, 1801, at the age of sixteen months), Scholastique Julienne (Escolastica Juliana) (born January 25, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38, 122, 126, 128. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.410 | Françoise | Aucoin | 01/01/1777 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.411 | Jacinte (Hyacinthe Laurent) | Aucoin | 01/01/1779 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Married Marie Céleste Delaune, a native of St. Martin Parish, Nantes, France, and the daughter of Jean Lelaune and Marianne Parque, at Assumption Parish, La., July 16, 1804. Vincente Mora and François Aucoin witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:38. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Marie Bourg | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugast (Dugas) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.412 | Pierre | Hébert | père | 01/01/1735 | Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Hébert | Married Suzanne Pitre. | Pierre (born 1763), François (born 1767), Joseph (born 1770), Mathurin (born 1772), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Marie (born 1761) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, France, 1759-1772. Resided at Rréméreuc, France, 1772-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, six children, and Marguerite Henry, who was either his step-daughter or dauther-in-law. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.413 | Suzanne | Pitre | 01/01/1730 | Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Pitre | Married Pierre Hébert, son of Jean Hébert and Claire Dugas (Dugast). | Pierre (born 1763), François (born 1767), Joseph (born 1770), Mathurin (born 1772), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Marie (born 1761) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, France, 1759-1772. Resided at Tréméreuc, France, 1772-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, six children, and Marguerite Henry, who was either her step-daughter or dauther-in-law. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.414 | Pierre | Hébert | 01/01/1763 | Suzanne (Susanne) Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Married Anne Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Joseph Aucoin and Anne Hébert, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 26, 1788. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | His marriage record suggests that he was a resident of the Bayou des Ecores settlement in 1788. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.415 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1767 | Privale, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Suzanne Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Married Angelle Henry (Angela Enrrique) at New Orleans, January 3, 1786. Vicente Llorca and Joseph Martinez witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:161. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.416 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1770 | Suzanne Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.417 | Mathurin | Hébert | 01/01/1772 | Pleurtuit, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Suzanne Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Married Marie Bourg (Bourque), a native of the Diocese of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of François Xavier Bourg and Isabelle LeBlanc, at Assumption Parish, La., September 18, 1797. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:371. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.418 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Suzanne Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.419 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1761 | St. Malo, France | Suzanne Pitre | Pierre Hébert | Married Pierre Aucoin (Ocuian) at New Orleans, January 14, 1786. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, five siblings, and Marguerite Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:161. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert & Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Pitre & Marguerite Terriot (Theriot) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.420 | Marguerite | Henry | 01/01/1750 | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Pierre Hébert Suzanne Pitre. The passenger manifest indicates that she was either Hébert's step-daughter or daughter-in-law. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.421 | Joseph | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1744 | Hélène Blanchard | Alexis Aucoin | Married Marie Josèphe Hébert. He was a widower at the time of his departure from France. | Alexis (born 1765), Fabien (born 1770), Mathurin (born 1771), Joseph (born 1775) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Ressided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1763. Resided at Tréméreuc, France, 1764-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his sons Alexis, Fabien, Mathurin, and Joseph. His family was accompanied by Marie Ozithe (Ozite) Broc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.422 | Alexis | Aucoin | 01/01/1765 | Marie Josèphe Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, three brothers, and Marie Ozithe (Ozite) Broc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Hélène Blanchard | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.423 | Fabien | Aucoin | 01/01/1770 | St. Malo, France | Marie Josèphe Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Married Suzanne (Susanne) Darois, a native of Morlaix, France, and the daughter of Étienne Darois and Magdeleine Trahan. | Marguerite Suzanne (Susana) (born February 5, 1800), Fabien Alexis (Fabian Alexos) (born March 12, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, three brothers, and Marie Ozithe (Ozite) Broc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 37. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Hélène Blanchard | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.424 | Mathurin | Aucoin | 01/01/1771 | St. Malo, France | Marie Josèphe Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Married Marie Magdeleine Darois, a native of Morlaix, France, and the daughter of Étienne Darois and Magdeleine Trahan. | Joseph Firmin (baptized April 28, 1794; buried September 27, 1794, at the age of twenty months), Jean Baptiste (born May 15, 1792); Désiré (Deseado) Mathurin Jean (born March 26, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, three brothers, and Marie Ozithe (Ozite) Broc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33-34, 36, 38. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.425 | Joseph | Aucoin | 01/01/1775 | Marie Josèphe Hébert | Joseph Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, three brothers, and Marie Ozithe (Ozite) Broc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin & Hélène Blanchard | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.426 | Marie Ozithe (Ozite) | Broc | 01/01/1745 | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Joseph Aucoin. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.427 | Luce Perpétue (La Luze) | Bourg (Bourque) | Veuve Pierre Hébert, Veuve Boudereau (Boudrot) | 01/01/1742 | Marie Madeleine (Magdalena) Hébert | Francois Bourg | Married (1) Pierre Hébert, son of Charles Hébert and Marguerite Dugas (Dugast). Identified as the widow of Pierre Hébert at the time of her second and third marriages. Married (2) Félix Boudrot at Ascension Parish, La., August 30, 1787. Charles Aucoin and Magdeleine Hébert witnessed the marriage record. Married (3) Charles Gauterot, the widower of Marie Magdeleine Melanson and the son of Pierre Gauterot and Agnès (Ynes) LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., November 30, 1789. | First marriage: Victoire (born 1767), Anne (born 1774), Julienne (born 1781) | Resided at Ploubalay, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Pleslin, France, 1760-1765. Resided at Tréméreuc, France, 1765-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughters Victoire, Anne, and Julienne. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Félix Boudrot. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Félix Boudrot (Boudreaut?), her husband, 38 years old; Anne, her daughter, 16 years old; and Julienne (Julie), her daughter, 8 years old. Luce Bourg (Bourq) and her family owned a small tract of land with three arpents frontage. They also oowned ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and nine hogs. Identified as Luce Bourg, Veuve Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-one-year-old widow and the head of a household including Anne, her seventeen-year-old daughter, and Julie (Julienne), her nine-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:124. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.428 | Victoire | Hébert | 01/01/1767 | Luce Perpétue Bourg | Pierre Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and two sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert & Marguerite Dugas | François Bourg & Madeleine Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.429 | Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1774 | Luce Perpétue Bourg | Pierre Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and two sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old in her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself, the household included Philippe(?) Boudrot(?), evidently her stepfather, 38 years old; Luce Bourg, her mother, 30 years old; and Julienne (Julie) Hébert, her sister, 8 years old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-yaer-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself, the household included her mother, who was a thirty-one-year-old widow, and Julie (Julienne) Hébert, her nine-year-old sister. The family occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. They owned one hog. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert and Marguerite Dugas | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.430 | Julienne (Julie) | Hébert | 01/01/1781 | Luce Perpétue Bourg | Pierre Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and two sisters. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Philippe(?) Boudrot(?), evidently her stepfather, 38 years old; Luce Bourg (Bourq), her mother, 30 years old; and Anne (Ann) Hébert, her sister, 16 years old. Her given name is rendered as Julie in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nine-year-old member of her mother's household. In addition to herself, the household included her mother, who was a thirty-one-year-old widow, and Anne Hébert, her seventeen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 67; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Charles Hébert & Marguerite Dugas | François Bourg & Madeleine Hébert | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.431 | Jean | Bourg | père | 01/01/1735 | Marie PItre. | Jean Bourg | Married (1) Marie Aucoin. Married (2) Anne Daigle (D'Aigle, Daigre), daughter of Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau. | Marie (born 1768), François (born 1769), Marguerite Perrine (born 1770; married May 26, 1800), Magdelaine (born 1773), Jeanne (born 1778), Jean (born 1769), Joseph (born 1782), Charlotte Françoise (born May 26, 1785) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.432 | Anne (Anne Josèphe) | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1745 | Marie Anne Breau | Jean Daigle (D'Aigle, Daigre) | Married Jean Bourg, son of Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre. | Marie (born 1768), François (born 1769), Marguerite Perrine (born 1770; married May 26, 1800), Magdelaine (born 1773), Jeanne (born 1778), Jean (born 1769), Joseph (born 1782), Charlotte Françoise (born May 26, 1785) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1767. Resided at Pleudihen, France, 1767-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.433 | Marie | Bourg | 01/01/1768 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.434 | François | Bourg | 01/01/1769 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Married Madeleine Comeau, daughter of Simon Comeau and Marguerite Aucoin, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., February 20, 1792. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records suggest that he was a resident of the Acadian settement at Bayou des Écores at the time of his marriage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.435 | Marguerite | Bourg (Bourque) | 01/01/1770 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Married Michel Aucoin, son of Michel Aucoin and Isabelle Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., May 26, 1800. Jacques Henry and Nicolas Albert witnessed the marriage record. | Hubert Onesime (born August 16, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35, 38. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.436 | Magdelaine (Madeleine Perinne) | Bourg | 01/01/1773 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Married Nicolas Albert, a native of Poitou Province, France, and the son of Nicolas Albert and Marie Benoît, at Assumption Parish, La., February 3, 1800. Honoré Breau and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage certificate. | Melanie Anne (born December 18, 1801), Marie Josèphe (born August 16, 1804), Urbain (Urbin) François (born March 6, 1806), Elizabeth (born May 30, 1807), Joseph Valéry (born February 13, 1809), Jean Baptiste (born December 1, 1810), Azelie Théotiste (born February 18, 1812), Rosalie Anne (born February 18, 1821), Marie Marceline (born March 24, 1813) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:8, 124; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Nicolas Gabriel Albert and Madeleine Perinne Bourg." | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.437 | Jeanne | Bourg | 01/01/1778 | Pleudihen, Diocese of Dole, Brittany, France | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Married Barthélemy Henry, son of Barthélemy Henry and Anne Bourg (Bourque), at Assumption Parish, La., August 27, 1798. Joseph Aucoin and Jean Richard witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123-124. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.438 | Jean | Bourg | 01/01/1779 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.439 | Joseph | Bourg | 01/01/1783 | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.440 | Charlotte Françoise | Bourg | Anne Daigle | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Marie Pitre | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.441 | Jean | Bourg | père | 01/01/1745 | Marie Josèphe Hébert | François Bourg | Married Marie Dupuy (Dupuis), daughter of Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin. | Marguerite (born 1769), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1773), Yves Jean (a twin, born 1778), Marie (Françoise Marie) (a twin, born 1778), Yves Antoine (born ca. 1779), Jean Baptiste Simon Louis (born ca. 1785) | Captured aboard the privateer La Biche, ca. 1760. Imprisoned in England, 1760-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1763-1772. Resided at Châtellerault, France, 1772-1775. Resided at Nantes, France, 1776. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1778-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.442 | Marie | Dupuy (Dupuis) | 01/01/1749 | Anne Aucoin | Ambroise Dupuis | Married Jean Bourg, son of François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert. | Marguerite (born 1769), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1773), Yves Jean (a twin, born 1778), Marie (Françoise Marie) (a twin, born 1778), Yves Antoine (born ca. 1779), Jean Baptiste Simon Louis (born ca. 1785) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1759-1768. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.443 | Yves (Antoine Yves) | Bourg | 01/01/1779 | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Tarveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.444 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) Simon Louis | Bourg | 01/01/1785 | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Tarveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that he was several months old at the time of the departure. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.445 | Marguerite | Bourg | 01/01/1769 | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Tarveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.446 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Bourg | 01/01/1773 | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Tarveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.447 | Marie | Bourg | 01/01/1777 | Marie Dupuy (Dupuis) | Jean Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Tarveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.448 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | Veuve de Joseph Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1743 | Françoise Landry | Charles Terriot (Theriot) | Married Joseph Como (Comeaux), son of Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin. | Elie (born 1766), Joseph (born 1768), Simon (born 1770), Jeanne (born 1774), Marie (born 1779) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.449 | Elie | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1766 | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his widowed mother and foru siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.450 | Joseph | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1768 | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his widowed mother and foru siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.451 | Simon | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1770 | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his widowed mother and foru siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.452 | Jeanne | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1774 | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and foru siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.453 | Marie | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1779 | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and foru siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.454 | Louis | Clausinet (Clossinet) | père | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Anne Jacquemin. Married (2) Marie Daigle, daughter of Jean Daigle (Daigre) and Anne Marie Breau, daughter of Jean Daigle and Anne Marie Breau. | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1764-1773. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and Geneviève Girouard, a stepdaughter. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.455 | Marguerite | D'Aigle (Daigle) | 01/01/1748 | Anne Marie Breau | Jean Daigle (Daigre, D'Aigle) | Married (1) Amand (Amant) Girouère (Giroire). Married (2) Louis Clausinet. | First marriage: Geneviève (born 1769) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her second husband and daughter Geneviève. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. (French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux indicate that she may not have been absent at the time of the Ville d'Arcangel's departure from France.) | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.456 | Geneviève (Marguerite Charlotte) | Girouère (Giroire?) | 01/01/1769 | Marie Daigle | Amand Giroire | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her stepfather and mother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. (French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux indicate that she may not have been absent at the time of the Ville d'Arcangel's departure from France.) | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.457 | Jean | Longuépée | père | 01/01/1740 | Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Louis Longuépée | Married Marie Françoise Bourg, daughter of Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast). | Marie (born 1765), Anne (born 1767), Marguerite (born 1770), Jean Jacques (born 1771), Pierre (born 1773), Corentine (born 1775), Louis (born 1779), Jean Baptiste (born 1781), Hélène (born ca. January 1785) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.458 | Marie Françoise | Bourg | 01/01/1745 | Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | Joseph Bourg | Married Jean Longuépée, son of Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux). | Marie (born 1765), Anne (born 1767), Marguerite (born 1770), Jean Jacques (born 1771), Pierre (born 1773), Corentine (born 1775), Louis (born 1779), Jean Baptiste (born 1781), Hélène (born ca. January 1785) | Resided at La Gouesnière, Brittany, France, 1759-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that her two eldest daughters were not aboard the Ville d'Arcangel when it sailed from France. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.459 | Marie (Françoise Jeanne) | Longuépée | 01/01/1765 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | On the passenger list for the Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that she was not aboard the Ville d'Arcangel when it sailed from France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.460 | Anne (Anne Josèphe) | Longuépée | 01/01/1767 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | On the passenger list for the Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that she was not aboard the Ville d'Arcangel when it sailed from France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.461 | Marguerite | Longuépée | 01/01/1770 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.462 | Jean Jacques | Longuépée | 01/01/1771 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 68; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.463 | Pierre | Longuépée | 01/01/1773 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.464 | Corentine (Laurentine Urienne) | Longuépée | 01/01/1775 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.465 | Louis | Longuépée | 01/01/1779 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.466 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Longuépée | 01/01/1781 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.467 | Hélène | Longuépée | 01/01/1777 | Marie Françoise Bourg | Jean Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. The passenger manifest indicates that she was eight months old at the time of the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Joseph Bourg and Françoise Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.468 | Alexandre | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1740 | Anne Marie Dupuis (Dupuy) | Charles Aucoin | Married Rosalie Teriault (Terriot, Theriot). | Geneviève (born ca. 1762), Marie (Marie Élisabeth) (born May 10, 1764), Marie Madeleine (born March 31, 1766), Jean Baptiste Fabien (born March 8, 1768), Françoise Théotiste (March 8, 1768), Noel Alexandre (born December 24, 1770), Perinne Marie (born August 20, 1773), Marguerite Josèphe (born April 19, 1775; died October 7, 1775), Marie Jeanne (born ca. 1777), Mathurin (born ca. 1781), Marguerite Josèphe II (died at the age of eighteen months on May 7, 1785, at Saint-Servan, France) | Deported to England, where he married Rosalie Terriot. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1771. Resided at Plouer, France, 1771-1773. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1773-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Alexandre Aucoin and Rosalie Theriot." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.469 | Rosalie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1740 | Françoise Landry | Charles Theriot | Married Alexandre Aucoin, son of Charles Aucoin and Anne Marie Dupuis (Dupuy). | Geneviève (born ca. 1762), Marie (Marie Élisabeth) (born May 10, 1764), Marie Madeleine (born March 31, 1766), Jean Baptiste Fabien (born March 8, 1768), Françoise Théotiste (March 8, 1768), Noel Alexandre (born December 24, 1770), Perinne Marie (born August 20, 1773), Marguerite Josèphe (born April 19, 1775; died October 7, 1775), Marie Jeanne (born ca. 1777), Mathurin (born ca. 1781), Marguerite Josèphe II (died at the age of eighteen months on May 7, 1785, at Saint-Servan, France) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1771. Resided at Plouer, France, 1771-1773. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1773-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Theriot and Marie Jeanne Landry | Antoine Landry and Marie Blanche LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.470 | Mathurin | Aucoin | 01/01/1781 | Rosalie Teriault (Terriot, Theriot) | Alexandre Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | Charles Aucoin and Anne Marie Dupuis (Dupuy) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.471 | Marie (Marie Élisabeth) | Aucoin | 01/01/1765 | St. Servan, near St. Malo, France | Rosalie Teriault (Terriot, Theriot) | Alexandre Aucoin | Married (1) Jacques Raoul, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Jacques Raoul and Servente Aubry, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1787. Charles Emond, Nicolas Lavergne, François Xavier Bourg, and Jacques Blanchard witnessed the marriage record. According to the baptismal record of Marie Carmelite Bourg, she married (2) Marin Bourg. | Marie Carmelite (baptized May 3, 1801, at the age of 16 months) | There is some controversy about her status as an Acadian immigrant. Some passenger manifests indicate that she sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux indicate that she was "absent" when the Ville d'Arcangel departed France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:126. | 1.785 | Charles Aucoin and Anne Marie Dupuis (Dupuy) | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.472 | Marie Jeanne | Aucoin | 01/01/1777 | Rosalie Teriault (Terriot, Theriot) | Alexandre Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | Charles Aucoin and Anne Marie Dupuis (Dupuy) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.473 | Victor | Desforets Desforetz (Desforetz, Forest, FORêt) | père | 01/01/1735 | Claire Vincent | Jacques Forest | Married (1) Judith Robichaud (Robichaux). Married (2) Anne Josèphe Hébert. Married (3) Julienne Rosereux. Married (4) Marie Jeanne Richer, daughter of André Richer and Madeleine Renoux. | Joseph Victor (born 1761), Jean (born 1774), Étienne Gille (Gilles) (born 1778), Anne Perrine (born 1765), Servanne Julienne (born 1768), Marie Adélaïde (born 1770), Jeanne Isabelle (born 1773) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1760-1764. Resided at Plouer, France, 1764-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1766-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and seven children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.474 | Marie Jeanne | Richer | 01/01/1739 | St-Malo, France | Madeleine Renoux | André Richer | Married Victor Desforetz (Desforets, Forest). | Jean (born 1774), Étienne Gille (Gilles) (born 1778), Servanne Julienne (born 1768), Marie Adélaïde (born 1770), Jeanne Isabelle (born 1773) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.475 | Joseph Victor | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1761 | Anne Josèphe Hébert | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Extant passenger manifests indicate that he sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that he was "absent" at the time of the the Ville d'Arcangel's departure. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.476 | Jean | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1774 | Marie Jeanne Richer | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | André Richer and Madeleine Renoux | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.477 | Étienne Gilles | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1778 | Marie Jeanne Richer | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | André Richer and Madeleine Renoux | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.478 | Anne Perrine | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1765 | Anne Josèphe Hébert | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.479 | Servanne Julienne | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1768 | Julienne Rosereux | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.480 | Marie Adélaïde | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1770 | Julienne Rosereux | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Extant passenger rolls indicate that she sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that she was "absent" when the Ville d'Arcangel departed France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.481 | Jeanne Isabelle | Desforetz (Desforets) | 01/01/1773 | Marie Jeanne Richer | Victor Desforetz (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and six siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Forest and Claire Vincent | André Richer and Madeleine Renoux | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.482 | Jacques | Desforetz (Desforets) | père de Victor | 01/01/1710 | Marie Bellemère | Michel Forest | Married (1) Claire Vincent. Married (2) Angélique Richet. | Victor (born 1735) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, his nephew Etienne Desforetz (Desforets, Forest, Forêt), and Marie Jeanne Billera. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.483 | Angélique | Richet | 01/01/1742 | Married Jacques Desforetz (Desforets). | Victor (born 1735) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, Jacques Desforetz (Desforets), and Marie Jeanne Billera. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.484 | Étienne | Desforetz (Forest) | 01/01/1755 | Jean Forest (Forêt) | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his uncle Jacques Desforetz (Desforets), Angélique Richet, and Marie Jeanne Billera. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.485 | Marie Jeanne | Billera | Veuve François Le Sommer | 01/01/1758 | Married François Le Sommer. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with Jacques Desforetz (Desforets), Angélique Richet, and Etienne Desforetz (Desforets). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.486 | Anne | Forêt (Forest) | Veuve de Simon LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | Claire Vincent | Jacques Forest (Forêt) | Married Simon LeBlanc, son of Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise Terriot (Theriot). | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Identified as Anne Forest (Forêt), the Widow LeBlanc, in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-year-old member of the household of Bennoît (Belony) Blanchard, her brother-in-law, and Magdeleine Forest, her sister. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.487 | Jean Jacques | Terriot (Theriot) | père | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Robichaud (Robichaux) | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) | Married Marguerite Josèphe Richard. He was a widower at the time of his departure from France. | Geneviève (born 1764), Marie (born 1766), Jeanne (born 1771), Rosalie (born 1773), Marguerite (born 1779) | Deported to England. He resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | On November 20, 1788, Jean Jacques Terriot (Theriot), who was evidently literate, petitioned the Iberville commandant to notify Louisiana's governor of his "poor and pitiable situation." Terriot indicated to Commandant Nicolas DeVerbois that he had immigrated from France. Following his arrival in Louisiana, the Acadan had been "assigned" to Bayou des Écores and given a land grant. According to Terriot, he had been compelled to abandon his property two years after settlement (ca. 1787) "by order of" Intendant Martín Navarro. (The reason is not specified in Terriot's letter.) Because he received no compensation for the few improvements that he had made and because he was obliged to buy a farm in the Iberville District for 220 piastres, Terriot, who claimed to have been continuously ill since his arrival in the district, was reduced to abject poverty. He requested financial assistance from the colonial government. Nicolas DeVerbois forwarded Terriot's request to the governor on November 26, 1788. In his cover letter, DeVerbois confirmed that the elderly Terriot and his daughters had indeed fallen upon hard times. The commandant recommended that the subsidy formerly provided the 1785 immigrants during the period of their initial settlement in Louisiana, be reinstated for the Terriot family. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:128; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Jean Jacques Terriot to Nicolas DeVerbois, November 20, 1788, AGI, PPC,202:231-231vo; Nicolas DeVerbois to Estevan Mir¢, November 26, 1788, AGi, PPC, 202:229; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.488 | Geneviève (Geneviève Catherine) | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Josèphe Richard | Jean Jacques Theriot (Terriot) | Extant passenger manifests indicate that she sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, indicate that she was "absent" at the time of the Ville d'Arcangel's departure from France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.489 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Josèphe Richard | Jean Jacques Theriot (Terriot) | Married Firmin Dupuis, son of Jean Baptiste Dupuis and Anne Richard, February 15, 1790. | Olivier Joseph (married August 20, 1810), Rose (married August 20, 1810), Jean Noël (married Apr9il 24, 1820), Marie Céleste (married April 24, 1820), Marie Henriette (married February 6, 1816), Reine Rosalie (married February 6, 1816) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | 1.785 | 14/12/1822 | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Robichaud | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.490 | Jeanne | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Josèphe Richard | Jean Jacques Theriot (Terriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.491 | Rosalie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1773 | Marguerite Josèphe Richard | Jean Jacques Theriot (Terriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.492 | Marguerite | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1779 | Marguerite Josèphe Richard | Jean Jacques Theriot (Terriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 69. | 1.785 | Jacques Terriot (Theriot) and Marie Robichaud | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.493 | Ambroise | Dupuy (Dupuis) | père | 01/01/1742 | Anne Aucoin | Amboirse Dupuis (Dupuy) | Married Anne Theriot (Terriot), daughter of Charles Terriot and Françoise Landry. | Marguerite (born 1777) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1765-1770. Resided at Plouer, 1770-1773. Resided at Saint-Servan, 1773-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and eight-year-old daughter Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one young woman, one middle-aged or elderly man, and one middle-aged or elderly woman. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.494 | Anne | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1745 | Married Ambroise Dupuy (Dupuis). | Marguerite (born 1777) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and eight-year-old daughter Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.495 | Marguerite | Dupuy (Dupuis) | 01/01/1777 | Anne Theriot (Terriot) | Ambroise Dupuy (Dupuis) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | Ambroise Dupuis and Anne Aucoin | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.496 | Jacques | Forêt (Forest) | père | 01/01/1730 | Married Marie Como (Comeaux). | Pierre (born 1770) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Extant ship lists indicate that he sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, his son Pierre, and Marie de Forest (Forêt?). French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, maintain that his wife not participate in the voyage. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.497 | Marie (sometimes Marguerite) | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1735 | Married Jacques Forêt (Forest). | Pierre (born 1770) | Extant ship lists indicate that she sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, her son Pierre, and Marie de Forest (Forêt?). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, maintain that she did not board the Ville d'Arcangel. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.498 | Pierre | Forêt (Forest) | 01/01/1770 | Marie Como (Comeaux) | Jacques Forêt (Forest) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and Marie de Forest (Forêt?). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.499 | Marie | de Forest (Forêt?) | 01/01/1764 | Anne Josèphe Hébert | Victor Forest (Forêt?) | Extant ship lists indicate that she sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with Jacques Forêt (Forest), Marie Como (Comeaux), and Pierre Forêt (Forest). French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, however, maintain that she did not board the Ville d'Arcangel. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.500 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Aucoin | 01/01/1758 | Marie Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Married Marie Forêt (Forest), daughter of Jacquest Forest (Forêt) and Marguerite Comeau. | Marie Françoise (born 1780), Michel (Michelle) (born 1781), Rose Adélaïde (born ca. 1785), Marie Jeanne (born February 13, 1785), Celestin (born December 1793) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and daughter Marie Jeanne. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.501 | Marie | Forêt (Forest) | 01/01/1765 | Married Jean Baptiste Aucoin. This is perhaps the Marie Forest, the widow of Baptiste Aucoin, who married (2) Antoine Bellard at the Opelousas post in 1797. | Marie Françoise (born 1780), Michel (Michelle) (born 1781), Rose Adélaïde (born ca. 1785), Marie Jeanne (born February 13, 1785), Celestin (born December 1793) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and daughter Marie Jeanne. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.502 | Marie Jeanne | Aucoin | Marie Forêt (Forest) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Claude Aucoin and Marie Saulnier (Sonnier) | Jacques Forest and Marguerite Comeau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.503 | Victor | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | père | 01/01/1730 | Cécile Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Antoine Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married (1) Catherine Josèphe Hébert. Married (2) Geneviève Richard. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1758), Marie Rose (born 1754), Cécile (born 1770), Jean Baptiste (married November 30, 1793)Second marriage: Sophie (born 1774), Noël (born 1776), Anne Jeanne (born January 17, 1785) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1765. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1765-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his second wife; his children Joseph, Marie Rose, Cécile, Sophie, Noël, and Anne Jeanne; his stepdaughter Marguerite Pierre; and his son-in-law François Pierre LeLorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.504 | Geneviève | Richard | 01/01/1748 | Catherine Gauterot (Gautreaux) | Charles Richard | Married (1) Simon Pitre dit Simon Pierre. Married (2) Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | First marriage: Marguerite (born 1768) Second marriage: Sophie (born 1774), Noël (born 1776), Anne Jeanne (born January 17, 1785). | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her second husband; her children Marguerite Pierre, Sophie Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux), Noël Boudrau, and Anne Jeanne Boudrau; her stepchildren Joseph Boudrau, Marie Rose Boudrau, Cécile Boudrau; and François Pierre LeLorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.505 | Joseph | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1758 | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, two step-sisters, one step-brother, Françoise Le Lorre, and Marguerite Pierre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.506 | Marie Rose | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1754 | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, two step-sisters, one step-brother, Françoise Le Lorre, and Marguerite Pierre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.507 | Cécile (Cécille) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1770 | St. Malo, France | Catherine Joseph | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Married (1) Thomas Caligan (Caligant), a native of Brittany, France, and the son of Jean Thomas Caligan and Françoise Le Trenoble, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., December 25, 1791. Ignace Boudrot, François Delonte, Félix Bernard, and Jean Longuépée witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Pierre Silvi, son of Arnaud Silvi and Agnès (Ignes) Fanin, at Assumption Parish, La., May 4, 1800. Mathurin Donis and Jean Baptiste Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, two step-sisters, one step-brother, Françoise Le Lorre, and Marguerite Pierre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She was a resident of the Acadian community along Bayou des Écores at the time of her marriage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:110. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.508 | François Pierre | Le Lorre | 01/01/1755 | Married Marie Rose Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and the family of Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) and Geneviève Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.509 | Sophie | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1774 | St. Malo, France | Geneviève Richard | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Married Jean Clément, a native of Nantes, France, and the son of Hilaire Clément and Tarsille Naquin, at Assumption Parish, La., September 14, 1801. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, one step-brother, two step-sisters, one half-sister, and François Pierre Le Lorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:118. | 1.785 | Antoine Boudrot and Cécile Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Charles Richard and Catherine Gauterot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.510 | Noël Victor (most commonly called Noël) | Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1776 | Geneviève Richard | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Married Rose LeBlanc, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Paul LeBlanc and Anne Boudreau (Boudrot), at Assumption Parish, La., February 13, 1803. Grégoire LeBlanc and Joseph Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, one step-brother, two step-sisters, one half-sister, and François Pierre Le Lorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117. | 1.785 | Antoine Boudrot and Cécile Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Charles Richard and Catherine Gauterot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.511 | Anne Jeanne | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | St. Malo, France | Geneviève Richard | Victor Boudrau (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | Married Jean Marie Navarre, a native of Nantes, France, and the son of Jean Navarre and Marie Boudrot, February 6, 1809. He was the widower of Anastasie Gauterot. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, one step-brother, two step-sisters, one half-sister, and François Pierre Le Lorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | 1.785 | Antoine Boudrot and Cécile Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Charles Richard and Catherine Gauterot | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.512 | Marguerite | Pierre (actually Pitre) | 01/01/1768 | Geneviève Richard | Simon Pitre dit Simon Pierre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her mother, her stepfather, one half-brother, two half-sisters, one step-brother, two step-sisters, and François Le Lorre. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.513 | Barthélemy | Henry | père | 01/01/1744 | Anne Aucoin | Pierre Henry | Married Anne Bourg. | François (born 1770), Jacques (born 1773), Barthélemy (born 1776), Marie (born 1782) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, 1761-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, 1763-1770. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1777-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.514 | Anne | Bourg | 01/01/1746 | Ursule Hébert | Alexandre Bourg | Married Barthélemy Henry. | François (born 1770), Jacques (born 1773), Barthélemy (born 1776), Marie (born 1782) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.515 | François | Henry | 01/01/1770 | Anne Bourg | Barthélemy Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Pierre Henry and Anne Aucoin | Alexandre Bourg and Ursule Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.516 | Jacques | Henry | 01/01/1773 | Anne Bourg | Barthélemy Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Pierre Henry and Anne Aucoin | Alexandre Bourg and Ursule Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.517 | Barthélemy | Henry | 01/01/1776 | Pleudihen, Diocese of Dole, Brittany, France | Anne Bourg | Barthélemy Henry | Married Jeanne Bourg, daughter of Jean Bourg and Anne Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., August 27, 1798. Joseph Aucoin and Jean Richard witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:123-124. | 1.785 | Pierre Henry and Anne Aucoin | Alexandre Bourg and Ursule Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.518 | Marie | Henry | 01/01/1783 | Anne Bourg | Barthélemy Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Pierre Henry and Anne Aucoin | Alexandre Bourg and Ursule Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.519 | Michel | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1732 | Élisabeth Amirault | Antoine Aucoin(?) (Aucoing) | Married Isabelle Hébert. | Jean (born 1762), Marie (born 1764), Anne (born 1766), Grégoire (born 1767), Michel (born 1769), Pierre (born 1771), Isabelle (born 1772), François (born 1774), Floriane (born 1781), Constant (born 1783) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Lunaire, France, 1761-1763. Resided at Saint-Enogat, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and ten children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.520 | Isabelle | Hébert | 01/01/1737 | Married Michel Aucoin. She appears to have been a widow in 1793. | Jean (born 1762), Michel (born 1769), Pierre (born 1771), François (born 1774), Constant (born 1783), Marie (born 1764), Anne (born 1766), Isabelle (born 1772), Floriane (born 1781), Grégoire (born 1767) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and ten children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She and her family appear to have settled along Bayou des Écores (present-day Thompson's Creek) The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that she was the head of a household including one male child, three young male adults, four young female adults, and one middle-aged or elderly woman. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.521 | Jean Charles | Aucoin | 01/01/1762 | St. Malo, France | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Hélène Thibodeau, a native of St. Malo and the daughter of Charles Thibodeau and Madeleine Henry, November 25, 1787. The marriage was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church. The marriage was witnessed by Louis Grisey, Charles Thibodeau, Michel Aucoin, and François Dugue. | Casimire (born November 4, 1788), Reine Isabelle Marie (baptized April 22, 1792), François (baptized April 28, 1794), Amarante Emilie (born November 24, 1795), Lufroi Désiré (Lufrois Deseado) (born January 4, 1798), Pablo (Paul) Eleandro (born February 27, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of Bayou des Écores, November 25, 1787. He and his family were residents of New Feliciana in April 1794. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 70; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33-36, 38, 39. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.522 | Michel | Aucoin | 01/01/1769 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Marguerite Perinne (Perina) Bourg (Bourque), daughter of Jean Bourg and Anne Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., May 26, 1800. Jacques Henry and Nicolas Albert witnessed the marriage record. | Hubert Onesime (born August 16, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35, 38. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.523 | Pierre (Pierre Paul?) | Aucoin | 01/01/1771 | St. Nogata, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Isabelle (Ysabel) Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Rosalie Gauterie, a native of the Parish of Locmaria, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, and the daughter of Charles Gauterot and Magdeleine Melanson (Melançon), at Assumption Parish, La., October 14, 1799. Michel Aucoin and François Aucoin witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-seven years of age. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:;38, 3:41. | 1.785 | 12/04/1818 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.524 | François | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Marie Comeau, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Simon Comeau and Marguerite Aucoin. | Eucario (Euchariste?) Antoine (born December 9, 1800), Hélène (Elena) (born July 14, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-39. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.525 | Constant | Aucoin | 01/01/1783 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.526 | Marie | Aucoin | 01/01/1764 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.527 | Anne | Aucoin | 01/01/1766 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Her burial record indicates that she was thirty years of age. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33. | 1.785 | 08/09/1798 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.528 | Isabelle | Aucoin | 01/01/1785 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.529 | Floriane (Florence) | Aucoin | 01/01/1781 | St. Nogata(?) Parish, St. Malo, France | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married (1) Michel Pedeau. Married (2) François Barillot, son of Jacques Barillot and Marie Mazerolle, at Assumption Parish, November 26, 1814. Michel Aucoin and Jean Charles Blanchard witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:37. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.530 | Grégoire | Aucoin | 01/01/1767 | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Marie Marguerite Aucoin. | Augustin (born December 23, 1789), Louis Grégoire (born June 2, 1793; buried November 21, 1800), Isidore Joseph (born August 19, 1795), Lufroi (Ludfrois) (born March 27, 1798), Florence (born December 23, 1799), Grégoire (born February 23, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and nine siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including five boys, one young man, and one young woman. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33-36. | 1.785 | Antoine Aucoin and Elisabeth Amirault | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.531 | Pierre | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1741 | Hélène Blanchard | Alexis Aucoin | Married Hélène Hébert. | Victoire (born 1765), Anne (born 1770), Jean (born 1772), François (born 1774) | Indicated his intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.532 | Hélène | Hébert | 01/01/1741 | Claire Dugas (Dugast) | Jean Hébert | Married Pierre Aucoin, son of Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard. | Victoire (born 1765), Anne (born 1770), Jean (born 1772), François (born 1774) | Indicated her intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.533 | Victoire | Aucoin | 01/01/1765 | Hélène Hébert | Pierre Aucoin | Indicated her intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard | Jean Hébert and Claire Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.534 | Anne | Aucoin | 01/01/1770 | Hélène Hébert | Pierre Aucoin | Indicated her intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard | Jean Hébert and Claire Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.535 | Jean | Aucoin | 01/01/1772 | Hélène Hébert | Pierre Aucoin | Indicated his intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard | Jean Hébert and Claire Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.536 | François | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | Hélène Hébert | Pierre Aucoin | Indicated his intention to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard | Jean Hébert and Claire Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.537 | Claude | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1728 | St. Joseph Parish, Acadia | Anne Trahan | Joseph Aucoin | Married (1) Marie Joseph (Josèphe) Saulnier (Sonnier), who died sometime before November 1788. Signed a marriage contract with Marie Brasseur, November 20, 1788. Married (2) Marie Brasseur, the daughter of Mathieu Brasseur and Anne Bellemère and the widow of Olivier Benoit, November 23, 1788. The wedding, performed by Father Joseph de Arazena, was witnessed by Blaise Brasseur, Baptiste Figuron, Joseph Jeansonne, and Jean Jeansonne. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1758) Perpétue (born 1763), Anastasie (born 1768), Mathurin (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), and Pierre (born 1776) | Exiled to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | According to his marriage contract with Marie Brasseur, dated November 20, 1788, he brought to the union 125 piastres, which constituted half the value of the community property accumulated by himself and his late wife, Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier). In conformity with Louisiana's forced heirship laws, the remaining half was divided equally among the five children of his first marriage. The marriage contract also indicates that he was illiterate. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included three males of unspecified ages, one woman, and one girl. He and his family owned one cow and three horses. They evidently did not own any real estate. | At his request, an inventory of his estate was compiled on November 10, 1788. Father Pedro de Zamora officiated over Aucoin's interment. His succession is dated August 20, 1794. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 22; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 49; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2405-2406. | 1.785 | 13/08/1794 | Opelousas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||
2.538 | Marie Joseph (Josèphe) | Saulnier (Sonnier, Saunier) | 01/01/1737 | Married Claude Aucoin. | Jean Baptiste (born 1758) Perpétue (born 1763), Anastasie (born 1768), Mathurin (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), and Pierre (born 1776) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.539 | Anastasie | Aucoin | 01/01/1768 | St. Malo, France(?) | Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Anastasie Aucoin signed a marriage contract with Amable Bertrand, the son of Gilles Bertrand and Thérèse Lajeunesse and the widower of Anastasie Guenard, in the Opelousas district, December 19, 1789. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 22; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2407. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.540 | Mathurin | Aucoin | 01/01/1772 | Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Married Susanne (sometimes Suzanne) Langlois, daughter of Philippe Langlois and Marie Jeansonne of Acadia, at the Opelousas church, October 31, 1796. | Jean Baptiste (baptized February 5, 1797); Marie (baptized June 14, 1798); Mathurin, fils (baptized at Opelousas church, February 23, 1800)Canadian genealogist Bona Arsenault maintains that Silésia, a daughter, was born of the union of Mathurin Aucoin and Susanne Langlois in 1801, but that name does not appear in the extant church records. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 23-24; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2407. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.541 | Marie | Aucoin | 01/01/1773 | Marie Josèphe Saulnier (Sonnier) | Claude Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.542 | Charles | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1735 | Married Magdelaine Trahan. | Pierre (born 1757) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, son Pierre, Marie Daigle, and Françoise Trahan. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.543 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Trahan | 01/01/1737 | Married Charles Aucoin. | Pierre (born 1757) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Charles, son Pierre, Marie Daigle, and Françoise Trahan. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.544 | Pierre | Daroir (Darois, Darroer) | 01/01/1757 | Acadia | Magdelaine Trahan | Etiene (Etienne) Daroir (Darois) | Married Marie Hébert, a native of St. Malo, France, at St. Louis Catholic Church in New Orleans, January 14, 1786. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, Marie Daigle, and Françoise Trahan. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 24; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.545 | Marie | Daigle | 01/01/1768 | Marie Blanche AuCoin | Charles Daigle | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with Charles Aucoin, Magdelaine Trahan, Pierre Aucoin, and Françoise Trahan. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.546 | Françoise | Trahan | Veuve de Pasqual Hébert | 01/01/1747 | Married Pasqual (Pascal) Hébert. Widowed before 1785. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with Charles Aucoin, Magdelaine Trahan, Pierre Aucoin, and Marie Daigle. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.547 | Simon | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1732 | Married Marie Geneviève Theriot (Terriot), daughter of Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry. | Perpétue (born 1761), Marguerite Geneviève (born 1769), Anne Olive (born 1773), Rose Félicité (born 1774) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 37. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.548 | Marie Geneviève | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1735 | Françoise Landry | Charles Terriot (Theriot) | Married Simon Aucoin. | Perpétue (born 1761), Marguerite Geneviève (born 1769), Anne Olive (born 1773), Rose Félicité (born 1774) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Simon and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.549 | Perpétue | Aucoin | 01/01/1761 | Bristol, England (born during the Grand Dérangement) | Marie Geneviève Theriot (Terriot) | Simon Aucoin | Married Joseph Richard, a native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, and the son of Pierre Richard and Françoise Daigre, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1788. Jacques Raoule, Joseph Comeau, Jean Baptiste Aucoin, and Jean Baptiste Daigre witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Her marriage record suggests that she was a resident of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores in 1788. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38. | 1.785 | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.550 | Marie Marguerite Geneviève | Aucoin | 01/01/1769 | Marie Geneviève Theriot (Terriot) | Simon Aucoin | Married Grégoire Aucoin, son of Michel Aucoin and Isabelle Hébert. | Augustin (born December 23, 1789), Louis Grégoire (born June 2, 1793), Isidore Joseph (born August 19, 1795), Lufroi (Ludfrois) (born March 27, 1798), Florence (born December 23, 1799), Grégoire (born February 23, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34-36. | 1.785 | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.551 | Anne Olive | Aucoin | 01/01/1773 | St. Malo, France | Marie Geneviève Theriot (Terriot) | Simon Aucoin | Married Isaac Landry, a native of Cherbourg, France, son of Joseph Landry and Jeanne Varongues, at Assumption Parish, La., November 3, 1795. Joseph Terriot (Theriot) and Amable Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:427. | 1.785 | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.552 | Rose Félicité | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | Marie Geneviève Theriot (Terriot) | Simon Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and three siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 71; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Landry | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.553 | Marin | Bourg | père | 01/01/1740 | Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Jean Bourg | Married Osite Daigle, daughter of Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron. | Marie Luce (born 1763), Jean Pierre (born 1765), Maguerite Josèphe (born 1768), Marin Joseph (born 1769), Rose Magdelaine (born 1772), Marie Françoise Magdelaine Josèphe (born 1775), François Georges (born 1778), Guillaume Jean (born 1781) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1763. Resided at Plouer, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie Osithe and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Died sometime before François Bourg's marriage on March 27, 1797. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.554 | Marie Osithe (Osite) | Daigle | Veuve Bourg | 01/01/1745 | Angélique Doiron | Olivier Daigle | Married Marin Bourg, son of Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît). She was a widow in 1793. | Jean Pierre (born 1765), Marie Luce (born 1763), Maguerite Josèphe (born 1768), Marin Joseph (born 1769), Rose Magdelaine (born 1772), Marie Françoise Magdelaine Josèphe (born 1775), François Goerges (born 1778), Guillaume Jean (born 1781) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Marin and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She and her family evidently settled along Bayou des Écores (present-day Thompson's Creek) following their arrival in 1785. The census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that she was a widow and the head of a household including two male children, three female children, two young male adults, and one middle-aged female. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.555 | Jean Pierre (actually Joseph Pierre) | Bourg | one source indicates Plouer, Brittany, France; three sources indicate St. Malo, France | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married Anne Blanchard, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Joseph Blanchard and Anne Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., April 23, 1798. Pierre Blanchard, Laurent Blanchard, and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Pierre Laurent (Pedro Lorenzo) (baptized January 6, 1799), Rosalie Anne (born October 15, 1800), Louis (born November 12, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 124, 127, 128. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.556 | Marie Luce | Bourg | 01/01/1763 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.557 | Marguerite Joseph (Josèphe) | Bourg | 01/01/1768 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.558 | Marin Joseph (often Joseph) | Bourg | 01/01/1769 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married Marie Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Joseph Aucoin and Anne Hébert, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 20, 1790. Gabriel Aucoin, Mathurin Pierre Bourg, and François Dugue witnessed the marriage record. | Marin François (born April 16, 1792; baptized May 8, 1792), Amant Louis (born May 7, 1794), Rose Anastasie (baptized April 30, 1797), Marianne (Mariana) (born September 30, 1798), Marie Carmelite (baptized May 3, 1801, at the age of sixteen months), Scholastique Julienne (Escolastica Juliana) (born January 25, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:122, 126, 128. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.559 | Rose Magdelaine | Bourg | 01/01/1772 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married Jean Baptiste Aucoin. | Jean Baptiste (born March 29, 1801), Clarisse Cléonise (born March 3, 1803) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She and her family were residents of Assumption Parish, La., in 1803. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49;Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33, 36. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.560 | Pierre Jean Baptiste | Bourg | 01/01/1773 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.561 | Marie Françoise Magdelaine Josèphe | Bourg | 01/01/1775 | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married (1) Simon Landry, son of Prosper Landry and Isabelle (Ysabel) Pitre of St. Malo, France, at Assumption Parish, La., July 5, 1795. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Felteman, son of Jean Baptiste Felteman and Marie Malbrou of Germany, at Assumption Parish, La., November 27, 1797. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125, 126. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.562 | François George | Bourg | 01/01/1778 | St. Malo, France | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married Adélaïde Bertrand, a native of Nantes, France, and the daughter of Pierre Bertrand and Catherine Bourg, at Assumption Parish, La., March 27, 1797. | Julie Scholastique (Julia Escolastica) (born July 14, 1797), Rose Adélaïde (baptized January 8, 1799), Ursin Narcisse (born October 29, 1800), Valéry (born August 1, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121, 124, 128, 129. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.563 | Guillaume Jean | Bourg | 01/01/1781 | Diocese of St. Malo, France | Marie Osithe (Osite) Daigle | Marin Bourg | Married Clarice Breau, daughter of Charles Breau and Esther Breau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., July 18, 1803. Pierre Bouré, Honoré Breau, and Alexis Breau witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:122. | 1.785 | Jean Bourg and Françoise Benoist (Benoît) | Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.564 | Joseph | Hébert | père | 01/01/1740 | Élisabeth (Elizabeth) Bourg | François Hébert | Married Marie Magdelaine (Madeleine) Aucoin, daughter of Joseph Aucoin and Anne Trahan. | Marie (born 1768), Victoire (born 1771) | Resided at Pleslin, Brittany, 1759-1765. Resided at Plouer, France, 1763-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1767. Resided at Plouer, France, 1767-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and two daughters. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.565 | Marie Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Aucoin | 01/01/1741 | Anne Trahan | Joseph Aucoin | Married Joseph Hébert. | Marie (born 1768), Victoire (born 1771) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and two children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.566 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Marie Magdelaine Aucoin | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and sister Victoire. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.567 | Victoire | Hébert | 01/01/1771 | Marie Magdelaine Aucoin | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and sister Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.568 | Claude | Guédry (Guidry) | père | 01/01/1725 | Married (1) Anne LeJeune. Married (2) Anne Moÿse (Moïse). | Marie (born 1764), François (born 1766), Suliac (born 1768), Malo (born 1770), Pierre (born 1773), Ollivier (born 1777) | Resided at Châteauneuf, Brittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.569 | Anne | Moyse (Moïse) | 01/01/1731 | Married (1) Joseph LeBlanc. Married (2) Claude Guédry (Guidry). | Marie (born 1764), François (born 1766), Suliac (born 1768), Malo (born 1770), Pierre (born 1773), Ollivier (born 1777) | Resided at Châteauneuf, rittany, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.570 | Marie | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1764 | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.571 | François | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1766 | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.572 | Suliac (Souliac, Soullac) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1768 | France | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Married Rose Anastasie Aucoin, a native of France and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Aucoin and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot), at Pointe Coupée Parish, December 27, 1789. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:343. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.573 | Malo | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1770 | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.574 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | leur fils | 01/01/1785 | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.575 | Ollivier (Olivier) | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1777 | Anne Moyse (Moïse) | Claude Guédry (Guidry) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.576 | Aman (Amant, Amand) | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | père | 01/01/1733 | Angélique Doiron | François Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married (1) Married Marie Couillard. Married (2) Marie Nogue (Nogues), daughter of Charles Nogues and Française Raimond. Neither spouse was of Acadien ancestry. | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1770), François (born 1771; married September 3, 1793) Second marriage: Marie (born 1779; married February 18, 1800), Joseph (born 1781), Hélène (born ca. January 1785) | Resided at Plouer, Brittany, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife Marie and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following children: Jean, his son, 17 years old; François, his son, 15 years old; Joseph, his son, 5 years old; and marie, his daughter, 8 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Died before February 1798. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 113, 116. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.577 | Marie (Marie Perrine) | Nogue (Nogues) | 01/01/1750 | Françoise Raimond | Charles Nogues | Married Aman Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux). | Marie (born 1779), Joseph (born 1781), Hélène (born ca. January 1785) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband Aman Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) and three children and two stepchildren. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.578 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1770 | Marie Couillard | Aman (Amant, Amand) Boudro (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included François, his fifteen-year-old brother, Joseph, his five-year-old half-brother, and Marie, his eight-year-old half-sister. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the head of a household that included Joseph, his six-year-old brother, François, his sixteen-year-old brother, and Marie, his nineteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.579 | François | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1771 | Brittany, France | Marie Couillard | Aman (Amant, Amand) Boudro (Boudrot) | Married Marie Thibodeau (María Tibodaux), a native of Brittany, France, and the daughter of Jean Thibodeau and Françoise Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., September 3, 1793. | Anne Marie (Ana María) (born September 17, 1797) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, the household included Jean (Jean Baptiste), his seventeen-year-old brother, Joseph, his five-year-old half-brother, and Marie, his eight-year-old half-sister. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his brother Jean's household. In addition to Jean, his eighteen-year-old sibling, the household also included Marie, his nineteen-year-old half-sister, and Joseph, his six-year-old half-brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.580 | Marie | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1779 | Marie (Perrine) Nogue (Nogues) | Aman (Amant, Amand) Boudro (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, a widower, the household included Jean (Jean Baptiste), her seventeen-year-old half-brother, François, her fifteen-year-old half-brother, and Joseph, her five-year-old brother. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen (sic)-year-old member of the household of Jean Boudreaux, her eighteen-year-old half-brother. Other members of the household included Joseph, her six-year-old brother, and François, her sixteen-year-old half-brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.581 | Joseph | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1781 | Marie (Perrine) Nogue (Nogues) | Aman (Amant, Amand) Boudro (Boudrot) | Married Marie Jeanne Billardin (Villardin), a native of Morlaix, France, and the daughter of Lambert Billardin (Villardin) and Marguerite Daigre, at Assumption Parish, La., October 24, 1803. Jean Boudrot and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a five-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his father, a widower, his household included Jean (Jean Baptiste), his seventeen-year-old half-brother, François, his fifteen-year-old half-brother, and Marie, his eight-year-old sister. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.582 | Hélène | Boudro (Boudrot, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1777 | Marie (Perrine) Nogue (Nogues) | Aman (Amant, Amand) Boudro (Boudrot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.583 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Aucoin | Veuve de Charles Trahan | 01/01/1716 | Married Charles Trahan. She became a widow before 1785. | Marie (born 1738), Marguerite (born 1745) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1767. Resided at Plouer, 1768-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughters marie and Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.584 | Marie | Trahan | 01/01/1738 | Magdelaine Aucoin | Charles Trahan | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and sister Marguerite. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.585 | Marguerite | Trahan | 01/01/1745 | Magdelaine Aucoin | Charles Trahan | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother and sister Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 72. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.586 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Aucoin | père | 01/01/1719 | Married Marguerite Therio (Theriot, Terriot). | Marie (born 1758), Jean Baptiste (born 1764), Rose Magdelaine (born 1766), Rose Anastasie (born 1769), Pierre (born 1774; married 1796) | Deported to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.587 | Marguerite | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1728 | Married Jean Baptiste Aucoin. | Marie (born 1758), Jean Baptiste (born 1764), Rose Magdelaine (born 1766), Rose Anastasie (born 1769), Pierre (born 1774) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.588 | Marie | Aucoin | 01/01/1758 | England | Marguerite Therio (Terriot, Theriot) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Married Joseph Aucoin, son of Alexis Aucoin and Hélène Blanchard, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 6, 1788. Felix Bernard, Jean Baptiste Aucoin, Jacques Blanchard, and Alexis Aucoin witnessed the marriage record. | Germain Jacques (born December 30, 1788), Jean Baptiste (baptized May 24, 1792) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:37. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.589 | Jean Baptiste | Aucoin | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Therio (Terriot, Theriot) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Married Rose Magdelaine Bourg, daughter of Marin Bourg and Marie Osite Daigle. | Rosa (Rose) (interred June 28, 1795 at the age of 4 months), Jean Baptiste (born March 29, 1801), Clarisse Cléonise (born March 3, 1803) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:36, 39. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.590 | Rose Magdelaine | Aucoin | 01/01/1766 | Marguerite Therio (Terriot, Theriot) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.591 | Rose Anastasie | Aucoin | 01/01/1769 | Marie Marguerite Therio (Terriot, Theriot) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Married Suliac (Souillac, Souliac) Guédry, a native of France and the son of Claude Guédry and Anne Moïse, at Pointe Coupée Parish, December 27, 1789. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:343. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.592 | Pierre | Aucoin | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Therio (Terriot, Theriot) | Jean Baptiste Aucoin | Married Pélagie Daigle (Daigre), daughter of Olivier Daigle and Marie Daigle. | Pélagie Céleste (baptized May 22, 1801, at the age of 2 years) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:39. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.593 | Jean | Pitre | père | 01/01/1727 | Married Félicité Daigle, daughter of Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau. | Charlotte Marie (born 1765), Pierre (born 1766), Jacques (born 1767), Françoise Madeleine (born 1768), Félicité (born 1769), Marguerite (born 1771) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.594 | Félicité | Daigle | 01/01/1730 | Marie Anne Breau | Jean Daigle | Married Jean Pitre. | Charlotte Marie (born 1765), Pierre (born 1766), Jacques (born 1767), Françoise Madeleine (born 1768), Félicité (born 1769), Marguerite (born 1771) | Resided at Pleudihen, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.595 | Charlotte Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1765 | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.596 | Pierre | Pitre | 01/01/1766 | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.597 | Jacques | Pitre | 01/01/1767 | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.598 | Françoise Madeleine (François) | Pitre | 05/07/1769 | Pleudihen, Brittany, France | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.599 | Félicité | Pitre | 01/01/1769 | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.600 | Marguerite | Pitre | 01/01/1771 | Félicité Daigle | Jean Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Daigle and Marie Anne Breau | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.601 | Joseph | Hébert | fils Joseph | 01/01/1735 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Benoît (Benoist) | Joseph Hébert | Married (1) Françoise Comeau. Married (2) Marguerite D'Aigle (Daigle), daughter of Olivier Daigle and Angélique Doiron. | Pierre Jean (born 1768), Marie Joseph (Josèphe) (born 1767), Thérèse Anne (born 1773), Jean Pierre (born February 21, 1785) | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759. Resided at Pleurtuit, France, 1759-1762. Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1763-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1764-1768. Resided at Plouer, France, 1768-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, four children, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.602 | Marguerite | Daigre (Daigle, D'AIGLE) | 01/01/1740 | Angélique Doiron | Olivier Daigle (D'Aigle, Daigre) | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Landry. Married (2) Honoré Richard. Married (3) Joseph Hébert. | Pierre Jean (born 1768), Marie Joseph (Josèphe) (born 1767), Thérèse Anne (born 1773), Jean Pierre (born February 21, 1785) | Resided at Plouer, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, four children, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.603 | Pierre Jean | Hébert | 01/01/1768 | Françoise Comeau | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, stepmother, three siblings, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît (Benoist) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.604 | Marie Joseph (Josèphe) | Hébert | 01/01/1767 | Françoise Comeau | Joseph Hébert | French ecclesiastical records indicate erroneously that she died at Plouer in 1779. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, stepmother, three siblings, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît (Benoist) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.605 | Thérèse Anne | Hébert | 01/01/1773 | St. Malo, France | Françoise Comeau | Joseph Hébert | Married Juan Ximenes. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, stepmother, three siblings, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:166. | 1.785 | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît (Benoist) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.606 | Marguerite | Richard | 01/01/1770 | Marguerite Daigle | Honoré RIchard | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Joseph Hébert, her stepfather, and Marguerite D'Aigle (Daigle), her mother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.607 | Jean Pierre | Hébert | Marguerite D'Aigle (Daigle) | Joseph Hébert | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, three siblings, and Marguerite Richard. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît (Benoist) | Olivier Daigle (D'Aigle) and Angélique Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.608 | Pierre | Henry | père | 01/01/1734 | Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Henry | Married Marie Joseph (Josèphe) Bourg, daughter of Charles Bourg. | Jean (born 1764) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and son Jean. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.609 | Marie Joseph (Marguerite Josèphe) | Bourg | 01/01/1735 | Charles Bourg | Married Pierre Henry, son of Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot). | Jean (born 1764) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and son Jean. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.610 | Jean | Henry | 01/01/1764 | Marie Joseph (Marguerite Josèphe) Bourg | Pierre Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Charles Bourg | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.611 | Jean | Henry | père | 01/01/1732 | Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Henry | Married Marie Pitre, daughter of Joseph Pitre and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Maximilien (born 1761), Isabelle (born 1764), Marguerite Rose (born 1769) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, three children, and his sister Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.612 | Marie | Pitre | 01/01/1732 | Isabelle Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Joseph Pitre | Married Jean Henry, son of Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot). | Maximilien (born 1761), Isabelle (born 1764), Marguerite Rose (born 1769) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisina with her husband, three children, and her sister-in-law, Marie Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:594. | 1.785 | 31/08/1786 | the "cemetery of Fort of Baton Rouge" | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.613 | Maximilien | Henry | 01/01/1761 | Marie Pitre | Jean Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and his aunt Marie Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot (Boudreaux) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.614 | Isabelle | Henry | 01/01/1764 | Marie Pitre | Jean Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and her aunt Marie Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot (Boudreaux) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.615 | Marguerite Rose (actually Marie Rose) | Henry | 01/01/1769 | Marie Pitre | Jean Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and her aunt Marie Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot (Boudreaux) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.616 | Marie | Henry | 01/01/1730 | Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of her brother, Jean Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 73; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.617 | Ambroise | Bourg | père | 01/01/1732 | Charles Bourg | Married (1) Anne Josèphe Pitre. Married (2) Marie Modeste Moulaison, daughter of Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson (Mélançon). | Marie Victoire (born 1765; married January 23, 1787), Modeste Aimée (born 1767), Magdelaine (born 1769), Julie Thérèse (born 1771), Isabelle (born 1773), Joseph (born 1777), Pélagie (born 1780), Modeste (born 1782), Ambroise (born 1784), Félicité (born March 15, 1786) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and nine childrne. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121, 126. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.618 | Marie Modeste | Moulaison | 01/01/1745 | Cécile Melanson (Melançon) | Jacques Moulaison | Married Ambroise Bourg, son of Charles Bourg. | Marie Victoire (born 1765), Modeste Aimée (born 1767), Magdelaine (born 1769), Julie Thérèse (born 1771), Isabelle (born 1773), Joseph (born 1777), Pélagie (born 1780), Modeste (born 1782), Ambroise (born 1784) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1774. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1774-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and nine children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.619 | Marie Victoire | Bourg | 01/01/1765 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.620 | Modeste Aimée | Bourg | 01/01/1767 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Married Jacques Blanchard at New Orleans, January 5, 1786. | Modeste (born November 25, 1787), Zephirin (baptized May 24, 1792), Emerite (baptized June 24, 1792), Marin (Marain) (born February 14, 1793), Joseph (born April 7, 1796), Louis Amant (Arman) (baptized July 13, 1800, at the age of 1 1/2 years), Augustine (born April 13, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:43; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 97,100, 101. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.621 | Magdelaine (Madeleine Adélaïde) | Bourg | 01/01/1769 | Marie Modeste Moulaison (Molesson) | Ambroise Bourg | Married Pierre Charles Thibodeau, the son of Charles Thiboceau and Madeleine Henry, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., October 10, 1788. Pierre Allain, Jacques Vignes, Félix Bernard, and François Duque witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | She was a resident of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores at the time of her wedding. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.622 | Julie Thérèse | Bourg | 01/01/1771 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.623 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Bourg | 01/01/1773 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.624 | Joseph | Bourg | 01/01/1777 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.625 | Pélagie | Bourg | 01/01/1780 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.626 | Modeste | Bourg | 01/01/1783 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.627 | Ambroise | Bourg | 01/01/1784 | Marie Modeste Moulaison | Ambroise Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and eight siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Jacques Moulaison and Cécile Melanson | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.628 | Charles | Henry | père | 01/01/1736 | Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Jean Henry | Married Françoise Hébert, daughter of Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît (Benoist). | Charles (born 1776), Françoise Victoire (born 1770), Marguerite Toussainte (born 1772) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.629 | Françoise | Hébert | 01/01/1738 | Isabelle Benoît (Benoist) | Joseph Hébert | Married Charles Henry. | Charles (born 1776), Françoise Victoire (born 1770), Marguerite Toussainte (born 1772) | Resided at Cherbourg, France, 1759-1774. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1774-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.630 | Charles | Henry | 01/01/1776 | Françoise Hébert | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.631 | Françoise Victoire | Henry | 01/01/1770 | Françoise Hébert | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.632 | Marguerite Toussainte | Henry | 01/01/1772 | Françoise Hébert | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Madeleine Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Hébert and Isabelle Benoît | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.633 | Pierre | Henry | fils | 01/01/1757 | Ile St. Jean, Acadia | Marie Madeleine (sometimes Marguerite) Pitre | Pierre Henry | Married Marie Longuépé at New Orleans, January 1, 1786. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his sisters Françoise and Angélique. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:162. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.634 | Françoise | Henry | 01/01/1762 | Anne Thibodeau | Pierre Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her brother Pierre and her sister Angélique. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.635 | Angélique | Henry | 01/01/1764 | Anne Thibodeau | Pierre Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her brother Pierre and her sister Françoise. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.636 | Simon | Como (Comeaux) | père | 01/01/1741 | Marie Aucoin | Jean Baptiste Comeau | Married Marguerite Aucoin. | Marie (born 1764), Isabelle (born 1766), Magdelaine (born 1767), Félicité (born 1769), Jean Baptiste (born 1771), Alexandre (born 1774), Pierre (born 1776), Joseph Marie (born March 7, 1785) | Depoted to England. Resided at Plouer, Brittany, France, 1764-1765. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1766-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one male child, three young male adults, three young female adults, and one middle-aged male. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.637 | Marguerite | Aucoin | 01/01/1739 | Married Simon Como (Comeaux). | Marie (born 1764), Isabelle (born 1766), Magdelaine (born 1767), Félicité (born 1769), Jean Baptiste (born 1771), Alexandre (born 1774), Pierre (born 1776), Joseph Marie (born March 7, 1785) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and eight children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.638 | Marie | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.639 | Isabelle (Élisabeth Madeleine) | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.640 | Magdelaine (Marie Madeleine) | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1767 | St. Malo, France | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Married (1) François Bourg, son of Jean Bourg and Anne Daigle, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., February 20, 1792. Elie Comeau, Simon Comeau, and Jean Baptiste Aucoin witnessed the marriage record. aMarried (2) François Aucoin, son of Michel Aucoin and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., June 9, 1800. | Second marriage: Eucario (Euchariste?) Antoine (born December 9, 1800), Hélène (Elena) (born July 14, 1802) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-39, 121. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.641 | Félicité (Augustine) | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.642 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1771 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.643 | Alexandre (Alexis Simon) | Como (Comeau, Comeaux) | 01/01/1774 | St. Servan, France | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Married Marguerite Blanchard, a native of St. Similiano Diocese of Nantes, France, at Assumption Parish, La., February 4, 1799. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Appointed corporal second class in the Lafourche District militia unit, November 20, 1798. Comeau traveled to New Orleans on business in May 1799. He held the rank corporal second-class in the Valenzuela militia in December 1799. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Verret to the governor, May 22, 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:563; Governor to Verret, December 1799, AGI, PPC, 216A:582; Holmes, Honor and Ficelity, 238; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:97. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.644 | Pierre | Como (Comeaux) | 01/01/1776 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and seven siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.645 | Joseph Marie | Como (Comeaux) | 03/07/1785 | Marguerite Aucoin | Simon Como (Comeaux) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Baptiste Comeau and Marie Aucoin | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.646 | Ambroise | Longuépée | père | 01/01/1733 | Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | Louis Longuépée | Married Marguerite Henry, daughter of François Henry and Marie Dugas (Dugast). | Janvier (born 1765) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and his son Janvier. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.647 | Marguerite | Henry | 01/01/1745 | Marie Dugas (Dugast) | François Henry | Married Ambroise Longuépée, son of Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux). | Janvier (born 1765) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1763. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and her son Janvier. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.648 | Janvier | Longuépée | 01/01/1765 | Marguerite Henry | Ambroise Longuépée | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 74; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Louis Longuépée and Anne Brasseur (Brasseaux) | François Henry and Marie Dugas (Dugast) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.649 | Anne | Terriot (Theriot) | Veuve de Joseph Granger | 01/01/1749 | Françoise Guérin | François Terriot (Theriot) | Married (1) Pierre Landry, son of Joseph Landry and Marie Josèphe Comeau. Married (2) Joseph Granger, son of Joseph Granger and Marguerite Terriot. She was widowed a second time by 1785. | First marriage: Anne Landry (born 1768)Second marriage: Ignace Granger (born 1770), Françoise Eulalie Granger (born 1778), Pierre Marie Granger (born 1782), Joseph Granger, Jeanne Granger | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughters Anne Landry and Françoise Eulalie Granger, and her sons Ignace Granger and Pierre Marie Granger. They were accompanied by Joseph Granger and Jeanne Granger. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.650 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1768 | Anne Theriot (Terriot) | Pierre Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Sailed to Louisiana with her twice-widowed mother, one half-sister, two half-brothers, Joseph Granger, and Jeanne Granger. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.651 | Joseph (Constant) | Granger (Grangé) | 01/01/1765 | Acadia | Marie Cyr | Joseph Granger | Married Anne Magdeleine (Magdalina) Savary (Chavine, Chauvin, Savarry) at Ascension Parish, La., June 5, 1786. Abraham Landry and Jean Charles Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Anne Theriot (Terriot), the widow of Joseph Granger. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | His name is rendered as Joseph Grangées in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included Anne Savary (Savarry), his forty-year-old wife, Olivier Potier, his fifteen-year-old stepson, and Silvin (Silvain) Potier, his nine-year-old stepson. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and one hog. His name is rendered as Joseph Grangé in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Savary (Savaray), his wife, 41 years old; Olivier Potier (Pitre), his stepson, 16 years old; and Silvin (Silvain) Potier, his stepson, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:183; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.652 | Jeanne | Granger (?) | 01/01/1777 | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Anne Theriot, the widow of Joseph Granger. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.653 | Ignace | Granger | enfant | 01/01/1770 | Marie Cyr | Joseph Granger | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his twice-widowed mother, his half-sister Anne Landry, his sister Françoise Eulalie, and his brother Pierre Marie. His family was accompanied by Joseph Granger and Jeanne Granger(?). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.654 | Françoise Eulalie | Granger | enfant | 01/01/1778 | Anne Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Granger | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her twice-widowed mother, her half-sister Anne Landry, and her brothers Ignace and Pierre Marie. Her family was accompanied by Joseph Granger and Jeanne Granger(?). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.655 | Pierre Marie | Granger | enfant | 01/01/1783 | Anne Theriot (Terriot) | Joseph Granger | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his twice-widowed mother, his half-sister Anne Landry, his sister Françoise Eulalie, and his brother Ignace. His family was accompanied by Joseph Granger and Jeanne Granger(?). Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.656 | Joseph Ignace | Godet (Gaudet) | 01/01/1747 | Marie Josèphe Darois | Jean Baptiste Gaudet | Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.657 | Charles | Henry | père | 01/01/1736 | Marie Hébert | Jean Henry | Married Marguerite Theriot (Terriot), daughter of François Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Guérin. | Jean Baptiste (born 1767), Marie Joseph (Josèphe) (born 1763), Jeanne Françoise (born 1768) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1761-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, three children, Françoise Guerin, and Marie Theriot. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.658 | Marguerite | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1735 | Françoise Guérin | François Terriot (Theriot) | Married Charles Henry, son of Jean Henry and Marie Hébert. | Jean Baptiste (born 1767), Marie Joseph (Josèphe) (born 1763), Jeanne Françoise (born 1768) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1761. Resided at Saint-Servan, France, 1761-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, three children, Françoise Guerin, and Marie Theriot. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.659 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Henry | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Theriot (Terriot) | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, two siblings, Françoise Guerin, and Marie Theriot. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | François Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Guérin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.660 | Marie Joseph (Josèphe) | Henry | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Theriot (Terriot) | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, two siblings, Françoise Guerin, and Marie Theriot. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | François Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Guérin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.661 | Jeanne Françoise | Henry | 01/01/1768 | Marguerite Theriot (Terriot) | Charles Henry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | François Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Guérin | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.662 | Françoise | Guérin | Veuve François Theriot | 01/01/1706 | Married François Theriot (Terriot). | Marie (born 1733) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Charles Henry and Marguerite Theriot. Accompanied by her daughter Marie. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.663 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1733 | Françoise Guerin | François Theriot (Terriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. With her widowed mother, she traveled to Louisiana with the family of Charles Henry and Marguerite Theriot. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.664 | René | Landry | père | 01/01/1732 | Married Marguerite Babin. | Marie (born 1763), Servanne (born 1765), Jean Raphaël (born 1l767), Marguerite (born 1769), Anne (born 1774), Pierre (born 1776), Joseph (born 1779), Jeanne (born 1780) | Deported to England. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, seven children, and Paul Babin, who was either his brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.665 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Sudanton (Southampton?), England | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Married Jean Raffrey at New Orleans, December 22, 1785. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either her father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:180. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.666 | Servanne | Landry | 01/01/1765 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either her father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.667 | Jean Raphaël | Landry | 01/01/1767 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either his father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.668 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1769 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either her father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.669 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1774 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either her father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.670 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1776 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either his father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.671 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1779 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either his father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.672 | Jeanne | Landry | 01/01/1780 | Marguerite Babin | René Landry | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her father, six siblings, and Paul Babin, who was either her father's brother-in-law or step-brother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.673 | Paul | Babin | 01/01/1733 | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied the family of René Landry, who was either his step-brother or his brother-in-law. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.674 | Victoire | Dugast (Dugas) | Veuve de Thomas Ayé | 01/01/1747 | Anne Marie Benoît (Benoist) | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Married Thomas Ayé (Aillet), son of Thomas Aillet and Madeleine Clolus. Memorial services for her husband were held on October 23, 1780. | Thomas (Thomas Joseph) Hayé (Aillet) (born 1775), Louis (Louis Julien) Hayé (Aillet) (born 1779) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her sons Thomas and Louis. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.675 | Thomas | Haye (Aillet) | enfant | 01/01/1775 | Victoire Dugast (Dugas) | Thomas Haye (Aillet, Ayé) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his widowed mother and brother Louis. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Thomas Aillet and Madeleine Clolus | Charles Dugas (Dugast) and Anne Marie Benoît | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.676 | Louis | Haye (Aillet) | 01/01/1779 | Victoire Dugast (Dugas) | Thomas Haye (Aillet, Ayé) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his widowed mother and brother Thomas. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Thomas Aillet and Madeleine Clolus | Charles Dugas (Dugast) and Anne Marie Benoît | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.677 | Anne Joseph (Josèphe) | Henry | Veuve de Théodore Teriot (Terriot) | 01/01/1752 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Marie Madeleine Pitre | Pierre Henry | Married (1) Théodore Teriot (Theriot, Terriot). Widowed by mid-1785. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Boudrot, son of Alexandre Boudrot and Marie Magdeleine Vincent, at St. Gabriel, Louisiana, February 27, 1786. | First marriage: Angélique (born 1781) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1777. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1777-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her daughter Angélique. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:113-114. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.678 | Angélique | Teriot (Terriot, Theriot) | 01/01/1781 | Anne Joseph (Josèphe) Henry | Théodore Teriot (Terriot, Theriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her widowed mother. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 75; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | François Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Guérin | Pierre Henry and Marie Madeleine Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.679 | Charles | Pitre | père | 01/01/1729 | Isabelle Boudrot | Joseph Pitre | Married Anne Henry, daughter of Jean Henry and Marie Hébert. | Joseph (born 1766), Marguerite (born 1770), Isabelle (born 1774) | Residedat Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.680 | Anne | Henry | 01/01/1733 | Marie Hébert | Jean Henry | Married Charles Pitre, son of Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot. | Joseph (born 1766), Marguerite (born 1770), Isabelle (born 1774) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and three children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.681 | Joseph | Pitre | 01/01/1766 | Anne Henry | Charles Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76. | 1.785 | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.682 | Marguerite | Pitre | 01/01/1770 | Anne Henry | Charles Pitre | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76. | 1.785 | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.683 | Isabelle | Pitre | 01/01/1774 | Anne Henry | Charles Pitre | Married Paul Marie Boudrot, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of François Boudrot and Euphrisine Barillot, at Assumpton Parish, La., September 28, 1794. Jean Baptiste Cazebon and Jean Mercier witnessed the marriage record. | Isabelle Euphrosine (born March 4, 1795) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and two siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:112, 117. | 1.785 | Joseph Pitre and Isabelle Boudrot | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.684 | Pierre | Arcement (Arsement) | père | 01/01/1733 | Cap Sable, Nova Scotia | Married Marie Hébert, daughter of Jean Hébert and Madeleine (Marie Madeleine) Doiron. | Pierre (born ca. 1758), Marguerite (Ludivine) (born September 16, 1760), Marie (Marie Josèphe (born October 24, 1762), Charles Suliac (August 15, 1764), Tranquil (Tranquille François) (born June 9, 1766), Victoire (Victoire Hélène) (born March 4, 1768), Perine (Perina, Perinne, Madeleine) (born May 12, 1770), Guillaume (Romain) (born January 6, 1772), Julie (born 1773), Françoise (born 1776) | Resided at Saint-Suliac, Brittany, France, 1759-1773. Probably resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1773-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household including Tranquille, his twenty-two-year-old son, Guillaume, his fifteen-year-old son, Victoire, his nineteen-year-old daughter, Perinne, his seventeen-year-old daughter, Julie, his thirteen-year-old daughter, and Françoise, his eleven-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn, two cows, and two hogs. Mistakenly identified as Pierre Arsenaut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Tranquil, his son, 22 years old; Guillaume, his son, 16 years old; Victoire, his daughter, 20 years old; Pierre, his son, 18 yers old; Julie, his daughter, 13 years old; and Françoise, his daughter, 11 years old. The census suggested that he was a widower. He and family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifty barrels of corn, two cows, and fourteen hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:31-32; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Pierre Arcement and Marie Josèphe Hébert." | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.685 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1735 | Madeleine Doiron | Jean Hébert | Married Pierre Arcemen | Marguerite (born 1761), Marie (born 1763), Victoire (born 1767), Perine (born 1769), Guillaume (born 1772), Julie (born 1773), Françoise (born 1776) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and six children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.686 | Marguerite | Arcement (Arsement) | (n'embarque pas) | 01/01/1761 | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Extant passenger rolls indicate that she signed up to sail for Louisiana aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana; a marginal notation on the passenger manifest, however, indicates that she did not board the vessel. A marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she did not board the ship before its departure; French genealogists Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux also indicate that she did not board the Ville d'Arcangel when it departed France. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.687 | Marie | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1763 | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.688 | Victoire | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1767 | St. Malo, France | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Married Louis Aucoin, son of Antoine Aucoin and Françoise Hébert. | Pierre Louis (born November 15, 1790), Louis Ambroise (born July 9, 1792; buried November 18, 1799), Antoine Joseph (born July 3, 1795), Noël (born September 30, 1799), Eugène (born June 15, 1800) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, her household included Tranquille, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her fifteen-year-old brother, Perinne, her seventeen-year-old sister, Julie, her thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, her eleven-year-old sister. Mistakenly identified as Victoire Arsenaut in the 1769 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquil, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her sixteen-year-old brother, Pierre, her eighteen-year-old brother, Julie, her thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:9-10; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34-36, 38-39. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.689 | Perine (Perinna, Perinne) | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1769 | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Married (1) Jean Charles Richard, the son of Joseph Richard and Marguerite LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., September 7, 1789. Pierre Arcement and Basile Richard witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Joseph Thibodeau, son of Blaise Thibodeau and Catherine Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., January 7, 1795. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquille, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her fifteen-year-old brother, Victoire, her nineteen-year-old sister, Julie, her thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:31. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.690 | Guillaume | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1772 | Saint-Souliac, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Married Marianne Ayssene, a native of St. Charles Parish, La., and the daughter of François Ayssene and Marie Thérèse Smith, at Assumption Parish, La., February 14, 1803. Jacques Henry and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquille, his twenty-two-year-old brother, Victoire, his nineteen-year-old sister, Perine (Perinne), his seventeen-year-old sister, Julie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, his eleven-year-old sister. Mistakenly identified as Guillaume Arsenaut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and hisfifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquil, his twenty-two-year-old brother, Victoire, his twenty-year-old sister, Pierre, his eighteen-year-old brother, Julie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, his eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:31. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.691 | Julie | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1773 | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquille, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her fifteen-year-old brother, Victoire, her nineteen-year-old sister, Perinne, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Françoise, her eleven-year-old sister. Mistakenly identified as Julie Arsenaut. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirteen-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquil, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her sixteen-year-old brother, Victoire, her twenty-year-old sister, Pierre, her eighteen-year-old brother, and Françoise, her eleven-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.692 | Françoise | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1776 | Saint-Souliac, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Married Pierre Dugas (Dugat), son of Marin(?) (Manino) Dugas and Françoise Boudrot, at Ascension Parish, La., May 12, 1794. Pierre Landry and Ambroise Mathurin Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and five siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her father, the household included Tranquille, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her fifteen-year-old brother, Victoire, her nineteen-year-old sister, Perinne, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Julie, her thirteen-year-old sister. Mistakenly identified as François Arsenaut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of her father's household. In addition to herself and her fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Tranquil, her twenty-two-year-old brother, Guillaume, her sixteen-year-old brother, Victoire, her twenty-year-old sister, Pierre, her eighteen-year-old brother, and Julie, her thirteen-year-old sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:260-261; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | Jean Hébert and Madeleine Doiron | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.693 | Jacques | Mieus (Mius) D'Entremont (Dentremont) | père | 01/01/1756 | Married Marie Hervé. | Jacques Ferdinand (born 1784; evidently died before 1788); Martine (born 1786) | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with his wife, his son Jacques, three step-children, and Marguerite Landry. A marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel at St. Malo; they boarded the Ville d'Arcangel at Nantes. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Langliné (Langlinay, Langlinais), his stepson, 14 years old; Angélique Langliné (Langlinay, Langlinais), his stepdaughter, 10 years old; and Martine Mius D'Entremont, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned one slave. They also owned fifteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included Jean Leauglinaux, whom the census identifies as his fifteen-year-old son. He and his "son" occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. According to the census, D'Entremont owned one slave. He also owned 100 barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. On July 28, 1791, Commandant Nicolas Verret informed the governor that a confrontation between D'Entremont and Pierre Moreau, resulting in the loss of three cows from a cattle drive bound for New Orleans. According to the report, as Moreau's men began to drive the cattle onto D'Entremont's property, D'Entremont, who had no fence along the "front" of his fields, took up a position along the roadway to ward the cattle away from his crops. Moreau's men urged D'Entremont several times to leave the roadway because he would scare the "wild" cattle in the herd. D'Entremont refused, and three cows ran into the woods. The drovers were unable to locate these cattle. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Nicolas Verret to the governor, July 28, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:276. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.694 | Marie | Hervé | 01/01/1755 | Married (1) Jean Louis Langliné. Married (2) Jacques Mius (Mieus) d'Entrement. | First marriage: Jean Louis (born 1774), Marie Jeanne (born 1776), Angélique (born 1778). Second marriage: Jacques Ferdinand (born 1784), Martine (born 1786) | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with her husband, four children, and Marguerite Landry. A marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she and her family did not board the vessel at St. Malo, France. Instead, they boarded the ship at Nantes. | She does not appear in her husband's household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District; this suggests that she died following her arrival in Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.695 | Jacques Ferdinand | Mieus (Mius) D'Entremont (Dentremont) | 01/01/1784 | Marie Hervé | Jacques Mieus d'Entremont | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with his parents, a step-brother, two step-sisters, and Marguerite Landry. A marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | He does not appear in his father's household in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District; this suggests that he died following his arrival in Louisiana. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.696 | Jean Louis | Langliné (Langlinais, Leauglinaux)) | 01/01/1774 | Marie Hervé | Jean Louis Langliné | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with his parents, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Jacques Mius D'Entremont, his stepfather. The household also included Angélique Langliné, his ten-year-old sister, and Marine Mius D'Entremont, his two-year-old half-sister. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. They owned one slave. They also owned fifteen barrels of corn, one cow, and one hog. His name is rendered as Jean Leauglinaux in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifteen-year-old "son" (sic) of Jacques Mius D'Entremont. The household also included Angélique, his eleven-year-old sister, and Marine (Martine), his three-year-old half-sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.697 | Marie Jeanne | Langliné (Langlinais) | 01/01/1776 | Marie Hervé | Jean Louis Langliné | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with her parents, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she and her family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.698 | Angélique | Langliné (Langlinais) | 01/01/1778 | Marie Hervé | Jean Louis Langliné | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with her parents, but a marginal notation in the passenger manifest indicates that she and her family did not board the vessel. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the ten-year-old member of the household of Jacques Mius D'Entremont, her stepfather. In addition to herself and her stepfather, her household also included Jean Langliné (Langlinay), her fourteen-year-old brother, and Martine Mius D'Entremont, her two-year-old half-sister. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents. They owned one slave. They also owned fifteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of the household of Jacques Mius D'Entremont. The household also included Jean, her fifteen-year-old brother, and Marine (Martines) Mius D'Enremont, her three-year-old half-sister. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.699 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1729 | Married Jacques Mieus d'Entremont. Widowed by mid-1785. | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Scheduled to travel to Louisiana with the family of Jacques Mius d'Entremont, père, but she did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.700 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1717 | Married (1) Anne Bourg. Married (2) Ursule Hébert. | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.701 | Ursule | Hébert | 01/01/1713 | probably St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite Landry | Jacques Hébert | Married (1) Alexandre Bourg, native of Cobequid and the son of Jean Hébert and Marie Barillau, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, October 20, 1735. The marriage occurred after a dispensation for consanguinity in the third degree was granted. Married (2) Joseph Melanson (Melançon), the widower of Anne Bourg. | RResided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:69; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.702 | Charles | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | père | 01/01/1722 | Élisabeth Vincent | Philippe Thibodeau | Married Magdelaine (Madeleine) Henry, daughter of Jean Henry and Marie Hébert. | Pierre Charles (born 1765), Jeanne Tarsile (born 1765), Marguerite (born 1763), Hélène (born 1767), Marie Victoire (born 1760) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1764-1765. Resided at Pleurtuit, 1765-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76-77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.703 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Henry | 01/01/1727 | Marie Hébert | Jean Henry | Married Charles Thibodeau (Thibodeaux), son of Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent. | Pierre Charles (born 1765), Jeanne Tarsile (born 1765), Marguerite (born 1763), Hélène (born 1767), Marie Victoire (born 1760) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1764. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, 1764-1765. Resided at Pleurtuit, 1765-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and five children. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76-77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.704 | Pierre Charles | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1765 | Magdelaine (Madelaine) Henry | Charles Thibodeau | Married Adélaïde Bourg, the daughter of Ambroise Bourg and Modeste Moulaison (Molesson), at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., October 10, 1788. Pierre Allain, Jacques Vignes, Félix Bernard, and François Duque witnessed the marriage record. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | He and his bride were residents of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores at the time of their marriage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:119. | 1.785 | Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.705 | Jeanne Tarsile | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1765 | Magdelaine Henry | Charles Thibodeau | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.706 | Marguerite | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1763 | Magdelaine Henry | Charles Thibodeau | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.707 | Hélène | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1767 | St. Malo, France | Magdelaine Henry | Charles Thibodeau | Married Jean Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Michel Aucoin and Isabelle Hébert, November 25, 1787. The marriage was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church. The marriage was witnessed by Louis Grisey, Charles Thibodeau, Michel Aucoin, and François Dugue. | Casimire (born November 4, 1788), Reine Isabelle Marie (baptized April 22, 1792), François (baptized April 28, 1794), Amarante Emilie (born November 24, 1795), Lufroi Désiré (Lufrois Deseado) (born January 4, 1798), Pablo (Paul) Eleandro (born February 27, 1801) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores, November 25, 1787. She and her family were residents of the New Feliciana District in April 1794. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33-36, 38, 39. | 1.785 | Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.708 | Marie Victoire | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1770 | Magdelaine Henry | Charles Thibodeau | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents and four siblings. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Philippe Thibodeau and Elisabeth Vincent | Jean Henry and Marie Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.709 | François Xavier | Bourg | père | 01/01/1741 | Charles Bourg | Married (1) Elisabeth LeBlanc, daughter of Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot (Theriot). Married (2) Pélagie Henry. | First marriage: Félix Xavier (born 1770), Joseph Faustin (born 1774), Marie Isabelle (born 1777), Maximilien (born 1779), Isabelle (born 1781; married August 2, 1795) Second marriage: Pierre (born 1784), Anne Victoire (born May 14, 1785), Anselme (born June 25, 1787), Marguerite Céleste (born December 16, 1788) | Captured by the British while serving aboard the Jason, evidently a privateer. Imprisoned in England, 1760-1763. Resided at Pleurtuit, Britany, France, ca. 1763-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife, seven children, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records suggest that he and his family were residents of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores in May 1788. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 125, 129. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.710 | Marguerite Pélagie | Henry | 01/01/1751 | Marie Madeleine Pitre | Pierre Henry | Married François Xavier Bourg, the son of Charles Bourg and the widower of Elisabeth LeBlanc. | Pierre (born 1784), Anne Victoire (born May 14, 1785), Anselme (born June 25, 1787), Marguerite Céleste (born December 16, 1788) | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband, seven children, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Ecclesiastical records suggest that she and her family were residents of the Acadian settlement at Bayou des Écores in May 1788. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 125. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.711 | Félix Xavier | Bourg | 01/01/1770 | Pleurtuit, Diocese of St. Malo, Brittany, France | Élisabeth LeBlanc | François Xavier Bourg | Married Marie Marianne Smite (sometimes Smith), a native of St. Charles Parish, La., and the daughter of Chrisostome Charles Smite and Marie Louise DuDrap, at Assumption Parish, La., April 13, 1801. | Mathurin François (Maturino Francisco) (born February 3, 1803) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:121, 127. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.712 | Joseph Faustin | Bourg | 01/01/1774 | Pleurtuit Parish, Diocese of St. Malo, France | Élisabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc | François Xavier Bourg | Married Félicité Canade (Kennedy?), a native of New Orleans and the daughter of David Canade (Kennedy?) and Marguerite Farquerson, at Assumption Parish, La., November 3, 1800. Mathurin Hébert and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Maximilien Joseph (Maximilliano Joseph) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:12, 122, 127. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.713 | Marie Isabelle | Bourg | 01/01/1777 | Prouvala (probably either Pleudihen or Pleurtuit), Diocese of St. Malo, France | Élisabeth LeBlanc | François Xavier Bourg | Married Mathurin Hébert, a native of the Diocese of St. Malo, France, at Assumption Parish, La., September 18, 1797. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:125. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.714 | Maximilien | Bourg | 01/01/1779 | St. Malo, France | Élisabeth LeBlanc | François Xavier Bourg | Married Sara Carlota Jiancta Carolina Rentrop, a native of Westphalia, Prussia, Germany, and the daughter of Henry Rentrop and Anna Catarina Elisabeth Trappe, at Assumption Parish, La., August 2, 1803. | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:127. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.715 | Isabelle | Bourg | 01/01/1781 | Élisabeth LeBlanc | François Xavier Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre LeBlanc and Françoise or Anne Terriot | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.716 | Pierre | Bourg | 01/01/1784 | Marguerite Pélagie Henry | François Xavier Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre Henry and Marie Madeleine Pitre | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.717 | Anne Victoire | Bourg | Marguerite Pélagie Henry | François Xavier Bourg | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her parents, six siblings, Charles Bourg, and Marguerite LeBlanc. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | Charles Bourg | Pierre Henry and Marie Madeleine Pitre | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.718 | Charles | Bourg | 01/01/1739 | Marie Josèphe Hébert | François Bourg | Married Marguerite Leblanc. | Resided at Saint-Enogat, Brittany, France, 1759-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. He and his wife traveled to Louisiana with the family of François Xavier Bourg and Marguerite Pélague Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.719 | Marguerite | Le Blanc (LeBlanc) | 01/01/1745 | Françoise or Anne Terriot (Theriot) | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Charles Bourg, son of François Bourg and Marie Josèphe Hébert. | Resided at Pleurtuit, Brittany, France, 1759-1767. Resided at Saint-Enogat, France, 1767-1785. Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. She and her husband traveled to Louisiana with the family of François Xavier Bourg and Marguerite Pélague Henry. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.720 | François | Galien | père (n'embarque pas) | 01/01/1740 | Married Henriette Grossin. | Marie Jeanne (born 1776), François (born 1779), Bon (born 1781), Julien François (born 1783) | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.721 | Henriette | Grossin | 01/01/1749 | Married François Galien. | Marie Jeanne (born 1776), François (born 1779), Bon (born 1781), Julien François (born 1783) | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that she and her family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.722 | Marie Jeanne | Galien | 01/01/1776 | Henriette Grossin | François Galien | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that she and her family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.723 | François Julien | Galien | 01/01/1779 | Henriette Grossin | François Galien | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.724 | Bon | Galien | 01/01/1781 | Henriette Grossin | François Galien | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.725 | Julien François | Galien | 01/01/1783 | Henriette Grossin | François Galien | Signed up to sail aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. A passenger manifest, however, indicates that he and his family did not board the vessel. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.726 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Terriau Terriot, Theriot) | 01/01/1746 | Françoise Landry (?) | Charles Terriot (Theriot) (?) | Married Anne Angélique Briand. | Jean Baptiste (born 1777) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his wife and son Jean Baptiste. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.727 | Anne Angélique | Briand | 01/01/1743 | probably not of Acadian ancestry | Married Jean Baptiste Terriau (Terriot, Theriot). | Jean Baptiste (born 1777) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with her husband and son Jean Baptiste. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 43-49. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.728 | Jean Bte. (Baptiste) | Terriau Terriot, Theriot) | enfant | 01/01/1777 | Anne Angélique Briand | Jean Baptiste Terriau (Theriot, Terriot) | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with his parents. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 77. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.729 | Marguerite | Aucoin | (la mere [de] la dit Morte) | 01/01/1784 | Sailed aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785. The ship ran out of provisions several days before reaching Balize, an outpost at the mouth of the Mississippi River. Upon arrival at Balize, thirty-eight of the Acadian passengers were very ill. Spanish authorities consequently rushed medical supplies, provisions, and fresh water to the vessel. La Ville d'Arcangel arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 63-77. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.730 | Madeleine | Theriot | Veuve Benoît | 01/01/1715 | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of Honnoré Caret and Françoise Benoît. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 44. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.731 | Anne Marie | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Acadia | Anne Marie Aucoin | Pierre Thibodot (Thibodeaux) dit le jeune | Married (1) François Rivard, who died July 1, 1780. Signed a marriage contract with Joseph Francoeur, a native of Montreal, Canada, and the son of Jean Baptiste Francoeur and Ursule Jutra, November 5, 1786. The marriage contract was witnessed by François Pitre. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Francoeur at the Opelousas church, November 5, 1786. | Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 24; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 328, 674. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.732 | Joseph | Babin | 01/01/1755 | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a sixteen-year-old member of Claude Martin's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Joseph Babien in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. His residence appears to have been next-door to that of Claude Martin and his family. In October, 1774, Babin owned seven cows and five horses or mules. He was probably the Joseph Babin listed in the May 10, 1777, muster roll as a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He was probably the Joseph Babin who served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; CMuster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; ensus of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.733 | Michel | Doucet | 01/01/1753 | Marguerite Martin | Michel Doucet | Married Marguerite Landry, daughter of René Landry and Marguerite Babin. | Jean Ursin (baptized November 1, 1795, at the age of 8 months) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Purchased a slave from one Laviolette, July 18, 1780. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Became embroiled in a dispute with the Attakapas church wardens for failing to pay him the fifteen piastres that had been promised him for escorting Father Hilaire during his journeys to, and from, the Pointe Coupée District to the Attakapas District by way of Bayou Teche and the Atchafalaya River, May 12, 1790. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 139-140; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 7; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 120-121. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.734 | Firmin | Landry | 01/01/1728 | Alexandre Landry | Married (1) Elizabeth Françoise Thibodeau. Married (2) Théotiste Thibodeau. | Known children: First marriage: Joseph (born 1753), Saturin (born 1755), Hélène (born 1757), Marie Madeleine (born 1759)Second marriage: Agnès (born December 11, 1784), Alexandre Anselme (born February 26, 1782), Françoise (born October 22, 1770), Hélène (born November 20, 1774), Hubert (born April 23, 1773), Marguerite (born February 1, 1789, Marie (baptized April 23, 1780), Rosalie (born August 15, 1776), Valentin (baptized May 13, 1779) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, who is not named in the census; Joseph Landry, his son, 17 years old; Saturin Landry, his son, 15 years old; Hélene (Elene) Landry, his daughter, 19 years old; Magdeleine (Magdeleyne) Landry, his daughter, 13 years old; and Barbe Landry, his daughter, 8 years old. Firmin Landry and his family owned five cows, one horse, and five hogs. Firmin Landry signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Attakapas District, December 8, 1769. On December 5, 1770, during Louisiana's severe grain shortage, Jean Bérard listed him among the Attakapas settlers having forty barrels of unhusked corn for sale. He was resident of the Attakapas District in 1771. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included his thirty-eight-year-old wife, daughters aged ten and six years, Joseph Landry (18 years of age), Madeleine Landry (15 years of age), and Saturin Landry (16 years of age). The census also notes that Firmin Landry owned twelve beef cattle and two horses. Landry and his family occupied, but did not own, a parcel of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. Landry participated in the election to select a second sindic for the construction of a church in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1773. On September 14, 1774, Attakapas Commandant Alexandre DeClouet reported that Firmin Landry and Pierre Dugas (Dugat) had not yet contributed their taxes for the construction of the local church and rectory. DeClouet also indicated that Landry had received a land grand two years earlier. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Firmin Landry, his wife, and six children. They owned twenty-five cattle, seven horses or mules, and six sheep. | His burial record notes that he died suddenly (unexpectedly) and that he was seventy-six years of age at the time of his death. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769120901; Jean Bérard to Luís de Unzaga, December 5, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/19; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:344; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2522; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1B, p. 428; Election of a Sindic in the Attakapas, May 16, 1773, Book 1, Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Alexandre DeClouet to Luís de Unzaga, September 14, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:102; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | 1.765 | 04/02/1801 | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church Cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.735 | Théotiste | Thibodeau | 01/01/1733 | Married Firmin Landry. | Agnès (born December 11, 1784), Alexandre Anselme (born February 26, 1782), Françoise (born October 22, 1770), Hélène (born November 20, 1774), Hubert (born April 23, 1773), Marguerite (born February 1, 1789, Marie (baptized April 23, 1780), Rosalie (born August 15, 1776), Valentin (baptized May 13, 1779) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Firmin Landry. Her household included her husband and five stepchildren: two unidentified girls aged respectively ten and six years, and Joseph, Madeleine, and Saturin Landry. Her family owned twelve beef cattle and two horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.736 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Élizabeth Françoise Thibodeau | Firmin Landry | Married Marie (sometimes Marianne) Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Paul Melanson and Marie Terriot. | Elise (born December 24, 1778), Joseph (baptized May 13, 1779), Louis (baptized April 23, 1780), Agricole (born 1781), Marie Magdeleine (born June 29, 1782), Rosalie (born February 7, 1784), Anastasie (born 1785; baptized July 15, 1787, at the age of two years), Célestin (born ca. 1786), Cirille (born February 7, 1787), Marie Mélanie (born ca. 1788), Joseph Dionisius (born 1788), Onésime (born ca. 1790), Pantaléon (born 1790; baptized November 11, 1795, at the age of five years), Séraphie (born 1793; baptized November 11, 1795, at the age of two years) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor. His home was located 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as an eighteen-year-old member of his father's household. On February 28, 1771, prominent Attakapas rancher François LeDée notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that a party of Acadians, including Michel Doucet, Claude Martin, Joseph(?) Martin, René(?) Trahan, Baptiste La Bauve (Labove), Joseph Landry, and Louis Levron, had approached him for a letter indicating that they were traveling to New Orleans without the required passport because they did not have time to obtain one from the commandant. The Acadians argued, and they did not have time to visit the commandant and "to make their journey to the city before it was time to begin cultivating their fields." The Acadians traveled to New Orleans in two boats. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. On February 22, 1777, Claude Boutté informed Louisiana's governor that "a poor Acadian named Joseph Landry" had purchased four boeufs (either oxen or bullocks) from Laurent Bailly of the Opelousas District. Landry attached these animals to the herd that Jean Bérard was driving to market in New Orleans. During the cattle drive, three of Landry's animals became separated from the herd. Boutté reported that Commandant Alexandre DeClouet had informed Landry that, because they had become strays, ownership of the animals had reverted to the crown. DeClouet then assigned a militia detachment to round up the strays or to kill them if they proved impossible to catch. Meanwhile, Landry was compelled to sell some of his own cattle to pay his debt to Bailly. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a corporal in the Attakapas District militia. He appears to have been the Joseph Landry who was ordered by colonial officials to carry a packet of official correspondence from the Attakapas District to New Orleans by way of the Lafourche District, ca. August 1, 1778. Attakapas Commandant Alexandre DeClouet directed Landry to travel "nonstop" to the colonial capital. Landry is listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was the head of a household that included four boys one to fifteen years of age, three girls one to fifteen years of age, one man fifteen years of age or older, and two women fifteen years of age or older. He and his family owned three slave girls one to fifteen years of age and three slave men fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Bellevue area of the Opelousas District. | His burial record maintains that he was forty-seven year of age at the time of his death. | Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 470-482; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2529; François LeDée to Luís de Unzaga, February 28, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:68; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Claude Boutté to the governor, February 22, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:150vo; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Judice to Bernardo de G lvez, August 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:448; Muster Roll of the Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | 1.765 | 03/06/1797 | Attakapas church | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.737 | Marie Magdaleine (Madeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1756 | Élizabeth Françoise Thibodeau | Firmin Landry | Signed a marriage contract with René Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard and Anastasie LeBlanc, at the Attakapas District, June 12, 1775. Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the couple married on May 16, 1775. | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a fifteen-year-old member of her father's household. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 480; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.738 | Saturin (Saturnine, Sinturnin) | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Élizabeth Françoise Thibodeau | Firmin Landry | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a sixteen-year-old member of his father's household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Saturnine Landry in the June 20, 1774, list. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. His name is rendered as Sinturnin Landry in the May 10, 1777 list. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:344; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2522; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.739 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Thibodeau | 01/01/1743 | Marguerite Trahan | Paul Thibodeau | Married (1) Charles Pellerin. Married (2) Joseph Martin. | Esther (married January 28, 1789), Françoise Pélagie (born January 20, 1773) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included her forty-five-year-old husband, a one-year-old daughter, and a ten-year-old Negro slave. Her family owned twenty head of beef cattle and seven horses. The Martins occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 543-547. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.740 | Marie | Thibodeau | 01/01/1742 | Françoies Comeau | Charles Thibodeau | Married (1) Pierre Surette. Married (2) Jean Baptiste Semer. | Marie (born ca. 1761), Urbain (born July 22, 1771), Victoire (born April 27, 1774), Jean Baptiste (born September 3, 1776), Marguerite (baptized May 9, 1779), Marie Marthe (baptized June 1, 1780), Marie Magdeleine (born February 11, 1781) | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that her household included her twenty-seven-year-old husband, twenty-two-year-old Anselme Thibodeau, twenty-year-old Victor Blanchard, and two unidentified girls aged respectively eight and two years. Marie Thibodeau and her husband owned twenty-nine beef cattle and six horses. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 705-707. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.741 | Françoise | Trahan | 01/01/1754 | Euphrosine Vincent | Michel Trahan | Married (1) Jacques Fostin (Faustin), a native of the Illinois Country and the son of Jacques Fostin and Françoise Vien, at the Attakapas church, July 18, 1772. Fostin died of dysentery; buried January 23, 1793. Married (2) Simon Pierre Daigle, native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer and the son of Simon Pierre Daigle and Magdeleine Terriot (Theriot), February 13, 1798. | First marriage: Françoise Clémence (born July 23, 1781), Jacques (born December 18,1778), Marguerite (born May 29, 1773), Marie Angélique (baptized May 5, 1776), Marie Magdeleine (married January 3, 1785), Ursule (born February 10, 1783) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow (identified as the Veuve de Faustin). He owned a tract of land with fifty arpents frontage. She also owned 5 semi-wild beef cattle and 160 tame cattle. She owned the following slaves: Appolon, 50 years old; Marianne, 35 years old; Constance, 25 yeasr old; and Pierre, 12 years old. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 213-214, 326-328, 766. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.742 | Jean | Trahan | 01/01/1755 | Euphrosine Vincent | Michel Trahan | Married Marguerite Broussard. | Germain (born 1751), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1749), Marguerite (born 1753) | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He appears to have been the person identified as Joseph Trahan who participated in a cattle drive from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. If this indeed the case, he was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.743 | Anne | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Jacques Bourg (Bourque), who evidently died ca. 1765. | Gertrude | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a member of the household of Amand (sometimes Pierre Amant) Thibodeau and Gertrude Bourg, her daughter. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 96; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.744 | Marie | Dugas | 01/01/1758 | Identified in the 1771 census of the Attakapas District as a thirteen-year-old member of Jean Berard's household. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.745 | Madeleine | Trahan | 01/01/1749 | Marguerite Brousssard | Jean Trahan | Married Joseph Hébert, son of Belloni Hébert and Jeanne Savoie, at the Attakapas church, April 25, 1771. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 770; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Conover, Trahan, 48. | 1.765 | 27/01/1808 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.746 | Hélène | Landry | Acadia | Françoise Thibodeau | Firmin Landry | Married Amand (Amant) Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil and Agnès Thibodeau, July 15, 1771. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée. | Josephat (Joseph) (born November 29, 1771) | Died sometime before May 1775. | Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 131-132; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 120; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:162. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.747 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Thibodeau | 01/01/1750 | Anne Hébert | Joseph Thibodeau | Married Athanase Trahan. | Athanase (born January 25, 1787), Julien (born May 22, 1789), Marie Magdaleine (born June 24, 1778), Michel (born March 20, 1785), Pierre (born July 25, 1783), Victoire (born December 22, 1793) | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of Jean Baptiste Broussard's household. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was living with three children, evidently next door to Jean Baptiste Broussard's family. The members of her household owned fortyl cows, twelve horses or mules, and thirty pigs. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was the fifty-nine-year-old spouse of Athanase Trahan. In addition to her forty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Madeline Thibodeaux, 24 years old; Joseph Trahan, 28 years old; and Pierre Trahan, 20 years old; Michel Trahan, 18 years old; Athanase Trahan, 16 years old; Julien Trahan, 14 years old; Anne Trahan, 12 years old; and Victoire Trahan, 10 years old. She and her family occupied property with twenty-nine arpents frontage. They owned 380 semi-wild beef cattle and 52 tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq.; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 762-777; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.748 | Félicité | Guilbeau | 01/01/1748 | Magdeleine (Madeleine) Michel | Joseph Guilbeau (Guilbeaux) dit l'Officier | Married Silvain (Sylvain) Broussard, son of Alexandre Broussard and Marguerite Thibodeau. | Anaclet (born October 7, 1770), Batilde (born October 7,1770), Hubert (born August 3, 1772), Adélaïde 9born June 26, 1774), Appolonie (baptized May 5, 1776), Félicité (born October 24, 1777), Marie Victoire (baptized May 9, 1779), Silvestre (born May 27,1784), François (born May 4, 1786), Céleste | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that she was twenty-three-years-old. Her household included her twenty-nine-year-old husband, two sons (actually one son and one daughter) one year of age, and sixteen-year-old Joseph Broussard, She and her family owned fifteen beef cattle, nine horses, and four sheep. They occupied but did not own a tract of land measuring twelve arpents frontage. | Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 137-138. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.749 | Pélagie | Landry (landrie) | 01/01/1746 | Married François Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil and Agnès Thibodeau. | Olidon (sometimes Odilon) (born January 2, 1771), Théophile (born March 5, 1773), Jean François (baptized May 5, 1776), Joseph Sarazin (born May 16, 1777), François Isidore (born January 2, 1779), Pelagie (born January 15, 1781) | The 1771 census of the Attakapas District indicates that her household included herself, her husband, Amant Broussard, Isabelle Landry, an unidentified eight-year-old girl, and an unidentified two-month-old boy. Her family owned twenty-eight cattle and seven horses. He occupied a parcel land measuring seven arpents frontage, but he did not hold a title to it. Her family also occupied a parcel land measuring seven arpents frontage, but they did not hold a title to it. Identified as Pélagie Landrie in the May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District. The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that she was the fifty-four-year-old wife of François Broussard. She and her fifty-six-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with thirty-five arpents frontage. They owned 700 semi-wild beef cattle and 60 domesticated cattle. They also owned the following slaves: Thomas, 50 years old; Leuder, 23 years old; Martin, 19 years old; Jean-Louis, 11 years old; Célestin, 7 years old; Charles, 5 years old; Godfrey, 4 years old; Charlotte, 42 years old; Hélène, 25 years old; Félicité, 23 years old; Madeleine, 17 years old; Angélique, 16 years old; Pte. Félicité, 10 years old; Marie, 7 years old; Messite, 4 yeaers old; Clarisse, 2 years old; and Hortense, 1 year old. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Conover, Broussard, 10; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 118-150; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 134-135; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.750 | Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Married Charles Guilbeau. | Ludivine (born 1770), Jean Charles (born December 15, 1771), Emilie (born December 20, 1773) | Died before 1775. | Voorhies, Some Late Eighteenth Century Louisianians, 124; Census of the Attakapas District, April 25, 1766, AGI, ASD 2595; Census of the Attakapas District, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:43vo; Reaux, "Revolutionary War Patriots," 163-164. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.751 | Marguerite | Broussard (Brossard) | Marguerite Savoie (Savoy) | Joseph Broussard | André Masse, an Attakapas District pioneer, and Isabelle LeBlanc served as her baptismal sponsors. Her parents are described as residents of the Attakapas District in her baptismal record, which was recorded at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée District, Louisiana. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149. | Wed, Apr 24, 1765 | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.752 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1728 | Married Joseph Bugeaud (Bujol). | Marguerite (born 1751), Augustin (born 1753; married February 7, 1774), Perpétue (born 1755), Anne (born 1757), Marie Magdeleine (born 1761; married February 15, 1784), Joseph Paul (born May 10, 1769) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Bugeaud. Her household included Joseph Bugeaud, 46 years old; Augustin, her son, 16 years old; Joseph, her son, 3 months old; Marguerite, her daughter, 18 years old; Perpétue, her daughter, 14 years old; Anne, her daughter, 12 years old; Marie, her daughter, 8 years old; and Joseph Landry, an uncle, 65 years old. Identified as an Acadian in the baptismal record of Joseph Paul Bugeaud, December 25, 1769. The baptism was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church, suggesting that she and her family may have been residents of San Luís de Natchez. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Bugeaud. Her household included the following persons: Joseph Bugeaud, 48 years old; Augustin Bugeaud, her son, 17 years old; Marguerite Bugeaud, her daughter, 19 years old; Perpétue Bugeaud, her daughter, 15 years old; Anne Bugeaud, her daughter, 13 years old; Marie Bugeaud, her daughter, 5 years old; and Joseph Bugeaud, her son, 1 year old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Bugeaud. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Bugeaud, her son, 8 years old; Anne Bugeaud, her daughter, 18 years old; Marie Bugeaud, her daughter 12 years old; Joseph Constant, her son-in-law, 38 years old; Marguerite Bugeaud, her daughter and Constant's wife, 26 years old; Paul Constant, her grandson, 6 years old; Augustin Constant, her grandson, 4 years old; Anne Constant, her granddaughter, 3 years old. Anne LeBlanc and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, eighteen cows, one horse, eleven hogs, and six muskets. | Her burial record indicates that she died at the age of eighty-one years. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25-26. | 02/04/1812 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.753 | Étienne | Bugeaud (Bujol, Bugot) | 01/01/1724 | Acadia | Married (1) Brigitte Chevais (Chenet). Married (2) Anne Forest, the widow of Pierre Babin, ca. 1768. (A list of recently married Acadian couples, drafted by local governmental official in 1768, indicates that his wife was Marguerite Forest.) | First mariage: Pierre (born 1755), Magdeleine (Madeleine) (a twin, born 1761), Marie (a twin, born 1761)Second marriage: Jean Augustin (born October 10, 1768), | Identified as an Acadian in the baptismal record of Jean Augustin Bugeaud, February 6, 1769. The baptism was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church, suggesting that he and his family may have resided at San Luís de Natchez. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Forest, his wife, 40 years old; Pierre, his son, 14 years old; Jean, his son, 1 year old; Magdeleine, his daughter, 8 years old; Marie, his daughter, 9 years old; Joseph Babin, his stepson, 14 years old; and Charles Babin, his stepson, 9 years old. The family occupied a tract of land (located above Bayou Lafourche) with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, twenty-six hogs, and two muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Forest (Forêt), his wife, 42 years old; Pierre Bugeaud, his son, 14 years old; Jean Bugeaud, his son, 2 1/2 years old; Marie Bugeaud, his daughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Bugreaud, his daughter, 9 years old; Joseph Babin, his stepson, 14 years old; and Charles Babin, his stepson, 9 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had 150 barrels of surplus corn. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Étienne Bugeaud owned three slaves. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Forest, his wife, 48 years old; Jean Bugeaud, his son, 9 years old; Magdeleine Bugeaud, his daughter, 16 years old; Marie Bugeaud, his daughter, 16 years old; and Charles Babin, his beau-fils, 17 years old. Étienne Bugeaud and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty-four cows, three horses, three sheep, eighteen hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 24-25. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.754 | Anne | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1729 | Acadia | Married (1) Pierre Babin. Married (2) Etienne Bugeaud., ca. 1768. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1755), Charles (born 1760) Second marriage: Jean Augustin (born October 10, 1768) | Identified in the baptismal record of Jean Augustin Bugeaud as an Acadian, February 6, 1769. The baptism was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church, suggesting that she and her family may have resided at San Luís de Natchez. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old spouse of Etienne Bugeaud. Her household included the following individuals: Etienne Bugeaud, 45 years old; Pierre Bugeaud, her stepson, 14 years old; Jean Bugeaud, her son, 1 year old; Magdeleine Bugeaud, her stepdaughter, 8 years old; Marie Bugeaud, her stepdaughter, 8 years old; Joseph Babin, her son, 14 years old; and Charles Babin, her son, 9 years old. Her family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage along the Mississippi River above Bayou Lafourche. They owned eight cows, twenty-six hogs, and two muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-two-year-old spouse of Etienne Bugeaud, the forty-six-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Pierre Bugeaud, her stepson, 14 years old; Jean Bugeaud, her son, 2 1/2 years old; Marie Bugeaud, her stepdaughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Bugeaud, her stepdaughter, 9 years old; Joseph Babin, her son, 14 years old; and Charles Babin, her son, 9 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Etienne Bugeaud. In addition to herself and her fifty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Bugeaud, her son, 9 years old; Magdeleine Bugeaud, her daughter, 16 years old; Marie Bugeaud, her daughter, 16 years old; and Charles Babin, her son by a previous marriage, 17 years old. On February 20, 1788, Anne Forest donated two slaves to her son, Jean Bugeau. On November 18, 1788, her estate was inventoried and appraised. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:48, 149; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 24-25. | 1.768 | 06/11/1788 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.755 | François | Babin | Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain at the Opelousas District, December 16, 1769. He appears to have been the Babin identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. | Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769121601; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.756 | Philippe | La Chaussée (Lachausay) | dit St. Julien | 01/01/1728 | Married (1) Françoise Gaudin. Married (2) Marie Rosalie (Rose) Bourgeois, October 5, 1766. | First marriage: Louise (born 1755), Pierre Philippe (born 1761) Second marriage: Rosalie (married May 16, 1792), unnamed daughter (buried at the age of 1 day, July 18, 1773), Valentin Philippe (often identified as Philippe de St. Julien) (born 1772) | He was at Ristigouche, in present-day New Brunswick, in 1761. | He was a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé District in 1766. On January 28, 1769, he purchased a tract of land from the children of Charles Bergeron and Isabelle Arseneau. This property had four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. It was located twenty-one leagues above New Orleans. The property was bounded above by the land of the Widow Gaudin and below by that of one Bonaventure. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a surgeon and the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Rose Bergeron [actually Bourgeois], his wife, 37 years old; Louse, his daughter, 14 years old; Paul Gravois, his stepson, 18 years old; Joseph Gravois, his stepson, 16 years old; and Anne Bergeron, 14 years old. The household occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, two horse, twenty sheep, and one musket. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had sixty barrels of surplus corn. Identified in local ecclesiastical records as a "surgeon for the [Acadian] Coast," January 12, 1772. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifty-year-old surgeon. He was also the head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Bourgeois, his wife, 46 years old; Philippe, his son, 5 years old; Louise (Gravois), his daughter (actually his stepdaughter), 22 years old; Rosalie, his daughter, 7 years old; Joseph Gravois, his stepson, 24 years old; and Jean Gravois, his son-in-law, 22 years old. On October 29, 1784, he joined with four other Acadian leaders in denouncing the tyranny of the local curé. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. His name is rendered as Philippe Lachausay in the October 27, 1786 list. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2520; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:404-405; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Jean Doucet, Jean Richard, Pierre Arseneau, Philippe La Chaussée, and Joseph Bourgeois to Governor Estevan Mir¢, October 29, 1784, AGI, PPC, 197:271-272; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12. | He was at Ile St-Jean in 1755. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.757 | Jacques | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1753 | Married Elizabeth Landry, daughter of Jean Landry and Ursule Landry, July 26, 1773. | Joseph (born 1775), Paul (born ca. January 1777) | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elizabeth Landry, his wife, 21 years old; Joseph Melanson, her son, 2 years old; and Paul Melanson, her son, 3 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows. The census indicates that they owned neither slaves nor horses. | List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.758 | Jean Pierre (Piere, Pierre) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned three chickens and one horse. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned one male slave, ten cows, three horses, eight hogs, fifteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the river. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. | Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:481. | 1.766 | 27/11/1790 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.759 | Marie Jeanne | Trahan | St. Servan, France or St. Malo, France | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Married (1) Joseph Boutin, an Acadian who was buried at the Opelousas church on November 26, 1796. Married (2) Balthazar Marks, a native of St. John the Baptist Parish along the Mississippi River and the son of Balthazar Marks and Marie Gaspard, at the Opelousas church, February 6, 1798. | When she signed a marriage contract with Balthazar Marks on September 8, 1798, Marie Jeanne Trahan owned the following property: the estate of her late husband, Joseph Boutin, as appraised on July 11, 1797; several cattle. She also owned a four-year-old female slave named Rosalie. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 104, 772; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 48. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.760 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1740 | Married Elizabeth Comeau, May 19, 1767. | Donat (born 1769), Joseph (born 1770), Alexandre (born 1772), Félicité (born 1774), Judith (born 1776) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage; this 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-seven-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a thirty-year-old bachelor living alone; in light of the census reports immediately before and after this one, the compiler erred regarding Guédry's marital status. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Elizabeth Comeau, his wife, 36 years old; Donat Guédry, his son, 8 years old; Joseph Guédry, his son, 7 years old; Alexandre Guédry, his son, 5 years old; Félicité Guédry, his daughter, 3 years old; and Judith Guédry, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.761 | Amable (Aimable) | Blanchard (Blanchart) | 01/01/1733 | Married Anatolia (Natalie, Anastasie) Girouard (Giroir). | Marin (born 1765), Pierre (born 1767; married April 24, 1792), Anastasie (born 1768), Marguerite (baptized July 24, 1774), Jean Baptiste (baptized October 28, 1777), Rosalie (baptized December 18, 1780), Céleste (Celestina) (buried August 30, 1797, at the age of 17 years) | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old married man. He lived one league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. His name is rendered as Aimable Blanchart in the January 23, 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie (Anatolia) Girouard, his wife, 32 years old; Marin Blanchard, his son, 12 years old; Anastasie (Anatolia) Blanchard, his daughter, 9 years old; Pierre Blanchard, his daughter, 7 years old; Marguerite Blandchard, his daughter, 3 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-one year old, and two horses. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92-93, 95, 97, 99, 100. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.762 | Prosper | Hébert (Ébert) | 01/01/1748 | Beaubassin, Acadia | Isabelle Cormier | Pierre Hébert | Married Marie Dupuis, daughter of Jean Baptiste Dupuis and Anne Richard, May 3, 1773. | Pierre Paul (baptized July 26, 1777, Michel Cyprien (baptized September 27, 1779), Jacques Prosper (married February 8, 1802), Henriette | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-two-year-old bachelor. He resided 1 league from the residence of Cabannocé Co-Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Marie Dupuis. The couple owned a tract of land with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twelve cows, two horses, four hogs, and one musket. His estate was inventoried and appraised on January 3, 1787. His probate inventory indicates that he and his wife owned a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-eight leagues above New Orleans. This propery was located between the lands of the Widow Dupuis and Firmin Guédry (Guidry). Improvements on Hébert's property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by twelve feet. The house had galleries across its front and rear facades. | He died sometime before January 4, 1787. | List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 50; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:371-374. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.763 | Jean | Richard | Catherine Cormier | Jean Baptiste (Jean) Richard | Served as a baptismal sponsor for his brother Joseph at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, February 26, 1764. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:238. | 1.764 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.764 | Abraham (Abram) | Landry | 01/01/1712 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Guilbeau (Guilbaut) | Abraham Landry | Married (1) Elizabeth (Isabel) LeBlanc, the twenty-year-old daughter of Charles LeBlanc and Marie Gauterot, at St. Charles aux Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, June 30, 1732. Abraham Landry, père, witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Marguerite Flan. Married (3) Claire Rivet. | First marriage: Marie (married February 5, 1768)Second marriage: Joseph (born 1757), Marguerite (born 1751), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1754), Magdeleine (born 1759) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as d fifty-seven-year old widower and the head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph, his son, 12 years old; Marguerite, his daughter, 18 years old; and Magdeleine, his daughter, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, one horse, twenty-six hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the fifty-six-year-old widower and the head of a household that included the following persons: Joseph, his son, 18 years old; Marguerite, his daughter, 17 years old; Isabelle (Elizabeth), his daughter, 16 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine), his daughter, 10 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. Around November 19, 1771, Abraham Landry (Landrie) approached Commandant Louis Judice and asked that he draft a petition to the governor requesting permission to sell "all sorts of beverages" as a means of earning a livelihood. This was necessary, Landry claimed, because his advanced age prevented him from working. Judice observed that Abraham Landry was a "good old man" and that his residence was located close to the Church of the Assumption. Landry's home was thus the ideal location for a tavern or an inn where settlers traveling to mass on Sunday could obtain "lodging or refereshments." Abraham Landry's son carried the petition to New Orleans on his father's behalf. On November 22, 1771, Governor Luís de Unzaga authorized Abraham Landry to sell "all sorts of beverages." Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was sixty-five-years old and a member of the household headed by Joseph Landry dit Dios, his twenty-year-old son. The 1777 census suggests that he was married to Claire Rivet. Claire Rivet is identified as being the belle-mère of Joseph Landry dit Dios. Belle-mère is a French term meaning either stepmother or mother-in-law. Becuase the census lists no wife for Joseph Landry dit Dios, it appears that Claire Landry was the head of the household's stepmother hence, Abrahan Landry's second wife. Anne Bonnant was also a member of the household. The census shows that Abraham Landry owned six cows, one horse, and ten hogs. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Abram Landry in the July 27, 1777, petition. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:71; 2:161; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, November 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:95; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Judice, November 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:95; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Ange de Revillagodos to Luís de Unzaga, October 10, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:204; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.765 | Désiré | LeBlanc | 01/01/1717 | Acadia | Married Marie Magdeleine Landry, daughter of Jean Landry and Claire LeBlanc. | Simon (born 1741), Madeleine (born 1742), Isaac (born 1746), Marie Marthe (born 1748), Jérôme (born 1749), Isabelle (born 1751), Désiré (born 1753), Marie (Marine) (born 1755), Osite (Ozite) (born 1758), Benjamin Désiré (born 1760), Anselme (born 1763), Grégoire (born ca. April 1769) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 46 years old; Désiré, his son, 16 years old; Benjamin, his son, 9 years old; Anselme, his son, 6 years old; Grégoire, his son, 5 months old; Isabelle, his daughter, 18 years old; Marine, his daughter, 14 years old; Osite, his daughter, eleven years old; and Augustin Broussard, a nephew, 20 years old. (It is unclear in the census if Broussard is related to Désiré LeBlanc or his wife.) The household occupied a tract of land with nine arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, forty-five hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 48 years old; Désiré LeBlanc, his son, 17 years old; Benjamin LeBlanc, his son, 10 years old; Anselme LeBlanc, his son, 8 years old; Grégoire LeBlanc, his son, 6 years old; Elizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc, his daughter, 12 years old; Marie LeBlanc, his daughter, 15 years old; Osite LeBlanc, his daughter, 18 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. Amand Préjean and Desire LeBlanc were elected delegates representing the Acadian population of Cabannocé, ca. April 22, 1771. The delegates subsequently approached Governor Luís de Unzaga to complain that the priest assigned to their district remained at Natchitoches refused to take up his new posting. The Acadians noted that "the other people don't deserve him any more than they [the Acadians] do." Commandant Louis Judice noted on January 3, 1772, that Desire LeBlanc and Honoré Duon (Duhon) were the only two Acadians in the district who were satisfied with Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey, which had reduced the size of some landholdings, while increasing the size of others. He was publicly insulted by Commandant Louis Judice of the Cabannocé District at the door of the local church, ca. June 15, 1773. Judice evidently indicated that LeBlanc was "more malicious (méchant) by himself than the rest of the district combined." Isaac Leblanc and Simon LeBlanc subsequently carried a formal complaint about Judice to Governor Luís de Unzaga at New Orleans. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. At the time of his death on March 15, 1777, he and his family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. This property was located between the landholdings of Joseph Bugeaud (Bujol) and Jérôme LeBlanc. A public auction of his estate was held on the front steps of the parish church, August 9, 1778. His estate included a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located between the lands of Joseph Bugeau (Bujol) and Jérôme LeBlanc, later became the upper portion of Evan Hall Plantation. Improvements on Désiré LeBlanc's land included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty-five by sixteen feet. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:non-paginated; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, April 22, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188B:80; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 3, 1772, AGI, PPC, 189A:418; Judice to Unzaga, June 15, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:478; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 55-75; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69. | 1.766 | 15/03/1777 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.766 | Silvain (Silvin, Sylvain) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Married Marie Josèphe Babin. | Simon (born 1764), Marin (Joseph) (born ca. March 1770), Paul (born 1772), Rosalie (born 1773), Magdeleine (Marie Madeleine) (born 1774), Angelle (Angela) (married June 5, 1797), Marine (probably Marianne) (married February 14, 1802), Henriette (married June 11, 1804), Marguerite (married May 7, 1807), Louis (married January 9, 1809), Marie Clémence (married December 19,1811) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Babin, his wife, 22 years old; Simon LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, seventeen hogs, and one musket. A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's third-ranking sous caporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-eight-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Babin, his wife, 28 years old; Simon LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old; and Marin LeBlanc, his son, 5 months old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that LeBlanc owned one slave. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Babin, his wife, 30 years old; Simon (Simons) LeBlanc, his son, 12 years old; Joseph LeBlanc, his son, 7 years old; Paul LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old; Rosalie LeBlanc, his daughter, 4 years old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-one cows, one horse, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal. His name is rendered as Silvain LeBlanc in the June 17, 1777, list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Silvin LeBlanc in the July 27, 1777, petition. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was the second-ranking corporal in the local militia unit. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of first corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On March 4, 1805, a Silvin LeBlanc sold a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River to Jéerôme Athanase Dugas. Said property, located approximately two leagues above the Ascension Parish church, was bounded below by the land of the vendor and above by the property of the Widow Breau. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, January 23, 1770, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73.Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231 | 1.766 | 30/07/1807 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.767 | Joseph (II) | Landry | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifteen barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.768 | Amand (Amans Paul, Amant, Armand) | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Josèphe LeBlanc(?) | Charles Gauterot(?) | Married Marie Landry. | Anne (born 1765), Marguerite (born ca. January 1769), Sophie (Soffie) (born 1773), Théodore (born 1776), Jérôme, Theodosia (probably Théotiste) (married July 12, 1794) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, 31 years old; Anne, his daughter, 4 years old; Marguerite, his daughter, 9 months old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, an orphan, 14 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a thirty-seven-year-old married man. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 31 years old; Anne Gauterot, his daughter, 5 years old; Marguerite Gauterot, his daughter, 1 1/2 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeBlanc, a cousin, 15 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of eighty-one barrels of surplus corn. On November 5, 1775, Amand Gauterot received a Spanish land grant. The grant, signed by Governor Luís de Unzaga, provided Gauterot with title to a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. This property was bounded by the lands of Vincent Landry and Pierre Landry dit La Viellard. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 38 years old; Anne Gauterot, his daughter, 12 years old; Marguerite Gauterot, his daughter, 8 years old; Sophie (Soffie) Gauterot, his daughter, 4 years old; Théodore Gauterot, his son, 1 year old; and Joseph Melanson (Melançon) dit Dios Rose, 20 years old. Melanson's relationship to the family is not indicated in the census. Amand Gauterot and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi RIver. They also owned twenty-three cows, three horses, seven hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." At the time of his death, Amand Gauterot's estate included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty by sixteen feet. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:48; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.769 | Amant (Amand) | Landry | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had sixteen barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.770 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1744 | Jeanne Gimbert(?) | Augustin Guédry (Guidry) | Married Claire Babin, daughter of Antoine Babin and Catherine Landry, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 23, 1769. Firmin Babin, Pierre Guédry, and Augustin Landry witnessed the marriage contract. | Pierre (born ca. March 1770), David (born 1770), Olivier (born 1772), Joseph (born 1774), Jean Baptiste (born 1776) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Claire Babin, his wife, 26 years old; Pierre Guédry (Guidry), his son, 5 months old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had a total of ninety barrels of surplus corn. In addition, he had sold thirty barrels of corn to Mr. Lamatte. On February 7, 1774, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Pierre Guédry (Guidry) had sold his farm to Chevalier Movant (Morvant?) and then had relocated in the Attakapas District all without the necessary governmental authorization and passport. Judice asked that, at the very least, Guédry be ordered to travel to Ascension Parish to reimburse the district for the musket, bayonet, gunpower, musket flints, and lead shot supplied to him by the local militia. In addition, Judice noted, he owed the district twenty-five piastres. Received a passport to travel from the Opelousas District to Spanish Manchac with his wife and two children in late 1774. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household included the following persons: Pierre Guédry (Guidry), his wife, and three unidentified children. He and his family owned twenty cows, five horses or mules, and three pigs. The April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit indicates that he was exempt from active duty because of either advanced age or infirmities. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household that included nine men, one woman, and two girls. He and his family owned five slaves. They also owned sixty cows and forty horses. They occupied a tract of land with eighteen arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. Pierre Guédry was the defendant in a civil suit brought by Guillaume Despau in the Opelousas district, January 7, 1788. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:138; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Passport issued to Pierre Guidry (Guédry), 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:74; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 46; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.771 | Olivier | Boutin (Bouton) | 01/01/1749 | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. Around September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.772 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had sixty barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.773 | Jacques | Landry | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty-six barrels of surplus corn that he had sold to Mr. Gagniard and forty-one that he had sold to Mr. Berard. Around September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to the Iberville District, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.774 | Charles | Landry | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifty barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.775 | Ephrème (Efrem) | Landry | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had eighty barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.776 | Amant (Amand, Armand) | Babin | 01/01/1742 | Acadia | Married Marie Anastasie Landry in Maryland, January 14, 1766. The wedding was performed after dispensations of consanguinity of the second and third degree. The marriage was witnessed by Firmin Landry and Saturin Landry. | Paul (born ca. Jun 1768; died August 21, 1772), Grégoire (born ca. 1769; died August 21, 1772), Eugène (Ugenne) (born 1772), Simon Raphaël (born 1773), Magdeleine (born 1776), Landry (married April 26, 1802), Maximilien (married May 28, 1804), Marie Clothilde (married November 24, 1806), Louis (married May 19, 1806), Alexandre (married December 29, 1793). Genealogist Sidney Marchand suggests that Donat Babin may have been a son. | In Maryland on January 14, 1766. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Landry, his wife, 22 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 15 months old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth) his sister-in-law, 15 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's fourth-ranking sous caporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-five-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Landry, his wife, 22 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 2 years old; Grégoire Babin, his son, evidently an infant; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Landry, his sister-in-law, 11 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had eighteen barrels of surplus corn. On September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to St. Jacques de Cabannocé. On December 13, 1775, Babin purchased a tract of land with improvements along the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, had five arpents frontage on the river. The property contained a dwelling, built sur sol, and covered and floored with pieux. On December 14, 1775, Amant Babin and his wife sold a tract of land on the west bank of the Mississippi River to their neighbor, Étienne Landry. The latter property was located approximately twenty-six leagues from New Orleans. The property was sold with improvements, including their residence, a dwelling of sur sol construction measuring thirty by sixteen feet. On January 4, 1776, Commandant Louis Judice reported that one Simoneau (probably Joseph Simoneau, who was married to an Acadian), Amand Babin, and Charles Babin had recently returned from New Orleans, where they had sold a shipment of corn. Judice complained that the three local settlers did not any indication on their passport that they had sold the grain legally at New Orleans (without smuggling any into British territory), but they assured him that the governor had taken part of the shipment. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the thirty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Landry, his wife, 27 years old; Eugène (Ugenne) Babin, his son, 5 years old; Simon Babin, his son, 4 years old; Magdeleine Babin, his daughter, 1 year old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned nineteen cows, three horses, twenty hogs, and two muskets. They owned no slaves. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was the highest-ranking "subcorporal" (evidently a rank corresponding to private first class in modern parlance) in the local militia unit. His name is rendered as Armand Babin in the list. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he was a sergeant in the Lafourche District militia unit. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On November 15, 1798, Amant Babin sold to his son Alexandre a parcel of land with three arpents frontage. On March 2, 1803, Babin purchased a tract of land with two arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Improvements on this property included a house measuring thirty feet by thirteen feet. On February 24, 1804, he sold the property he had acquired in 1803 to Joseph Fontelais. On March 30, 1805, Babin sold a tract of land with three arpents frontabe on the right bank of the Mississippi River, above the parish church, to his son Landry. | His burial record indicates that he died ca. March 1, 1808. The document indicates that he was approximately sixty-six years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Wood, Guide, 196; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to St. James Parish, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 4, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:302; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 4; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:42. | 1.766 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.777 | Simon | Landry | 01/01/1744 | Acadia | Abraham Landry | Married Marguerite Babin, October 12, 1767. | Marguerite (born ca. 1769); evidently died before August 1770), Belloni (Beloni) (born 1772), Marie (Marie Magdeleine) (born 1774), Pierre (Pierre Alexis) (born 1775), Joseph (born ca. November 1775), Olivier (married [1] June 5, 1797), Firmin (married October 24, 1803), Nicolas (married April 9, 1804) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in October 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenth-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Babin, his wife, 30 year old; Marguerite their daugher, no age given, but evidently an infant; and Marie Babin, his sister-in-law. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, twenty-one hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-five-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household. The census indicates that he was an invalid. His household included Marguerite Babin, his wife, 31 years old; and Marie Babin, his sister-in-law, 17 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. On November 5, 1775, Simon Landry received a Spanish land grant with twelve arpents fontage on the Mississippi River. Governor Luís de Unzaga signed the land grant certificate. The land grant was located between the lands of Pierre Landry and Baptiste Breau. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Babin, his wife, 39 years old; Belloni (Bellonne) Landry, his son, 5 years old; Pierre Landry, his son, 2 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 18 months old; and Marie Landry, her daughter, 3 years old. Simon Landry and his family owned a large tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fifteen cows, three horses, twenty-nine hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On May 16, 1782, Simon Landry's estate was inventoried and appraised. The succession lists the following surviving children: Pierre, 8 years old; Joseph, 6 years old; Olivier, 4 years old; Firmin, 3 years old; Nicolas, age not indicated; and Magdeleine, age not indicated. The succession also indicates that, at the time of his death, Simon Landry and his family were residing on his large 1775 land grant. Improvements on this property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-six feet wide. The house had bousillage walls. On October 2, 1796, Commandant Louis Judice sold Simon Landry's estate at public auction. Landry's twelve-arpent wide farmstead was sold to Joseph Landry for 360 piastres. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:449; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 66-67. | 1.766 | 25/02/1782 | 26/02/1782 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.778 | Étienne (Estienne) | Landry | dit Le Jeune (LeJeune) | 01/01/1742 | Élizabeth (Isabel, Isabelle) LeBlanc | Abraham Landry | Married Brigitte Trahan, daughter of Charles Trahan and Brigitte Landry, May 12, 1776. | Eloi (Eloy), Rosalie, Anne, Marie Jeanne, Mathurin (buried November 14, 1790) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-seven-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned two cows, six hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. On August 4, 1774, Étienne Landry sold toJacques Landry a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twenty-six leagues above New Orleans, this property was situated between the land of Charles Babin and the property of Étienne Landry. Improvements on the property included a small wooden shack. On December 14, 1775, Étienne Landry bought a tract land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-six leagues above New Orleans. This property was bounded above by the land of Étienne landry and below by the property of Pierre LeBlanc. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty feet by sixteen feet. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Brigitte (Bergette) Trahan, his wife, 20 years old; and Firmin Trahan, his brother-in-law, 12 years old. Étienne Landry and his wife owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows, two horses, three hogs, and one musket. On June 17, 1777, he may have been (there were two Acadians named Étienne Landry in the district) a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On October 5, 1780, Étienne Landry purchased from Ascension Catholic Church a tract of land without improvements. This property, which now constitutes the heart of downtown Donaldsonville, Louisiana, was bounded above by the land of Pierre Landry dit Pitre. The land Étienne Landry acquired measured three arpents frontage by forty arpents depth. The purchase price was 242 piastres. On July 6, 1782, Étienne Landry sold to Étienne LeBlanc the property he had acquired in October 1780. He may have been the Étienne Landry (once again, two local men carried the name) who served on a military tribunal that formally investigated the arrest of Church Warden Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre) by a small detachment of Ascension Parish militiamen, June 16, 1786. The proceedings of the investigation indicate that he was illiterate. At the time of his death, Étienne Landry owned a parcel of land bounded above by the land of Anselme Landry and below by the property of Veuve LeBlanc. Improvements on Étienne Landry's land included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-eight feet by sixteen feet. | He died before November 28, 1786. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Investigation into the Charges made Against Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:180; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55, 58, 97; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:423. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.779 | Jean Baptiste | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. | List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.780 | Paul (Joseph Paul, Paulle) | Breau (Brau, Braud) | 01/01/1745 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Élizabeth Henry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married (1) Marie Marthe LeBlanc, ca. August 1770. Married (2) Elizabeth (Isabelle) Babin, December 23, 1782. | First marriage: Jérôme Raymond (Rémon) (born 1771; baptized August 28, 1772), Simon (Anselme) (born April 20, 1773), Marie Magdeleine (born January 8, 1775; baptized February 19, 1775), Étienne (born November 4, 1776), Hypolite Armand (born September 2, 1778), Pierre Anselme (born April 28, 1780), Marie Henriette (born September 19, 1781), Anaclete (born July 13, 1785; baptized August 15, 1785)Other children identified by genealogist Clarence T. Breaux: Pierre Valentin, Victor, Joseph Grégoire, Laurent | He appears to have been among the prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned three cows, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's first (i.e., highest ranking) corporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-four-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Marthe LeBlanc, his wife, 21 years old; Simon La Chaussée, his stepson, 6 months old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had ten barrels of surplus corn. (Note: Simon Lachaussée was interred on July 21, 1776.) The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marthe LeBlanc, his wife, 38 years old; Raymond (Rémon) Breau (Braud), his son, 6 years old; Simon (Simons) Breau (Braud), his son, 4 years old; Etienne Breau (Braud), his son, 6 months old; Magdeleine Breau (Braud), his daughter, 2 years old; and Jacques La Chaussée, his stepson, 7 years old. Paul Breau and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-two cows, one horse, twenty-one hogs, and three muskets. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal submitted to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the suggestion "made by people too lazy to make [enclosed] pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He is listed as the "second sergeant" in the local militia unit in the 1779 muster roll. His name is rendered as Paulle Brau in the muster roll. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On October 11, 1791, he joined with three other prominent local Lafourche District Acadians in petitioning the governor for assistance for local flood victims. Around October 2, 1792, the governor appointed Paul Breau (Braud) a sindic to inspect levees and enforce levee maintenance ordinances in the left-bank settlements of Ascension Parish. He served as sindic in 1793. On March 16, 1793, he informed the governor that Pierre Part and Étienne LeBlanc of the Cabannocé District had ignored his orders to repair their levees. Breau asked the governor to force the recalcitrant settlers to comply. His name is rendered as Paul Braux in the letter. On March 18, 1793, Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau wrote to Governor Carondelet, informing him that a vacant parcel of land with twelve arpents frontage along the Mississippi River had no levees. As a consequence, their farms were inundated every year. These destructive floods were forcing the local settlers to abandon the farms they had cultivated since 1767. The petitioners consequently requested a 4,000 piastre subsidy from the royal treasury to subsidize the necessary levee construction. LeBlanc, Babin, Landry, and Breau promised to repay the 4,000 piastres in six years. On November 29, 1793, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Paul Breau, a local sindic for public roads, had been attacked by a "cruel illness," which "gets worse every day without any hope of abating." According to genealogist Sidney A. Marchand, Paul Breau and his second wife owned the following real estate: A tranct of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located between the land of Baptiste Breau and the property of Baptiste Landry. Paul Breau and his wife also owned a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-eight by sixteen feet. On November 26, 1793, Paul Breau sold to his son Simon a tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The land acquired by Simon was bounded above by the land of Simon Landry and below by the property of Paul Breau. Paul Breau's estate was inventoried and appraised on January 9, 1795 two days after his death. His property included a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The probate inventory also lists a house of sur sol construction, measuring thirty-two by sixteen feet. The house, which featured galleries on the front and rear facades, was purchased by his widow at the estate sale. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty years old at the time of his death. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Isaac LeBlanc, Joseph Landry dit Chinoux, Bonaventure Babin, and Paul Braud (Breau) to the governor, October 11, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:397; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Governor to Louis Judice, October 2, 1792, AGI, PPC, 205:311; Paul Braux to the governor, March 16, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:233; Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau to the governor, March 18, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:284-285; Louis Judice to Baron de Carondelet, November 29, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:288; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19, 21, 69; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:142; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.766 | 07/01/1795 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.781 | Isaac | LeBlanc | 01/01/1746 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married (1) Marie Rose Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Jean Baptiste Melanson and Madeleine LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., February 5, 1768. Marie Rose Melanson died on December 11, 1781. Married (2) Marguerite Babin, daughter of Jean Baptiste Babin and Ursule Landry, at Ascension Parish, May 21, 1782. | First marriage: Joseph Isaac (born ca. 1770; married May 21, 1792), Donat (Dermon, Dernon) (born ca. 1772, married June 2, 1794), Marie Sophie (born June 21, 1774), Marguerite Félicité (born November 23, 1775), Jean Baptiste (born July 1, 1778), Françoise (born March 15, 1780)Second marriage: Charles Pierre (born May 9, 1783), Osite (baptized December 13, 1785), Marie Magdeleine (born November 12, 1785), Barthélemy Anselme (baptized August 18, 1787), Joseph (married May 21, 1792), Jean Baptiste (married ca. February 1801), Marie Constance (born May 6, 1793; buried October 4, 1797), | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-four-year-old wife, Marie Melanson (Melançon). The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-three-year-old married man. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Identified at the time of his death as the second lieutenant of the the Ascension Parish militia and the chief warden of the local Catholic church. Signed a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. (He was one of only three Cabannocé Acadians capable of signing the petition.) Around 1775, LeBlanc received a Spanish land grant with five arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. (The grant was signed by Governor Luís de Unzaga.) The land grant was located in the vicinity of present-day Darrow, Louisiana. LeBlanc obtained one of two cabaret operating licenses auctioned off at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, ca. January 6, 1775. The cabaret license authorized LeBlanc to sell over the course of the following year "all sortes of beverages [but the implication is alcoholic beverages], both in quantity and individually, as well as sugar and coffee." On February 17, 1775, Isaac LeBlanc purchased from jean Baptiste Mille a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. This property was located between the lands of Isaac LeBlanc and Charles Melanson. Improvements on the property included a house measuring twenty-eight by sixteen feet. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Melanson (Melançon), his wife, 31 years old; Joseph LeBlanc, his son, 7 years old; Donat(?) LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old; Marie LeBlanc, his daughter, 3 years old; and Marguerite LeBlanc, his daughter, 2 years old. Isaac LeBlanc and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-six cows, four horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. Isaac LeBlanc was one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. Isaac LeBlanc is identified in Governor Bernardo de G lvez's letters as a sergeant in the Cabannocé District militia, June 18, 1777. G lvez indicates that LeBlanc had been obliged to prisoners captured aboard DuBreuil's boat. The governor paid LeBlanc eighteen piastres and four escalins as compensation for his efforts. Petitioned Louisiana's governor to permit cattle to roam freely throughout the year, ca. August 9, 1777. On December 12, 1777, Commandant Louis Judice wrote to Louisiana's governor, formally charging Sergeant Isaac Leblanc of the local mililtia unit and his brother, Simon LeBlanc, with insubordination and possible treason. Judice complained that the brothers had defied his orders by conducting to New Orleans a raft of logs owned by Englishmen. This act of defiance, according to Judice, not their willingness to disobey the commandant's commands, but it also reflected their "preference for service to the English over service to their prince and their country." Because of their positions in the local militia, these were serious charges, and Judice asked the governor to "render justice." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was a sergeant-major in the local militia unit. On July 13, 1780, the Spanish crown issued a letter of appointment naming Isaac LeBlanc as a minor officer in the Valenzuela District militia. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. Isaac LeBlanc was a cousin of Pierre Landry dit Pitre. On November 17, 1787, Commandant Louis Judice reported to the governor that Isaac LeBlanc, a former sergeant in the Lafourche militia, had told the commandant that, if reports of a smallpox outbreak among Judice's slaves were true, that he would take the infected persons by force of arms if necessary and remove them to an isolated cabin. LeBlanc allegedly leavened his threat with numerous oaths. Judice consequently wrote to the governor, asking the chief executive to discipline LeBlanc for this unpardonable affront. Taking LeBlanc's former services to the crown in consideration, Governor Estevan Mir¢ subsequently limited his disciplinary measures to a severe reprimand and a public apology to Judice. On December 10, 1787, after LeBlanc had made a public apology, Louis Judice complained that, in the course of making his apology, that the Acadian had had the audacity to insult both the commandant and the local church warden. The commandant lamented that "this, Your Grace, is the manner in which this man made his apology, which was more aggravating than the insult." Identified as a contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 fire in New Orleans. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourche District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On June 27, 1792, he joined with twelve other Acadian Coast residents in signing a memorandum supporting a mission by Acadian delegates to persuade the governor to undertake a public works project to improve flood protection in the Acadian Coast settlements. His cumulative service record was compiled on June 30, 1792. This document indicates that Isaac LeBlanc was a native of Louisbourg, Canada (sic) and that he was forty-five years of age. He was married. He had volunteered for military service in the colony on January 1, 1778. He was appointed acting sublieutenant on July 13, 1780. At the time of that local authorities processed his first wife's succession, on May 13, 1782, LeBlanc's household included the following children: Joseph, 12 years old; Dernon (Donat), 10 years old; Baptiste, 3 years old; Marie, 8 years old; Marguerite, 6 years old; and Françoise, 2 years old. His wife's probate inventory indicates that the family inhabited a house measuring thirty by sixteen feet. The residence had fronta and rear galleries as well as bousillage walls. LeBlanc was commissioned sublieutenant on February 12, 1792. He had served in the Lafourche militia unit for fourteen years, one month, and eleven days. He had served in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for four months and nineteen days. He had participated in the Spanish military campaigns against Manchac and Baton Rouge (1779), Mobile (1780), and Pensacola (1781). He had demonstrated valor and good conduct in his military service. His superiors noted, however, that he had only poor ability. On March 18, 1793, Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau wrote to Governor Carondelet, informing him that a vacant parcel of land with twelve arpents frontage along the Mississippi River had no levees. As a consequence, their farms were inundated every year. These destructive floods were forcing the local settlers to abandon the farms they had cultivated since 1767. The petitioners consequently requested a 4,000 piastre subsidy from the royal treasury to subsidize the necessary levee construction. LeBlanc, Babin, Landry, and Breau promised to repay the 4,000 piastres in six years. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a local militia officer, May 6, 1793. On January 11, 1794, Commandant Louis Judice reported that the local settlers had delegated Isaac LeBlanc, the "church warden in charge of the parish church in this district," the responsibility of petitioning the governor for Father Bernard de Deva's assignment to the Lafourche District. On March 22, 1794, Isaac LeBlanc sold to his son-in-law, Isidore Blanchard, a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the vendor and below by the property of Bonaventure Babin. LeBlanc served as the second lieutenant of the local militia unit and as the chief local church warden at the time of his death on June 22, 1794. On July 6, 1794, Isaac LeBlanc's property was sold at auction, following public notification of the sale at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, St. Gabriel, Valenzuela, and Ascension Parish. At the time of Isaac LeBlanc's death on June 21, 1794, the following children survived from his second marriage: Charles, Barthélemi (Barthélemy), Madeleine (Magdeleine), Osite (Ozite), and Constance. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-seven years of age at the time of his death. | Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 57-59; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:467-475; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 6, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:264; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Petition to the Governor of Louisiana, ca. August 9, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:292; Louis Judice to the governor, December 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:309vo; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Memorandum by Anselme Blanchard, November 11, 1781, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, November 17, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:588-589; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judice, no date, AGI, PPC, 200:590; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, December 10, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:594; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Isaac LeBlanc, Joseph Landry dit Chinoux, Bonaventure Babin, and Paul Braud (Breau) to the governor, October 11, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:397; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Petition to the governor, June 27, 1792, AGI, PPC, 206:413; Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau to the governor, March 18, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:284-285; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 199; Louis Judice to Baron de Carondelet, January 11, 1794, AGI, PPC, 210:266; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7, 69-71. | 1.766 | 21/06/1794 | 22/06/1794 | Ascension Parish, La. | Jean LeBlanc and Jeanne Bourgeois | Jean Landry and Claire LeBlanc | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||
2.782 | Charles | Melanson (Melançon) | Married Magdeleine LeBlanc, February 7, 1768. | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.783 | René (Renée) | Landry | 01/01/1716 | Marie Guilbeau | Abraham Landry | Married (1) Marie Terriot (Theriot), daughter of Jacques Terriot and Marie LeBlanc at Grand Pré, Nova Scotia, February 18, 1737. Married (2) Anne Landry ca. 1753. | First marriage: Marin (born 1748), Olivier (born 1752)Second marriage: , Joseph (born 1757), Firmin (born 1760), Félicité (married February 5, 1768) , Valentin (born 1770), Baptiste (born 1773), Anne (born ca. June 1776)Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand notes that René's son Hyacinthe could have been a product of the first or second marriage. | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners. He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 37 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 12 years old; and Firmin Landry, his son, 9 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 38 years old; Marin Landry, his son, 22 years old; Olivier Landry, his son, 17 years old; Joseph Landry, his son 13 years old; Firmin Landry, his son, 10 years old; Firmin Broussard, his stepson, 19 years old; and Jean Broussard, his stepson, 10 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had fifteen barrels of surplus corn. On September 1, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga of a dispute between René Landry and Chevalier de Bellevue evidently regarding Landry's tardy contribution to the construction of a local flour mill. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. Around January 1774, René Landry presented his local commandant with a petition for a tract of land with "35 or 40 arpents frontage along the river. This property was contiguous to, and below, the property held by his son Olivier Landry. René Landry indicated to Judice that the property was vacant that that, because it was flood-prone, it was of value only as pasture, being "too low for cultivation." On January 23, 1774, Louis Judice forwarded René Landry's request to Governor Luís de Unzaga. Identified as Renée Landry in the December 3, 1775, slave census of Ascension Parish. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Landry owned three slaves. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the sixty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 44 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 20 years old; Firmin Landry, his son, 15 years old; Valentin Landry, his son, 7 year old; Baptistse Landry, his son, 4 years old; Anne Landry, his daughter, 10 years old; Jean Broussard, his beau-fils, 16 years old; and Joseph Landry, his "uncle," 67 years old. René Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, twenty-four cows, two horses, fifteen hogs, and three muskets. René (Renée) Landry was one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. His name is rendered as Renée Landry in the April 23, 1777, list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." His probabe inventory, compiled on June 7, 1781, indicates that René Landry and his wife owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, opposite Bayou Lafourche. They had received title to this property by means of a Spanish land grant, signed by Governor Luís de Unzaga and dated November 5, 1775. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty by eighteen feet. Firmin Landry purchased the René Landry estate at a probate sale conducted at the parish church's front door on July 29, 1781. | His burial record indicates that he was either sixty-four or seventy-four years old at the time of his death. Published sources disagree about René Landry's age at the time of his death. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:161, 424, 447; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, Sepltember 1, 1772, AGI, PPC, 189A:435; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 23, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:526; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65-66. | 1.766 | 03/06/1781 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.784 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1721 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a fifty-year-old widow. Her household included a twelve-year-old boy. She owned three cattle and twelve pigs. Her family occupied a tract of land measuring four arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.785 | Marie Madeleine | Dupuis | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Marguerite Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Antoine Dupuis | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert, a native of Acadia and the son of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson (Melançon), at St. Francis Catholic Church, Pointe Coupée Parish, La., March 27, 1769. Joseph Dupuis, Simon Richard, and Joseph Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Hébert. Her household included an unidentified eight-year-old girl. He and his family owned three beef cattle, ten hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. | Her husband is mistakenly identified as Jean Paul Hébert in her burial record. | Wood, Guide, 128-129; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:169; 2:271. | 1.767 | 18/09/1803 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.786 | Pierre (sometimes Amant , Amand) | Richard | 01/01/1711 | Pierre Richard | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a widower. His household included his twenty-eight-year-old son Amant, his twenty-eight-year-old daughter-in-law, and three unidentified boys aged seven, four, and two years. Amant Richard, père, and his family owned thirteen beef cattle, one steer, fifteen hogs, and twenty-seven chickens. They occupied a large tract of land with sixteen arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.787 | Claire | Rivet | 01/01/1727 | Married Bonaventure Forest. | Marguerite (born 1749), Marie (bor n 1752), Anne Sophie (born 1755), Anne Rose (born 1760), Madeleine (born 1764) | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. A member of her husband's household in 1767. The household also included her three daughters. Her family carried all of its belongings in one trunk at the time of its settlement in Louisiana. The Spanish colonial government gave her family a land grant encompassing eight arpents frontage along the Mississippi River at St. Gabriel, 1767. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old wife of Bonaventure Forest. Her household included four unidentified girls aged twenty-one, eighteen, sixteen, and ten years. The household owned six beef cattle, six hogs, and twelve chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the fifty-two-year-old belle-mère of Joseph Landry dit Dios. The term belle-mère can mean either stepmother or mother-in-law. Since the household does not indicate taht Joseph Landry dit Dios was married, it appears that Claire Rivet was married to Abraham Landry and thus the stepmother of the young head of the household. The household also included Anne Bonnant. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 117; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.788 | Anselme | Blanchard | père | 01/01/1705 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a sixty-six-year-old head of a household that included his sixty-year-old wife. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.789 | Mme. Anselme | Blanchard | 01/01/1711 | Married Anselme Blanchard. | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was the sixty-year-old spouse of Anselme Blanchard. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.790 | Pierre (Piere) | Forest (Faurete, Forêt) | 01/01/1740 | son (born 1764), daughter (born 1767) | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. His age, which is partially illegible in the original manuscript, appears to approximately thirty years. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife, an unnamed seven-year-old son, and an unnamed four-year-old daughter. He and his family owned four cattle, sixteen hogs, and fifteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land measuring six arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-three years of age. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-three-year-old wife, a seven-year-old son, and a five-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, eighteen hogs, and twenty-five chickens. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his wife, 30 years old; his daughter, 9 years old; his daughter, 6 years old; his son, 12 years old; and twins: a son and a daughter six months old. He and his family owned one female slave, nineteen cows, twelve hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.791 | Anne | Landry | Veuve | 01/01/1706 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a sixty-year-old widow and the head of a household that included an unidentified twenty-two-year-old boy, an unidentified eighteen-year-old boy, an unidentified twenty-year-old girl, and an unidentified sixteen-year-old gilr. Her household owned nine cattle, eight hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.792 | Athanase | Landry | 01/01/1750 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple owned nine cattle, twenty-three hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years of age. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.767 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.793 | Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1751 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. At the time of the 1771 census, he owned three cattle, twelve hogs, and eighteen chickens. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.794 | Élizabeth | Landry | Married Mathurin Richard. | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was twenty-one years old. Her household included her twenty-two-year-old husband and an unidentified eighteen-month-old boy. She and her family owned three cattle, sixteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a thirty-year-old widow. Her household included a thirteen-year-old son, a ten-year-old son, an eight-year-old son, and a six-year-old daughter. She and her family owned two male slaves, eighteen cattle, three horses, sixteen hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.795 | Pierre Paul | Boutin | père | 01/01/1731 | Married Ursule Guédry. | Joseph (married July 27, 1790), Marguerite Louise (married June 19, 1787), Paul, fils, Susanne | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-year-old wife, an unidentified twenty-year-old boy, an unidentified five-year-old boy, an unidentified seventeen-year-old girl, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. He and his family owned three cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. Governor Luís de Unzaga authorized Paul Boutin and his family to move from the Iberville District to the Opelousas District, February 18, 1774. The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that his household consisted of the following persons: Paul Boutin, his wife, and three unidentified children. They owned ten cows and four horses or mules. The April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit indicates that he was exempt from active duty because of either advanced age or infirmities. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. Identified as Paul Boutin, fils, in the 1788 census of the Opelousas District. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was the head of a household including one male and one female. He owned forty cows and twelve horses. He occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was a bachelor living alone. He owned one female slave fifteen years of age or older. The census indicates that his household was located in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 103-105; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Dutisné, February 18, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:390; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.796 | Ursule | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1741 | Married Pierre Paul (Pierre) Boutin. | Joseph (married July 27, 1790), Marguerite Louise (married June 19, 1787), Paul, fils, Susanne | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was thirty years old. Her household included her forty-year-old husband, an unidentified twenty-year-old boy, an unidentified five-year-old boy, an unidentified seventeen-year-old girl, and an unidentified one-year-old girl. She and her family owned three cattle, fifteen hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 103-105; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.797 | Olivier | Babin | 01/01/1739 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-two-year-old spouse and an unidentified seventeen-month-old boy. He and his family owned six hogs and twenty chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as the only member of his household. He was thirty-four years old at the time the census was compiled. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned four cattle, eighteen hogs, and 100 chickens. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.798 | Jean | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1738 | The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a thirty-three-year-old widower living alone. He owned two hogs and occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.799 | Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1725 | Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-seven-year-old wife and an unidentified twenty-year-old woman. His household owned eight hogs and eight chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.800 | Magdeleine | Landry | Veuve | 01/01/1736 | Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. The January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a thirty-five-year-old widow and the head of a household that included an unidentified fifteen-year-old boy and an unidentified seventeen-year-old girl. The census also indicates that she and her family owned four cattle and seven chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.801 | Mathurin | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Pisiquid, Nova Scotia | Marie Babin | Augustin Landry | Married (1) Perpétue Breau, daughter of Antoine Landry and Marguerite Landry, in 1779. She was buried at St. Gabriel, La., September 29, 1796. Married (2) Marie Polonia Hébert, daughter of Amant Hébert and Marie Claire Landry, at St. Gabriel, February 10, 1800. Thomas Hébert and Baptiste Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Joseph Xavier (born 1780) | Among the Acadians settled by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel (in present-day Iberville Parish), 1767. Extant documents indicate that he was twelve years old in 1767. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-two-year-old married man. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Landry lost eight of his eighteen cows. He was a resident of the "Plaquemine Settlement" at the time of his death ca. January 9, 1808. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-three years old at the time of his death. | Wood, Guide, 138; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:509; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | 1.767 | 09/01/1808 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.802 | Pierre (Simon Pierre) | Babin | 01/01/1750 | Identified in the January 30, 1771, census of the Iberville District as a twenty-one-year-old bachelor living alone. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Identified as Simon Pierre Babin his burial record, which indicates that he was approximately fifty years of age at the time of his death. | Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle (aux Marais), January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:63; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | 15/12/1809 | Saint Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.803 | Mathurin | Landry | Isabelle Boudrot | Etienne Landry | Married Rosalie Terriot (Theriot), daughter of Joseph Terriot and Magdeleine Bourgeois, at Cabannocé, May 4, 1778. The married was witnessed by Etienne LeBlanc and Joseph Melanson. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:509. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.804 | Charles | Hebert | 01/01/1758 | Married Marguerite Poirier. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five-years old at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:356. | 06/05/1803 | Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.805 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1728 | Acadia | Anne Marie Poirier | Joseph Hébert | Married (2) Osite (Ausite) Landry, a widow and the daughter of Paul Landry and Marie Hébert, at Cabannocé, November 2, 1l794. | His burial record maintains that he was seventy years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:359. | 21/11/1798 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.806 | Marie | Boudrot | New England, probably Maryland | Cécile (Cécille) Melanson | Benjamin Boudrot | Married Amant Hébert, son of Paul Gaston Hébert and Josèphe Marguerite Melanson, September 30, 1776. The marriage was recorded at St. Francis Church, Pointe Coupée post. | Adélaïde (Delaida) buried November 6, 1799, at the age of 14 years), Irene (born July 22, 1800), Joseph Zacharie (baptized January 2, 1780), Manoue (probably Manon) (born January 1, 1788), Marie (born February 5, 1791) | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2510-2511; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117, 354-355; Wood, Guide, 131-132; Census of the Iberville District, January 30, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188A:267-277. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.807 | Marie Josèphe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1713 | Acadia | Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as a fifty-nine-year-old widow and the head of a household that included a ten-year-old son. Her household occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. The family owned three cattle, eight hogs, and thirty chickens. | Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.808 | Jean (Jan) | Mire (Mir) | 01/01/1733 | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-nine years of age. His name is rendered as Jan Mir in the June 21, 1771 list. Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as a thirty-nine-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twelve hogs, and eighteen chickens. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.809 | Marie | Comeau | Veuve | 01/01/1732 | son (born 1754), son (a twin) (born 1760), son (a twin) (born 1760), daughter (born 1756) | Identified in the May 10, 1772, census of the Iberville District as a widow and the head of a household that included an eighteen-year-old son, twin sons twelve years of age, and an eighteen-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. The family owned two cattle, twelve hogs, and sixty chickens. | Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.810 | Mrs. Charles | Comeau | Veuve | 01/01/1714 | bon (born 1748), son (born 1752), daughter (born 1747), daughter (born 1759) | Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a fifty-eight-year-old widow and the head of a household that included a twenty-four-year-old son, a twenty-year-old son, a twenty-five-year-old daughter, and a thirteen-year-old daughter. The household occupied a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. The family owned eight cattle, thirty hogs, forty chickens, and three horses. | The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.811 | Mathurin (Maturin) | Benoît | 01/01/1750 | Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned eight hogs. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned four cows, six hogs, fourteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a ninteen-year-old bachelor. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was twenty-two years of age. | The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.812 | Widow Jean | Breau | 01/01/1737 | Identified in the February 23, 1772, census of the right bank settlements of Iberville District as a thirty-year-old widow living alone. She occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. She owned ten hogs. | The Remainder of the Census of the District of Iberville, February 23, 1772, Supplement to the Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.813 | Marguerite | Doiron | Marie Bourgeois | Pierre Doiron | Married Pierre Lambert, May 5, 1766. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.814 | Anne | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | Petitcodiac (Petcoudiac), Acadia | Marguerite Trahan | Paul Thibodeau | Married François Savoie, October 5, 1766. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 92-93. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.815 | Charles (Jean Charles) | Babin | 01/01/1742 | St. Joseph Parish, Acadia | Married Magdeleine (sometimes rendered Elizabeth) Babin, daughter of Germain Babin and Marguerite Landry, March 2, 1767. | Joseph (born ca. May 1769), Allain (born 1772), Victoire (married February 21, 1797), Constance (born ca. September 1776; died August 4, 1829) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Babin, his wife, 24 years old; and Joseph Babin, his son, 4 months old. His wife was evidently the woman identified as Elizabeth Babin in the February 14, 1768, list of Acadian marriages. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. A 1770 muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's third-ranking corporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-eight-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Babin, his wife, 24 years old; and Joseph Babin, his son, 1 year old. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Charles Babin owned one slave. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Babin, his wife, 31 years old; Joseph Babin, his son, 8 years old; Allain Babin, his son, 5 years old; and Constance Babin, his daughter, 8 months old. Charles Babin and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, ten hogs, and one musket. On January 4, 1776, Commandant Louis Judice reported that one Simoneau (probably Joseph Simoneau, who was married to an Acadian), Amand Babin, and Charles Babin had recently returned from New Orleans, where they had sold a shipment of corn. Judice complained that the three local settlers did not any indication on their passport that they had sold the grain legally at New Orleans (without smuggling any into British territory), but they assured him that the governor had taken part of the shipment. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was the first corporal (i.e., the highest-ranking) corporal in the district's militia unit. On March 31, 1780, Commandant Louis Judice inventoried Babin's estate. The probabe inventory indicates that, at the time of his death, he and his wife owned a farmstead with six arpents frontage, a house measuring twenty feet by ten feet, a storehouse of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring fifteen feet by sixteen feet, and a slave cabin. The following children survived Charles Babin: Joseph (11 years of age), Allain (8 years of age), Constance (5 years of age), and Victoire (13 months of age). | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 4, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:302; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:49; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 5; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2409. | 1.766 | 21/12/1779 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.816 | Magdeleine (Élizabeth) | Babin | 01/01/1745 | Marguerite Landry | Germain Babin | Married Charles Babin, March 2, 1767. | Joseph (born ca. May 1769), Allain (born 1772), Constance (born ca. September 1776) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as Magdeleine Babin, the twenty-four-year old spouse of Charles Babin, the twenty-seven-year-old head of her household. She appears to have been the woman identified as Elizabeth Babin in the February 14, 1768, list of Acadian marriages at Cabannocé. Her household also included Joseph Babin, her four-month-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Babin. In addition to her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Babin, her one-year-old son. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Charles Babin. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following pesons: Joseph Babin, her son, 8 years old; Allain Babin, her son, 5 years old; and Constance Babin, her daughter, 8 months old. Magdeleine Babin and her family owend a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, ten hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.817 | Joseph | Bourg | 01/01/1735 | Acadia | Married Marie LeBlanc, March 2, 1767. | Amedé (a twin) (baptized May 8, 1771), Bibianne (Vivienne) (baptized May 8, 1771; married June 21, 1790) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie LeBlanc, his wife, 35 years old; and Marguerite Richard, his stepdaughter, 10 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, twelve hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-four-year-old married man. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 129. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.818 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1734 | Married (1) Joseph Richard. Widowed by 1767. Married (2) Joseph Bourg, March 2, 1767. | First marriage: Marguerite (born 1759) Second marriage: Amedé (a twin) (baptized May 8, 1771), Bibianne (Vivienne) (baptized May 8, 1771; married June 21, 1790) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Bourg. Her household included her thirty-four-year-old husband and Marguerite Richard, her ten-year-old daughter by her first marriage. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, twelve hogs, and one musket. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2;120, 129, 625; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.819 | Élizabeth | Comeau | 01/01/1741 | Married Joseph Guédry (Guidry), May 19, 1767. | Donat (born 1769), Joseph (born 1770), Alexandre (born 1772), Félicité (born 1774), Judith (born 1776) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Guédry. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following children: Donat, 8 years old; Joseph, 7 years old; Alexandre, 5 years old; Félicité, 3 years old; and Judith, 1 year old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.820 | Anne | Bergeron | Married Pierre Hébert, July 16, 1767. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.821 | Catherine | Comeau | 01/01/1728 | Married Joseph Guilbeau, October 2, 1767. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1766. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-one-year-old spouse of thirty-eight-year-old Joseph Guilbeau. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, twelvle hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.822 | Anne | Gaudet | Veuve Dupuy (Dupuis) | 01/01/1726 | Married (1) Michel Dupuis (Dupuy). Married (2) Olivier Boudrot (Boudreaux), October 2, 1767. | Marie (born 1751), Monique (born 1754) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in October 1767. On August 1, 1768, Cabannocé co-commandant Louis Judice informed Spanish governor Antonio de Ulloa that Anne Gaudet was travelling to New Orleans to have the chief executive make good on his earlier promise to give her a cow if she remarried. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-four-year-old spouse of Olivier Boudrot. Her household included the following persons: Olivier Boudrot, 43 years old; Simon Boudrot, her stepson, 14 years old; Marie Dupuis, her daughter by a previous marriage, 17 years; Monique Dupuis, another daughter by a previous marriage, 14 years old; and Joseph Dupuis, a nephew. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, one horse, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The 1769 census indicates that she owned a separate plot of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. This parcel of land was evidently bounded by the property of Abraham Roy and Joseph Saulnier. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old wife of Olivier Boudrot. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows and two horses. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:270-271; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Louis Judice to Antonio de Ulloa, August 1, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.823 | Marguerite | Babin | Veuve Simon Landry | 01/01/1739 | Married Simon Landry, October 12, 1767. | Marguerite (born ca. 1769); evidently died before August 1770), Belloni (Beloni) (born 1772), Marie (Marie Magdeleine) (born 1774), Pierre (Pierre Alexis) (born 1775), Joseph (born ca. November 1775), Olivier (married [1] June 5, 1797), Firmin (married October 24, 1803), Nicolas (married April 9, 1804) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in October 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-year-old spouse of Simon Landry. Her household included the following persons: Simon Landry, 25 years old; Marguerite Landry, her daughter, no age indicated, but evidently an infant; and Marie Babin, her sister, 16 year old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cows, twenty-one hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Simon Landry, who was a twenty-six-year-old invalid at the time of the census. In addition to her husband, her household also included her seventeen-year-old sister, Marie Babin. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Simon Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Belloni (Bellonne) Landry, her son, 5 years old; Pierre Landry, her son, 2 years old; Joseph Landry, her son, 18 months old; and Marie Landry, her daughter, 3 years old. Marguerite Babin and her family owned a large tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fifteen cows, three horses, twenty-nine hogs, and two muskets. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On December 20, 1790, Marguerite Babin identified as Anne Marguerite Babin purchased a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located between the lands of Louis Parent and Pierre LeComte, constituted the dividing line between the Lafourche and Iberville districts. At the time of the purchase, the property acquired by Marguerite Babin contained only a small wooden shack. This purchase was evidently made in anticipation of the sale of her late husband's large farm at a probate sale. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy-four years old at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 66-67. | 1.766 | 17/10/1809 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.824 | Pierre | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1732 | Acadia | Married (2) Marie Josèphe Landry, November 5, 1767. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1756), Anne (born 1759), Pierre (born 1762), Fabien (born 1764) Second marriage: Marie (born 1768), Louis (born 1776), Paul (born 1778), Rosalie (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1782), Henry, Marianne, Marguerite (born 1787) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 25 years old; Joseph, his son, 13 years old; Pierre, his son, 7 years old; Fabien, his son, 5 years old; Anne his daughter, 10 years old; and Marie, his daughter, 1 year old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a thirty-seven-year-old married man. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty(?)-seven(?)-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 26 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 14 years old; Pierre Landry, his son, 8 years old; Fabien Landry, his son, 6 years old; Anne Landry, 6 years old; and Marie Landry, his daughter, age is illegible in the census. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Landry, his wife, 44 years old; Fabien Landry, his son, 14 years old; Louis Landry, his son, 12 years old; Paul (Paulle) Landry, his son, 10 years old; Rosalie Landry, his daughter, 8 years old; Jean Baptiste Landry, his son, 6 years old; Henry Landry, his son, age illegible; Marianne (Mariane) Landry, his daughter, age illegible; and Marguerite (Marguarita) Landry, his daughter, 1 year old. Pierre Landry and his family owned eleven slaves and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned fifteen barrels of rice, 150 barrels of corn, ten cows, four horses, and twenty hogs. Identified as Pierre Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Marie Josèphe (Joseph) Landry, his wife, 45 years old; Fabien Landry, his son, 15 years old; Louis Landry, his son, 13 years old; Paul (Pol), hi son, 11 years old; Rosalie Landry, his daughter, 9 years old; Jean Baptiste Landry, his son, 7 years old; Henry Landry, his son, 5 years old; Marianne (Mariane) Landry, his daughter, 3 years old; and Margruerite (Margritta) Landry, his daughter, 3 yearsold. Pierre Landry and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eleven slaves. They also owned twenty barrels of rice, 300 barrels of corn, fourteen cows, five horses, and nineteen hogs. Pierre Landry and his family appear to have been the wealthiest Acadian settlers in the Lafourche District in 1789. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.825 | Marie (Marie Josèphe) | Landry | 01/01/1744 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Marguerite Bourg | Paul Landry | Married Pierre Landry, November 5, 1767. | Marie (born 1768), Louis (born 1776), Paul (born 1778), Rosalie (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1782), Henry, Marianne, Marguerite (born 1787) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. The September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was twenty-five years old. Her household included the following persons: Pierre Landry, her husband, 37 years old; Joseph, her stepson, 13 years old; Pierre, her stepson, 7 years old; Fabien, her stepson, 5 years old; Anne, her stepdaughter, 10 years old; and Marie, her daughter, 1 year old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned six cows, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry, the thirty(?)-seven(?)-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her stepson, 14 years old; Pierre Landry, her stepson, 8 years old; Fabien Landry, her stepson, 6 years old; Anne Landry, her stepdaughter, 6 years old; and Marie(?), her daughter, age illegible. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Pierre Landry, her husband, 55 years old; Fabien Landry, 14 years old; Louis Landry, 12 years old; Paul (Paulle) Landry, 10 years old; Rosalie Landry, 8 years old; Jean Baptiste Landry, 6 years old; Henry Landry, age illegible; Marianne (Mariane) Landry, age illegible; and Marguerite (Marguarita) Landry, age illegible. Marie Landry and her family owned eleven slaves and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned fifteen barrels of rice, 150 barrels of corn, ten cows, four horses, and twenty hogs. Their extensive property holdings made them the wealthiest Acadian family in the Lafourche District in 1789. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 64. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.826 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1729 | Married (1) Alexis Granger. Married (2) Joseph Saulnier (Sonnier), November 6, 1767. | First marriage: Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1757) Second marriage: Marguerite (born 1768) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-year-old spouse of Joseph Sonnier, the thirty-four-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Marguerite Sonnier, her daughter, 1 year old; Magdeleine, her daughter from a previous marriage, 12 years old; and Agnaise Daigre (Daigle), a cousin, 17 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.827 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1741 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Landry, ca. 1756. Married (2) Anne Arseneau, the widow of Barthélemy Bergeron and the daughter of Jean Arseneau and Marie Hébert, November 6, 1767. | First marriage: Paul (born ca. 1764)Second marriage: Marie Anne (born 1768), Antoine Alexandre (baptized June 2, 1770), Anne Constance (baptized April 3, 1774), Edouard (born May 2, 1772), Henriette (married June 13, 1796), Benjamin (married November 19, 1804) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Anne Arseneau, his wife, 25 years old; Marie Anne, his daughter, 1 years old; Marguerite Bergeron, an orphan, 6 years old. The household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, two horses, twenty-eight pigs, and one musket. In mid-1777, four Acadians of approximately the same age were named Simon LeBlanc. One of them was a sergeant in the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew on June 17, 1777. On December 2, 1777, Commandant Louis Judice formally charged Simon LeBlanc and his brother, Isaac LeBlanc, with subordination. According to Judice, Simon LeBlanc invited his brother to assist him in guiding a raft of logs, owned by Englishmen evidently from Manchac, to New Orleans. Isaac LeBlanc accepted the invitation. When Judice banned the trip, the brothers left for the colonial capital in open defiance of the commandant's orders. Judice asked the governor to discipline both men, who, the commandant claimed, were more devoted to the English then to either the Spanish king or their country. On July 1, 1778, Louis Judice complained that one LeBlanc (the given name is not mentioned), one Maison, and one Urquhart traveled freely from Cabannocé to New Orleans, Manchac, and Pointe Coupée on business without first obtaining a passport from the commandant, as required by colonial regulations. Circumstantial evidence suggests that Simon Leblanc was the person about whom Judice complained. After mass on September 3, 1780, Commandant Louis Judice offered Simon LeBlanc's estate for sale at public auction. His estate included the following property: a home located on the right bank of the Mississippi River, located one league above Bayou Lafourche, a tract of land with eight arpents frontage, a house of sur sol construction (built directly on the ground) and measuring thirty-five feet by sixteen feet, and covered with planks. Evan Jones purchased the property for $1,200. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Louis Judice to the governor, December 2, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:307-308vo; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 55-57; Louis Judice to the governor, July 1, 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:442-442bis; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 2, 69; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marie Joseph Landry and Simon LeBlanc." | 1.766 | 03/09/1780 | Jean LeBlanc and Jeanne Bourgeois | Jean Landry and Claire LeBlanc | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.828 | Marie | Bergeron | 01/01/1750 | St. John River, Acadia | Married Pierre Bourgeois, son of Paul Bourgeois and Marie Josèphe Brun (LeBlanc?), November 6, 1767. | Pierre (born August 1769), Anne Marie (Marianne) (born 1773), Louise (born 1775), Olivier (born 1777) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nineteen-year-old spouse of Pierre Bourgeois. Her household included her twenty-nine-year-old husband and her one-month-old son, Pierre. She and her family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Bourgeois. In addition to her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Bourgeois, her son, 7 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, her son, 5 years old; Marianne Bourgeois, her daughter, 3 years old; and Louise Bourgeois, her daughter, 2 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen slaves, sixteen cows, and three horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 13, 17. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.829 | Jean | Richard | 01/01/1745 | Acadia | Married Rosalie Bourgeois, November 7, 1767. | Pierre (born 1769), Paul (born 1771), Pélagie (born 1773), Michel (born 1776) | He was a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-five-year-old married man. He lived three-fourths of a league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie Bourgeois, his wife, 26 years old; Pierre Richard, his son, 8 years old; Paul Ridchard, his son, 6 years old; Michel Richard, his son, 1 year old; Pélagie Richard, his daughter, 4 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.830 | Rosalie | Bourgeois | 01/01/1751 | Married Jean Richard. | Pierre (born 1769), Paul (born 1771), Pélagie (born 1773), Michel (born 1776) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in November 1767. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Richard. In addition to herself and her thirty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Pierre Richard, her son, 8 years old; Paul Richard, her son, 6 years old; Michel Richard, her son, 1 year old; and Pélagie Richard, her daughter, 4 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slave, twenty-six cows, and four horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.831 | Joseph | Comeau (Coumo, Coumot) | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Married Marie Babineau, January 9, 1768. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in December 1767. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, thirty-year-old married man. His name is rendered as Joseph Coumot in the January 23, 1770 list. Identified as a member of the Cabannocé militia, August 1771. On August 1, 1771, Cabannocé co-commandant Nicolas Verret reported that Joseph Comeau (Coumo) wished to leave Louisiana. Verret reported that Comeau had fulfilled the three-year residency requirement established by Alejandro O'Reilly in his land ordinance of 1770. Having satisfied this residency requirement, Comeau could legally dispose of the land, but Verret urged Governor Luís de Unzaga to deny him permission to sell the land, noting that this precedent would allow large numbers of disgruntled local Acadians to migrate. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Nicolas Verret to Luís de Unzaga, August 1, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:68. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.832 | Magdeleine | Leblanc | 01/01/1713 | Married Charles Melanson, February 7, 1768. | Charles (born 1745) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a sixty-four-year-old widow, living with the family of Charles Melanson, her thirty-two-year-old son. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.833 | Isaac | LeBlanc | Married Marie Landry, February 7, 1768. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.834 | Marie | Landry | Married Isaac LeBlanc, February 7, 1768. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.835 | Jacques | La chaussée | Married Marie Marthe LeBlanc, February 7, 1768. | La Chaussée was a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. On April 23, 1779, local commandant Louis Judice inventoried La Chaussée's estate. The probate inventory indicates that his estate included a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, approximately twenty-two leagues above New Orleans. This land was located between the properties of Amand Préjean and Basile Préjean. | He died sometime before April 30, 1770. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:54. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.836 | Marie Marthe | LeBlanc | 01/01/1748 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married (1) Jacques La Chaussée (Lachaussée) at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 7, 1768. She became a widow before September 14, 1769. Married (2) Paul Breau (Braud), son of Jean Baptiste Breau and Elizabeth Henry, sometime before April 30, 1770. | First marriage: Jacques (born ca. February 1770; died April 25, 1790)Second marriage: Jérôme Raymond (Rémon) (born 1771; baptized August 28, 1772), Simon (Anselme) (born April 20, 1773), Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born January 8, 1775; baptized February 19, 1775), Étienne (born November 4, 1776), Hypolite Armand (born September 2, 1778), Pierre Anselme (born April 28, 1780), Marie Henriette (born September 19, 1781) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in February 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the Widow La Chaussée. The census indicates that she was twenty-years-old and that she occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. She owned two cattle, ten hogs, and one musket. On April 30, 1770, the Widow La Chaussée transferred to Jean Jeansonne her claim to a tract of land located along the Mississippi River twenty-three leagues above New Orleans. In abandoning the property, she indicated to local authorities that she could neither occupy it nor construct a roadway across it, as required by Louisiana's 1770 land regulations. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-one-year-old wife of Paul Breau. Her household included Paul Breau, the twenty-five-year-old head of her household, and Simon La Chaussée, her six-month-old son. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Paul Breau (Braud). In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Raymond (Rémon) Breau, her son, 6 years old; Simon (Simons) Breau, her son, 4 years old; Etienne Breau, her son, 6 months old; Magdeleine Breau, her daughter, 2 years old; and Jacques La Chaussée, her son by a previous marriage, 7 years old. Marie Marthe LeBlanc and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-two cows, one horse, twenty-one hogs, and three muskets. On May 15, 1782, Commandant Louis Judice inventoried the Marie Marthe LeBlanc's estate. The probate inventory indicates that she and her husband owned a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River. The property was located between the lands of Jean Baptiste Breau and Jean Baptiste Landry. Improvements on Marie Marthe LeBlanc's property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-eight by sixteen feet. | Her record indicates that she was thirty-four years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 64-67; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19, 21; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 52, 54, 69. | 1.766 | 27/02/1782 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.837 | Anne Geneviève | Babin | 01/01/1748 | Acadia (possibly Port Roya, Acadia) | Magdeleine Bourg | Pierre Babin (mistakenly identified as René by genealogist Sidney A. Marchand) | Married Joseph Granger, the son of Pierre Granger and Euphrosine Terriot (one source indicates Gauterot), April 11, 1768. | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in April 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Granger. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eight hogs and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Granger. On November 3, 1776, Geneviève Babin and Joseph Granger sold to Firmin Landry a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. On this property stood a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty feet by thirteen feet. | Died sometime before her husband (Joseph Granger) remarried at the Attakapas church on January 16, 1791. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 361; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.838 | Marguerite | Cormier | 01/01/1744 | Married Pierre Vincent, April 11, 1768. | Charles (baptized March 31, 1771), Felix (baptized March 29, 1773), Félicité (May 5, 1778), Jean (born ca. June 1769), Joseph (born 1770), Magdeleine (baptized May 20, 1780), Marguerite Rosalie (baptized July 20, 1775), Pierre Charles (married June 14, 1797) | A resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé in April 1768. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Vincent. Her household included her twenty-five-year-old husband and Jean Vincent, her three-month-old son. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Vincent. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following children: Joseph, 7 years old; Charles, 5 years old; Félix, four years old; and Rosalie, 1 year old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. The census indicates that they owned no slaves. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.839 | Collette | Léger | Married Saturnin Bruno, April 11, 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.840 | Osite | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1745 | Married Jean Baptiste Melanson, May 2, 1768. | Eusèbe (born ca. May 1769), Marie (born 1772), Geneviève (born 1774) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Bapiste Melanson (Melançon). Her household included her twenty-eight-year-old husband and her four-month-old son, Eusèbe. She and her family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned one cow, ten hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Melanson. In addition to her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included Eusèbe Melanson, her eight-year-old son, Marie Melanson, her five-year-old daughter, and Geneviève Melanson, her three-year-old daughter. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.841 | François | Landry | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Landry | Married Marie Rosalie (Marie Rose) LeBlanc, May 2, 1768. Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the marriage occurred April 30, 1768. | Marguerite (married [2] January 30, 1793), Marie Rose (married June 20, 1793), Edouard (married June 21, 1796), Hélène (married February 3, 1800), Françoise (married March 1, 1802), Marie Louise (married April 26, 1802) | In an act of donation, dated October 3, 1793, a François Landry donated to his nephew, Charles Grégoire (Landry?), certain specified movable property as thanks and compensation for the lodging Charles Grégoire had provided his uncle for several years. | His burial record indicates that he was eighty years old at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57, 59, 72. | 17/02/1797 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.842 | Marie Rosalie (Marie Rose) | LeBlanc | St. Charles Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Marguerite Guédry (Guidry) | Joseph LeBlanc | Married François Landry, son of Charles Landry and Marie LeBlanc, at Cabannocé, May 2, 1768. Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that the marriage occurred April 30, 1768. | Marguerite (married [2] January 30, 1793), Marie Rose (married June 20, 1793), Edouard (married June 21, 1796), Hélène (married February 3, 1800), Françoise (married March 1, 1802), Marie Louise (married April 26, 1802) | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57, 59, 72. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.843 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | Married Germain Bergeron, May 3, 1768. | Élizabeth (born 1770), Jean Louis (born 1772), Marie (born 1774), Susanne (born 1779), Geneviève Rosalie (baptized December 31, 1780 ) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the eighteen-year-old spouse of Germain Bergeron. Her household included the following persons: Germain Bergeron, 25 years old; Baptiste D'Amours, a nephew, 14 years old; and François D'Amours, a nephew, 10 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned three cows, thirteen hogs, and one musket. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Germain Bergeron. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Bergeron, her daughter, 17 years old; Jean Louis Bergeron, her son, 15 years old; Susanne Bergeron, her daughter, 9 years old; and Germain Bergeron, her son, 3 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned ten barrels of rice, 100 barrels of corn, twenty cows, eight horses, and eight hogs. Their property holdings made the Bergerons one of the wealthiest families in the Lafourche District. Her name is rendered as Margritta Le Blanc in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-seven-year-old wife of Germain Bergeron. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Elizabeth (Elisabeth) Bergeron, her daughter, 18; jean Louis Bergeron, her son, 15 years old; Susanne (Suzanne) Bergeron, her daughter, 9 years old; and Germain Bergeron, her son, 3 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned thirteen barrels of corn, twelve barrels of rice, twelve cows, two horses, and eight hogs. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:75; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.844 | Blanche | Breau | Married Charles Gaudet, May 16, 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.845 | Marie (Magdeleine, Madeleine) | Doucet | 01/01/1736 | Married Abraham Roy, June 6, 1768. | Joseph (born 1770) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old wife of Abraham Roy. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Pierre Roy, her stepson, 17 years old; Charles Roy, her stepson, 14 years old; Sauveur Roy, her son, 17 years old; Joseph Roy, her son, 6 years old; and Marguerite Roy, her stepdaughter, 12 years old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.846 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1749 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Anne Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Babin | Married François Dugas, son of "Dejean" (probably Jean) Dugas and Marie Charlotte Gaudin, June 28, 1768. | Joseph (born 1770), Hipolyte (Hipolite) (born 1771), Athanase (born 1773), Michel (born 1776), Appolonie (born 1778), Joseph Roger (born 1783), Jean (born 1784), Marguerite (born 1786) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-year-old spouse of François Dugas. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of François Dugas. In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Dugas, her son, 7 years old; Hipolite Dugas, her son, 6 years old; Athanase Dugas, her son, 4 years old; Michel Dugas, her son, 1 year old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents; frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, two horses, nine hogs, and two muskets. | One source indicates that she died on March 9, 1807. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:56; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8, 35. | 1.766 | 19/05/1807 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.847 | Joachim | Mire | dit Benoni | Marie Forest (Forêt) | Pierre Mire | Married Magdeleine Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Jacques Melanson and Marguerite Broussard, June 9, 1768. | Alexandre (born May 1779), Anne Magdaleine (born September 4, 1786), Benjamin (baptized March 21, 1772), Félicité (baptized October 24, 1770), Jean Baptiste (baptized December 24, 1775), Marguerite (baptized June 20, 1780), Marie Magdeleine (baptized October 24, 1770), Paul (married February 22, 1802), Rosalie (baptized July 4, 1773) | On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:547-549; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 81. | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||
2.848 | Marguerite (often Magdeleine) | broussard | Married Joachim Mire, June 9, 1768. | Alexandre (born May 1779), Anne Magdaleine (born September 4, 1786), Benjamin (baptized March 21, 1772), Félicité (baptized October 24, 1770), Jean Baptiste (baptized December 24, 1775), Marguerite (baptized June 20, 1780), Marie Magdeleine (baptized October 24, 1770), Paul (married February 22, 1802), Rosalie (baptized July 4, 1773) | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:547-549. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.849 | Rose (Osite) | Gauterot (Gautreaux) | 01/01/1735 | Married Michel Bourgeois at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, May 20, 1767. | Paul (born 1769), Marguerite (born 1775), Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Michel Bourgeois. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul Bourgeois, her son, 8 years old; Marguerite Bourgeois, her daughter, 2 years old; and Magdeleine (Magdelaine, Madeleine) Bourgeois, her daughter, 2 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, fifteen cows, and 2 horses. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:31; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.850 | Marie | Landry | Married Pierre Forest, ca. 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.851 | Joseph | Bourg | Married Anne Dugas, ca. 1768. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
2.852 | Louise Françoise | La Chaussée | dit St. Julien | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Françoise Gaudin (Godin) | Philippe La Chaussée | Married Joseph Gravois, son of Pierre Gravois and Rose Bourgeois (her father's second wife), at Cabannocé, June 2, 1777. The married was witnessed by Jean Bourgeois and Jean Roger. | Auguste (married April 27, 1802), Clémence (married April 26, 1803), Céleste (Célestine) (born March 21, 1778), Joseph Simon (born August 20, 1786) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Resided with two stepbrothers and Anne Bergeron. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:333-334, 404. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.853 | Joseph | Gravois | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Marie Rosalie (Rose) Bourgeois | Pierre Gravois | Married Louise Françoise La Chaussée dit St. Julien, daughter of Philippe La Chaussée and Françoise Gaudin (deceased at the time of the wedding), at Cabannocé, June 2, 1777. | Auguste (married April 27, 1802), Clémence (married April 26, 1803), Céleste (Célestine) (born March 21, 1778), Joseph Simon (born August 20, 1786) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a sixteen-year-old bachelor. He resided 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of the household of Philippe La Chaussée, his stepfather, and Marie Bourgeois, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:333-334; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.854 | Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1755 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Philippe La Chaussée and Rose Bergeron. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.855 | Veuve | Gaudin | 01/01/1730 | Victor (born 1753), Pierre Paul (born 1757), Marie (born 1752), Marie Louise (born 1760) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-nine-year-old widow and head of a household that included the following individuals: Victor, her son, 16 years old; Pierre Paul, her son, 12 years old; Marie, her daughter, 17 years old; and Marie Louise, her daughter, 9 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.856 | Victor | Gaudin | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Veuve Gaudin | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a sixteen-year-old bachelor. He resided 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.857 | Pierre Paul | Gaudin | 01/01/1757 | St. John River area, Acadia | Veuve Gaudin | Married Félicité LePine, a native of New Orleans (one source indicates St. Charles Parish, La.). | Marie Louise (born January 3, 1792), Guillaume (born October 14, 1795), Eloise (born July 25, 1798) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:181; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:133. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.858 | Marie | Gaudin | 01/01/1752 | Veuve Gaudin | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.859 | Marie Louise | Gaudin | 01/01/1760 | Veuve Gaudin | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.860 | Dominique | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1762 | Marie Josèphe Breau | Honoré Melanson | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.861 | Rose | Gaudet | 01/01/1739 | Rose Breau (Her burial record indicates Rose Doucet) | Charles Gaudet | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-year-old member of her brother's household. The household included Jérôme Gaudet, her brother, 27 years old; and Marie Breau, her mother, 67 years old. | Her burial record indicates that she was a seventy-year-old spinster at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:309. | 05/12/1799 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.862 | Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1702 | Married (?) Gaudet. | Jérôme (born 1740), Rose (born 1739) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixty-seven-year-old widow residing in the household of her son, Jérôme Gaudet. The household also included her daugher Rose. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.863 | Marie | Breau | 01/01/1769 | Marie LeBlanc | Athanase Breau | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a one-month-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a seven-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.864 | Jacques | LeBlanc | 01/01/1708 | Pisiquid(?), Acadia | Married Catherine Josette Forest (Forêt). | Marguerite (married April 87, 1768), Catherine (born 1750), Osite (born 1752), Marcel, Paul | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the sixty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Catherine Forest, his wife, 59 years old; Catherine, his daughter, 19 years old; and Osite, his daughter, 17 years old. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They family owned two slaves, twelve cattle, three horses, twenty-seven hogs, and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the sixty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Catherine Forest (Forêt), his sixty-seven-year-old wife. He and his spouse owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, six cows, and four horses. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | His burial record indicates that he was an eighty-seven-year-old widower at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:483; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 71. | 26/02/1795 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.865 | Catherine Josette | forest (forêt) | 01/01/1710 | Pisiquid(?), Acadia | Married Jacques LeBlanc. | Marguerite (married April 87, 1768), Catherine (born 1750), Osite (born 1752), Marcel, Paul | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-nine-year-old spouse of Jacques LeBlanc. In addition to her sixty-one-year-old husband, her household included Catherine, her daughter, 19 years old; and Osite, her daughter, 17 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The family owned two slaves, twelve cattle, three horses, twenty-seven hogs, and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the sixty-seven-year-old spouse of Jacques LeBlanc. She and her husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, six cows, and four horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 71. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.866 | Catherine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1750 | Catherine Forest (Forêt) | Jacques LeBlanc | Married Pierre Lanoue (Lanoux). | Simon (born 1771), Michel (born 1773), Marianne (born ca. November 1775), Carmelite (married December 26, 1810) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Lanoue. In addition to her husband, her household included Simon Lanoue, her six-year-old son, Michel Lanoue, her four-year-old son, and Marianne Lanoue, her eighteen-month-old daughter. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 67. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.867 | Osite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1752 | Catherine Forest (Forêt) | Jacques LeBlanc | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.868 | Joseph | Richard | Married Agnès Hébert, November 28, 1766. | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records suggest that his family remained as a prisoners of war at Fort Edward (Windsor), Nova Scotia, after he was sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, with the other able-bodied Acadian men, July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that four members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 2 2/3 rations. He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.869 | Joseph | Richard | 01/01/1762 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old resident of the household of Joseph Richard, his uncle. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a seven-year-old resident of the household of Joseph Richard, his uncle, and Anne Blanchard. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.870 | Anne | Landry | Veuve Dugas | 01/01/1736 | Marie Marguerite Blanchard | Alexandre Landry | Married (1) Athanase Dugas. Married (2) Mathurin Landry, ca. 1767. | First marriage: Michel Dugas (born 1756)Second marriage: Anne Marie (born ca. January 1769), Isabelle (Elizabeth) Sophie (born 1771), Anastasie Rosalie (born 1773), Joseph (born 1775), Marie Louise (born 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Mathurin Landry. Her household included her eight-month-old daughter Marie. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Mathurin Landry, the thirty-six-year-old head of her household. Her household also included Marie Landry, her daughter, 1 1/2 years old; and Michel Dugas, her son by a previous marriage, 14 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Mathurin Landry. In addition to herself and her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her son, 2 years old; Marie Landry, her daughter, 8 years old; Isabelle Landry, her daughter, 6 years old; Anastasie Landry, her daughter, 4 years old; Marie Louise Landry, her daughter, 1 year old; and Barbe Babin, her husband's sister-in-law from a previous marriage. Anne Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-eight cows, two horses, ten sheep, twenty-five hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 63. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.871 | Marie (Marie Anne, Marianne) | Granger | 01/01/1743 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Euphrosine (Frosine) Gauterot | Pierre Granger | Married Joseph Landry dit à Petit Abram, son of Abram (Abraham?) Landry and Isabelle LeBlanc, August 10, 1768. | Marguerite (born ca. February 1770; evidently died before 1777); Eloy (interred October 14, 1772), Grégoire Raphaël (born October 23, 1773; interred October 28, 1773), Gilles (probably Guillaume Raph„el) (born January 10, 1775), Guillaume Raphaël (born ca. 1775; married November 26, 1792), François (1779), Madeleine (born 1781)The Baton Rouge diocesan church records also record the birth of Anne Magdeleine Landry, born to Joseph Landry and Anne Granger, possibly the subject of this sketch and her spouse. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry. Her household included her sons Joseph (7 years old) and Pierre (5 years old). Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry, the thirty-one-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following children: Pierre Landry, her son, 8 years old; Joseph Landry, her son, 6 years old; and Marguerite Landry, her daughter, 6 months old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the thirty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her stepson, 13 years old; Pierre Landry, her stepson, 11 years old; Raphaël Landry, her son, 2 years old; and Jean Baptiste Milhomme, a blacksmith, 40 years old. Marie Granger and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slaves, twenty-six cows, five horses, eight sheep, thirty hogs, and two muskets. | She died at the age of thirty-six years, according to her burial record. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.;Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:332; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46, 61. | 1.766 | 20/08/1781 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.872 | Pierre Abraham | Landry | dit Pitre (Pittre) | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Marguerite Flan | Abraham Landry | Married Marguerite Allain, daughter of Pierre Allain and Catherine Hébert, at St. Gabriel, La., January 11, 1773. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he was a resident of Ascension Parish at the time of his marriage. Mathurin Landry and Firmin Broussard witnessed the marriage record. | Victoire Constance (Marie VIctoire Constance) (born November 2, 1774; married January 8, 1798), Henriette Elise (Ulise, Zlise) (baptized February 11, 1777; married June 21, 1796), Allain (Allein) (born October 18, 1778), Pierre Augustin (born July 4, 1780), Pierre Grégoire (born November 17, 1782); Marie Adélaïde (baptized February 19, 1786), Reine (Rienne) (baptized December 8, 1788); Marie del Carmel Dorothée (born January 7, 1790), Marie del Carmel Marguerite (born April 1, 1792), Marie Eugénie (born November 13, 1794) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage and owned four hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier and a seventeen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old who owned a tract of fallow land. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. The list also indicates that he had sold an additional fifty barrels of corn to an unidentified resident of the German Coast. On January 22, 1775, a Pierre Landry purchased at the estate sale of Magdeleine M artin a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-two leagues above New Orleans. The foregoing property was bounded above by the land of Marin Préjean and below by the property of Jean Jeansonne. Improvements on the aforementioned property include a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-six by seventeen feet. The house included bousillage walls. On June 16, 1775, Landry sold his recently acquired property to Amand (Amant) Préjean. On November 5, 1775, Pierre Landry received a Spanish land grant along Bayou Lafourche. The land grant encompassed much of the property presently included in western Donaldsonville, Louisiana. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Allain, his wife, 25 years old; Constance Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; Uline Landry, his daughter, 9 months old; and Marie Andrau, an orphan, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows, one horse, nine hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On October 21, 1779, Pierre Landry purchased from Joseph Gaudet a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was boundd above by the land of François Duon (Duhon) and below by the property of Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Improvements included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-six by sixteen feet. The house had a front gallery. On May 7, 1780, Landry sold to Noël Verret the property hea had acquired in 1779. On June 10, 1786, Commandant Louis Judice reported that twenty-five Lafourche District settlers had approached him for permission to travel to New Orleans to complain to the governor about Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), the local church warden. The settlers insisted that Landry had insulted them. Judice denied the complainants' request, preferring to achieve a local diplomatic solution. Judice then wrote to Landry, summoning him to the commandant's residence. During their subsequent meeting, Judice counseled Landry to exercise restraint in his dealings with the complainants, particularly as many of those who had filed a complaint were either his uncles or his cousins. Evidently responding to public pressure, on June 15, Mir¢ ordered Judice to conduct a full-scale investigation. A public investigation was held on June 16, 1786. Two days later, Landry appeared at Judice's residence and begged forgiveness; Judice responded that Landry should seek forgiveness from God. Judice imposed a fine of thirty piastres. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On September 4, 1794, Commandant Louis Judice filed a formal complaint with the governor about about Landry's "insubordination." Judice reported that he was going to entrust a packet of his dispatches with Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), who was leaving the district for New Orleans, and that he had notified Landry that he must not depart before the packet arrived. Landry blatantly disregarded Judice's instructions, leaving for the colonial capital the night before the commandant's arrival at his home. Adding insult to injury, Landry had not secured a passport as required by colonial regulations. On September 19, 1794, Governor Carondelet ordered Judice to imprison Pierre Landry dit Pitre for four days in the district jail. In February, 1806, following his death, Pierre Landry dit Pitre's widow sold to William Donaldson the property subsequently incorporated into the town of Donaldsonville. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:11, 415-451; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, June 10, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:280; List of Settlers Who Were Insulted by Mr. Pittre and Who Have Demanded Justice, [ca. June 10, 1786], AGI, PPC, 199:294; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, June 18, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:295; Judice to Carondelet, September 4,1794, AGI, PPC, 210:305; Carondelet to Judice, September 19, 1794, AGI, PPC, 210:306; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 23, 55, 64-65; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marguerite Allain and Pierre Abraham [dit Pitre] Landry." | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.873 | Joseph (2) (once identified as Joseph Athanase) | Landry | dit Dios (once identified as Joseph, cadet) | 01/01/1757 | Acadia | Marguerite Flan | Abraham Landry | Married (1) Magdeleine (Marie Madeleine) LeBlanc, daughter of Étienne LeBlanc and Elizabeth Boudrot of Miramichi, Acadia, February 23, 1773. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand mistakenly identifies his wife as Marie Rose Melanson.) Joseph Landry dit Dios was a widower in 1781. Married (2) Magdeleine Babin, the widow of Charles Babin, at Ascension Parish, La., November 25, 1781. Ephrème Babin and Étienne Landry witnessed the marriage record. | First marriage: Marthe (born December 3, 1778), Joseph Thadeo (born March 18, 1780) (Genealogist Bona Arsenault maintains that a daughter, Marie Élise, was born in 1781, but she does not appear in the ecclesiastical records of the Diocese of Baton Rouge.)Second marriage: Simon (born April 15, 1782), Jacques Donat (born December 11, 1783), Pierre (baptized December 24, 1785), Marie Madeleine (baptized May 1, 1788) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his father's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a thirteen-year-old member of his father's household. On November 2, 1774, Abraham (Abram) Landry sold to Joseph Landry, cadet, a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. (The term cadet refers to a younger person of the same name in this case evidently the younger of the two Josephs born to Abraham Landry. This Joseph Landry, cadet thus was the person more commonly called Joseph Landry dit Dios.) This property was bounded above by the Ascension Catholic Church site and below by the land of Joseph Landry (1) dit à Petit Abram. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, thirty feet wide. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Abraham Landry, his father, 65 years old; Claire Rivet, his fifty-two-year-old stepmother; and Anne Bonnant, his fifteen-year-old stepsister or sister-in-law. Joseph Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The 1777 census also indicates that Joseph Landry owned six cows, one horse, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | His burial record indicates that he was twenty-seven years old at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:415-451; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55-56; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2528; Wood, Guide, 133-136. | 1.766 | 08/01/1784 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.874 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Marguerite Flan | Abraham Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of her father's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an seventeen-year-old member of her father's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.875 | Magdeleine (Marie Magdeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1759 | Marguerite Flan | Abraham Landry | Married Firmin Broussard, son of Jean Broussard and Anne Landry, May 16, 1775. | Françoise (born 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old resident of her father's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as ten-year-old member of her father's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the eighteen-year-old spouse of Firmin Broussard. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included Françoise Broussard, her one-year-old daughter. Marie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, two horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.876 | Charles (Charle) | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Lincour | 01/01/1741 | Married Marie Josèphe Babin. | Isabelle (Élizabeth, Isabel) (born 1774), Saul (born 1776), Marguerite (married June 22, 1801), Françoise (married June 22, 1801), Sainte Reine (born December 24, 1785) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the owner of a tract of land with six arpents frontage. This tract of land was "above" (i.e., upstream from) Bayou Lafourche. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that a nineteen-year-old bachelor. His age and marital status are both erroneous in this muster roll entry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-nine-year-old wife, Marie Babin. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Babin, his wife, 25 years old; Saul Lincour, his son, 1 year old; Isabelle Lincour, his daughter, 3 years old; Marguerite Babin, his sister-in-law, 24 years old; Edouard Lincour, his nephew, 6 years old; and Rosalie Lincour, his niece, 10 years old. Charles Gaudin dit Lincour and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fourteen cows, three horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was the third-ranking "subcorporal" (evidently a rank corresponding to the modern private first class) in the local militia unit. His name is rendered as Charles Lincour in the list. He is listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780. The January 16, 1780, list indicates that he held the rank of corporal in the Cabannocé militia. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of first corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. On June 17, 1786, he gave a deposition regarding his role in the arrest of churchwarden Pierre Landry dit Pitre. He was a corporal in the local militia commanding a three-man detachment at the arrest was made. The proceedings of the investigation indicate that he was illiterate. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. The official list of complainants indicates that he was Pierre Landry's cousin. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. His name is rendered as Charle Lincour in the February 17, 1789 petition. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On July 29, 1802, Charles Gaudin dit Lincour purchased a tract of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River, approximately two leagues above the parish church. The foregoing property was bounded above by the land of Charles Gaudin and below by the property of Charles Landry. On July 29, 1802, Charles Gaudin dit Lincour acquired a tract of land adjoining the upper boundary of the aforementioned property. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Investigation into the Charles Made against Pierre landry dit Pitre, June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:145; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.877 | Joseph | Gaudin (Godin) | dit Lincour | 01/01/1742 | Acadia | Married Geneviève Landry. | Rosalie (born ca. 1767), Edouard (married June 27, 1796), Marie (born 1767) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Geneviève Landry, his wife, 25 years old; Rosalie, his daughter, 2 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with 6 arpents frontage. This tract of land was located "above [Bayou] Lafourche." They owned 2 cattle, 17 hogs, and 1 musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-seven-year-old widower. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Edouard, 6 years old; Marie, his daughter, 3 years old; and Mrs. Babin, his sister-in-law. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.878 | Geneviève | Landry | 01/01/1744 | Married Joseph Gaudin dit Lincour, ca. 1767. | Rosalie (born ca. 1767), Edouard (married June 27, 1796) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Gaudin dit Lincour. Her household included her husband and her two-year-old daughter Rosalie. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. This property was located "above Lafourche." They owned two cows, seventeen hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.879 | Barthélemy | Gaudin (Godin)(?) | 01/01/1733 | Acadia | Married Marguerite Blanchard. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Blanchard, his wife, 36 years old; and Magdeleine Blanchard, his niece, 9 years old. His family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-eight-year-old married man. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.880 | Magdeleine | Blanchard | 01/01/1760 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of the household of Barthélemy Gaudin(?) and Marguerite Blanchard, her aunt. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.881 | Marguerite | Blanchard | 01/01/1733 | Anne Robichaud | Pierre Blanchard | Married Barthélemy Gilson (Guilson), a surgeon. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Barthélemy Gaudin(?). Her household included her husband and her nine-year-old niece Magdeleine Blanchard. Her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They Owned two hogs and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-year-old spouse of Barthélemy Gilson, a surgeon. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.882 | Augustin | Berteau (Berteaud) | 01/01/1749 | France(?) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He also owned one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor. The muster roll also suggests that he was a native of France, rather than Acadia. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. His name is rendered as Augustin Berteaud in the February 17, 1789 list. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.883 | Jérôme (Gerome) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1749 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Magdeleine Landry, the widow of Thomas Comes and the daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Josèphe Bourg. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned one cow, two hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a thirty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine landry, his wife, 30 years old; and Joseph Comeau(?), his stepson. 8 years old. Jérôme LeBlanc and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twelve cows, eight hogs, and two muskets. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal. His name is rendered Gerome LeBlanc in the June 17, 1777, list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. The 1779 muster roll indicates that he was the "third sergeant" (i.e., the third-ranking sergeant) in the unit. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he was a sublieutenant (soulieutenant) in the Lafourche District militia unit. On April 2, 1786,. Jérôme LeBlanc purchased a tract of land at Jean Baptiste Chauvin's succession sale. This property was located between the lands of Evan Jones and Jean Baptiste Chauvin. On June 16, 1786, he served on a military tribunal investigating the arrest of Church Warden Pierre Landry dit Pitre by Ascension Parish militiamen. Identified as a contributor to a fund for the victims of the disastrous 1788 New Orleans fire. Around June 17, 1788, Jérôme LeBlanc and Claude LeBlanc formally complained to the governor about Commandant Judice's failure to maintain his levees. Commandant Judice repudiated LeBlanc's charges in a letter to the governor, July 5, 1788. On June 16, 1789, Jérôme LeBlanc "executed his will declaring that he was a native of Acadia." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Investigation into the Charges Made Agsint Pierre Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 67-68; Estevan Mir¢ to Louis Judice, June 17, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:610; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, July 5, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:622vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:466; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69, 72. | 1.766 | 24/08/1789 | 25/08/1789 | Ascension Parish, La. | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.884 | Marie | Landry | Veuve LeBlanc | 01/01/1723 | Married (1) Désiré LeBlanc. Married (2) Pierrre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques. | Simon (born 1741), Madeleine (born 1742), Isaac (born 1746), Marie Marthe (born 1748), Jérôme (born 1749), Isabelle (born 1751), Désiré (born 1753), Marie (Marine) (born 1755), Osite (Ozite) (born 1758), Benjamin Désiré (born 1760), Anselme (born 1763), Grégoire (born ca. April 1769) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old spouse of Desire LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: Désiré LeBlanc, her husband, 52 years old; Desire, her son, 16 years old; Benjamin, her son, 9 years old; Anselme, 6 years old; Grégoire, 5 months old; Isabelle, her daughter, 18 years old; Marine, her daughter, 14 years old; Osite, her daughter, 11 years old; and Augustin Broussard, a nephew, 20 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with nine arpents frontage. The property was located "above Lafourche." The family owned six cows, forty-five hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Désiré LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: her husband, 53 years old; Désiré LeBlanc, her son, 17 years old; Benjamin LeBlanc, 10 years old; Anselme LeBlanc, 8 years old; Grégoire LeBlanc, his son, 6 years old; Elizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc, 12 years old; Marie LeBlanc, his daughter, 15 years old; Osite LeBlanc, his daughter, 18 years old. Became embroiled in a major religious controversy with Father Ange de Revillagodos, the local pastor. Around January 15, 1776, for reasons known only to himself, the priest, while standing at the altar of the local church, prohibited all of his female parishioners from utilizing the services of Mme Desire LeBlanc, who had served as a midwife for twenty-two years. Mme LeBlanc and her husband filed a complaint with Commandant Louis Judice, who, in turn, forwarded a report to the governor. Meanwhile, because of her excellent reputation, Judice allow Mme LeBlanc to continue working as a midwife. On January 17, 1776, Governor Luís de Unzaga overruled Revillagodos. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a fifty-three-year-old widow. Her household included Benjamin LeBlanc, her sixteen-year-old son, Anselme LeBlanc, her fifteen-year-old son, Grégoire LeBlanc, her eight-year-old son, and Osite LeBlanc, her nineteen-year-old daughter. Marie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows, one horse, eight hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:303; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Judice, January 17, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:304vo; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.885 | Désiré | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old resident of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 68. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.886 | Benjamin (Désiré) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1760 | Maryland (sometimes New England, a contemporary euphemism for the English seaboard colonies) | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Rosalie Babin, daughter of Joseph Babin and Ozite LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., July 12, 1790. | Anne Marie (Nanette) (born May 10, 1791), Benjamin Désiré (born November 14, 1796), Narcisse (born January 17, 1800), Joseph (born March 19, 1801) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Benjamin LeBlanc recorded his will on March 30, 1785. LeBlanc's successon sale was held on May 6, 1806. His estate included a tract of land on the right bank o the Mississippi River, eight leagues above Commandant Cantrelle's residence in present-day St. James Parish. Improvements on the property included a large house of sur sol construction measuring forty-two by fifteen feet. His 1806 succession indicates that the following children survived him: Anne (Mannette, Nanette), 15 years old; Benjamin Désiré, 9 years old; and Joseph, 5 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 70-71; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 9, 68, 69. | 1.766 | 18/02/1804 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.887 | Anselme (Enselme) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1763 | Maryland (sometimes New England, a euphemism for the English seaboard colonies) | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Magdeleine Babin, daughter of Ephrème (Efrème) Babin and Marguerite LeBlanc, December 27, 1784. | Grégoire Sifrin (Sifroy) (born May 27, 1788), Marie Judith (married November 6, 1809), and Jacques Valéry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Enselme Leblanc in the 1779 militia list. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of second corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On January 21, 1792, Anselme LeBlanc and his wife sold to Gilles LeBlanc, a resident of Cabannocé, a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, between the lands of Paul Landry and Charles Lincour. At the time of the sale, improvements on the LeBlanc property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-one by fourteen feet. The house featured front and rear galleries and bousillage walls. At the time of his death, Anselme LeBlanc and his wife owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. This farm, bounded above by the land of Étienne LeBlanc and below by the property of Alexandre Landry, was located approximately two leagues above the parish church. Anselme LeBlanc was survived by three children, whose ages in 1797 are indicated following their names: Grégoire Sifrin, 13 years old; Marie Judith, 7 years old; Jacques (Santiago) Valéry, 6 years old. On December 24, 1797, Anselme LeBlanc's widow signed an affidavit indicating that she could not maintain the family's large farm. She consequently sold a parcel of land with four arpents frontage to Gilles Leblanc. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 73; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69. | 1.766 | 01/02/1797 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.888 | Grégoire | LeBlanc | 01/01/1769 | Louisiana(?) | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Marie Barbe Babin, daughter of Olivier Babin and Marie Madeleine Breau (Braud), at Ascension Parish, April 21, 1787. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contends that the marriage occurred on April 23, 1787.) | Désiré (born April 23, 1787), Marie Clémence (married May 7, 1810), Rosemond (married November 30, 1816), Geralde(?) Marie (married February 3, 1817), Marie Hortense (married October 2, 1820), Lessin (married January 27, 1823), Léon Narcisse (married January 17, 1825), Privot (married May 20, 1832), Catherine | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-month-old resident of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was an eight-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 73-75; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69, 70. | 1.766 | 11/05/1824 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.889 | Isabelle (Élizabeth, Isabel) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1751 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Joseph Landry, son of Joseph Étienne Landry and Marie Josèphe Bourg, at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1775. | Louis (born May 12, 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old resident of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. On April 25, 1778, Commandant Louis Judice inventoried and appraised the estate of Isabelle Leblanc. The probate inventory indicates that she and her husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by sixteen feet. Ancillary buildings included a small storehouse and two slave cabins. The estate was valued at 350 piastres. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 68; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 58, 62, 69. | 1.766 | 01/09/1777 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.890 | Marine (Anne, Marie, Marianne?) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | probably Grand Pré, Acadia | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married (1) Joseph Babin dit Dios, son of Pierre Babin and Anne Forest (Forêt), at Ascension Parish, La., February 19, 1775. Married (2) Gilles LeBlanc, the widower of Théotiste Gaudin, December 21, 1783. | Paul (Hypolite) (born November 20, 1775), Charles (born May 12, 1777), Benjamin (married May 15, 1797), Jérôme, Bonaventure (married November 8, 1788), Anne Marguerite (married December 21, 1783), Nicolas (married January 21, 1805), and Rosemond (born March 28, 1789) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old resident of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Her burial record indicates that she was fifty-five years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 68-69; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8, 69, 70. | 1.766 | 08/09/1789 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.891 | Osite (Ozitte) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1758 | Maryland | Marie Magdeleine Landry | Désiré LeBlanc | Married Étienne LeBlanc, son of Étienne LeBlanc and Isabelle Boudrot (Boudreaux), at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana, January 7, 1778. | Anne Catherine (born September 25, 1778), Edouard (born June 4, 1780), Anne Céleste (born November 14, 1782), Marceline (born November 25, 1780)), André Étienne (born August 16, 1791; married February 10, 1812), Étienne Privot (born July 22, 1793), Gustave (born October 6, 1795), Manette (probably Nanette, a nickname for Anne) (married July 25, 1808) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eleven-year-old resident of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 70; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:236; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 69, 70. | 1.766 | 07/01/1808 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.892 | Augustin | Broussard | 01/01/1749 | Acadia | Married Anne Landry, ca. early 1770. | Anne (baptized December 25, 1770), Apolonie (born November 25, 1775), Constance (born December 9, 1778), Hortense (born August 3, 1783), Augustin (born July 15, 1785), Louis (married May 20, 1800) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nephew, and twenty-year-old member of the household of, Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Landry. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twent;y-year-old bachelor. He lived one-half league from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Anne Landry, his wife, 30 years old; Olivier Melanson (Melançon), his stepson, 10 years old; Simon Melanson, his stepson, 2 years old; and Marguerite Melanson, his stepdaughter, 8 years old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had twenty barrels of surplus corn. On May 14, 1776, Augustin Broussard sold to Honoré Visswiaux a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. This property was boundd above by the land of Olivier Melanson (Melançon) and below by the property of René Landry. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty by sixteen feet. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He served in a militia detachment assigned by Commandant Alexandre DeClouet to drive a herd of cattle from the Attakapas District to New Orleans in support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He was issued a passport for this purpose on December 29, 1779. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On June 12, 1780, Augustin Broussard signed a receipt acknowledging receipt of 149 piastres "for the minor children of my first wife." The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Broussard, 66 years old; Joseph Broussard, 26 years old; Auguste Broussard, 18 years old; and Apollonie Broussard, 27 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with twenty-four arpents frontage. They owned 200 semi-wild beef cattle and 50 tame cattle. They also the following slaves: Isadore, 16 years old; and Deliel, 8 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 118-150; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256; Receipt, June 12, 1780, St. Martin Parish Original Acts, St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martin Parish Courthouse, St. Martinville, La.; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22-23. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.893 | Joseph | Bugeaud (Bujol) | 01/01/1723 | St. Charles Parish, Acadia | Married Anne LeBlanc. | Marguerite (born 1751), Augustin (born 1753; married February 7, 1774), Perpétue (born 1755), Anne (born 1757), Marie Magdeleine (born 1761; married February 15, 1784), Joseph Paul (born May 10, 1769) | Exiled to Maryland. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne LeBlanc, his wife, 36 years old; Augustin, his son, 16 years old; Joseph, his son, 3 months old; Marguerite, his daughter, 18 years old; Perpétue, his daughter, 14 years old; Anne, his daughter, 12 years old; Marie, his daughter, 9 years old; and Joseph Landry, his uncle, 65 years old. Joseph Bugeaud is identified as an Acadian in the baptismal record of Joseph Paul Bugeaud, December 25, 1769. The baptism was recorded at the Pointe Coupée church, suggesting that he and his family may have been residents of San Luís de Natchez. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne LeBlanc, his wife, 42 years old; Augustin Bugeaud his son, 17 years old; Marguerite Bugeaud, his daughter, 19 years old; Perpétue Bugeaud, his daughter, 15 years old; Anne Bugeaud, his daughter, 13 years old; Marie Bugeaud, his daughter, 5 years old; and Joseph Bugeaud, his son, 1 year old. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the fifty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne LeBlanc, his wife, 44 years old; Joseph Bugeaud, his son, 8 years old; Anne Bugeaud, his daughter, 18 years old; Marie Bugeaud, his daughter, 12 years old; Joseph Constant, his son-in-law, 38 years old; Marguerite Bugeaud, evidently his daughter and the wife of Joseph Constant, 26 years old; Paul Constant, his grandson, 6 years old; Augustin Constant, his grandson, 4 years old; and Anne Constant, his granddaughter, 3 years old. Joseph Bugeaud and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, eighteen cows, two horses, nineteen hogs, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Joseph Bujeau in the July 27, 1777, petition. On May 26, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Joseph Bugeau (Bujeaux) had been insulted by drunken Indians. | Two Acadians by the name of Joseph Bugeau died in the first decade of the nineteenth century. They appear to be father and son Joseph Bugeau, the husband of Anne LeBlanc, and his son Joseph. The first burial was recorded on February 14, 1806, the second on October 24, 1807. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:149; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, May 26, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:411-412; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25-26. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.894 | Augustin | Bugeaud (Bujeau) | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Married Gertrude Landry, daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Bourg (Bourque), February 7, 1774. | Marie (born 1774) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Gertrude Landry, his wife, 25 years old; and Marie Bugeaud (Bujeaux), his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows, two horses, seven hogs, and two muskets. Augustin Bugeaud was one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. His name is rendered as Augustin BuJeau in the June 17, 1777, list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.895 | Joseph | Bugeaud | 05/10/1769 | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a three-month-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a one-year-old member of his parents' household. | Two Acadians by the name of Joseph Bugeau died in the first decade of the nineteenth century. They appear to be father and son Joseph Bugeau, the husband of Anne LeBlanc, and his son Joseph. The first burial was recorded on February 14, 1806, the second on October 24, 1807. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25-26. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.896 | Marguerite | Bugeaud (Bujol) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Married (1) Joseph Constant. Married (2) Juan Vives, a resident of the Valenzuela settlement of the Lafourche District, February 8, 1780. Vives was a native of Valencia, Spain, and the son of Juan Vives and Francisca Planez. | First marriage: Paul (born 1771), Augustin (Auguste) (born 1772), Anne (born 1774), Constance (married February 6, 1797) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Constant. Marguerite Bugeaud, her husband, and her three children resided with her parents (Joseph Bugeaud and Anne LeBlanc) and three siblings. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 29. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.897 | Perpétue | Bugeaud (Bujol) | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Married Paul Prévost, son of Nicolas Prévost and Yve Duon (Yse [Isabelle?] Dubois?), February 13, 1773. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.898 | Anne | Bugeaud | 01/01/1757 | Maryland | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Married Joseph Landry dit Belhomme (Bel Homme), the widower of Isabel LeBlanc, November 25, 1779. | Jeanne Carmelite (born 1780), Marie Céleste (born 1782), Joseph (born 1786), Philippe Ursin (Felipe Ursino) (born May 25, 1788), Marie Carmelite (born May 19, 1800), Narcisse (born February 19, 1807), Marie Arthemise (born September 28, 1813), Valéry Isidore (born August 12, 1815), Marie Delphine (born May 20, 1817), Melanie (born January 27, 1817), Jean Trasimond (married April 11, 1825) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25, 62. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.899 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Bugeaud | 01/01/1761 | Anne LeBlanc | Joseph Bugeaud | Married Auguste Verret, son of Nicolas Verret and Marie Cantrelle, February 15, 1784. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a five-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.900 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1704 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixty-five-year-old member of the household of Joseph Bugeaud and Anne LeBlanc. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a sixty-seven-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his sixty-two-year-old nephew, and Anne Landry. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." (A notation on the original document indicates that Jérôme LeBlanc actually signed the petition for him, perhaps as his proxy.) | His burial record indicates thathe was sixty-seven years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:428. | 1.766 | 04/09/1783 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.901 | Pierre | Bugeaud (Bujol, Bijeau) | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Brigitte Chevais (Chenet) | Etienne Bugeau (Bujol) | Married Osite (Ozite) Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and Geneviève Broussard, at Ascension Parish, La., April 22, 1776. Pierre Landry and Jean Baptiste Granger witnessed the marriage record. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, his father, and Anne Forest (Forêt), his stepmother. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a sixteen-yer-old bachelor. He lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, his father, and Anne Forest (Forêt), his stepmother. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. On October 31, 1776, Pierre Bugeau's estate was inventoried and appraised. His estate included a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, twenty-six leagues above New Orleans. This property was located between the lands of Étienne Bugeau and Silvin (Silvain) Leblanc. Improvements on the property included shed or storehoes of poteaux-en-terre construction, measuring sixteen feet by eight feet. | Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that he died on October 28, 1776. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:445; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 24-25. | 1.766 | 28/10/1776 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.902 | Marie Magdeleine | Bugeaud (Bujol) | 01/01/1761 | Brigitte Chevais (Chenet) | Etienne Bugeau (Bujol) | Married Firmin Blanchard, a resident of Valenzuela in the Lafourche District and the son of Joseph Blanchard and Marie Josèphe Landry, at Ascension Parish, May 28, 1781. Anselme Blanchard, Abraham Landry, and Joseph Bugeau (Bijeaud) witnessed the marriage record. | Henriette (born 1783), Marie Constance (born 1786; married October 1, 1803), Pierre Joseph (born May 17, 1788), Marie Rose (María Rosa) (sometimes Clémence) (born August 2, 1791), Melanie (born 1794), Augustin Valéry (Balerio) (born October 19, 1797), Marie Marthe (buried October 4, 1803, at the age of 7 months), Paul Firmin (born January 13, 1803) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of the household of Étienne Bugeaud, her father, and Anne Forest (Forêt), her stepmother. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nine-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud and Anne Forest (Forêt). The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Étienne Bugeaud, her father, and Anne Forest, her stepmother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 14, 24, 25. | 1.766 | 03/08/1778 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.903 | Marie | Bugeaud (Bujol) | 01/01/1761 | Brigitte Chevais (Chenet) | Etienne Bugeau (Bujol) | Married Pierre Bourg (Bourque), son of Joseph Bourg and Marie Magdeleine Granger, at Ascension Parish, La., February 6, 1786. Pierre Bourg witnessed the marriage record. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, her father, and Anne Forest (Forêt), her stepmother. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seven-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, her father, and Anne Forest (Forêt), her stepmother. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, her father, and Anne Forest, her stepmother. On December 20, 1789, her home site was sold at a probate sale. It consisted of a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The property was located between the lands of Silvin (Silvain) LeBlanc and Jean Bugeau. Standing on the home site was a residence of sur sol construction with bousillage walls. The house measured twenty by fourteen feet. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:127, 168; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17. | 1.766 | 13/08/1788 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.904 | Joseph | Babin | dit Dios | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Anne Forest | Pierre Babin | Married Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc, daughter of Desire LeBlanc and Marie (?), February 19, 1775. | Paul (Hypolite) (born November 20, 1775), Charles (born May 12, 1777), Benjamin (married May 15, 1797), Jérôme, Bonaventure (married November 8, 1788), Anne Marguerite (married December 21, 1783), Nicolas (married January 21, 1805), and Rosemond (born March 28, 1789) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, his stepfather, and Anne Forest (Forêt), his mother. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a fifteen-year-old bachelor. His residence was located 1 1/4 leagues from the home of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud and Anne Forest (Forêt). On May 7, 1782, Joseph Babin's estate was inventoried. The probate inventory indicates that he owned a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. On his property stood a twenty-foot-wide house with a front gallery. Joseph Babin's property was bought at public auction by Benjamin LeBlanc, December 7, 1783. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 10. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.905 | Charles | Babin | 01/01/1760 | Anne Forest | Pierre Babin | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, his stepfather, and Anne Forest (Forêt), his mother. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a nine-year-old member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud and Anne Forest. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a member of the household of Etienne Bugeaud, his stepfather, and Anne Forest, his mother. | His burial record indicates that he was twenty-two years old at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | 10/01/1783 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.906 | Mathurin | Bugeau (Bugeaud, Bujeau) | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He also owned four hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor. He lived 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.907 | Marie (Marie Josèphe) | Babin | 01/01/1747 | Marie Landry | Pierre Babin | Married Silvain (Silvin) LeBlanc, ca. 1769. | Simon (born 1764), Marin (Joseph) (born ca. March 1770), Paul (born 1772), Rosalie (born 1773), Magdeleine (Marie Madeleine) (born 1774), Angelle (Angela) (married June 5, 1797), Marine (probably Marianne) (married February 14, 1802), Henriette (married June 11, 1804), Marguerite (married May 7, 1807), Louis (married January 9, 1809), Marie Clémence (married December 19,1811) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Silvain LeBlanc. Her household included Silvain LeBlanc, 28 years old; and Simon LeBlanc, her son, 5 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cows, seventeen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Silvain LeBlanc, who was the twenty-nine-year-old head of her household. Her household also included her sons Simon (5 years old) and Marin (5 months old). The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Silvain (Silvin) LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Simon (Simons) LeBlanc, her son, 12 years old; Joseph LeBlanc, her son, 7 years old; Paul LeBlanc, her son, 5 years old; Rosalie LeBlanc, her daughter, 4 years old; and Magdeleine LeBlanc, her daughter, 3 years old. Marie Babin and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-one cows, one horse, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.908 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1764 | Marie Babin | Silvain LeBlanc | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a five-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.909 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned three cows, thirteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.910 | Étienne (Estienne) | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Acadia | Married Marie Josèphe Landry. | Anastasie (born 1757), Jean Baptiste (born 1767), Ignace (born ca. June 1769), Victoire (born 1775), Joseph (born 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie, his wife, 35 years old; Jean Baptiste, his son, 2 years old; Ignace, his son, 3 months old; Anastasie, his daughter, 12 years old; and Isabelle Landry, his sister-in-law, 3 years old. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a thirty-five-year-old married man. His home was located 1 1/2 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Landry, his wife, 36 years old; Jean Baptiste Landry, his son, 3 years old; Ignace (Ygnace) Landry, his son, 1 year old; Anastasie Landry, his daughter, 13 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, his sister, 32 years old. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that he owned two slaves. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the forty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 43 years old; Jean Baptiste Landry, his son, 10 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 1 year old; Anastasie Landry, his daughter, 20 years old; Victoire Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; Isabelle Landry, his sister-in-law, 30 years old. Etienne Landry and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty-five cows, two horses, ten sheep, twenty hogs, and two muskets. On June 17, 1777, he may have been (there were two Acadians named Étienne Landry in the district) a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He appears to have been the Étienne (Estienne) Landry who was identified by Commandant Louis Judice as having transported twenty-five barrels of corn to New Orleans in conformity with gubernatorial orders, ca. February 16, 1780. Movement of Acadian grain to the colonial capital was evidently part of the Louisiana government's attempt to support of the Spanish military campaign against West Florida. Étienne Landry complained that such trips to New Orleans kept farmers away from their fields at the very time that they should planting their new corn crop. He appears to have been the Etienne (Estienne) Landry whom Commandant Louis Judice identified as having been one of only two local farmers having surplus rice, March 23, 1785. He may have been the Étienne Landry (once again, two local men carried the name) who served on a military tribunal that formally investigated the arrest of Church Warden Pierre landry dit Pittre by a small detachment of Ascension Parish militiamen, June 16, 1786. The proceedings of the investigation indicate that he was illiterate. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. He appears to have been the Étienne Landry who, on February 17, 1789, joined numerous other Lafourhce District residents in signing a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-seven years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Bernardo de G lvez, February 16, 1770, AGI, PPC, 193B:331-332; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, March 23, 1785. AC, PPC, 197:297; Investigation into the Charges made Against Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:423; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55. | 1.766 | 02/10/1789 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.911 | Anastasie | Landry | 01/01/1757 | Dorothée Babin | Étienne Landry | Married Joseph Jean Hébert, May 31, 1779. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.912 | Joseph | Babin | dit l'aîné | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Ursule Landry | Jean Baptiste Babin | Married Osite LeBlanc, daughter of Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Forest, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, Louisiana, January 28, 1771. The marriage was witnessed by Joseph Babin, Marie Landry, Joseph Landry, Louise LeConte, Jean Landry, Marcelle LeBlanc, and Charles Gaudet. | Rosalie (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), Joseph (born 1774), Paul (born 1776), Marguerite (this is possiblly Marie) (married September 18, 1797), Anne Lise (married October 14, 1807), Simon (married April 23, 1814), Adélaïde (married August 19, 1816), Claude Raphaël (married July 31, 1819) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Ursule Landry Babin, his mother, 45 years old; Marie Josèphe Babin, his sister, 19 years old; and Marguerite Babin, his sister, 17 years old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned two cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located "above" Bayou Lafourche, and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Josèphe Babin, his sister, 20 years old; Marguerite Babin, his sister, 17 years old; Barbe Babin, his sister, 14 years old. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that he owned one slave. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite LeBlanc, his wife, 24 years old; Joseph Babin, his son, 3 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 1 year old; Rosalie Babin, his daughter, 5 years old; Marie Babin, his daughter, 4 years old. Joseph Babin and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, one horse, sixteen hogs, and one musket. On April 13, 1804, Joseph Babin sold to his son Paul a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | His burial record indicates that he was sixty-six years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:48; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:54; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7-9. | 1.766 | 09/03/1809 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.913 | Marie Josèphe | Babin | 01/01/1750 | Ursule Landry | Jean Baptiste Babin | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of her brother Joseph's household. The household included her widowed mother and sister Marguerite. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a twenty-year-old member of a household headed by Joseph Babin, her twenty-year-old brother. The household also included Marguerite Babin, her seventeen-year-old sister, and Barbe Babin, her fourteen-year-old sister. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.914 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Ursule Landry | Jean Baptiste Babin | Married (1) Isaac LeBlanc, the son of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Landry and the widower of Marie Melanson (Melançon), at Ascension Parish, La., May 21, 1782. Married (2) Pierre Pannevel, son of Noël Pannevelle and Marie Catherine Cienac, August 22, 1801. | First marriage: Charles, Barthélemi, Magdeleine, Osite (Ozite), Constance | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of her brother Joseph's household. The household included her widowed mother and sister Marie Josèphe. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of a household headed by Joseph Babin, her twenty-one-year-old brother. Her household also included Marie Josèphe Babin, her twenty-year-old sister, and Barbe Babin, her fourteen-year-old sister. On October 25, 1794, Marguerite Babin, now a widow, purchased a tract of land on the right bank with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of Jacques Babin and below by the property of Firmin Landry. Among the improvements on the property she purchased was a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-four feet by sixteen feet. The house had galleries running across the front and rear façades. The house had bousillage-entre-poteaux walls and plank floors. An inventory of her community property compiled on September 11, 1802, indicates that she and her husband owned a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, approximately two leagues above the Ascension Parish church. This property was situated between the lands of Olivier Landry and Pierre Landry. Improvements on the property included a house measuring twenty by sixteen feet. Marguerite Babin's husband subsequently sold the foregoing property to Auguste Constant. On April 29, 1803, Pierre Pannevel purchased from Pierre R. Duplessis a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of the vendor and below by the property of Donat Hébert. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7, 71, 84. | 1.766 | 08/10/1815 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.915 | Ursule | Landry | Veuve Babin | 01/01/1724 | Acadia | Married Jean (Jean Baptiste) Babin. | Joseph (born 1748), Anne Barbe (born 1755, married October 28, 1778), Marie Josèphe (born 1750), Marguerite (born 1752) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a forty-five-year-old widow living in the household of her son Joseph. The household also included her daughters Marie Josèphe and Marguerite. On February 2, 1777, Ursule Landry, Veuve Babin, signed an affidavit indicated acknowledging that she had received a Spanish land grant, but also indicating that she could not maintain the land. She consequently transferred title to part of the property to Vincent Landry, her brother, and part of it to Joseph Babin, evidently her eldest child. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:450; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7. | 1.766 | 17/01/1786 | Ascension Parish, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.916 | Susanne (Suzanne) | Godin (Gaudin) | 01/01/1737 | Married Vincent Landry. | Charles Caliste (born 1769), Marguerite (born ca. January 1769), Félicité (born 1770), Magdeleine (born 1771), Grégoire (born 1773), Marie Magdeleine (a twin, born 1773), Marie (born 1774), Marguerite (born 1775) | In New Orleans with her husband Vincent Landry and son Charles Caliste, 1767. Received governmental rations for the month July, 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Vincent Landry. Her household included the following persons: Vincent Landry, 42 years old; Charles Caliste, her son, 3 months old; Félicité, her daughter, 9 months old; Brigitte Trahan, an orphan, 12 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Vincent Landry, the forty-four-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Charles Caliste Landry, her son, 4 years old; Félicité Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; and Brigitte Trahan, an orphan, 13 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of Vincent Landry. In addition to herself and her fifty-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Susanne (Suzanne) Godin (Gadon), his wife, 40 years old; Caliste Landry, her son, 10 years old; Grégoire Landry, her son, 4 years old; Félicité Landry, her daughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Landry, her daughter, 6 years old; Marie Magdeleine Landry, her daughter, 4 years old; Marie Landry, her daughter, 3 years old; Marguerite Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; and Mrs. Siraxe, her sister, 27 years old. Susanne Godin and her family owned a small tract of land with three arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, one horse, ten hogs, and one musket. | Her burial record indicates that she was forty-six years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:449. | 1.767 | 13/02/1784 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.917 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1738 | Married Amant (Amand) Gauterot. | Anne (born 1765), Marguerite (born ca. January 1769), Sophie (Soffie) (born 1773), Théodore (born 1776), Jérôme, Theodosia (probably Théotiste) (married July 12, 1794) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Amant Gauterot. Her household included the following persons: Amant Gauterot, 37 years old; Anne, her daughter, 4 years old; Marguerite, her daughter, 9 months old; and Magdeleine, an orphan, 14 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Amant (Amand, Armand) Gauterot, the thirty-eight-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Anne Gauterot, her daughter, 5 years old; Marguerite Gauterot, her daughter, 1 1/2 years old; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) LeBlanc, a cousin, 15 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of Amand Gauterot. In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Anne Gauterot, her daughter, 12 years old; Marguerite Gauterot, her daughter, 8 years old; Sophie (Soffie) Gauterot, her daughter, Théodore Gauterot, her son, 1 year old; and Joseph Melanson dit Dios Rose, 20 years old. Melanson's relationship to her family is not indicated in the census. Marie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. THey also owned twenty-three cows, three horses, seven hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 44. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.918 | Magdeleine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old orphan in the household of Amant Gauterot and Marie Landry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old "cousin" living with the family of Amant (Amand, Armand) Gauterot and Marie Landry. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Wood, Guide, 122-123; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.919 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1756 | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Marie Landry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, his stepmother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.920 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1762 | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Marie Landry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, his stepmother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.921 | Fabien | Landry | 01/01/1764 | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Marie Landry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, his stepmother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; .Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.922 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1759 | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Marie Landry. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, her father, and Marie Landry, her stepmother. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, evidently her stepmother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.923 | Amant (Amand) | Landry | 01/01/1746 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Landry | Married Marguerite Melanson (Melançon), of St. Charles Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia, October 26, 1767. | Joseph (baptized December 25, 1770), Françoise (born August 9, 1772) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-two-year-old wife, Marguerite Melanson (Melançon). He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one cow, fourteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-three-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Melanson (Melançon), his wife, 22 years old; and Joseph Melanson, his brother-in-law, 15 years old. Traveled to New Orleans to ask the governor's permission to sell their farms because the land was too low (flood-prone) to cultivate crops. On January 13, 1774, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Amand Landry and Firmin Breau (Braud) had entered into an agreement to provide 3,000 pieux for shipment to New Orleans. They were to produce these nine-foot-long posts at a cost of of 3.5 piastres per hundred. Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that Landry and Breau had also requested permission to relocated in the Attakapas District. On March 21, 1774, Louis Judice notified Governor Luís de Unzaga that the arguments put forth by Amand Landry, Jean Jeansonne, and Firmin Breau (Braud) of Cabannocé for relocation at Attakapas or Opelousas were indeed valid, being based upon legitimate needs. Judice acknowledges that their relatives have offered to provide assistance of the aforementioned Acadians were allowed to settle alongside more established friends and relatives in the Attakapas and Opelousas districts. But Judice cautioned the governor that permitting the three Acadians to relocate would set a dangerous precedent, leading to a massive migration of Acadians to the prairie country. Unzaga subsequently overruled Judice and permitted the Acadians to relocate. On March 8, 1775, Iberville District Louis Dutisné reported the arrival of Amant (Amans) Landry, who had obtained from Governor Luís de Unzaga permission to settle at the Attakapas District. Judice nevertheless refused to allow Landry to travel to the Attakapas country; instead, Judice provided Landry with a passport to the Iberville District. Dutisné informed the governor that Landry, who had sold his farm and livestock, found himself in the Iberville District with no land and no prospect of obtaining land comparable to the one he sold. Landry thus requested permission to continue on to the Attakapas District, where he had already bought a farm and where all of his relatives resided. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. | His burial record indicates that he was fifty-five years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, November 10, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:504; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, January 13, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:520; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, March 21, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:540; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, March 8, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:231; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 470. | 1.766 | 10/11/1793 | Attakapas church cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.924 | Jean Louis | Hébert | 01/01/1761 | Claire Robichaud | Jean Baptiste Hébert dit Manuel | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old child residing in a household headed by Mathurin Hébert, his sixteen-year-old brother. The household also included the following persons: Claire Robichaud, evidently his grandmother, 56 years old; Marie, his aunt, 19 years old; and Théotiste, his aunt, 16 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.925 | Jean | La Bauve (LaBauve) | 01/01/1759 | Anne Vincent | Antoine La Bauve | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The census also indicates that he was the twin brother of Marin La Bauve. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.926 | Françoise | Pitre | 01/01/1763 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a six-year-old orphan residing in the household of Antoine La Bauve and Anne Vincent. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a six-year-old orphan living in the household of Claude Duon (Duhon) and Marie Josèphe Vincent. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.927 | Marie | Poirier | 01/01/1753 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) Richard | Jean Poirier | Married Joseph Dupuis. | Marie (born 1775), Monique (born ca. December 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old orphan living with the family of Michel Poirier and Marie Cormier. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Dupuis. In addition to her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included Marie Dupuis, her two-year-old daughter, and Monique Dupuis, her five-month-old daughter. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned ten cows and two horses. They census indicates that they owned no slaves. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.928 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1744 | Margueritte Broussard | Jacques Melanson (Melançon) | Married Benonie (Bellony) Mire, son of Pierre Mire and Marie Josèphe Forest. (Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that Melanson's husband was named Joachim Mire.) | Scholastique (born ca. July 1769), Marie Madeleine (born 1770), Félicité (born 1771), Benjamin (born 1772), Rosalie (born 1773), Jean Baptiste (born 1774) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Benonie (Bellony) Mire. The 1769 census indicates that her household included the following persons: her husband, 33 years old; Scholastique (Collastie), her daughter, 8 months old; François Part, a brother-in-law, 16 years old; Marguerite Broussard, her mother, 50 years old; Isabelle (Elizabeth) Melanson (Melançon), her sister, 23 years old; and Marguerite Melanson, her sister, 21 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned two cows, one horse, nineteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Benonie (Bellony) Mire. In addition to her forty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Benjamin Mire, her son, 5 years old; Jean Baptiste Mire, her son, 1 year old; Scholastique Mire, her daughter, 8 years old; Marie Mire, her daughter, 7 years old; Félicité Mire, her daughter, 7 years old; Rosalie Mire, her daughter, 4 years old; and Joseph Mire, her brother-in-law, 34 years old. Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned one slave, twenty cows, and four horses. | Jehn, Acadian Exiles in the Colonies, 244; Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2558; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.929 | Marguerite | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1719 | Married Jacques Melanson (Melançon). | Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born 1744), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1746), Marguerite (born 1748) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-year-old widow of Jacques Melanson. She lived with three daughters in the household of Benonie (Bellony) Mire and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Melanson. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fifty-seven-year-old member of the household of Pierre Part, her son-in-law, and Marguerite Melanson, her daughter. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.930 | Isabelle (Anne, Élizabeth) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1746 | Margueritte Broussard | Jacques Melanson (Melançon) | Married Charles D'Amours dit Louvrière (Louvière). | Anne (born 1771, married March 7, 1791), Daniel (buried June 9, 1795), David (baptized November 11, 1781), Félicité (baptized 1773), Marie Geneviève (baptized December 25, 1774), Louis (baptized July 27, 1776), Rosalie (baptized July 22, 1770), Théotiste (baptized December 27, 1778) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-three-year-old member of the household of Benonie (Bellony) Mire, her brother-in-law, and Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson, her sister. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Charles Louvière (D'Amour dit Louvrière). In addition to her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Louis, her son, 6 years old; Anne, her daughter, 4 years old; Geneviève, her daughter, 2 years old; and Jacques Lahbit (Landry?), 14 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and three horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.931 | Marguerite | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1748 | St. Charles Parish, Grand Pré, Acadia | Rosalie Blanchard | Pierre Melanson (Melançon) | Married (1) Amant (Amand) Landry, the son of Charles Landry and Marie LeBlanc, October 26, 1767. Amant Landry evidently died before 1773. Married (2) Pierre Part. | First marriage: Joseph (baptized December 25, 1770), Françoise (born August 9, 1772)Second marriage: Marie Magdeleine (baptized August 18, 1771), Rosalie (baptized August 18, 1771), François Régis (baptized ca. January 1773), Pierre I (baptized January 24, 1774), Joseph (baptized June 12, 1775), Marguerite (baptized August 8, 1777), Pierre II (baptized April 16, 1779), Olivier (baptized May 12, 1780), Jacques (born October 13, 1789) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-one-year-old member of the household of Benonie (Bellony) Mire, her brother-in-law, and Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson, her sister. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Amant (Amand) Landry. Her household included the following persons: Amant (Amand) Landry, her husband, 24 years old; and Joseph Melanson (Melançon), her brother, 15 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Pierre Part. In addition to her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: François Part, her son, 4 years old; Joseph Part, her son, 3 years old; François D'Amours, an orphan, 17 years old; Marguerite Broussard, her mother, 57 years old; and Olivier Part, her brother-in-law, 30 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and two horses. They owned no slaves. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 79; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:424-446, 579; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2553. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.932 | Marie Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1747 | Marie Dugas | Michel Bergeron | Married Pierre Hébert. | François (born 1768), Rosalie (born 1770) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre Hébert. Her household included her thirty-year-old husband and François Hébert, her one-year-old son; Marie Dugas, the Widow Bergeron, her mother, 59 years old; and Isidore D'Amours, a nephew, 7 years old. Her household occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. Her family owned two cows, ten hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.933 | Marie | Dugas | Veuve Bergeron | 01/01/1719 | Married (?) Bergeron. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the fifty-year-old Widow Bergeron, residing in the household of Pierre Hébert, her son-in-law, and Marie Bergeron, her daughter. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.934 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1750 | Married Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) Gaudin. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nineteen-year-old spouse of Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) Gaudin, who was then twenty-four years old. The couple occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. They owned three cows, eight hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.935 | Marie Josèphe | Landry | 01/01/1738 | Married Pierre Forest. | Théotiste (born 1771), Marie (born 1773), Constance (born 1775) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Pierre Forest. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned four cows, one horse, twelve hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Théotiste Forest, her daughter, 6 years old; Marie Forest, her daughter, 4 years old; and an engagé (a hired laborer), whose name is garbled in the census, 40 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighty cattle and three horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.936 | Basile | Chiasson | 01/01/1758 | Ozite Marguerite (Ausède, Osite) Landry | Pierre Chiasson | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.937 | Pierre (Jean Pierre) | LeBlanc | 04/11/1726 | Grand Pré, Nova Scotia | Jeanne Terriot (Theriot) | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Osite (Ozitte) Melanson (Melançon) ca. 1752. | Isaac (born 1760), Josime (born 1762), Hélène (born 1764), Simon (born 1767) | Jean Pierre LeBlanc, his wife Osite, and sons Isaac and Josime were among the Acadians at Snow Hill, Maryland, in 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Melanson, his wife, 39 years old; Isaac, his son, 9 years old; Josime, his son, 7 years old; Hélène, his daughter, 5 years old; and Magdeleine LeBlanc, his mother, 57 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, two horses, ten hogs, and two muskets. Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had forty barrels of surplus corn. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a forty-two-year-old married man. He resided 2 1/4 leagues from the home of Commandant Nicolas Verret. He made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. | He died sometime between October 16, 1773, and his widow's remarriage in February 1776. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, from Manchac to l'Isle aux Marais, May 10, 1772, AGI, PPC, 202:241-246; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Jean Pierre LeBlanc and Osite Anne Melancon." | 1.766 | Cabannocé (present-day St. James Parish), La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.938 | Osite (Ozitte) | Melanson (Melançon) | St. Charles aux Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon) | Married (1) Pierre (Jean Pierre) LeBlanc. Married (2) Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) Bourgeois, February 20, 1776. | First marriage: Isaac (born 1760), Josime (born 1762), Hélène (born 1764), Simon (born 1767) | Jean Pierre LeBlanc, his wife Osite, and sons Isaac and Josime were among the Acadians at Snow Hill, Maryland, in 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-nine-year-old wife of Pierre LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: Pierre LeBlanc, her husband, 41 years old; Isaac, her son, 9 years old; Josime, her son, 7 years old; Simon, her son, 2 years old; Hélène, her daughter, 5 years old; and Magdeleine LeBlanc, her mother in law, 57 years old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, two horses, ten hogs, and two muskets. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-five-year-old spouse of Baptiste Bourgeois. In addition to herself and her forty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Bourgeois, her stepson, 16 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, her stepson, 12 years old; Pierre Bourgeois, her stepson, 8 years old; Tadee Bourgeois, her stepson, 6 years old; Paul Bourgeois, her stepson, 2 years old; Isaac LeBlanc, her son, 16 years old; Josime LeBlanc, her son, 14 years old; Simon LeBlanc, her son, 9 years old; Hélène LeBlanc, her daughter, 11 years old; Marie LeBlanc, her daughter, 5 years old; and Marguerite LeBlanc, her daughter, 4 years old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned six slaves, thirty cows, and four horses. | She was sixty-five years of age at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:113; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | 27/02/1803 | St. James Catholic Church, St. James, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
2.939 | Isaac | LeBlanc | 01/01/1760 | Maryland | Osite Anne Melanson (Melançon) | Jean Pierre LeBlanc | Married (1) Marie Rose Terriot, ca. 1780. Married (2) Marie Anne Arseneau, daughter of Joseph Arseneau and Marie Bergeron, November 16, 1787. | First marriage: Marie Genevieve (born ca. 1781)Second marriage: Aemundo (probably Raimundo, Raymond in French) (born November 20, 1790), Jean Baptiste (born May 7, 1792), Céleste Célestine (baptized March 30, 1794), Sosthene (born October 20, 1796), Dominique (August 5, 1798), Casimir (born December 17, 1799), Marie Justine (born December 17, 1799), Étienne (born 1802), Nicolas (born May 11, 1805), Isaac (born December 22, 1809), Sebastien (born ca. 1810) | He was at Snowhill, Maryland, with his parents and brother Josime on July 7, 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Baptiste Bourgeois, his stepfather, and Osite Melanson, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Isaac LeBlanc and Marie Rose Theriot." | 1.766 | 25/01/1810 | St. James Parish, Louisiana | Convent, St. James Parish, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||
2.940 | Josime | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | Osite Melanson | Pierre LeBlanc | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Baptiste Bourgeois, his stepfather, and Osite Melanson, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.941 | Hélène | LeBlanc | 01/01/1764 | Osite Melanson | Pierre LeBlanc | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a five-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was an eleven-year-old member of the household of Baptiste Bourgeois, her stepfather, and Osite Melanson, her mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.942 | Magdeleine (Madeleine) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1757 | Pierre LeBlanc (born 1728) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifty-nine-year-old resident of the household of Pierre LeBlanc, her 41-year-old son, and Osite Melanson, her 39-year-old daughter-in-law. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.943 | François | landry | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Married Rosalie (Marie Rose) Dugas. | Marguerite (born 1771), Marie Rose (born 1773), Edouard (born 1775) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned seven cattle, one horse, nineteen hogs, and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie Dugas, his wife, 27 years old; Edouard Landry, his son, 2 years old; Marguerite Landry, his daughter, 6 years old; Marie Rose Landry, his daughter, 4 years old; and Jean Mire, a hired hand, 28 years old. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Rosalie (Rozalie) Dugas, his wife, 27 years old; Edouard Landry, his son, 2 years old; Marguerite Landry, his wife, 6 years old; Marie Rose Landry, his daughter, 4 years old; and Jean Mire, a hired laborer, 28 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. He held the rank of first sergeant in the local militia unit at the time of his death. On October 3, 1793, François Landry signed an act of donation to his nephew, Charles Dugas. The legal instrument indicates that Landry had lived with his nephew for several years. To compensate Dugas for the care and lodging he had provided, Landry gave his nephew various movables. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:426; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 36, 59. | 1.766 | 02/05/1783 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.944 | Osite | Hébert | Veuve Melanson | 01/01/1730 | Married Alexandre Melanson. Widowed sometime before September 14, 1769. | Pierre (born 1750), Joseph (born 1754), Étienne (born 1756), Paul (born 1762), Charles (born ca. February 1769) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirty-nine-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Pierre Melanson (Melançon), her son, 19 years old; Joseph Melanson, her son, 15 years old; Étienne Melanson, her son, 13 years old; Paul Melanson, her son, 7 years old; and Charles Melanson, her son, 7(?) months old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a widow and the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Etienne Melanson, her son, 22 years old; Etienne Melanson, 20 years old; Paul Melanson, her son, 14 years old; Charles Melanson, his son, 9 years old; William, an engagé (a hired laborer), 37 years old; and Charles, an indentured worker, 29 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.945 | Pierre (Pierre Jacques) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Osite (Ozitte) Hébert | Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) | Married Elizabeth Landry, daughter of Jean Landry and Ursule Landry, at Ascension Parish, La., July 26, 1773. | Joseph (born 1775), Paul (born ca. January 1777), Henriette (married February 25, 1811) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household, that included his brothers Joseph, Étienne, Paul, and Charles. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor. He lived 2 1/2 leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 78. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.946 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Osite (Ozitte) Hébert | Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) | Married (1) Anastasie Breau. Anastasie Breau died on January 5, 1783. Married (2) Marie Josèphe LeBlanc, daughter Marcel LeBlanc and Marie Josèphe Breau, at Ascension Parish, La., September 21, 1784. | Neuville (married February 1, 1826) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household, that included his brothers Pierre, Étienne, Paul, and Charles. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. He lived 2 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Amant (Amand) Landry and Marguerite Melanson, his sister. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was seventeen years of age. His name is rendered as Jausephe Melanson in the June 21, 1771 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old member of a household that included Michel Chiasson, 20 years old; and Bazitte (Basile?) Claire(?), 28 years old. He owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The census also indicates that he owned no slaves or livestock. Melanson apparently volunteered for military service on January 12, 1780. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. He appears to have been the Joseph (Jausephe) Melanson (Melenson) who lost three of his seven cows. Appointed sergeant first-class in the district militia, February 12, 1792. He appears to have been the Joseph Melanson identified in Spanish military records as the first sergeant of the Lafourche District militia, ca. 1800. His military dossier, compiled on December 31, 1800, indicates that he enjoyed robust health and that he was married. His service records indicate that he had served in the Lafourche District militia for twelve years and one month and in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for eight years, ten months, and nineteen days. His superiors noted that he had "good application" to duty, supposed valor, good conduct, and "average capacity." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Service Records, 1800, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 207; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 78. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.947 | Étienne | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1756 | Osite (Ozitte) Hébert | Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household, that included his brothers Pierre, Joseph, Paul, and Charles. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.948 | Paul | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1762 | Osite (Ozitte) Hébert | Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of his widowed mother's household, that included his brothers Pierre, Joseph, Étienne, and Charles. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Appointed sindic by the local commandant, 1798. Around May 1798, a Spanish dragoon borrowed Melanson's horse on official business. The horse became lame while being used by the dragoon. On May 21, 1798, Melanson wrote the governor requesting reimbursement. On August 20, 1798, Melanson sent the governor a second request for reimbursement. Melanson served as sindic for the Acadian Coast area in August 1798. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Paul Mellanson (Melanson, Melançon) to Manuel Gayoso de Lemos, May 21, 1798, AGI, PPC, 215A:401; Paul Melanson to the governor, August 20, 1798, AGI, PPC, 215A:402; Gayoso de Lemos to Paul Melanson, September 12, 1798, AGI, PPC, 215A:404. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.949 | Charles | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1769 | Osite (Ozitte) Hébert | Alexandre Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-month-old member of his widowed mother's household, that included his brothers Pierre, Joseph, Étienne, and Paul. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a nine-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.950 | Marguerite | Richard | 01/01/1759 | Marie LeBlanc | Joseph Richard | Married Joseph Fagniant (Fayant), son of P. Fagniant and Angélique Bellehumeur, at Cabannocé, July 27, 1773. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of the household of Joseph Bourg, her stepfather, and Marie LeBlanc, her mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the seventeen-year-old wife of Joseph Fayant, the forty-year-old head of her household. The census indicates that they owned no real estate, slaves, cows, or horses. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2;625; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.951 | Magdeleine | Granger | 01/01/1757 | Acadia | Marie Landry | Alexis Granger | Married Ambroise Terriot (Theriot), a native of Acadia and the son of Joseph Terriot (Theriot) and Françoise Melanson, at Cabannocé, June 2, 1777. The groom's parents were both deceased at the time of the wedding. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Olivier Landry and Joseph Landry. | At Oxford, Maryland, in 1763. | Among the Acadians established by the Spanish government at St. Gabriel, 1767. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of the household of Joseph Saulnier, her thirty-four-year-old stepfather, and Marie Landry, her forty-year-old mother. The household also included the following persons: Marguerite Saulnier, her half-sister, 1 year old; and Agnaise Daigre (Daigle), a cousin, 17 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned six cows, twenty-two hogs, and one musket. Extant documents indicate that she was a ten-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a nineteen-year-old member of Joseph Saulnier's (Sonnier's) household. The census indicates that she was his belle fille (either his daughter-in-law or his stepdaughter, the former option being more likely). | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:333; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2.; List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 125; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | 26/04/1773 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.952 | Agnaise | Daigle | 01/01/1752 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Joseph Saulnier (Sonnier) and Marie Landry. The household also included Marguerite Saulnier, 1 year old; and Magdeleine Granger, 12 years old. The census indicates that he was a cousin. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.953 | Paul | LeBlanc | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Married Anne Babin. | Marcel (born 1766), Marie Rose (born ca. February 1769), Jacques (born 1771), Paul (born 1773), Appolonie (born ca. July 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Babin, his wife, 26 years old; Marcel LeBlanc, his son, 3 years old; and Marie Rose LeBlanc, his daughter, 7 months old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned fourteen hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-six-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Babin, his wife, 33 years old; Marcel LeBlanc, his son, 11 years old; Jacques LeBlanc, his son, 6 years old; Paul LeBlanc, his son, 4 years old; Marie LeBlanc, his daughter, 8 years old; and Apollonie (Pollonne), his daughter, 9 months old. He and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They owned two slaves, twenty-six cows, and four horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.954 | Anne | Babin | 01/01/1743 | Married Paul LeBlanc. | Marcel (born 1766), Marie Rose (born ca. February 1769), Jacques (born 1771), Paul (born 1773), Appolonie (born ca. July 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Paul LeBlanc. Her household included her husband, 26 years old; Marcel LeBlanc, her son, 3 years old; and Marie Rose LeBlanc, her daughter, 7 months old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fourteen hogs and one musket. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Paul LeBlanc. In addition to her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marcel LeBlanc, her son, 11 years old; Jacques LeBlanc, 6 years old; Paul LeBlanc, her son, 4 years old; Marie LeBlanc, her daughter, 8 years old; and Appolonie (Pollonne) LeBlanc, her daughter, 9 months old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Her family also owned two slaves, twenty-six cows and four horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.955 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1751 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned one cow, three hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a seventeen-year-old bachelor. He resided 1 1/4 leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.956 | Joseph | Mire | 01/01/1742 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-seven-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. He owned one cow, ten hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-seven-year-old bachelor. He ived two leagues from the residence of Commandant Louis Judice. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirty-four-year-old member of the household of Benonie (Bellony) Mire, his brother, and Madeleine (Magdeleine) Melanson, his sister-in-law. The census indicates that Joseph Mire owned a tract of land with six arpents of frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned six cows and two horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.957 | Joseph | Lanoue (Lanous) | 01/01/1746 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned three hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. He lived two leagues from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.958 | Jeansonne | 01/01/1746 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-three-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He owned one hog and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
2.959 | Geneviève | Hébert | 01/01/1746 | Acadia | Married (1) François Andro (André). Married (2) Joseph Dorvan, a native of St. Michael Parish, Quebec, and the widower of Charlotte Campo, at Ascension Parish, La., November 29, 1775. | Jeanne (born ca. December 1768) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-three-year-old spouse of François Andro. Her household also included Jeanne Andro, her ten-month-old daughter. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The hosehold owned one cow nine hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-three-year-old spouse of François Andro, the twenty-one-year-old head of her household. The household also included Jeanne Andro, her daughter, 1 1/2 years old at the time of the census. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:360; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.960 | Marin (Marein) | Landry | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | René Landry | Married Pélagie Landry. | Anastasie (born 1772), Magdeleine (born 1776) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned one cow, one hog, and one musket. A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's fourth-ranking corporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor. He lived one-fourth league from Commandant Louis Judice's residence. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-two-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established on the left bank of the Mississippi RIver indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Pélagie Landry, his wife, 19 years old; Anastasie Landry, his daughter, 5 years old; and Magdeleine Landry, his daughter, 18 months old. Marin Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River, but it is unclear if this was a second tract of land, or simply the one mentioned earlier in the census. Marin Landry and his family also owned two slaves, twenty cows, four horses, ten hogs, and one musket. The 1777 census indicates that he and his family lived next door to René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On December 15, 1778, Commandant Louis Judice wrote to Louisiana's governor complaining about Maurice Canoée (Conway), Jean Firmin Broussard, and Marin Landry of the Cabannocé District. According to Judice, these three landholders had failed to build a levee, a drainage ditch, and a roadway across their as required by Governor Alejandro O'Reilly's 1770 land regulations. The lack of a levee resulted in annual flood damage for their neighbors. Judice, therefore, asked the governor to order the work to be done on the three aforementioned landholdings and to assess the delinquent landholders for the costs. The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he was a first corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. Promoted to the rank of sergeant second-class in the local militia, February 12, 1792. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. Promoted to the rank of sergeant first-class in the local militia, December 25, 1796. On August 20, 1798, Paul Melanson, a local sindic, notified the governor that he had been obliged to provide housing for Antoine Mac, a Spanish dragoon, because he had been refused lodging by Marin Landry. According to Melanson, Landry's wife and children had been extremely ill. Marin Landry's cumulative military service record, compiled in 1800, indicates that he was approximately fifty years of age. He held the rank of first sergeant, in the Cabannocé militia. He enjoyed robust health. His service record indicates that he had volunteered for service on February 12, 1782. He had served in the Cabannocé militia for ten yearss and in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for eight years, ten months, and nineteen days. He had not served in any military campaigns. In a final assessment of his abilities, his superiors noted that Landry had "supposed valor; average application & capacity; good conduct." Marin Landry is identified in official correspondence as a sindic in the Lafourche District during the late Spanish period. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Judice to the governor, December 15, 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:472; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231; Governor of Louisiana to Evan Jones, December 3, 1797, AGI, PPC, 213:468; Paul Melanson to Gayoso de Lemos, August 20, 1798, AGI, PPC, 215A:402; Cumulative Service Record, 1800, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Service Record, AGI, PPC, legajo 161A; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 197. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.961 | Anne | Landry | Veuve Broussard | 01/01/1732 | Married (1) Jean Broussard, who died sometime before 1769. Married (2) René Landry. | First marriage: Firmin Broussard (born 1751), Jean Broussard (born 1760), Paul (born November 24, 1766) Second marriage: Valentin (born 1770), Baptiste (born 1773), Anne (born ca. June 1776)Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand notes that the second marriage may have produced another son named Hyacinthe. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-seven-year-old spouse of René Landry. Her household included the following persons: her husband, 53 years old; Joseph Landry, her stepson, 12 years old; Firmin Landry, her stepson, 9 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned nine cows, one horse, thirty hogs, eight sheep, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-eight-year-old spouse of René Landry. In addition to her fifty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marin Landry, her stepson, 22 years old; Olivier Landry, her stepson, 17 years old; Joseph, her stepson, 13 years old; Firmin, her stepson, 10 years old; Firmin Broussard, her son, 19 years old; and Jean Broussard, her son, 10 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of René Landry. In addition to herself and her sixty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her stepson, 20 years old; Firmin Landry, her stepson, 15 years old; Valentin Landry, her son, 7 years old; Baptiste Landry, her son, 4 years old; Anne Landry, her daughte,r 10 months old; Jean Broussard, her son by her first marriage, 16 years old; and Joseph Landry, her husband's "uncle," 67. Anne Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, twenty-four cows, two horses, fifteen hogs, and three muskets. The community property she shared with her second husband, René Landry, was liquidated at a probate sale conducted on July 29, 1781. On October 13, 1781, Anne Landry purchased a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was situated between the lands of François Duon (Duhon) and Firmin Broussard. She subsequently mortgaged her farm to Evan Jones for 460 piastres. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:35; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65-66. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.962 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1757 | Marie Terriot | René Landry | Married Marie Rose Melanson (Melançon), daughter of Jean Baptiste Melanson and Osite Dupuis, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, October 12, 1789. | Célestine (born January 3, 1791) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a thirteen-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. On September 18, 1790, according to genealogist Sidney A. Marchand, Joseph Landry bought a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Situated approximately twenty-seven leagues above New Orleans, this right-bank property was bounded above by the Chauvin de Léry estate and below by the land of Firmin Landry. On October 25, 1794, Joseph Landry and his wife sold to Marguerite Babin, the widow of Isaac LeBlanc, the property they acquired in 1790. At the time of the 1794 sale, improvements to the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-four by sixteen feet. The structure had front and rear galleries and bousillage-between-post walls. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:420, 424, 428; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 63, 90-91; Wood, Guide, 152-154. | 1.766 | 08/01/1784 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.963 | Firmin | Landry | 01/01/1760 | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | René Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of the household of René Landry and Anne Landry. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. On September 18, 1790, Firmin Landry purchased a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, approximately twenty-seven leagues above New Orleans. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | 04/12/1806 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.964 | Anne | Landry | Veuve Melanson | 01/01/1740 | Married (1) Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Married (2) Augustin Broussard, ca. early 1770. | First marriage: Olivier (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762), Simon (born ca. May 1768) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-nine-year-old, widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Olivier Melanson (Melançon), her son, 9 years old; Simon Melanson, her son, 16 months old; Marguerite Melanson, her daughter, 7 years old. She and her family occupied a large tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They owned one slave, nine cows, eleven hogs, and two muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-year-old spouse of Augustin Broussard. In addition to her twenty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Olivier Melanson (Melançon), her son, 10 years old; Simon Melanson, her son, 2 years old; and Marguerite Melanson, her daughter, 8 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:539; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.965 | Olivier | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1760 | Acadia | Anne Landry | Joseph Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nine-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a nineteen-year-old bachrlor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of the household of Augustin Brousard, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.966 | Simon | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1760 | Anne Landry | Joseph Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the sixteen-month-old member of his widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a two-year-old member of the household of Augustin Broussard, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:539; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | 03/04/1776 | Ascension Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.967 | Marguerite | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1762 | Anne Landry | Joseph Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the seven-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of the household of Augustin Broussard, her stepfather, and Anne Landry, her mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.968 | Charles | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1740 | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon) | Married Félicité Landry, daughter of René Landry and Marie Terriot (Therriot), February 5, 1768. | Joseph (born ca. May 1770), Simon (died September 13, 1772), Marie (born 1773), Allain (born 1775) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Félicité Landry, his nineteen-year-old spouse, and Magdeleine LeBlanc, his fifty-two-year-old mother. The and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned seven cows, seven hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Félicité Landry, his wife, 20 years old; and Joseph Melanson (Melançon), his son, 3 months old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Félicité Landry, his wie, 23 years old; Allain (Alin) Melanson (Melançon), his son, 2 years old; Marie Melanson (Melançon), his daughter, 4 years old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, Veuve Melanson (Melançon), his mother, 64 years old; and Claude Perée, a private tutor, 50 years old. Charles Melanson and his family owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-three cows, two horses, fifteen hogs, and one musket. On November 25, 1776, Commandant Louis Judice informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that Charles Melanson had reported the theft of 300 piastres from his home. Upon receiving the report, Judice summoned Melanson and asked if he suspected anyone of the theft. Melanson replied that he did not. Judice then asked if there was anything unusual about the money reported stolen. Melanson indicated that there was a small amount of French specie among the Spanish currency. Judice recommended that Melanson make subtle inquiries with the captains of the English vessels involved in smuggling along the Acadian Coast. Melanson's inquiries revealed that one Captain Holley received the distinctive French currency in a business transaction. Judice consequently informed the governor that he suspected certain individuals in his district, but that he lacked sufficent evidence to prosecute them for the theft of Melanson's money. Petitioned Governor Unzaga to permit cattle to roam freely throughout the year, ca. July 27, 1777. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. Charles Melanson was Landry's cousin, according to the official list of complainants. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | He died sometime before November 10, 1788. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, November 25, 1776 AGI, PPC, 189B:347-348; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Petition to the Governor of Louisiana, ca. July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:290-291; Petition to the Governor of Louisiana, ca. August 9, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:292; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65-66, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.969 | Félicité | Landry | 01/01/1750 | Marie Terriot (Theriot, Therriot) | René Landry | Married (1) Charles Melanson (Melançon), son of Jean Baptiste Melanson and Magdeleine LeBlanc. Married (2) Bonaventure Babin, the son of Joseph Babin and Marine (Marianne) LeBlanc, November 10, 1788. | Joseph (born ca. May 1770), Simon (died September 13, 1772), Marie (born 1773), Allain (born 1775), Isabelle, Jean Baptiste, Eloy (Eloi), Charles, Marie Elise, Magdeleine | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the nineteen-year-old spouse of twenty-six-year-old Charles Melanson (Melançon). Her household also included her mother-in-law, fifty-two-year-old Magdeleine LeBlanc. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-year-old spouse of Charles Melanson. Her household included her twenty-seven-year-old husband and her three-month-old son, Joseph Melanson. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Melanson. In addition to herself and her thirty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Allain (Allain) Melanson (Melançon), her son, 2 years old; Marie Melanson (Melançon), her daughter, 4 years old; Magdeleine LeBlanc, Veuve Melanson (Melançon), her mother-in-law, 64 years old; and Claude Perée, a private tutor, 50 years old. Félicité Landry and her family owned a tract of land with ten arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-three-cows, two horses, fifteen cows, and one musket. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On March 6, 1800, local authorites inventoried and appraised her estate. Among her belongings was a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi River, two leagues above the Ascension Parish church. Improvements on that property included a house measuring twenty by fifteen feet. Her probate inventory indicates that the following children survived her: Isabelle (Isabel), Jean Baptiste, Eloy (Eloi), Charles, Marie Elise, Magdeleine, and Marie. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 65-66, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.970 | Magdeleine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1717 | Charles Melanson (Melançon) (born 1740) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifty-two-year-old member of the household of Charles Melanson (Melançon), her son, and Félicité Landry, her daughter-in-law. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.971 | Paul | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1730 | Acadia | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Melanson(?) | Married Marie Terriot (Theriot). | Jean Baptiste (born 1759), Philippe (born 1760), Magdeleine (born 1756), Marie (born 1761), Paul (born ca. June 1770) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Terriot (Theriot), his wife, 33 years old; Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon), his son, 10 years old; Philippe Melanson, his son, 9 years old; Magdeleine Melanson, his daughter, 13 years old; Marie Melanson, his daugher, 8 years old; and Basile Landry, a brother-in-law, 19 years old. The members of his household occupied a; tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, one horse, twenty-six hogs, and and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a forty-year-old married man. On April 10, 1774, Paul Melanson sold his farm, on the left bank of the Mississippi River, to Jean Baptiste Mellhomme. At the time of its sale, the property was situated between the lands of Isaac LeBlanc and Charles Melanson. Improvements on Melanson's property included a house measuring twenty-eight by sixteen feet. | He died sometime before the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:113; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.972 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | Veuve Melançon | 01/01/1736 | Married Paul Melanson (Melançon). Widowed sometime before August 1, 1770. | Jean Baptiste (born 1759), Philippe (born 1760), Madeleine (Magdeleine) (born 1756), Marie (born 1761), Paul (born ca. June 1770) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Paul Melanson (Melançon). Her household included the following persons: her husband, 39 years old; Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon), her son, 10 years old; Philippe Melanson, her son, 9 years old; Magdeleine Melanson, her daughter, 13 years old; Marie Melanson, her daugher, 8 years old; and Basile Landry, a brother-in-law, 19 years old. The members of her household occupied a; tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, one horse, twenty-six hogs, and and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a thirty-four-year-old widow and the head of a household that included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Melanson, her son, 10 years old; Philippe Melanson, her son, 19 years old; Paul Melanson, her son, 2 months old; and Basile Landry, her brother-in-law, 19 years old. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 79. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.973 | Jean Baptiste | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1759 | Maryland | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | Paul Melanson (Melançon) | Married Magdeleine Préjean at the Attakapas church, May 10, 1785. | Marguerite (born May 31, 1786), Jean (born December 27, 1788), Scholastique (died on August 26, 1808 at the age of 17 years), Emilien (born August 1, 1796), Marie (born August 15, 1800), Louise (born October 18, 1803), Onesime (born October 18, 1803), Adélaïde (born February 13, 1806) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdeleine Préjean, 38 years old; Marguerite Melanson (Melançon), 18 years old; Jean Melanson (Melançon), 17 years old; Scholastique Melanson (Melançon), 12 years old; Marie Melanson (Melançon), 8 years old; and Emilien Melanson (Melançon), 5 years old. Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon) and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned 100 cattle and 1 slave. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, vol. I, pp. 401-404, 562; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.974 | Philippe | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1760 | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | Paul Melanson (Melançon) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a nine-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.975 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1756 | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | Paul Melanson (Melançon) | Married Joseph Breau at Cabannocé, February 7, 1774. | Hilaire (born 1775), Paul (married February 17, 1806) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a thirteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a thirteen-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Joseph Breau. In addition to her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included Hilaire Breau, her two-year-old son. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 20. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.976 | Marie (sometimes Marianne) | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1761 | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | Paul Melanson (Melançon) | Married Joseph Landry, son of Firmin Landry and Elizabeth Françoise Thibodeau. | Elise (born December 24, 1778), Joseph (baptized May 13, 1779), Louis (baptized April 23, 1780), Agricole (born 1781), Marie Magdeleine (born June 29, 1782), Rosalie (born February 7, 1784), Anastasie (born 1785; baptized July 15, 1787, at the age of two years), Célestin (born ca. 1786), Cirille (born February 7, 1787), Marie Mélanie (born ca. 1788), Joseph Dionisius (born 1788), Onésime (born ca. 1790), Pantaleon (born 1790; baptized November 11, 1795, at the age of five years), Séraphie (born 1793; baptized November 11, 1795, at the age of two years) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eight-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eight-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.977 | Basile | Landry | 01/01/1750 | Acadia | Marguerite Boudrot (Ponderotte) | Vincent Landry | Married (1) Marie (Anastasie) Richard at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, November 11, 1776. Étienne LeBlanc and Michel Dugas witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Marianne Mire, a native of St. Jacques de Cabannocé and the minor daughter of Simon Mire and Magdelaine Cormier, at the Attakapas Church, October 3, 1786. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of the household of Paul Melanson and Marie Terriot (Theriot). The census indicates that he was a brother-in-law of either Paul Melanson or Marie Terriot. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that a nineteen-year-old bachrlor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old member of the household of Marie Terriot, the widow of Paul Melanson (Melançon). The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anastasie Richard, his wife, 18 years old; Veuve Richard, his mother-in-law, 51 years old; and Pélagie Richard, his sister-in-law, 8 years old. He and his wife owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows, three horses, sixteen hogs, and two muskets. On November 7, 1776, Basile (Bazile) Landry purchased from Joseph Richard and Anne Blanchard, his wife, a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located twenty-three leagues above New Orleans, was situated between the land of Amant (Amand) Babin and the property of Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Improvements on the property purchased by Landry included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-one by fourteen feet. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On November 4, 1777, Basile Landry and his wife, Marie Richard, sold to Firmin Broussard the property that they had purchased on November 7, 1776. Migrated to the Attakapas District sometime before October 1786. | His burial record indicates that he was "a little over 60 yrs." of age at the time of his death. This statement is at odds with other documentary sources indicating that he was much younger. His widow is identified as Marie Mire at the time of the burial. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:419; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 472-473; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.766 | 12/03/1788 | Attakapas Church, Attakapas District | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.978 | Marie Rose | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1745 | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Melanson | Married Isaac LeBlanc, son of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Magdeleine Landry, at Ascension Parish, La., February 5, 1768. | Donat(?) (born 1772, married June 2, 1794), Joseph (born 1770; married May 21, 1792), Françoise (born March 15, 1780), Jean Baptiste (born July 1, 1778), Marguerite (born 1775), Marie Sophie (born January 21, 1774) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Isaac LeBlanc. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cattle, twenty hogs, and one musket. On October 22, 1770, Governor Luís de Unzaga sent to Louis Judice, commandant of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, money for the stockings (bas) evidently manufactured by Mme. Isaac LeBlanc. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Isaac LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her thirty-year-old spouse, her household included the following persons: Joseph LeBlanc, her son, 7 years old; Donat(?) LeBlanc, her son, 5 years old; Marie LeBlanc, her daughter, 3 years old; and Marguerite LeBlanc, her daughter, 2 years old. Marie Melanson (Melançon) and her family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-six cows, four horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Luís de Unzaga to Louis Judice, October 2, 1770, AGi, PPC, 188A:1d/32; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 57; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:537. | 1.766 | 12/12/1781 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.979 | Pierre | Landry | dit Pierrot à Jacques | 01/01/1721 | Married (1) Geneviève Broussard. Married (2) Euphrosine (Froizine) Gauterot. Married (3) Marie Landry, widow of Désiré LeBlanc, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, February 29, 1778. | First marriage: Osite (Ozitte) (born 1753), Baptiste (born 1754), Jean (born 1755), Firmin (born 1759), Paul (born 1762) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 1 1/3 rations. | Identified in the September 14, 1769(?), census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Froizine (Frozine) Gauterot, his wife, 45 years old; Firmin Landry, his son, 10 years old; Paul Landry, his son, 7 years old; Osite Landry, his daughter, 16 years old; and Baptiste Granger, a son-in-law, 16 years old. The members of his household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cattle, twenty-three hogs, and 2 muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the forty-nine-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Froizine Gauterot, his wife, 46 years old; Firmin Landry, his son, 11 years old; Paul Landry, his son, 7 years old; Osite Landry, his daughter, 16 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, his daughter, 14 years old. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Landry owned five slaves; identified as Pierre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques in the 1775 list. On Octoer 18, 1776, Pierre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques and his sons signed an affidavid indicating that they could not occupy the lands given to them by the Spanish government. They consequently transferred their rights to the property measuring eighteen arpents frontage to Maurice Conway. Conway, in turn, paid the Landrys sixty piastres for the improvements made to the property by Pierre Landry and his sons. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the fifty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Euphrosine Gauterot, his wife, 53 years old; Firmin Landry, his son, 14 years old; Paul Landry, his son, 12 years old; and Veuve Bugeaud, 23 years old. Pierre Landry and his family owned a large tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. He and his family also owned six slaves, fifty-three cows, eight horses, fifty-five hogs, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He appears to have been the Pierre Landry who, during a district-wide meeting to discuss the need for a fortification near the parish church to protect the women and children in the event of war with Great Britain, told the assembly that "it would be better to attack first than to take a defensive posture, which would avoid their own devastation," July 14, 1778. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. Pierre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques was the uncle of Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre). Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. He was probably the Pierre Landry summoned by Commandant Louis Judice to inspect the flooding caused by crevasses on the Lafourche District farms of Judice and Ducourneaux, ca. April 16, 1793. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Bernardo de G lvez, July 14, 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:442; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Louis Judice to Carondelet, April 16, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:239-240; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:447; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46-47, 64. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
2.980 | Euphrosine (Froizine, Frozine) | Gauterot (Gautereaux) | 03/08/1724 | St. Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia | Anne LeBlanc | Jean Gauterot | Married (1) Pierre Granger of Grand Pré, Acadia. Married (2) Pierre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques. | First marriage: four children, including Marie (Marie Anne) (born 1743), Joseph (born 1748), and Jean BaptisteSecond marriage: Osite (Ozitte) (born 1753), Firmin (born 1759), Paul (born 1762), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1756)(Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that she also had a son named Olivier Landry.) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-five-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. Her household included the following persons: her husband, 48 years old; Firmin Landry, her son, 10 years old; Paul Landry, her son, 7 years old; Osite Landry, her daughter, 16 years old; and Baptiste Granger, a son-in-law, 16 years old. The members of her household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows, twenty-three hogs, and two muskets. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the forty-six-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. Her household included the following persons: Pierre Landry, her husband, 49 years old; Firmin Landry, her son, 11 years old; Paul Landry, her son, 7 years old; Osite Landry, her daughter, 16 years old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, her daughter, 14 years old. On December 1, 1770, Euphrosine Gauterot drew up her last will and testament. This document indicates that she had four children by Pierre Landry. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the fifty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. In addition to herself and her fifty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Firmin Landry, her son, 14 years old; Paul Landry, her son, 12 years old; and the Veuve Bugeaud, 23 years old. She and her family owned a large tract of land with eleven arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. They also owned six slaves, fifty-three cows, eight horses, fifty-five hogs, and one musket. Her estate was inventoried and appraised on February 10, 1778. | She died sometime before February 10, 1778. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:49; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 46-47, 64. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
2.981 | Firmin | Landry | 01/01/1759 | Euphrosine Gauterot | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eleven-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.982 | Paul | Landry | 01/01/1762 | Euphrosine Gauterot | Pierre Landry | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On January 19, 1790, Commandant Louis Judice reported that Paul Landry had agreed to build the district jail at a cost of 116 piastres. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.;List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Louis Judice to the governor, January 19, 1790, AGI, PPC, 212A432-433. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.983 | Osite | Landry | 01/01/1753 | Euphrosine Gauterot | Pierre Landry | She evidently married Jean Baptiste Granger. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household, which also included Baptiste Granger, who was evidently her husband. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.984 | Baptiste | Granger | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Froizine (Frozine) Gauterot. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. On July 27, 1773, Louis Judice, commandant of the Cabannocé District, complained that Baptiste Granger and Jean Baptiste Breau, two local young men, had agreed to serve as employees of one Mr. Maison during a proposed trip to Illinois. Judice complained that their decision contravened his own proclamations that no one should hire themselves to work for "foreigners." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, July 27, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:482. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.985 | Jean | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1760 | Anne Landry | Jean Broussard | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nine-year-old member of a household headed by his seventeen-year-old brother Firmin. The brothers occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned three cattle and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.986 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River and owned one musket.The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. Cabannocé Commandant Louis Judice sent him to New Orleans as a courier carrying dispatches from the Attakapas District and Mexico, January 11, 1780. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Judice to the governor, AGI, PPC, 193B:321. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.987 | Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fourteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a fifteen-year-old bachelor. On June 17, 1777, he was a member of the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew. The muster roll of the unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.988 | Marie Rose (Marie) | Landry | 01/01/1730 | Married Jean Baptiste Breau (Braux). She was a widow in 1796. | Marguerite (born 1747), Magdeleine (born 1749), Jean (born 1751), Armand (Amant, Amand) (born 1754), Anne (born 1754), Jacques (sometimes Fernand) (born 1757), Esther (born 1760) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-nine-year-old spouse of Baptiste Breau. Her household included the following persons: Baptiste Breau, 43 years old; Jean Breau, her son, 18 years old; Magdeleine Breau, her daughter, 20 year old; Anne Breau, her daughter, 15 years old; and Esther, her daughter, no age indicated in the census. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cows, nineteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the forty-year-old wife of Baptiste Breau. Her household included the following persons: Baptiste Breau, 44 years old; Jacques Breau, her son, 13 years old; Armand (Amant, Amand) Breau, her son, 16 years old; Magdeleine Breau, her daughter, age illegible; Anne Breau, her daughter, 15 years old; and Esther (Esthère) Breau, her daughter, 10 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the forty-eight-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Breau. In addition to herself and her fifty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Fernand (evidently Jacques) Breau, her son, 20 years old; and Esther Breau, her husband, 17 years old. Marie Landry and her family owned a large tract of land with fourteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fifteen cows, three horses, twenty-nine hogs, and three muskets. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy-four years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:447. | 1.766 | 14/01/1796 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.989 | Jean | Breau (Breaux, Braud) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Marie Landry | Baptiste Breau | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of his parents' household. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. He is not listed with his parents in the August 1, 1770 census of Ascension Parish. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as . | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
2.990 | Magdeleine | Breau (Breaux, Braud) | 01/01/1749 | Marie Landry | Baptiste Breau | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.991 | Anne | Breau (Breaux, Braud) | 01/01/1754 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married Joseph Broussard, son of Joseph Broussard and Ursule trahan, at Ascension Catholic Church, Ascension Parish, La., June 3, 1776. | Joseph (born March 22, 1777), Marguerite (born October 27, 1778), Joseph Nicolas, unidentified child (died January 20, 1784, at the age of 3 weeks), second unidentified child (died January 20, 1784), Raphaël (baptismal record was lost during the colonial period), Alexandre (born December 1784), Dositsée (born December 23, 1786), Adélaïde (born June 26, 1774), Edouard (baptized March 31, 1793), Susanne (born December 24, 1795), Philemon (born November 1, 1796), Delphine (born 1799) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.992 | Esther (Esthère) | Breau (Breaux, Braud) | 01/01/1760 | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a member of her parents' household. Her age is not indicated in the census. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she as a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.993 | Amant (Armant, Amand) | Breau | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned two hogs and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a sixteen-year-old bachelor. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; . | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
2.994 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1753 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Simon Landry, her brother-in-law, and Marguerite Babin, her sister. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Simon Landry and Marguerite Babin, her sister. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.995 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1731 | Married Anne Landry, a sister of Pierre Landry dit Pitre. | Anne (often identified as Rose) (born 1759), Silvin (Silvain) (born 1771), Devine (probably Ludivine) (born 1775), Marie Louise (married February 28, 1791) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 32 years old; Anne LeBlanc, his daughter, 10 years old; and Marie LeBlanc, an orphan, 16 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned one cow, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-eight-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 33 years old; and Rose (Anne?) LeBlanc, his daughter, no age given. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Landry, his wife, 42 years old; Silvin LeBlanc, his son, 6 years old; Rose LeBlanc, his daughter, 17 years old; and Devine (probably Ludivine) LeBlanc, his daughter, 2 years old. Pierre LeBlanc and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-one cows, three horses, eight sheep, twelve hogs, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
2.996 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Married Pierre LeBlanc. | Anne (often identified as Rose) (born 1759), Silvin (Silvain) (born 1771), Devine (probably Ludivine) (born 1775), Marie Louise (married February 28, 1791) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre LeBlanc. Her household included the following persons: Pierre LeBlanc, 38 years old; Anne LeBlanc, her daughter, 10 years old; and Marie LeBlanc, an orphan, 16 years old. Her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage along the Mississippi River. They owned one cow, twenty hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry. In addition to her thirty-year-old husband, her household included Rose (Anne?) LeBlanc, her daughter. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of Pierre LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty-one cows, three horses, eight sheep, twelve hogs, and one musket. They owned no slaves in 1777. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. | Her burial record indicates that she was sixty-seven years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 73. | 1.766 | 12/05/1808 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
2.997 | Anne (Rose?) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1759 | Anne Landry | Pierre LeBlanc | Married Athanase Dugas (Dugat), son of Jean Dugas and Marie Charlotte Gaudin, September 15, 1777. | Joseph (born 1778), Anne Josèphe (born 1779), Madeleine (born 1780), Henriette (born 1781), Anne Marie (married February 28, 1802), Julie (married May 20, 1804), Jérôme Athanase (married January 21, 1805), Julien Canuel (born 1786), Marie Louise (born 1788), Rosalie Athanase (married Occtober 16, 1809) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of her parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as Rose LeBlanc. Her age was not indicated in the August 1, 1770, census. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | She was a thirty-six-year-old widow at the time of her death, according to her death record. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:482; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35. | 1.766 | 28/02/1792 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
2.998 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a sixteen-year-old orphan in the household of Pierre LeBlanc and Anne Landry. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
2.999 | Marie Anastasie | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Ursule Landry | Jean Landry | Married Amant (Amand) Babin in Maryland, January 14, 1766. The wedding was performed after dispensations of consanguinity of the second and third degree. The marriage was witnessed by Firmin Landry and Saturin Landry. | Paul (born ca. Jun 1768; died August 21, 1772), Grégoire (born ca. 1769; died August 21, 1772), Eugène (Ugenne) (born 1772), Simon Raphaël (born 1773), Magdeleine (born 1776), Landry (married April 26, 1802), Maximilien (married May 28, 1804), Marie Clothilde (married November 24, 1806), Louis (married May 19, 1806), Alexandre (married January 16, 1809). Genealogist Sidney Marchand suggests that Donat Babin may have been a son. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Amant (Amand) Babin. Her household included the following persons: Amant (Amand) Babin, 27 years old; Paul Babin, her son, 15 months old; and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, her sister. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Amant (Amand) Babin. In addition to her twenty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul Babin, her son, 2 years old; Grégoire, her son, evidently an infant; and Magdeleine (Madeleine) Landry, her sister, 11 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Amant (Armand) Babin. In addition to herself and her thirty-three-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Eugène (Ugenne) Babin, her son, 5 years old; Simon Babin, her son, 4 years old; Magdeleine Babin, her daughter, 1 year old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned nineteen cows, three horses, twenty hogs, and two muskets. They owned no slaves. | Her burial record indicates that she was forty-eight years of age at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 4; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 55. | 1.766 | 18/08/1795 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
3.000 | Joseph | Babin | 01/01/1745 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Anne Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Babin | Married Marie Landry, daughter of Abraham Landry and Elizabeth (Isabel) LeBlanc and a native of Grand Pré, Acadia, February 5, 1768. | Louis (born 1763), Marguerite (born ca. December 1769), Élizabeth (born 1771) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie "Babin" (actually Landry), his wife, 20 years old; and Anne Terriot (Theriot), the Widow Babin, his mother, 48 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cattle, twenty hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-four-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 21 years old; Marguerite Babin, his daughter, 9 months old. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included Marie Landry, his twenty-seven-year-old wife; Louis Babin, his son, 14 year old; Elizabeth Babin, his daughter, 6 years old; and Marguerite Babin, hs daughter, 4 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fifteen cows and two horses. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He appears to have been the Joseph Babin who served as a military courier, transporting badly needed ammunition from New Orleans to the Cabannocé District during the American Revolution, March 18, 1780. He also appears to have been the Joseph Babin who served as sergeant in the Cabannocé militia, July 1785. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. He appears to have been the Joseph Babin who, on February 17, 1789, joined with numerous other Lafourhce District residents in signing a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On January 9, 1792, a Joseph Babin acquired at a public auction a tract of land with three arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. Standing upon this property, located between the lands of Joseph Melanson and Joseph Babin, stood a house measuring twenty by sixteen feet. The house had a front gallery, bousillage walls, and plank walls. | His burial record indicates that he was twenty-eight years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:48, 50; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Bernard de G lvez, March 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:335vo; Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8, 55. | 1.766 | 01/02/1782 | Ascension Parish, La.(?) | NULL | |||||||||||||
3.001 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1749 | Grand Pré, Acadia | Élizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc | Abraham Landry | Married Joseph Babin, a native of Pisiquid, Acadia, and the son of Joseph Babin and Anne Terriot (Theriot), February 5, 1768. | Louis (born 1763), Marguerite (born ca. December 1769), Élizabeth (born 1771) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-year-old spouse of Joseph Babin. Her household included the following persons: Joseph Babin, 24 years old; and Anne Terriot (Theriot), the Widow Babin, her mother-in-law, 48 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Babin. In addition to her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included her nine-month-old daughter, Marguerite Babin. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Babin. In addition to her thirty-year-old husband, her household included Louis Babin, her fourteen-year-old son; Elizabeth Babin, her six-year-old daughter; and Marguerite Babin, her four-year-old daughter. The census indicates that the members of her household owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fifteen cows and two horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8, 55. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.002 | Anne | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1721 | Married Joseph Babin. Widowed sometime before September 14, 1769. | Joseph (born 1745), Jacques (born 1747), Marguerite (born 1749) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a forty-eight-year-old member of the household of Joseph Babin, her son, and Marie Babin, her daughter-in-law. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.003 | Ephrème (Effrème, Efraime) | Babin | 01/01/1745 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Landry | Paul Babin | Married Marguerite LeBlanc, daughter of Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Josette Forest (Forêt) of Pisiquid, Acadia. They signed a marriage contract at St. Jacques de Cabannocé on April 8, 1768. | Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born ca. February 1769; married December 27, 1784), Paul (born ca. June 1770), Victoire (married July 2, 1789), Jacques (appears to have married on November 28, 1796) Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that Ephrème Babin and Marguerite LeBlanc also had a son named Joseph. | Her family was deported to Oxford, Maryland, where his father died before 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 22 years old; Magdeleine (Madeleine) Babin, his daughter, 8 months; Brigitte Babin, his sister, 19 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-four-yera-old married man. They owned five cows, twenty hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 22 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 2 months old; Marie Magdeleine Babin, his daughter, 1 year old; and Brigitte Babin, his sister, 19 years old. On September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to St. Jacques de Cabannocé. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. On October 24, 1775, he participated in a hunting party organized to kill a bear that was ravaging local cornfields. During the course of the bear hunt, Jacques Landry was accidentally shot and severely wounded. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Babin owned two slaves; identified as Efrème Babin in the list. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On March 23, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice informed the governor that Ephrème Babin was one of only two local farmers with rice surpluses. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourche District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On October 13, 1787, Commandant Louis Judice informed the governor that smallpox had broken out in the district at the residence of Ephrème Babin. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On July 15, 1800, Ephrème Babin sold a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located four and one-half miles above the parish church. On August 26, 1800, Babin purchased a farmstead on the left bank of the Mississippi River, two leagues above the parish church. On the day of the purchase, Babin sold a strip of the left-bank property, measuring one-half arpent frontage by forty arpents depth, to Michel Judice. | Identified as the widower of Marguerite LeBlanc at the time of his death. His burial record indicates that he was about sixty-seven-years of age when he died. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to St. James Parish, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:50; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, March 23, 1785, AGI, PPC, 197:297; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, October 13, 1787, AGI, PPC, 200:575-576; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 6, 9; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2408. | 1.766 | 04/09/1810 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
3.004 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | 01/01/1747 | Assumption Parish, Acadia; one source indicates Pisiquid, Acadia | Catherine Josette Forest (Forêt) | Jacques LeBlanc | Married Ephrème (Efraime, Etienne) Babin, son of Paul Babin and Marie Landry. The couple signed a marriage contract in the presence of Cabannocé co-commandant Louis Judice, April 8, 1768. | Magdeleine (Madeleine) (born ca. February 1769; married December 27, 1784), Paul (born ca. June 1770), Victoire (born 1774; married July 2, 1789), Jacques (born 1768; appears to have married on November 28, 1796) Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that Ephrème Babin and Marguerite LeBlanc also had a son named Joseph. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Ephrème (Efraime) Babin, the twenty-four-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Magdeleine (Madeleine) Babin, her daughter, 8 months old; and Brigitte Babin, her sister-in-law, 19 years old. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Ephrème (Efreime) Babin. In addition to her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul Babin, her son, 2 months old; Marie Magdeleine Babin, her daughter, 1 year old; and Brigitte Babin, her sister-in-law, 19 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Étienne Babin. Marguerite LeBlanc and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, fifteen cows, two horses, thirty hogs, and one musket. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 6, 9-10; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.005 | Brigitte | Babin | 01/01/1750 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Landry | Paul Babin | Married Paul Marie Landry, who pre-deceased her. Paul Marie Landry was the son of Alexandre Landry and Anne LeBlanc. | Her family was deported to Oxford, Maryland, where her father died before 1763. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a nineteen-year-old member of the household of Ephrème (Efraime) Babin, her brother, and Marguerite LeBlanc, her sister-in-law. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a nineteen-year-old member of the household of Ephrème Babin, her brother, and Marguerite LeBlanc, her sister-in-law. | Her burial record indicates that she was the sixty-two-year-old widow of Paul Marie Landry at the time of her death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:43; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 9-10; Arsenault, Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2408. | 1.766 | 30/04/1803 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||
3.006 | Jacques | Landry | 01/01/1743 | Acadia | Married Françoise Blanchard. | Seven surviving children: Donat, Jacques, Désiré, Victor (born 1768; evidently died before 1777), Anne Françoise (born 1773; married June 17, 1805), Marine (born 1775), Adélaïde (born ca. January 1777), Victoire(Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand lists the following children born of the union of Jacques Landry and Françoise Blanchard: In one passage, he lists Adélaïde [married February 3, 1799], Donat [Donate] [married May 27, 1805], Jacques [died July 29, 1829], Victoire. In another passage, he identifies Jacques, Donat, Victoire, Poulonne, Marine, and Adélaïde.) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Blanchard, his wife, 22 years old; Victor Landry, her son, 1 year old; and Joseph Landry, his brother, 18 years old. he and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned two cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-six-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Blanchard, his wife, 24 years old; Victor Landry, his son, 2 years old; and Joseph Landry, his brother, 17 years old. On April 4, 1774, a Jacques Landry purchased from Étienne Landry a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Located approximately twenty-six leagues above New Orleans, said property was situated between the Land of Charles Babin and Étienne Landry. Improvements on the property included a small wooden shack. Identified as Jacque Landry in the December 3, 1775, slave census of Ascension Parish. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that he owned one slave. On October 29, 1775, Louis Judice reported that Jacques Landry of Cabannocé district had been seriously wounded in a hunting accident. Jacques Landry, Efrème (Ephrème) Babin, and Pierre Landry had organized a hunting parting to kill a bear that had been ravaging their corn crop. During the ill-fated hunt on October 24, 1775, Pierre Landry accidently shot Jacques Landry, his brother. Jacques Landry was subsequently taken to the residence of Sieur Mollère, the local surgeon who provided emergency medical attention. Meanwhile, Pierre Landry was arrested and placed in irons pending an investigation by the local commandant. Judice subsequently interrogated Jacques Landry at Mollère's residence about the shooting incident. When asked if he thought the shooting had been premeditated and if he had had any recent disagreements with his brother, Landry responded "that he had always gotten along well with his brother, never having had any difficulties with him and that his brother was quite innocent of this unfortunate gunshot." Jacques Landry also noted that, "if God disposed of his soul," he "forgave his brother with all his heart and . . . he asked God and mankind to forgive his brother for his death." Judice's interrogation of other eyewitnesses to the shooting confirmed that it was accidentaly. Pierre Landry was later released. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River indicates that Jacques Landry and his family resided on a different parcel of land nearby. The census shows that Jacques Landry was the thirty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Françoise Blanchard, his wife, 30 years old; Anne Landry, his daughter, 4 years old; Marine Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; Adélaïde Landry, his daughter, 4 months old. Jacques Landry and his family owned a second tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, fourteen cows, five horses, five hogs, and one musket. On February 5, 1778, Jacques Landry and his wife sold to Manuel Quintero a tract of land with eight arpents frontage. Said property was bounded above by the royal domain and below by the land of Charles Landry. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty by fifteen feet. | His burial record indicates that he was forty years of age at the time of his death. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, October 29, 1775 AGI, PPC, 189B:286; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:428; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57, 60, 100. | 1.766 | 29/12/1783 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.007 | Françoise | Blanchard | 01/01/1747 | Married (1) Jacques Landry. Married (2) Anselme Landry, February 14, 1784. | First marriage: Seven surviving children: Donat, Jacques, Désiré, Victor (born 1768; evidently died before 1777), Anne Françoise (born 1773; married June 17, 1805), Marine (born 1775), Adélaïde (born ca. January 1777), Victoire(Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand lists the following children born of the union of Jacques Landry and Françoise Blanchard: In one passage, he lists Adélaïde [married February 3, 1799], Donat [Donate] [married May 27, 1805], Jacques [died July 29, 1829], Victoire. In another passage, he identifies Jacques, Donat, Victoire, Poulonne, Marine, and Adélaïde.) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-two-year-old member of the household headed by her twenty-six-year-old husband, Jacques Landry. Her household also included Victor Landry, her one-year-old son, and Joseph Landry, her eighteen-year-old brother-in-law. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned to cows, eighteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jacques Landry. In addition to her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Victor Landry, her son, 2 years old; and Joseph Landry, her brother-in-law, 17 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Jacques Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Anne Landry, her daughter, 4 years old; Marine Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; and Adélaïde Landry, her daughter, 4 months old. She and her family owned two tracts of land. The first, designated number 71 in the census, encompassed five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The second, designated plot number 75 in the census, encompassed six arpents frontage. Françoise Blanchard and her family also owned two slaves, fourteen cattle, five horses, five hogs, and one musket. On December 13, 1784, Françoise Blanchard asked the local authorities to inventory and appraise the property of the late Jacques Landry. The resulting probate inventory indicates that the estate included a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River, approximately twenty-six leagues above New Orleans. Improvements on the property included a house measuring thirty feet by sixteen feet, with bousillage walls. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57, 100. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.008 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as an eighteen-year-old member of the household of Jacques Landry, his brother, and Françoise Blanchard, his sister-in-law. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Jacques Landry, his brother, and Françoise Blanchard, his sister-in-law. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.009 | Charles | Landry | 01/01/1737 | Acadia | Married (1) Marie Landry. Married (2) Marie Babin, daughter of Germain Babin and Marguerite Landry, at Ascension Parish, December 2, 1775. Joseph Landry and Pierre Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Second marriage: Angel (born 1776; married January 4, 1796), Céleste (married October 16, 1797), Léger (married October 14, 1807), Marie (married February 10, 1812) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 22 years old; Pélagie Landry, his sister, 20 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned one cow, twenty hogs, and two muskets. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a thirty-four-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included Pélagie Landry, his twenty-year-old sister. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. On October 24, 1775, he participated in a three-man hunting party attempting to kill a bear that was raving local cornfields. During the course of the hunt, he accidentally shot and severely wounded Jacques Landry, his brother. He was subsequently arrested and placed in irons pending an investigation. During the course of the investigation, Commandant Louis Judice interrogated Jacques Landry about his relationship with his brother. Jacques Landry indicated to Judice that the shooting was an accident and that he forgave his brother for the injury. Testimony from other eyewitnesses also indicated that the shooting was accidental. Subsequently released. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Charles Landry owned one slave. There were two Charles Landrys of approximately the same age in the parish at the time the census was compiled; neither Landry owned a slave in 1777. On July 26, 1778, Commandant Louis Judice informed Louisiana's governor that Charles Landry was transporting to New Orleans twenty-five muskets requiring refurbishment by the local militia. Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, October 29, 1775 AGI, PPC, 189B:286; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; Louis Judice to Bernardo de G lvez, July 26, 1778, AGI, PPC, 193A:447; List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:420; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.010 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Married Charles Landry. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Charles Landry, the thirty-one-year-old head of her household. Her household also included Pélagie Landry, her sister-in-law. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.011 | Pélagie | Landry | 01/01/1749 | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-year-old member of the household headed by Charles Landry, her brother, and Marie Landry, her sister-in-law. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-year-old member of the household of Charles Landry, her thirty-two-year-old brother. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.012 | Jacques | Babin | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Anne Terriot (Theriot) | Joseph Babin | Married Marguerite Landry. | Pélagie (born 1772), Donat (born 1774), Paul (born ca. January 1777) | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He also owned one cow, four hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-two-year-old bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-two-year-old head of a household that included Anne Babin, his forty-nine-year-old mother. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Landry, his wife, 25 years old; Donat Babin, his son, 3 years old; Paul Babin, fils, his son, 4 months old; and Pélagie Babin, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.013 | Pierre (probably Joseph) | Jeansonne | 01/01/1755 | Marie Aucoin | Charles Jeansonne | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a fifteen-year-old member of the household headed by his brother, Jean Jeansonne. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.014 | Joseph | Préjean | 01/01/1760 | Magdeleine (Madeleine, Magdelaine) Martin | Amand Préjean | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.015 | Marie Madeleine | LeBlanc | 01/01/1767 | Élizabeth (Elisabeth) Boudrot | Étienne LeBlanc | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a three-year-old member of her widowed mother's household. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.016 | Michel | Dugas | 01/01/1756 | Anne Landry | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Mathurin Landry, his stepfather, and Anne Landry, his mother. His household also included Marie Landry, his 1 1/2-year-old half sister. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.017 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1754 | probably Élizabeth (Isabelle) LeBlanc | Abraham Landry | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of her father's household. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.018 | Marie (Marie Josèphe) | Babin | 01/01/1741 | Married Charles Gaudin dit Lincour. | Isabelle (Élizabeth, Isabel) (born 1774), Saul (born 1776), Marguerite (married June 22, 1801), Françoise (married June 22, 1801), Sainte Reine (born December 24, 1785) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Charles Gaudin dit Lincour, the twenty-nine-year-old head of her household. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Charles Gaudin dit Lincour. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Saul Lincour, her son, 1 year old; Isabelle Lincour, her daughter, 3 years old; Marguerite Babin, her sister, 24 years old; Edouard Lincour, her husband's nephew, 6 years old; and Rosalie Lincour, her husband's niece, 10 years old. Marie Babin and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fourteen cows, three horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 43. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.019 | Marie Josèphe | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Married Etienne Landry. | Anastasie (born 1757), Jean Baptiste (born 1767), Ignace (born ca. June 1769), Victoire (born 1775), Joseph (born 1776) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as the thirty-six-year-old spouse of Etienne Landry, the thirty-six-year-old head of her household. Her household also included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Landry, her son, 3 years old; Ignace (Ygnace) Landry, her son, 1 year old; Anastasie Landry, her daughter, and Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry, her sister-in-law, 32 years old. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the forty-three-year-old spouse of Etienne Landry. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Baptiste Landry, her son, 10 years old; Joseph Landry, her son, 1 year old; Anastasie Landry, her daughter, 20 years old; Victoire Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; and Isabelle Landry, her sister, 30 years old. Marie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, twenty-five cows, two horses, ten sheep, twenty hogs, and two muskets. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.020 | Barbe | Babin | 01/01/1756 | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of the household headed by Joseph Babin, her twenty-one-year-old brother. This household also included Marie Josèphe Babin, her twenty-year-old sister, and Marguerite Babin, her seventeen-year-old sister. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.021 | Olivier | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Marie Terriot (Theriot) | René Landry | Married Marie Magdeleine Hébert, daughter of François Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson (Melançon), February 7, 1775. | Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. He owned one cow, one hog, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a seventeen-yearold bachelor. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of the household of René Landry, his father, and Anne Landry, his stepmother. Sometime around early 1773, fifty-three Cabannocé Acadians signed a complaint about Chevalier de Bellevue's local land survey. Of the fifty-three complainants, only six could sign their names: Joseph Babin, Olivier Landry, Charles Landry, Firmin Broussard, François Dugas, and Pierre Landry. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Magdeleine Hébert, his twenty-four-year-old wife. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned nine cows, one horse, eight hogs, and two muskets. On October 15, 1785, Commandant Louis Judice notified the governor that Olivier Landry had sold his land grant to Étienne Leblanc. Received a land grant in the Attakapas district on August 27, 1787. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. In 1791, Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard), elders of the Acadian community, were interrogated regarding the performance of the commandant and church warden in the performance of their duties with regard to repairs to the local church. | List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of Persons Unhappy with Bellevue's Landry Survey, ca. early 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:511; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of Lands Found in the Lafourche District, October 15, 1785, AGI, PPC, 188A:8/6; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49, 66; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 45; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; Proceedings of the interrogation of Jean Baptiste Broussard, Olivier Landry, Simon Broussard, Joseph Hébert, and Firmin Giroire (Girouard) Regarding Repairs to the Attakapas Church, (1791), AGI, PPC, 204:220-239. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.022 | Joseph | Gravois | 01/01/1739 | Married Madeleine Bourg. | Marguerite Angélique (born 1765), Marie Félicité (born 1767), Joseph Frédéric (born 1772), Victoire (born 1774), Marie Tersile (born 1779), Jean Hubert (born 1781), Marie Susanne (born 1784), and Madeleine Blanche (born in September 1788) | Commanded the Brigitte, a schooner that carried eighteen Acadians to Louisiana in late 1788. The Brigitte departed St. Pierre, a French island near Newfoundland, ca. October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.023 | Madeleine | Bourg | 01/01/1745 | Married Joseph Gravois. | Marguerite Angélique (born 1765), Marie Félicité (born 1767), Joseph Frédéric (born 1772), Victoire (born 1774), Marie Tersile (born 1779), Jean Hubert (born 1781), Marie Susanne (born 1784), and Madeleine Blanche (born in September 1788) | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her husband, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.024 | Joseph Frédéric | Gravois | 01/01/1772 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, he and his family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by his father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.025 | Jean Hubert | Gravois | 01/01/1781 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, he and his family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by his father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.026 | Marguerite Angélique | Gravois | 01/01/1765 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.027 | Marie Félicité | Gravois | 01/01/1767 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.028 | Victoire | Gravois | 01/01/1774 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.029 | Marie Tersile | Gravois | 01/01/1779 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.030 | Marie Susanne | Gravois | 01/01/1784 | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | Around October 16, 1788, at St. Pierre, an island off the southern Newfoundland coast, she and her family boarded the Brigitte, commanded by her father, for transportation to Louisiana. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.031 | Madeleine Blanche | Gravois | 11/01/1788 | apparently born en route to Louisiana | Madeleine Bourg | Joseph Gravois | She was apparently born aboard the Brigitte, a schooner commanded by her father which carried her family to Louisiana. The Brigitte departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. Extant Spanish colonial documents indicate that she was three weeks old at the time of the Brigitte's arrival. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.032 | Marine (Marianne?) | LeBlanc | Veuve de Joseph Babin | 01/01/1738 | Married Joseph Babin. Widowed by October 1788. | François Laurent (born 1767), Pierre Moïse (born 1768), Victoire (born 1771), Mathurin (born 1773), Anne Marguerite (born 1779) | She and her family boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.033 | François Laurent | Babin | 01/01/1764 | Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc | Joseph Babin | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.034 | Pierre Moïse | Babin | 01/01/1768 | Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc | Jospeh Babin | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.035 | Mathurin | Babin | 01/01/1773 | Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc | Jospeh Babin | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.036 | Victoire | Babin | 01/01/1771 | Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc | Joseph Babin | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.037 | Anne Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1779 | Marine (Marianne?) LeBlanc | Jospeh Babin | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.038 | Charles | Babin | oncle | 01/01/1743 | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.039 | Jean Baptiste | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1770 | Boarded the Brigitte, Joseph Gravois's schooner which departed St. Pierre, a French island near the southern coast of Newfoundland, for Louisiana around October 16, 1788. | Arrived at Pass à l'Outre (now called Pass à Loutre, at the mouth of the Mississippi River), December 11, 1788. | List of French Settlers Embarked aboard the Schooner Brigitte, Bound for Louisiana, Capt. Gravois, October 16, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:653a; List of Passengers abord the Schooner Brigitte, December 11, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:652-652a; Ygnacio Balderas to Esteban de Mir¢, December 14, 1788, AGI, PPC, 14:656. | 1.788 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.040 | Jean | LeBlanc | 01/01/1748 | Married Marie Melanson (Melançon). | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Marie Melanson (Melançon). | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.041 | Marie | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1746 | Married Jean LeBlanc. | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jean LeBlanc. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.042 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1756 | Euphrosine Gauterot | Pierre Landry | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.043 | Firmin René | Landry | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the owner of a six-arpent tract of fallow land. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." Identified as Firmin Landry in the July 27, 1777, petition. He is listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780; the list indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. Although assigned to active duty, Commandant Louis Judice noted that he was too ill to undertake the campaign. He was evidently the Firmin Landry who constituted part of a small militia detachment sent to arrest Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), the local church warden. On June 16, 1786, he was required to give a deposition at a formal inquiry into Landry's arrest. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. The official list of complainants indicates that he was Pierre Landry's cousin. On February 17, 1789, he and numerous other Lafourhce District residents signed a petition voicing his willingness to comply with a royal ordinance removing paper money from circulation in Louisiana. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo; Investigation into the Charges Made Against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; Petition to Governor Estevan Mir¢, February 17, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:279; . | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.044 | Jean | Landry | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included fourteen-year-old Joseph Landry. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor who owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He also owned six cows, two horses, and one musket. He owned no slaves. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.045 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1756 | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a fourteen-year-old member of a household headed by nineteen-year-old Jean Landry. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.046 | Armand (Amant, Amand) | Breau | 01/01/1754 | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married (1) Magdeleine Clouatre. Married (2) Céleste Landry, daughter of Anselme Landry and Osite Landry, July 25, 1802. | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a sixteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.047 | Magdeleine | Landry | 01/01/1759 | Ursule Landry | Jean Landry | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as an eleven-year-old member of the household of Amant (Amand) Babin and Anastasie Landry, her sister. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.048 | Anne | Babin | 01/01/1721 | Jacques (born 1747) | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a forty-nine-year-old member of the household of Jacques Babin, her twenty-two-year-old son. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.049 | Pierre | Dupuis | 01/01/1751 | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the nineteen-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-six-year-old sister Monique. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned two cows, seven hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.050 | Efrème (Effrème, Ephrème) | Robichaud (Robicheau, Robico) | The June 20, 1774, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. He His name is rendered as Effrème Robico in the June 20, 1774, list. The October 30, 1774, census of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned fifteen cows and four horses or mules. | Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, June 20, 1774, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Attakapas District, October 30, 1774, AGI, PPC, 218. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.051 | Widow | Cormier | The October 25, 1774, census of the Opelousas District indicates that her household included the following persons: The Widow Cormier and four unidentified children. She and her family owned two cows and two horses or mules. The census suggests that they lived next door to Michel Cormier's family. | General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.052 | Veuve Joseph | landry | 01/01/1747 | Married Joseph Landry. | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that she was a thirty-year-old widow. Her household included only a pair of fraternal twins a four-year-old boy and girl. She and her family owned one female slave, eighteen cows, fourteen hogs, and twenty chickens. They also owned a ract of land with eight arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.053 | Joseph | Leblanc | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the eighteen-year-old head of a household that included his sixty-eight-year-old mother. He and his mother owned twelve cattle, two horses, six hogs, and eighteen chickens. They occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.054 | Petitjean | Hébert (Ebert) | 01/01/1747 | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: his twenty-two-year-old wife; his three-year-old son; and his two-year-old daughter. He and his family owned twenty cows, three horses, eighteen hogs, and thirty chickens. They occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Hébert (Ebert) lost four of his sixteen cows. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.055 | Joseph | LeBlanc | dit Adous | 01/01/1740 | Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that also included the following persons: his wife, 20 years old; a daughter, 3 years old; a daughter, 2 years old; a daughter, 1 year old; and a daughter, 1 month old. He and his family owned thirteen cattle, nine hogs, fifteen chickens, and a tract dof land with six arpents frontage. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. Around June 27, 1792, he served as a delegate representing the Acadian settlers of the Iberville District. He traveled to New Orleans with five other prominent Acadian Coast Acadians to petition the governor for assistance in improving local flood protection. | List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; . | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.056 | Anselme (Enselme) | Landry | 01/01/1739 | He appears to have been the Anselme Landry who married Françoise Blanchard, the widow of Jacques Landry, on February 14, 1784. | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-nine-year-old head of a household that included his thirty-five-year-old wife, a thirteen-year-old girl, and a six-year-old boy. He and his family owned twelve cows, eleven hogs, thirteen chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. His estate was inventoried and appraised on February 14, 1804. His probate inventory indicates that his estate included a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank o the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of Athanase Landry and below by the property of Olivier Terriot (Theriot). Improvements on Anselme Landry's land included a house measuring thirty feet by ten feet, with galleries across the front and rear facades. Ancillary buildings included an "old kitchen," evidently a detached building, of post-in-ground construction, and three cabins, probably slave cabins. The estate was partitioned among the heirs on April 4, 1805. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57. | 07/02/1804 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.057 | Jean | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1746 | The March 6, 1777, census of the Iberville District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned eighteen cows, eight hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.058 | Pierre | Dugas | 01/01/1754 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple owned ten cows, two horses, eight hogs, sixteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.059 | Augustin (Augustain) | Dugas (Duga, Dugat) | 01/01/1747 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-one-year-old wife, and his two-year-old daughter. He and his family owned eight cows, two horses, five hogs, seventeen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Dugas had lost two of his five cows. The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Duhon, 36 years old; Charles Dugas (Dugat), 9 years old; Marie Dugas (Dugat), 13 years old; Tarsine Dugas (Dugat), 16 years old; Eloy Dugas (Dugat), 2 years old; Christinin Dugas (Dugat), 1 year old. Augustin Dugas (Dugat) and his family occupied a tract of land with fifteen arpents frontage. They owned sixteen semi-wild beef cattle and seven tame cattle. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.060 | Alexandre | Dugas | 01/01/1758 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned six cows, four hogs, eight chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.061 | Étienne | Babin | 01/01/1754 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included his eighteen-year-old sister. He and his sister ownwed sixteen cows, three horses, twelve hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was fifteen-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Babin (Babain) had lost eight of his sixteen cows. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.062 | Joseph | Landry | fils | 01/01/1760 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned six cows, four hogs, twelve chickens, and a tract of land with ten arpents frontage along the Mississippi. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost three of his twenty-one cows. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.063 | Athanase | Landry | 01/01/1745 | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-seven-year-old spouse, a three year-old daughter, and an eighteen-month-old son. He and his family owned ten cows, eight hogs, sixteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a thirty-eight-year-old married man. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost four of his twelve cows. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.064 | Baptiste | Hébert | fils | 01/01/1748 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-eight-year-old head of a household that included his twenty-year-old wife and a six-month-old son. He and his family owned seven cows, two horses, twelve hogs, fifteen chickens, and a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Hebert lost fourteen of his twenty cows. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.065 | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1739 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included his twenty-seven-year-old wife, a six-year-old son, and a two-year-old son. He and his family owned twelve cows, three horses, ten hogs, thirty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.066 | Basile | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1741 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that also included his eighteen-year-old wife, a two-year-old son, and a twelve-year-old orphan. He and his family owned eight cows, ten hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.067 | Jérôme | Blanchard | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi. He appears to have been the Jérôme Blanchard whose cumulative service record was compiled on June 30, 1792. If so, the service record indicates that he was a native of Maryland, that he was married, and that he enjoyed robust health. The service record indicates that he was only twenty-six years of age in 1792, but this is an obvious error, for he was have been only thirteen years old when he participated in the 1779 campaign against British West Florida (see below). He had served as a member of Royal Mixed Legion of the Mississippi for four months and nineteen days. He had also served in the Company of Iberville. His cumulative service record indicates that he had demonstrated both valor and good conduct in his military service. Served in the Spanish military campaigns against Manchac and Baton Rouge (1779) and Mobile (1780) during the American Revolution. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. Appointed second lieutenant, February 12, 1792. He had also demonstrated only average application to his duties and average ability. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:94; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 169. | 12/03/1793 | St. Gabriel, la. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.068 | Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1760 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned seven cows, five hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Hébert lost thirteen of his twenty-five cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.069 | Veuve Pierre | RIchard | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates thatshe was the thirty-two-year-old widow of Pierre Richard. The census indicates that she owned four male slaves, two female slaves, ten cows, two horses, eight hogs, twelve chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the river. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.070 | Veuve Jean Athanase | lANDRY | 01/01/1741 | Married Jean Athanse Landry. | daughter (born 1769), daughter (born 1771), son (born 1771) | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that also included an eight-year-old daughter, a six-year-old daughter, and a six-year-old son. She and her family owned ten cows, three horses, fourteen hogs, twenty chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.071 | Veuve Joseph | lANDRY | 01/01/1739 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that she was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that also included an eight-year-old son. She and her son owned twelve cows, fifteen hogs, seventeen chickens, and a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the river. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.072 | Charles | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | 01/01/1758 | The April 15, 1777, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a nineteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Pierre Arseneau and Anne Bergeron. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.073 | Lise Marie Josèphe (Josette, Lise, Lisette) | Babin | 01/01/1763 | Anne Saulnier | Basile Babin | Married Charles Arseneau | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifteen-year-old spouse of Charles Arseneau. She and her twenty-two-year-old husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, ten cows, and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | 11/05/1820 | Convent, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.074 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1742 | Married Anne Bergeron. | Alexandre (born 1770), Edouard (born 1772), Constance (born 1774) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old married man. He lived 1 1/4 league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. his name is rendered as Simon LeBlan in the 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Bergeron, his wife, 31 years old; Alexandre LeBlanc, his son, 7 years old; Edouard LeBlanc, his son, 5 years old; Constance LeBlanc, his daughter, 3 years old; Jean Roger, an indentured worker, 20 years old; and "Guianne," an engagé (a hired worker), 34 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, thirty cows, and five horses. In mid-1777, four Acadians of approximately the same age were named Simon LeBlanc. One of them was a sergeant in the St. Jacques de Cabannocé militia unit that captured Dubreuil's boat and arrested its crew on June 17, 1777. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Detachment that captured Mr. duBreuil's boat, June 17, 1777, AGI, PPC, 191:342; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.075 | Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1746 | Married Simon LeBlanc. | Alexandre (born 1770), Edouard (born 1772), Constance (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Simon LeBlanc. In addition to her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included Alexandre LeBlanc, her son, 7 years old; Edouard LeBlanc, her son, 5 years old; Constance LeBlanc, her daughter, 3 years old; Jean Roger, an indentured worker, 20 years old; and "Guianne," an engagé (a hired worker), 34 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, thirty cows, and five horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.076 | Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1760 | Anne Préjean | Joseph Hébert | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.077 | Marguerite | Hébert | 01/01/1760 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
3.078 | Louise | Gravois | 01/01/1755 | Marie Bourgeois | Pierre Gravois | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.079 | Jean Baptiste | Bergeron | 01/01/1751 | Marie Forest (Forêt). | Michel (born 1776; married September 24, 1796) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a nineteen-year-old bachelor. He resided 2 1/4The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, leagues from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Marie Forest (Forêt), his twenty-two-year-old wife, and Michel Bergeron, his one-year-old son. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned six cows and one horse. On September 24, 1796, Jean Baptiste Bergeron purchased a tract of land on the right bank of the Mississippi RIver. This property was located twenty-three leagues above New Orleans. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.080 | Marie | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1755 | Married Jean Baptiste Bergeron. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Bergeron. In addition to her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Michel Bergeron, her one-year-old son. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned six cows and one horse. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.081 | Marie | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1737 | Married (2) François Morreaux (Moreau). | First marriage: Jean Baptiste (born 1757), Osite (born 1758), Dominique (born 1760) Second marriage: Louis (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of François Morreaux (Moreau). In addition of her thirty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Louis Morreaux (Moreau), her son, 2 years old; Jean Baptiste, her son, 20 years old; Dominique, her son, 17 years old; and Osite, her daughter, 19 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned twelve cows and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.082 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1751 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie Rose Landry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married Honoré Breau, a native of Acadia and the son of Alexandre Breau and Marguerite Trahan, January 18, 1773. | Marie (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Honoré Breau. In addition to her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Marie Breau, her three-year-old daughter. Madeleine Breau and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18, 19. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.083 | Joseph | Clouatre (Cloatre) | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, census of the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Iberville District indicates that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned ten cows, twelve hogs, eighteen chickens, and a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the river. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Clouatre lost none of his fifteen cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Census of the Iberville District, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.084 | Marie | Doucet | 01/01/1741 | Married Jérôme (Gerome) Gaudet. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the spouse of Jérôme Gaudet. Her age appears to be seventy-six on the census report, but it must actually have been twenty-six. She and her thirty-three-year-old husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned sixteen hogs and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.085 | Grégoire | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) Gaudet | Joseph LeBlanc | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.086 | Louis | Babin | 01/01/1763 | Marie Landry | Joseph Babin | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.087 | Marguerite | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Jacques Babin. | Pélagie (born 1772), Donat (born 1774), Paul (born ca. January 1777) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the right bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old wife of Jacques Babin. In addition to her twenty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Donat Babin, her three-year-old son; Paul Babin, her four-month-old son; and Pélagie Babin, her five-year-old daughter. The members of her household owned a tract o land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.088 | Joseph | Saulnier (Saunier, Sonier, Sonnier) | 01/01/1732 | Marguerite (born 1769) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Saulnier (Sonnier), his daughter, 8 years old; Magdeleine (Madeleine) Granger, his belle fille (either a daughter-in-law or stepdaughter), and Marie Babin, a fourteen-year-old orphan. On April 25, 1785, a Joseph Saulner (Saunier) purchased a tract of land in Ascension Parish with ten arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. The foregoing property was bounded below by the land of Joseph Saulnier. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 92. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.089 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1735 | Married François Antailla | Jean Baptiste, Meddes(?), Beason(?) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old spouse of François Antailla. In addition to her forty-year-old husband, her household included Jean Baptiste Antailla, her son, 7 years old; Meddes(?) Antailla, her son, 5 years old; and Beason(?) Antailla, her son, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and four horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.090 | Anne (Agnès, Angèle) | Daigle | 01/01/1752 | Isle Saint-Jean | Married Thomas Terriot (Theriot), April 22, 1771. | César (Cézar) (born November 2, 1771), Hubert (born December 10, 1773), François (François Xavier) (born ca. March 1776), Rosalie Monique (born May 5, 1778), Etienne (born January 14, 1781), Charles (born ca. 1783; married June 25, 1805), Pierre (born February 16, 1787), Marie Modeste (born February 17, 1789), Marguerite (born September 24, 1791) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Thomas Terriot (Theriot). In addition to her thirty-two-year-old husband, her household included César (Cézar) Terriot, her son, 5 years old; Hubert Terriot, her son, 3 years old; François Terriot, her son, 10 months old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 96; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marie Agnes (Angele) Daigle and Thomas Theriot). | 11/02/1812 | Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.091 | Pierre | Breau | 01/01/1740 | Marie Josèphe Dupuis | Jean Pierre Breau | Married Brigitte (Thérèse) Forest (Forêt). | Marie Charlotte (born ca. January 1777), Luce Henriette (married February 22, 1802), Joseph Alexandre (married May 7, 1807), Magdaleine (married May 31, 1812), Rosalie Justine (married May 20, 1816), Pierre (married July 21, 1814), Marcelite (married June 12, 1809)Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that two other children are known to have been born of the union of Pierre Breau and Brigitte Forest: Olivier and Jean. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that "after exile at Nantucket Island and Boston, Massachusetts, he came to Louisiana before 1776." | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Brigitte Forest (Forêt), 24 years old; Marie Charlotte Breau, his daughter, 4 months old; and Jean Roger, no relationship indicated, 22 years old. Pierre Breaux and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows and four horses. They owned no slaves. On August 22, 1784, a Pierre Breau purchased a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This land was bounded above by the property of Simon LeBlanc and below by the land of Mathurin LeBlanc. Standing on the property was a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-four feet by fifteen feet. The residence had a front gallery, and its walls were of bousillage between post construction. Pierre Breau sold the land and improvements to Charles Peytavin du Riblon on January 24, 1787. | His burial record indicates that he was seventy-five years of age at the time of his death. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 15/11/1803 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.092 | Brigitte | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1753 | Marie LeJeune | Pierre Forest (Forêt) | Married Pierre Breau, son of Pierre Breau, père, and Marie Dupuis (Dupuy), at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 15, 1776. | Marie Charlotte (born ca. January 1777), Luce Henriette (married February 22, 1802), Joseph Alexandre (married May 7, 1807), Magdaleine (married May 31, 1812), Rosalie Justine (married May 20, 1816), Pierre (married July 21, 1814), Marcelite (married June 12, 1809) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Pierre Breau. In addition to her thirty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marie Charlotte Breau, her four-month-old daughter, and twenty-two-year-old Jean Roger. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows and four horses. They owned no slaves. | Her burial record indicates that she was seventy-two years of age at the time of her death. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22. | 07/02/1825 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.093 | Cécile (Cécille) | Bergeron | 01/01/1737 | Acadia | Marguerite Dugas | Barthelemy Bergeron, fils | Married (1) Joseph Dugas, ca. 1754. Her first husband died before April 9, 1766. Married (2) Pierre Bernard at Cabannocé, June 13, 1770. Married (3) Pierre Bernard. | First marriage: Joseph (born 1755), Cécile (born ca. 1757), Marie Pélagie Madeleine (born ca. 1759), Mathilde (born March 6, 1765) Second marriage: Adélaïde (born 1773), Louis (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-two-year-old wife of Pierre Bernard. In addition to her forty-four-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Dugas, a son by her first husband, 22 years old; Pierre Bernard, a son by her son husband, 18 years old; Nicolas Lahure, 8 years old; Louis Bernard, a son by her second husband, 3 years old; and Adélaïde Bernard, a daughter by her second husband, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned twenty-six cows and four horses. | Identified in her burial record, which indicates that she was eight-five years old at the time of her death, as the widow (third marriage) of Pierre Bernard. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:84; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron and Marguerite Dugas." | 28/08/1814 | Barthelémy Bergeron and Genevieve St. Aubin Serreau | Claude Dugas and Marguerite Bourg | St. Michael Catholic Church Cemetery, Convent, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
3.094 | Joseph | Dugas | 01/01/1755 | Cécile (Cécille) Bergeron | Joseph Dugas | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of the household of Pierre Bernard, his stepfather, and Cécille (Cécile) Bergeron, his mother. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.095 | Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1750 | Married François Part. | Rosalie (born 1771) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of François Part. In addition to her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Rosalie Part, her six-year-old daughter, and Isidore D'Amours, a thirteen-year-old orphan. The family also owned seven cows and two horses. They owned no slaves. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.096 | Marie | Martin | 01/01/1736 | Married Joseph Richard. | Louis (born 1767), Marie (born 1767), Rose (born 1770), Françoise (born 1770), Angélique (born 1772), Pierre (born 1774), Simon (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of Joseph Martin. In addition to her forty-one-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Louis Richard, her son, 10 years old; Pierre Richard, 3 years old; Simon Richard, her son, 2 years old; Marie Richard, her daughter, 10 years old; Rose Richard, her daughter, 7 years old; Françoise Richard, her daughter, 7 years old; and Angélique Richard, her daughter, 5 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned twenty cows and four horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.097 | Joseph | Richard | 01/01/1736 | Acadia | Married Marie Martin. | Louis (born 1767), Marie (born 1767), Rose (born 1770), Françoise (born 1770), Angélique (born 1772), Pierre (born 1774), Simon (born 1775) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-one-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Martin, his wife, 41 years old; Louis Richard, his son, 10 years old; Pierre Richard, his son, 3 years old; Simon Richard, his son, 2 years old; Marie Richard, his daughter, 10 years old; Rose Richard, his daughter, 7 years old; Françoise Richard, his daughter, 7 years old; and Angélique Richard, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They owned twenty cows and four horses. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.098 | Madeleine (Magdeleine) | Dugas | 01/01/1759 | Cécile Bergeron | Joseph Dugas | Married Jean Baptiste Bernard. | Anne (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1781) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the eighteen-year-old spouse of Jean Baptiste Bernard; she is misidentified in the census as Magdelaine Bergeron. The census lists no children. She and her husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and two horses. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2421; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.099 | Anne | Landry | 01/01/1734 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Marie LeBlanc | Charles Landry | Married Michel Bourgeois, son of Paul Bourgeois and Marie Josèphe Brun (LeBlanc?), at Cabannocé, May 2, 1768. | Louis (ca. 1769), Sophie (born 1770), Angélique (born 1771), Victoire (born 1773), Jean Baptiste (born 1774), Marie Anne (baptized April 14, 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Michel Bourgeois. In addition to her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: jean Baptiste Bourgeois, her son, 2 years old; Sophie (Soffie) Bourgeois, her daughter, 7 years old; Angélique Bourgeois, her daughter, 5 years old; and Victoire Bourgeois, her daughter, 4 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fourteen cows, and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 17, 57. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.100 | Rosalie | Dugas | 01/01/1750 | Married François Landry. | Marguerite (born 1771), Marie Rose (born 1773), Edouard (born 1775) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of François Landry. In addition to her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Edouard Landry, her son, 2 years old; Marguerite Landry, her daughter, 6 years old; Marie Rose Landry, her daughter, 4 years old; and Jean Mire, a hired laborer, 28 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. The 1777 census indicates that they owned no slaves. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.101 | Jean | Mire | 01/01/1749 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-eight-year-old day laborer hired by the family of François Landry and Rosalie Dugas. The census suggests that he lived with his employers. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.102 | François | Savoie (Savoy) | 01/01/1740 | Acadia | Married Anne Thibodeau, October 5, 1766. Signed a marriage contract with Marie Martin, daughter of Ambroise Martin of Ile St. Jean (present-day Prince Edward Island), August 22, 1769. Savoie contributed 500 livres to the marriage. Subsequently married Marie Martin. | François (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767), Jean (born 1770), Marie (born 1771) | He was a resident of Cabannocé in 1766. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-eight-year-old married man. He lived one league from the residence of Cabannocé Co-Commandant Nicolas Verret. On July 5, 1776, Nicolas Cantrelle, acting commandant of the Cabannocé District, informed Governor Luís de Unzaga that "a poor settler named François Savoy" was traveling to New Orleans to request gubernatorial permission to travel to the Attakapas District for the purpose of receiving medical treatment from his brother-in-law, physician Antoine Bordat, for an unspecified illness. According to Cantrelle this illness had incapacitated Savoie, who had been unable to afford treatment locally. The illness had devastated Savoie's family because the head of the household had been unable to plant a crop for their subsistence. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Martin, his wife, 31 years old; François Savoie, his son, 13 years old; Pierre Martin, his son, 10 years old; Jean Martin, his son, 7 years old; and Marie Martin, his daughter, 6 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twenty cows and four horses. On July 9, 1777, Governor Unzaga informed Nicolas Cantrelle that he had "granted François Savoie permission to go and settle at Attakapas because of his illness." | List of Acadians Who Have Been Married Since the Establishment of Kabahanossé (Cabannocé), February 14, 1768, AGI, PPC, 187A; Marriage contact, August 22, 1769, Original Acts, Volume I, n.p., Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; St. Martin Parish Clerk of Court's Office, St. Martinville, La.; Nicolas Cantrelle to Luís de Unzaga, July 5, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:149-150vo; Luís de Unzaga to Nicolas Cantrelle, July 9, 1776, AGI, PPC, 189B:151; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:508. | 1.766 | 03/12/1780 | Opelousas District, Louisiana | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.103 | François | Savoie | fils | 01/01/1764 | Anna Thibodeau | François Savoie | Married Appolonie Louise (Lusia) Potier at the Opelousas Church, September 4, 1792. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old in the household of François Savoie and Marie Martin. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, 1:508. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.104 | Marie | LeBlanc | 01/01/1752 | Married Louis Pacquet. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Louis Pacquet. In addition to herself and her forty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Lambremont, an orphan, 8 years old; and Charles Gaudet, a bachelor, 25 years old. She and her husband owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned twelve cows and three horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.105 | Charles | Gaudet | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-two-year-old bachelor living 2 1/4 leagues from the residence of commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living in the household of Louis Pacquet and Marie LeBlanc. The census also indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River, as well as eight cows and two horses. He owned no slaves. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.106 | Charles | Comeau | 01/01/1722 | Married Marguerite Babin. | Anne (born 1763), François (born 1769) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Babin, his wife, 49 years old; François Comeau, his son, 8 years old; and Anne Comeau, his daughter, 14 years old. Charles Comeau and his family owned a small tract of land with three arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.107 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1728 | Married Charles Comeau. | Anne (born 1763), François (born 1769) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-nine-year-old spouse of Charles Comeau. In addition to herself and her fifty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: François Comeau, her son, 8 years old; and Anne Comeau, her daughter, 14 years old. She and her family owned a small tract of land with three yards frontage. In addition, they owned sixteen cows. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.108 | Anne | Comeau | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Babin | Charles Comeau | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fourteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.109 | Baptiste (Jean Baptiste) | Bourgeois | 01/01/1733 | Married (2) Osite Melanson (Melançon). | First marriage: Jean Baptiste, fils (born 1761), Joseph (born 1765), Pierre (born 1769), Tadée [sic] (born 1771)Second marriage: Paul (born 1775) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around July 12, 1762. British records from Fort Edward, dated August 9, 1762, indicate that two members of his family were held as prisoners, but the family received only 1 1/3 rations. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, a thirty-seven-year-old married man, and a native of Acadia. He lived 1 3/4 leagues from the residence of Cabannocé Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite Melanson, his wife, 45 years old; Jean Baptiste, fils, his son, 16 years old; Joseph Bourgeois, his son, 12 years old; Pierre Bourgeois, his son, 8 years old; Tadée [sic] Bourgeois, his son, 8 years old; Paul Bourgeois, his son, 2 years old; Isaac LeBlanc, his stepson, 16 years old; Iozime (Josime) LeBlanc, his stepson, 14 years old; Simon LeBlanc, his stepson, 9 years old; Hélène LeBlanc, his stepdaughter, 11 years old; Marie LeBlanc, his stepdaughter, 5 years old; and Marguerite LeBlanc, his stepdaughter, 4 years old. Baptiste Bourgeois and his family owned a large tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned six slaves, thirty cows, and four horses. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.110 | Joseph | Bourgeois | 01/01/1765 | Jean Baptiste Bourgeois | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twelve-year-old member of the household of Baptiste Bourgeois, his father, and Osite Melanson, his stepmother. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On October 27, 1786, he joined numerous St. Jacques de Cabannocé settlers in signing a petition to the governor requesting permission to destroy a "plague of crows" that was destroying local crops. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Petition to Kill Crows, October 7, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:229-230. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.111 | Pierre | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1767 | Magdeleine Bourgeois | Joseph Terriot (Theriot) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a ten-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.112 | Pierre | Roy | 01/01/1752 | Anne Aubois | Abraham Roy | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a seventeen-year-old member of the household of Abraham Roy, his father, and Magdeleine (Marie, Madeleine) Doucet, his stepmother. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.113 | Charles | Roy | 01/01/1763 | Anne Aubois | Abraham Roy | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Abraham Roy, his father, and Magdeleine (Marie, Madeleine) Doucet, his stepmother. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.114 | Marguerite | Roy | 01/01/1765 | Anne Aubois | Abraham Roy | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of the household of Abraham Roy, her father, and Magdeleine (Marie, Madeleine) Doucet. her stepmother. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.115 | André | Bourgeois | 01/01/1720 | André (born 1753), Marie (born 1765) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: André Bourgeois, his son, 24 years old; and Marie Bourgeois, his daughter, 12 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four cows. The 1777 census suggests that André Bourgeois was a widower. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.116 | André | Bourgeois | 01/01/1753 | André Bourgeois | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old member of his father's household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.117 | Marie | Bourgeois | 01/01/1765 | André Bourgeois | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her father's household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.118 | Charles | Mouton | 01/01/1721 | Acadia | Marie Giroir | Jean Mouton | Married Anne Comeau. | George (born 1756) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old married man. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the fifty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Comeau, his wife, 55 years old; George Mouton, his son, 21 years old; and Marie Mouton, his niece, 12 years old. He and his family occupied a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned thirty cows and three horses. The census shows that they owned no slaves. | His burial record indicates that he was an eighty-seven-year-old widower at the time of his death. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:560. | 17/11/1798 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||
3.119 | Anne | Comeau | 01/01/1722 | Married Charles Mouton. | George (born 1756) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-five-year-old spouse of Charles Mouton. In addition to herself and her fifty-six-year-old husband, her household included George Mouton, her twenty-one-year-old son, and Marie Mouton, her husband's niece, 12 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned thirty cows and three horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.120 | George | Mouton | 01/01/1739 | Anne Comeau | Charles Mouton | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to his parents, the household included Marie Mouton, his first cousin. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.121 | Marie | Mouton | 01/01/1765 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of the household of Charles Mouton, her uncle, and Anne Comeau. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.122 | Michel | Gaudin | 01/01/1751 | Magdelaine Delorry (DeLéry?). | Marie (born 1770), Anne (born 1772) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Magdelaine Delorry, his wife, 27 years old; Marie Gaudin, his daughter, 7 years old; and Anne Gaudin, his daughter, 5 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned sixteen cows and two horses. He appears to have been the Michel Gaudin who, on July 28, 1786, joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. On May 17, 1795, he participated in a meeting of the Cabannocé District notables to discuss means of increasing local security in the wake of the abortive 1795 Pointe Coupée slave uprising. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227; Procès-verbal of an Assembly of Cabannocé Notables Regarding the Proposed Fund to Reimburse Slave Owners for Slaves Expelled from the Colony, May 17, 1795, AGI, PPC, 199:231. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.123 | Rose | Préjean | 01/01/1762 | Marguerite Borel (sometimes Durel, Durelle) | Joseph Préjean | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.124 | Joseph | Préjean | 01/01/1763 | Marguerite Borel (sometimes Durel, Durelle) | Joseph Préjean | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.125 | Joseph | Blanchard (Blanchart) | 01/01/1739 | Acadia | Married Anne Esther Bourgeois. | Félicité (baptized December 16, 1770; married November 8, 1791), Maurice (born May 2, 1774), Joseph (baptized February 19, 1775; married January 4, 1803), Frédéric Silvin (Frédéricque Silvain) (baptized September 29, 1777; married February 17, 1800), Anne Modeste (born February 8, 1783), Jean Pierre (born October 5, 1786) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the first company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier and a native of Acadia. He was thirty-one years of age. He was married and lived one league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. His name is rendered as Joseph Blanchart in the January 23, 1770 list. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Esther Bourgeois, 26 years old; Maurice Blanchard, his son, 3 years old; Joseph Blanchard, his son, 2 years old; Frédéric Blanchard, his son, 1 year old; and Félicité Blanchard, his daughter, 6 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. THey also owned two slaves, twenty-four cows, and four horses. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:27; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 94, 96. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.126 | Anne Esther | Bourgeois | 01/01/1751 | Married Joseph Blanchard. | Félicité (baptized December 16, 1770; married November 8, 1791), Maurice (born May 2, 1774), Joseph (baptized February 19, 1775; married January 4, 1803), Frédéric Silvin (Frédéricque Silvain) (baptized September 29, 1777; married February 17, 1800), Anne Modeste (born February 8, 1783), Jean Pierre (born October 5, 1786) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Joseph Blanchard. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Maurice Blanchard, her son, 3 years old; Joseph Blanchard, her son, 2 years old; Frédéric Blanchard, her son, 1 year old; and Félicité Blanchard, her daughter, 6 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty-four cows, and four horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 94, 96. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.127 | Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Trahan | 01/01/1733 | Married François Hébert. | Élizabeth (born 1765), Honoré (born 1767), Charles (born 1772), Joseph (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the forty-four-year-old spouse of François Hébert. In addition to herself and her forty-two-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Honoré Hébert, her son, 10 years old; Charles Hébert, her son, 5 years old; Joseph Hébert, her son, 1 year old; and Elizabeth Hébert, her daughter, 12 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, sixteen cows, and four horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.128 | Élizabeth | Darois | 01/01/1765 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twelve-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.129 | Pierre | Poirier | 01/01/1764 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a thirteen-year-old orphan living in the household of Jean Léger and Cécile Poirier. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.130 | Veuve | Forest | 01/01/1721 | Rosalie (born 1770), Jean Baptiste (born 1773), Marguerite (born 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-six-year-old head a family of three orphans Jean Baptiste Forest, Rosalie Forest, and Marguerite Forest. She and her children were members of the household of Jean Léger and Cécile Poirier. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.131 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1752 | Married Charles Thibodeau. | Marguerite (born 1770), Magdeleine (born 1772), Jean Charles (born 1775), Marie (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Charles Thibodeau. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Jean Charles Thibodeau, her son, 2 years old; Marguerite Thibodeau, her daughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Thibodeau, her daughter, 5 years old; Marie Thibodeau, her daughter, 7 months old. Marie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, seventeen cows, and three horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.132 | Charles | Thibodeau (Thibodeaux) | 01/01/1741 | Acadia | Married Marie Landry. | Marguerite (born 1770), Magdeleine (born 1772), Jean Charles (born 1775), Marie (born 1776) | Identified by Cabannocé officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A 1770 list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 25 years old; Jean Charles Thibodeau, his son, 2 years old; Marguerite Thibodeau, his daughter, 7 years old; Magdeleine Thibodeau, his daughter, 5 years old; Marie Thibodeau, his daughter, 7 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, seventeen cows, and three horses. On July 28, 1786, he joined with numerous other St. Jacques de Cabannocé residents in signing a petition urging the newly appointed local priest to honor the deceased former priest's debt to the parish's church building fund. | List of Settlers in St. James Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/16; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Petition to Governor Mir¢, July 28, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:227. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.133 | Rosalie | Richard | 01/01/1756 | Catherine Cormier | Jean Baptiste (Jean) Richard | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was a twenty-one-year-old member of her parents' household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.134 | Jean Baptiste | Cormier | 01/01/1738 | Acadia | Married (1) Marguerite Bourg. Signed a marriage contract with Anne Blanchard, widow of Joseph Richard, January 2, 1779. Cormier brought to the marriage property valued at 760 piastres. The marriage contract was witnessed by Victoire Richard, Joseph Cormié (Cormier), Pierre Richard, Joseph Grangé (Granger), and the Chevalier DeClouet. Married (2) Anne Blanchard at the Attakapas church, January 10, 1779. | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a thirty-two-year-old married man. He resided three-fourths of a league from the home of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The May 10, 1777, muster roll indicates that he was a fusilier in the Attakapas District militia. Opelousas post officials compiled an inventory of Cormier's property, January 2, 1779. Jean Baptiste Cormier signed a marriage contract with Anne Blanchard, January 2, 1779. Cormier contributed 760 piastres to the union. His marriage contract with Anne Blanchard identifies Cormier as a resident of the Attakapas district, but the entry for his marriage to Anne Blanchard in the St. Martin de Tours church registers indicates that he was a resident of the Opelousas district, January 10, 1779. Sold land in the Opelousas district to one Latiolais, March 29, 1780. | Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 4-6; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 66-67, 206; Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll for the Attakapas District Militia Unit, May 10, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.135 | Marguerite (Magdelaine, Marie) | Richard | 01/01/1726 | Married Jean Baptiste Cormier. | Jean Baptiste, Marie Anne, Marie, Marguerite (married January 7, 1771), Anastasie (born 1753, married January 27, 1772) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the fifty-one-year-old wife of Jean Baptiste Cormier. In addition to herself and her sixty-eight-year-old husband, her houshold included the following persons: Pierre Bourg, her son-in-law, 24 years old; Anastasie Cormier, her daughter, 24 years old; Marguerite Bourg, her granddaughter, 2 years old; Rosalie Bourg, her granddaughter, 2 years old; Félicité Bourg, her granddaughter, 5 years old; Charles Bourg, an orphan, 15 years old. She and her family owned twelve cows in 1777. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:204. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.136 | Charles | Bourg | 01/01/1762 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a fifteen-year-old orphan living with Jean Baptiste Cormier and Marie Richard. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.137 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1750 | Married Anne Cormier. | Joseph (born 1770), Pierre (born 1772), Benjamin (born 1774), Marguerite (born 1776), Marie Magdeleine (born 1778), Jean Baptiste (born 1779), François (born 1781), Magdeleine (Magdelena) (born 1784), Céleste (Celestina) (born 1787), Marie Céleste (born 1791) | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the right bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-one-year-old married man. He lived one-half league from the residence of Commandant Nicolas Verret. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Anne Cormier, his wife, 30 years old; and Joseph Cormier, his son, 7 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, and two horses. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Pollard, Book of Landry, p. 6; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2525. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.138 | Anne | Cormier | 01/01/1747 | Married Joseph Landry. | Joseph (born 1770), Pierre (born 1772), Benjamin (born 1774), Marguerite (born 1776), Marie Magdeleine (born 1778), Jean Baptiste (born 1779), François (born 1781), Magdeleine (Magdelena) (born 1784), Céleste (Celestina) (born 1787), Marie Céleste (born 1791) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry. In addition to herself and her twenty-seven-year-old husband, her household included Joseph Landry, her seven-year-old son. Anne Cormier and her family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty cows, and two horses. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.139 | Charles | Préjean | 01/01/1736 | Shepody, Acadia | Marie Louise Comeau | Joseph Préjean | Married Marguerite Richard, the daughter of Joseph Richard and Anne Blanchard. | Charles Amand (born November 28, 1765; appears to have died before April 1766); Amable (Aimable) (born ca. February 1769), Simon Pierre (born 1773), Simon Paul (born 1773), Madeleine (born 1775), Rosalie (born ca. 1780), Célestin (born 1782), Anastasie (born 1784) | He and his family appear to have been prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. | The family appears to have arrived in Louisiana in 1765. They probably moved to the Attakpapas District before settling at Cabannocé. The April 9, 1766, census of Cabannocé indicates that Charles Préjean and his wife Marguerite Richard occupied a parcel of land measuring six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. He owned one firearm. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the thirty-two-year-old head of a household that included the following individuals: Marguerite Richard, his wife, 24 years old; and Aimable, his son, 7 months old. The family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned three cattle, twenty-four hogs, and one musket. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that a thirty-three-year-old married man. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of Ascension Parish as the thirty-three-year-old head of a hosehold that included his wife, twenty-six-year-old Marguerite Richard, and Aimable Préjean, his son. Identified by Assumption Parish officials as a local farmer with surplus rice and/or corn during the 1770 colonial grain shortage. A December 25, 1770, list indicates that he had thirty barrels of surplus corn. Joined with numerous other Acadians in complaining vociferously about an official governmental land survey conducted by Chevalier de Bellevue which drastically reduced the size of his property, ca. May 27, 1771. Indicated that he would migrate to the Attakapas District if the original boundaries were not restored. On December 26, 1773, Charles Préjean purchased the land of Joseph Préjean at a probate sale. At the time of the purchase, the land was bounded above by the property of Charles Préjean and below by the property of Marin Préjean. On December 13, 1775, Charles Préjean and his wife sold to Amant Babin the property that they had purchased on December 26, 1773. At the time of the 1775 sale, improvements to the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring twenty-two by sixteen feet. The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was the forty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Richard, his wife, 31 years old; Aimable Préjean, his son, 8 years old; Simon Préjean, his son, 6 years old; Marie Préjean, his daughter, 3 years old; and Magdeleine Prejean, his daughter, 18 months old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fourteen cows, three horses, two sheep, four hogs, and two muskets. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 2:231; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2571; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:607-608; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Settlers in Assumption Parish Who Have Corn and Rice Surpluses, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:5/13; Chevalier de Bellevue to Luís de Unzaga, May 27, 1771, AGI, PPC, 188C:64; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 87. | 1.765 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.140 | Anastasie (Marie) | Richard | 01/01/1759 | Married Basile Landry. | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the eighteen-year-old spouse of Basile Landry. In addition to herself and her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Veuve Richard, her mother, 51 years old; Pélagie Richard, her sister, 8 years old. She and her husband owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eighteen cows, three horses, sixteen hogs, and two muskets. On November 4, 1777, Marie Richard and her husband, Basile Landry, sold to Firmin Broussard a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | She died sometime before September 27, 1786. She is identified as Marie Richard in Basile Landry's second marriage record. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.141 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a voyageur (itinerant fur trader). His age is not indicated in the census. He owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.142 | Isabelle (Élisabeth, Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1755 | Marguerite Flan | Abram (Abraham) Landry | Married François Duon (Duhon). Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contends that the couple was married on November 9, 1772. | Marie Juie (born 1774), Adélaïde (born 1775), Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born ca. January 1777) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of François Duon (Duhan). In addition to herself and her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Marie Duon (Duhan), her daughter, 3 years old; Adélaïde Duon (Duhan), her daughter, 2 years old; and Isabelle Duon (Duhan), her daughter, 4 months old. She and her family owned a tract of land with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned nine cows, two horses, three hogs, and two muskets. | Genealogist Sidney A. Marchand contents that she died on November 29, 1783, at the age of twenty-nine years. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:451; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 37, 55. | 04/10/1786 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.143 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | Élizabeth Gaudin | Joseph LeBlanc | Married Simon LeBlanc. | Joseph (born 1774), Marie Madeleine (born 1775), Marguerite (born 1779), Simon (born 1781), Louis (born 1783), Balthazar (born 1786), Céleste (born 1788) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old wife of Simon LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her twenty-two-year-old husband, her household included Joseph LeBlanc, her three-year-old son, and Magdeleine LeBlanc, her eighteen-month-old daughter. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.144 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1755 | Married Anselme Forest. | Marie Madeleine (born 1774), Jean Louis (born 1776), Paul (born 1778), Augustin (born 1780) | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.145 | Pierre | Martin | 01/01/1755 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old hired hand living in the household of François Mollère, a surgeon. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.146 | Marguerite | Babin | 01/01/1743 | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a twenty-four-year-old member of the household of Charles Gaudin dit Lincour and Marie Babin, her twenty-five-year-old sister. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.147 | Anne (Marie Josèphe) | Dupuis (Dupuy) | 01/01/1742 | Married Anselme Bellisle (Bellîle). | Paul (born 1764), Marie (born 1771), Françoise (born 1773; married February 4, 1793), Marguerite (baptized September 11, 1775), Augustin (born 1777), Joseph Anselme (baptized May 22, 1778) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the thirty-five-year-old spouse of Anselme Bellisle. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul Bellisle (Belilsle), her son, 13 years old; Marie Bellisle (Belilsle), her daughter, 6 years old; Françoise Bellisle (Belilsle), her daughter, 4 years old; and Marguerite Bellisle (Belilsle), her daughter, 2 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, thirteen cows, three horses, eight hogs, and two muskets. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old wife of Anselme Bellisle. In addition to herself and her spoue, her household included the following persons: Paul, her son, 24 years old; Marie, her daughter, 16 years old; François, her son, 14 years old; (name and relationship illegible), 12 years old; (name and relationship illegible), 10 years old; and Augustin, evidently her son, 8 years old. Dupuis and her family owned one slave, a tract of land with six arpents frontage, fifteen barrels of rice, fifty barrels of corn, fourteen cattle, four horses, and twenty hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-seven-year-old wife of Anselme Bellisle (Bellîle). In addition to herself and her forty-nine-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Paul (Pol), her son, 27 years old; Marie, her daughter, 17 years old; François, her son, 15 years old; Marguerite (Margritte), her daughter, 14(?) years old; Joseph, her son, 13 years old; and Augustin, her son, 9 years old. Marie Josèphe Dupuis and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned one slave. They also owned fifteen barrels of rice, sixty barrels of corn, fifteen cows, four horses, and twenty-one hogs. Their property holdings ranked them as one of the wealthiest Acadian families in the Lafourche District. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.148 | Marie | Corporon (often Dupuis) | 01/01/1733 | Married François Simoneau, a native of Lorraine. François Simoneau died on July 24, 1791. | Joseph (born 1760), René (born 1761), Marguerite (born 1765), Alexis (born 1767), Maurice (born 1769), Marie (born 1771), Françoise (born 1775) | On December 25, 1771, François Simoneau was the highest bidder for the tract of land offered for sale at the public auction of the Joseph Gaudin dit Lincour estate. This property included six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River, approximately twenty-five leagues above New Orleans. Improvements included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction measuring thirty by eleven feet. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old spouse of François Simoneau (Simonos). In addition to herself and her forty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Simoneau (Simonos), her son, 17 years old; René Simoneau (Simonos), her son, 16 years old; Alexis Simoneau (Simonos), her son, 10 years old; Maurice Simoneau (Simonos), her son, 8 years old; Marguerite Simoneau (Simonos), her daughter, 12 years old; Marie Simoneau (Simonos), her daughter, 6 years old; and Françoise Simoneau (Simonos), her daughter, 2 years old. She and her family owned a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage. They also owned one slave, twenty-six cows, three horses, twenty-three hogs, and two muskets. On July 14, 1787, Simoneau sold the land he acquired in 1771 to François Mollère. At the time of the 1787 sale, the property was located between the lands of Evan Jones and Claude LeBlanc. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Marie Dupuis was the fifty-three-year-old spouse of François Simoneau. In addition to herself and her sixty-year-old husband, her household included Alexis, her twenty-two-year-old son, Maurice her twenty-year-old son; Marie, her seventeen-year-old daughter, and Paul (Paulon), her fourteen-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of rice, 120 barrels of corn, seven cows, eight horses, and eighteen hogs. | Identified as Marie Corporon in her burial record. Her burial record indicates that she was sixty-seven years of age at the time of her death. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:204; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 93-94. | 27/09/1802 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.149 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Married (1) Thomas Comes, a royal surgeon. Married (2) Jérôme LeBlanc, son of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Magdeleine Landry. Married (3) Jean Baptiste Pechoux (sometimes LeCheux). | First marriage: Joseph (Comeau? Commesse?) (born 1769), Célenie(?) (married October 6, 1817) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Jérôme LeBlanc. In addition to herself and her twenty-six-year-old husband, her household included Joseph (Comeau? Comesse?), an eight-year-old boy, evidently her son by a previous marriage. Magdeleine Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, tweove cows, eight hogs, and two muskets. On December 30, 1794, Landry sold to Joseph Comex a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the right bank o the Mississippi River. The land was bounded above by the vendor and below by Ameroi Caisse. | Ascension Parish genealogist Sidney A. Marchand maintains that Landry died on October 15, 1800. He also indicates that she was fifty-three years of age at the time of her death. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 67-68; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:43Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:434-435; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 28. | 05/10/1800 | 06/10/1800 | Ascension Parish, La. | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.150 | Isabelle (Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1753 | Married Joseph Landry dit Belhomme. | Louis (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry dit Belhomme. In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, her household included Louis Landry, her one-year-old son, and the Veuve Landry, her sixty-six-year-old mother-in-law. Isabelle (Elizabeth) Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, three cows, two horses, eight sheep, twenty hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.151 | Isabelle (Elisabeth, Élizabeth) | Landry | 01/01/1747 | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was a thirty-year-old member of the household of Etienne Landry and Marie Landry, her sister. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.152 | Rose Osite (Ozitte) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1753 | Married Joseph Babin. | Rosalie (born 1772), Marie (born 1773), Joseph (born 1774), Paul (born 1776), Marguerite (this is possiblly Marie) (married September 18, 1797), Anne Lise (married October 14, 1807), Simon (married April 23, 1814), Adélaïde (married August 19, 1816), Claude Raphaël (married July 31, 1819) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Babin. In addition to herself and her twenty-eight-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Babin, her son, 3 years old; Paul Babin, her son, 1 year old; Rosalie Babin, her daughter, 5 years old; and Marie Babin, her daughter, 4 years old. Osite LeBlanc and her family owend a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, one horse, sixteen hogs, and one musket. | Her burial record indicates that she was sixty-six years old at the time of her death. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 9. | 27/06/1813 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.153 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | dit Dios Rose | 01/01/1767 | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of the household of Amand Gauterot and Marie Landry. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.154 | Pierre | Landry | dit La Vieillarde | 01/01/1722 | Married Marie Landry; in view of the ages of his children, she was evidently not Pierre Landry's first wife. | Pierre (born 1756), Anne (born 1759), Joseph (born 1761), Julien (born 1763), Armand (born 1771), Jean (born 1773), Paul (born 1775), Rosalie (born ca. December 1776) | Identified as Pierre Landry dit La Vielliarde in the December 3, 1775, slave census of Ascension Parish, La. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that one slave. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 33 years old; Joseph Landry, his son, 16 years old; Pierre Landry, his son, 21 years old; Julien Landry, his son, 14 years old; Armand Landry, his son, 6 years old; Jean Landry, his son, 4 years old; Paul Landry, his son, 2 years old; Anne Landry, his daughter, 18 years old; and Rosalie Landry, his daughter, 5 months old. Pierre Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.155 | Marie | Landry | 01/01/1744 | Married Pierre Landry dit La Vieillarde. | Pierre (born 1756), Anne (born 1759), Joseph (born 1761), Julien (born 1763), Armand (born 1771), Jean (born 1773), Paul (born 1775), Rosalie (born ca. December 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Landry dit La Vieillarde. In addition to herself and her forty-five-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, probably a stepson, 16 years old; Pierre Landry, probably a stepson, 21 years old; Julien Landry, probably a stepson, 14 years old; Armand Landry, probably her son, 6 years old; Jean Landry, probably her son, 4 years old; Paul Landry, probably her son, 2 years old; Anne Landry, probably her stepdaughter, 18 years old; and Rosalie Landry, her daughter, 5 months old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They also owned three slaves. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.156 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1756 | Pierre Landry | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a twenty-one-year-old resident of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, evidently his stepmother. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.157 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1761 | Pierre Landry | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a sixteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, evidently his stepmother. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.158 | Julien | Landry | 01/01/1763 | Pierre Landry | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was a fourteen-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry, his father, and Marie Landry, evidently his stepmother. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.159 | Joseph | Babin | dit Dios | 01/01/1754 | Anne Forest (Forêt) | Pierre Babin | Married Marine (Anne, Marie Anne) LeBlanc, daughter of Désire LeBlanc and Marie Magdeleine Landry, at Ascension Parish, La., February 19, 1775. | Paul (Hypolite) (born November 20, 1775), Charles (born May 12, 1777), Benjamin (married May 15, 1797), Jérôme, Bonaventure (married November 8, 1788), Anne Marguerite (married December 21, 1783), Nicolas (married January 21, 1805), and Rosemond (born March 28, 1789) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Anne LeBlanc, his twent;y-three-year-old wife, and Hypolite (Hipolitte) Babin, his one-year-old son. Joseph Babin and his family owend a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eight cattle, two horses, twelve hogs, and two muskets. The probate inventory compiled shortly after his death indicates that he owned a house of sur sol construction. This house had a twenty-foot front gallery. His estate was sold at public auction on December 30, 1783. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Nora Lee Clouatre Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 68-69; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2: 47; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 8. | 01/02/1782 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.160 | Anne | LeBlanc | 01/01/1754 | Married Joseph Babin dit Dios. | Hypolite (Hipolitte) (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Babin dit Dios. In addition to herself and her twenty-three-year-old husband, her household included Hypolite (Hipollite) Babin, her one-year-old son. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eight cows, two horses, twelve hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.161 | Jean Baptiste (often Baptiste) | Breau (Breaux) | 01/01/1726 | Pisiquid, Acadia | Elizabeth Henry | Jean Baptiste Breau | Married Marie (Marie Rose) Landry. | Magdeleine (born 1749), Jean (Jean Baptiste) (born 1751), Armand (Amant, Amand) (born 1754), Anne (born 1754), Jacques (sometimes Fernand) (born 1757), Esther (born 1760) | Served as a delegate representing the Cabannocé Acadians. Signed with his mark (he was illiterate) an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of the Acadians at the Cabannocé District, August 28, 1769. Identified in the September 14, 1769, census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé as the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 39 years old; Jean Breau, his son, 18 years old; Magdeleine Breau, his daughter, 20 years old; Anne Breau, his daughter, 15 years old; Esther Breau, no age indicated. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents; frontage. They owned five cows, nineteen hogs, and one musket. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as the forty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Rose Landry, his wife, 40 years old; Jacques Breau, his son, 13 years old; Armand (Amant, Amand) Breau, 16 years old; Magdeleine Breau, his daughter, age is illegible; Anne Breau, his daughter, 15 years old; Esther (Esthère) Breau, his daughter, 10 years old. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on a petition to Governor Luís de Unzaga, asking that Louis Andry be assigned to undertake a second land survey in the Cabannocé District, October 16, 1773. On May 27, 1776, Jean baptiste Breau sold to Nil (Neil? Nilles?) McDonno (McDonough? MacDonald?) a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located twenty-six leagues above New Orleans, was bounded above by the land of Louis LeConte and below by the property of Joseph Babin. A small house described as being "in ruins" stood on the property acquired by McDonno. On January 7, 1777, Nil McDonno transferred title to the foregoing riverfront property to Jean Baptiste Breau. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the fifty-one-yea-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marie Landry, his wife, 48 years old; Fernand (Hernand) Breau, his son, 20 years old; and Esther Breau, his daughter, 17 years old. Jean Baptiste Breau and his family owned a large tract land with fourteen arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned fifteen cows, three horses, twenty-nine hogs, and three muskets. Baptiste Breau (Braud) was one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." On January 7, 1780, Jean Baptiste Breau and his wife sold to Armand Breau, their son, a tract of land with thirteen arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississipi River. (Genealogist Sidney Marchand indicates that the sale occurred on January 7, 1770, when Armand Breau was still a sixteen-year-old minor. The correct date appears to be 1780.) This land was located twenty-five leagues above New Orleans, between the properties o Simon Landry and Paul Breau. On December 26, 1787, he gave a deposition indicating that Alexis Breau's pirogue had been stolen by slaves owned by François Croizet, fils, and Jean Duon. | Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that Jean Baptiste Breau died between 1786 and 1796. | Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #1769082801; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; Petition to Governor Unzaga, October 16, 1773, AGI, PPC, 189A:498; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Deposition by Jean Baptiste Breau (Breaux), December 26, 1787, AGI, PPC, 191:364; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4. | 1.766 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.162 | Magdeleine | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | Married Olivier Landry. | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Olivier Landry. The couple owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned nine cows, one horse, eight hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.163 | Pélagie | Landry | 01/01/1758 | Adorato(?) Bourque | François Landry | Married Marin Landry. | Anastasie (born 1772), Magadeleine (born 1776) | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Marin Landry. In addition to herself and her twenty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Anastasie Landry, her daughter, 5 years old; and Magdeleine Landry, her daughter, 18 months old. Pélagie Landry and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned two slaves, twenty cows, four horses, ten hogs, and one musket. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:447. | 19/02/1799 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.164 | René (Renée) | Richard | 01/01/1747 | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a thirty-year-old hired hand living in the household of Guillaume (William) Obrians (O'Brien). Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. His name is rendered as Richard, Renée in the 1779 militia list. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.165 | Veuve | Bugeaud | 01/01/1754 | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a twenty-three-year-old member of the household of Pierre Landry and Euphrosine Gauterot. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.166 | Jean Baptiste | Landry | 01/01/1757 | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor who owned a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He also owned six cows, two horses, two sheep, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He is listed among the Acadian militiamen dispatched from St. Jacques de Cabannocé to participate in the 1780 Spanish military campaign against British West Florida, January 16, 1780; the list indicates that he held the rank of fusilier. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to the governor, January 16, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:324-325vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.167 | Fernand | Breau (Breaux, Braud) | 01/01/1757 | Marie Landry | Baptiste Breau | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-year-old member of his parents' household. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.168 | Étienne | Babin | 01/01/1746 | Married Marguerite LeBlanc. | Jacques (born 1768), Magdeleine (born 1769), Victoire (born 1774) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, 1763. | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite LeBlanc, his wife, 30 years old; Joseph Babin, his son, 8 years old; Allain Babin, his son, 5 years old; Constance Babin, his daughter, 8 months old. Étienne Babin and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned three slaves, fifteen cows, two horses, thirty hogs, and one musket. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | 19/12/1788 | St. Gabriel, Louisiana | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.169 | Charles | Landry | 01/01/1739 | Married Marie Babin. | Angel (born 1776) | In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that Charles Landry owned one slave. There were two Charles Landrys of approximately the same age in the parish at the time the census was compiled; neither Landry owned a slave in 1777. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-eight-year-old head of a household that included Marie Babin, his twenty-three-year-old spouse, and Angel Babin, his seven-month-old daughter. | List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.170 | Marie | Babin | 01/01/1754 | Married Charles Landry, the widower of Marie Landry, December 2, 1775. | Angel (born 1776; married January 4, 1796), Céleste (married October 16, 1797), Léger (married October 14, 1807), Marie (married February 10, 1812) | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Charles Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-eight-year-old husband, her household included Angel Babin, her seven-month-old daughter. Marie Babin and her husband owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, seventeen cows, two horses, eighteen hogs, and one musket. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 57. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.171 | Joseph | Guédry (Guidry) | 01/01/1734 | Monique(?) Dupuis. | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the forty-five-year-old head of a household that included Monique(?) (Monie) Dupuis, his thirty-three-year-old wife. The couple owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fifteen cows, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.172 | Monique | Dupuis | 01/01/1744 | Married Joseph Guédry (Guidry). | Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the left bank settlements of Ascension Parish as a twenty-six-year-old member of the household of Pierre Dupuis, her nineteen-year-old brother. The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the thirty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Guédry. She and her husband owned a tract of land with eight arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, fifteen cows, fifteen hogs, and two muskets. | Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.173 | Monique | Dupuis | 01/01/1762 | Anne Dupuis | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Firmin Guédry, her brother. The household also included Veuve Guédry (Anne Dupuis), her forty-four-year-old mother, and Jean Guédry, her seventeen-year-old brother. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.174 | Marie | DUPUIS | 01/01/1755 | Married Prosper Hébert. | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Prosper Hébert. The couple owned a tract of land with seven arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twelve hogs, two horses, four hogs, and one musket. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.175 | Joseph | Breau (Braud, BREAUX) | 01/01/1751 | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was a twenty-six-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned a tract of land with four arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. He also owned four cows, two horses, and one musket. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.176 | François | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1741 | Married Marguerite Breau. | Charles (born 1765), Paul (a twin, born 1767), François (a twin, born 1767), Marie (born 1772) | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that he was the thirty-six-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Breau, his wife, 40 years old; Charles Babin, his son, 12 years old; Paul Babin, his son, 10 years old; François Babin, his son, 10 years old; and Marie Babin, his daughter, 5 years old. François Breau and his family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eleven cows, nine hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.177 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | 01/01/1737 | Married François Breau. | Charles (born 1765), Paul (a twin, born 1767), François (a twin, born 1767), Marie (born 1772) | The April 15, 1777, census of the settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River between Maurice Conway's (Canoée's) property and François Babin's property in Ascension Parish indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of François Breau. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Charles Babin, her son, 12 years old; Paul Babin, her son, 10 years old; François Babin, her son, 10 years old; and Marie Babin, her daughter, 5 years old. Marguerite Babin and her family owned a tract of land with nine arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned eleven cows, nine hogs, and two muskets. | General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.178 | Charles | Bourg | 01/01/1733 | Married (1) Marie Josèphe Dugas. Married (2) Marie Madeleine Granger. | Sebastien Joseph (born ca. 1766), Jean Baptiste (ca. 1768), Marie Josèphe (ca. 1764), Élisabeth (born ca. 1771) | Resided in the Breton communities of Plouer and Pleurtuit, 1759-1760. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, France, 1760-1766. Resided at Saint-Servan, Brittany, France, 1766-1771. Resided at Saint-Coulomb, 1771-1773. Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 16. | 1.785 | sawyer | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.179 | Anne | Douairon (Doiron) | 01/01/1739 | Married Jean Baptiste La Garenne (LaGarenne). | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.180 | Jean Baptiste | La Garenne (Lagarenne) | 01/01/1730 | Married Anne Douairon (Doiron). | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.181 | Marie Madeleine | LeBlanc | Veuve Isidore Trahan | 01/01/1730 | Married Isidore Trahan. She was a widow by May 1785. | Paul (Isidore) (born 1764), Simon, Alexis Romain (born 1774), Marie, Rosalie (born 1779) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with five children. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.182 | Paul (Isidore) | Trahan | 01/01/1764 | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled with his mother and four siblings. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.183 | Simon | Trahan | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled with his mother and four siblings. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.184 | Alexis Romain | Trahan | 01/01/1774 | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled with his mother and four siblings. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.185 | Marie | Trahan | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled with her mother and four siblings. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.186 | Rosalie | Trahan | 01/01/1779 | Marie Madeleine LeBlanc | Isidore Trahan | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled with her mother and four siblings. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.187 | Veuve | Comeau | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that her household included Thomas Comeau, her nine-year-old son, and Jean Comeau, her five-year-old son. She and her family owned three cows and eight hogs. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | 1.765 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.188 | Élizabeth | Broussard (Brossard) | 01/01/1763 | A general census of the Attakapas District compiled around 1769 indicates that she was a six-year-old member of François Broussard's household. | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.189 | Élizabeth | Hébert | 01/01/1754 | General census of the settlers and cattle of the Attakapas District, [labeled 1794, but actually ca. 1769], AGI, PPC, 210:228 et seq. | Hebert | 1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.190 | Madeleine (Madeleine Modeste) | Hébert | 01/01/1738 | Marguerite Trahan | Jean Hébert | Jean (Jean Baptiste) Hébert. | Michel (born 1764), Pierre (born 1767), Marie Louise (born 1769), Félicité (born 1771) | Deported to England. She and her family occupied farm no. 42 at the village of Bormanahic, Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, ca. 1767. Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Identified in the passenger manifest as the head of a household including his wife and four children. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 43; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 31-36. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.191 | Marguerite | Gaudet (Godet) | 01/01/1776 | Marie Hébert | Louis Godet (Gaudet) | She and her family appear in two different sets of 1785 passenger lists. One set indicates that they departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans, and arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. The family also appears in the passenger lists of the Caroline, which departed France aboard the Caroline, a 200-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, October 15, 1785. The Caroline arrived in Louisiana on December 12, 1785. Circumstantial evidence suggests that her family probably sailed aboard the Caroline. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; 78-84; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 51-52. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.192 | François | Landry (Landri) | 01/01/1741 | Married (2?) Isabelle (surname?). | Isabelle (Élizabeth) (born 1770), Luc (Lucque) Alexandre (born 1772), Marguerite (Margueritte) (born 1777), Rosalie (born 1779) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-seven-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle (no surname indicated), 18 years old; Luc (Lucque) Alexandre, his son, 16 years old; Marguerite (Margueritte), his daughter, 11 years old; Rosalie, his daughter, 9 years old; Marie Richard, a spinster, 47 years old; and Joseph LeBlanc, a bachelor, 40 years old. François Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, fifty barrels of corn, five cows, four horses, and thirteen hogs. Identified as François Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the forty-eight-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle, his daughter, 19 years old; Don Alexandre, his son, 18 years old; Marguerite (Margritte), his daughter, 12 years old; Rosalie, his daughter, 10 years old; Marie (Mari) Richard, a spinster, 47 years old; and Joseph LeBlanc, a bachelor, 40(?) years old. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.193 | Marie (Mari) | Richard | 01/01/1741 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-seven-year-old spinster in the household of François Landry. Other members of the household included François Landry, Isabelle Landry, Luc (Lucque) Alexandre Landry, Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry, and Joseph LeBlanc. Identified as Mari Richard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-seven-year-old spinster residing with the family of François Landry. In addition to herself, the household included François Landry, 48 years old; Isabelle Landry, 19 years old; Alexandre Landry, 18 years old; Marguerite (Margritte) Landry, 12 years old; Rosalie Landry, 10 years old; and Joseph LeBlanc, a bachelor, 40(?) years old. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.194 | Joseph | Landry | dit Chinoux | 01/01/1758 | New England (i.e., the English seaboard colonies) | Dorothée Bourg | Francois Landry | Married Osite (Ositte) Landry, the widow of Pierre Bugeau and the daughter of Pierre Landry dit Pierrot à Jacques and Geneviève Broussard, at Cabannocé, February 23, 1778. Simon LeBlanc and Jean Baptiste Granger witnessed the marriage record. | Hubert Marin, Marguerite (born July 31, 1782), Constance (born 1786), Joseph (born November 9, 1791)Genealogist Bona Arsenault maintains that their children included Osite (born 1778), Élizabeth (born 1780), Marguerite (born 1782), and Isabelle (born 1788) | The July 10, 1785, muster roll indicates that he held the rank of second corporal in the Lafourche District militia unit. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Osite (Ositte) Landry, his wife, 23 years old; Marguerite Landry, his daughter, 2 years old; and Constance Landry, his wife, 1 year old. Joseph Landry and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, six barrels of rice, sixty barrels of corn, ten cows, six horses, and twenty hogs. He served in a small militia detachment assigned to arrest Pierre Landry dit Pitre (Pittre), ca. June 10, 1776. On April 4, 1778, Joseph Landry dit Chinoux purchased from Firmin Bourssard a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-five leagues above New Orleans, was situated between the lands of Pierre Landry and isaac LeBlanc. Improvements on said property included a house of sur sol construction measuring eighteen by twelve feet. The house featured a four-foot-wide front gallery. On December 21, 1782, Joseph Landry dit Chinoux "and others" purchased from Olivier Landry a parcel of land on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Improvements on this property included a large house of sur sol construction measuring thirty by twelve feet. On June 16, 1786, he gave a deposition at a formal inquiry into Landry's arrest. Filed a formal complaint against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, claiming that the Ascension Parish church warden had insulted him and other local residents, ca. June 17, 1786. The official list of complainants indicates that Joseph Landry was Pierre Landry's cousin. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household including Osite Landry, his twenty-five-year-old wife, Marguerite (Margritta), his three-year-old daughter, and Constance, his two-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine barrels of rice, seventy-five barrels of corn, ten cows, nine horses, and thirty-four hogs. On October 11, 1791, he joined with three other prominent local Lafourche District Acadians in petitioning the governor for assistance for local flood victims.On October 31, 1791, he joined numerous prominent Lafourche District Acadians in signing a petition to the Spanish crown for financial assistance to improve the levees along the Mississippi River and to prevent the annual flooding that had taken a terrible toll on the local settlers. On July 26, 1797, Louis Judice reported that Landry had become in a controversy involving Étienne LeBlanc's succession. | Muster Roll of the Lafourche District Militia, July 10, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:431; Investigation into the Charges Made Against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, Church Warden of the Church of the Ascension, Lafourche District, June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; List of Setters Who Were Insulted by Mr. [Pierre Landry dit] Pitre and Who Demand Justice, ca. June 17, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:294; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:427, 430, 445; Isaac LeBlanc, Joseph Landry dit Chinoux, Bonaventure Babin, and Paul Braud (Breau) to the governor, October 11, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:397; Petition, October 31, 1791, AGI, PPC, 204:401-403, Louis Judice to the Governor, July 26, 1797, AGI, PPC, 213:366; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 62, 63; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:430; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.195 | Osite (Ositte, Ozite) | Landry | 01/01/1765 | Geneviève Broussard (Brossard) | Pierre Landry | Married (1) Pierre Bugeaud (Bigaut), son of Étienne Bugeaud and Brigitte Chaine, at Ascension Parish, La. April 22, 1776. Pierre Landry and Jean Baptiste Granger witnessed the marriage record. Pierre Bugeaud was interred at Ascension Parish, La., on October 28, 1776. Married (2) Joseph Landry dit Chinoux, son of François Landry and Dorothée Bourg, at Cabannocé, February 23, 1778. | Hubert Marin, Marguerite (born July 31, 1782), Constance (born 1786), Joseph (born November 9, 1791)Genealogist Bona Arsenault maintains that their children included Osite (born 1778), Élizabeth (born 1780), Marguerite (born 1782), and Isabelle (born 1788) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old wife of Joseph Landry. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Joseph Landry, her husband, 30 years old; Marguerite Landry, her daughter, 2 years old; Constance Landry, her daughter, 1 year old. She and her family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage, six barrels of rice, sixty barrels of corn, ten cows, six horses, and twenty horses. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Joseph Landry. In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, the household included Marguerite, her three-year-old daughter, and Constance, her two-year-old daughter. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned nine barrels of rice, seventy-five barrels of corn, ten cows, nine horses, and thirty-four hogs. | Her burial record indicates that she died at the age of fifty-eight years. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:169, 435; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:430; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 24, 62; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523. | 04/12/1813 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.196 | Anne | Landry | Acadia | Élizabeth Dupuis (Dupuy) | Pierre Landry | Married Joseph Comeau, son of Alexis Comeau and Elizabeth Dupuis, at Cabannocé, June 8, 1778. The marriage record was witnessed by Mathurin Benoit and Honoré Breau. | Victoire (born 1779), Rosalie (born 1781; married January 23, 1809), Joseph (born 1783), Marie (born 1786) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that Anne Landry was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Joseph Comeau. In addition to herself, her household included the following persons: Joseph Comeau, her husband, 36 years old; Victoire Comeau, her daughter, 9 years old; Rosalie Comeau, her daughter, 7 years old; Joseph Comeau, her son, 5 years old; and Marie Comeau, her daughter, two years old. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Joseph Comeau (Como). In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, her household included the following persons: Victoire Comeau, her daughter, 9 years old; Rosalie Comeau, her daughter, 8 years old; Joseph Comeau, her son, 5 years old; and Marie Comeau, her daughter, 3 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned two slaves. They also owned eight barrels of rice, 200 barrels of corn, eight cows, ten horses, and fifty hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:418; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 29. | 1.768 | 11/10/1797 | Assumption Parish | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.197 | Amant (Amand) | Landry | 01/01/1764 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He owned a trace of land with six arpents frontage, four barrels of rice, twenty barrels of corn, four cows, two horses, and twelve hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was s twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned four barrels of rice, twenty barrels of corn, six cows, three horses, and eight hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.198 | Agnès | Pitre | 01/01/1749 | Married Joseph Guérin, son of Dominique Guérin and Anne LeBlanc. | Françoise (born ca. 1785) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old wife of Joseph Guérin. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one horse, and four hogs. Her daughter, Françoise Guérin, does not appear in the census, suggesting that she died en route to, or shortly after arrival in, Louisiana. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Joseph Guérin. In addition to herself and her thirty-six-year-old husband, the household included Joseph Guérin, her one-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and eight hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 14; 21; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.199 | Pierre Charles | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | Jean Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with his father Jean Hébert and with the family of his uncle, Pierre Hébert. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, 28. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.200 | Mathurin | Aucoin | 01/01/1752 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirty-three-year-old bachelor living in the household of Fabien Aucoin and Marguerite Dupuis. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirty-three-year-old "laborer" living in the household of Fabien Aucoin and Marguerite (Margritta) Dupuis. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.201 | Anne | Bourg (Bourq) | Marie Commeau (Comeau) | Allain Bourg | Although not listed in the passenger manifests, she probably sailed to Louisiana aboard the Beaumont. The Beaumont departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a member of the household of Simon Dugas, her brother-in-law, and Marie Bourg (Bourq), her sister. The household also included Anne Dugas, Simon Dugas' sister. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a seventeen-year-old member of Louis Aucoin's household. In addition to herself, the household included the following persons: Louis Aucoin, no relationship indicated, 18 years old; Simon Dugas (Duga), her brother-in-law, 51 years old; Marie Bourg, her sister, 25 years old; and Anne Dugas, Simon Dugas' sister, 25 years old. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:261; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 31; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | François Bourg and Madeleine Hébert | Joseph Comeau and Marguerite Hébert | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.202 | Simon | Landry | 01/01/1728 | Married Françoise Trahan, the widow of Pierre LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., May 21, 1787. The marriage certificate was witnessed by Jacques Mius D'Entremont and Joseph Michel. Françoise Trahan died sometime before the 1788 census of the Lafourche District was compiled. The groom was probably the widower of Margueritte (Marguerite) Gotreau (Gauterot). | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the sixty-year-old head of a household that included Simon LeBlanc, his twelve-year-old stepson, and Marie LeBlanc, his twenty-one-year-old stepdaughter. Simon Landry and his stepchildren occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Simon Landri in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a sixty-one-year-old widower and the head of a household that incuded Simon LeBlanc, his fourteen-year-old stepson, and Marie LeBlanc, his twenty-two-year-old stepdaughter. Simon Landry and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and six hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:449, 704; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 66. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.203 | Joseph | Gautrau (Gauterot) | 01/01/1770 | Anne Pitre | Joseph Gautrau (Gauterot) | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. Accompanied his parents and five siblings during the voyage. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 38. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.204 | Joseph Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | 01/01/1765 | Pleudihen, Brittany, France | Margueritte Thibaudeau (Thibodeau) | Étienne Boudreau (Boudrot, Boudereau) | Married (1) Marie Pitre at New Orleans, January 28, 1786. Vicente Llorca and Josef Martinez witnessed the marriage record. Married (2) Marguerite Ludivine Pitre at Ascension Parish, La., October 4, 1787. Etienne Boudrot and Marie Rose LeBlanc witnessed the marriage certificate. | Second marriage: Marguerite Marthe (born September 3, 1788), Joseph François (born January 6, 1790), Julien Marie (born February 14, 1791), Felonia Cécille (born January 7, 1793), Isidore (born March 26, 1794), Constance Rose (born October 13, 1795), Simon Valentin (born September 27, 1797), François Célestin (born March 9, 1799), Marie Rose (baptized April 5, 1801), René Toussaint (Raynaldo Todos Santos) (born October 1, 1802) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-three-year-old head of a household including Marie, his twenty-one-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Marie, his twenty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one horse, and eight hogs. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:37; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-118. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.205 | Marie | boudrot (Boudreaut) | Veuve Navarre (Navare) | 01/01/1763 | Jean (born 1785) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a twenty-five-year-old widow and the head of a household that included Jean Navarre, her three-year-old son. She and her son occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and three hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.206 | Joseph | LeBlanc | 01/01/1752 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirty-six-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty-barrels of corn and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.207 | Marguerite (Margritta) | Richard | 01/01/1743 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a forty-five-year-old member of a household including Marie Richard, her forty-eight-year-old sister, and Elisabeth (Elizabeth) Richard, her thirty-five-year-old sister. She and her siblings occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. Identified as Margritta Richard in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-six-year-old head of a household that included Elisabeth (Elizabeth) Richard, her thirty-six-year-old sister. She and her sister occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.208 | Élisabeth (Élizabeth) | Richard | 01/01/1753 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a thirty-five-year-old member of a household including Marie Richard, her forty-eight-year-old sister, and Marguerite (Margueritte) Richard, her forty-five-year-old sister. She and her siblings occupied a tract with six arpents of frontage. They also owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old member of a household headed by Marguerite (Margritta) Richard, her forty-six-year-old sister. The sisters occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.209 | Jean | Trahan | 01/01/1751 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirty-seven-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and four hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Passport Issued to Pierre Broussard and Others by Alexandre DeClouet, December 29, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:256. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.210 | Marie | Vincent | 01/01/1761 | Married Louis Pinel (Pinelle). | Marie Louise (baptized October 1, 1786), Modeste Anne (Aneta) (baptized November 6, 1787), Jean Louis (born May 10, 1789), Joseph Maurice (born May 25, 1791) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Louis Pinel (Pinelle). She and her husband act of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Louis Pinel. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty-six barrels of corn and five hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:591-592; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.211 | Joseph | Boudrot (Boudreaut) | 01/01/1764 | Married Rose Gauterot (Gautreaut). | Jeanne Adélaïde (a twin; born 1786; baptized May 30, 1787), Rose Anne (a twin; born 1786; baptized May 30, 1787) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included Rose Gauterot (Gautreaut), his twenty-three-year-old wife, and his twin daughters Jeanne Adélaïde (Adélaÿde) and Rose, both two years of age. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114, 117-118. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.212 | Rose | Gauterot (Gautreaut) | 01/01/1765 | Married Joseph Boudrot (Boudreaut). | Jeanne Adélaïde (a twin; born 1786; baptized May 30, 1787), Rose Anne (a twin; born 1786; baptized May 30, 1787) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Joseph Boudrot (Boudreaut). Her household also included her twin daughters Jeanne Adélaïde (Adélaÿde) and Rose, both two years of age. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114, 117. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.213 | François | Bodeloche (Bodouche, Boudeloche) | 01/01/1764 | Married Marie Magdeleine Trahan at Ascension Parish, La., May 26, 1788. (Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that the marriage ceremony occurred on May 26, 1786.) Acadians Ignace Hamon, Chrisostome Trahan, and Jean Métra witnessed the marriage certificate. | Marguerite Reine (born February 8, 1790), Marie Louise (born August 4, 1791) | Identified as an Acadian in the ecclesiastical records of the Diocese of Baton Rouge, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty barrels of corn and one hog. identified in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District as François Boudeloche. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-five-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the lands along Bayou Lafourche, January 30, 1792. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:102; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 15. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.214 | Marie | Gauterot (Gautreaut) | 01/01/1764 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Joseph Moulaison. She and her thirty-two-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.215 | André | Broche (Bocqa, Bop) (possibly Bourg) | 01/01/1759 | Acadia | Married Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut). | Ecclesiastical records identify him as an Acadian. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-nine-year-old husband of Marie Boudrot (Boudreaut). The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and one hog. His name is rendered as André Bop in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household including Marie Boudrot (Boudereau), his forty-one-year-old wife. He and his spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one horse, and nine hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:160; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.216 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudreaut) | 01/01/1748 | Acadia | Married André Broche (Bocqa, Bop), July 1, 1786. Broche is identified as an Acadian in extant ecclesiastical records. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-year-old spouse of André Broche (Bocqa). The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty-five barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Marie Boudereau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the forty-one-year-old wife of André Bop. She and her thirty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn, one horse, and nine hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:117, 160; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.217 | Mathurin | Chevalier (Frelot, Frélo) | 01/01/1758 | Married Françoise Olivier Pitre, daughter of Olivier Pitre and Marie Moïse, at Ascension Parish, La., May 9, 1786. Mathurin Chevalier is identified as an Acadian in the marriage record. | Mathurin (baptized at Ascension Parish, La., May 5, 1788) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included Françoise Pitre, his seventeen-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of a household that also included Françoise Pitre, his nineteen-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn and four hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:186-187; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.218 | Joseph | Cheramie (cher Amie, Cher Amy) | 01/01/1762 | Married Gertrude Michel (Michelle), an Acadian, at Ascension Parish, La., October 2, 1786. The marriage record was witnessed by Mathurin Comeau. Joseph Cheramie is identified as an Acadian in his marriage record. | Joseph Baptiste (born October 18, 1787), Marguerite Susanne (baptized February 20, 1793, at the age of four months), Jean Baptiste (born November 5, 1794) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Gertrude Michel (Michelle), his twenty-one-year-old spouse. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household that included Gertrude Michel, his twenty-one-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-eight barrels of corn and six hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:186; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.219 | Jacques | Le Prince | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:501. | 05/08/1788 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.220 | Judith (Julie) | Le Prince | 01/01/1758 | Marianne Mire (Cécile Mancepin?) | Antoine Le Prince | Married Charles Breau, an Acadian and the son of Alexis Breau and Magdeleine Trahan, at St. James Parish, La., June 22, 1789. The marriage record was witnessed by Joseph Arseneau (Arcenaux) and Marie Breau. Judith Le Prince is identified as an Acadian in the marriage record. Her mother is variously identified as Marianne Mire and Cécile Mancepin. | Identified as Julie Le Prince in her burial record. The record indicates that she was the widow of Charles Breau and that she was forty-five years of age at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:501. | 11/07/1803 | St. James Parish, La. | St. James Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.221 | Jeanne (Geneviève) | Bourg | 01/01/1768 | Jeanne Chellon (Chaillou? Chaillon?) | Jean Bourg(?) | Married Antoine (Antoinne) Mollard. | Antoine (born 1786) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-year-old spouse of Antoine (Antoinne) Mollard. In addition to herself and her thirty-four-year-old husband, her household included Antoine (Antoinne) Mollard, fils, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, one horse, and two hogs. If Geneviève Bourg was indeed actually Jeanne Bourg, then she and her family lived next door to her mother and her brothers in 1788. Her name is rendered as Jenevieve Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Antoine Mollard (Moulard). In addition to herself and her thirty-five-year-old husband, her household included Antoine Mollard (Moulard), her three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and three hogs. The 1789 census suggests that she lived next door to her mother. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.222 | Simon | LeBlanc | 01/01/1762 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-six-year-old head of a household that included Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) LeBlanc, his fifteen-year-old niece. He and his niece owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.223 | Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) | LeBlanc | 01/01/1773 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old member of the household of Simon LeBlanc, her twenty-six-year-old uncle. She and her uncle occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and two hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.224 | Jean Charles | Terriot (Theriot) | Le Coquenais, Cotes-du-Nord, France | Hélène Landry | Étienne Terriot (Theriot) | Married Marie Magdeleine Landry, an Acadian, at Ascension Parish, La., February 27, 1786. Olivier Terriot (Theriot), his brother, witnessed the marriage record. | Marie (Marie Rosalie) (baptized August 11, 1787), Jean Charles, fils (born June 7, 1788), Henriette Carmelite (born June 7, 1790), Céleste Rosalie (born February 7, 1793), Jules Furcy(?) Florentin (born, ca. 1795), Jacques Tourville (born January 1796), Marie Anne (Mariana) (born September 1798), Claire (born September 27, 1801), Louis Lazare (born September 14, 1805) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Traveled to Louisiana with the family of his brother Olivier Terriot. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-two-year-old head of a household including Marie Magdeleine (Magdeleinne) (Landry), his twenty-year-old wife, and Marie Terriot, his one-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. His name is rendered as Juanotte Teriot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-three-year-old head of a household that included Marie Magdeleine (Madelaine), his twenty-one-year-old wife, and Marie, his two-year-old daughter. He and his family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and ten hogs. | He died seometime before February 17, 1817. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:687-693; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95; Albert Robichaux, Jr., The Acadian Exiles in Saint-Malo, 1758-1785, 2 vols. (Eunice, La.: Hébert Publications, 1981), 2:735. | Sat, Feb 16, 1765 | Pleudihen, Cotes-du-Nord, France | NULL | ||||||||||||||
3.225 | Marguerite | Pitre | 01/01/1762 | Married Jean Berthrand (Bertrand) at St. Louis Catholic Church (now Cathedral), New Orleans, La., December 25, 1785. Joseph Martinez witnessed the marriage record. | Pierre (born 1788) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Berthrand (Bertrand). She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, and four hogs. Her name is rendered Margritta Pitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-seven-year-old spouse of Jean Berthrand (Bertrand). In addition to herself and her twenty-five-year-old husband, her household included Pierre Berthrand (Bertrand), her one-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and seven hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:28; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.226 | Jean Athanase (Jan Atanase) | Landry | dit Attanaze (Athanase) | 01/01/1756 | Married Anne Moreau, daughter of Gabriel Moreau, at Ascension Parish, La., January 22, 1787. Laurent Michel and Jean Boudrot witnessed the marriage record. | Fancia(?) (married April 21, 1816) | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. He is identified as Jean Landry dit Attanaze in the July 10, 1783 list. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-two-year-old spouse of Anne Moreau. He and his twenty-two-year-old wife were members of the household of Gabriel Moreau, his father-in-law. The members of this household occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and two hogs. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. He is identified as Jean Landry in the November 15, 1788 list. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:428; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 60, 61. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.227 | Joseph | Terriot (Theriot) | 01/01/1761 | Married Anastasie Aucoin. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the twenty-seven-year-old head of a household including Anastasie Aucoin, his twenty-seven-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn and six hogs. His name is rendered as Joseph Teriot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Jean Baptiste Pitre, his seven-year-old brother. | According to his burial record, he was approximately forty years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:690; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 22/02/1798 | Assumption Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.228 | Magdelaine (Madeleine) | Pitre | 01/01/1765 | Married Jean Gauterot (Gautreaut). | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Jean Gauterot (Gautreaut). She and her twenty-two-year-old spouse occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. Identified as MadelainePitre in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Gauterot (Gauterau). She and her twenty-three-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned no livestock and no slaves. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.229 | Anne (Annette) | Thibodot (Thibodeau) | 01/01/1758 | Married Yves Rousseaux (Derousseau). | Nicolas Yves (baptized February 1, 1786), Hyacinthe (Jacinto) (baptized October 5, 1787), Joseph Marie (born April 28, 1789), Anne Marguerite (born January 2, 1793) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-year-old spouse of Yves Rousseaux. In addition to herself and her thirty-seven-year-old husband, the household included Pierre Rousseaux, her eighteen-year-old stepson, and Yves, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn and four hogs. Her name is rendered as Annette Thibeaudeau in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-one-year-old spouse of Pierre Rousseaux (Derousseau). In addition to herself and her thirty-one-year-old husband, her household included Pierre, her nineteen-year-old stepson, and Yves, her three-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, three horses, and eleven hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 92. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.230 | Tranquille (Tranquil) | Arcement (Arsement) | 01/01/1766 | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | Married Anne Rassicot (Rassicaut), a native of Cherbourg, France. | Marie Mathilde (born July 21, 1789), François Louis (born May 22, 1791), Henriette Adélaïde (Enricca Adelaides) (born February 11, 1794), Louis (baptized June 16, 1797), Rose Scholastique (born March 13, 1803) | Probably sailed with his father and sibilings aboard La Ville d'Arcangel, a 600-ton frigate chartered by the Spanish government to carry Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. The ship departed St. Malo, France, on August 12, 1785, and arrived at New Orleans on December 3, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Guillaume, his fifteen-year-old brother, Victoire, his nineteen-year-old sister, Perinne, his seventeen-year-old sister, Julie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, his eleven-year-old sister. Mistakenly identified as Tranquil Arsenaut in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his father's household. In addition to himself and his fifty-four-year-old father, the household included Guillaume, his sixteen-year-old brother, Victoire, his twenty-year-old daughter, Pierre, his eighteen-year-old sister, Julie, his thirteen-year-old sister, and Françoise, his eleven-year-old sister. Ecclesiastical records indicate thathe and his wife were residents of the Lafourche District in May 1791. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 76; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:31-32. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.231 | Anne | Robicho (RobichAUD) | 01/01/1770 | Married Pierre Naquin, son of Ambroise Naquin and Elizabeth Bourg. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the eighteen-year-old spouse of Pierre Naquin. She and her twenty-two-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned ten barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and four hogs. Identified as Anne Robico in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the nineteen-year-old spouse of Pierre Naquin. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.232 | Rose | Dugat | 01/01/1764 | Anne Naquin | Charles Dugast (Dugas) | Married Mathurin Daunie (D'Aunis). | Died sometime before her husband's second marriage on October 25, 1791. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:224. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.233 | Marguerite (Margritta) | Benoît | 01/01/1752 | Married Claude (Glode) Bernard Dugat (Dugas). | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the thirty-six-year-old wife of Claude (Glode) Bernard Dugat (Dugas). She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Margritta Crochet in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. She and her twenty-seven-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.234 | Claude (Glode) Bernard | Dugat (Duga, Dugas) | 01/01/1758 | Married Marguerite (Margueritte) Benoît. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-year-old head of a household that included Marguerite (Margueritte) Benoît, his thirty-six-year-old wife. He and his wife occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-five barrels of corn and four hogs. Identified as Claude Bernard Duga in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was the thirty-one-year-old head of household that included Marguerite (Margritta) Benoît, his twenty-seven-year-old wife. The couple occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.235 | Marie | Boudrot (Boudereau, Boudreaux) | 01/01/1767 | Married Jean Crochet. | Identified as Marie Boudreaut in the 1788 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-one-year-old spouse of Jean Crochet. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and one hog. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Jean Crochet. She and her twenty-five-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty-nine barrels of corn, one cow, one horse, and six hogs. | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.236 | Marie | Hébert | 01/01/1764 | Marguerite Richard | Joseph Hébert | Married Jean Pierre Pitre (sometimes rendered Culaire, Cullère, Culer, Cuiller, Cuillère) at New Orleans, October 23, 1785. | Nicolas (born 1787), Marie (born April 30, 1788), marie Josèphe (born November 15, 1789; interred August 7, 1790) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Jean Pierre Pitre (Culaire). In addition to herself and her twenty-four-year-old husband, the household included Nicolas Pitre (Culaire), her one-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six aprents frontage. They owned fifteen barrels of corn and three hogs. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old spouse of Jean Pierre Pitre. In addition to herself and her twenty-five-year-old husband, the household included Nicolas Pire, her two-year-old son. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned thirty barrels of corn, two cows, and twelve hogs. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:211; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:113. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.237 | Marie | Doiron | 01/01/1773 | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a fifteen-year-old orphan residing in the household of Louis Dentin (Dantain, Dantin). The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was a sixteen-year-old orphan residing in the household of Louis Dentin (Dantin). | General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.238 | Félix | Bernard | He and his family evidently settled alongt Bayou des Écores (now Thompson's Creek) after 1785. The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a house that included one male child, one female child, one middle-aged male, and one middle-aged female. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.239 | Richard | Aucoin | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household tha tincluded one female child, one young male adult, and one middle-aged male. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.240 | André | Aucoin | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household that included one young male adult and one young female adult. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.241 | Jean | Bourg | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household that included three young female adults, one middle-aged or elderly man, and one middle-aged or elderly female. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.242 | Louis | Clouatre (Cloatre) | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one young female adult, one middle-aged or elderly man, and one middle-aged or elderly woman. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.243 | Marie | Terriot (Theriot) | Veuve | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that she was a middle-aged or elderly widow living alone. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.244 | Charles | Dupuis | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one young mand and one young woman. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.245 | Pierre | Henry | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one young girl, one young man, and one young woman. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.246 | Pierre | Hébert | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household including one boy, one middle-aged or elderly man, and one middle-aged or elderly woman. | General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.247 | Chevalier de | Beaujeu | Arrived in Louisiana by way of Pensacola, Florida, ca. June 1767. Chevalier de Beaujeu identified himself as an Acadian. Arrested and imprisoned by Charles Philippe Aubry, acting French governor of Louisiana as a suspected British agent sent to Louisiana to engage in subversive activities among the Acadian exiles. Sent to France for interrogation, evidently in late 1767. | Aubry to Ulloa, June 3, 1767, AGI, PPC, legajo 187A:non-paginated. | 1.767 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.248 | Marie Magdeleine (Magdelaine) | Bourg (Bourque) | 01/01/1766 | Anne Granger | Théodore Bourg | Married Joseph Simoneau (Simoneaux) at Ascension Parish, La., April 24, 1786. Alexis Daigle and Theodore Bourg witnessed the marriage record. | Anne (born ca. 1786, perhaps another name for Constance), Constance (Constancia) (baptized April 7, 1787), Joseph Fabian (baptized September 6, 1789), Maria del Carmen (born March 15, 1791), Reulio Hipolito (René? Hypolite) (born March 30, 1793), Jeanne Théotiste (born June 24, 1795), Narcisse Eugène (born November 25, 1797), Marie Humiliana (born November 6, 1799), Hilaire Honoré (baptized May 17, 1802) | Identified as Magdelaine Bourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District, La. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-two-year-old spouse of Joseph Simoneau. In addition to herself and her twenty-nine-year-old husband, her household included Anne Simoneau, her two-year-old daughter. Magdeleine (Magdelaine) Bourg and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five barrels of rice, eighty barrels of corn, nine cows, two horses, and twelve hogs. | General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:124, 674-675. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.249 | Antoine (Entoine) | Rodrigue (Rodrique) | Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant reported that his cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost eight of his fourteen cows. He is identified as Entoine Raudrique in the September 18, 1780 list. | List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780,AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.250 | Marie | Rivet (Rivette) | Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. | List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b; | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.251 | Marguerite (Margueritte) | Comeau (Caumont) | She was a widow in June 1770. | Identified as Margueritte Caumont, Veuve, in a list of land grantees, June 12, 1770. Received a land grant with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River "above [Bayou] Plaquemine and below the Acadians at [San Luís de] Natchez," June 12, 1770. | List of the Lands Which I Have Granted Above Plaquemine and Below the Acadians at Natchez, in Accordance with the Wishes of His Excellency, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1b. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.252 | Jean Baptiste | Comeau | Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. | List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.253 | Paul (Piere, Pierre) | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1753 | Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. He was evidently the person identified as Pierre Rivette in the March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-four-year old married man. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Rivet (Rivette) lost five of his ten cows. | List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.254 | Joseph | Boutin | 01/01/1753 | Ursule Guidry | Pierre Paul Boutin | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was either thirteen or fifteen years of age. Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. His name is rendered as Jausephe Boutain in the June 21, 1771 list. He is listed as a fusilier in the April 15, 1776, muster roll of the Opelousas District militia unit. He is listed as a fuselier in the Opelousas District militia, June 8, 1777. He is listed in the 1779 muster roll of the Opelousas District militia. This suggests that he served in the 1779 Spanish military campaign against Manchac and Baton Rouge in British West Florida during the American Revolution. Identified as a fusilier (i.e., a private) in the July 30, 1785, muster roll of the Opelousas militia unit. The 1788 census of the Opelousas District indicates that he was a bachelor living alone. He owned two slaves. He also owned fifty cows and eleven horses. He occupied a large trace of land with twenty-six arpents frontage. The census indicates that he and his family resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. According to the May 1796 census of the Opelousas District, he was a bachelor living alone. He owned two female slaves under the age of fifteen years. In May 1796, he resided in the Grand Coteau area of the Opelousas District. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Opelouas District Militia, 1779, AGI, PPC, 192:258; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia Unit, July 30, 1785, AGI, PPC, 187A:non-paginated; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.255 | Vincent | Comeau | Because he was a member of the Iberville District militia, the colonial government issued him one musket, one bayonet, and one belt, June 12, 1770. | List of men given muskets, bayonets, and belts, June 12, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A:1c/1a. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.256 | Pierre | LeBlanc | 01/01/1736 | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a fifty-two-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned forty barrels of corn, three cows, one horse, and eleven hogs. | General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.257 | Jean Charles | LeBlanc | Marie Theriot (Terriot) | Jean LeBlanc | Married Osite (Ausite) Landry, daughter of Joseph Landry and Marie Richard, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, August 5, 1770. Thomas Terriot (Theriot) and François Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:467. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.258 | Osite (Ausite) | Landry (Landris) | Marie Richard | Joseph (Josèphe) Landry | Married Jean Charles LeBlanc, son of Jean LeBlanc and Marie Theriot (Terriot), at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, August 5, 1770. Thomas Theriot (Terriot) and François Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:467. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.259 | Pierre Charles | Blanchard | 01/01/1785 | Marie Magdeleine Livoir | Jean Grégoire Blanchard | Sailed aboard the St. Rémi, a ship chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles from France to Louisiana. Accompanied his parents and two siblings during the voyage. Identified in the passenger manifest as a nursing infant. Departed St. Malo, France, on June 20, 1785; the ship subsequently picked up a small contingent of Acadian passengers at Paimboeuf. Because of congestion and unhealthy conditions aboard the vessel, diseases claimed the lives of numerous passengers during the voyage. Smallpox killed twelve children, while scurvy took the lives of three women. Following their arrival in New Orleans on December 5, 1785, an additional sixteen Acadians died as a result of smallpox. | The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a seven-year-old member of his parents' household. In addition to himself and his parents, the household included Marie Blanchard, his twelve-year-old sister, and Jean Blanchard, his nine-year-old brother. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.260 | Jean Jacques | Babin | On September 20, 1772, Commandant Louis Judice reported that he had moved from Assumption Parish to St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | List of Settlers Who Have Moved from Assumption Parish to St. James Parish, [ca. September 20, 1772], AGI, PPC, 189A:445; Passport for Veuve Jean Jacques Babain, November 6, 1787, AGi, PPC, 200:447; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 26. | 07/12/1785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.261 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Marie Josèphe Landry | Amant Breau | Signed a marriage contract with Jean Baptiste Chauvin. The contract simply provided for the creation of a community of acquets and gains; neither party provided a dowry. Married Jean Baptiste Chauvin, son of Louis Chauvin and Marie Bergeron, at Ascension Parish, La., February 9, 1773. Louis LeConte and Pierre Bijeaud (Bugeaud) witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Jeanne (born November 29, 1773) | On November 4, 1776, local commandant Louis Judice inventoried and appraised Marie Breau's estate. The probate inventory includes a tract of land with twelve arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property, located approximately twenty-six leagues above New Orleans, was situated between the lands of Jérôme LeBlanc and Augustin Bugeau. The improvements on Marie Breau's property included a house of poteaux-en-terre construction, measuring twenty-ive feet by fifteen feet. The house featured a gallery along the front and rear facade. | Her husband remarried on October 17, 1779. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:150, 183-184; Married Contract Between Jean Baptiste Chauvin adn Demoiselle Marguerite Braud, [February 6, 1773], Original Acts, Clerk of Court's Office, Ascension Parish Courthouse; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 27-28. | 01/10/1775 | Ascenson Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.262 | Élizabeth Magdelaine | Babin | 01/01/1744 | Assumption Parish, Acadia | Joseph Athanase Landry. | Her burial record indicates that she was about sixty-eight years old at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:50. | 05/01/1812 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.263 | Victoire | Babin | Môle St. Nicolas, Saint Domingue (now Haiti) | Marie Hebert | Charles Babin | Married Louis Morrow (Morow), a native of Boston, Massachusetts, at St. James Parish, La., September 2, 1816. Jean Pierre Richard, John Cox, and Joseph Caillet witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:64. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.264 | Anne | Bergeron | 01/01/1753 | Acadia | The burial record, which indicates that she was sixty years of age at the time of her death, was witnessed by Pierre Terriot (Theriot) and Joseph LeBlanc. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:83. | 04/06/1813 | St. Michael Catholic Church Cemetery | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.265 | Pierre | Guédry (Guidry) | Identified as an Ascension Parish contributor to a fund for the victims of the extremely destructive 1788 New Orleans fire. | List of Ascension Parish settlers who contributed funds to the victims of the 1788 fire in New Orleans, 1788, AGI, PPC, 202:260-261vo. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.266 | Basile (Bazille) | Landry | 01/01/1726 | Acadie | Married Brigitte Boudrot (Boudreaux). | Marie (born 1756), Marianne (Madeleine) (born 1766) | At Upper Marlboro, Maryland, in 1763. | Listed among the Acadians established at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. In 1768, his household included his wife and two children. Received a land grant measuring five arpents frontage at San Luís de Natchez, 1768. Served as one of the delegates elected by the San Luís de Natchez Acadians to negotiate with Spanish authorities at New Orleans, September 1769. Made his mark (he was illiterate) on an unconditional oath of allegiance to Spain on behalf of his constituents, September 9, 1769. On October 18, 1769, he made his mark on a petition to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly requesting permission for the Acadian settlers of San Luís de Natchez to abandon the outpost for the Acadian Coast, along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans. O'Reilly approved the request. The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was forty-five years of age. His name is rendered as Bazille Landry in the February 7, 1770 list. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD 2585:314-314vo; Oath of Allegiance, Louisiana State Museum, Louisiana History Center, Judicial Records of the French Superior Council, #17l69092801; Petiton to Governor Alejandro O'Reilly from the Acadians Who Were Settled at San Luís de Natchez, October 10, 1769, AGI, ASD, 2585:non-paginated; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.267 | Basile | Landry | Paroisse de la Ste. Famille, Pisiquid, Acadia | Marguerite Forest | Pierre Landry | Signed a marriage contract with Marie Froisine (Françoise in the marriage record) Vincent, the widow of Michel Trahan and the daughter of Michel Vincent and Marie Doiron. Married Françoise Vincent, , a native of Paroisse de la Vieille Habitation, Acadia, at the Attakapas church, May 23, 1786. Amand Landry, Claude Duhon, Louis Roger, and Paul Trahan witnessed the marriage record. | Listed in the 1789 muster roll as a member of the Attakapas District militia unit. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, pp. 472-473; Muster Roll of the Attakapas Militia Unit, 1789, AGI, PPC, legajo 120. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.268 | Charles | Babin | Committed suicide by drowning himself in the Mississippi River after being accused, by his Iberville District host, of having sex with his wife, ca. June 5, 1774. | Procès-verbal regarding the examination and identification of Charles Babin's corpse, June 5, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:403; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, June 7, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:541. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.269 | Magdeleine | Boudrot (Boudreau, Boudreaux) | Married Pierre Clouatre. | Mme Pierre Clouatre was implicated in a sex scandal resulting in the death of Charles Babin, June 2-5, 1774. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:192-194; Procès-verbal Regarding the Examination and Identification of Charles Babin's Corpse, June 5, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:403; Louis Judice to Luís de Unzaga, June 7, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189B:541; Louis Dutisné to Luís de Unzaga, AGI, PPC, 189A:401. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.270 | Marie Magdeleine | Durambourg (Duraubourg) | 01/01/1762 | Cherbourg, France | Magdeleine Henri (Henry) | Jean Baptiste Durambourg | Married Jean Pierre Liret. | Marie (born 1781), Rose (born 1783), Nicolas (baptized February 5, 1786), Anne Constance (baptized December 31, 1787), Marie Magdeleine (baptized January 1, 1788), Rosalie Léonore (born May 1, 1789), Eulalie Adélaïde (born September 18, 1791), Marguerite Josèphe (born August 8, 1793), Luce Adélaïde (born August 22, 1796), Marie Ange (Maria Angela) (baptized July 17, 1798), Jean Pierre (born July 26, 1800), Marguerite Clemence (born April 9, 1803) | Identified as Marie Duraubourg in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-six-year-old spouse of Jean Liret. In addition to herself and her twenty-eight-year-old husband, the household included the following persons: Nicolas Liret, her son, 2 years old; Marie Liret, her daughter, years old; and Rose Liret, her daughter, 5 years old. She and her family occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned forty barrels of corn and eleven hogs. The 1789 census suggests that Marie Durambourg lived next door to her parents. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:504; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.271 | Susanne (Suzanne) | Le Prince (Leprince) | Marie Le Prince | Joseph Trahan | Her given name is rendered as Suzanne in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was an eight-year-old child living with her mother. She and her mother occupied a tract of land with three arpents frontage. | General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.272 | Jean | Gaudet | The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that he was a thirty-six-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. He owned twenty-six barrels of corn, one cow, two horses, and four hogs. | General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.273 | François | Hébert | 01/01/1742 | Acadia | The January 23, 1770, muster roll of the First Company of the Acadian Coast militia unit indicates that he was a fusilier, a resident of the left bank of the Mississippi River, and a twenty-eight-year-old bachelor. | Muster Roll for the First Company, Acadian Coast Militia, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.274 | Joseph | Babin | Cadet | 01/01/1746 | Acadia | A 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was the unit's second-ranking sous caporal. The January 23, 1770, muster roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, indicates that he was a fusilier, that his residence was located on the left bank of the Mississippi River, and that he was a twenty-four-year-old married man. | Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.275 | Joseph Ignace (Joseph Ygnace, Ygnace) | Landry (LandRie) | 01/01/1754 | Acadia | Marie Babin | Auguste (Augustin) Landry | Married Scholastique Breau, daughter of Antoine Breau and Marguerite Landry, February 12, 1776. Genealogist Bona Arsenault indicates that their marriage occurred on September 12, 1776. | Louis (born 1777), Marie Madeleine Barbe (born 1778), Joseph Emmanuel (born 1780) | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 18, 56; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.276 | Jean Baptiste | LeBlanc | 01/01/1754 | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-year-old bachelor. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, LeBlanc lost two of his seven cows. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.277 | Firmain (Firmin) | Landry (Landrie) | 01/01/1743 | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of corporal and that he was twenty-seven years of age. His name is rendered as Firmain Landrie in the June 21, 1771 list. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a sergeant on active duty. He served as the second-ranking sergeant in the Iberville District militia unit, 1785. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 245. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.278 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Hébert (Éberre, Heber) | 01/01/1750 | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty years of age. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. He is identified as Jausephe Ebert, fils in the July 13, 1777 list. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a fusilier on active duty. His name is rendered as Joseph Éberre in the July 10, 1783 list. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.279 | Joseph | Landry | 01/01/1744 | The February 7, 1770, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age.The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-six years of age. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, February 7, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.280 | Jean Baptiste (Janbatiste) | Hébert (Heber) | 01/01/1754 | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. His name is rendered as Janbatiste Heber in the June 21, 1771 list. The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was sixteen years of age. The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-four years old. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.281 | Jean Baptiste (Janbatiste) | Babin (BabbAIN) | 01/01/1744 | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-seven years of age. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.282 | Ignace | Hébert | 01/01/1753 | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost five of his ten cows. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.283 | Pierre | Landry | 01/01/1753 | The June 21, 1771, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was eighteen years of age. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant reported that his cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, he lost four of his nine cattle. On November 15, 1788, he joined with twenty-eight other Iberville District residents in petitioning the governor to enforce the colony's 1770 land grant regulations. According to the petitioners, lax enforcement had allowed numerous landowners to avoid the onerous requirements of building levees, digging drainage ditches, and constructing a roadway across their land grants. As a result, many settlers endured annual flooding that destroyed their crops, pasturage, and livestock. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, June 21, 1771, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780,AGI, PPC, 193B:311; Petition to Governor Mir¢, November 15, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:590-591. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.284 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1755 | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was a twenty-two-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.285 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.286 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Breau (Braux) | 01/01/1758 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a nineteen-year-old bachelor. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.287 | Paul (Polle) | Babin (Babain) | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a ninteen-year-old bachelor. His name is rendered as Polle Babain in the March 6, 1777 militia list. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.288 | Joseph | Dugas | 01/01/1756 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-one-year-old bachelor. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.289 | Pierre (Piere) | Rivet (Rivette) | 01/01/1753 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-three-year-old bachelor. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.290 | Jean Charles (Jan Charlle) | Benoît (Benois) | 01/01/1759 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was an eighteen-year-old bachelor. The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years of age. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.291 | Joseph | Breau (Braud) | dit Marie | 01/01/1756 | The March 6, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was a twenty-one-year-old married man. He was probably the "Jausephe Braux" identified as the second ranking sergeant of the Iberville District militia unit in the muster roll of July 13, 1777. The July 10, 1783, muster roll of the Iberville District militia indicates that he was a sergeant on active duty. He served as the highest-ranking sergeant in the Iberville Militia district, 1785. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, March 6, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll of the First Company of the Iberville District, July 10, 1783, AGI, PPC, 198A:374; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 235. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.292 | Charles (Charle) | Breau (Braux) | 01/01/1758 | The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was nineteen years of age. His name is rendered as Charle Braux in the July 13, 1777 list. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.293 | Pierre (Piere) | Breau (Braud, Braux, Breaux) | le jeune | 01/01/1754 | The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-three years old. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.294 | Baptiste | Doucet | 01/01/1741 | The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was thirty-six years old. On September 18, 1780, the Iberville District commandant compiled a list of local farmers whose cattle had been effected by a livestock epidemic then raging in Louisiana. According to this report, Doucet (Doucette) lost eleven of his twenty-three cows. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; List of the Cattle that Died in Iberville District Since the Beginning of the Month, September 18, 1780, AGI, PPC, 193B:311. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.295 | Joseph (Jausephe) | Orillion (Aurillon, Orillon) | 01/01/1753 | The July 13, 1777, muster roll of the Iberville District militia unit indicates that he held the rank of fusilier and that he was twenty-four years old. | Muster Roll of the Iberville District militia, July 13, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.296 | Joseph | Landry | dit Belhomme (Bel Homme) | 01/01/1753 | Rivière aux Canards, Grand Pré, Acadia (Louisbourg, Acadia, according to his service record) | Marie Josèphe Bourg | Joseph Étienne Landry | Married (1) Isabelle (Isabel) LeBlanc, daughter of Désiré LeBlanc and Marie Magdeleine Landry, at Ascension Parish, La., April 18, 1775. Isabelle LeBlanc died on September 1, 1777. Married (2) Anne Bugeaud (Bujol), daughter of Joseph Bugeaud (Bujol) and Anne LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., November 25, 1779. | First marriage: Louis (born May 12, 1776)Second marriage: Jeanne Carmelite (born 1780), Marie Céleste (born 1782), Joseph (born 1786), Philippe Ursin (Felipe Ursino) (born May 25, 1788), Marie Carmelite (born May 19, 1800), Narcisse (born February 19, 1807), Marie Arthemise (born September 28, 1813), Valéry Isidore (born August 12, 1815), Marie Delphine (born May 20, 1817), Melanie (born January 27, 1817), Jean Trasimond (born December 16, 1795; married April 11, 1825) | Exiled to Maryland. | Listed among the Acadians who were in New Orleans in 1767. "Volunteered" for duty in the district militia, February 12, 1770. Identified in the August 1, 1770, census of the right bank of Ascension Parish as a seventeen-year-old member of his widowed mother's household. Identified as Joseph Landry, le jeune, in the December 3, 1775, slave census of Ascension Parish. In a slave census he compiled on December 3, 1775, Commandant Louis Judice noted that he owned two slaves. The April 15, 1777, census of the Ascension Parish settlers established above Bayou Lafourche indicates that he was the twenty-four-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Isabelle (Elizabeth) LeBlanc, his wife, 24 years old; Louis Landry, his son, 1 year old; and the Veuve Landry, his mother, 66 years old. Joseph Landry dit Belhomme and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned four slaves, thirty cows, two horses, eight sheep, twenty hogs, and two muskets. On July 27, 1777, at a meeting of all district settlers to discuss the merits of a proposal presented to the governor by ranchers in other districts to allow cattle to range freely throughout the year, he joined fifty-three other Lafourche de Chetimachas landowners in signing a petition expressing his opposition to the recommendation "made by people too lazy to make pens big enough to provide pasturage for their herds." He appears to have been one of only six Ascension Parish Acadians who committed themselves to grow tobacco as part of the Spanish government's effort to encourage Louisiana farmers to produce marketable staple crops, April 23, 1777. On April 25, 1778, the estate of his late wife, Isabelle leBlanc, was inventoried and appraised. The probate inventory indicates that she and Joseph Landry owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. Improvements on the property included a house measuring twenty by sixteen feet. Ancillary buildings included a small shed and two slave cabins. The estate was valued at 350 piastres. Appointed sergeant first-class in the district militia, September 1, 1779. Appointed sublieutenant in the district militia unit, February 12, 1792, one day after was nominated by Commandant Louis Judice for appointment as sublieutenant in the local militia unit, February 13, 1785. Identified as acting sublieutenant in the Cabannocé District militia, July 10, 1785. On June 16, 1786, he served on a local military tribunal investigating the arrest of Church Warden Pierre Landry dit Pitre by Ascension Parish militiamen. The governor appointed him sindic for Ascension Parish, October 2, 1792. On March 18, 1793, Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau wrote to Governor Carondelet, informing him that a vacant parcel of land with twelve arpents frontage along the Mississippi River had no levees. As a consequence, their farms were inundated every year. These destructive floods were forcing the local settlers to abandon the farms they had cultivated since 1767. The petitioners consequently requested a 4,000 piastre subsidy from the royal treasury to subsidize the necessary levee construction. LeBlanc, Babin, Landry, and Breau promised to repay the 4,000 piastres in six years. Promoted to the rank of second lieutenant in the district militia, March 29, 1796. His military dossier, compiled on December 31, 1800, indicates that he enjoyed robust health and that he was married. He had served in the Lafourche District militia for twenty-two years and in the German Coast Disciplined Provincial Militia for eight years, ten months, and nineteen days. His superiors noted that he had "supposed valor; good application [to duty] and [good] conduct; [and] average capacity." Served as interim commandant of the Lafourche District during the absences of M. Croquer in the early 1800's. John Watkins, sent to Louisiana in 1803 at a representative of the American government, penned the following description of Landry, "who had always acted as Commandant per interim during the absence of Mr. Croquer": "This gentleman altho born in Acadia has resided many years in Louisiana, speaks the English and French langauges [and] professes strong attachment to the government of the United States." Served as commandant of Acadia County, La., 1803-May 20, 1805. Served as justice of the peace in Acadia County, 1805-1806. Elected to the Louisiana legislative council, 1806. Subsequently resigned his post. Elected to the Louisiana senate,1812. Later resigned. | List of Acadians in the City (New Orleans), 1767, AGI, PPC, 114; Census of Ascension Parish, August 1, 1770, AGI, PPC, 188A; List of Slaveowning Settlers in Ascension Parish, December 3, 1775, AGI, PPC, 189B:294; General Census of the Settlers in Ascension Parish of the Lafourche des Chetimachas District, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:173 et seq.; List of settlers in Ascension Parish, Lafourche des Chetimaches District, Who Promised to Grow Tobacco, April 23, 1777, AGI, PPC, 193A:393; Procès-verbal of an Assembly Regarding the "Abandonment" of Stray Cattle, July 27, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:293; Louis Judice to Estevan Mir¢, February 13, 1785, AGI, PPC, 198A:396; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523-2524; Pollard, The Book of LeBlanc, 68; J. Edgar Bruns, "Joseph Landry (1750-1814): Acadien Éxilé, Sénateur de la Louisiane, Homme Politique à Ses Heures," Cahiers de La Société Historique Acadienne, 5, 43ième cahier (1974): 104-106; Chambers, History of Louisiana, 1:437; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 3:494; Investigation into the Charges Made Against Pierre Landry dit Pitre, June 16, 1786, AGI, PPC, 199:288-289; Governor to Louis Judice, October 2, 1792, AGI, PPC, 205:311; Isaac LeBlanc, Bonaventure Babin, Joseph Landry, and Paul Breau to the governor, March 18, 1793, AGI, PPC, 208:284-285; Service Record, December 31, 1800, AGI, PPC, 161A; Holmes, Honor and Fidelity, 196; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:180; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 25, 58, 61, 62; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2523-2524. | 1.767 | 14/10/1814 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||
3.297 | François | Boudrot | 01/01/1739 | The May 1803 census of the Vermilion area of the Attakapas District indicates that he was a sixty-four-year-old bachelor living alone. He occupied a tract of land with five arpents frontage. He owned 300 semi-wild beef cattle and 30 tame cattle. He also owned the follwoing slaves: Gabriel, 35 years old; and Julie, 25 years old. | Census of the "District" of Vermilion, May 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.298 | Françoise | Dugas | 01/01/1730 | Married Pedro Rivas (probably Pierre Rivet). | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2: 255. | 12/07/1788 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.299 | Amant (Aman) | Dugas (Dugat) | 01/01/1751 | Acadia | Anne Hébert | Claude Dugas | Married Geneviève Robichaud (Robicheau), daughter of René Robichaud and Marguerite Martin, at the Attakapas church, January 11, 1779. Jean Baptiste Bérard and Jean Baptiste Broussard witnessed the marriage certificate. Father Ange de Revillagodos officiated at the marriage ceremony. | The May 26, 1803, Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District indicates that he was the fifty-two-year-old head of a household including the following persons: Geneviève Dugat (actually Robichaud), 48 years old; Jean Dugas (Dugat), 18 years old; Augustin Dugas (Dugat), 16 years old; Selestin Dugas (Dugat), 13 years old; Maxine Dugas (Dugat), 11 years old. Amant Dugas (Dugat) and his family occupied a tract of land with only four arpents frontage. They owned 100 year old semi-wild beef cattle and 10 tame cattle. They owned no slaves. | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 268; Census of the Quartier de la Grande Prairie in the Attakapas District, May 26, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.300 | Marguerite | Forest (Forêt) | 01/01/1730 | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:294. | 02/10/1790 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.301 | Osite (Osytah) | Gaudet | 01/01/1730 | Married François Hébert. | Her burial record indicates that she was a seventy-year-old widow at the time of her death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:309. | 30/07/1801 | St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.302 | Marianne (Marie Anne) | Gaudin (Godin) | Probably the Acadian settlements along the St. John River, in present-day New Brunswick | Anne d'Amboise (Bergeron) | Alexandre Gaudin | Married (1) Antoine Alexandre Dupré. (2) Jean Villeneuve at New Orleans, February 27, 1783. Married (3) Joseph (Amand [Armand] Joseph) Melanson, son of Amant Melanson and Marie Magdeleine LeBlanc, at Ascension Parish, La., February 10, 1790. Charles Gaudin and Joseph Babin witnessed the marriage record. Marianne Gaudin became a widow before August 20, 1810. | First marriage: Marie (married June 27, 1791)Second marriage: Emanuel (married August 20, 1810; died November 21, 1820) | On August 16, 1787, Marie Gaudin purchased for 400 piastres in "new coins of Mexico" a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was bounded above by the land of Benjamin LeBlanc and below by the land of Joseph Melanson (Melançon). Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction measuring thirty-one feet by sixteen feet. Said house had a front gallery. Ancillary buildings included a small storehouse and three cabins. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:312; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:143; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 38, 100. | 13/08/1791 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.303 | Jean | Guilbeau | Lorient, Brittany, France | Thérèse Boisdeque | François Guilbeau | Married Adélaïde Tollerest, a native of Nantes, France, and a resident of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, at Assumption Parish, August 6, 1798. Jean Raphael Landry and Ambroise Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:346. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.304 | Joseph | Guénard | Anne Marie (Marie) Thibodeau | Timothé (Thimothée) Guénard | Married Véronique Duplechen, a native of Pointe Coupée Parish but a resident of the Opelousas District, at Pointe Coupée, November 25, 1772. Duplechen was the daughter of Philippe Duplechen and Reine Boof. Philippe Duplechen and Joseph Rabelais witnessed the marriage record. | He appears to have been a prisoner of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, on October 5, 1761. | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:344. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.305 | Agnès | Thibodeau | Dugas | Michel Thibodeau | Married Joseph Broussard dit Beausoleil, September 1725. | Jean-Grégoire (born 1726), Joseph "Petit Joe," Victor Grégoire (born ca. 1728), Raphaël (born 1733), Timothée (born 1741), Amand (born ca. 1745), François, Isabelle, Amand, Claude Eloy, and Françoise | She and her family were held as prisoners of war at Fort Edward, Nova Scotia, around October 11, 1762. British documents indicate that there were five persons in her family group in October 1762. | C. J. d'Entremont, "Brossard (Broussard), dit Beausoleil, Joseph," Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 3, pp. 87-88; Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Grover Rees, trans., "The Dauterive Compact: The Foundation of the Acadian Cattle Industry," Attakapas Gazette, 11 (1976): 91; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 137; Conover, Broussard, 5. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.306 | Anselme | Martin | Acadia | Marie Thibodeau | Paul Martin | Married Marie Théotiste Hébert, a native of Cobequid, Acadia, and the daughter of Jean Baptiste Hébert and Marie Claire Robichaud, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, La., February 14, 1774. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:370. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.307 | Claude | Landry | Acadia | Married Cécille Melanson. | Joseph | Identified in ecclesiastical records as a resident of the St. Gabriel area, June 6, 1774. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:417. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.308 | Cécille | Melanson (Melançon) | Acadia | Married Claude Richard. | Joseph | Ecclesiastical records indicate that she and her husband were residents of the St. Gabriel area, June 6, 1774. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:417. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.309 | Joseph (Joséphe in his burial record) | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Anne Flan | Alexandre Landry | Married Marguerite LeBlanc. | Joseph Donat (born 1773), Marguerite (born 1773) | His burial record indicates that he was fifty years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:431; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2536. | 14/01/1797 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.310 | Magdeleine | Landry | Married Joseph LeBlanc. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:434. | 19/06/1786 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.311 | Magdeleine | Landry | Mararied Charles Hébert. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:434. | 27/10/1788 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.312 | Boutin | Acadia | Piguory, a Spanish soldier. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:35. | 22/02/1773 | New Orleans, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.313 | Augustin | Breau | Acadia | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:37. | 11/08/1776 | 11/08/1776 | New Orleans, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.314 | Joseph | David | 01/01/1747 | Acadia | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:73. | 30/01/1773 | New Orleans, La. | master blacksmith | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.315 | Marie | Savoie (Savoy) | Port Royal, Acadia | (?) Thibodeau | Married (1) François Nieto(?). Married (2) Fernando Alvarez at New Orleans, August 24, 1777. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 3:273-274. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.316 | Marie Marguerite | Trahan | Anne Granger | Joseph Trahan | Married Joseph Henon(?) at New Orleans, September 4, 1785. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:299. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.317 | André | Bernard | St. Nicolas Parish, Nantes, Brittany, France | Marguerite Gaudin | Étienne Bernard | Married Françoise Sigur, a native of Pont-a-Mousson, France, at New Orleans, August 27, 1792. Arnod Magnon and Juan Caffin witnessed the marriage record. | Laurent André (born September 9, 1794), Eulalie (born October 15, 1798), Louise Pauline (born September 13, 1796) | His burial record indicates that he died "in his house in the country." He was thirty-eight years of age at the time of his death, according to his burial record. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 4:29; 6:22; 7:25. | 19/11/1802 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.318 | Osite Barbe | Blanchard | 01/01/1764 | Baltimore, Maryland | Esther LeBlanc | Anselme Blanchard | Married Joseph Mollere, a native of Canada. | Celestin (born March 11, 1797) | She was a resident of the Lafourche District at the time of her death. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:28; Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:198. | 15/10/1799 | New Orleans, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.319 | Joseph | boudrot (boudreaux) | Morles (probably Morlaix), France | Agnès Boudrot | Félix Boudrot | Married Marie Julienne Brossier, a native of Nantes and the daughter of Pierre Brossier and Jeanne Delinot. | Marie Luce (Lucia) (born March 24, 1790), Adélaïde (born December 17, 1795), Joseph Alexandre (born March 1, 1798) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:33; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:116. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.320 | Marguerite | LeBlanc | Marie Pitre | François LeBlanc | Married Augustin Duon, son of Honoré Duon and Anne Trahan. | Charles (baptized July 14, 1799) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:104. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.321 | Geneviève | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1765 | Baltimore, Maryland | Marguerite (surname not indicated) | Joseph Melanson (Melançon) | Married Baptiste Felen(?). | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:192. | 22/10/1796 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.322 | Marguerite | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1766 | Baltimore, Maryland | Marguerite (surname not indicated) | Joseph Melanson (Melançon) | Married Laurent (Lorenzo) Lazar. | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 6:192. | 11/10/1796 | St. Louis Cathedral Cemetery, New Orleans | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.323 | Louis | Aucoin | St. Malo, France | Françoise Hébert | Antoine Aucoin(?) (Aucoing) | Married Victoire Arcement (Arsement), daughter of Pierre Arcement and Marie Hébert. | Pierre Louis (born November 15, 1790), Louis Ambroise (born July 9, 1792; buried November 18, 1799), Antoine Joseph (born July 3, 1795), Noël (born September 30, 1799), Eugène (born June 15, 1800) | Woods and Nolan, comps., Sacramental Records, 7:9-10; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:33-36, 38-39. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.324 | Jeanne (Marie) | Haché (Achet) | St. Malo, France | Anne Boudrot (Boudrote) | Charles Haché | Married François Sevin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Charles Sevin and Marie Hugue, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., June 14, 1787. Charles Daigle and Étienne Pelletier witnessed the marriage record. | Eloïse Amélie (born January 18, 1790), Marie Isabelle (born December 6, 1792), Marie Remigia ( baptized April 12, 1797, at the age of four years), François Nicolas (baptized April 12, 1797) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:1, 671. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.325 | Pierre | Acheron | Married Anne Gauterot, an Acadian, at Ascension Parish, La., February 27, 1786. Identified as an Acadian in his marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:2. | 1 | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.326 | Nicolas | Albert | Châtellereault, Poitou Province, France (one source indicates Châteauneuf, France) | Marie Benoît of Acadia | Nicolas Albert of Ile d'Oléron, France | Married Magdeleine Bourg (Bourque), daughter of Jean Bourg and Anne Daigle, at Assumption Parish, La., February 3, 1800. | Melanie Anne (born December 18, 1801) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:8. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.327 | Jean Charles | Arseneau (Arceneaux) | Married Elisabeth Hébert. | Cécile Félicité (Coecille Foelicité (baptized November 11, 1779) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:21-27. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.328 | Pierre | Aucoin | St. Malo, France | Isabelle Hébert | Michel Aucoin | Married Rosalie Gauterot (Gautraux), a native of Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France, and the daughter of Charles Gauterot and Magdeleine Melanson (Melançon). | Joseph Marie (born September 8, 1800), Eugène (born January 20, 1802) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 36. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.329 | Rosalie | Gauterot (Gautraux) | Belle-Ile-en-Mer, France | Magdeleine Melanson (Melançon) | Charles Gauterot (Gautraux) | Married Pierre Aucoin, a native of St. Malo, France, and the son of Michel Aucoin and Isabelle Hébert. | Eugène (born January 20, 1802) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 36. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.330 | Pierre | Aucoin | Married Marie Guédry (Guidry). | Pierre Elias (born February 9, 1791), Florentine (born January 31, 1798) | He and his family were residents of Manchac in March 1799. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 38. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.331 | Marie | Guédry (Guidry) | Married Pierre Aucoin. | Pierre Elias (born February 9, 1791), Florentine (born January 31, 1798) | She and her family were residents of Manchac in March 1799. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:34, 38. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.332 | Joseph | Aucoin | Married Marie Aucoin, a native of England and the daughter of Jean Aucoin and Marguerite Terriot (Theriot), at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 6, 1788. Felix Bernard, Jean Baptiste Aucoin, Jacques Blanchard, and Alexis Aucoin witnessed the marriage record. | Germain Jacques (born December 30, 1788), Jean Baptiste (baptized May 24, 1792) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:35, 36. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.333 | François | Aucoin | Married Marie Boudrot, a native of St. Malo, France. | Joseph François (born Decemer 20, 1801) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:36. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.334 | Marie | Boudrot | St. Malo, France | Married François Aucoin. | Joseph François (born Decemer 20, 1801) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:36. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.335 | Angélique Fleurit | Armant | Louisbourg, Acadia | Cécille Normand | Joseph Marie Armant, a merchant | Married Louis Riche, a native of Pointe Coupée Parish, La., and the son of Louis Riche and Catherine Frédéric, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 31, 1769. Gabriel Armant, Jean Stephan, and Marguerite Riche witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:137. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.336 | Magdeleine | Armant | Louisbourg, Acadia | Cécille Normand | Joseph Marie Armant, a merchant | Married Gabriel Lamathe, a native of Bourg, Diocese of La Rochelle, France, and the son of Joseph Marie Lamathe d'Ors and Thérèse Godé de St. Germain, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., January 31, 1769. Gabriel Armant, L. Lamathe, Jean Stephan, Marie Armant, Marguerite Riche, and V. Gérard witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:137. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.337 | Marie Josèphe | Armant | Louisbourg, Acadia | Cécille Normand | Joseph Marie Armant, a merchant | Married Louis Joseph Lamathe, a native of Bourg, Diocese of La Rochelle, France, and the son of Joseph Marie Lamathe, a French tax collector, and Thérèse Godet de St. Germain, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., May 16, 1769. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:137. | 19/11/1769 | Pointe Coupée Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.338 | Marie | Boutin | Acadia | Marie Josèphe Gudie(?) | Charles Boutin | Married Alphonse Segobia (Segovia), a corporal in Louisiana's Spanish garrison, a native of Haenne, Spain, and the son of Jean Antoine Segobia and Thérèse Bahene, at Pointe Coupée Parish, Lal., April 4, 1768. Joseph Gimenez (Jimenez), Marie Morin, and A. Bergeron witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:148. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.339 | Marie | Breau (Braud, Breaux) | Acadia | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:148. | 1.768 | 04/10/1768 | 05/10/1768 | probably San Luís de Natchez | St. Francis Catholic Cemetery, Pointe Coupée Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.340 | Anne | Rivet (Rivette) | Acadia | Anne Landry | Michel Rivet | Married Pierre Ribolle, a native of Fuente, Vergona, Spain, a corporal in the local Spanish garrison, and the son of Ferdinand Ribolle and Paule María Tesques, at Pointe Coupée Parish, La., August 9, 1768. Geneviève Landry, Anne Rivet, Cirille Rivet, and Michel Rivet witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 1:215. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.341 | Marie | Aucoin | Marie LeBlanc | Joseph Aucoin | Married Joseph Breau, son of Antoine Breau and Marguerite Landry, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 15, 1777. François Landry, Pierre Breau, Pierre Dupuis, Michel Bourgeois, and Michel Breau witnessed the marriage record. | Marie Constance (married February 3, 1804), Joseph, fils (married Febraury 6, 1816) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 20. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.342 | Pierre | Aucoin | Acadia | Magdeleine Trahan (Trahant) | Charles Aucoin | Married Marie Guédry (Guidry), daughter of Claude Guédry and Anne Moliz of Maraca (Majorca?), at St. Gabriel, La., October 24, 1788. Simon Pierre Daigre and Jean Baptiste Trahan witnessed the marriage record. (New Orleans ecclesiastical records indicate that the wedding took place in the Crescent City on January 14, 1786.) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:38; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 24. | 10/08/1792 | St. Gabriel, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.343 | Marguerite | Templet (Templé) | St. Servan, France (one source indicates St. Malo, France) | Marguerite LeBlanc | André Templet (Templé) | Married Joaquin Blanchard, a native of Saint-Suliac, France, and the son of Beloni Blanchard and Magdeleine Forest (Forêt), at Assumption Parish, La., August 20, 1793. | Charles Joachim (Joaquín) (baptized November 27, 1796), Augustin (born February 11, 1797), Florentin (born October 30, 1798), Ambroise (born July 4, 1800) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:91, 92, 94, 95. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.344 | Jean Jacques | Blanchard | Marguerite Comeau(?) | Gabriel Blanchard | Married Modeste Aimée Bourg, daughter of Ambroise Bourg and Marie Modeste Moulaison, at New Orleans, January 5, 1786. | Modeste (born November 25, 1787), Zephirin (baptized May 24, 1792), Emerite (baptized June 24, 1792), Marin (Marain) (born February 14, 1793), Joseph (born April 7, 1796), Louis Amant (Arman) (baptized July 13, 1800, at the age of 1 1/2 years), Augustine (born April 13, 1802) | The 1793 census of Nueva Feliciana indicates that he was the head of a household that included three male children, two female children, one young male adult, and one young female adult. Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his family were residents of Nueva Feliciana in April 1794. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:92, 94, 96-97, 100; General Census of New Feliciana, 1793, AGI, PPC, legajo 208. | 1.785 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.345 | Henri | Blanchard | 01/01/1723 | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:95. | 04/10/1783 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.346 | Augustin | BouDrot | Acadia | Marie Doiron (Doyran) | Pierre Boudrot | Married Osite (Osithe) Hébert (Hebere)k, daughter of Jacques Hébert and Marguerite (Margueritte) Landry (Landris) at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 7, 1771. Joseph Saulnier, Thomas Terriot (Theriot), Jean Baptiste Bergeron, and Joseph Dupuis witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.347 | Étienne | Boudrot (Boudereau, Boudreaux) | Brigite Apart (Apant) | Antoine Boudrot | Married Victoire Gauterot, daughter of Alexandre Gauterot and Marguerite Hébert, at ascension Parish, La., January 10, 1788. Manuel Ordonez witnessed the marriage record. | Charles (baptized February 24, 1789), Pierre Alexandre (born June 21, 1790), Augustin (born November 24, 1791), Stanislaus (born September 11, 1793), Étienne Magloire (born November 30, 1794), Françoise Anastasie (born September 14, 1797), Jean (baptized November 11, 1799), Étienne Simon (born May 27, 1801) | Ecclesiastical records indicate that he and his wife were residents of the Valenzuela settlement in the Lafourche District in June 1790. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:109-113, 117; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.348 | Félix | Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Married Françoise Guillot at Ascension Parish, October 16, 1786. (Genealogist Sidney Marchand maintains that the marriage ceremony occurred on October 17, 1786.) Pierre Guillot and Pierre Landry witnessed the marriage record. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:111; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 16. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.349 | Jean Baptiste | Boudrot | St. Malo, France (one source indicates Saint Servan, France) | Josèphe (sometimes Catherine) Hébert | Victor Boudrot | Married (1) Marie Françoise LeBlanc, a native of St. Malo, France, and the daughter of Charles LeBlanc and Rosalie Trahan, at Assumption Parish, La., November 30, 1793. Married (2) Marie Rose Benoît, a native of Chatelerault, France, and the daughter of Grégoire Benoît and Marie Rose Carret, at Assumption Parish, La., April 25, 1803. | Jean Baptiste (born June 24, 1796), Théodore (born June 14, 1798) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:114; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:118. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.350 | Pierre | Bourg | Pledieu (either Pleslin or Pleudihen), Diocese of Dole, France | Anne Thibodeau | Charles Bourg | Married Madeleine (Magdelena) Pitre, a native of St. Martin Parish, Nantes, France, and the daughter of Pierre Olivier Pitre and Rosalie Hébert, at Assumption Parish, La., June 10, 1798. | Charles Olivier Valentin (born February 11, 1799), Jean Baptiste (born October 6, 1801) | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:120, 123, 127. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.351 | Anne Barbe | Babin | 01/01/1755 | Maryland | Ursule Landry | Jean Baptiste Babin | Married Joseph Melanson (Melançon) dit Vieux, the son of Honoré Melanson (Mealançon) and Marie Breau, at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, October 28, 1778. | Angélina Marguerite (born 1779), Osite Barbe (born 1780), Jean Baptiste (born 1782), Alexandre (born 1784), Joseph (born 1786), Charles (born ca. 1787) | On October 13, 1781, she and her husband sold to Anne Landry, the widow of René Landry, a tract of land with five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 7. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.352 | Marie Magdeleine (Madeleine) | Breau (Braud) | Acadia | Married (1) Olivier Babin. Married (2) Pierre Forest (Forêt), December 11, 1775. Married (3) Guillaume Raphael Landry dit à Petit Abram, the widower of Anne Granger and the son of Joseph Landry and Anne Granger, May 12, 1782. | First marriage: Barbe, Marie Josèphe (born 1765), Marianne (born 1767) | On April 20, 1798, she donated to her daughter Barbe a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River. This property was located twenty arpents below Bayou Lafourche. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 9; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:71, 426; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 19-20, 42. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.353 | Élizabeth (Isabelle) | Benoît (Benoist) | Marie Comeau | Alexis Benoît | Married Jean Baptiste Dupuis, son of Antoine Dupuis and Marguerite Boudrot at Ascension Parish, February 7, 1775. Charles Melanson (Melançon), Augustin Broussard, and François Hébert witnessed the marriage record. | Simon (married October 5, 1778) | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:71; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 38. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.354 | Paul | Breau | 01/01/1764 | Baltimore, Maryland | Marie LeBlanc | Pierre Valentin Breau | Married Marguerite (Marguerite Françoise) Landry, the widow of Firmin Guédry (Guidry) and the daughter of Charles Landry and Marguerite Boudrot, at Ascension Parish, La., January 5, 1801. | Paul (a twin) (born ca. July 1801), Françoise (a twin) (born ca. July 1801)Genealogist Clarence T. Breaux indicates that he had two sons who migrated to Louisiana: Cornelio Paul and François Magloire | On February 6, 1784, Paul Breau (Braud) purchased from Amant (Armand) Breau a tract of land with thirteen arpents frontage on the left bank of the Mississippi River. Located twenty-five leagues above New Orleans, this property was bounded above by the land of Veuve Simon Landry and below by the property of Paul Breau. Improvements on the property included a house of sur sol construction, measuring twenty-six feet by sixteen feet. | His burial record indicates that he was forty-five years of age at the time of his death. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:155; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 21, 22, 56-57; Clarence T. Breaux, "The Breauxs/Brauds in Louisiana," 4, 5. | 20/01/1809 | Ascension Parish, La. | NULL | ||||||||||||||
3.355 | Marie | Bergeron | Pisiquid, Acadia | Married Louis Chauvin , of Navarre. | Jean Baptiste (married [1] February 9, 1773) | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 27-28. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.356 | Louis | Dantin (D'Antin) | Married Marguerite Breau, daughter of Alexis Breau and Marie Guillot, at Ascension Parish, La., July 23, 1787; however, the 1788 census suggests that he was an unmarried widower; the census reports also list his wife as a member of her parents' household in 1788 and 1789. | Louis François (baptized December 25, 1788; married October 18, 1807), Marguerite (born November 20, 1789), Fabien Sebastien (born October 10, 1793), Marie Louise (August 24, 1795), Jean Baptiste (born February 28, 1799), Modeste Carmelite (born May 11, 1801), Marie Carmelite (born May 18, 1803) | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 37-42; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:220-221; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 32. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.357 | Marguerite | Dugas | Nantes, France | Marie Victoire Pitre | Ambroise Dugast (Dugas) | Married Jean Doiron, son of Jacques Doiron and Anne Breau, at Ascension Parish, La., April 16, 1792. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 33; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:243. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.358 | Théodore | Dugas | Marie Charlotte Gaudin (Godin) | Jean Dugas | Married Marie Victoire Forest (Forêt), daughter of Pierre Forest (Forêt) and Marguerite Blanchard of Acadia, at Ascension Parish, La., October 11, 1784. | His burial record indicates that he died at the age of fifty-nine years. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 35-36; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:261. | 28/03/1827 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.359 | Valéry | Dupuis (Dupuy) | Anne Richard | Jean Baptiste Dupuis | Married Marie Hortense Hébert, daughter of Donat Hébert and Marie Henriette Hébert, May 29, 1826. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 39. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.360 | Marie Hélène (Maria Elena) | Guédry (Guidry) | probably St. Malo, France | Anne Bourg (Bourque) | Charles Guédry | Married Sebastien Frédéric (Frederick), son of Simon Frédéric and Nanette Benoît, July 9, 1821. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 47. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.361 | Geneviève | Hébert | Anne Josèphe Dugat (Dugas) | Jean Baptiste Hébert | Married Pierre Lavergne, son of Pierre Lavergne and Marguerite Daigle, October 2, 1802. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 49. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.362 | Marie | Landry | Brigitte Boudrot | Basile Landry | Married Louis Caissy dit Roger, October 29, 1774. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 91. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.363 | Joseph | Melanson (Melançon) | 01/01/1732 | Magdeleine LeBlanc | Jean Baptiste Melanson (Melançon) | Married Anne Landry, ca. 1758. | Olivier (born 1760), Marguerite (born 1762), Simon (born 1767) | His widow occupied lot no. 141 along the Mississippi River in St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | He died sometime before the 1769 census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2554; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 79. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||
3.364 | Joseph | bourg | 01/01/1736 | Françoise Dugas | Joseph Bourg | Married Marguerite Borel (Durelle), daughter of Charles Lacroix dit Durel and Judith Chiasson, June 27, 1772. | Pélagie (baptized January 16, 1774) | The April 15, 1777, census of the inhabitants of the left bank of the Mississippi River at St. Jacques de Cabannocé indicates that he was the forty-three-year-old head of a household that included the following persons: Marguerite Durel (Borel), his wife, 42 years old; Joseph Préjean, his son, 14 years old; Jean Baptiste Préjean, his son, 11 years old; Basile Préjean, his son, 8 years old; Victoire Préjean, his daughter, 16 years old; Rose Préjean, his daughter, 16 years old; Marie Rose Préjean, his daughter, 7 years old; Aimée (Anne?) Préjean, his daughter, 6 years old; and Pélagie Préjean, his daughter, 3 years old. He and his family owned a tract of land with six arpents frontage on the Mississippi River. They also owned one slave, twenty-five cows, and four horses. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2431; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 87; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:128. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.365 | Marguerite | Richard | Cécile Melanson (Melançon) | Claude Richard | Married Jean Baptiste Hébert, son of Paul Hébert and Marie Josèphe Melanson (Melançon), at Ascension Parish, June 6, 1774. | Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 89. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.366 | Joseph | Richard | Cécile Melanson (Melançon) | Claude Richard | Married Anne Landry, daughter of Alexandre Landry and Anne Leblanc, at Ascension Parish, La., June 6, 1774. | Marguerite (married June 2, 1794) | On February 16, 1777, Joseph Richard's farm, which had five arpents frontage on the right bank of the Mississippi River in Ascension Parish, was sold. At the time of the sale, the farm had a small house that had fallen into ruin. The farmstead was located twenty-two leagues above New Orleans. It was situated between the lands of Amand Babin and Amand Préjean. | List of Acadian Families, 1767, AGI, ASD, 2585; Wood, Guide, 136-138; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56, 89. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.367 | Anne | Trahan | 01/01/1737 | Married Honnoré (Honoré) Duhon. | Augustin (born 1765), Jacques (born 1768), Jean Charles (born 1772) | Departed La Rochelle, France, aboard the Amitié, a merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to New Orleans. Arrived in Louisiana on November 7, 1785. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Expeditions of 1785, 50-62. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.368 | Marguerite | Cormier | Marie Arseneau | Joseph Cormier | Married (2) Pedro Flore (Flori) at St. Jacques de Cabannocé, January 30, 1786. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:288. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.369 | Jean Baptiste | Doucet | Élisabeth Hébert | Jean Doucet | Married Anne Comeau, daughter ofCharles Comeau and Magdeleine Landry, at St. Gabriel, La., January 11, 1773. | Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:247. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.370 | Marie Josèphe | Thibodeau | Françoise Saulnier | Pierre Thibodeau | Married François Pitre. | Anastasie (born January 22, 1777), Charles (baptized July 29, 1781, at the age of 4 months), an unidentified child (buried on August 2, 1785), Eufrosine (baptized June 20, 1784, at the age of 4 months; died June 23, 1787), François (married November 23, 1795), Joseph (baptized September 11, 1791), Louis (born August 10, 1786), Marie Josèphe (married August 25, 1788), Paul (baptized May 26, 1779, at the age of 9 months), Pierre (married April 7, 1790), Silesie (Selesie) (born October 27, 1788) | Régis Sygefroy Brun, "Listes des Prisoniers Acadiens au Fort Edward," Cahiers de la Société Historique Acadienne, 3, no. 4, 24ième cahier (1969): 158-164; 3, no. 5, 25ième cahier (1969): 188-192; Vidrine, comp., Opelousas Post, 1764-1789, 27, 49, [55]; Vidrine and De Ville, Marriage Contracts of the Opelousas Post, 24; Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 2A, p. 752; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2566; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, April 15, 1776, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110; Muster Roll of the Opelousas Militia, June 8, 1777, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; General Census of the Opelousas District, 1788, AGI, PPC, legajo 2361; General Census of the Opelousas District, May 1796, AGI, PPC, legajo 2364. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.371 | Anne | Trahan | Françoise Roy | Étienne Trahan | Married (1) Jean Baptiste Benoît. Married (2) Louis Ledée. Married (3) Charles François Campeau (Campo). | Facsimile transmission from Stephen White to Janie Bulliard, November 26, 1997. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.372 | Françoise (Françoise Gertrude) | Guillot | 03/03/1767 | Cotes-du-Nord Department, France | Françoise Bourg | René Guillot | Married (1) Félix Boudrot. Married (2) Paul (Paul Hypolite) Theriot, on May 22, 1787. In her 1787 marriage record, Guillot's surname is mistakenly rendered as Melanson. | Joseph (born March 28, 1788), Suzanne (born ca. 1790), Paul [I] (born May 10, 1792), Julien (born ca. March 1795), Martin (born ca. 1797), Marie Marthe (born January 28, 1800), Paul [II] (born November 15, 1802), Charles Raphael (born January 1, 1808) | She died before September 18, 1822. | Census of Cabannocé, April 9, 1766, AGI, PPC, 187A; Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2594-2596; List of Acadians Settlers on Both Sides of the [Mississippi] River, from Jacques Cantrelle's Farm to Isle aux Marais, September 14, 1769, AGI, PPC, 187A-2; Muster Roll of Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Muster Roll, Louis Judice's Militia Company, Cabannocé District, Acadian Coast, January 23, 1770, AGI, PPC, legajo 161; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 95; Diocese of Baton Rouge, 2:535, 691-692; Glenn R. Conrad, Land Records of the Attakapas District, 1804-1818, 2, pt. 2, p. 157; Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record." | Tue, Mar 3, 1767 | Trigavou, Cotes-du-Nord, France | Attakapas District, Louisiana | St. Martin de Tours Catholic Church, St. Martinville | NULL | |||||||||||||
3.373 | Anne Marie Julienne | Hebert | 12/07/1773 | Cotes-du-Nord, France | Luce Bourg | Pierre Hébert | Married Pierre Terriot (Theriot), son of Pierre Theriot (Terriot) and Elizabeth Trahan, at Ascension Parish, Louisiana, February 13, 1792. Charles Gauterot and Pedro Monte witnessed the marriage record. | Ambroise Bernard (born 1793); Charles Celestin (Angel) (born November 2, 1795); Louis (born September 22, 1797); Ursin (born January 19, 1800); Joseph Gilbert (born May 24, 1801); Rosalie Reine (born October 1, 1803); Constant Mathurin (born February 11, 1805); Marie Carmelite (born September 8, 1806); Théotiste Carmelite (born July 28, 1809); Anne Elise (January 18, 1811) | The December 1795 census of the Valenzuela District (in present-day Assumption Parish) indicates that she was the twenty-three-year-old spouse of Pierre Terriot. In addition to herself and her husband, the household included two children. The 1797 census of Valenzuela indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old wife of Pierre Terriot, whom the census compiler estimated to be twenty-seven years of age. Her household also included her two sons. The 1798 census of the Lafourche region indicates that her household included herself, whom the census compiler estimated to be twenty-four years old, her twenty-eight-year-old husband, and her two sons Ambroise and Celestin. The household also included her seventeen-year-old orphaned sister, Julienne. | Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Pierre Theriot and Elizabeth Trahan." | Wed, Dec 8, 1773 | Tremereuc, Cotes-du-Nord, France | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.374 | Ozite (Osite) Perpetué Rose | Terriot (Theriot) | England | Marie Boudrot | Jean Charles Terriot | Jean Simon (born October 19, 1787) | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-eight-year-old spouse of Jean Maillet. She and her thirty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned eighteen barrels of corn and one hog. Her name is rendered as Rose Teriot in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the left-bank settlements of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-nine-year-old spouse of Jean Maillet. She and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned twenty barrels of corn, one horse, and nine hogs. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.375 | Charles | Bergeron | Listed among the Lafourche District Acadians who volunteered to served under Governor Bernardo de G lvez in the Spanish campaign against British West Florida during the American Revolution, 1779. He held the rank of fusilier in the unit. On September 18, 1788, Eusèbe (Euzèbe) Arseneau (Arsenaut) and Charles Bergeron officially charged Joseph Mollère with stealing cypress timber from their lands. | List of volunteers from the Lafourche des Chetimachas militia who promised to follow the governor-general of this province wherever he deems proper, 1779. AGI, PPC, 192:563; Euzèbe Arsenaut and Charles Bergeron to Estevan Mir¢, September 18, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:641; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 12. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||||
3.376 | Barthélemy | Bergeron | 01/01/1698 | Acadia | Married Marguerite Dugas at Port Royal, Nova Scotia, April 21, 1721. | Jean Baptiste dit d'Amboise (born 1722), Marguerite (born ca. 1724), an unidentified son (born ca. 1726), Charles (born March 23, 1728), Judith (born ca. 1734), Cécile (born ca. 1737), Barthelémy (born ca. 1740), Marie Anne (born ca. 1741), GermainCharles (born in 1743) | Died before 1767. | Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group Record: Barthelemy Bergeron II and Marguerite Dugas." | Barthélemy Bergeron and his family, including two sons and three daughters, are listed in the 1736 census of the Acadian village of Sainte-Anne along the St. John River in present-day New Brunswick. Bergeron was captured by the British along the St. John River during the Grand Dérangement. Some members of Bergeron's family were held as prisoners at Halifax until 1763. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.377 | Henry | Peyroux de la Coudrenière | Mortagne, Poitou Province, France | Married Prudence Rodrigue, an Acadian. | With Olivier Terriot (Theriot), an Acadian shoemaker, Henri Peyroux de la Coudrenière helped organize the 1785 Acadian migration from France to Louisiana. | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, p. 25. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.378 | Henri | Peyroux de la Coudrenière | 01/01/1743 | Mortagne, Poitou Province, France | Marguerite-Suzanne Peyroux | Married Prudence Rodrigue, an Acadian. | No children. | Reportedly visited Louisiana ca. 1783. Subsequently returned to France. With Acadian Olivier Terriot (Theriot), Peyroux de la Coudrenière recruited the Acadians remaining in France for colonization in Louisiana. Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. He later drafted a report on Louisiana agriculture. Peyroux de la Coudrenière served as commandant of the Ste. Geneviève district of present-day Missouri from 1787 to 1794. While serving as commandant, he visited Philadelphia and met with Thomas Jefferson. Removed as commandant of Ste. Geneviève because of his suspected support of the French revolution. He was later exonerated and appointed commandant of New Madrid in present-day Missouri. Dismissed from office in 1803. He subsequently returned to France. | The date of his death is not known. | Carl J. Ekberg, "Peyroux de la Coudreniere," Dictionary of Louisiana Biography, 2 vols. (New Orleans: Louisiana Historical Association, 1988), 2:646-657; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, p. 25; Carl J. Ekberg, Colonial Ste. Genevieve (1985); Abraham P. Nasatir, Spanish War Vessels (1962); Oscar W. Winzerling, Acadian Odyssey (Baton Rouge, 1955). | France | NULL | ||||||||||||||||
3.379 | Margueritte (Margritta, Marguerite) | Noël | Veuve Roquemont | St. Servan, Brittany, France, the child of Acadian exiles | Marie Madeleine Barbe | Pierre Noël | Married (1) Guillaume Jean Roquemont, who was thirty-six years older than his bride. Married (2) Charles Aucoin at Ascension Parish, La., January 16, 1786. Olivier Aucoing (Aucoin), Guillaume Mazerolle, and Paul Bellisle witnessed the marriage record. | Marguerite Eugénie (born January 20, 1790), Marcelin Firmin (Marcelino) (born May 16, 1791; buried December 2, 1802, at the age of eleven years), Melanie, Augustin Babilas (January 24, 1795), Anne Carmelite (July 3, 1799), Evariste Claude (born September 7, 1801) | Departed France aboard the Bergère, a 300-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, May 12, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 15, 1785. | The 1788 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-four-year-old spouse of Charles Aucoing (Aucoin). In addition to herself and her husband, the household included Aucoin's twenty-four-year-old sister-in-law. Noël and her husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned five cattle, two horses and six hogs. Identified as Margritta Noël in the 1789 census of the Lafourche District. The 1789 census of the Lafourche District indicates that she was the twenty-five-year-old wife of Charles Aucoing (Aucoin). She and her forty-year-old husband occupied a tract of land with six arpents frontage. They owned sixteen barrels of corn, two cows, one horse, and six hogs. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 21-25; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 13; General census of the settlers in the Lafourche District, 1788, AGI, PPC, 201:668-680; General Census of the Settlers of the Lafourche District, 1789, AGI, PPC, 202:248-259vo; Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, 2:32-37. | 1.785 | NULL | |||||||||||||||
3.380 | Pierre Laurent | Potier (Poitier) | 01/01/1775 | Marie Doucet | Pierre Potier (Poitier) | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 28. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.381 | Marguerite | Bourg | 01/01/1748 | St. Charles des Mines Parish, Grand Pré, Nova Scotia | Marie Landry | Joseph Bourg | The register of admissions at the Ursuline Convent in New Orleans notes that Marguerite Bourg had "passed more than a year at the Ursuline boarding school in New Orleans" prior to receiving the religious habit on October 26, 1767. Father Prosper, a Capuchin priest and chaplain to the Ursuline order, presided over the induction ceremony. Bourg subsequently took the religious name of Sister Sainte Claire. "In April 1768, the [Ursuline religious] community decided that she did not have the qualities required for the religious life and she returned to her family." | James F. Geraghty, "Louisiana's First Acadian Religious," Attakapas Gazette, 12 (1977): 198-200. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.382 | Marguerite | Breau (Braud) | 01/01/1763 | Probably Maryland | Rose Landry | Janvier Breau (Braud) | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.383 | Madeleine | Breau (Braud) | 01/01/1765 | Probably Maryland | Rose Landry | Janvier Breau (Braud) | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Distribution of Lands among the Acadian Families at San Luís de Natchez, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:314-314vo. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.384 | Pierre Joseph | Hébert | 01/01/1785 | Marie Bernard | Pierre Hébert | Departed France aboard the Beaumont, a 180-ton merchant vessel chartered by the Spanish government to transport Acadian exiles to Louisiana, June 11, 1785. Arrived in Louisiana, August 19, 1785. | Identified in the May 16, 1803, census of the Carencro area of the Attakapas District as an 18-year-old member of his parents' household. | Rieder and Rieder, comps., Seven Acadian Expeditions of 1785, 29; Bugeon and Hivert-Le Faucheux, comps., Les Acadiens partis de France en 1785, pp. 27-30; Census of the Carencro Area in the Attakapas District, May 16, 1803, AGI, PPC, legajo 220B. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.385 | Marianne (Madeleine) | Landry | 01/01/1766 | Brigitte Boudrot (Boudreaux) | Basile Landry | Listed as a member of her parents' household at San Luís de Natchez, February 2, 1768. | List of Acadian Families Who Have Come to Settle in Louisiana, February 2, 1768, AGI, ASD, 2585:312; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 56`. | 1.768 | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.386 | Anastasie | Landry | 01/01/1757 | Marie Josèphe Landry | Étienne Landry | The August 1, 1770, census of the right bank settlements of Ascension Parish indicates that she was a member of her parents' household. | 1.766 | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||
3.387 | Marguerite | Saulnier | Married Joseph Cormier | Susanne (born 1760) | Hebert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 211. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.388 | Marie | Girouard | Michel Comeau | Jean | General Census of the Opelousas District, October 25, 1774, AGI, PPC, 189A:106-110. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.389 | Marie Charlotte | Breau (Breaux) | 01/01/1777 | Brigitte Forest (Forêt) | Pierre Breau (Breaux) | General Census of St. Jacques de Cabannocé, April 15, 1777, AGI, PPC, 190:192 et seq.; Marchand, An Attempt to Re-Assemble the Old Settlers in Family Groups, 22. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||||
3.390 | Olivier | Guédry (Guidry) | Boston, Massachusetts | Marguerite Picot | Augustin Guédry (Guidry) | Married Félicité Aucoin, daughter of Alexandre Aucoin and Elizabeth (Elisabeth, Isabelle) Duon (Duhon), at the Attakapas church, January 8, 1793. Father George Murphy officiated at the wedding ceremony. Charles Guibeau, Jean Baptiste Simon, and David Babineau witnessed the marriage record. | Susanne (born January 20, 1794), Pierre (born February 25, 1796), Paul (born March 25, 1798), Olivier, fils (born April 8, 1800) | Hébert, Southwest Louisiana Records, rev. ed., vol. 1A, p. 374-376. | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.391 | Pierre | Barillot (Barilleaux) | 01/01/1737 | probably Pisiquid, Acadia | Véronique Girouard(?) | Pierre Barillot(?) | Married Marie Bourgeois, ca. 1760. | Canadian genealogist Bona Arsenault maintains that he was a resident of the west bank settlement at St. Jacques de Cabannocé in 1777. | Arsenault, Histoire et généalogie, 6:2415. | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.392 | Augustin Joseph (Joseph) | Adam | La Rochelle, France | Marie Anne Blanchard | Nicolas Adam | Married Marguerite Perinne Crochet, November 20, 1785. | André (born ca. 1787), Marie Josèphe (born March 3, 1789), Julie Adelaide (born May 14, 1791), Marcel (Marcelin) (born August 8, 1792), Pierre Alexandre (born January 1, 1795), Jacques (Santiago) (born September 20, 1796), Maximilien (Similien) (born May 8, 1798) | Augustin Joseph Adam's baptismal record indicates that his father was a "maître d'équipage" a boatswain in 1757. | A 1786 crew list for the Amitié indicates that Augustin Joseph Adam signed on as a boatswain aboard the ship for a voyage to Louisiana and a return to France via Saint-Domingue. Under the terms of the contract, Adam received two months' wages in advance. A marginal notation in the crew list indicates that Adam disembarked at Louisiana due to illness on February 14, 1786. The notation also indicates that he was paid for what appears to have been six months and six days of service aboard the Amitié. His monthly salary was 70 livres per month, and he appears to have been paid a total of 364 livres. Another crew list indicates that Augustin Joseph Adam was twenty-nine yearsa of age at the time of the voyage. It also maintains that he was of "average" height and that he had brown hair. The latter list suggests that he had previously served as a boatswain in the royal naval with a salary of 50 livres per month. | Died before August 1810. | Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Augustin Joseph Adam and Marguerite Perinne Crochet;" copy of original French baptismal records in the possession of Jolene Adam, St. Martinville, Louisiana; Crew's list for the Amitié, 1786, copy in the possession of Jolene Adam, St. Martinville, Louisiana. | Sun, Mar 20, 1757 | La Rochelle, France | NULL | ||||||||||||||
3.393 | Marie Monique | Dupuis | 01/01/1752 | Acadia | Anne Gaudet | Michel Dupuis | Married Joseph Arsenault, September 10, 1780. | Céleste (born ca. 1781), Esther, Joseph, fils (born June 26, 1786), Modeste (born August 5, 1788), Pélagie (born December 13, 1790) | Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Marie Monique Dupuis and Joseph Arsenault." | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
3.394 | Charles Suliac (Souliac) | Arcement (Arsement) | Ile-et-Vilaine, France | Marie Hébert | Pierre Arcement | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||||||
3.395 | Olivier | Barillot | 01/01/1737 | Pisiquid, Nova Scotia | Véronique Girouard | Pierre Barillot | Married (1) Anastasie Boudrot, daughter of Jean Boudrot and Agathe Thibodeau, in France, February 19, 1764. Barillot's first wife died at St. Malo, France, February 19, 1766. Married (2) Elizabeth Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and Anne Theriot, May 10, 1768. | First marriage: Anne Marie Josèphe (born April 3, 1765)Second marriage: Charles Olivier (born March 3, 1769), Jean Baptiste (born March 22, 1771), Joseph Marie (September 27, 1773) | NULL | |||||||||||||||||||
3.396 | Elizabeth | Landry | 01/01/1747 | Grand Pré, Nova Scotia | Anne Theriot (Terriot) | Pierre Landry | Married Olivier Barillot, widower of Anastasie Boudrot and son of Pierre Barillot and Véronique Girouard, May 10, 1768. | Charles Olivier (born March 3, 1769), Jean Baptiste (born March 22, 1771), Joseph Marie (September 27, 1773) | Karen Theriot Reader, "Family Group: Olivier Barillot and Elizabeth Landry." | NULL | ||||||||||||||||||
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