PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Louise

PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Louise

Female 1685 - 1727  (41 years)

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Louise was born on 14 Aug 1685 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 14 Aug 1695 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada (daughter of PEPIN, Pierre and LEMIRE, Louise); died on 9 Apr 1727 in Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  PEPIN, PierrePEPIN, Pierre was born on 29 Dec 1652 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada (son of PEPIN, Guillaume and MECHIN, Jeanne); died on 2 Apr 1722 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 2 Apr 1722 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada.

    Pierre married LEMIRE, Louise on 20 Oct 1681 in Quebec, Canada. Louise (daughter of LEMIRE, Jean and MARSOLET, Louise) was born on 10 May 1666 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; was buried on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  LEMIRE, Louise was born on 10 May 1666 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada (daughter of LEMIRE, Jean and MARSOLET, Louise); died on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; was buried on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    Children:
    1. PEPIN LAFORCE, Pierre was born on 6 Nov 1683 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 6 Nov 1683 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 27 Oct 1757 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was buried in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    2. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Guillaume was born on 14 Sep 1682 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; was christened on 14 Sep 1682; died on 16 Sep 1682 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; was buried on 16 Sep 1682 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    3. 1. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Louise was born on 14 Aug 1685 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 14 Aug 1695 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 9 Apr 1727 in Pointe-aux-Trembles, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    4. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Jean Baptiste was born on 19 Jun 1686 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 19 Jun 1686; died on 21 Jun 1686 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 21 Jun 1686 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    5. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Francoise was born on 28 Dec 1688 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 28 Déc 1688 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 7 Nov 1712 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 7 Nov 1712 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    6. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Jacques was born on 9 Jan 1691 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 9 Janv 1691; died on 13 Jan 1691 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 13 Janv 1691 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    7. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Anne was born on 29 Jul 1697 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 29 Juil 1697 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 26 May 1778 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    8. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Marie Josephte was born on 16 May 1700 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 16 May 1700 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 20 Jan 1751 in Yamaska, Pierre-De Saurel, Quebec, Canada.
    9. PEPIN DIT LAFORCE, Jean Baptiste was born on 27 Jul 1704 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 27 Juil 1704 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died in 1791.
    10. PEPIN, Louise was born on 11 Sep 1687 in Quebec, Canada; was christened on 11 Sep 1687; died on 29 Oct 1687 in Quebec, Canada; was buried on 30 Oct 1687 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    11. PEPIN, Madeleine was born in 1698 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    12. PEPIN, Marie Renee was born on 21 May 1702 in Quebec, Canada; was christened on 21 May 1702 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 31 Dec 1706 in Quebec, Canada; was buried on 30 Déc 1706 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.
    13. PEPIN LAFORCE, Joseph was born on 25 May 1706 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 May 1706 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada; died on 6 Jan 1741 in Chambly, La Vallée-du-Richelieu, Quebec, Canada.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  PEPIN, Guillaume was born in 1607 in Xaintes, Indre, Centre, France; died on 12 Aug 1697 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.

    Guillaume + MECHIN, Jeanne. Jeanne (daughter of Living and Living) was born in 1630 in La Rochelle, Manche, Basse-Normandie, France; died on 30 Nov 1680 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  MECHIN, JeanneMECHIN, Jeanne was born in 1630 in La Rochelle, Manche, Basse-Normandie, France (daughter of Living and Living); died on 30 Nov 1680 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Differentiator: Fille a Marier Before the Daughters of the King
    • Fille a Marier: Yes
    • Record Date: 10 Feb 1675

    Children:
    1. 2. PEPIN, Pierre was born on 29 Dec 1652 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada; died on 2 Apr 1722 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 2 Apr 1722 in Trois-Rivieres, Les Chenaux, Quebec, Canada.

  3. 6.  LEMIRE, JeanLEMIRE, Jean was born on 24 Jun 1625 in Saint-Vivien, Basse-Normandie, France (son of LEMIRE, Mathurin and VANNIER, Jeanne); died on 5 Oct 1684 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Differentiator: Important in Canadian History
    • Occupation: Carpenter

    Jean married MARSOLET, Louise on 20 Oct 1653 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada. Louise (daughter of MARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, Nicolas and LEBARBIER, Marie) was born on 17 May 1640 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died on 18 Apr 1712 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  MARSOLET, LouiseMARSOLET, Louise was born on 17 May 1640 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada (daughter of MARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, Nicolas and LEBARBIER, Marie); died on 18 Apr 1712 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 3. LEMIRE, Louise was born on 10 May 1666 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; was buried on 22 Jun 1727 in Montréal, Montréal (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    2. LEMIRE, Hélène was born on 28 Aug 1678 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    3. LEMIRE, Pierre was born in 1681; died in 1681.
    4. LEMIRE, Jean was born on 5 Sep 1676 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1754.
    5. LEMIRE, Marie-Anne was born on 26 May 1669 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    6. LEMIRE, Jean-François was born in 1675 in Petite-Rivière, Charlevoix, Quebec, Canada.
    7. LEMIRE, Joseph was born on 6 Mar 1662 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    8. LEMIRE, Catherine-Eleonore was born on 20 Mar 1668 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1749.
    9. LEMIRE, Jeanne-Elisabeth was born on 13 Jun 1658 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    10. LEMIRE, Marie-Madeleine was born on 3 Feb 1660 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1736.
    11. LEMIRE, Marie-Anne-Geneviève was born on 13 Mar 1664 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1750.
    12. LEMIRE, Jean was born about Feb 1671 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died before 1681.
    13. LEMIRE, Charles was born in 1673 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1673 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    14. LEMIRE, Marie-Charlotte was born in 1674; died in 1677.


Generation: 4

  1. 10.  Living

    Living + Living. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 11.  Living
    Children:
    1. 5. MECHIN, Jeanne was born in 1630 in La Rochelle, Manche, Basse-Normandie, France; died on 30 Nov 1680 in Trois-Rivières, Quebec, Canada.

  3. 12.  LEMIRE, Mathurin died in Saint-Vivien, Basse-Normandie, France.

    Mathurin + VANNIER, Jeanne. Jeanne died in Saint-Vivien, Basse-Normandie, France. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 13.  VANNIER, Jeanne died in Saint-Vivien, Basse-Normandie, France.
    Children:
    1. 6. LEMIRE, Jean was born on 24 Jun 1625 in Saint-Vivien, Basse-Normandie, France; died on 5 Oct 1684 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.

  5. 14.  MARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, NicolasMARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, Nicolas was born on 7 Feb 1601 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France; died in 1677 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.

    Other Events and Attributes:

    • Differentiator: Important in Canadian History

    Notes:

    From https://www.geni.com/people/Nicolas-Marsolet-sieur-de-St-Aignan/6000000005102576878#:~:text=Nicolas%20Marsolet%20was%20recruited%20by,as%20a%20trader%20at%20Tadoussac.

    About Nicolas Marsolet, sieur de St-Aignan
    https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Marsolet-2 Biography MARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, NICOLAS, interpreter, clerk in the fur trade, ship's master, trader, and seigneur, coming from the neighbourhood of Rouen perhaps from Saint-Aignan-sur-Ry, as his name suggests; b. 1587, if the burial certificate is to be believed, or 1601, according to the 1666 census; d. 15 May 1677 at Quebec.

    Nicolas Marsolet was recruited by Samuel de Champlain in 1613 to come to New France from a village in Rouen France. Champlain "set him to work in the Saguenay valley, and called him the 'Montagnais interpreter'. This young man also learned other indian languages, but mainly he worked as a trader at Tadoussac. Marsolet came to know the Saguenay River as well as any European, and Champlain gave him positions of responsibility there in 1623-24. He moved deep into the country of the Indian nations, and also traveled back and forth across the Atlantic. Marsolet was in Paris on March 24, 1627, and back in Canada that same year. Then came the Kirke brothers, and the English conquest of Quebec in 1629. Marsolet turned his coat and began to work for the English." Champlain was appalled by his treachery and met him at Tadoussac. Hard words were exchanged by both. According to Champlain's diary Marsolet and another deserter, Brule, both said, "We know quite well that if they had us in France they would hang us; we are very sorry for that, bu the thing is done; we have mixed the cup and we must drink it, and make up our minds ever to return to France; we shall manage to live notwithstanding" Marsolet managed to be on the wrong side of the French for awhile. Father Paul LeJeune wrote angrily, 'In all the years we have been in this country no one has been able to learn anything from the interpreter named Marsolet, who, for excuse, said that he would never teach the Savage tongue to anyone.'

    But Marsolet dealt with his difficulties by continuing to work as an agent among the Montagnais. He acquired his own boat, traded in furs with much success, and his profits brought him wealth and respectability. He came to be called 'the little king of Tadoussac' After Champlain's death, Marsolet settled down, married a French wife, raised a family of ten children, acquired a seigneury from the company of the Hundred Associates, and accumulated land and offices. He lived to the ripe age of ninety and died in 1677, a respected citizen of New France.

    MARSOLET DE SAINT-AIGNAN, NICOLAS, interpreter, clerk in the fur trade, ship's master, trader, and seigneur, coming from the neighbourhood of Rouen perhaps from Saint-Aignan-sur-Ry, as his name suggests; b. 1587, if the burial certificate is to be believed, or 1601, according to the 1666 census; d. 15 May 1677 at Quebec.

    The Quebec historian N.E. Dionne won awards from both Canada and France for the sources cited in his works. In his book, " Makers of Canada: Champlain", written in 1912, Dionne states that thirty men were with Champlain when Quebec was founded on July 3, 1608. Nicolas Marsolet is specifically recorded as being there with Champlain when Quebec is founded. Dionne explains that two years later, in 1610, there was a meeting between Champlain, the Huron and the Montagnais Algonquin natives. A trade was discussed by Champlain and the natives to send a native to France to learn about the French language and French people and in return, a Frenchman would go live with the Montagnais natives to learn about them and learn their language. The native who went to Paris was called Savignon by the French. The Frenchman who went to live with the Montagnais was Nicolas Marsolet. He lived amongst the natives for over 25 years until 1636 when he learned of Champlain's death in late 1635. He had been criticized by the French for adopting the dress of the natives, dress we would now call the attire of a voyaguer. The historian Dionne notes that Nicolas Marsolet and Etienne Brule are the first two interpreters in New France, and should be considered with other interpreters who came later as the Fathers of New France since they layed the foundations for the fur trade in Quebec. Dionne notes that during this period Marsolet makes many trips to Paris to meet with government and church leaders to establish native policies in Quebec.[1]

    In Marsolet's long career two periods are distinguishable, during which he adopted in turn each of the two conceptions of colonization whose partisans were at variance in New France. On the one hand the merchants and their clerks, concerned solely with furs and wealth, were opposed to the establishment of a French population; on the other hand Champlain and his associates were struggling to populate the colony and preach the gospel to the Indians. Until about 1636 Marsolet seems to have supported the merchants; subsequently he went over to the other camp.

    Little information prior to 1629 is available in respect to Marsolet. In 1623 and 1624 his presence at Tadoussac was noted; on 24 March 1627 he was in Paris; in the summer of 1627 he was back in Canada and took part in fur-trading at Cap-de-la-Victoire. Finally, the interpreter who spent the winter of 1625-26 with the Jesuits of Quebec while incapacitated by pleurisy and who agreed to impart his linguistic knowledge to Father Charles Lalemant, was Marsolet.

    From the moment he reached New France, Marsolet probably divided his activities between the posts at Tadoussac, Quebec, Trois-Rivières, and the Algonkin villages of the Ottawa River region, living with the Indians in the greatest licence and continually on the look-out for substantial profits. This at least is what Champlain hinted at in 1629, when he accused Marsolet and Brûlé of remaining without religion, eating meat on Friday and Saturday, of indulging themselves in unrestrained debauchery and libertinism, and especially of having betrayed their King and sold their country for love of money, by putting themselves at the disposal of the English when Quebec was taken by the Kirke brothers. However, the historian Dionne notes that when the Kirke brothers from England took over Quebec for three years, there were no French ships or French soldiers in Quebec to protect and defend Quebec against the English. Certain Frenchmen living in Quebec, notably Marsolet and Etienne Brule found it right for themselves to stay in Quebec and work with the English to continue to develop Quebec than to abandon Quebec altogether. Although Champlain angrily denounced their actions, the historian Dionne notes that if the French government had truly found Marsolet and Brule guilty of treason, they would have either been hung or returned to Paris for a trial, neither of which ever happened. Instead, after Champlain died, Marsolet was awarded large grants of land in Quebec.

    Champlain had another reason to complain of Marsolet. The interpreter wrecked his plan to take back to France Charité and Espérance, two Indian girls whom the founder of Quebec had taken upon himself to adopt. This incident occurred because the native elders requested Marsolet carry a letter from them to Champlain requesting that the girls be returned to their native village. These girls and their way of life were known to Marsolet and it is likely that he agreed with the native elders that going to Paris would not be best for them. Despite Champlain's indignant denials and his offer to appease the Indians with a valuable gift, David Kirke did not authorize him to take his two protegees with him to France and they were returned to their village.

    At the end of the summer of 1629 when the English took over Quebec, the majority of the French sailed for France. Marsolet remained behind. He continued to carry on his occupation as an interpreter. In 1632 the French returned. The Jesuit Paul Le Jeune wrote in 1633: In all the years that we have been in this country no one has ever been able to learn anything from the interpreter named Marsolet, who, for excuse, said that he had sworn that he would never teach the Savage tongue to anyone whomsoever. Only Father Charles Lallemant won him. Nicolas Marsolet was still harbouring the inveterate distrust felt by the majority of the fur-traders towards the missionaries and the settlers, for they dreaded their influence over the Indians who supplied the fur trade.

    Nevertheless, the interpreter was soon to abandon his prejudices. By about 1636, Champlain has died, and there seemed to be no possibility that the movement towards populating and evangelizing the country would be checked, although it was still only at its beginning. Marsolet sided with the general opinion and resolved to settle down. In 1636 or 1637 (we know the first child was baptized on 22 Feb. 1638) he married Marie Le Barbier, and on 6 Oct. 1637 took possession of the seigneury of Bellechasse (Berthier). This seigneury, with a frontage of a quarter of a league and a depth of one and a half leagues, had been granted to him by the Cent-Associés on the preceding 28 March; three years later, on 20 Nov. 1640, he bought from René Maheu a tract of land on the Sainte-Geneviève hill. From then on Marsolet lived a steady life. In 1643, for example, the Relation spoke of him as a valued collaborator of the missionaries.

    Thanks to his long experience of Indian questions and of the fur trade, Marsolet obtained a post as clerk to the Cent-Associés about 1642; but while he continued to act as an interpreter, an occupation which he never abandoned, he soon began to traffic on his own account. Marsolet was on bad terms with the directors of the Communauté des Habitants; he disapproved of their luxurious living; and after inciting a movement of protest against them in January 1646, which was swiftly suppressed by the governor, he had to rely on his own resources to carry through his commercial undertakings. By 1647 at the latest he was the owner of a boat which he utilized in his fur-trading trips to Tadoussac. Later, about 1660, he appears to have operated a shop at. Quebec: in December 1664, for instance, he was accused of retailing wine at 25 sols a jug, despite the rulings of the council. In 1663 he was one of the 17 settlers to whom the governor Pierre Dubois Davaugour, on March 4, had rented the Tadoussac trading concession for two years; this lease, however, was judged irregular and annulled shortly afterwards by the Conseil Souverain.

    The 'little king of Tadoussac', totally engrossed in the fur trade, took scant interest, perhaps for lack of capital, in exploiting the numerous grants of land that had been made to him. After the Bellechasse seigneury which he made over to M. Berthier* on 15 Nov. 1672, Marsolet had received the following: from Abbé La Ferté on 5 April 1644 the Marsolet meadows, an arriere-fief with a frontage of half a league and a depth of two leagues, in the Cap-de-la-Madeleine seigneury; from the Compagnie de la Nouvelle-France on 16 April 1647 an equal area of land, in part of the future Gentilly seigneury, which he sold to Michel Pelletier de La Prade on 23 Oct. 1671; and from Jean Talon on 3 Nov. 1672 the Marsolet fief, half a league long and one and a half leagues wide, in the future Lotbinière seigneury. None of these fiefs was lived on or cleared by Marsolet's efforts. In the censive (seigneurial area) of Quebec Marsolet owned two other estates: 71 acres on the Sainte-Geneviève hill, granted by the Compagnie de la Nouvelle-France on 29 March 1649, and 16 acres on the St. Charles River, made over by Louis d'Ailleboust on 10 Feb. 1651. Only the land on the Sainte-Geneviève hill was brought under cultivation, and in 1668 Marsolet declared that the 71 acres were 'now ploughed' and that on them he had 'had built two buildings and a barn'; it seems, as is suggested by the farming lease made between Marsolet and Raymond Pagé, dit Carcy, in 1656, that this land was chiefly worked by farmers.

    Shortly before 1660, and although he still acted as an interpreter if occasion arose, Nicolas Marsolet ceased to make excursions to Tadoussac in order to devote himself to his business at Quebec. It is here that he died on 15 May 1677. His widow, who had given him 10 children, married Denis Le Maistre on 8 May 1681. She was buried at Quebec on 21 Feb. 1688. As for Marsolet's children, some of them became connected by marriage with the best families in the colony.

    The historian Dionne notes that there were twelve interpreters who came to Quebec to establish the fur trade in New France between 1608 and 1625 and Nicholas Marsolet was the very first. "Their services to the authorities, both civil and religious, were therefore at certain periods exceedingly valuable. It is among these men that we may fittingly seek for the founders of the Canadian race."

    Sources

    "'Dionne, THE MAKERS OF CANADA':CHAMPLAIN, Toronto Press, 1912; pp. 27, 37, 76, 103-105. Contributed by Cheryl Granville Johns, October, 2015.Granville-73 20:52, 13 October 2015 (EDT) http://genealogiequebec.info/testphp/info.php?no=188756page 506-507 of Champlain's Dream, by David Hackett Fischer 2008 http://www.nosorigines.qc.ca/GenealogieQuebec.aspx?genealogy=Nicolas_Marsolet&pid=3972&lng=en&partID=3973 http://genealogiequebec.info/testphp/info.php?no=188756 https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolas_Marsolet Companions of Champlain: Founding Families of Quebec, 1608-1635 By Denise R. Larson..Companions of Champlain Source: S-2066392702 Title: Dictionnaire Généalogiques Des Familles De Québec Author: Jetté, René Jetté, René. Dictionnaire Généalogique Des Familles De Québec. Source: S-2066392706 Title: Dictionnaire National des Canadiens Français, 1608-1760 Author: Drouin, Gabriel Drouin, Gabriel. Dictionnaire National des Canadiens Français, 1608-1760. Tanguay, p 413 (p 458 of 668) ↑ N.E.Dionne, THE MAKERS OF CANADA: CHAMPLAIN, 1912, public domain book, available at Amazon.com, pages 27, 37, 41, 143, 144 Acknowledgements

    Nicolas married LEBARBIER, Marie on 19 Mar 1637 in Rouen, Seine-Maritime, Haute-Normandie, France. Marie was born on 20 May 1619 in Rouen, Basse-Normandie, France; died in 1688. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  6. 15.  LEBARBIER, Marie was born on 20 May 1619 in Rouen, Basse-Normandie, France; died in 1688.

    Notes:

    From: http://www.oocities.org/weallcamefromsomewhere/Kebec/marie_lebarbier.html

    Marie Le Barbier was born on May 20, 1619, at St. Cande le Viel , Rouen, Normandy, France; the daughter of Henry Le Barbier and Marie Le Villain.
    She married Nicolas Marsolet in France on March 19, 1637; and soon after crossed the Atlantic with her husband and young daughter; one of the first French families to arrive after the Kebec Trading Post was returned to them by the British.

    Her husband had spent a number of years in New France, arriving with Samuel De Champlain, when he was just a boy; and together with Etienne Brule; proved his worth as a scout and translator amoung the Native populations. Living as Coureur Des Bois, he had made many friends, but also gained a few enemies. When the Kirke Brothers arrived to take over and oust the French at Kebec, Marsolet was accused of leading the enemy to the Post and and also with improper sexual conduct toward Champlain's adopted daughters. However, we have to look at both sides, and recognize Champlain's love of the dramatic and ability to stretch the truth.

    Marie and Nicolas would have ten children, though only six of them would reach adulthood. Nicolas Marsolet died on May 15, 1677 and four years later, the widow Marie married Denis Lemaitre. However, since at the time she was already 60 years old, they had no children. Marie died herself on February 20, 1687 at Quebec; a place that had been her home for almost fifty years.

    Children:
    1. 7. MARSOLET, Louise was born on 17 May 1640 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died on 18 Apr 1712 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    2. MARSOLET, Jean Sieur De Bellechasse was born on 20 Apr 1651 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died in 1715.
    3. MARSOLET, Geneviève was born on 10 Aug 1644 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.
    4. MARSOLET, Joseph was born in 1642 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died before 1666.
    5. MARSOLET, Louise was born on 30 Sep 1648 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died before 1666.
    6. MARSOLET, Anne was born in 1653 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died before 1666.
    7. MARSOLET, Elisabeth was born on 29 Sep 1655 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada; died before 1666.
    8. MARSOLET, Marie was born about 1661; died in 1677 in Quebec City, Quebec (Urban Agglomeration), Quebec, Canada.


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