Marguerite Josephe Melanson

Female 1718 - 1772  (53 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Marguerite Josephe Melanson was born 6 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 16 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada (daughter of Jean Dominique Melanson and Marguerite Dugas); died 29 Mar 1772, Morlaix, Finistère, Bretagne, France.

    Marguerite married Joseph Thériault [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Joseph Jean Thériault was born 4 Sep 1723, Grand Pre,Kings,Nova Scotia,Canada; was christened 5 Sep 1723, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 5 Oct 1823, Caraquet, Gloucester, New-Brunswick, Canada; was buried 7 Oct 1823, Caraquet, Gloucester, New-Brunswick, Canada.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Jean Dominique Melanson was born 1681, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of Pierre Melanson and Marie Marguerite Anne Mius D'Entremont); died 23 Nov 1760, France.

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/207614507/jean-dominique-melanson

    Jean married Marguerite Dugas Marguerite (daughter of Claude Dugas and Françoise Bourgeois) was born 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; was christened 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; died Before 28 February 1729, Acadia, New France. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Marguerite Dugas was born 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; was christened 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France (daughter of Claude Dugas and Françoise Bourgeois); died Before 28 February 1729, Acadia, New France.
    Children:
    1. Alexander Miguoin Melanson was born 1716, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 1769, Snowhill, Worcester, Maryland, United States; was buried 1769, Snow Hill, Wocester, Maryland, United States.
    2. Pierre B Melanson was born 4 Sep 1710, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 4 Sep 1710, Saint Charles des Mines, Gand Pre, Acadia, New France; died 1759, Donaldsonville, Ascension, Louisiana, United States.
    3. Marie Josephe Melanson was born 8 Jan 1713, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 8 Jan 1713, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died Before 27 July 1767, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, United States.
    4. 1. Marguerite Josephe Melanson was born 6 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 16 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 29 Mar 1772, Morlaix, Finistère, Bretagne, France.
    5. Jean-Baptiste Melanson, I was born 28 Feb 1706, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1706, Grand Pre Nova Scotia; died 7 Jul 1763, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, British Colonial America; was buried , Maryland, British Colonial America.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Pierre Melanson was born 1632, Yorkshire, England (son of Pierre Melanson and Priscilla Melanson); died 1720, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was buried 1720, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    He is the son of Pierre Laverdure dit Melanson and Priscilla Melanson. Pierre was a tailor by trade and a captain in the militia at Mines, Acadie.

    He was supposedly a Huguenot, and a Calviniste (although that isn't confirmed). Pierre was of French and English descent as explained below:

    His father, Pierre Laverdure dit Melanson, left France because of persecution of his Protestant faith, finding refuge in England. It was there that he met his wife Priscilla Melanson or Malleson.

    Pierre senior moved to Boston with his wife Priscilla and youngest son in 1667 (after the French retook Acadia), where he probably died. After his father died, his mother was remarried to William Wright, on 18 April 1680.


    After initially settling at Port Royal, Pierre Melanson was later one of the founders of Grand Pre with Pierre Theriot. He was a stonemason.

    "In the spring of 1657, the family embarked in England aboard the vessel Satisfaction under the command of Captain Peter Butler, forming part of the company which Thomas Temple was transporting to Acadia, over which he had been named Governor after its capture by the English. Having first stopped at Boston, Captain Butler next went to the fort on the St. John River, where a group of his passengers disembarked, and finally to Port-Royal. It appears the La Verdure (or Melanson, as they were known) family stopped at Fort St. John. After the Treaty of Breda, under which in 1667 England ceded Acadia to France, he and his parents went to seek refuge under the Protestant government at Boston.

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/138630602/pierre-melanson

    Pierre married Marie Marguerite Anne Mius D'Entremont Port-Royal, Acadia, New France. Marie (daughter of Philippe Mius d'Entremont and Madeleine "Helie du" Tillet) was born 1649, Cherbourg, Manche, Normandy, France; died 1691, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 1714, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Marie Marguerite Anne Mius D'EntremontMarie Marguerite Anne Mius D'Entremont was born 1649, Cherbourg, Manche, Normandy, France (daughter of Philippe Mius d'Entremont and Madeleine "Helie du" Tillet); died 1691, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 1714, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    Marie-Marguerite-Anne Mius d'Entremont married Pierre in 1665, in Port-Royal, Acadie. They are the parents of the following:

    1) Philippe-Charles (1666-1744) md Catherine-Marie Dugas
    2) Cecile (1668-1753) md Jean Landry
    3) Pierre (1670-1752) md Marie-Rosalie Blanchard
    4) Marie-Madeleine (1673-1714) md Germain Landry
    5) Marguerite (1676-1744) md Alexandre Bourg
    6) Elisabeth (1679-1718) md (1) Pierre-Alain Bujold and (1) Rene Leblanc
    7) Jean (1681-) md Marguerite Dugas
    8) Madeleine-Catherine (1683-) md Louis-Simon LePoupet
    9) Anne-Marie (1686-) md Thomas-Jacques Jacob
    10) Paul-Pierre (1691-) md Marie Theriault

    Children:
    1. Marguerite Melanson was born Abt 1676, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; died 15 Jul 1744, Acadia, New France; was buried 16 Jul 1744, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia , Canada.
    2. Paul-Pierre Melanson was born 1686, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 1774, Donaldsonville, Ascension, Louisiana, United States.
    3. 2. Jean Dominique Melanson was born 1681, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 23 Nov 1760, France.
    4. Marie Madeleine Melancon was born About 1673, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 15 Jul 1744, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States or St Charles, Mines, Canada.
    5. Pierre Melanson was born 1670, Acadia, New France; died 1751, Acadia, New France.
    6. Isabelle Melanson was born 1679, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1679, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died About 1719, Acadia, New France.
    7. Philippe-Charles Melancon was born 1666, St Charles Des Mines, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 24 Jun 1744, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Saint-Charles-des-Mines Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada .

  3. 6.  Claude Dugas was born 1652, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of Abraham Dugas and Marie-Marguerite Doucet); died 16 Oct 1732, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 16 Oct 1732, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    from www.geni.com
    Claude Dugas, I
    Birthdate: 1649 (83)
    Birthplace: Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada
    Death: October 16, 1732 (83)
    Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada
    Place of Burial: Port-Royal (Acadie), Nova Scotia, Canada
    Immediate Family:
    Son of Abraham Dugas and Marguerite Doucet
    Husband of Marguerite Bourg and Marie-Françoise Bourgeois
    Father of Elisabeth Dugas; Joseph dit le jeune Dugas; Marguerite Marie Bergeron; Marguerite Dugas; Louis Dugas; Claire Dugas; Marie-Anne Dugas; Charles Dugas; Marie Dugas; Claude Dugas, Jr.; Michel Dugas; Marie-Catherine Dugas; Claude Dugas; Françoise Dugas; Joseph Francois Dugas; Marie Marguerite Dugas; Jeanne Dugas; Anne Dugas; Agnès-Marie Dugas; Marie-Madeleine Dugas; Marie Dugas and Cécile Dugas « less
    Brother of Marie Anne Dugas; Martin Dugas; Marie-Marguerite Dugas; Abraham Dugas, III; Madeleine Dugas; Marie-Jeanne Dugas; Cecile Dugas; Marie Dugas and Marie Dugas « less
    Occupation: Gunsmith



    20 Mar 1682: Claude Dugas's name appears on the record of La Valliere's allotment to his tenants.

    Aug 1695 (old style): Claude Dugas took the oath of allegiance to the King of England at Port-Royal; he made his mark on the document.

    ID: I597
    Name: Claude DUGAS
    Surname: Dugas
    Given Name: Claude
    Sex: M
    Birth: 1652 in Port Royal,Acadia 1
    Reference Number: 112
    Change Date: 28 Feb 2005 at 00:00:00

    HintsAncestry Hints for Claude DUGAS

    10 possible matches found on Ancestry.comAncestry.com


    Father: Abraham DUGAS b: 1616 in France c: in France
    Mother: Marguerite Louise DOUCET b: 1625 in France

    Marriage 1 Francoise BOURGEOIS b: 1659 in Port Royal,Acadia

    Married: ABT 1673 in Port Royal,Acadia

    Children

    Has Children Marie DUGAS b: 1674 in Port Royal,La.
    Has Children Claude DUGAS b: 1676 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Francoise DUGAS b: 1678 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Anne DUGAS b: 1679 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Joseph DUGAS b: 1680 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Marguerite DUGAS b: 1681 in Grand-Pre,Acadia
    Has Children Anne DUGAS b: 1683 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Jeanne DUGAS b: 1684 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Agnes DUGAS b: 1686 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Francois DUGAS b: 1688 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Madeleine DUGAS b: 1689 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Cecile DUGAS b: 1690 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Marie DUGAS b: 1691 in Port Royal,Acadia


    Marriage 2 Marguerite BOURG b: 1673 in Port Royal,Acadia

    Married: ABT 1696 in Port Royal,Acadia

    Children

    Has Children Elizabeth DUGAS b: 1697 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Joseph DUGAS b: 1698 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Louis DUGAS b: 1703 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Marguerite DUGAS b: 1704 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Claire DUGAS b: 1705 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Anne DUGAS b: 1706 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Marie Anne DUGAS b: 1707 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Charles DUGAS b: 1709 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Claude DUGAS b: 1712 in Port Royal,Acadia
    Has Children Michel DUGAS b: 1715 in Port Royal,Acadia


    Sources:

    Title: "Histoire et Genealogie des Acadien; Volume #2
    Author: Bona Arsenault




    DUGAS

    [DOO-gah]

    ACADIA

    Abraham Dugas, a skilled gunsmith perhaps from Chouppes, Poitiers, France, born in c1616, reached Acadia in the early 1640s--among the early settlers of the colony. (There is genetic evidence that Abraham may have had Jewish ancestry, which would have made him unique among his fellow Acadians.) In October 1687, Abraham "made his mark on an attestation in favour of Governor d'Aulnay's accomplishments," which attests to his early presence in the colony. Abraham also was more than a gunsmith at Port-Royal. According to a high French official, Abraham Dugas "carried out the functions of general representative of the King [in civil and criminal matters]," so he probably came from an influential family in France. Abraham married Marguerite, daughter of Germain Doucet, sieur de La Verdure and his first wife, at Port-Royal in c1647. They had eight children, five daughters and three sons, all born at Port-Royal. Abraham died at Port-Royal by 1700. In December 1705, in order to increase the size of the fort at Port-Royal, colonial officials appropriated two lots "adjoining and drawing towards the old fort" that belonged to Abraham's heirs. His daughters married into the Melanson ditLa Ramée, Bourgeois, Mignot dit Châtillon, Arseneau, and LeBlanc families. All three of his sons also created their own families. Some of his children and grandchildren left Port-Royal and settled at Chignecto, Cap-Sable, Minas, Cobeguit, and on Île Royale and Île St.-Jean.

    Oldest son Claude, born in c1649, a gunsmith like his father, married first to Françoise, daughter of Jacques Bourgeois and Jeanne Trahan, at Port-Royal in c1673. They had 12 children, including three sons who married daughters of Bernard Bourg. Their nine daughters married into the Melanson, Forest, Bourg, Part dit LaForest, Thibodeau, Hébert, Broussard, and Brun families. Claude remarried to Marguerite, another daughter of Bernard Bourg and Françoise Brun, at Port-Royal in c1697. They had 10 children, including five sons who married into the Coste, Girouard, and Robichaudfamilies. Their five daughters married into the Aubois dit Dubois, Bergeron dit d'Amboise, Amireau, and Belliveaufamilies. Claude also owned land at Chignecto as early as 1682. Claude died at Port-Royal in October 1732, in his early 80s, no doubt surrounded by many children, grandchildren, and even great-grandchildren. Most of his children from his first marriage remained at Port-Royal, though two of his sons settled at Cobeguit, and children from his second marriage settled not only at Port-Royal, but also on Rivière St.-Jean and at Port-Toulouse and Port-d'Orléans on Île Royale, today's Cape Breton Island. Several of his grandchildren settled at Minas. By the early 1750s, many of his grandchildren had moved to Île St.-Jean, today's Prince Edward Island, probably to escape British authority in Nova Scotia.

    Hide Details

    Dugas
    1640

    Port-Royal

    From this excellent site on Acadians


    Claude married Françoise Bourgeois 1673, Port Royal, Acadia, New France. Françoise (daughter of Jacques Jacob Bourgeois and Jeanne Trahan) was born 19 Sep 1659, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died Bef 1697, Beaubassin, Acadie, Nouvelle-France; was buried 1697, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Françoise Bourgeois was born 19 Sep 1659, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (daughter of Jacques Jacob Bourgeois and Jeanne Trahan); died Bef 1697, Beaubassin, Acadie, Nouvelle-France; was buried 1697, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. Marie Madeleine Dugas was born 1689, Annapolis Royal, Nova Scotia, British Colonial America; died 10 Aug 1766, Bécancour, Quebec, Canada.
    2. Francoise Dugas was born 3 Oct 1681, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 21 Apr 1731, Bridgetown, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    3. Cecile Dugas was born 1690, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died Deceased, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried After 1735, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    4. François Dugas was born 1688, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1688, Acadie, Canada; died 13 Dec 1758, At Sea In route To France; was buried ft.Aug 1926, St Jean-Baptiste, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia.
    5. 3. Marguerite Dugas was born 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; was christened 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; died Before 28 February 1729, Acadia, New France.
    6. Agnes Dugas was born 1685, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 27 Nov 1734, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 28 Nov 1734, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    7. Joseph Dugas was born 1680, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 1758, Cherbourg-Octeville-Sud-Ouest, Cherbourg-Octeville, Manche, Normandy, France.
    8. Marie Dugas was born About 1691, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 22 Feb 1772, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 24 Feb 1772, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    9. Marie Catherine Dugas was born 1674; died 20 Sep 1733, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was buried , Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Pierre Melanson was born 1606, La Rochelle, Charente-Maritime, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 1 Dec 1676, Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts; was buried After 1685, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusssetts.

    Pierre married Priscilla Melanson. Priscilla died 1 Jan 1692, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried 1692, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Priscilla Melanson died 1 Jan 1692, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts; was buried 1692, Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts.
    Children:
    1. Charles Melanson was born 1643, Yorkshire, England; died 1700; was buried , Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, CA.
    2. 4. Pierre Melanson was born 1632, Yorkshire, England; died 1720, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was buried 1720, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  3. 10.  Philippe Mius d'EntremontPhilippe Mius d'Entremont was born 14 Nov 1601, Cherbourg-Octeville, Departement de la Manche, Basse-Normandie, France (son of Claude Antoine Muis de Montauban and Beatrice D'entremont); died 1700, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Saint-Charles-des-Mines Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    Baron Mius d'Entremont was born in Cherbourg, Normandy and came from a longtime noble family. He was brought to Acadia with his family in 1651, by the new governor Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour. The governor in July 1653 awarded him one of the few fiefs to constitute territory in North America, the Barony of Poboncoup, extending from Cap Nègre to Cap Fourchu (Yarmouth), and in 1670 appointed him lieutenant-major and commander of the king's troops, and procureur du roi (crown attorney), which post he retained until 1687.

    One year after the foundation of this barony, in 1654, Major Robert Sedgewick of Massachusetts made his pass through Acadian lands, initially seizing de La Tour's fort in Saint John and taking him captive, finally devastating the settlements of Port-Royal, Pentagoët and La Hève, but not that of Pobomcoup. During the English occupation, which lasted until the treaty of Bréda in 1667, Philippe Mius d'Entremont was nowhere to be found. His whereabouts would not be known until the census of 1671 when he surfaced in Pobomcoup with his family that included four children, namely Jacques, Abraham, Philippe and Madeleine. The census specifies that the head of family, Mius d'Entremont, had six arpents of land in tillage, 26 horn cattle, 29 ewes, 12 goats and 20 pigs.

    d'Entremont was important to the colony's history as an administrator, and because he promoted agriculture on his seigneury. The settlement and d'Entremont's residence were established at Pubnico, the modern spelling of Poboncoup.

    Source: Wikipedia

    The family of Philippe MIUS and Madeleine ÉLIE:

    MIUS, Philippe, sieur d'Entremont, Royal protonotary (1686) (protonotaire du roi (1686), born about 1609 (rec. 1671, rec. 1686) Normandie (province) (France, known area), died fin 1700 Grand-Pré (Saint-Charles-des-Mines) (Acadie)

    Married about 1649, from Normandie (province) (France, known area)
    ÉLIE, Madeleine, born about 1626 (rec. 1671) Normandie (province) (France, known area), died between census 1671 and census 1678 Port-Royal (Acadie)

    1) Marguerite, born about 1650 (rec. 1686) Normandie (province) (France, known area), died after census 1714 Grand-Pré (Saint-Charles-des-Mines) (Acadie), married about 1665 Pierre MELANÇON dit LAVERDURE

    2) Jacques, born about 1654 (rec. 1671) or 1659 (rec. 1686), married about 1678 Anne LATOUR

    3) Abraham, born about 1658 (rec. 1671) or 1662 (rec. 1686), married about 1676 Marguerite de SAINT-ÉTIENNE de LATOUR

    4) Philippe, born about 1660 (rec. 1671) or 1662 (rec. 1686), married about 1678 .., married about 1687 Marie ..

    5) Madeleine, born about 1669 (rec. 1671) or 1670 (rec. 1686)

    http://www.francogene.com/quebec--genealogy/086/086987.php

    Philippe's patronymic name was not d'Entremont, but Mius, probably of Germanic origin, from the word majus, maius or mius. However, the name of d'Entremont was added to the patronymic surname Mius. The historical connection is as follows, dating back to the French Wars of Religion and the St. Bartholomew's Day massacre in 1572:

    Nicolas Mius was killed at the St. Bartholomew's Day Massacre, murdered at the side protecting Gaspard de Coligny. Gaspard's wife, Jacqueline de Montbel d'Entremont (16 February 1541 - 17 December 1599) was a French noblewoman and only daughter and heiress of the Savoyard family of Montbel d'Entremont who has many fiefs in Savoy, Bresse, Bugey and Piedmont.

    After Jacqueline's husband's murder, the Countess felt indebted to the children of Nicolas Mius. Jacqueline took under her protection a son of Nicolas. (Unfortunately, there is no record of his first name.) The boy was actually under the care of Jacqueline?s mother, the Countess Beatrice d?Entremont of the House of Montbel d?Entremont of Savoie.

    THE NAME OF 'd'ENTREMONT" was THEN added to his surname "MIUS". This was Jacqueline?s wish, since she was the only child who survived her parents' marriage, and had only a daughter from her marriage to the Admiral. The following clause appears in the marriage contract between the Admiral and Jacqueline:

    The following clause appears in the marriage contract between the Admiral and Jacqueline:

    "The first son originating from the marriage and his descendants, whether male or female, would carry the name and coat of arms of Count D'Entremont" (Jacqueline's father). The name of d'Entremont is an adopted name, probably from the grandfather who would have adopted Jacqueline d'Entremont, Nicolas Mius having died at the side of Jacqueline's husband Gaspard de Coligny at St-Barthelmy."


    Philippe Mius d'Entremont arrived in Acadia with his wife and daughter about 1651, as adjutant to Governor Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour and commandant in the colony during the latter's absence. He received, jointly with Pierre Ferrand, by letters patent from La Tour dated 17 Jul 1653, the fief of Pobomcoup, at Cape Sable. in 1670, he became King's attorney.

    On 20 Jul 1684, in his capacity as attorney, he signed an order of the King that was registered at Port-Royal. On 5 Oct 1687 he signed an attestation in favor of the accomplishments of Governor d'Aulnay. in 1688 he was replaced as attorney by Pierre Chenet Dubreuil who had received the retainer for the office on 23 Sep 1687.

    A deposition by Sr. de Tenville (sic for Tienville), taken before Mathieu de Goutin on 31 Jul 1699, related to statements of Sr. d'Entremont, residing at Les Mines, concerning the boundaries of Acadia.
    A letter from Mathieu de Goutin to the Minister on 23 Dec 1707 contained the following: "Sr. Philippe Mius d'Entremont, a native of Normandy, who died seven years ago at the age of ninety-nine years and some months, with all his teeth, had been adjutant under the late M. de la Tour, governor of this country. He had since been obliged to carry out the duties of King's attorney for eighteen years, and had only left off because of his great age."?

    MIUS (Muis) D?ENTREMONT, PHILIPPE, esquire, first baron of Pobomcoup (Pubnico), near Cap de Sable, lieutenant-major, king?s attorney, settler, the first of the d?Entremonts of Nova Scotia; b. c. 1601 (or 1609) in Normandy (probably at Cherbourg); d. c. 1700 (or 1701).

    According to Placide Gaudet, the Norman Philippe Mius was related by marriage to the Bourbon family and was made Sieur d?Entremont by Louis XIV; but according to a descendant, H. Léandre d?Entremont, the titles of nobility are said to go back to the 11th century in Savoy, and a branch of the Savoy family is thought to have emigrated to Normandy during the 16th century. In 1649 the Sieur d?Entremont married Madeleine Hélie (or Élie) Du Tillet (b. 1626). He was then a captain in a regiment. It was in 1650 (Coll. de manuscrits relatifs à la Nouv.-France, II, 329) or 1651 (R. Le Blant) that he, with his wife and a daughter, were brought to Acadia by the new governor Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour, a childhood friend, as lieutenant-major and commander of the king?s troops. To reward him for his services, La Tour offered d?Entremont in 1651 or 1653 the letters patent of the Pobomcoup fief, as a barony. The feudal rights conferred upon the baron a territory stretching from Cap Nègre to Cap Fourchu (Yarmouth). The feudal castle was built near the entry to the natural harbour of Pubnico, on the east side.

    D?Entremont played an important part in the colony?s history both because of what he did as an administrator and because he was one of the rare Acadian seigneurs to concern himself with cultivation and with clearing land; he attracted to his estate ?several indentured workers and a few families from Port-Royal [now Annapolis Royal, N.S.] and this seigneury eventually formed a small centre of population.?

    Besides their daughter whom they had brought from France, the d?Entremonts had four children who were born on Acadian soil: two of their sons, Jacques, b. 1659, and Abraham, de Plemazais (or Plemarch), b. 1661 or 1662, married respectively Anne and Marguerite, the daughters of Governor Charles de La Tour and Jeanne Motin; the third son, Philippe, whose life is more difficult to piece together, evidently married a daughter of Jean-Vincent d?Abbadie* de Saint-Castin. As for the daughters, Marie-Marguerite, born in France, married Pierre Melanson, dit La Verdure [see Charles Melanson]; the other, Madeleine, seems to have remained a spinster.
    Around 1670, at the time when the Treaty of Breda was being put into force, Governor Andigné de Grandfontaine was establishing himself at Pentagouet on the Penobscot. D?Entremont was named king?s attorney, an office which he held for 18 years despite his advanced age. We know of reports which were made by Mius d?Entremont and Jacques Bourgeois* on the subject of the Acadian frontiers, and sent to the minister, Pontchartrain, by Joseph Robinau de Villebon. Towards the end of his life d?Entremont left his seigneurial estate, bequeathing the title of baron to his eldest son Jacques, and went to settle at Port-Royal with his wife and two of his children. He died at the end of 1700 or the beginning of 1701, a venerable patriarch more than 90 years old.

    According to tradition it was at Port-Royal that he died, but Léandre d?Entremont indicates Grand-Pré, where d?Entremont may have gone to reside with his daughter Marie-Marguerite Melanson, as the more likely place of death. Philippe Mius d?Entremont has left a large number of descendants in Acadia; the barony of Pobomcoup remained in the family until the expulsion of the Acadians; and after more than three centuries some hundred families of the same name can still be counted at Pubnico.

    Clément Cormier
    Coll. de manuscrits relatifs à la Nouv.-France, II, 134, 329. Recensement de 1686 (Acadie). Placide Gaudet, notes preserved in the PAC and at the Université de Moncton; études published in Moniteur Acadien (Shediac, N.B.), 17 Dec. 1886, 11 and 25 Jan. 1887. George S. Brown, Yarmouth, Nova Scotia: a sequel to Campbell?s history (Boston, 1888), 151?52. A. Cameron, study published in the Halifax Herald, 1 Jan. 1886, of which the translation was published in the Moniteur Acadien, 21 Jan. 1886; see also issues of 7, 14 Jan. 1886, 17 Dec. 1886, 11 Jan. 1887. H. L. d?Entremont, The Baronnie de Pombcoup and the Acadians, a history of the ancient ?Department of Cape Sable,? now known as Yarmouth and Shelburne counties, Nova Scotia (Yarmouth, 1931); The forts of Cape Sable of the seventeenth century (n.p., 1938); study on the genealogy of the Acadian families of Yarmouth county, published in the Yarmouth Herald beginning 20 Feb. 1940. Robert Le Blant, ?Les trois mariages d?une Acadienne, Anne d?Entremont (1694?1778),? NF, VII (1932), 211. Rameau de Saint-Père, Une colonie féodale, II, 320. P.-G. Roy, ?Les marquisats, comptés, baronnies et châtellenies dans la Nouvelle-France,? BRH, XXI (1915), 48. Webster, Acadia, 121.

    General Bibliography
    © 1966?2017 University of Toronto/Université Laval

    Philippe married Madeleine "Helie du" Tillet 1648, Calvados. Madeleine was born 1626, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died 1678, Pubnico, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Old Acadian Cemetery Lower West Pubnico, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  4. 11.  Madeleine "Helie du" Tillet was born 1626, Departement du Calvados, Basse-Normandie, France; died 1678, Pubnico, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Old Acadian Cemetery Lower West Pubnico, Yarmouth County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 5. Marie Marguerite Anne Mius D'Entremont was born 1649, Cherbourg, Manche, Normandy, France; died 1691, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 1714, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  5. 12.  Abraham Dugas

    Abraham married Marie-Marguerite Doucet. [Group Sheet]


  6. 13.  Marie-Marguerite Doucet
    Children:
    1. Marie-Jeanne Dugas was born Bet. 1665-1667, Peut-etre, Port Royale, l'Acadie; died 14 Jan 1734, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, Nouvelle Ecosse, Canada.
    2. Abraham Dugas was born 1662, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 3 May 1720, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 3 May 1720, St Jean Baptiste, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    3. 6. Claude Dugas was born 1652, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 16 Oct 1732, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 16 Oct 1732, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  7. 14.  Jacques Jacob Bourgeois was born 1621, Champagne-et-Fontaine, Dordogne, Aquitaine, France; died 1701, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nouvelle-Écosse, Canada.

    Notes:

    According to Acadian historian Father Clément Cormier, Jacques Bourgeois was an army officer who served at Port-Royal in the 1650s and evidently was the brother-in-law of Germain Doucet, sieur de La Verdure, an associate of Acadian Governor Charles d'Aulnay. When the English seized Acadia in 1654, four years after d'Aulnay's death, Robert Sedgwick, leader of the English expedition, held Jacques Bourgeois as "hostage" to insure that Doucet, in command at Port-Royal, would fulfill the terms of surrender. Father Cormier says Jacques was repatriated to France along with other French officers and never returned to Acadia. According to Cormier, it was Jacques's son, Jacques dit Jacob, not Jacques, père the soldier, who was progenitor of the family in Acadia. However, more recent studies devoted to this important family, including that of genealogist Stephen A. White, tell a different story:

    Jacques dit Jacob or Jacobus Bourgeois was born in France, perhaps at La Ferté-Gaucher on Rivière Grand-Morin in Champagne east of Paris, in c1619, parents unknown. A young surgeon, trained perhaps by members of l'Ordre de Malte, Jacques was recruited by Claude Launay-Rasilly, brother of Isaac de Razilly, after the French re-established control of Acadia in the 1630s. Jacques came to Acadia in 1641 aboard the St.-François and established one of the first families in the colony. He married Jeanne, daughter of prominent settler Guillaume Trahan and his first wife Françoise Corbineau, at Port-Royal in c1643. Jeanne had come to Acadia even earlier than Jacques--in 1636 aboard the St.-Jehan, with her father, mother, and a sister. In February 1653, Jacques stood as a witness to the marriage of Governor Charles La Tour and Jeanne Motin de Reux, the widow of former Governor Charles d'Aulnay. Jacques was second in command of the post when Robert Sedgwick and his New Englishmen captured Port-Royal August 1654. Jacques remained there with his wife and children and became a farmer and a shipbuilder. He also worked as a merchant, trading regularly with the New Englanders of Boston. Having learned to speak English fluently, he served as the King's interpreter in dealings with the English. Jacques also became a successful fur trader among the Indians and ventured to every corner of the colony. It is said that in 1671, when the first Acadian census was taken, Jacques was the most properous habitant in the colony. In 1672, he sold a part of his holdings at Port-Royal and, with his two older sons and two of his sons-in-law, pioneered the major Acadian settlement of Mésagouèche, later Missaguash, on the isthmus of Chignecto, "the first swarming of the Acadians to establish their hive," as one historian describes it. He built a flour mill and a saw mill at Chignecto to encourage settlement beside the wide salt marshes that were perfect for cattle raising. In 1676, part of Chignecto became the seigneurie of Canadian-born French nobleman Michel LeNeuf de La Vallière, père, who named his 100-league holding Beaubassin. La Vallière brought in settlers and indentured employees from Canada, in direct competition with the earlier, adjacent Bourgeois settlement. According to Acadian tradition, a clause in La Vallière's land grant title "protected the interests of Jacques Bourgeois and the other Acadian settlers established on the domain," and "it was not long before the two elements of the population merged into one."

    Jacques and Jeanne had 10 children, seven daughters and three sons. Six of their daughters married into the Cyr, Girouard, Boudrot, Mirande dit Tavare, Maisonnat dit Baptiste, Dugas, LeBlanc, and Comeau le jeune dit Des Loups-Marins families. A French census taker found Jacques living with one of his sons at Chignecto in 1698, but otherwise he spent his final days at Port-Royal. He died at Port-Royal in c1701, in his early 80s. All three of his sons, born at Port-Royal, created families of their own, but only two of them had sons:

    Oldest son Charles, born in c1646, married Anne, daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marguerite Doucet, at Port-Royal in c1668. Charles and Anne had four children, including two sons who married into the Blanchard family. One of their daughters married into the Caissie family. One of Charles's grandsons, Honoré, who married twice into the Richard family, moved from Chignecto to Île St.-Jean, today's Prince Edward Island, in the late 1740s or early 1750s probably to escape British authority in Nova Scotia.

    Germain, born in c1650, married Madeleine, daughter of Antoine Belliveau and Andrée Guyon, probably at Chignecto in c1673. They had three children, including a son who married into the Mius de Pleinmarais and Thibodeau families. Their daughter married into the Breau family. Germain remarried to Madeleine, another daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marguerite Doucet and sister of brother Charles's wife Anne, probably at Chignecto in c1682. They had 10 children, including two sons who married into the LeBlanc family. Their eight daughters married into the Poirier, Richard dit Lafond and dit Beaupré, Girouard, LeBlanc, and Robichaud dit Prudent families. In 1696, during King William's War, Germain commanded a ship in Pierre Le Moyne, sieur d'Iberville's attack on the New England fort at Pemaquid, Maine. Later that year, Germain confronted Massachusetts Colonel Benjamin Church when the Englishman attacked Chignecto. Germaine died in 1711, in his early 60s, from the rigors of being held hostage by British Colonel Samuel Vetch in the dungeon at Port-Royal during Queen Anne's War.

    Youngest son Guillaume, born in c1655, married Marie-Anne, daughter of Martin d'Aprendestiguy, sieur de Martignon, a Basque fur trader and seigneur on lower Rivière St.-Jean, and Jeanne de Saint-Étienne de La Tour, daughter of former governor Charles La Tour, probably at Port-Royal in c1686. Guillaume did not follow his older brothers to Chignecto but remained with his father at Port-Royal, where he became a merchant like his father. In September 1727, he was one of the delegates from Port-Royal representing Acadian interests before the Nova Scotia Council at Port-Royal. Along with two other Acadian leaders, Charles Landry and Abraham Bourg, Guillaume refused to take the oath of allegiance to British King George II and was imprisoned for his opposition. Guillaume and his wife had only a single child, a daughter, who married into the LeBlanc family.

    >>>>>>>>>

    Jacques was a surgeon by trade. He immigrated to Port-Royal in 1642. He married Jeanne Trahan in 1643, and they are the parents of the following:

    1) Jeanne (1644-1730) md Andre Coudray
    2) Charles (1646-) md Anne Dugas
    3) Germain (1650-1711) md Marguerite Belliveau and Madeleine Dugas
    4) Marie-Francoise (1652-1741) md Pierre Cyr and Germain Girouard
    5) Guillaume (1655-) md Marie-Anne D'Aprendestiguy
    6) Marguerite (1658-1732) Jean Boudreau and Pierre Maisonnat
    7) Francoise 1659-1697 md Claude Dugas
    8) Anne (1661-1747) md Rene Leblanc
    9) Marie (1665-) md Antoine Leblanc
    10) Jeanne (1667-1716) md Pierre Comeau

    Jacques became a farmer and shipbuilder in Port Royal. He traded with Bostonians and learned English, enabling him to become an interpreter. He sold part of his holdings in 1672, and settled in the Chignecto Basin, along with his two oldest sons and two of his sons-in-law. He became the first promotor of Beaubassin, by building a flour mill and a saw mill, encouraging more people to settle the area, which became very prosperous.

    He returned to Port-Royal again before 1699, living there until his death in 1701.


    Jacob (Jacques) BOURGEOIS, Druggist, 50; cattle 33, sheep 24.
    wife Jeanne TRAHAN 40;
    children: Jeanne 27,
    Charles 25,
    Germain 21,
    Marie 19,
    Guillaume 16,
    Marguerite 13,
    Francois 12,
    Anne 10,
    Marie 7,
    Jeanne;

    1671 Port Royal Acadian Census

    https://www.acadian.org/census1671.html


    Jacques married Jeanne Trahan About 1643, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France. Jeanne (daughter of Guillaume Trahan and Françoise Charbonneau) was born 8 Jan 1629, De Bouguil, Indre-et-Loire, France; was christened 1629, Bourgueil, Département d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France; died Jul 1699, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried Jul 1699, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  8. 15.  Jeanne Trahan was born 8 Jan 1629, De Bouguil, Indre-et-Loire, France; was christened 1629, Bourgueil, Département d'Indre-et-Loire, Centre, France (daughter of Guillaume Trahan and Françoise Charbonneau); died Jul 1699, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried Jul 1699, Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/136913767/jeanne-trahan

    Jeanne is the daughter of Guillaume Trahan and Francoise Charbonneau. She married Jacques Bourgeois in 1643, in Port Royal, Acadie. They are the parents of the following:

    1) Jeanne (1644-1730) md Andre Coudray
    2) Charles (1646-) md Anne Dugas
    3) Germain (1650-1711) md Marguerite Belliveau and Madeleine Dugas
    4) Marie-Francoise (1652-1741) md Pierre Cyr and Germain Girouard
    5) Guillaume (1655-) md Marie-Anne D'Aprendestiguy
    6) Marguerite (1658-1732) Jean Boudreau and Pierre Maisonnat
    7) Francoise 1659-1697 md Claude Dugas
    8) Anne (1661-1747) md Rene Leblanc
    9) Marie (1665-) md Antoine Leblanc
    10) Jeanne (1667-1716) md Pierre Comeau

    Thank you Gloria Moreau #48849488 providing the death and husband info for child (1) Jeanne.

    Children:
    1. 7. Françoise Bourgeois was born 19 Sep 1659, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died Bef 1697, Beaubassin, Acadie, Nouvelle-France; was buried 1697, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. Anne Bourgeois was born About 1661, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 28 Dec 1747, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was buried 29 Dec 1747, Saint-charles-des-mines Cemetery, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    3. Charles Bourgeois was born 14 Dec 1646, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened About 1646, Acadie, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 1678, Acadia, Alberta, Canada; was buried 1678, Amherst, Cumberland, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    4. Marie Jeanne Bourgeois was born 1664, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 10 Jun 1716, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Saint-Charles-des-Mines Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    5. Jeanne Bourgeois was born 1667, , , Acadie, Nouvelle-France; died 10 Jun 1716, Port-Royal, , Acadie, Nouvelle-France.
    6. Germain Bourgeois was born 1650, Port royal, Acadia, New France; died 15 Nov 1711, Port royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, CA.
    7. Marguerite-Marie Bourgeois was born 1658, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 8 Aug 1732, Amherst, Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried , Notre Dame de l'Assomption Fort Lawrence, Cumberland County, Nova Scotia, Canada .
    8. Marie-Francoise Bourgeois was born About 1652, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; was christened Port-Royal, Acadia, New France, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 3 Mar 1741, Beaubassin, Nova Scotia, British Colonial America; was buried , St Anne Cemetery, Amherst, Cumberland, Nova Scotia, Canada.