Rare List of P.E.I. Acadians

A rare list of P.E.I. Acadians, misfiled in a French archive in Paris, was recently discovered by an unnamed American in the Boston area and submitted to Regis Brun, an archiver employed at the University of Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada. The list of 287 names of Acadians were living on Prince Edward Island in 1763. The list was submitted to Ancestry by SCseke who obtained the document from the "Acadian Archives of Prince Edward Island".


De L'isle de St. Jean dit Port Lajoye Liste des habitants acadiens demeurants sur Lisle de St. Jean et autres places De La ditte Isle


A ST. PIERRE HABITANTS


Ambroise Poirier, Marie Gaudet avec quatre enfants


La veuve Marie Poirier: 1 enfant


Joseph Bernard, Anathalie Arsenou avec quatre enfants


La veuve Joseph Savoy: 9 enfants


Francois Bourque: Joseph Arcenou: 1 enfant


Charles Doucet, Anne Arcenou: 6 enfants


Piere [sic] [Francois] Arcenou, Marguerite Bernard: 1 enfant


Paul Doucet, Marie Poirier


Piere Poirier, Marguerite Giroire: 3 enfants


Joseph Poirier, Jeanne Godet: 2 enfants


Vincent Arcenou, Margt Poirier: 5 enfants


Louis Arcenou, Marie Poirier: 1 enfant


Jean Pitre, Margte Arcenou: 2 enfants


DE LA BAY FORTUNE


Piere Mitchelle, Isabelle Bourck


Ambroise Bourk: veuf


Ambroise Bourck, Anne Brou avec huit enfants


Paul D'aigle, Marie Bourck: 7 enfants


Joseph Pitre, Anne Bourk: 4 enfants


DE MOULIN A VENT


Francois Ashay, Anne Boudrau: 12 enfants


Joseph Chiasson, Anne Ashay: 4 enfants


La veuve Charles Gallant [Genevieve Lavergne]: 2 enfants


Pierre Melanson, Lizete Ashay: 1 enfant


Louison Gallant, Anne Chiasson: 3 enfants


A TRACADIE


Jacques Chiasson, Marie Arcenou: 1 enfant


Paul Chiasson, Lizette Boudrau: 3 enfants


Charles Boudreau, Anne [sic Madeleine] Chiasson: 2 enfants


Jacques Chiasson, Judith Boudrau: 1 enfant


Pierre Mannou, Isabelle Chiasson


Pierre Boudrau, Magdelaine Bourck: 4 enfants


Francois Cormier, Anne Chiasson: 7 enfants


Louis Beliveau, Lizette Ashay: 7 enfants


Michelle Doucet, Katish Boudrot: 1 enfant


A ROSICOU


Francois Blanchard, veuve: cinq enfants


Alexis Provencal, Francoise Doucet: 2 enfants


Joseph Coumeau, Anne Doucet: 6 enfants


ISLE DE LA MAGDALAINE


Joseph Arcenau, Margueritte Boudreau: 7 enfants


Francois Boudreau, John [Jeanne] Landrie: 1 enfant


Charles Doucet, Jeane Boudreau: 6 enfants


Joseph Boudrau, Louise Arcenou: 7 enfants


Paul Arcenou, Anne Bernard: 2 enfants


MAGDELAINE ISLES


Alexandre Arcenou


John Arcenou, Magdeln Boudreaux: cinq enfants


Jacques Arcenou, Marie Poirier


Marie Joseph Richard: 5 enfants


Claude Arcenou, Marie Coumeau: 2 enfants


Charles Arcenou, Anne Arcenou: 1 enfant


Piere Poirier, Anne Arcenau: 3 enfants


Jacques Ashay, Josephe Boudrau: 7 enfants


Joseph Mimik [Hache], Anne Ashay: 1 enfant


Jean Chiasson, Isabelle Boudrau: 1 enfant


Chls Poirier, Magln Landry: 4 enfants


La veuve Richard: cinq enfants


DU PORT LAJOYE


Charles Devau, Marie Godet: 6 enfants


Nore Coomeau, Marguerite Poirier: 4 enfants


Marie Henry: 6 enfants


Archives nationales de France - 662-AP16-Fonds d'Estaing


Regis Brun believes this list represents Acadians who were imprisoned at Fort Amherst in 1763. The Fort Amherst list for 1763 has been lost for some reason.


"In that same year, we had the list of Acadian prisoners at Fort Beausejour, at Saint John, New Brunswick, at Halifax...They were known, they've been published, but there's one at Fort Amherst, it had disappeared in thin air...It's a missing link in the paper trail of people the British wanted to keep an eye on, and of who needed to be fed, said Brun."


Stephen White , a genealogist at the centre, has a different take on the meaning of this find. He thinks the list could be a petition to the French king.


At the end of the so-called Seven Years War, the French were inviting Acadians who had been deported to settle in French colonies, mainly in the Caribbean, Santo Domingo and Haiti, said White.


"These people were aware of that, but they hadn't been invited, but they believed they were qualified. And the cover letter says 'We're the same as these others and you invited them so we want to be invited to move to French territory as well because we've always been French loyal subjects in French territory' because they lived in Isle St. Jean," he said.


"The document lists the different places where they live - St. Pierre, St. Peters today; Baie Fortune, which is Rouleau Bay, or that area, and Le Moulin a Vent, which is Savage Harbour; Tracadie, which is still Tracadie and Rustico, which is spelled a little different today. And there's a whole bunch of people, 17 households from the Magdalen Islands."


http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/prince-edward-island/story/2012/01/31/nb-acadian -list-pei.html