Généalogie Joël Morin Genealogy
Ancêtres de Joël Morin Ancestors
Person Page 72

           
Filles du Roy - Saints - Bouts de ligne

Pierre Lemieux1
M, b. circa 1592

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1592 Rouen, Normandie (Seine Maritime), France1 
Marriage*27 June 1614 St-Michel, Rouen, Normandie (Seine Maritime), France, Principal=Marie Lugan1 
Marriage*10 September 1647 Québec, Québec, Canada, Principal=Marie Benard1 

Family 1Marie Lugan b. circa 1595
Child 1.Pierre Lemieux+ b. 26 Oct 1616, d. b 18 Jul 16621

Family 2Marie Benard b. 1 July 1624

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 707.

Mrs. John Mansfield
F, b. 1592

ChartsPedigree for Jessica Norberta Corbett

Birth*1592 England 
Marriage*1613 England, Principal=John Mansfield 

FamilyJohn Mansfield b. 1590
Child 1.Richard Mansfield+ b. 1611, d. 10 Jan 1655

Jean Juchereau de Maur1,2,3
M, b. 31 March 1592, d. 7 February 1672

FatherJean Juchereau Sieur de Maure b. circa 1568, d. 1628/29
MotherJeanne Creste b. circa 1570, d. 11 August 1597
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ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Anecdote Jean arrived in Quebec in 1634. He was recorded in 1667 as living in Quebec. He was a fur trader by occupation at La Ferte-Vidame. Assistant General for the State of New France on February 1647. He was also the agent for Cap-Rouge, the eldest son of his brother Noel on 1/15/1636.4 
Name Variation Jean Juchereau Sieur de Maure 
Birthcirca 1584 la Ferté-Vidame, Beauce, Perche, France2 
Birth*31 March 1592 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France4,5 
Christening31 March 1592 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France 
Occupation* Seigneur, conseiller, marguiller2 
Marriage*1 June 1621 La Lande-sur-Eur, Longny, Montagne, France, Principal=Marie Langlois4 
Note*1672 seigneur, membre du Conseil de la traite et marguillier, baptisé le 31 mars 1592 à Tourouvre (Orne, France), fils de Jean Juchereau et de Jeanne Creste, décédé à Beauport le 7 février 1672.

Jean Juchereau et son épouse, Marie Langlois, vécurent, après 1628, à La Ferté-Vidame où leurs plus jeunes enfants sont nés. En 1634, la famille Juchereau passa en Nouvelle-France. Juchereau était un ami et un collaborateur de Robert Giffard, avec qui il fit vraisemblablement la traversée.

Dès le 15 janvier 1635, d’ailleurs, les Cent-Associés lui concédaient l’espace de terre compris entre le cap aux Diamants et le vallon du Cap-Rouge. Toutefois, le gouverneur Huault de Montmagny ayant un peu plus tard jugé préférable de laisser autour de Québec une banlieue qui relèverait de la censive de la compagnie, le fief de Juchereau fut échangé pour une superficie égale de terre située au delà de Cap-Rouge. L’intendant des Cent-Associés, Jean de Lauson (père), prit la peine d’écrire à Juchereau, le 19 mars 1636, pour lui expliquer la nouvelle politique de la compagnie.

En 1647, les possessions territoriales de Juchereau s’accroissaient : le 21 mars, par devant Teuleron, notaire à La Rochelle, Noël Juchereau Des Chatelets achetait, au nom de son frère, le fief de Saint-Michel, propriété de M. de Puiseaux, et, le 18 septembre, le gouverneur concédait à Jean et à Noël Juchereau la seigneurie de Maur où de Saint-Augustin. La concession fut ratifiée par la compagnie le 29 mars 1649, et Jean Juchereau, héritier de son frère décédé depuis peu, fut mis en possession de sa seigneurie le 9 avril 1650.

S’il s’intéressa beaucoup au défrichement et à la colonisation, Juchereau n’en fut pas moins mêlé à la Communauté des Habitants. Un document de 1667 le dit « ci-devant assesseur à la Cour Souveraine de ce pays [Conseil souverain] et conseiller au conseil établi par le Roi pour la direction du commerce et de la traite de ce dit pays ».

Il est évident que, à l’époque où il entra en possession de la seigneurie de Maur, Juchereau était devenu un notable de la colonie : en 1647, 1650 et 1651, il porte le dais aux processions de la Fête-Dieu ; en 1651, le 1er janvier, il est parmi les quelques personnalités qui reçoivent des étrennes des Jésuites ; en 1656 et 1657, enfin, il est marguillier de l’église paroissiale de Québec. Personnage en vue à Québec et l’un des dirigeants de la Communauté des Habitants, Juchereau fût – avec combien d’autres ! – accusé de malversations par l’irascible et excessif Jean Peronne Dumesnil.

Vieillissant et ne jouant plus aucun rôle officiel, Juchereau, à partir de 1663, fut quelques fois choisi par le Conseil souverain où par les parties comme arbitre où curateur d’une succession. En 1668, M. de Prouville de Tracy proposa au roi de l’anoblir avec quelques-uns des principaux habitants du pays. Mais le roi ne donna pas suite à cette suggestion.

Enfin, le 4 janvier 1672, sentant son heure proche, Juchereau signait avec ses héritiers un acte par lequel il cédait sa seigneurie de Maur à son fils aîné, Jean Juchereau de La Ferté.

Son épouse, Marie Langlois, avait été inhumée à Québec le 15 janvier 1661. Quant à Jean Juchereau de Maur, il mourut à Beauport « en l’habitation de M. de Saint-Denys [V. Nicolas Juchereau], son fils », le 7 février 1672.3,6 
Death*7 February 1672 Beauport, Montmorency, Québec, Canada2 
Burial*9 February 1672 53 15020-66a ave, Surrey, BC, Canada 

FamilyMarie Langlois b. circa 1600, d. 14 January 1661
Marriage*1 June 1621 La Lande-sur-Eur, Longny, Montagne, France, Principal=Marie Langlois4 
Child 1.Geneviève Juchereau+ b. 25 Jul 1632, d. 16872

Citations
  1. Seigneur de Maur.
  2. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  3. [S70] Unknown author, Dictionnaire Biographique du Canada.
  4. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.
  5. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  6. [S241] DBC en ligne, online, I - VIII, http://www.biographi.ca/FR/ShowBio.asp?BioId=34431; AJQ, Greffe de Guillaume Audouart, 15 mars, 1er oct. 1651 ; Greffe de Gilles Rageot, 4 janv. 1672.— ANDQ, Registre des sépultures, 15 janv. 1661.— APQ, Coll. de pièces jud. et not., 26 ; Fois et hommages, Régime français, I : 199.— ASQ, Documents Faribault, 78, 97–100 ; Polygraphie, XII : 22, XXII : 47.— Contrat de Teuleron, 21 mars 1647, RHAF, V (1951–52) : 123–125.— JJ (Laverdière et Casgrain).— JR (Thwaites).— Jug. et délib., I.— Papier terrier de la Cie des I. O. (P.-G. Roy), 25, 124, 261.— Précis des actes de foy et hommage, I, RAC, 1881 : 31.— P.-G. Roy, Inv. concessions, I : 270–272.— Philéas Gagnon, La Seigneurie de Maur, BRH, VII (1901) : 52s.— Jean Peronne Dumesnil et ses mémoires, BRH, XXI (1915) : 194.— Jean Langevin, Notes sur les archives de Notre-Dame de Beauport (Québec, 1860), 10, 132.— P.-G. Roy, La Famille Juchereau Duchesnay (Lévis, 1903), 15–18. [Mme Pierre [F.L.] Montagne, Tourouvre et les Juchereau ... (Québec, 1965).]

    .

Francis Sayre
M, b. 14 May 1592

FatherFrancis Sayre b. circa 1565, d. before April 1645
MotherElizabeth Atkins b. 9 November 1565
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Christening*14 May 1592 Martaizé, Vienne, France 

Michelle Mabille1,2
F, b. before 20 May 1592, d. 21 January 1665

FatherGuillaume Mabille2 b. circa 1572, d. between 1627 and 1640
MotherEtiennette Monhé2 b. circa 1572, d. between 1640 and 1641
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ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*before 20 May 1592 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France2 
Marriage*12 February 1619 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Guillaume Pelletier d. LeGobloteur2 
Death*21 January 1665 Québec, Québec, Canada2 

FamilyGuillaume Pelletier d. LeGobloteur b. circa 1599, d. 27 November 1657
Child 1.Jean Pelletier d. LeGobloteur+ b. 12 Jun 1627, d. 24 Feb 16982

Citations
  1. TRV; AG-FNF.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p887.

Jean Guyon1
M, b. 18 September 1592, d. 30 May 1663

FatherJacques Guyon2 b. circa 1572, d. before 1623
MotherMarie Huet2 b. circa 1572
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ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Misc 'French Canadian and Acadian Genealogical Review', Spring 1968. Page 16-26. He signed his name as 'Guion', and it is from him that Guyon, and many Dion and Dionnes descend. His godfathers are Jean Collin and Pierre Dolivet, and godmother Catherine Goddin. He grew up in Tourouvre, on May 18, 1614, he signed at loan to Pantaleon Bigot, a farmer from Autheuil, a sum consisting of: 'a small gold pistol, pieces of fifty-two sons, quarters of crowns and other silver pieces'. For a value of about 84 pounds. He was already a mason although only 24 years of age, was very successful. Jean built the old stairs of the steeple tower of the church at Tourouvre in 1615. He was then living in the parish of St-Jean de Mortagne, province of Perche, France.2 
BirthSeptember 1592 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France2,3 
Christening*18 September 1592 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France2,3 
Marriage*2 June 1615 St-Jean-de-Mortagne, Chartes, Eure-et-Loir, Centre, France, Principal=Mathurine Madeleine Robin2 
Occupation*14 March 1634 Québec, Canada, macon a l'emploi de Robert Giffard 
Immigration*8 August 1634 Québec, Québec, Canada, arrive a bord d'un vaisseau commnade par le Capitaine deVille. Ils avaient quitte Dieppe a la fin mai., Principal=Mathurine Madeleine Robin3 
Death*30 May 1663 Beauport, Montmorency, Québec, Canada2,3 
Burial*31 May 1663 Québec, Québec, Canada2,3 

FamilyMathurine Madeleine Robin b. circa 1595, d. 16 April 1662
Marriage*2 June 1615 St-Jean-de-Mortagne, Chartes, Eure-et-Loir, Centre, France, Principal=Mathurine Madeleine Robin2 
Children 1.Marie Guyon+ b. 18 Mar 1624, d. 29 Aug 16961
 2.Claude Guyon+ b. c 1629, d. Feb 16941
 3.Barbe Guyon+ b. 27 Nov 1700, d. 27 Nov 17004

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.
  3. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  4. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 56.

Françoise Poningle1
F, b. circa 1593

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1593 2 
Marriage*circa 1613 Principal=(?) Lambert 

Family(?) Lambert b. circa 1590
Child 1.Eustache Lambert Sieur de Ste-Marie+ b. 1618, d. 6 Jul 16731

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S72] Unknown compiler.

Sarah Wakeman
F, b. 23 April 1593, d. 1662

FatherFrancis Wakeman b. 6 October 1565, d. 2 September 1626
MotherAnne Good b. 27 October 1568, d. 29 January 1621
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Married Name Hubbell 
Christening23 April 1593 Bewdley, Worcestershire, England 
Birth*23 April 1593 Bewdley, Ribbesford Parish, Worcestershire, England 
Marriage*30 April 1621 Marcigny-sur-Loire, Saône-et-Loire, Bourgogne, France, Principal=Richard Hubbell 
Death*1662 Marcigny-sur-Loire, Saône-et-Loire, Bourgogne, France 

FamilyRichard Hubbell b. circa 1600

Pierre Desportes1
M, b. circa 1594, d. circa 18 May 1629

FatherLouis Desportes2 b. circa 1574
MotherAnne Dupoteau2 b. circa 1574
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Misc* avait une occupation inconnue, mais il devait jouir d'un certain restige parmi les habitants et il savait sans doute écrire, car c'est lui qui signa, au nom des habitants, la pétition addressée au roi en 1621. Rien de plus n'est connu sur son compte.3 
Birth*circa 1594 l'ev. Lisieux, Normandie, France2,4 
Marriage*circa 1614 Normandie, France, Principal=Françoise Langlois5 
Emigration*1619 4 
Death*circa 18 May 1629 France2,4 

FamilyFrançoise Langlois b. circa 1594, d. circa 18 May 1629
Child 1.Hélène Desportes+ b. 7 Jul 1620, d. 24 Jun 16751

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.
  3. [S70] Unknown author, Dictionnaire Biographique du Canada, vol 1 p.272.
  4. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  5. [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.

Françoise Langlois1
F, b. circa 1594, d. circa 18 May 1629

FatherGuillaume Langlois2 b. 1566, d. before July 1634
MotherJeanne Millet2 b. 1570, d. after 1634
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1594 Normandie, France1,3 
Marriage*circa 1614 Normandie, France, Principal=Pierre Desportes3 
Death*circa 18 May 1629 France4,2 

FamilyPierre Desportes b. circa 1594, d. circa 18 May 1629
Child 1.Hélène Desportes+ b. 7 Jul 1620, d. 24 Jun 16751

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  3. [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.
  4. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.

John Wakeman
M, b. circa 1594, d. 1595

FatherFrancis Wakeman b. 6 October 1565, d. 2 September 1626
MotherAnne Good b. 27 October 1568, d. 29 January 1621
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Birth*circa 1594 Chaddesley, England 
Death*1595  
Burial*May 1595  

Jacques Gaudry1
M, b. circa 1594, d. between 17 May 1637 and 18 September 1637

Occupation* marchand tanneur [merchant, tanner]
1 
Birth*circa 1594 France2,1 
Marriage*before 8 December 1621 Feings, Perche, France, Principal=Charlotte Chevalier1 
Death*between 17 May 1637 and 18 September 1637 Feings, Perche, France1 

FamilyCharlotte Chevalier b. circa 1601, d. bef 1681 census

Citations
  1. [S248] Unknown author, GEDCOM File C:\Program Files\The Master Genealogist\GEDCOM\ib4eexcept.-boucherged.ged imported on 06/27/2006 at 23:58:44..
  2. [S249] Unknown author, Grandes Familles.

Elizabeth Sayre
F, b. 25 April 1594

FatherFrancis Sayre b. circa 1565, d. before April 1645
MotherElizabeth Atkins b. 9 November 1565
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Birth*25 April 1594  
Marriage*27 November 1625 Principal=Francis Wells 

FamilyFrancis Wells b. circa 1605

Giles Rickard
M, b. circa 13 June 1594

Residence* Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, USA 
Birth*circa 13 June 1594 Taunton, Somerset, England1 
Marriage*7 January 1623 West Hatch, Somerset, England, Principal=Judith Cogan2 

FamilyJudith Cogan b. circa 1621
Children 1.Giles Rickard+ b. c Oct 16233
 2.Sarah Rickard b. c 16244
 3.John Rickard b. 16274

Citations
  1. [S89] Unknown author, New England Historical and Genealogical Society Register, pg121, child in Taunton on that date.
  2. [S85] Eugene Aubrey Stratton, Plymouth Colony, its History and People 1620-1691, pg 342.
  3. [S98] Unknown author, The New England Register and Genealogy, Colonial Families of the United States, p. 416.
  4. [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various, CIS RICKAR.TXT.

Francis Eaton1
M, b. before 1595, d. November 1633

Misc* The ancestry of Francis Eaton is not known. He is believed to have been of the group that boarded the Mayflower in London.
Francis came on the Mayflower with his wife Sarah and son Samuel who was a "suckling child".

There are several clues to Eaton's ancestry, however. In an apprenticeship record dated 4 December 1626, reads as follows:

"John Morgan son of Edward Morgan of the City of Bristol, sailor, deceased, apprenticed to Francis Eaton of the City of
Bristol carpenter and Dorothy his wife for seven (7) years, paying 4s 6d for the liberties of Bristol with two (2) suits of apparel
and one suit 'telorum pertenr ad artem le carpinter.' [in margin: "The Mr. at New England"] . . . The Master consenteth at the
end of the said term to convey to the apprentice and his heairs forever 25 acres of land lying in New England in America and
also to give until him 15 bushels of wheat he serving him truly the term of his apprenticeship."

This probaby isn't the Francis Eaton of the Mayflower however. Here are the reasons. This is because it says "Dorothy his wife
for seven years". If this Dorothy is the second wife of Francis, whose name is not known, then he would have had to marry her
in 1619--but he sailed on the Mayflower in 1620 with his wife Sarah.

The things that make this document tempting, however, are two facts. First it calls Francis Eaton a carpenter. The Francis Eaton
of the Mayflower was also called a carpenter. Second, the Francis Eaton of the Mayflower is the only known "Francis Eaton"
to have lived in America up through about 1700. So what would be the chances of there being an unrecorded Francis Eaton
living in New England with the same occupation? Perhaps the misunderstanding about the wife Dorothy is due to the slow
exchange of news from the Plymouth colony and the rest of the world.

Another possible clue is found in "The Pastor of the Pilgrims", a book about John Robinson. It says that a George and Francis
Eaton were selling land c1591, in Fenton, England. That was the birthplace of John Robinson, as well as of his wife, and Gov.
John Carver's wife.



BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY:

Little is known about Francis Eaton, the man. However, when he died in 1633, the inventory of his estate called him a
carpenter. There was some kind of disease going around in 1633, and several Mayflower passengers died that year from it,
including Francis Eaton and Peter Browne.

The inventory of Francis Eaton's estate included one cow and a calf, two hogs, fifty bushels of corn, a black suit, a white hat
and a black hat, boots, saws, hammers, an adze, square, awgers, a chisel, boards, fishing lead, and some kitchen items.2 
Religion Puritan 
Birth*before 1595 England3 
Occupation* a carpenter 
Misc1620 Arrived on Mayflower 
Marriage*circa 1625 Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, New England, Principal=Christian Penn3 
Death*November 1633 Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, New England3 

FamilyChristian Penn b. circa 1607, d. circa 1684
Marriage*circa 1625 Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, New England, Principal=Christian Penn3 
Children 1.Rachel Eaton b. 1625, d. bt 3 Jun 1656 - Oct 16614
 2.Benjamin Eaton+ b. Mar 1627, d. 16 Jan 17111

Citations
  1. [S59] George Ernest Bowman, Bowman Files.
  2. [S110] Unknown compiler, "Web Page", Ancestral File, http://members.aol.com/calebj/eaton.html.
  3. [S109] Unknown compiler, "Lori Steadman's Genealogical Database", Ancestral File.
  4. [S90] Unknown author, Mayflower Families Through 5 Generations, volume 9.

Mathurine Madeleine Robin
F, b. circa 1595, d. 16 April 1662

FatherEustache Robin1 b. 1574
MotherMadeleine Avrard1 b. 1570
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Name Variation Mathurine Robin2 
Birth*circa 1595 Mortagne(-au-Perche), Chartres, Perche (Orne), France1,3 
Marriage*2 June 1615 St-Jean-de-Mortagne, Chartes, Eure-et-Loir, Centre, France, Principal=Jean Guyon1 
Immigration*8 August 1634 Québec, Québec, Canada, arrive a bord d'un vaisseau commnade par le Capitaine deVille. Ils avaient quitte Dieppe a la fin mai., Principal=Jean Guyon3 
Death*16 April 1662 Beauport, Montmorency, Québec, Canada1,3 
Burial*17 April 1662 Québec, Québec, Canada1,3 

FamilyJean Guyon b. 18 September 1592, d. 30 May 1663
Children 1.Marie Guyon+ b. 18 Mar 1624, d. 29 Aug 16962
 2.Claude Guyon+ b. c 1629, d. Feb 16942
 3.Barbe Guyon+ b. 27 Nov 1700, d. 27 Nov 17003

Citations
  1. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.
  2. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  3. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Mathurin Paquet1
M, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Name Variation Mathurin Pasquet2 
Birth*circa 1595 1 
Birthcirca 1630 Poitou, France2 
Marriage*circa 1642 St-Jean de Montaigu, Poitou, France, Principal=Marie Frémillon2 

FamilyMarie Frémillon b. circa 1595
Child 1.Isaac Paquet dit Lavallee+ b. c 1650, d. 18 Jun 17021

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  2. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.

Marie Frémillon1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Married Name Pasquet 
Name Variation Marie Fremillon2 
Birth*circa 1595 Poitou, France1 
Birthcirca 1630 Poitou, France2 
Marriage*circa 1642 St-Jean de Montaigu, Poitou, France, Principal=Mathurin Paquet2 

FamilyMathurin Paquet b. circa 1595
Child 1.Isaac Paquet dit Lavallee+ b. c 1650, d. 18 Jun 17021

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  2. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.

Jean Dubé1
M, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 Chapelle-Thémer, ar. Fontenay-le-Compte, Poitou (Vendée), France1 
Marriage*circa 1618 Chapelle-Thémer, ar. Fontenay-le-Compte, Poitou (Vendée), France, Principal=Renée Suzanne1 

FamilyRenée Suzanne b. circa 1595
Child 1.Mathurin Dubé+ b. c 1633, d. 28 Dec 16951

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 364.

Mathurine Mercier
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 St-Hilaire-du-Bois, Poitou, France1,2 
Marriage*circa 1615 Principal=Guillaume Joiry1 

FamilyGuillaume Joiry b. circa 1580
Child 1.Jeanne Joiry+ b. c 16151

Citations
  1. [S111] Unknown compiler, "GEDCOM File AG15.GED submitted by Keith R. Lambert", Ancestral File.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Renée Suzanne1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 Chapelle-Thémer, ar. Fontenay-le-Compte, Poitou (Vendée), France1 
Marriage*circa 1618 Chapelle-Thémer, ar. Fontenay-le-Compte, Poitou (Vendée), France, Principal=Jean Dubé1 

FamilyJean Dubé b. circa 1595
Child 1.Mathurin Dubé+ b. c 1633, d. 28 Dec 16951

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 364.

Sainte Dupont1
F, b. circa 1595, d. 13 July 1680

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 Mortagne, ev. Chartres, Perche (Orne), France1 
Marriage*18 July 1616 St-Jean, Mortagne, ev. Sées, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Zacharie Cloutier1 
Death*13 July 1680 Château-Richer, Montmorency, Québec, Canada1 

FamilyZacharie Cloutier b. circa 1590, d. 17 September 1677
Children 1.Zacharie Cloutier+ b. 16 Aug 1617, d. 3 Feb 17081
 2.Jean Cloutier+ b. 13 May 1620, d. 16 Oct 16902

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p259.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 259.

Marin Boucher1
M, b. circa 1595, d. 25 March 1671

ChartsPedigree for Jessica Norberta Corbett
Pedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Occupation maçon2 
Birth15 April 1589 Mortagne, Perche, France3,4,2 
Birth*circa 1595 Mortagne, ev. Chartres, Perche (Orne), France1 
Marriage*7 February 1611 St-Jean, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Julienne Baril3,5,2 
Marriage*before 29 August 1630 Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Perrine Mallet6 
Death*25 March 1671 Château-Richer, Montmorency, Québec, Canada1 

Family 1Julienne Baril d. 15 December 1627
Child 1.François Boucher+ b. 22 Nov 1617, d. 2 May 16782

Family 2Perrine Mallet b. circa 1595, d. after 1681
Children 1.Louis-Marin Mallet b. 29 Aug 1630, d. 18 Dec 17001
 2.Françoise Boucher+ b. 22 Jun 1636, d. 18 Apr 17117
 3.Pierre Boucher+ b. 13 Feb 1639, d. 13 May 17078
 4.Marie Boucher+ b. 11 Apr 16441

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p135.
  2. [S248] Unknown author, GEDCOM File C:\Program Files\The Master Genealogist\GEDCOM\ib4eexcept.-boucherged.ged imported on 06/27/2006 at 23:58:44..
  3. [S11] On the orders of King Alfred the Great, Anglo Saxon Chronicles.
  4. [S249] Unknown compiler, Grandes Familles.
  5. [S16] Unknown author, Encyclopedia Britannica.
  6. [S214] Fichier Origine, online http://www.genealogie.com/fichier.origine/.
  7. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 136.
  8. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Perrine Mallet1,2
F, b. circa 1595, d. after 1681

FatherPierre Mallet2 b. circa 1588
MotherJacqueline Liger2 b. circa 1588
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 Courgeon, ar. Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France2 
Marriage*before 29 August 1630 Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Marin Boucher3 
Death*after 1681 Château-Richer, Montmorency, Québec, Canada2 

FamilyMarin Boucher b. circa 1595, d. 25 March 1671
Children 1.Louis-Marin Mallet b. 29 Aug 1630, d. 18 Dec 17002
 2.Françoise Boucher+ b. 22 Jun 1636, d. 18 Apr 17114
 3.Pierre Boucher+ b. 13 Feb 1639, d. 13 May 17075
 4.Marie Boucher+ b. 11 Apr 16442

Citations
  1. AG-FNF.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p135.
  3. [S214] Fichier Origine, online http://www.genealogie.com/fichier.origine/.
  4. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 136.
  5. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Jean Desvarieux1
M, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 St-Vincent d'Aubermail (auj. St-Vincent-Cramesnil), Pays de Caux, ar. Le Havre, Normandie (Seine-Maritime), France1 
Marriage*circa 1618 Pays de Caux, ar. Le Havre, Normandie (Seine-Maritime), France, Principal=Marie Chevalier1 

FamilyMarie Chevalier b. circa 1595
Child 1.Vincente Desvarieux+ b. c 1619, d. 2 Jan 16951

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 452.

Marie Chevalier1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 St-Vincent d'Aubermail (auj. St-Vincent-Cramesnil), Pays de Caux, ar. Le Havre, Normandie (Seine-Maritime), France1 
Marriage*circa 1618 Pays de Caux, ar. Le Havre, Normandie (Seine-Maritime), France, Principal=Jean Desvarieux1 

FamilyJean Desvarieux b. circa 1595
Child 1.Vincente Desvarieux+ b. c 1619, d. 2 Jan 16951

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 452.

Marie Lugan1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 Rouen, Normandie (Seine Maritime), France1 
Marriage*27 June 1614 St-Michel, Rouen, Normandie (Seine Maritime), France, Principal=Pierre Lemieux1 

FamilyPierre Lemieux b. circa 1592
Child 1.Pierre Lemieux+ b. 26 Oct 1616, d. b 18 Jul 16621

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 707.

Marie Bourgeois1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 France1 
Marriage*circa 1621 France, Principal=Germain Doucet Sieur de la Verdure1 
Misc*1654 returned to France, Principal=Germain Doucet Sieur de la Verdure2 

FamilyGermain Doucet Sieur de la Verdure b. circa 1605
Child 1.Pierre Doucet+ b. 1621, d. 1 Jun 17131

Citations
  1. [S189] Unknown compiler.
  2. [S192] GenWeb - Acadie, online http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/Meadows/2700/.

Jacques Lelievre1
M, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 France1 
Marriage*circa 1616 France, Principal=Antoinette Bougard1 

FamilyAntoinette Bougard b. circa 1595
Child 1.Guillaume Lelievre+ b. c 16161

Citations
  1. [S69] Unknown author, PRDH.

Antoinette Bougard1
F, b. circa 1595

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1595 France1 
Marriage*circa 1616 France, Principal=Jacques Lelievre1 

FamilyJacques Lelievre b. circa 1595
Child 1.Guillaume Lelievre+ b. c 16161

Citations
  1. [S69] Unknown author, PRDH.

Ellen Glover
F, b. 1595

FatherThomas Glover b. 1569, d. 13 December 1619
MotherMargaret Deane b. 1573, d. after 1615
Pop-up Pedigree

Birth*1595 Rainhill, Lancastershire, England 
Christening2 February 1595 Prescot, Lancastershire, England 

William Sayre
M, b. 15 September 1595, d. 9 April 1598

FatherFrancis Sayre b. circa 1565, d. before April 1645
MotherElizabeth Atkins b. 9 November 1565
Pop-up Pedigree

Christening*15 September 1595 Martaizé, Vienne, France 
Death*9 April 1598 Martaizé, Vienne, France 
Christening9 September 1602 Martaizé, Vienne, France 

Elder Henry Cobb1
M, b. 1596, d. 1679

FatherHenry Cobb2 b. 1561, d. 1617
Pop-up Pedigree

Misc "was the first known Cobb to emigrate from England to the Plymouth Colony, Cape Cod, MA. Many distinguished descendants have long searched for his English origin and background. In developing this vignette of the immigrant I have drawn liberally from the scholarly works of Philip L. Cobb, author of The Cobb Family (1907), Richard Cobb, Harvard professor and Richard Cobb a retired Navy Supply Corps Captain. However, the hypotheses and conclusions contained herein are my own. (Tracy Ashley Crocker Sr.)

Much is known on the activities of Henry Cobb, the Puritan, in the Bay Colony but little has been done to unravel the specifics of his origin. There is general agreement that "The Elder Henry or the Deacon Henry Cobb" came from an area in County Kent east of the Medway River which flows out of the hills of southern Kent through Maidstone and Chatham and into the Thames Estuary. It is within this area that inhabitants are called "Men of Kent" (Jutish origin); those to the west of the Medway are known as "Kentish Men" (Saxon origin). Professor Richard Cobb, through study and acquaintance with the Cape Cod descendants of Henry Cobb, suggests that as a young man Henry Cobb was "rather short, with blue eyes and reddish sandy hair." Interesting, as this description agrees with the perceived appearance of the Germanic Jutes who invaded and settled in Great Britain in the 5th century.
The most visible trail of "Henry the Elder" in England is found in his relationship with his church leader, the Reverend John Lothrop. Lothrop, "a man of good family and education" was baptized at Eton on 20 December 1584. He received BA and MA degrees at Queens College, Cambridge. In 1611 we find him with the established Church of England at Egerton, Kent, a distance of about 15 miles from the probable home of Henry Cobb in Reculver, Kent. Obviously disenchanted with the autocratic dogma of the King's Church, the Reverend Lothrop is found as minister of an independent church in London in 1623; and then on 29 April 1632, we find him imprisoned in London with 40 members of his flock for violating the laws relating to religious gatherings. Following two years imprisonment, Lothrop left England in the ship "Griffin" with his family and some members of his church for the Plymouth colony, arriving there 18 September 1634. Here Henry Cobb, the Lothrop protege who had been in the Colony for about five years, responded to the call of his old friend and esteemed pastor. He aided the Reverend in getting his family and church established in the newly formed town of Scituate. Lothrop's records published in the New England Register, Volumes IX and X, leaves little doubt of Henry Cobb's membership in Lothrop's London church:
"Uppon January 8, 1634, Wee had a day of humiliation and then at night joyned in covenaunt together, so many of us had beene in covenaunt before. To Witt.
Mr. Gilsonn and his wife
Goodman Anniball and his wife
Goodman Rowly and his wife
Goodman Cobb and his wife
Goodman Turner
Edward Foster
Myselfe
Goodman Foxwell
Samuel House."

It is very probable that immigrant Henry Cobb of Plymouth and Ambrose Cobb of the Virgina Colony were of the same Kent Family, they shared a common progenitor in John Cobb, Esquire (b. ca 1300) of Cobb's Court, Romney, Kent. The suggested (but undocumented) relationships shown are based primarily on the association of the family names, locations, and dates. That is, Henry Cobb of Plymouth Colony would appear to be a second son of Henry Cobb (1561-1617) of Reculver, Kent. The son Henry was born about 1605. (He married Patience Hurst in Plymouth in 1631; English Yeoman of his time, married at age 26, thus the basis for his date of birth). Most men of Kent were farmers in an area famous for hops, fruit, and grain. Even in this age, importance was attached to the idea of status. The term "Yeoman" was commonly used in legal and other documents to denote status above "Husbandman" (smaller, less prosperous farmer) and below that of "Gentleman" (upper middle class). Yeomen, from whom Henry Cobb was descended, were reasonably well educated. Some Yeomen sons attended the universities; some became clergymen. A review of the Cobbs of Kent and a person inspection of the Manor houses at Reculver and Eastleigh Court suggest 16th century gentry but 17th century Yeomen. Suffice it to say that the emigrant Henry Cobb did not inherit his father's estate. The major inheritance, by custom, probably went to Benjamin Cobb, the first-born son. This situation, as well as the significant influence of Reverend Lothrop, could have given the impressionable 18 year old Henry Cobb ample justification to seek an apprenticeship in the shops or pubs of London in 1623, the year that Lothrop formed his church there. The influence of the charismatic Lotrop on the Cobbs of Reculver must have been substantial. The Cobb home at Reculver was about 15 miles from Egerton, Kent where Lothrop was in residence from 1611 to 1623. Henry Cobb, the assumed father of the emigrant Henry, was himself censured by the establishment. He had become Lord of the Manor of Bishopstone, Reculver Kent, when his father Richard died in 1582. In the record of the Visitations of Archdeacon of Canterbury in 1599 is found the following "We present these persons whose names are hereunder written for they refuse to pay unto a cess made by divers of our parish for the reparation of our said church: .....Henry Cobb 3 shillings, 10 pence (owed)."
The nature of Henry Cobb's apprenticeship or trade in London is open to conjecture. The fact that he came from an area rich in hops and grain and later in the Colony he was authorized to dispense wine suggests the production and/or sale of ale, the national beverage of the era. From the Plymouth Colony Record 1173; "5 June 1644, Henry Cobb is lycensed to draw wine at Barnstable."
What better place than an English pub in the 17th century to keep abreast of politics, religion and emigration. Henry Cobb of London must certainly have been aware of a number of significant events, viz: That in 1604, in a declaration at Hampton Court, James I said of the Puritans, "I shall make them conform themselves or I will harry them out of the Land or else do worst." Henry must have known the story of an undereducated group of separatists called "Pilgrims" who sough refuge first in Amsterdam and subsequently in Leyden, Holland; and the unwilling to be assimilated into the Dutch culture, made their way to Plymouth in 1620 aboard the "Mayflower". (of the 101 passengers on the first voyage of the Mayflower, 35 were Leyden adventurers.) In 1628 the Puritans of Henry Cobb's sect began their mass exodus. In 1630 John Winthrop, a strong and able leader, led nearly 1000 Puritans with their cattle and horses to settlements in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. In general the Puritans were a wealthier and better educated class than the Pilgrims but they shared their deeply religious convictions. It was shortly after the Winthrop departure that Henry Cobb made his move, probably in the ship "The Anne" in 1629. Other possible ships include " Mayflower II' and the "Little James", which also arrived at Cape Cod in 1629. Professor Cobb said in his character analysis of Henry, the emigrant, that he was "sensible, shrewd, adverse to making trouble or being a part of it." Cobb didn't linger in London long enough to be jailed in the famous "clink" with the zealous Lothrop and his followers in 1632. When the great Civil War of 1642 came about to settle the question of supremacy between King and Parliament, High Church and Puritans, Henry Cobb is found saving souls and selling wine in Massachusetts."
                                   (John E. Cobb, Col., US Army)3 
Birth*1596 Reculver, Kent, England4,5 
Marriage*1631 Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, New England, Principal=Patience Hurst5 
Residence*8 January 1634 Scituate, Massachussetts, USA, Henry went from Plymouth to Scituate. He took a letter from the Plymouth church to join Rev. John Lothrop's church in Sciutate, where he was elected Ruling Elder on December 15, 1635.5 
Misc15 December 1635 Scituate, Massachussetts, USA, elected Ruling Elder of his church5 
Residence*1639 In 1639 Henry removed with Rev. Lothrops to Barnstable where he settled permanently. He was a deacon 44 years, and ordained Elder in 1670. Served as Deputy in the Plymouth Court or Legislature for 7 years. Was a useful and valuable man. Died in 1679, when he was about 83 years old. The descendants of Henry Cobb are very numerous and are at the present time very widely scattered. They were of the true Pilgrim stock and it has always been a deeply religious family, numbering many Ministers and Deacons among its members, and as a class have been noted for their loyalty to the church.5 
Marriage*1649 Principal=Sarah Hinckley 
Ordination*1670 Scituate, Massachussetts, USA, ordained Elder5 
Death*1679 Barnstable, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, USA5 

Family 1Patience Hurst b. 1610, d. 4 May 1648
Marriage*1631 Plymouth, Plymouth Co., Massachussetts, New England, Principal=Patience Hurst5 
Children 1.John Cobb+ b. 7 Jun 1632, d. 22 Feb 17146
 2.Sgt. James Cobb b. 14 Jan 1634, d. 16956
 3.Edward Cobb b. c 16356
 4.Mary Cobb b. 24 Mar 16365
 5.Hannah Cobb b. 5 Oct 1639, d. 17 Jan 17305
 6.Patience Cobb b. 13 Mar 1641, d. 23 Oct 1727
 7.Gersham Cobb b. 10 Jan 1644, d. c 24 Jun 1675
 8.Eleazar Cobb b. 30 Jan 1648

Family 2Sarah Hinckley
Marriage*1649 Principal=Sarah Hinckley 
Children 1.Mehitabel Cobb b. 1 Sep 1651, d. 8 Mar 16526
 2.Samuel Cobb b. 12 Oct 1654, d. 27 Dec 1727
 3.Sarah Cobb b. 15 Jan 1658, d. 25 Jan 1658
 4.Jonathan Cobb b. 10 Apr 1660
 5.Sarah Cobb b. 1663
 6.Henry Cobb b. 3 Sep 1665
 7.Mehitabel Cobb b. 15 Feb 16677
 8.Experience Cobb b. 11 Sep 1671

Citations
  1. [S61] Tracy Ashley Crocker, unknown record type, Downloaded from CompuServe, p21 Cobb Chronicles.
  2. [S34] John E. Cobb, Cobb Chronicles, An Overview of the clan.
  3. [S61] Tracy Ashley Crocker, unknown record type, Downloaded from CompuServe, Extract from his files.
  4. [S32] Gerald R. Fuller, Gerald Fuller.
  5. [S33] Amis Otis, Amis Otis.
  6. [S78] Unknown compiler, "Typewritten genealogical notes collated by an unknown person, provided by Pat Bragdon.", Ancestral File.
  7. [S35] Unknown compiler, "Lewis GEDCOM File", Ancestral File.

Martha Wakeman
F, b. circa 27 March 1596, d. 1663/64

FatherFrancis Wakeman b. 6 October 1565, d. 2 September 1626
MotherAnne Good b. 27 October 1568, d. 29 January 1621
Pop-up Pedigree

Birth*circa 27 March 1596 Upper Arley, Worcestershire, England 
Marriage*30 November 1621 Principal=William Davis 
Death*1663/64  

FamilyWilliam Davis b. circa 1601

Pierre Crenel1
M, b. circa 1597

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Name Variation Pierre Crevet 
Birth*circa 1597 Normandie, France1 
Marriage*18 July 1613 Normandie, France, Principal=Marie Lemercier2 

FamilyMarie Lemercier b. circa 1597
Child 1.Marie Crenel+ b. c 1615, d. 22 Nov 16951

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.

Marie Lemercier1
F, b. circa 1597

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Name Variation Marie Le Mercier 
Birthcirca 1595 France 
Birth*circa 1597 Normandie, France1 
Marriage*18 July 1613 Normandie, France, Principal=Pierre Crenel2 

FamilyPierre Crenel b. circa 1597
Child 1.Marie Crenel+ b. c 1615, d. 22 Nov 16951

Citations
  1. [S67] Anonyme, Dictionnaire Généalogique Drouin.
  2. [S18] Interview, Assumption or calculation, various.

Antoine Citolle1
M, b. circa 1597

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1597 l'Auverdière, Touraine (Indre-et-Loire), France1 
Marriage*circa 1617 l'Auverdière, Touraine (Indre-et-Loire), France, Principal=Françoise Jouillain1 

FamilyFrançoise Jouillain b. circa 1597
Child 1.Charlotte Citolle+ b. c 16171

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p209.

Françoise Jouillain1
F, b. circa 1597

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1597 l'Auverdière, Touraine (Indre-et-Loire), France1 
Marriage*circa 1617 l'Auverdière, Touraine (Indre-et-Loire), France, Principal=Antoine Citolle1 

FamilyAntoine Citolle b. circa 1597
Child 1.Charlotte Citolle+ b. c 16171

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p209.

Thomas Sayre1,2
M, b. 20 July 1597, d. 23 April 1671

FatherFrancis Sayre b. circa 1565, d. before April 1645
MotherElizabeth Atkins b. 9 November 1565
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Jessica Norberta Corbett

Anecdote* Eight men and one woman and a small child left Lynn, Mass. in 1640 to settle a new colony. They settled in Southampton and Thomas built the first English house on Long Island in 1648 which is still there 
Christening20 July 1597 Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, England 
Birth*20 July 1597 Leighton Buzzard, Bedfordshire, England 
Marriage*circa 1623 England, Principal=Margaret Aldrich 
Deathcirca June 1670 Southampton, Long Island, New York, USA2 
Death*23 April 1671 Southampton, Suffolk Co., New York, USA 

FamilyMargaret Aldrich b. circa 1600, d. 23 August 1634
Children 1.Daniel Sayre b. c 1623, d. bt Apr 1707 - 1708
 2.Joseph Sayre b. c 1625, d. 1 Apr 1694
 3.Damaris Sayre+ b. 1625, d. 7 Apr 16912
 4.Francis Sayre b. 1628, d. 20 Jan 1698
 5.Mary Sayre b. c 1632
 6.Hannah Sayre b. c 1634
 7.Miss Sayre b. c 1636
 8.Job Sayre b. 1637, d. 1 Apr 1694
 9.Mary Sayre b. c 1640, d. b 30 Aug 1705

Citations
  1. [S59] George Ernest Bowman, Bowman Files.
  2. [S62] Charles Hobart Attwater, Atwater History.

Jean Roussin1
M, b. 3 October 1597

FatherPierre Roussin1 b. circa 1571, d. between 1603 and 1611
MotherJeanne Nyeullé1 b. circa 1577, d. after 1636
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Baptism*3 October 1597 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France1 
Marriage*12 June 1622 Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Madeleine Giguère1 

FamilyMadeleine Giguère b. 26 May 1605
Child 1.Nicolas Roussin+ b. 10 Mar 1635, d. 6 Mar 16971

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Jean Nicolet Sieur de Belleborne1
M, b. circa 1598

FatherThomas Nicolet2 b. circa 1575, d. before October 1637
MotherMarguerite de Lamer2 b. circa 1575
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1598 Cherbourg, Normandie (Manche), France1 
Occupation* interprète, commmis de la Compagnie des Cent-Associés, agent de liaison entre les Français et les indiens, explorateur1 
Burial*29 October 1642 Québec, Québec, Canada, mort noyé à la hauteur de Sillery en se rendant de Québec à Trois-Rivières pour délivrer un prisonnier iroquois que les hurons s'apprètaient à torturer. La chaloupe qui le transportait fut renversée par un fort coup de vent. Il ne savait pas nager.1 
Note* interprete et commis de la Compagnie des Cent-Associés, agent de liaison entre les Français et les Indiens, explorateur, né vers 1598, probablement à Cherbourg à Cherbourg (Normandie), de Thomas Nicollet, messager postal ordinaire du roi entre Cherbourg et Paris, et de Marie de Lamer, noyé près de Sillery le 27 octobre 1642.
Nicollet arriva au Canada en 1618, au service de la Compagnie des Marchands de Rouen et de Saint-Malo. Comme Marsolet et Brùlé, On le destinait à vivre parmi les Indiens alliés afin qu'il apprît leur langue, leurs coutumes et explorât les régions qu'ils habitaient. On ne sait rien de son éducation ni de son tempérament, sauf cette remarque du père Vimont, en 1643 : « son humeur & sa mémoire excellente firent espérer quelque chose de bon de luy ».
Champlain, lors de ses explorations, était entré en relations avec les Algonquins de l'Outaouais (Ottawa) supérieur. On présume que, désireux de consolider une alliance à peine ébauchée, c'est lui qui chargea Nicollet, l'année de son arrivée, de se rendre hiverner à l'île aux Allumettes. Cet endroit était le centre de ralliement de la grande famille algonquine commandée par Tessouat (mort en 1636). L'île était située en un lieu stratégique sur l'Outaouais, la route des fourrures. Il importait, dans l'intérêt du commerce, que les tribus qui vivaient sur les bords de l'Outaouais fussent amies des Français. Nicollet resta deux ans à l'île aux Allumettes, s'acquittant fort bien de sa mission. Il apprit le huron et l'algonquin, vécut la vie précaire des indigènes, s'initia à leurs coutumes et explora la région. Les Algonquins ne tardèrent pas à le considérer comme l'un des leurs. Ils le firent capitaine, lui permirent d'assister à leurs conseils et l'emmenèrent même chez les Iroquois négocier un traité de paix.
Nicollet revint à Québec en 1620. Il rendit compte de sa mission et en reçut une nouvelle : entrer en rapport avec les Népissingues qui vivaient sur les bords du lac du même nom. Ces indiens occupaient chaque année une place plus importante dans le commerce des fourrures, se posant en intermédiaires entre les Français et les tribus indiennes de l'Ouest et de la baie d'Hudson. Nicollet devait consolider leur alliance avec les Français et veiller à ce que leurs fourrures ne prennent pas la route de l'Hudson.
Dès l'été 1620, Nicollet se rendit chez les Népissingues. Neuf années durant, il allait vivre parmi eux. Il avait sa cabane à part et un magasin. Le jour, il commerçait avec les Indiens des différentes tribus qui se rendaient sur les bords du lac des Népissingues (Nipissing) et les interrogeait sur leur pays ; le soir, il notait par écrit ce qu'il avait recueilli. Ces mémoires de Nicollet, malheureusement perdus aujourd'hui, nous sont parvenus indirectement par les Relations. Le père Paul le Jeune, qui a pu les consulter, s'en inspira pour décrire les moeurs des indiens de cette région.
Lors de la prise de Québec par les Anglais en 1629, Nicollet, fidèle à la France, se réfugia au pays des Hurons. Il contrecarra tous les plans des Anglais pour amener les Indiens à commercer avec eux.
Nicollet parut à Trois-Rivières et à Québec en 1633. Il demanda la permission de s'établir à Trois-Rivières à titre de commis de la Compagnie des Cent-Associés. On accéda volontiers à son désir. Cependant, avant d'assumer ses nouvelles fonctions, il fut prié, sans doute par Champlain, d'entreprendre un voyage d'exploration et de pacification chez les Gens de Mer, appelés aussi Puants, Ounipigons ou Winnebagoes. Ces Indiens vivaient au fond de la baie des Puants (Green Bay), entourés de tribus algonquines avec qui ils étaient en froid au sujet du commerce des fourrures Une alliance entre les Gens de Mer et les Hollandais de l'Hudson était à craindre. Il fallait rétablir la paix au plus tôt dans cette région. Nicollet devait en profiter aussi pour vérifier les renseignements qu'il avait recueillis concernant la mer de Chine qui, selon les Indiens, était à proximité de la baie des Puants. Aussi Nicollet se munit-il, avant son départ, d'une robe de damas de Chine, toute parsemée de fleurs et d'oiseaux multicolores.
Nicollet se mit en route durant l'été de 1634, probablement à la mi-juillet. Il suivit la route traditionnelle de l'Outaouais, bifurqua à l'île aux Allumettes en direction du lac des Népissingues puis descendit la rivière des Français pour atteindre le lac des Hurons. Chemin faisant, il recruta une escorte de sept Hurons. Il se dirigea vers Michillimakînac, pénétra dans le lac Michigan et atteignit la baie des Puants. Revêtu de sa robe de damas, il sema un moment l'épouvante parmi les Winnebagoes, qui le prirent pour un dieu. Il réunit 4 000 ou 5 000 hommes, groupant les différentes tribus de J'endroit qui, dans la fumée des calumets, conclurent la paix.
Nicollet avait atteint le premier objectif de son voyage. Malheureusement, il-n'avait pas trouvé la mer de Chine. En vain descendit-il la rivière aux Renards jusqu'à un village de Mascoutens, situé à trois jours de la rivière Wisconsin, affluent du Mississipi. Une percée vers le Sud, en direction de la rivière des Minois, ne fut guère plus fructueuse. Sans doute déçu du succès partiel de sa mission, il revint à Québec à l'automne de 1635. Il n'en reste pas moins qu'il fut le premier Blanc à explorer la région du Nord-Ouest américain actuel.
Nicollet s'installa définitivement à TroisRivières, en qualité de commis de la Compagnie des Cent-Associés. Il reçut une « concession de 160 arpents de bois en commun avec Olivier Letardif dans la banlieue le 23 mai 1637 ». Ce serait à la meme époque qu'il aurait obtenu, en copropriété avec son beau-frère Letardif, le fief de Belleborne, situé probablement dans les plaines d'Abraham, à Québec. Il épousa, en octobre 1637, Marguerite, fille de Guillaume Couillard et de Guillemette Hébert, qui lui donna un garçon et une fille. Cette dernière, prénommée Marguerite, devint la femme de Jean-Baptiste Legardeur de Repentigny, membre du Conseil souverain. Jusqu'à sa mort, Nicollet apparaît comme une figure dominante du bourg de Trois-Rivières. Les services signalés qu'il a rendus à la colonie, sa connaissance des langues et des coutumes indiennes lui valurent le respect de tous.
Les Relations des Jésuites font souvent l'éloge de sa conduite exemplaire : à l'encontre de la plupart des coureurs de bois de son temps, Nicollet aurait toujours vécu suivant les principes de sa religion. Pourtant, il eut en 1628 une fille naturelle née probablement d'une Népissingue. En 1633, il demanda à rester à Trois-Rivières, « pour mettre, rapporte le père Le Jeune, son salut en assurance dans l'usage des sacrements ». Sa plus grande joie, dans les moments de loisirs que lui laissaient ses fonctions, était de servir d'interprète aux missionnaires et d'enseigner la religion aux Indiens.
Nicollet mourut prématurément à Québec en 1642. Il remplaçait temporairement le commis général de la compagnie, son beau-frère Letardif, quand on lui demanda de se rendre au plus tôt à Trois-Rivières pour délivrer un prisonnier iroquois que les Hurons s'apprêtaient à torturer. La chaloupe qui le transportait vers Trois-Rivières fut renversée par un fort coup de vent, près de Sillery. Ne sachant pas nager, il se noya.3,4 

Family(?) Nipissirinienne
Child 1.Madeleine Nicolet+ b. c 16281

Citations
  1. [S70] Unknown author, Dictionnaire Biographique du Canada, I : 527-529.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
  3. [S70] Unknown author, Dictionnaire Biographique du Canada, I - 527 | ASQ, Documents Faribault, 7 ; Registre A, 560s. (porte la signature de Nicollet). - Champlain, OEuvres (Laverdière), V, VI. - JR (Thwaites), VIII : 247, 257, 267, 295s. ; XXIII, 274-282 ; passim. - C. W. Butterfield, History of the discovery of the northwest by John Nicolet in 1634, with a sketch of his lire (Cincinnati, 1881). - Godbout, Les Pionniers de la région trifluvienne. - Auguste Gosselin, Jean Nicolet et le Canada de son temps (Québec, 1905). Lionel Groulx, Notre grande aventure : rempire français en Amérique du Nord (1535-1760) (Montréal et Paris, 1958D. - Gérard Hébert, Jean Nicolet, le premier Blanc à résider au lac Nipissing (La Société histonique du Nouvel-Ontario, Documents historiques, XIII, Sudbury, 1947), 8-24. - Henri Jouan, Jean Nicolet (de Cherbourg), interprète-voyageur au Canada, 161 81642, BC, XXII (1886) : 67-83. - Benjamin Sulte, Jean Nicolet, Journal de rlnstruction publique, XVII (1873): 166s. ; XVIII (1874): 28-32; Jean Nicolet et la Découverte du Wisconsin, 1634, BC, VI (1910) : 148-155, 331-342, 409-420 ; 1-e Nom de Nicolet BRH, VII (1901) : 21-23 ; Notes on Jean Nicolet (Wisconsin Hist. Soc. Coli., VIII, Madison, 1879), 188-194..
  4. [S241] DBC en ligne, online, I - VIII, http://www.biographi.ca/FR/ShowBio.asp?BioId=34552; ASQ, Documents Faribault, 7 ; Registre A, 560s. (porte la signature de Nicollet).— Champlain, Œuvres (Laverdière), V, VI.— JR (Thwaites), VIII : 247, 257, 267, 295s. ; XXIII, 274–282 ; passim.— C. W. Butterfield, History of the discovery of the north-west by John Nicolet in 1634, with a sketch of his life (Cincinnati, 1881).— Godbout, Les Pionniers de la région trifluvienne.— Auguste Gosselin, Jean Nicolet et le Canada de son temps (Québec, 1905).— Lionel Groulx, Notre grande aventure : l’empire français en Amérique du Nord (1535–1760) (Montréal et Paris, [1958]).— Gérard Hébert, Jean Nicolet, le premier Blanc à résider au lac Nipissing (La Société historique du Nouvel-Ontario, Documents historiques, XIII, Sudbury, 1947), 8–24.— Henri Jouan, Jean Nicolet (de Cherbourg), interprète-voyageur au Canada, 1618–1642, RC, XXII (1886) : 67–83.- Benjamin Sulte, Jean Nicolet, Journal de l’Instruction publique, XVII (1873) : 166s. ; XVIII (1874) : 28–32 ; Jean Nicolet et la Découverte du Wisconsin, 1634, RC, VI (1910) : 148–155, 331–342, 409–420 ; Le Nom de Nicolet, BRH, VII (1901) : 21–23 ; Notes on Jean Nicolet (Wisconsin Hist. Soc. Coll., VIII, Madison, 1879), 188–194.
    .

André Guay1
M, b. circa 1598, d. before October 1638

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1598 Caen, Normandie (Calvados), France1 
Marriage*28 July 1638 St-Gilles, Caen, Normandie (Calvados), France, Principal=Anne Lamy1 
Death*before October 1638 France1 

FamilyAnne Lamy b. circa 1598
Child 1.Jean Guay+ b. 10 Aug 1643, d. bt Aug 1679 - Nov 16791

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Anne Lamy1
F, b. circa 1598

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1598 Caen, Normandie (Calvados), France1 
Marriage*28 July 1638 St-Gilles, Caen, Normandie (Calvados), France, Principal=André Guay1 

FamilyAndré Guay b. circa 1598, d. before October 1638
Child 1.Jean Guay+ b. 10 Aug 1643, d. bt Aug 1679 - Nov 16791

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.

Alice Sayre
F, b. 2 September 1598

FatherFrancis Sayre b. circa 1565, d. before April 1645
MotherElizabeth Atkins b. 9 November 1565
Pop-up Pedigree

Christening*2 September 1598 Martaizé, Vienne, France 

Marguerite Gagnon1
F, b. 5 October 1598, d. 7 December 1677

FatherPierre Gagnon2 b. circa 1572, d. between 16 December 1630 and 10 November 1633
MotherMadeleine-Renée Roger2 b. circa 1577, d. after September 1647
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*5 October 1598 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France1 
Marriage*3 February 1624 Ste-Madeleine, La Ventrouze, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Eloi Tavernier2 
Death*7 December 1677 Château-Richer, Montmorency, Québec, Canada1 

FamilyEloi Tavernier b. circa 1604, d. between 1651 and 1666
Child 1.Marguerite Tavernier+ b. c 1627, d. 12 Jan 16971

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 451.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 1065.

Guillaume Pelletier d. LeGobloteur1,2
M, b. circa 1599, d. 27 November 1657

FatherEloi Pelletier2 b. circa 1579
MotherFrançoise Matte2 b. circa 1579
Pop-up Pedigree

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1599 St-Pierre de Brésolettes, ar. Mortagne, Canton Tourouvre, Perche (Orne), France2 
Occupation* Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, marchand charbonnier2 
Marriage*12 February 1619 St-Aubin, Tourouvre, Mortagne, Perche (Orne), France, Principal=Michelle Mabille2 
Immigration*1641 Québec, Québec, Canada2 
Death*27 November 1657 Québec, Québec, Canada2 

FamilyMichelle Mabille b. before 20 May 1592, d. 21 January 1665
Child 1.Jean Pelletier d. LeGobloteur+ b. 12 Jun 1627, d. 24 Feb 16982

Citations
  1. TRV; AG-Or.
  2. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, p887.

Françoise Tourault1
F, b. circa 1599

ChartsPedigree for Major Joseph Athanase Morin ED

Birth*circa 1599 Lardillière, Dompierre-sur-Mer, La Rochelle, Aunis (Charente Maritime), France1 
Marriage*24 January 1629 St-Philibert, Pont-Charault, Luçon, Poitou (Vendée), France, Principal=Jacques Archambault1 
Burial*9 December 1663 Montréal, Québec, Canada1 

FamilyJacques Archambault b. circa 1604
Child 1.Jacquette Archambault+ b. c 1634, d. 17 Dec 17001

Citations
  1. [S51] Rene Jette, Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec, 17.

Nicholas Snow
M, b. circa 25 January 1599, d. 15 November 1676

FatherN