Willow Pond was somewhere in the northwest part of the county, where the Sewalds lived. Valentine Sewald's obituary said he lived in Willow Pond in Jackson Township. That's as much as I know. Lisa ----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 9:48 PM Subject: re: Willow Pond > Can anyone tell me where Willow Pond was in Ste. Geneview County, Mo. > Mu great grandparents were married there. > Mary Ellen > > > ============================== > Shop Ancestry - Everything you need to Discover, Preserve & Celebrate > your heritage! > http://shop.myfamily.com/ancestrycatalog >
Can anyone tell me where Willow Pond was in Ste. Geneview County, Mo. Mu great grandparents were married there. Mary Ellen
I got email from a Jane Harris asking for information on the Hoog family, but replying to her email address isn't working. Anyone know how to get in touch with her? John Krussel
Paul: Many thanks for the 1850 census data. That fairly well confirms there were no official or living children by Benjamin Wilson and Mary (Pectol) Smith. Since Mary remarried by 1850, the children of Benjamin should have appeared with her in the household of Nicholas Conner but listed as a SMITH or CONNER to cover up the unhappy 2nd marriage. The only candidate would be: Eliza Jane b. c. 1849, MO and here is the 1850 Union Twp census for Nicholas Conner and Mary : Household 618/635, p. 249, taken on 9 Oct 1850 Nicholas CONNER 50 NY farmer Mary 43 TN (sic- IN?) Eliza J. 1 MO Emely SMITH 18 IN (all Smith's b. IN) George 17 Elizabeth 15 Morgan 14 Isaac 9 Margaret 8 (Comment: Eliza J. was dau of Benjamin Wilson or Nicholas Conner? Probably Nicholas' as Benjamin living with Hannah Clinton as of 13 Mar 1848 (affadavit) and Nichoas and Mary md. 18 Mar 1849 (marriage record) well within gestation period for Eliza's birth.) That still leaves open the question of where were Benjamin Wilson and Mary (Pectol) Smith married? George W. Archer ----------------------------------------------------------------------- George Archer Internet: [email protected] PO Box 6233 CompuServe: 72530,1645 McLean, VA 22106 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Hi I was wondering if anyone had information on these two Benjamin BUTCHER'S that are in Ste. Genevieve County, MO. Divorces and Separations in Missouri 1808--1853 by Lois Stanley-George F. Wilson and Maryhelen Wilson page 4 BUTCHER< Thodise (Divorce) Ste Genevieve CO. INP Aug 1824 by next friend Charles Guffier vs. Benjamin INP means= Independent Patriot, Jackson (Cape Giradeau CO.) Wide area SE. MO ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ MO PIoneers Vol 19: Abstracts of Wills and Admrs. 1807-1855 Butcher, Benjamin intestate. Admr. Jane Butcher widow of the dec'd 08 Oct 1819 Sec. Elisha Belsha and Jas. Preston vol A page 75 Thanks, Theresa Cate Richardson http://www.geocities.com/alwysrunnin
--part1_c2.72c8ae6.27bea373_boundary Content-Type: text/plain; charset="US-ASCII" Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit After seeing a posting regarding where to find Divorce records I came across the following book at the library. It contains a list of persons involved in separations or divorces with useful information to a researcher for some of them. All entries have a date and county along with where it was published. Some have additional information such as maiden names, marriage dates, reasons, etc. I do not have a copy of this book but thought the following might be of use to someone. >From the book entitled Divorces and Separations in Missouri 1808-1853 compiled by Lois Stanley, George F. Wilson, and Maryhelen Wilson. "Divorce was not common in Missouri in the early 1800s. But there is considerable evidence that many couples found life together intolerable, at least at times. From earliest days newspapers carried plaintive 'my wife having left my bed and board' notices filed by indignant husbands. The deserted wife seldom took this means of showing dissatisfaction. She waited the required period and sued for divorce. Notices of separation can only be found in newspapers, but there are two other sources for divorce records: the circuit courts, where one existed, and the State Legislature of Missouri, which acted on divorce cases in the wide areas where no circuit courts sat. Actually, many of these cases also appeared in the newspapers, since many times a partner in a divorce case could not be found and it was necessary to notify him via the press. It is possible to go through a 10-year period in one of the early circuit courts and not find a single divorce action. But there may be divorces in some of those early records which are not included in the records which follow. The causes for divorce were limited -- desertion, adultery, habitual drunkenness were the most common. They were occasionally combined, as in one of the earliest and most sensational cases, that of General William Montgomery versus his wife Nancy. Separations shown here apparently seldom resulted in a divorce. But whether the couples reconciled, or the injured party left the state, or neither bothered to dissolve the marriage legally, cannot easily be determined. Separations do, however, provide clues which a researcher might otherwise miss. They offer an explanation as to why a couple married for years might have only one child, or widely-spaced offspring; why children were brought up by other relatives; why a man might cut off wife, child, or children in his will, with no explanation. Divorce records, too, can be valuable. The shadow of such an old scandal has darkened many a researcher's path. Proof that a divorce occurred has solved some very knotty problems. We think of 'Women's Lib' as a product of our own time. But these records show that Missouri women have been far more liberated than we realized, and for a very long time! Note: a few of these records have appeared in the St. Louis Genealogical Society Quarterly." --part1_c
George, Glad to be of help. Benjamin was my gggrandfather. He apparently was quite a rascal. He is also my proverbial brick wall. I have Ben married to Elizabeth CHOUNIE, unk date, with four children; Permulicia b c 1833, James Frederick b c 1835, William J.(my ggrandfather) b c 1837, and Emaliane b Aug 27, 1839. Ben had a son George b August 28, 1851 possibly by Mary (or maybe even Hannah). The 1850 Ste. Gen. City Census shows: Benjamin 42 b Mo Hannah 22 b Ill Pernecia A. 17 b Mo James 15 b Mo William 13 b Mo Emeline 11 b Mo Apparently, Elizabeth CHOUNIE was no longer with him. Until I found the court item about cohabitating with Hannah CLINTON, I had assumed Hannah was their first child. Ben went on to marry Rosalie M. THOMURE b c 1832 d Mar 29, 1864 m Mar 13, 1855. There were two more children; Thomas b Apr 10, 1957, and, John b c 1859. Ben d c 1863. Ste. Gen. County Court records of marriages Book/Volume A 1807-1898 (LDS microfilm nr 915668) included the following item: This will certify that on the 8th day of March 1849 I joined in marriage Nicholas CONNOR and Mary Wilson. Recorded June 15th 1849 Robert P Gentry Minister of the Gospel Hope this helps George. Regards, Paul P.S. I would also be interested in where to find divorce records during that timeframe.
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Paul: Many thanks for the outstanding documentary find that confirms Mary (Pectol) Smith's (my grgr grmother) marriage to Benjamin Wilson before she md. 3rd Nicholas Conner. Your answer arrived in record of one day after I posted to MOSTEGEN. It does not get better than that! The St. G. Circuit Court item on Benjamin Wilson's affair with Hannah Clinton indeed answers a very big question about her marriage to Wilson (never found in St. G. records), but if they were married, the fact that there was a sworn affadavit by a third party in Circuit Court to the affair suggests that this document was part of a divorce suit for adultry and abandonment. I need to search the marriage records more carefully for the period 1842-1849 and look for an 1848 divorce suit. Her 3rd marriage to Nicholas Conner in 18 Mar 1849 strongly suggests a quick and successful divorce suit. Question for MOSTEGEN: where are divorces for Missouri in the 1840's? At the local level or granted only by a state legislature or state-level courts, as was the case in some other states? Was there a waiting period or none if the abandonment was as definitive as this case? Was she entitled to retore her former name (as in Ohio)? She did not change her names, as she was married to Nicholas Conner as Mary Wilson? Solicit suggestions on where to look. And while on the embarrassing matter, was this Benjamin Wilson a relative of yours? Since this was a time period after the 1840 census and before the more detailed 1850 census, did Benjamin Wilson and Mrs. Mary (Pectol) Smith have any children? I did not find any children born 1843-1848 in the 1850 household of her 3rd husband, Nicholas Conner. If Benjamin and Mary were married there may have been cohabitation for about 5 years (1842-1847) before her remarriage and some children as a result. Many thanks again, George Archer
George, Really appreciated your e-mail info. I recently found the below item in Ste. Gen. circuit court records. Looks like we may be able to fill in at least one blank. State of Missouri County of Ste. Geneveive This day personally appeared before Thos. McCollom a justice of the peace in and for the County aforesaid Samuel Spurrier who being duly sworn upon his oath say that on or about the first day of February last past at the county aforesaid one Benjamin Wilson being then and there Married and then and there Husband of one Mary Wilson Formerly Mary Smith did unlawfully ....dly & laciviously abide and cohabit with one certain Hannah Clinton and the wife of said Benjamin Wilson being then alive. Sworn to and Subscribed Before me this 13 day of March Samuel Spurrier 1848 Thos. McCollom Justice Regards, Paul - Port Charlotte, Fl.
Surnames related to this line of SMITHs: Claywell Connor Counts Covington Degrant Hipes Morgan Morris Pectol Rickard Roberts Thurman Whitener Wilson (?) Morgan Smith, son of Reuben Smith and Mary Morgan b. 26 Apr 1807, Floyd Co., IN c. d. 3 May 1842, St. Genevieve Co, MO Res: 1807-1841, Floyd Co., IN; 1841- Union Twp, St. Genevieve, Co, Mo. md. 1. Elizabeth Jeams/James; d. by 1828 ch: Reuben b. 1 Aug 1823, Spencer CO,KY md. Eliza Roberts b. Jefferson CO, KY; 19 Nov 1843, IN (Reuben went with Morgan and Mary to St. Genevieve but returned to Floyd Co., IN and married after Morgan died and moved to Green Co, IN by 1847 remained there until ca 1900. Nine children. Reuben served in Co. A, 25th IN Inf. in Civil War.) md. 2. Mary Pectol, Floyd Co., IN b. c. 1816-1817 (sic-1860-70 Census) d. 3 May 1883 (?- see note about tombstone) md on 17 Jul 1828, Floyd Co, IN (A/83) (her b. date probably c. 1807-1812) Mrs. Mary (Pectol) Smith md. 2. ___Wilson ca. 1842-1849 (St. Genevieve Marriage record not found and no known children of Mary's born during this period, but Mary md. Nicholas Conner as "Mary Wilson") md 3. Nicholas Conner, b. c. 1800, NY; d. by 1860 md on 18 Mar 1849, St. Genevieve Co, MO (A/56). children: Eliza Jane b. c. 1849, MO Mary Jane b. c. 14 May 1852 (1854?), MO md. James Ellis Counts Children by Morgan and Mary Smith: 1. Sarah Jane b. 1 Mar 1830; d. 7 Jul 1916 md. Jacob Rickard 16 Jul 1846, St. Genevieve, MO (A/40) 2. Emily b. c. 1832, IN 3. George b. c. 1833, IN 4. Elizabeth "Betsy" b. 1834, Floyd Co, IN; d. md Andrew Jackson Claywell b. c. 1829-1832, KY on 26 Nov 1857, St. Genevieveve Co, MO (A/118) Children: (all b. MO) a. Mary Elizabeth b. c. 1858; b. Margaret L. b. c. 1860 c. Rolla b. c. 1862 d. Martha c. 1865 e. John b. c. 1867 f. Laura b. c. 1868 5. Morgan P(ectol?) b. 26 Sep 1836, Floyd Co, IN ; d. 26 Dec 1919 md. Louisa Ann De Grant b. 23 May 1846, Bonne Terre, MO ; d. 19 Jan 1915, Desloge, St. Francois Co., MO, dau of John De Grant and Louise Anna. md. on 26 Dec 1865, St. Genevieveve Co., MO. Both buried Aulsburry Chapell Church Cem. Children: a. Israel A. 8 Oct 1866 - d. before 1915 b. Isaac 8 Oct 1868 - d. 31 Dec 1887 c. William Alexander 6 Jul 1869, St. Genevieve Co., MO - 3 Apr 1942 md. Virginia Lee Covington 25 Dec 1877 , Farmington, St. Francois Co., MO - 8 Apr 1960, Farmington, St. Francois Co., MO on 25 Dec 1894, St. Francois Co., MO on 25 Dec 1894, d. Andrew Jackson 26 Sep 1871 - 21 Jun 1950 md. Elma Morris 25 May 1875 - 26 Mar 1953 on 29 Nov 1893, St. Francois Co., MO e. Clara Ann 5 Apr 1873- 7 Aug 1898 md. John Hipes f. Mary Laura 15Aug 179- 31 Jul 1940 md. Frank Thurman 29 Oct 1863- 5 Mar 1943 g. Margaret L. 27 Sep 1885 -21 Dec 1957 md. Joe L. Whitener 22Jun 1872- 26 Jun 1932 6. Sarah Jane b. 1 Apr 1837 7. Isaac b. c. 1839, IN 8. Margaret b. c. 1842, IN md. William Brady 20 Mar 1861, St. Genevieve, MO (A/150) (Comment on Morgan's tombstone) Both Morgan and Mary are probably buried in Little Vine Baptist Church. Morgan's stone (b. 26 Apr 1807- Mary's birth date?) has an incorrect death date (3 Aug 1883), probably the death date of his wife. Morgan's actual death date is established by his son's Civil War application file with Elizabeth vouching for Morgan, Sr.'s death in a separate affadavit, and by a local history decribing Reuben's return to Indiana after Morgan, Sr.'s death. Morgan's tombstone was probably erected years after his death, as it is made of thick granite, not thesoft limestone of other stones of his relatives in the same cemetery who died about the same time. The sponsor of the stone was probably mistaken about the name and dates on the stone. I have considerably more on this Smith line back to the 1750's in PA and VA and on descendants of the other lines from Morgan Smith, Sr. in the St. Genevieve and St. Francois Cos., MO areas. George W. Archer ----------------------------------------------------------------------- George Archer Internet: [email protected] PO Box 6233 CompuServe: 72530,1645 McLean, VA 22106 -----------------------------------------------------------------------
Many early US history books tend to ignore happenings west of the Mississippi or even west of Ohio. Most war of 1812 books don't mention that war in Missouri, and the majority of the big Civil War books don't mention the war in Missouri even though Missouri was third in the order in the number of battles fought after Virginia and Tennessee. So I'm not surprised that few Revolutionary War history books mention actions west of the Mississippi River. Those that do are worth digging out. Gerald J.
Hi, I am glad that I am corresponding with people with an open mind & a lot of Patience. I have this book at home that I thought that I would quote from. The name of the book is: Colonial Ste. Genevieve by Carl J. Ekberg. (Second edition) I am still trying to show that their was people from Missouri who fought in the American Revolution, even if it was not name Missouri at the time. I hope this make some good sense. I have saw many of my surnames in this book & a few DAR Books that is in the library. I really am not a one track person, but I am just trying to make a point. Please let me know if it is working. LOL I am open to positive responses...please be kind with the other responses.LOL "In 1763 the Treaty of Paris ended the French and Indian War (Seven Years' War in Europe), and diplomats in Europe parceled out the territory in the heart of North American continent to new owners: the Illinois Country east of the Mississippi River became British territory and the Illinois Country west of the river became Spanish. This juggling of the geopolitics of North America had profound consequences for the village of Ste. Genevieve. The most obvious one, that Ste. Genevieve was now under Spanish sovereignty instead of French, mattered little at first; the population remained French, and the Spanish monarchy did not assume command of its new province for years to come. More important was the fact that, as the French lost possession of the territory around Fort de Chartres and Kaskaskia, the new overlords, Englishmen, arrived in the Illinois Country....." (pp 40 & 41) "There is no way to determine how many of these casualties came from the Ste. Genevieve contingent. One man surnamed St. Jean was killed, and another with the same name taken prisoner. Given the fact that the militia muster rolls for Illinois from November 1779 list one St. Jean at St. Louis and another at Ste. Genevieve, it may be presumed that Paul St. Jean, voyageur, from Ste. Genevieve, was either killed or captured in defending St. Louis on May 26, 1780............"(p. 67) "At the same time that the Franco-Spanish garrison repelled the Anglo-Indian attack on St. Louis, Colonel John Montgomery and General George Rogers Clark fended off a secondary British thrust at Cahokia across the Mississippi. These British setbacks in the western theater of action are a little-known part of the history of the American revolution. Nonetheless, they prevented Great Britain from seizing control of the lucrative fur trade of the lower Missouri River, and even permitted a joint militia force from St. Louis and Cahokia to seize (and hold for twenty-four hours!) the British outpost at St. Joseph (Michigan) in January 1781. The Franco-American-Spanish successes in the Illinois Country did not demolish the British presence in the Mississippi Valley. They did, however, have a bearing upon the territorial settlement arrived at in Paris during the peace negotiations that concluded the American Revolution: Louisiana remained in Spanish hands, and the Northwest territory became American. (pp. 67 & 68) The violent competition for empire in North America during the 1770s and 1780s, which we call the American Revolution, resolved some of the political complexity in Louisiana: henceforth Great Britain would no longer continuously compete for sovereign control of the Mississippi Valley. In the peace treaties of 1783, Great Britain retained her rights to navigation-and therefore trade and commerce- on the entire course of the Mississippi. She also dominated the fur trade of the upper Mississippi Valley and even, contrary to the peace agreements, refused to give up her outposts there. Nonetheless, although Great Britain several times threatened to attack Spanish Louisiana, after 1783 she was no longer a persistent contender to become sovereign master of the colony...........(p. 68) The period 1783-1803 would determine which of the other contenders-Spain, France, or the United States-could impose its rule upon the uncharted vastness of western Louisiana, which included the important river town of Ste. Genevieve. When Arthur P. Whitaker, wrote that "north of New Orleans the only Spanish posts of any consideration in 1783 were Natchez, Arkansas and St. Louis,...." he neglected to mention Ste. Genevieve. But in 1783 Ste. Genevieve was as large as St. Louis and was a vital part of the trans-Mississippian West, a West that some Americans already coveted as a region for an expanding American empire. As the American Revolution ended, however, the townspeople of Ste. Genevieve could not possibly have foreseen the time when they would become citizens of the aggressive new republic, whose western frontier was now within eyeshot across the Mississippi." ...(p 68) Thank for your patience. Thank [email protected] Janet RESEARCHING: PORTELL, POLITTE, CHAMP, OLIVIER, COLEMAN, BOYER, ROUSSIN, COURTAWAY/COURTOIS/COURTOUIS, CHABOT, BOISMENU, BIENBENUE, LACHANCE, PEPIN, LALUMONDIERE, ARCHAMBEAU, ROBINET, GOURNEAU/GOVERO, OLIVE, RULO.
I would like to get in touch with SUE BAZE if any one has her correct e-mail address. Regarding the OTT family from ZELL. Thanks, Rosanna
I have posted on my webpage a complete transcription of Chapter III of the book, "The History and Antiquities of Hawsted in Suffolk", 1784, by the Rev. Sir John Cullum, Bart. The chapter which is posted online at this time is "Lords of the Manor, and Other Proprietors of Land". I have included the DRURY section of this chapter as a separate page. Included are scanned engravings of the seals of Drury, Fillet, Clopton, Lely, and Curteys families or individuals. In-depth discussions are made of the Middilton, Talmach, and Bokenham families who possessed or lived at Hawsted Manor at one time or another and many area family names are also mentioned. Scans of three pages of DRURY fold-out pedigree charts, a CULLUM pedigree chart, and a CLOPTON chart from the book are also posted and include a number of Suffolk names who married into the these families in the 1500-1700 period. (These take a little while to download due to the size of the charts.) This line of the DRURY family includes several knights and baronets, and descends from the time of William the Conqueror. Their ancestor is said in the book to appear on the "Roll of Battail Abbey" and to have accompanied William from Normandy. The line moved from Suffolk to Docking, Norfolk and then to St. Mary's County, Maryland and later (1795) to Prairie Du Rocher, Illinois and Ste. Genevieve, Missouri and surrounding counties. Other branches settled in Ireland and eventually Canada. The Hawsted estate, which is the subject of the book, is near Bury St. Edmund's in Suffolk County in the Hundred of Thingo. The quickest way to these additions to the webpage is through this link. http://www.genealogysource.com/whatsnew.htm They are also linked from the www.DruryFamily.com page. Hope this helps someone in their search! Regards, Tom Stevenson -- http://www.GenealogySource.com http://www.StevensonFamily.com http://www.DruryFamily.com http://www.GideonFamily.com Researching AUBUCHON*CARON*DRURY*GIDEON*GIDLEY* HAYDEN*HEMPHILL*HERMANN*LOGAN*LYONS*McCAULEY* McKINNEY*POLLOCK*REID*SANDS*STEVENSON*TELFORD*TUTTLE Have a Genealogy home page? Add a link to it from http://www.GenealogySource.com/Add_A_Link.htm
Can anyone tell me who Charlotte Gibault's parents were? Where or When was Charlotte born? This is the Marie Charlotte who was married jan 13 1783 to Beauchamp and were parents to the Beauchamp who married Barbe LaPlant in Ste. Gen in 1795 Thanks Pat
Hi I was looking for something and found an item, I cannot use, but will pass info on hoping it may help some one else. I know some of there French names may be around Ste. Genevieve. FROM PRDH: Antoine Bricault dit Lamarche married madeleine Buyat April 17 1781 in Cahokia Antoine's parents were : Antoine Bricault Lamarche and Marie-Anne Janot dit LaChapelle who were married oct 9 1747 in Longue Pointe (Quebec) This Antoine had a 2nd marriage with Marie Monique Baril. the 2nd Antoine's parents were: Joseph Bricault dit Lamarche and Elisabeth-Isabelle Archambault Marei-Anne Janot LaChapelle's parents were Antoine Janot dit LaChapelle and Jeanne Galipeau By the way the Antoine who was married at Cahokia also had a brother, Jean Louis Bricault dit Lamarche who married Marie Amable Fumas La Juenesse Nov 20 1780 at Pointe Olivier (St. Mathias) (Quebec)
Pat, The only Gibault/Gibeault I know of is Fr. Pierre Gibeault, who was sent by Guy Carleton in 1768 to minister to the spirital needs of the French-Canadian settlers/traders/trappers in and around Kaskaskia in the Illinois country. He spent the rest of his life in the Mississippi River Valley; I have brief accounts, but would love to have a more detailed version of his life. Good luck! Eric > > >Is there another Guilbault family? Yet Both Canadian records and Ste Gen >records say the line is from Beauchamp/Sequin. It is after that where it >gets confusing. Thank you!!!!! > >... >7. Guibault has many spellings: Guibeau, Gibault, etc -- Eric MacKnight [email protected] CANADA
Hi List, I think I am still a subscriber, I am now getting back to some of my Beauchamp lines and brick walls and need some help!! I have been working with PRDH and Quebec. I have worked down almost to the Illinois Territory and Ste. Gen. Beauchamps and it dosen't fit. And according to what I have received or found in Ste. Gen. I should have the correct family. It seems like there is a generation that is mixed up or something. I am hoping someone out there can clarify things for me. My problem area is with Marie-Charlotte Guibault and the Beauchamp she married. PRDH shows she died after 3 childrenis burried in Quebec and then Amable remarried and he too, died in Canada. Records at Ste. Gen. indicate Marie-Charlotte Guibault married a Jean Beauchamp and are parents to the line in Ste. Gen. Is there another Guilbault family? Yet Both Canadian records and Ste Gen records say the line is from Beauchamp/Sequin. It is after that where it gets confusing. Thank you!!!!! I have the following : Descendants of Jean-Baptiste Beauchamp 1. JEAN-BAPTISTE6 BEAUCHAMP (PIERRE (LAQUALITE)5, JEAN (DIT LEPETIT)4, MICHEL DESCHAMPS DIT3, JEAN (DESCHAMP)2, MARC1 DESCHAMP) was born 26 March 1712 in Lachenaie, Quebec, Canada, and died 18 December 1769 in St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. He married MARIE-GENEVIEVE ( dit LAUDEROUTE) SEGUIN1 13 August 1731 in Lachenaie, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada, daughter of PIERRE SEGUIN and BARBE-MARIE FEUILLON. She was born 1707 in Quebec, and died 16 October 1771 in St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. More About JEAN-BAPTISTE BEAUCHAMP: Baptism: 27 March 1712, Lachenaie, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Burial: 19 December 1769, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Sponsors: Louis Truchon, Lachenaie & Marie-Madeleine Hunault More About MARIE-GENEVIEVE (LAUDEROUTE) SEGUIN: Burial: 17 October 1771, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Children of JEAN-BAPTISTE BEAUCHAMP and MARIE-GENEVIEVE SEGUIN are: i. JEAN-MARIE-BAPTISTE7 BEAUCHAMP2, b. 02 May 1732, Terrebonne, Quebec Canada; d. Abt. 1803, St. Roch de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; m. MARIE-AGATHE JANARD, 27 April 1756, St. Henri-de-Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec; b. 10 August 1740, Lachenaie, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 04 March 1780, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. More About JEAN-MARIE-BAPTISTE BEAUCHAMP: Baptism: 03 May 1732, Terrebonne, Quebec Canada Burial: Abt. 1803, ? More About MARIE-AGATHE JANARD: Burial: 06 March 1780, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Children of JEAN-MARIE-BAPTISTE BEAUCHAMP and MARIE-AGATHE JANARD are: i. JEAN-MARIE8 BEAUCHAMP2, b. 13 February 1757, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 18 February 1757, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. More About JEAN-MARIE BEAUCHAMP: Burial: 18 February 1757, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Sponsors: Jean Beauchamp, grandfather and Marie Charl? ii. JEAN-MARIE BEAUCHAMP3, b. 26 May 1760, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 08 August 1760, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. iii. JEAN-MARIE BEAUCHAMP3, b. 10 June 1761, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 04 April 1765, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. iv. FRANCOIS-MARIE BEAUCHAMP3, b. 22 August 1762, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 02 September 1762, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. v. AMABLE BEAUCHAMP4, b. 17 September 1763, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; d. 18 October 1826, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; m. (1) MARIE-CHARLOTTE-CHARLES GUILBAULT5, 13 January 1783, Lachenaie, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; b. Abt. 1764, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; d. 08 August 1787, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; m. (2) MARIE-URUSULE GRIGNON6, 28 February 1791, St. Henri-de-Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec; b. 1758; d. 27 March 1825, St. Roch de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. More About AMABLE BEAUCHAMP: Baptism: 17 September, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada Burial: 19 October 1826, L'Assomption County, Quebec Godparents: Rose Beauchamp & Amable Janard. More About MARIE-CHARLOTTE-CHARLES GUILBAULT: Burial: 10 August 1787, St. Henri de Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada More About MARIE-URUSULE GRIGNON: Burial: 28 March 1825, St. Roch de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada vi. MICHEL BEAUCHAMP, b. 04 March 1765, St. Roch de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; m. ELIZABETH (DIT MITRON) JOLIVET, 22 February 1802, St. Roch-de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. vii. JOSEPH-MARIE BEAUCHAMP, b. 02 October 1766, Lachenaie, Quebec, Canada; d. Bef. 23 October 1815, St. Roch de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada; m. MARIE-MARGUERITE BELANGER, 01 January 1793, St. Henri-de-Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec. viii. AUGUSTIN BEAUCHAMP, b. 10 June 1778; m. LOUISE (BEAULAC) DEMERAIS, 01 August 1803, St. Roch-de-L'Achange, L'Assomption County, Quebec, Canada. ix. MARIE-EUPHROSINE BEAUCHAMP, b. Unknown; m. JEAN-MARIE BOURGOIN, 07 May 1787, St. Henri-de-Mascouche, L'Assomption County, Quebec. Endnotes 1. PRDH, All information on birth of children from PRDH except for Augustin and Joseph-Marie. PRDH only goes to 1799. 2. Jean Marie's birth and death from PRDH. 3. PRDH. 4. PRDH and Tanguay.Amable's birth and marriage dates and wife's name from PRDH 5. PRDH & Tanguay. 6. PRDH. 7. Guibault has many spellings: Guibeau, Gibault, etc
Researching The Bequette and Aubuchon families. Need name of the father & mother of each person. Augustine L. Bequette& Julia or Juliana Aubuchon. Married Oct, 30,1898 at French Village, Ste. Genevieve County Missouri Augustine Bequette & Julia or Juliana Aubuchon. Married Nov. 24, 1857 at French Village, Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri. Eugene Beckett [email protected]