Notes
Matches 22,501 to 22,550 of 23,145
# | Notes | Linked to |
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22501 | The god parents were Marthy Bouillie and Renee Gueve. | Gagne, Louise (I1497)
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22502 | The god parents were Mathieu Bosmont and Mary Lagnel. | Le Bel, Colette (I1691)
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22503 | The god parents were Mathurin Brochard and Elisabeth Etourneau. | Davenne, Marie Charlotte (I1415)
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22504 | The god parents were Pierre Feuvrie and Marie Francoise Trotie. | Danis, Marie Brigitte (I2598)
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22505 | The god parents were Pierre Jonquas and Anne Bissonnet. | Bissonnet, Jean (I1404)
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22506 | The god parents were Pierre Michaud, grandfather and Marie Madeleine Michaud, spouse of Jean Baptiste Roy Desjardins. | Dionne, Marie Anne (I471)
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22507 | The god parents were Prisque Symard and Francoise Tremblay. | Fortin, Louis Marie (I334)
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22508 | The god parents were Sylvain Veau and Marie Madeleine Gagnon. | Caron, Marguerite (I1577)
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22509 | The godparents were Albert Lemmelin and Rose Alma Paquette Lemmelin. | Lemelin, Mariette (I4269)
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22510 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Lirette, Patricia Ann (I1200)
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22511 | The godparents were Damasse Thouin and Zephirina Thouin. | Lemelin, Marie Jacqueline (I4267)
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22512 | The godparents were Delphis Peloquin and Lucie Auger, husband and wife. | Lemelin, Madeleine (I2484)
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22513 | The godparents were Donai Gognon and Alma Brassard. | Lemelin, Francoise (I2468)
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22514 | The godparents were Emile Lavallee and Jeanne Lemmelin. | Lemelin, Emilienne (I4268)
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22515 | The godparents were Gaudias Lemelin and Aurore Lemelin. | Lemelin, Aurore Alice (I4274)
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22516 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Lirette, Carol Ann (I1202)
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22517 | The godparents were Jean Lavoye and Angelique Dufour. | Gauthier dit Larouche, Francois (I65)
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22518 | The godparents were John & Elizabeth McCoy. | McCoy, William James (I224)
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22519 | At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Lirette, Irene Marie (I1201)
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22520 | The godparents were Leonidas Brassard and Imeilda Boucher. | Lemelin, Georges (I4266)
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22521 | The godparents were Michel Chabot and Marie Madeleine Coron. | Nadon, Marie Madeleine (I66)
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22522 | The godparents were Naricsse Lemmelin and Delina Lemmelin. | Lemelin, Theresa (I2485)
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22523 | The godparents were Philippe Boucher and Marguerite Frichette. | Lemelin, Roland (I2466)
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22524 | The godparents were Romeo Dufresne (Duchesne) and Emma Bernard Dufresne. | Lemelin, Andre (I4270)
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22525 | The godparents were Thomas Shanahan & Margaret Bourus. | McCoy, Mary (I228)
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22526 | The godparents were Zoe Robillard and Theodore Birabin dit St. Denis. | Lacasse, Henriette (I1621)
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22527 | The governor of Montreal established the "Milice de la Sainte-Famille de Jesus, Marie and Joseph". Gilles was a militia man of the 14th squad under the leadership of corporal Louis Artus de Sailly. (Each squad consisted of a corporal and six militia men) | Lauzon, Gilles (I10576)
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22528 | The governor of New France, Jean de Lauzon, ceded Noel a quarter-league of frontal land by a league deep, beginning an arpent below the La Caille River and going up the Saint Lawrence towards the south side. This concession included the Ile-aux-Oies. Noel became a partial owner of the seigneury of la Riviere-du-Sud. He named this fief Saint-Luc. | Morin, Noel Sieur de Saint-Luc (I11658)
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22529 | The Grondins owned 2 pieces of land: one with 4 arpents in frontage and another with 2 arpents located not far away. Francois and Sebastien remained the heirs. Sebastien recieved 3 arpents in frontage with buildings. Francois would own the remaining arpent, with the old house, and the 2 other non contiguous arpents. Sebastien was to give the parents 8 rools of linen and 50 livres in silver; the two brothers would provide them with food for 3 years. When this period expired, the two brothers would jointly give 14 minots of wheat annually. Francois would then pay 25 livres annually. Sebastien would remain owner of the buildings already built. But he would help Francois build for himself a house 18 "feet square" and a shed 30 by 20 feet. | Grondin, Jean (I909)
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22530 | The guardianship of the two daughters of Robert and Anne Cloutier, Genevieve and Jeanne, were given to Anne's father Zacharie after her death. Over the years there were several legal battles over the girls and permanent guardianship was given to Zacharie. | Drouin, Robert (I3251)
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22531 | The Hayot family lived at Cap-Rouge on the Saint-Ignace coast. Their neighbors were Etienne de Nevers and Sebastien Langelier. | Hayot, Thomas (I9645)
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22532 | The heirs of Abraham decided to sell the estimated 32 arpents of land to the Ursuline nuns for 1,200 livres. Notary Duquet drew up the paperwork. Jean Madry represented the nuns in this transaction. The division of the money was: 240 livres to Amador Martin when he reaches his majority; 480 livres to the sellers, except for the share to Nicolas Forget which remained in the hands of Madry, the remaining 480 livres had to be paid on the next Christmas. The heirs stated that they had to sell the property because it remained fallow, the buildings had fallen into ruins and they did not have sufficient funds to continue to culitivate the land. | Martin dit l'Ecossais, Abraham (I1176)
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22533 | The Historical Society of Ottawa BEFORE AND AFTER COLONEL BY by Hammett P. Hill, K.C. Bytown Pamphlet Serie No. 16 ISSN 0823-5457 Page 3 "The township of Nepean, of which Bytown was originally a part, was surveyed in 1798, A Mr. Honeywell was the first settler in the township. The owners of the original lots covering the present townsite were principally United Empire Loyalists or their children. That portion of the present city lying between Wellington and Rideau streets and the Ottawa River and stretching from Bronson Avenue to the Rideau river was originally granted to one Jacob Carman, the son of a United Empire Loyalist who had settled in the township of Ameliasburg. It would not appear that Mr. Carman ever settled on the lot, and shortly afterwards in some way that I have been unable to ascertain, the property passed into the hands of Colonel Hugh Fraser, of Three Rivers, Quebec." | Carman, Jacob (I318)
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22534 | The home of Jean and Anne Felicite burned down and five children died in the fire. | Hamel, Jean Francois (I3896)
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22535 | The house and property that Helene brought to the marriage was ceded to the couple on 4 September 1640. | Desportes, Helene (I11659)
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22536 | The house on Euclide had a big barn in the back. They kept chickens before 1914. The house had a root cellar where they stored their vegetables. They would get their potatoes from the farm owned by Eouard and Monique. | Valliere, Henry Joseph (I45)
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22537 | The Hunault family tried to get justice for the murder of Toussaint by entrusting their civil rights to Sieur Charles de Couagne, a powerful fur merchant, so that he would represent them and get compensation. In return, Couagne canceled all of Toussaint's debts to him. | Lorgueil, Marie (I10014)
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22538 | The inventory of Julien's estate described their house as being half-timbered, measuring 40 by 20 feet. | Fortin, Julien (I1302)
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22539 | The inventory of property was drawn up by notary Duquet. He stated that Abraham died in his home. | Martin dit l'Ecossais, Abraham (I1176)
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22540 | The inventory shows that the family's stone home was worth 1,000 livres. Pierre must have had a long illness because of the debt of 350 livres owed to surgeon Gervais Baudouin. | Parent, Pierre (I2503)
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22541 | The Jesuit Jacques Fremin, head of the administration of Prairie de la Magdeleine, granted to Jean Verdon an area of forty arpents, comprising about two arpents in frontage by twenty deep, beginning at the standing wood, His neighbors were Antoine Rolleau (Rousseau) and the south side and Jean Inard on the north. Jean had to pay to the administration of Laprairie two liards (half -farthings) per year for each of the forty arpents, this being twenty sols in land rent and two live capons or their value, and two deniers for the cens for the whole concession. He had to build lodging, clear constantly and incessantly, maintain the public roads deemed necessary and to have his grain ground at the seigneurial mill. The administration also stated "and when the said Verdon asks for a day off work to cut wood in order to build we will give him permission with respect to the spot which he will mark and as there is a prairie between the standing wood and the great river all along the said coast to being at a place called the marigot, we give the said prairie to being at the said marigot in common into perpetuity to all the residents of the said coast of saint Lambert on condition that they pay us every years on the first day of december five sols per beast that they pasture there, the calves of seven or eight months excepted.." The notary only indicated where it began; at "le marigot" or the small marsh formed by a stream whose mouth is lost in the middle of the fruit trees and wild oats, twenty-five arpents from the river Saint-Jacques. | Verdon, Jean (I5859)
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22542 | The Jesuit Journal reports that Marin and Thomas Hayot separated. The Journal states: "Our farmers at Beauport agreed to a separation: Boucher left & Thomas Hayot remained in charge; this was an agreement between them, without our having to do anything except consent to it". Marin took a concession next to Olivier Le Tardif on the Beaupre Coast (Chateau-Richer) and Thomas kept the farm. | Boucher, Marin (I9659)
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22543 | The Jesuits ceded 16 square arpents of land to Pierre. It was located near his mother-in-law, Anne Ardouin, and it was near a quarry. Pierre worked the quarry for ?i?Beauport stone?/i? and built furnaces to make lime. | Parent, Pierre (I2503)
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22544 | The Jesuits ceded Noel a homestead comprised of four arpents in frontage, located in the seigneury of Saint-Gabriel, near Saint-Charles. | Rose, Noel (I1843)
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22545 | The King's prosecutor stated he received information from Montreal, signed by the clerk de Mouchy, that miller Pierre Bissonnet was accused of bigamy. The Council ordered "to take and apprehend the body of the said Bissonnet and to make him a prisoner at the royal prison of this town according to law". De Mouchy drew up a warrant for his arrest. [It is not known for sure if PIerre was jailed or fined.] | Bissonnet, Pierre (I1453)
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22546 | The land of Ile d'Orleans, in the parish of St. Francois, was surveyed at the request of Dominique Gagne, Verieul and Francois Quemeneur. Francois had land that measured 4 1/2 arpents in frontage. The Quemeneurs lived on the eastern tim of the island, plot number 1, rear-fief of Argentay, towards the north channel between Louis Allaire and Pierre Lepage. | Quemeneur dit Laflamme, Francois (I6745)
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22547 | The Last Will and Testament of Mildred Ann Gauthier was submitted to the court. She bequeathed 1/7th part to each of the following: the issues of my deceased brother, Lawrence Gauthier; my sister, Mary Audrey Gauthier Bayer; my sister, Florence Ruth Gauthier LaMotte; my sister, Theresa Vivian Gauthier Peters; my brother John Harvey Gauther; my brother, Robert Joseph Gauthier; my brother David Herbert Gauthier. | Gauthier, Mildred Ann (I11)
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22548 | The Lauzon properties were sold and the debts paid. | Lauzon, Gilles (I10576)
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22549 | The lived in the Saint-Joseph section of Charlesbourg. | Mignier dit Lagace, Andre (I8937)
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22550 | The marriage act reads as follows: "On 14 July 1637, the banns were made as usual and there being found no legitimate impediment, Father Charles Lallemant, Jesuit, acting as curate at Quebec, after having questioned, heard and listened to the mutual consent, solemnly married and joined in bonds of holy matrimony Antoine Brassart, mason, and Francoise Mery in the presence of M. Francois Derre and Nicolas Pivert". This was entered from memory because the original register was destroyed in a fire on 15 June 1640. | Family F446
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