Could we do a rollcall?

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Paul L LeBlanc

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Jan 26, 2020, 11:23:28 AM1/26/20
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We are moving from Ancestry rootsweb.com which is closing March 2nd to


We are still working on how they will interrelate

Let us do a rollcall for about a week

When it is over let us take a look to see if anything new on your old brickwalls.
After that your new brickwalls
After that general requests for additional info on our ancestors

==============

(Please  Bcc (Blind carbon copy) me - ple...@aim.com to make sure your posts go through)

Now that we are up could we do a roll call?
(also email me personally with suggestions for the Group - ple...@aim.com)

Please start a new chain with the subject line your name

Answer questions like this

Who are you?

Where you are?

When were your families first & last in one of our homelands?
(homeland -historic or where most of the neighbors are related to you)

What other families are you researching? What Period?

Any other Genealogical projects you are working on?

Have you done your DNA, which ones, which DNA groups do you belong to?

What else would you like us to know?

What family associations do you belong to?

Do you have a blog, website or online database you would like to share?

Any unique resources you will do lookups?

Hold your brick walls we will try & work them after the roll call


Paul L LeBlanc
List Admin

SUSAN BURNETTE

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Jan 26, 2020, 12:18:43 PM1/26/20
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Hi Paul,

I could do the rollcall on the Acadian site, but not the Louisiana site. It wouldn't accept the link as a recipient on email?

Thanks. Sue


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Roger

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Jan 26, 2020, 12:20:01 PM1/26/20
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I have the same issue, Paul.

Roger Bull

 

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Leslie Johnson CPC

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Jan 26, 2020, 9:18:34 PM1/26/20
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Hi Cousins!!

Re roll call: Please start a new chain with the subject line your name


Who are you?  
My name is Leslie LeBrun Johnson 

Where you are? 
Currently live in FL; my father's family all were born in Lowell,MA then my father's direct line migrated to Boston area, MA then south to Stoughton, MA.  We are all over the place now.


When were your families first & last in one of our homelands?
My tree shows they came in the 1600s

My father's direct line is as follows:
10. my father, James LeBrun, n. 1928 d. 1993 
9. Omer A LeBrun, n. 1887, USA - Gertrude Melzar, n. 1894, USA<-- first generation of American Acadien marrying non-Acadienne

The rest upline  from Quebec:

8. Joseph George LeBrun, n. 1857 - Elise Dejadon (Desjadon), n. 1862
7. Francois LeBrun, n. 1813 - Francoise Paquette, n. 1808 <-- the last in the homelands, lived in the USA but I believe they may have gone back. No proof, yet; Most of their children stayed in Lowell, MA
6. Francois Bonaventure Forest, n. 1768 - Genevieve LaForest , n. 1765
5. Bonaventure Le Brun, n. 1745- Marie Louise Couturier, n. 1748
4. Jean Baptiste Brun, n. 1715  - Marguerite Godet (Gaudet), n. 1721
3. Antoine Brun, n. 1685 - Francoise Comeau (Commeaux) n. ~1692
2. Sebastien Brun, n. ~1655 Port Royal - Huguette Bourg n. ~1657, Port Royal 
1. Vincent Brun, n. ~1611 in France, died in Port Royal - Renee Breau (Breaux) <-- on the list of the Acadian founders, I believe

(homeland -historic or where most of the neighbors are related to you)  
Nova Scotia, Port Royal.  

What other families are you researching? What Period?  I'm looking up the grandmothers' lines and also on my mother's side, a mix of Quakers from England, descendants of the Mayflower (Brewster, William, n. ~ 1566) and her mother's mother's line appears to be of the English that settled in Nova Scotia after the Acadian expulsion. Still researching.


Any other Genealogical projects you are working on? 
I'm looking for the Metis factor in my father's line.  I see it on my mother's side, but haven't yet found it on my father's. Other than my father's side is my father's mother's side and also my mother's lines, occasional help to some others as they come up.

Have you done your DNA, which ones, which DNA groups do you belong to?  
Yes, I did the DNA through Ancestry.

GEDMatch.com  Kit #A714879   
FamilyTree DNA, Acadian-Amerindian group/French Heritage DNA - https://www.familytreedna.com/groups/acadian-amerindian/about  
Kit No. 
B323043

and of course, these email groups here

What else would you like us to know?  
So much to learn!  Just one major brick wall at the moment - to be shared at a later time as you requested below

What family associations do you belong to?

None at the moment; wasn't aware of too many involving the Acadian side of the family.
My mother's family line sees from the Mayflower era to the Revolutionary War, to War of 1812, the War Between the States (Union), the Indian Wars of the 1800s, the Spanish-American War; her father's direct line are the Quakers who went to MD/NC and then went en masse to the midwest: Iowa, Indiana, etc.

Haven't decided whether to be a DAR or anything like that yet.

Do you have a blog, website or online database you would like to share?
I do not, at this time.  I have an OLD Gedcom uploaded here: https://familyhistoriantree.tribalpages.com/    Would need the password for family to see it, though.

Any unique resources you will do lookups?
I don't know if what I use is unique to others, there are so many. I have an HUGE list of sites that I visit, but I don't know if you have them or not.  I'll need to put them in a list other than in my bookmarks.

Hold your brick walls we will try & work them after the roll call

 
Leslie Johnson, CMCS, CPC

Know what you know & Know Why you Know It!
https://jfamc.org
https://codingadvisory.com


-----Original Message-----
From: ouracad...@googlegroups.com
Sent: Sun, 26 Jan 2020 16:23:24 +0000 (UTC)
To: ourlouis...@googlegroups.com, ouracad...@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

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Paul L LeBlanc

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Jan 26, 2020, 10:00:09 PM1/26/20
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one small change to LeBrun?
6. Francois Bonaventure Forest, n. 1768 - Genevieve LaForest , n. 1765
I have 16 lines from Vincent & Renee

ejda...@mindspring.com

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Jan 26, 2020, 10:32:07 PM1/26/20
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Who are you?

Earl Joseph David

Where you are?

New Orleans, Louisiana


When were your families first & last in one of our homelands?
(homeland -historic or where most of the neighbors are related to you)

Jean Pierre David dit Saint Michel

Michel David

Paul David I

Paul David II

Paul Helaire David

Julian Helaire David

Elie David

Lloyd David

 


What other families are you researching? What Period?

David, Cabrol, Melancon, Verret


Any other Genealogical projects you are working on?

FamilyTreeDNA - Y-DNA David dit Saint Michel Project


Have you done your DNA, which ones, which DNA groups do you belong to?

Yes - Y-DNA67 – FamilyTreeDNA


What else would you like us to know?

What family associations do you belong to?

Do you have a blog, website or online database you would like to share?


Any unique resources you will do lookups?

GeneaNet, Ancestry.com, Archives nationales


Hold your brick walls we will try & work them after the roll call

 

Leslie Johnson CPC

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Jan 26, 2020, 10:42:58 PM1/26/20
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Do you? 

Pleased do tell & share? I'm researching the lines for accuracy now ... I am teachable!

This may be where I'm missing valuable information. Would love to know more as I'm still so very new at this (only 5 years).

Thanks!



Leslie Johnson, CMCS, CPC

Know what you know & Know Why you Know It!
https://jfamc.org
https://codingadvisory.com


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Paul L LeBlanc

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Jan 26, 2020, 11:56:40 PM1/26/20
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I only have Bonaventure LeBrun up still Related over 100 ways closest is

Leslie LeBrun and PAUL LEWIS LE BLANC are 8th cousins.  Their common ancestors are (2) SEBASTIEN BRUN and (1h) HUGUETTE BOURG.

Names in caps are ancestors we share
a few genertions up (without notes)

First Generation

1.    Bonaventure LeBrun was born 1745.
Bonaventure married Marie Louise Couturier. Marie was born 1748.


Second Generation

2.    (11) Jean-Baptiste Brun[1] was born 5 Sep 1715 in Port Royal, Acadia and was baptized 29 Sep 1715. He died 22 or 23 May 1758 in Quebec City, Quebec and was buried 23 May 1758. Jean-Baptiste married[1] Marguerite Gaudet Godet on 22 Jan 1742 in Port Royal, Acadia.
3.    Marguerite Gaudet Godet[1] was born 1721.


Third Generation

4.    (5) Antoine Brun[1] was born 1685. He married[1,2] (6c) Marie Francoise Comeau on 29 Sep 1709 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia.
5.    (6c) Marie Francoise Comeau[1] was born about 1692.
6.    (15) Bernard Gaudet dit Bleche was born about 1691. He died Av 13 Jan 1747. Bernard married Marguerite Pellerin.
7.    Marguerite Pellerin.


Fourth Generation

8.    (2) SEBASTIEN BRUN[3,4,5] was born about 1654 in Port-Royal, Acadia. He was buried[6] 15 Aug 1728 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia. SEBASTIEN married[3,4,5] (1h) HUGUETTE BOURG about 1675.
9.    (1h) HUGUETTE BOURG[3,4,5] was born about 1657 in Port Royal, Acadia. She died 1687/1693.
10.    (6) Pierre Comeau le Jeune dit Des Loups-Marins[7,8,9] was born about 1658. He married[7,8,9] (1j) Jeanne Bourgeois about 1689.
11.    (1j) Jeanne Bourgeois[7,8,9] was born about 1667. She was buried[10] 10 Jun 1716 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia.
12.    (5) Pierre Gaudet le jeune[11,12,13] was born about 1654. He died 8 Dec 1741 and was buried[14] 9 Dec 1741 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia. Pierre married[12,13,15] (1f) Marie Blanchard about 1675.
13.    (1f) Marie Blanchard[11,12,13] was born about 1656.
14.    (2) Etienne Pellerin[16,17] was born about 1647. He died 17 Nov 1722 and was buried[18] 18 Nov 1722 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia. Etienne married[16,17] (1d) Jeanne Savoie about 1675.
15.    (1d) Jeanne Savoie[16,17] was born about 1658. She died 3 Nov 1735 in Port-Royal, Acadia and was buried[19] 4 Nov 1735 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia.
Appendix A  -  Sources

1. Stephen A White, Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Acadiennes 1636-1714 v1, p 295-296 Brun Antoine (5).
2. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26 p.292 Brun Antoine Françoise Comeau.
3. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 289-290 Brun Vincent (1).
4. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 290-291 Brun Sebastien (2).
5. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 221-222 Bourg Antoine (1).
6. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26 p.373 Brun Sebastien.
7. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 251-253 Bourgeois Jacques (1).
8. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 369-371 Comeau Pierre (1).
9. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 380-381 Comeau Pierre (6).
10. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26 p.358 Bourgeois Jeanne.
11. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 668-669 Gaudet Denis (2).
12. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 143-144 Blanchard Jean (1).
13. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 672-673 Gaudet Pierre le jeune (2).
14. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26a p.212 Gaudet Pierre.
15. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 666-668 Gaudet Jean (1).
16. Stephen A White, Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Acadiennes 1636-1714 v2, p 1456-1457 Savoie Francois (1).
17. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1278-1280 Pellerin Etienne (2).
18. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26 p.363 Pellerin Etienne.
19. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26a p.145 Savoye Jeanne.


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Marie Rundquist

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Jan 27, 2020, 1:34:59 PM1/27/20
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Thank you, Paul, for keeping the membership together.  It's hard to do and I appreciate yours and everyone's efforts to create and maintain online venues where we may connect and share what we know about our ancestors. 

Roll Call: I'm Marie Rundquist. I have Acadian lines on my mother's side on her maternal line. I'm researching a Quebec lineage of a Guinel-Dinelle ancestor out of the Magdalen Islands (in Canada), also on my mother's maternal line.  We had a J.B. Guinel-Dinelle marry into one of my mother's Acadian lines in Louisiana several generations ago and I've visited the cemetery where he and his wife, my ancestors, are buried along with their descendants.  The Guinel-Dinelle family appears to have a lot of tentacles that reach out into the US and Canada (and into my family genealogy and DNA connections). I'm also working on my mother's non-Acadian paternal line.

There are numerous mysteries that are still out there on all of my lineages.  I don't know when I'll be able to say I'm finished researching.  I don't know if that is possible. I've learned recently about a new, non-Acadian line on my father's side (through autosomal and Y DNA test results) and have enjoyed researching new family connections I've learned about that way. I've been helping a lot of people over the years research their own Y, mtDNA results, and autosomal DNA results, make connections, and overcome brick walls through several Family Tree DNA projects which I also have a role in managing.  I think we all do this.

I also write books and articles and give talks and have enjoyed all of the relationships I've developed through those avenues as well.

Thanks.

--Marie Rundquist


Calvin Leger

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Jan 30, 2020, 10:32:41 AM1/30/20
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Who are you?
Hello
My name is Calvin Leger

Where you are?
I was born in Lafayette Louisiana and have lived in Scott, Louisiana for 34 years
 
When were your families first & last in one of our homelands?
They were in Canada in the early 1600's. I think that most were deported in 1755 or so
    The Leger's were deported to The LaRochelle France area then in 1785 sent to Louisiana. 

(homeland -historic or where most of the neighbors are related to you)
I have the Leger's who lived in Quebec
LaBauve who lived in Annapolis Valley and I think later possibly the Bras D'Or area in Cape Brenton and Louisburg
The Simard/ Simar. Semar who are pioneers of Baie St. Paul as well as the Tremblay and Gagnon
The Hanks are anybody's guess anywhere from Germany to Gloucester England. (work in progress)
What other families are you researching? What Period?
Amynthe Daigle , daughter of Joseph and grand daughter of Theodule founders of Churchpoint, Louisiana
Barge Bajolet is my oldest known MTDNA ancestor


Any other Genealogical projects you are working on?
The Leger's are pretty much nailed down
The LaBauve (my fathers mother) are pretty clear after they arrived in THE NEW WORLD. Continue to try to figure out the France connection.
The Hanks, I think we have the lineage close except there must be an NPE


Have you done your DNA, which ones, which DNA groups do you belong to?
MTDNA X2B7
YDNA-I-M170
family finder
Ancestry
familytreeDNA 

What else would you like us to know?
I am not a genealogist like the rest of you. This page looks like a who's who of genealogy.
I am a hobbyist at best always looking to learn more.
I love the history and the culture 
I am one of the appointed Commissioners for the Bayou Vermilion District (BVD) in Lafayette Louisiana 
We manage and operate Vermilion the ACADIAN LIVING HISTORY MUSEUM
So if you have any ideas of how we could include genealogy resources or anything into Vermilionville I'd love to hear your ideas 
I have been invited to participate in the Acadian Memorial Festival on March 21 in St. Martinville
My wife and I will dress in 1785 period clothing and will represent the Leger's coming to Louisiana

I went to Canada in 2018
We visited Nova Scotia (Grand Pre) 
New Brunswick, Old Quebec City and Bae St Paul
Since that visit I do everything that I can every day to make my home, my city and my state more like our homelands. 
I think that we in Louisiana need to connect more with our Acadian roots
I feel that much of our culture, language and history is being lost every day. 

I work every day to try to promote and bring economic resources and culture to the Vermilion River area, Atchafalaya Basin and all of south Louisiana

I can be reached at (I hope this is legal)

What family associations do you belong to?
Leger Family Association

Do you have a blog, website or online database you would like to share?
No

Any unique resources you will do lookups?
No

Cynthia Stark

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Jan 31, 2020, 11:50:40 PM1/31/20
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I'm not sure If I'm doing this correctly, my apologies. 
Please start a new chain with the subject line your name

Who are you?
Cynthia Stark

Where you are?
Vancouver, BC, Canada


When were your families first & last in one of our homelands?
(homeland -historic or where most of the neighbors are related to you)
My dad's maternal grandma was French-Canadian.
Our ancestors include:

My 9th great-grandfather:
Louis Lejeune (Abt. 1600-1637) (ancestors were: Lejeune, Briard)

and my 6th great-grandparents:
Jean Baptiste Savoie (1715-1787) (ancestors were: Savoie, Lejeune, Briard, Membertou, Breaux, Renaulme, Bourg, Landry, Salle, Sansoucy, Richard, Poirier, Gougeon, Blanchard, Lambert, Petitpas, Lafleur, Bugaret, Saint Martin, Bagard)
and
Marie Haché Gallant (1712-1790) (ancestors were: Haché, Cormier, Peruade, Perrault, Girouard, La Varenne, Aucoin, Salle, Leblanc, Gaudet, Daussy, Hebert, Juneau, Lefranc, Labranche

What other families are you researching? What Period?
My tree goes up to when my ancestors arrived in Canada, hoping to add more.

Any other Genealogical projects you are working on?
Finland


Have you done your DNA, which ones, which DNA groups do you belong to?
Ancestry, 23andMe, GEDmatch


What else would you like us to know?

What family associations do you belong to?
None 


Do you have a blog, website or online database you would like to share?
None


Any unique resources you will do lookups?
None


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R. Martin Guidry

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Feb 6, 2020, 1:43:56 PM2/6/20
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I am Martin Guidry from Baton Rouge, Louisiana.  I grew up in south Louisiana where I graduated from the University of Southwestern Louisiana in Lafayette, LA in 1970.  I became interested in genealogy when I noticed a book entitled the "Acadian Miracle" by Dudley LeBlanc - a well-known, local politician and Acadian historian.  It was then that I learned that I am Acadian and what an Acadian was.  Since that day in May 1970, I have studied Acadian history and the genealogy of our Guidry.  For the last 20 years I have served as President of the Les Guedry et Petitpas d'Asteur (the Guedry and Petitpas family association) where I help publish our family journal and organize family reunions throughout the U. S. and Canada.  I am a Board Member and past-President of the Acadian Memorial of St. Martinville, LA and a member of several other genealogical organizations.  I also speak on various aspects of Acadian history and genealogy throughout the U. S. and Canada.  My main surname interests are Guedry, Petitpas, Hebert, Semer, Breaux, Butaud and Clotiaux.  

Martin Guidry

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Richard Riddell

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Feb 6, 2020, 3:14:26 PM2/6/20
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Thank you so much for your work! 

On Feb 6, 2020, at 10:43, R. Martin Guidry <guidry...@gmail.com> wrote:



karen lynn obrien

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Feb 7, 2020, 9:46:12 AM2/7/20
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I am Karen Lynn O'Brien.  My mother was a Thibodeau with links to Madawaska and Quebec. I have done my DNA with 23 and me.
I am related to the early Thibodeau and Brossard lines in Louisana.

Kate Holloway

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Feb 7, 2020, 12:20:47 PM2/7/20
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Bonjour les amis et cousins,


I just want to let you all know that I speak French fluently and am happy to volunteer my assistance if anyone needs help understanding and/or translating or summarizing any French records or sources. 

Virginia Trudeau

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Feb 7, 2020, 4:17:09 PM2/7/20
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Merci Cousine Kate


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Heather Hallett

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Mar 8, 2020, 2:46:00 PM3/8/20
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I am Heather Morison Hallett.  I am also a Thibodeau through Pierre Thibodeau (1631-1704) and Jeanne Terriot (1843-1726).  Their daughter Jeanne married Mathieu DeGoutin in Acadia in 1689.  I am descended from their son Joseph who became the "First Cajun in New Orleans" (White).


From: "karen lynn obrien" <gtok...@gmail.com>
To: "ouracadianroots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Friday, February 7, 2020 6:45:59 AM

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 8, 2020, 3:05:46 PM3/8/20
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My ancestors are early french arrivers, fi de roi etc. Many have Metis Heritage, and I am So very Proud to be connected there. I do not know of any Acadian roots on our tree, but we have Deep very old southern roots on one side, and deep Very old French Canadian on the other, so nothing would surprise me. Mostly I am in Awe of what I learn here, and on the Metis page threads.

Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 8, 2020, 4:40:09 PM3/8/20
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Jennifer

Give us 8 or so surnames especially any voyagers?

We will probably share more than two

There are so few Quebecois without some Acadian Lines.

There were refugees from before 1710 untill after the fall of Quebec

Paul

Myra Herron

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Mar 8, 2020, 4:49:07 PM3/8/20
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I am Myra Herron and here's my lineage:

 

Myra Anne Herron born 1940, Alpena Michigan

 

Parents Harlo E Herron and MARY MARGARETTA MEDDAUGH born 4 March 1914, Alpena, Alpena, Michigan

 

Mary's parents:  LOUIS ELMER MEDDAUGH born 8 November 1869, Croswell, Lexington, Sanilac, Michigan, and Mary Eleanor Parker

 

Louis' parents:  John Washington Meddaugh and MARY (POLLY) THIBODEAU born 22 October 1838, Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario

 

Mary 'Polly' Thibodeau's parents:  PIERRE CELESTIN THIBAUDEAU born 17 May 1785, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada, and Margaret Meddaugh

 

Pierre Celestin Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN BAPTISTE THIBAUDEAU, born 1758, Trois Rivieres, Quebec, Canada and Marguerite Rheault/Reau

 

Jean Baptiste Thibaudeau's parents:  CHARLES ALEXIS THIBAUDEAU, born 8 March 1711, St Charles des Mines, Acadia, Canada and Anne Marie Melanson.

 

Charles Alexis Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN PIERRE THIBAUDEAU, born 1673. Port Royal, Acadia, Canada and Marguerite Hebert

 

Jean Pierre Thibaudeau's parents:  PIERRE THIBODEAU, born about 1631, Les Moutiers, Vendee, Poitou, France and Jeanne Therriot/Theriau

 

Pierre Thibodeau's parents:  MATHURIN THIBAUDEAU, BORN ABOUT 1605, Vendee, Poitou, France and Marie Delbeau (Roy)

 

That is as far as I have gotten my tree, with MUCH help from other descendants.   

Myra Herron

Heather Hallett

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Mar 8, 2020, 5:36:27 PM3/8/20
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Hi Myra, we are cousins although many times removed.  You may be interested in this excerpt from a book I have written.

 

The French lines of the Morison Family.

 

Richard and I embarked on a cruise of Eastern Canada and the Atlantic seaboard in the Fall of 2004.  The ship sailed from Montreal with a 2 day stop in Quebec City before cruising on down the St. Lawrence river.  We had the opportunity to book our shore excursions before we left home, which was then Vancouver, British Columbia.  The “Evanageline Trail” (highway 101) was was one of the Nova Scotia options.  I felt totally complled to take it, and I didn’t know why.  I didn’t know anybody there and while I thought Acadian history might be interesting, I thought the other options such as Peggy’s Cove and Lunenburg might be equaly interesting, but I had to go on the Evangeline Trail.  The clincher was the opportunity to see the Bay of Fundy and perhaps observe the fascinatingly extreme tidal changes in this large, shallow body of water.  We boarded our Coach and left Halifax harbour in the morning.  The journey took us out to the National Historic site of Grand Pre which is near Wolfville on the north shore across the Bay of Fundy from New Brunswick.  Grand Pre means large or great meadow, and indeed it was.  We also visited the interpretive centre and museum and the memorial Church of St. Charles-des-Mines.  The presentations were totally fascinating and complete with a demonstration of how the Acadian people dycked, drained and desalinated the marshes which created several thousand acres of wonderfully fertile farm land.  These enterprising people fashioned pipes made from the trunks of trees.  They had a massive piping system with one way valves built into the pipes to make sure the salt water didn’t flood the drained acres at the turn of the tides.  The Acadian desalination workers sold the salt they collected to their fellow Acadians, the fishermen for salting and preserving fish.  This was back in the 1680’s.  This remarkable feat was accomplished despite the fact that they had no machinery and all metal implements had to be shipped from France or New England.

There were books of Acadian genealogy for sale in the museum gift shop.  I almost bought an $80 set, but managed to talk myself out of the purchase because I thought it made absolutely no sense for me to own it.  Two years later my (our) cousin Patsy Morison Adams in England and her late husband Geoff alerted me to our Acadian family history.  I was totally astonished and fascinated, to say the least.  I also knew that something had been at work urging me to purchase the genealogies of part of my as yet unknown family.
     The first Europeaan settlement in this part of the world (Acadia or Nova Scotia) originated in 1601.  Grand Pre was not established until the 1680’s, but it quickly outgrew it’s predecessor, Port-Royal.  The name Acadia seems to have originated with the Algonquin Indians.  Acadia was named after a river of the same name.  It means “place of plenty”.

Sources of information used in this section:  Ancestry.com,  The Genealogical Dictionary of Canadian Families by Tanguay, Acadian census records, the records collected by Steven White. Wikipedia.  I have also used the Acadian genealogy site www.Landry.ca and the online Dictionary of Canadian Biography.

 Our first ancestors in the New World were from France.   The following is from a book I bought in Nova Scotia in 2011, called “Port-Royal Annapolis Royal 1605-1800”, by Brenda Dunn.  Page 18 says, “For colonists, d’Aulnay drew on his family’s estates, in France, not far from La Rochelle.  At least 20 Acadian family names of today, such as Belliveau, Blanchard, Bourg, Landry, Le Blanc, Terriot and Thibodeau, originated with people who moved to Port-Royal from the d’Aulnay family estates.”  This was in the Province of Poitou in France.
Charles de Menou d’Aulnay (1604-1650) was a member of the French nobility.  He was one of those who pioneered European settlement in North America.  D’Aulnay was Governor of Acadia from 1635 to 1650.

Note: Ancesty.com says that all the Terriot and Thibodeau children were born in Port-Royal, Acadia.  This does not make any sense because neither couple lived or worked in Port-Royal and women did not leave their own homes to give birth to their children in those days.  I think that they brought their babies into Port-Royal to have them Christened and the Church records erroneously listed Port-Royal as the birth place.

 

Generation 1

 

  Our first ancestors in Canada were Jean or Jehan Terriot and Perrine Beau or Bourg.    Jean Terriot, was born in Martaize, Loudon, Vienne, France in 1601.  He was a ploughman who became a landed farmer.  Perrine was born in Martaize in 1611.  Jean and Perrine were married in Martaize in 1635.  They must have come to Acadia in about 1642-43.  Perrine died in Port Royal in 1672.  Jean followed his wife in death in 1686. 

 

Generation 2

 

Children of Jean Terriot and Perrine Beau.
Claude Terriot, was born in France in about 1637.  He married Marie Gautreau in 1661.

Jean Terriot, was born in France in 1639.

Bonaventure Terriot, was born in France in 1641.  He married Jeanne Boudreau in 1666.

 Jeanne Terriot, was their fourth child.  She was born in Acadia (Nova Scotia) in 1643.   Jeanne was our first ancestor to be born in Canada.  She would have been born on the family farm, located on the Annapolis River on the north bank and upstream for about 17 kilometres from Port-Royal.  The river was also called Riviere Dauphin in the census of 1701.  Jeanne married Pierre Thibodeau.

Germain Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1646.  He married Andree Brun in 1668.

Catherine Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1650.  She married Pierre Guilbault in 1668.

Pierre Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1654.  He married Cecile Landry in 1668.  He was only 14 years of age.

Note:  The last 3 children all got married in 1668.  Curious?

 

The Thibodeau family.

Mathurin Thibodoux was born in Poitiers, in the Province of Poitou, France in 1608.  He married Marie Dolbeau in Isere, France in 1630.  Isere is in the French Alps, near Grenoble.  Their son Pierre was born in Marans, near La Rochelle, Poitou, France the next year.  At the age of 23, Pierre sailed to Acadia, in what is now Nova Scotia, Canada on the ship Chateaufort in 1654.  He was employed for a term of 3 years with a salary of 100 livres per year. (From the “Catalogue des Immigrants’ by Marcel Trudel).  Pierre settled at La Pre-Ronde which also became know as “Village des Thibodeau”.  This village was close to Port Royal which was later renamed Annapolis Royal by the English.
Pierre was a very enterprising man and full of ambition.  He married a local girl Jeanne Terriot in Port Royal a few years after his arrival in the new world and they had at least 18 children together (hence the “Village des Thibodeau”). 

“Pierre Thibodeau settled approximately 17 kilometres from the mouth of the Port-Royal river in a lovely spot called Pree-Ronde.  There he built his house, his farm and his flour and grist mill.  Pierre was undoubtedly properous but he had larger ambitions.  On 20 June, 1695, Governor de Frontenac granted him on the Kennebec river (Maine), a seigniory two leagues deep (aprox. 6 miles) and a league (3 miles) on each bank of the Kennebec river along with the islands.  At the age of 67, the enterprising Pierre Thibodeau decided to found a new community on the northern part of Baie Francaise (Fundy) called Chipoudie, now Hopewell Cape.  He associated his sons and a few neighbours for this new foundation and had the necessary machinery for a flour and grist mill brought over from Boston.  In addition to his occupations as a farmer and a miller, Pierre Thibodeau was also a merchant.  He traded furs with the Indians.  Pierre Thibodeau died at Pree-Ronde and was buried at Port-Royal on 27 Dec. 1704.  His children settled at Port-Royal, Grand-Pre and Chipoudie.”  The preceding was contributed by Fidele Theriault of Fredericton, New Brunswick to the Telegraph-Journal Newspaper of St. John, New Brunswick, and was published on Wed., 10 Aug. 1994.

When I read the above article, I thought that the river he was referring to was the Annapolis river.  I was correct.  The name of Pierre Thibodeau’s settlement has also changed.  The village is now known as Round Hill.  A monument with a plaque was erected at Round Hill Brook on 8 Nov. 1980 commerating the first settler in the area, Pierre Thibodeau.  The Brook has also been known as Church Creek and Hill Creek over the centuries.  Pierre’s mill would have been built on the creek so as to have a source of water power to turn the mill stone and grind various grains into flour or meal.

 Pierre died on 26 Dec. 1704.  He is buried at Port Royal (Annapolilis Royal), Nova Scotia, Canada.

 

Generation 3 

 

Children of Pierre Thibodeau and Jeanne Terriot.

Marie Thibodeau was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1661.  She married Antoine Landry in 1681.  He was the son of Rene Landry and Marie Bernard.  Marie died in the Minas Basin, at St. Charles, Grand Pre, Acadia in 1711.

Marie Thibodeau (another one) was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1663.  In 1678 she married  Pierre Lejeune dit Briard in Port Royal.  He was the son of Pierre Lejeune dit Briard and Miss Doucet.

Marie Thibodeau (yet another) was born in 1664.  She married Charles Robichaud dit Cadet after 1686.  He was the son of Etienne Robichaud dit Cadet and Francoise Boudrot.  Charles was born in Port Royal in about 1667.  He died before 18 May 1737.  Marie predeceased him in about 1701. 

Anne Marie Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1666.  She married Claude Boudrot in 1682.  He was the son of Michel Boudrot and Michelle Aucoin.  Anne died before 1700.  Claude died on 7 March 1740.  He was buried in the Churchyard of St. Charles aux Minas at Grand Pre, Acadia.

Marie Catherine Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1667.  She died before 11 Nov. 1721.  She married Claude Landry in Grand Pre in about 1684.  Claude was born in Port Royal in about 1663.  He died in Grand Pre on 4 Sept. 1747.

Jeanne Francoise Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1669.  Jeanne married Mathieu De Goutin.

Pierre L’aine Thibodeau, was born in 1670.  In 1690 he married Anne-Marie Bourg.  She was the daughter of Jean Bourg and Marguerite Martin.  Pierre died in Pisguit, Acadia.

Jean Thibodeau, was born in about 1674 in Port Royal.  He died on 9 Nov. 1746 in the parish of St. Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia.  He married Marguerite Hebert in Port Royal on 7 Feb. 1703.  Marguerite was born in Port Royal in about 1682.

Antoine Thibodeau, was born about 1676 in Port Royal.    He married Marie Prejean in Port Royal on 8 Oct. 1703.  Antoine and his wife both died between 1753 and 1758.

Pierre Le Jeune Thibodeau, was born about 1678.  He died in Acadia before 14 Oct. 1734.  Pierre married Anne Marie Aucoin in Port Royal on 25 Nov. 1706.  She was born in Beaubassin, Acadia in about 1687.  Anne Marie died in Quebec on 16 Oct. 1757.

Cecile Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1680.  She married Emmanuel Le Borgne in Port Royal in about 1698.

Michel Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1680.  Michel Married Agnes Dugas in Port Royal on 13 Nov. 1704.   Agnes was born in Port Royal in about 1686.  She died after 1725.  Michel died  in Port Royal on 27 Nov. 1734.  He was buried there the next day.

Cecile Thibodeau, was born about 1681 in Port Royal, Acadia.

Anne Marie Thibodeau, was born about 1683 in Port Royal.  She married Charles D’Amours in Acadia in about 1697.  Charles was born about 1664.  Anne Marie died in Hotel Dieu, Quebec City, Quebec on 2 Sept. 1720.

Claude Thibodeau, was born in about 1685 in Port Royal.  He married Elisabeth (Isabelle) Comeau in Port Royal on 5 Nov. 1709.  She was born in Port Royal in about 1692.

Catherine Josephe Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1687.  She married Guillaume Bourgeois in Port Royal on 17 Feb. 1705.  He died in Port Royal on 7 Aug. 1747.  Catherine died after 1734.  They had at least 4 children.

Charles Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in about 1689.  He married Francoise Comeau in Port Royal on 19 Dec. 1715.  Francoise was born in Port Royal in about 1693.  Charles died in Aug. 1756 in Isle St. Jean, Acadia and was buried in Port Lajoie, Isle St. Jean on 26 Aug. 1756.  Charles would probably have been deported by the English had he not died.  Francoise also died in the early 1750’s.

 



From: "Myra Herron" <woodsey...@hotmail.com>
To: "ouracadianroots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 1:49:02 PM

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

Craig Borne

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Mar 8, 2020, 6:34:52 PM3/8/20
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Is this Thibodeau Family the same as the Thibodaux Family who settled in Terrebone parish, Louisiana?
Craig



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On Mar 8, 2020, at 5:36 PM, Heather Hallett <hhal...@shaw.ca> wrote:



Vicki LeBlanc

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Mar 8, 2020, 6:41:00 PM3/8/20
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Vicki Ann LeBlanc, AZ and WI here.  I had done quite a bit of work some years ago on my family but never could find where my grandfather, Zowell Joseph LeBlanc, came into MN from Canada.  I was told the family came from the Three Rivers area but haven't done any research for a long time.  Just thought I'd throw that out for now and hope to become active in the next couple of months. 


Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 8, 2020, 7:40:42 PM3/8/20
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Did descendents of PIERRE THIBODEAU & JEANNE THERIOT settle in Terrebone, LA - yes

They Probably  came from "Exile in France" to Louisiana on the 7 ships of 1785 (slim may have moved down bayou Lafourche)

click on thibodeaux

Could we have your sources for Mathurin and all the work?
Something like this please.
Pierre parents are unknown until we see some proof.

1.    (1) PIERRE THIBODEAU[1,2] was born about 1631. He died 26 Dec 1704 in Port-Royal, Acadia.
PIERRE married[1,2] (1d) JEANNE THERIOT[1,2], daughter of (1) JEAN THERIOT Jehan and PERRINE RAU, about 1660. JEANNE was born about 1643. She died 7 Dec 1726 in Port-Royal, Acadia and was buried[3] 8 Dec 1726 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia.
They had the following children:
        2    F    i.    (1a) MARIE THIBODEAU[1,4,5] was born about 1661. She died before 16 Feb 1711 in Grand-Pre, Acadia.
MARIE married[1,4,5] (3) ANTOINE LANDRY[1,5], son of (2) RENE LANDRY Dit LeJeune and (1a) MARIE BERNARD, about 1681. ANTOINE was born about 1660. He died before 16 Feb 1711 in Grand-Pre, Acadia.
        3    F    ii.    (1b) Marie Thibodeau Tibaudo[1,6,7] was born about 1663.
Marie married[1,6,7] (2) Pierre Lejeune dit Briard[1,6,7], son of (1) Pierre Lejeune Dit Briard and (1c) fille Doucet, about 1678 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Pierre was born about 1656.
        4    F    iii.    (1c) Marie Thibodeau[1,8,9] was born about 1664. She died before 9 Jun 1703.
Marie married[1,8,9] (2) Charles Robichaud dit Cadet[1,8,9,10], son of (1) (3035) Etienne Robichaud and (1a) Francoise Boudrot, after 1686. Charles was born about 1667. He died before 18 May 1737 in Port-Royal, Acadia.
        5    F    iv.    (1d) ANNE-MARIE THIBODEAU[1,11,12,13,14,15] was born about 1666. She died 1698/1700.
ANNE-MARIE married[1,11,12,13,14] (4) (504) CLAUDE BOUDROT[1,11,12,13,14,15,16,17], son of (1) (551) MICHEL BOUDROT Boudreau and (1a) MICHELLE AUCOIN, about 1682. CLAUDE was born about 1663. He was buried[18] 7 Mar 1740 in St-Charles-aux-Mines Catholic Church, Grand-Pre, Acadia.
        6    F    v.    (1e) CATHERINE THIBODEAU Marie-[1,5,19] was born about 1667. She died before 11 Nov 1721.
CATHERINE married[1,5,19] (6) CLAUDE LANDRY[1,5,19], son of (2) RENE LANDRY Dit LeJeune and (1a) MARIE BERNARD, about 1684 in Port-Royal, Acadia. CLAUDE was born about 1663 in Port-Royal, Acadia. He was buried[20] 14 Sep 1747 in St-Charles-aux-Mines Catholic Church, Grand Pre, Acadia.
        7    M    vi.    (2) Pierre Thibodeau l'aine[1,21] was born about 1670 in Pisiguit, Acadia. He died in L'Assomption Parish, Pisiguit, Acadia.
Pierre married[1,21] (3a) Anne-Marie Bourg[1,21], daughter of (3) Jean Bourg and (1f) Marguerite Martin, about 1690 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Anne-Marie was born about 1668 in Port-Royal, Acadia. She died in L'Assomption Parish, Pisiquit, Acadia.
        8    F    vii.    (1g) Jeanne Thibodeau[1,22] was born about 1672. She died 7 Apr 1741 in Louisbourg, Ile-Royale, Acadia and was buried 8 Apr 1741 in Louisbourg, Ile-Royale, Acadia.
Jeanne married[1,22] Mathieu Goutin de[1,22] about 1689. Mathieu was born about 1663. He died 25 Dec 1714 in Ile Royal, Acadia.
        9    M    viii.    (3) Jean Thibodeau -Baptiste[1,23,24] was born about 1674. He died 9 Dec 1746 and was buried[25] 9 Dec 1746 in St-Charles-aux-Mines Catholic Church, Grand-Pre, Acadia.
Jean married[1,23,24] (5b) Marguerite Hebert[1,23,24], daughter of (5) EMMANUEL HEBERT and (1b) ANDREE BRUN, on 7 Feb 1703 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Marguerite was born about 1682. She died 15 Jan 1723 - 14 Jan 1727.
        10    M    ix.    (4) Antoine Thibodeau[1] was born about 1676. He died Bet 19 Nov 1753 / 6 Nov 1758.
Antoine married[1] Marie Prejean[1], daughter of (1) Jean Prejean dit Lebreton and (1h) Andree Savoie, on 8 Oct 1703 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Marie was born about 1684. She died Bet 19 Nov 1753 / 6 Nov 1758.
        11    M    x.    (6) Pierre Thibodeau le jeune[1,26,27] was born about 1676 in Port-Royal, Acadia. He died before 14 Oct 1734.
Pierre married[1,26,27,28,29] (2j) Anne-Marie Aucoin Marie-Anne[1,26,27], daughter of (2) MARTIN AUCOIN and (2e) MARIE GAUDET Dit La Cadette Jeanne, on 25 Nov 1706 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia. Anne-Marie was born about 1687. She died 16 Oct 1757 in Quebec City, Quebec and was buried 17 Oct 1757 in Quebec City, Quebec.
        12    M    xi.    (5) Michel Thibodeau[1,30,31] was born about 1680. He died 27 Nov 1734 in Port-Royal, Acadia and was buried 28 Nov 1734 in Port-Royal, Acadia.
Michel married[1,30,31] (2h) Agnes Dugas[1,30,31], daughter of (2) CLAUDE DUGAS and (1g) FRANCOISE BOURGEOIS Marie, on 13 Nov 1704 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Agnes was born about 1685.
        13    F    xii.    (1l) Cecile Thibodeau was born about 1680.
Cecile married Emmanuel Le Borgne de Belisle, son of (2) ALEXANDRE LE BORGNE de Belisle and (2a) MARIE TURGIS DE SAINT-ETIENNE de La Tour, about 1698.
        14    F    xiii.    (1m) Anne-Marie Thibodeau[1] was born about 1682. She died 2 Sep 1720 in Hotel-Dieu de Quebec, Quebec.
Anne-Marie married[1] (4) Charles d'Amours de Louvieres[1], son of (1) Mathieu d'Amours and Marie-Margarite Masolet, on 1897. Charles was born about 1661/1662. He died about 1725/1726.
        15    M    xiv.    (7) Claude Thibodeau[1] was born about 1685.
Claude married[1] (4j) Elisabeth Comeau Isabelle[1], daughter of (4) PIERRE COMEAU dit L'Aine dit l'Esturgeon and (1i) JEANNE BOURG, on 5 Nov 1709 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Elisabeth was born about 1692.
        16    F    xv.    (1o) Catherine-Josephe Thibodeau was born about 1686.
Catherine-Josephe married (6) Guillaume Bourgeois[32,33,34], son of (3) Germain Bourgeois and (1b) Madeleine Belliveau, on 17 Feb 1705 in Port-Royal, Acadia. Guillaume was born about 1674. He died 7 Aug 1747 in Port-Royal, Acadia and was buried 8 Aug 1747 in Port-Royal, Acadia.
        17    M    xvi.    (10) Charles Thibodeau[1] was born about 1689. He was buried 26 Aug 1756 in Port-Lajoie, Ile-St-Jean, Acadia.
Charles married[1] (4l) Francoise Comeau[1], daughter of (4) PIERRE COMEAU dit L'Aine dit l'Esturgeon and (1i) JEANNE BOURG, on 19 Dec 1715 in St-Jean-Baptiste Church, Port-Royal, Acadia. Francoise was born about 1693.
Appendix A  -  Sources

1. Stephen A White, Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Acadiennes 1636-1714 v2, p 1508-1511 Thibodeau Pierre (1).
2. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1483-1484 Theriot Jean (1).
3. An Acadian Parish Remembered, RG 1 Vol. 26 p.365 Terriau Jeanne.
4. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 918-920 Landry Antoine (3).
5. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 916-918 Landry Rene (2).
6. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1048-1049 Lejeune Pierre(1).
7. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1051-1054 Lejeune Pierre (2).
8. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1402-1404 Robichaud Etienne (1).
9. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1404-1407 Robichaud Charles (2).
10. Albert J Robichaux Jr, Acadian Exiles in Saint-Malo 1758-1785, The , v 2 p 711-712 Robichaud Joseph (834).
11. Stephen A White, Dictionnaire Genealogique des Familles Acadiennes 1636-1714 v1, p 184-186 Boudrot Michel (1).
12. Stephen A White, Histoire de la Famille de Michel Boudrot, p 6-9 Boudrot Claude (4).
13. Stephen A White, Famille de Michel Boudrot, p 1-2 Boudrot Michel (1).
14. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 190-193 Boudrot Claude (4).
15. Phoebe Chauvin Morrison, Generations... Past to Present Vol 1, p 64 Boudreaux Michel (551).
16. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1179-1181 Meunier Jean (1).
17. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 411-412 Corporon Jean (1).
18. Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records v 1aR, p 30 (SGA-3, 4b).
19. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 924-926 Landry Claude (6).
20. Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, v 1a p 108 (SGA- 3, 44b-45a).
21. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1511-1513 Thibodeau Pierre (2).
22. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 756-759 de Goutin Mathieu (1).
23. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1513-1515 Thibodeau Jean (3).
24. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 806-807 Hebert Emmamuel (5).
25. DOBR v 1aR, p 190 (SGA-3, 40b-41a).
26. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 41-44 Aucoin Martin (2).
27. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1520-1520 Thibodeau Pierre (6).
28. An Acadian Parish Remembered, The Registers of St Jean-Baptiste, Annapolis Royal, 1702-1755, RG 1 v 26 p 280 Tibeaudeau Pierre Marie Anne Aucoin.
29. Milton P Rieder & Norma Gaudet Rieder, Acadian Church Records Port Royal 1702-1721 v III, Metairie LA, 1977, p 59 Tibeaudeau Pierre & Aucoin Marie Anne.
30. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 564-567 Dugas Claude (2).
31. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1517-1519 Thibodeau Michel (5).
32. Stephen A White, DGFA v2, p 1203-1204 Mius Abraham (2).
33. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 254-256 Bourgeois Germain (3).
34. Stephen A White, DGFA v1, p 259-261 Bourgeois Guillaume (6).


-----Original Message-----
From: Craig Borne

Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 8, 2020, 8:04:29 PM3/8/20
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Let's see what a quick scan can find.
Do you have his birthday? best guess of year?
Zowell may be his name for "les Americans"
Zoel?

Did he live in Duluth in the 1930s?

Myra Herron

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Mar 8, 2020, 9:58:05 PM3/8/20
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Thanks for the info.  I have marked my tree 'not proven' for both of Pierre's parents.  Thanks for the info AND the nudge.  I need to be corrected often, and I never take offense.  I KNOW I am an amateur in this!
Myra Herron




From: 'Paul L LeBlanc' via Our Acadian Roots <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 1:40 PM
To: ouracad...@googlegroups.com <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?
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Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 8, 2020, 10:36:24 PM3/8/20
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Hi Paul,
I am not sure who were Voyagers. We have assumed most of them, but we
have no record to show. Some of the early surnames I have are as
follows.
Vermette Laforme,
Vermette
Seguin,
Menard
Bercier.
Fueillon
Campeau,
Masse Baumier,
Ducorps dit Leduc
st.Auben,
Lorain,
Lorin-Lorin
loraine dit la chappelle
Lajuness'
Gervase
Drouin
Archambault
TessierLavigne 1636
Lamoth
Gile Luazon
Francois cha.tourault 1599
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Heather Hallett

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Mar 9, 2020, 12:06:48 AM3/9/20
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Hi Myra,
I checked my DNA results for connections and I found 43 connections to HERRON families.  They are all my 5th to 8th cousins and some of them have links to some of the other surnames in my family tree.  Amazing!


From: "Myra Herron" <woodsey...@hotmail.com>
To: "ouracadianroots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 6:58:02 PM

Myra Herron

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Mar 9, 2020, 9:00:52 AM3/9/20
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Heather Hs

Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device


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Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 10:06:45 PM
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Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 9, 2020, 9:45:41 AM3/9/20
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Run your Menard line Please

The president of GRA2020 is one,

Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 9, 2020, 9:52:56 AM3/9/20
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Could we have the souce for pierre's parrents.?
Pierre Thibodeau's parents:  MATHURIN THIBAUDEAU, BORN ABOUT 1605, Vendee, Poitou, France and Marie Delbeau (Roy)

Jean Pierre could it have been Jean a Pierre (Jean son of Pierre)


-----Original Message-----
From: Myra Herron <woodsey...@hotmail.com>
To: ouracad...@googlegroups.com <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sun, Mar 8, 2020 3:49 pm
Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

Myra Herron

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Mar 9, 2020, 10:52:08 AM3/9/20
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I had to go through all of my files to find where I might have gotten the 'information' that the parents of Pierre Thibodeau were Mathurin Thibodeau and Marie Dolbeau.  I found it finally.  It is attached.  I have this from other Thibaudeau people that I've communicated with over the years, but am not sure who sent this to me.  But there is a letter also, so that will also be included here.  

Myra Herron

 

From: 'Paul L LeBlanc' via Our Acadian Roots <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Monday, March 9, 2020 3:52 AM
To: ouracad...@googlegroups.com <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

Could we have the souce for pierre's parrents.?
Pierre Thibodeau's parents:  MATHURIN THIBAUDEAU, BORN ABOUT 1605, Vendee, Poitou, France and Marie Delbeau (Roy)

Jean Pierre could it have been Jean a Pierre (Jean son of Pierre)


-----Original Message-----
From: Myra Herron <woodsey...@hotmail.com>
To: ouracad...@googlegroups.com <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sun, Mar 8, 2020 3:49 pm
Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

I am Myra Herron and here's my lineage:
 
Myra Anne Herron born 1940, Alpena Michigan
 
Parents Harlo E Herron and MARY MARGARETTA MEDDAUGH born 4 March 1914, Alpena, Alpena, Michigan
 
Mary's parents:  LOUIS ELMER MEDDAUGH born 8 November 1869, Croswell, Lexington, Sanilac, Michigan, and Mary Eleanor Parker
 
Louis' parents:  John Washington Meddaugh and MARY (POLLY) THIBODEAU born 22 October 1838, Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario
 
Mary 'Polly' Thibodeau's parents:  PIERRE CELESTIN THIBAUDEAU born 17 May 1785, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada, and Margaret Meddaugh
 
Pierre Celestin Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN BAPTISTE THIBAUDEAU, born 1758, Trois Rivieres, Quebec, Canada and Marguerite Rheault/Reau
 
Jean Baptiste Thibaudeau's parents:  CHARLES ALEXIS THIBAUDEAU, born 8 March 1711, St Charles des Mines, Acadia, Canada and Anne Marie Melanson.
 
Charles Alexis Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN PIERRE THIBAUDEAU, born 1673. Port Royal, Acadia, Canada and Marguerite Hebert
 
Jean Pierre Thibaudeau's parents:  PIERRE THIBODEAU, born about 1631, Les Moutiers, Vendee, Poitou, France and Jeanne Therriot/Theriau
 
Pierre Thibodeau's parents:  MATHURIN THIBAUDEAU, BORN ABOUT 1605, Vendee, Poitou, France and Marie Delbeau (Roy)
 
That is as far as I have gotten my tree, with MUCH help from other descendants.   
Myra Herron



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THIBAUDEAU TREE FROM MARK THIBAUDEAU.jpg
THIBAUDEAU STORY PAGE 1.jpg

Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 9, 2020, 11:25:34 AM3/9/20
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Paul L LeBlanc,
Thank you Very Much! I will do that. The Menard ancestor we have is Barbe Menard, (wife of Antoine Vermette. First Vermette to come to New France) She was a Fille De Roi. Perhaps she is a common distant Grandmother.
How Exciting!

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Bobby Stelly

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Mar 9, 2020, 11:31:40 AM3/9/20
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I just wanted to share my two fille du roi certificates I just received last month. 

87174015_10158106774202427_1837396204753780736_n.jpg
87328280_10158106774537427_1352926264586928128_n.jpg

Josephine and Keith

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Mar 9, 2020, 11:37:49 AM3/9/20
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I, too, am a descendant of Madeleine Olivier.  She's my paternal 9th Great Grandmother. 

Bobby Stelly

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Mar 9, 2020, 12:43:35 PM3/9/20
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Paul L LeBlanc

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Mar 9, 2020, 1:26:30 PM3/9/20
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fille du roi kings Daughters & fille du mer in Quebec

Are like casket girls in Louisiana.

Called casket girls becauce all their possessions were in a trunk shapped like a coffin

I have 6 fille du roi lines.
One of my ancestors had a Casket girl step-mom.




Bobby Stelly

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Mar 9, 2020, 2:06:22 PM3/9/20
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I have more than this Paul but those are the two I had applied for.

Rita

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Mar 9, 2020, 7:19:02 PM3/9/20
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Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 9, 2020, 7:36:55 PM3/9/20
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Rita  So cool! I will look up the first names and dates. My be the same family!

Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 9, 2020, 7:42:45 PM3/9/20
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Rita, We have Julian St Auben, b. 1683
and Joseph St Auben, 1707. 
Do these match yours? 

Rita

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Mar 9, 2020, 7:59:25 PM3/9/20
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Mine go back to that very first guy and one of his daughters...off the top of my head. Have to go dig up my files. I'm old school and never had the time to get it all on computer.

Rita

Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 9, 2020, 8:01:02 PM3/9/20
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Its the same family! Hello Cousine '; )

Marie Rundquist

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Mar 9, 2020, 8:12:56 PM3/9/20
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Guinel-Dinelle var. Denell, Gosselin, Bariteau dit Lamarche

Rita

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Mar 9, 2020, 8:30:34 PM3/9/20
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Yes, I descend from Jean Serreau de St Aubin who was married to Marguerite Boisleau around 1660. Their daughter, Genevieve, married Barthelemy Bergeron around 1695.

Rita


Josephine and Keith

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Mar 10, 2020, 8:33:02 AM3/10/20
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Rita, you and I share a number of common ancestors!  Genevieve was my maternal 9th Great Grandmother.  I descend from her son Barthelemy II, married to Marguerite Dugas.  Three of their children (Jean Baptiste, Judith, and Cecile) are my direct line ancestors.

Keith

------ Original Message ------
From: "'Rita' via Our Acadian Roots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 3/9/2020 6:30:28 PM
Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] some Quebecois surnames please

Rita

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Mar 10, 2020, 9:33:07 AM3/10/20
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I'm sure there might be several lines where we connect. My mother was from Sorrento, LA where a lot of Acadian descendants live. I also descend from Barthelemy II from his son, Charles.

Rita

Jennifer Gunter

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Mar 10, 2020, 12:44:40 PM3/10/20
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Rita, I think we probably do have far back connections. ( our earliest French arrivers) Some of my Quebecois ancestors def. stayed in the far east of the continent, then likely ended up South.
Many of my people headed toward the The Red River settlement,  traveling along the wooded river ways.
It is all wonderful and facinating.
I am always glad to meet Kin, no matter how distant.

Margie Fuller

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Mar 11, 2020, 8:27:03 PM3/11/20
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Some of these are in Acadia, some by Quebec This is the furthest ones that I have back in each line:
. Pierre Menard & Marguerite Deshais (fille du roi)
Jacques LaParte St. George & Nicole Duchene
Etienne Dalaire and Marie Ann Bilaudeau
Antoine Boyer and Marie Perras Fopntaine
Pierre Gervais and Catherine Saillard
Hughes Picard and Aontoinete Deliercourt
Noel Ronceray and Jean Aubert
Nicholas Servignan and Jeanne Vaterre
Jacques Suprenant and Loiuise Roquet
Antoine Denotte and Catherine LeDuc
Rene Brault and Marie Renaullne
Antoine Boure and Antoinette Landry
Jacques LeBlanc and Catherine Hebert
Pierre Bouduc and Gillete Pijart
Claude Hubert and Isabelle Fontaine
Jean Caron amd Marguerite Gaignon
Jean Baptiste Leblond and Marie Theres Leteurneau
Jean Pilotte and Marie Francoise Debourbonniere
Antoine Brassard and Francoise Esmerry
Jean Quelue /Marie Camu
Jacques Bissonette and Guilemette Debien
Michael Dallon and Marguerite Veronne
Rene Poiterin Vandit and Marie Renee Aviot
Thomas Catrin and Marguerite Consoniere
Nicholas Delaunay
Guilaume Durand and Marguerite Tellier
Andre Marcear and Marie Grand (Guignard)
Gilles Bolper and Nicole Lechef
Louis Ginchereau and Msrie Manie (Magne)(Magnier)
Pascal Merciee ansd Marie Madelien Boucher
Antoine Fortier and Marie Madeleine Courvi;;e
Jean Leclerc and Marie Blanquet
Jacques Remondiere and Renee Riviere Leviriere


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Bil Martineau

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Mar 17, 2020, 11:53:54 AM3/17/20
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.. Thank you for the list ..
I found one relative that's recorded into my files ....

    To be one with the Wind, the Earth, and the Water,
To hear your heart beat with the tempo of the rain, your blood
    surge with the rhythm of the running stream.
To Know the triumphant cry of the Hawk, the haunting lament
    of the Coyote, the silent strike of the Rattlesnake.
 When your spirit is that of the Earth,
You are as immortal as the Rocks you tread. And that is why
    a warrior lives without fear, and dies without regret.
 


Heather Hallett

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Jul 10, 2022, 8:16:47 PM7/10/22
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Yes!


From: "Craig Borne" <cdb...@gmail.com>
To: "ouracadianroots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 3:34:47 PM

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?
Is this Thibodeau Family the same as the Thibodaux Family who settled in Terrebone parish, Louisiana?
Craig



Sent from Craig's iPhone

On Mar 8, 2020, at 5:36 PM, Heather Hallett <hhal...@shaw.ca> wrote:

Hi Myra, we are cousins although many times removed.  You may be interested in this excerpt from a book I have written.

 

The French lines of the Morison Family.

 

Richard and I embarked on a cruise of Eastern Canada and the Atlantic seaboard in the Fall of 2004.  The ship sailed from Montreal with a 2 day stop in Quebec City before cruising on down the St. Lawrence river.  We had the opportunity to book our shore excursions before we left home, which was then Vancouver, British Columbia.  The “Evanageline Trail” (highway 101) was was one of the Nova Scotia options.  I felt totally complled to take it, and I didn’t know why.  I didn’t know anybody there and while I thought Acadian history might be interesting, I thought the other options such as Peggy’s Cove and Lunenburg might be equaly interesting, but I had to go on the Evangeline Trail.  The clincher was the opportunity to see the Bay of Fundy and perhaps observe the fascinatingly extreme tidal changes in this large, shallow body of water.  We boarded our Coach and left Halifax harbour in the morning.  The journey took us out to the National Historic site of Grand Pre which is near Wolfville on the north shore across the Bay of Fundy from New Brunswick.  Grand Pre means large or great meadow, and indeed it was.  We also visited the interpretive centre and museum and the memorial Church of St. Charles-des-Mines.  The presentations were totally fascinating and complete with a demonstration of how the Acadian people dycked, drained and desalinated the marshes which created several thousand acres of wonderfully fertile farm land.  These enterprising people fashioned pipes made from the trunks of trees.  They had a massive piping system with one way valves built into the pipes to make sure the salt water didn’t flood the drained acres at the turn of the tides.  The Acadian desalination workers sold the salt they collected to their fellow Acadians, the fishermen for salting and preserving fish.  This was back in the 1680’s.  This remarkable feat was accomplished despite the fact that they had no machinery and all metal implements had to be shipped from France or New England.

There were books of Acadian genealogy for sale in the museum gift shop.  I almost bought an $80 set, but managed to talk myself out of the purchase because I thought it made absolutely no sense for me to own it.  Two years later my (our) cousin Patsy Morison Adams in England and her late husband Geoff alerted me to our Acadian family history.  I was totally astonished and fascinated, to say the least.  I also knew that something had been at work urging me to purchase the genealogies of part of my as yet unknown family.
     The first Europeaan settlement in this part of the world (Acadia or Nova Scotia) originated in 1601.  Grand Pre was not established until the 1680’s, but it quickly outgrew it’s predecessor, Port-Royal.  The name Acadia seems to have originated with the Algonquin Indians.  Acadia was named after a river of the same name.  It means “place of plenty”.

Sources of information used in this section:  Ancestry.com,  The Genealogical Dictionary of Canadian Families by Tanguay, Acadian census records, the records collected by Steven White. Wikipedia.  I have also used the Acadian genealogy site www.Landry.ca and the online Dictionary of Canadian Biography.

 Our first ancestors in the New World were from France.   The following is from a book I bought in Nova Scotia in 2011, called “Port-Royal Annapolis Royal 1605-1800”, by Brenda Dunn.  Page 18 says, “For colonists, d’Aulnay drew on his family’s estates, in France, not far from La Rochelle.  At least 20 Acadian family names of today, such as Belliveau, Blanchard, Bourg, Landry, Le Blanc, Terriot and Thibodeau, originated with people who moved to Port-Royal from the d’Aulnay family estates.”  This was in the Province of Poitou in France.
Charles de Menou d’Aulnay (1604-1650) was a member of the French nobility.  He was one of those who pioneered European settlement in North America.  D’Aulnay was Governor of Acadia from 1635 to 1650.

Note: Ancesty.com says that all the Terriot and Thibodeau children were born in Port-Royal, Acadia.  This does not make any sense because neither couple lived or worked in Port-Royal and women did not leave their own homes to give birth to their children in those days.  I think that they brought their babies into Port-Royal to have them Christened and the Church records erroneously listed Port-Royal as the birth place.

 

Generation 1

 

  Our first ancestors in Canada were Jean or Jehan Terriot and Perrine Beau or Bourg.    Jean Terriot, was born in Martaize, Loudon, Vienne, France in 1601.  He was a ploughman who became a landed farmer.  Perrine was born in Martaize in 1611.  Jean and Perrine were married in Martaize in 1635.  They must have come to Acadia in about 1642-43.  Perrine died in Port Royal in 1672.  Jean followed his wife in death in 1686. 

 

Generation 2

 

Children of Jean Terriot and Perrine Beau.
Claude Terriot, was born in France in about 1637.  He married Marie Gautreau in 1661.

Jean Terriot, was born in France in 1639.

Bonaventure Terriot, was born in France in 1641.  He married Jeanne Boudreau in 1666.

 Jeanne Terriot, was their fourth child.  She was born in Acadia (Nova Scotia) in 1643.   Jeanne was our first ancestor to be born in Canada.  She would have been born on the family farm, located on the Annapolis River on the north bank and upstream for about 17 kilometres from Port-Royal.  The river was also called Riviere Dauphin in the census of 1701.  Jeanne married Pierre Thibodeau.

Germain Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1646.  He married Andree Brun in 1668.

Catherine Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1650.  She married Pierre Guilbault in 1668.

Pierre Terriot, was born on the family farm in Acadia in 1654.  He married Cecile Landry in 1668.  He was only 14 years of age.

Note:  The last 3 children all got married in 1668.  Curious?

 

The Thibodeau family.

Mathurin Thibodoux was born in Poitiers, in the Province of Poitou, France in 1608.  He married Marie Dolbeau in Isere, France in 1630.  Isere is in the French Alps, near Grenoble.  Their son Pierre was born in Marans, near La Rochelle, Poitou, France the next year.  At the age of 23, Pierre sailed to Acadia, in what is now Nova Scotia, Canada on the ship Chateaufort in 1654.  He was employed for a term of 3 years with a salary of 100 livres per year. (From the “Catalogue des Immigrants’ by Marcel Trudel).  Pierre settled at La Pre-Ronde which also became know as “Village des Thibodeau”.  This village was close to Port Royal which was later renamed Annapolis Royal by the English.
Pierre was a very enterprising man and full of ambition.  He married a local girl Jeanne Terriot in Port Royal a few years after his arrival in the new world and they had at least 18 children together (hence the “Village des Thibodeau”). 

“Pierre Thibodeau settled approximately 17 kilometres from the mouth of the Port-Royal river in a lovely spot called Pree-Ronde.  There he built his house, his farm and his flour and grist mill.  Pierre was undoubtedly properous but he had larger ambitions.  On 20 June, 1695, Governor de Frontenac granted him on the Kennebec river (Maine), a seigniory two leagues deep (aprox. 6 miles) and a league (3 miles) on each bank of the Kennebec river along with the islands.  At the age of 67, the enterprising Pierre Thibodeau decided to found a new community on the northern part of Baie Francaise (Fundy) called Chipoudie, now Hopewell Cape.  He associated his sons and a few neighbours for this new foundation and had the necessary machinery for a flour and grist mill brought over from Boston.  In addition to his occupations as a farmer and a miller, Pierre Thibodeau was also a merchant.  He traded furs with the Indians.  Pierre Thibodeau died at Pree-Ronde and was buried at Port-Royal on 27 Dec. 1704.  His children settled at Port-Royal, Grand-Pre and Chipoudie.”  The preceding was contributed by Fidele Theriault of Fredericton, New Brunswick to the Telegraph-Journal Newspaper of St. John, New Brunswick, and was published on Wed., 10 Aug. 1994.

When I read the above article, I thought that the river he was referring to was the Annapolis river.  I was correct.  The name of Pierre Thibodeau’s settlement has also changed.  The village is now known as Round Hill.  A monument with a plaque was erected at Round Hill Brook on 8 Nov. 1980 commerating the first settler in the area, Pierre Thibodeau.  The Brook has also been known as Church Creek and Hill Creek over the centuries.  Pierre’s mill would have been built on the creek so as to have a source of water power to turn the mill stone and grind various grains into flour or meal.

 Pierre died on 26 Dec. 1704.  He is buried at Port Royal (Annapolilis Royal), Nova Scotia, Canada.

 

Generation 3 

 

Children of Pierre Thibodeau and Jeanne Terriot.

Marie Thibodeau was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1661.  She married Antoine Landry in 1681.  He was the son of Rene Landry and Marie Bernard.  Marie died in the Minas Basin, at St. Charles, Grand Pre, Acadia in 1711.

Marie Thibodeau (another one) was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1663.  In 1678 she married  Pierre Lejeune dit Briard in Port Royal.  He was the son of Pierre Lejeune dit Briard and Miss Doucet.

Marie Thibodeau (yet another) was born in 1664.  She married Charles Robichaud dit Cadet after 1686.  He was the son of Etienne Robichaud dit Cadet and Francoise Boudrot.  Charles was born in Port Royal in about 1667.  He died before 18 May 1737.  Marie predeceased him in about 1701. 

Anne Marie Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1666.  She married Claude Boudrot in 1682.  He was the son of Michel Boudrot and Michelle Aucoin.  Anne died before 1700.  Claude died on 7 March 1740.  He was buried in the Churchyard of St. Charles aux Minas at Grand Pre, Acadia.

Marie Catherine Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1667.  She died before 11 Nov. 1721.  She married Claude Landry in Grand Pre in about 1684.  Claude was born in Port Royal in about 1663.  He died in Grand Pre on 4 Sept. 1747.

Jeanne Francoise Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in 1669.  Jeanne married Mathieu De Goutin.

Pierre L’aine Thibodeau, was born in 1670.  In 1690 he married Anne-Marie Bourg.  She was the daughter of Jean Bourg and Marguerite Martin.  Pierre died in Pisguit, Acadia.

Jean Thibodeau, was born in about 1674 in Port Royal.  He died on 9 Nov. 1746 in the parish of St. Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia.  He married Marguerite Hebert in Port Royal on 7 Feb. 1703.  Marguerite was born in Port Royal in about 1682.

Antoine Thibodeau, was born about 1676 in Port Royal.    He married Marie Prejean in Port Royal on 8 Oct. 1703.  Antoine and his wife both died between 1753 and 1758.

Pierre Le Jeune Thibodeau, was born about 1678.  He died in Acadia before 14 Oct. 1734.  Pierre married Anne Marie Aucoin in Port Royal on 25 Nov. 1706.  She was born in Beaubassin, Acadia in about 1687.  Anne Marie died in Quebec on 16 Oct. 1757.

Cecile Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1680.  She married Emmanuel Le Borgne in Port Royal in about 1698.

Michel Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1680.  Michel Married Agnes Dugas in Port Royal on 13 Nov. 1704.   Agnes was born in Port Royal in about 1686.  She died after 1725.  Michel died  in Port Royal on 27 Nov. 1734.  He was buried there the next day.

Cecile Thibodeau, was born about 1681 in Port Royal, Acadia.

Anne Marie Thibodeau, was born about 1683 in Port Royal.  She married Charles D’Amours in Acadia in about 1697.  Charles was born about 1664.  Anne Marie died in Hotel Dieu, Quebec City, Quebec on 2 Sept. 1720.

Claude Thibodeau, was born in about 1685 in Port Royal.  He married Elisabeth (Isabelle) Comeau in Port Royal on 5 Nov. 1709.  She was born in Port Royal in about 1692.

Catherine Josephe Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal in about 1687.  She married Guillaume Bourgeois in Port Royal on 17 Feb. 1705.  He died in Port Royal on 7 Aug. 1747.  Catherine died after 1734.  They had at least 4 children.

Charles Thibodeau, was born in Port Royal, Acadia in about 1689.  He married Francoise Comeau in Port Royal on 19 Dec. 1715.  Francoise was born in Port Royal in about 1693.  Charles died in Aug. 1756 in Isle St. Jean, Acadia and was buried in Port Lajoie, Isle St. Jean on 26 Aug. 1756.  Charles would probably have been deported by the English had he not died.  Francoise also died in the early 1750’s.

 



From: "Myra Herron" <woodsey...@hotmail.com>
To: "ouracadianroots" <ouracad...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sunday, March 8, 2020 1:49:02 PM

Subject: Re: [Our Acadian Roots] Could we do a rollcall?

I am Myra Herron and here's my lineage:

 

Myra Anne Herron born 1940, Alpena Michigan

 

Parents Harlo E Herron and MARY MARGARETTA MEDDAUGH born 4 March 1914, Alpena, Alpena, Michigan

 

Mary's parents:  LOUIS ELMER MEDDAUGH born 8 November 1869, Croswell, Lexington, Sanilac, Michigan, and Mary Eleanor Parker

 

Louis' parents:  John Washington Meddaugh and MARY (POLLY) THIBODEAU born 22 October 1838, Hamilton, Wentworth, Ontario

 

Mary 'Polly' Thibodeau's parents:  PIERRE CELESTIN THIBAUDEAU born 17 May 1785, Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, Canada, and Margaret Meddaugh

 

Pierre Celestin Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN BAPTISTE THIBAUDEAU, born 1758, Trois Rivieres, Quebec, Canada and Marguerite Rheault/Reau

 

Jean Baptiste Thibaudeau's parents:  CHARLES ALEXIS THIBAUDEAU, born 8 March 1711, St Charles des Mines, Acadia, Canada and Anne Marie Melanson.

 

Charles Alexis Thibaudeau's parents:  JEAN PIERRE THIBAUDEAU, born 1673. Port Royal, Acadia, Canada and Marguerite Hebert

 

Jean Pierre Thibaudeau's parents:  PIERRE THIBODEAU, born about 1631, Les Moutiers, Vendee, Poitou, France and Jeanne Therriot/Theriau

 

Pierre Thibodeau's parents:  MATHURIN THIBAUDEAU, BORN ABOUT 1605, Vendee, Poitou, France and Marie Delbeau (Roy)

 

That is as far as I have gotten my tree, with MUCH help from other descendants.   

Myra Herron




Hold your brick walls we will try & work them after the roll call


Paul L LeBlanc
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Vicki LeBlanc

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Jul 11, 2022, 8:40:02 PM7/11/22
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I'm not sure I know what you mean by rollcall?  a short summary of who we are and who we're looking for or the whole line of descendancy?

Many thanks, Vicki LeBlanc


Margie Fuller

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Jul 15, 2022, 9:45:41 AM7/15/22
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My paternal grandmother was Melinda Menard. Her parents were Ludivine Frances Breault and David Matthee  Menard.Ludivine's father was Joseph Brault who was born on Bagot/Johnson, QWC.. Joseph descended through 5 generations from Vincent Brault. I belong to a Facebook group called the King-Menard Cousin's which has genealogical information about our branch of the family. Please feel free to check it out and join if you are interested.

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