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BOUCHER Francois

Male 1742 - 1819  (76 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  BOUCHER Francois was born on 07 Sep 1742 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada (son of BOUCHER Pierre and LIZOTTE Catherine); died on 16 May 1819 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.

    Francois married BEAULIEU Catherine Hudon Dit on 21 Nov 1768 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. Catherine (daughter of BEAULIEU Joseph Hudon Dit and SERIEN Marie Madeleine Langlois Dit) was born on 28 May 1750 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada; died on 04 Apr 1817 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. BOUCHER Theotiste

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  BOUCHER Pierre was born on 16 Nov 1697 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada (son of BOUCHER Pierre and DANCOSSE Marie Madeleine); died in 1774.

    Pierre married LIZOTTE Catherine on 17 Aug 1726 in LaPocatiere Et Riviere Quelle, QC. Catherine (daughter of LIZOTTE Noel and MENEUX Catherine) was born about 1703 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada; died on 16 Apr 1779. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  LIZOTTE Catherine was born about 1703 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada (daughter of LIZOTTE Noel and MENEUX Catherine); died on 16 Apr 1779.
    Children:
    1. 1. BOUCHER Francois was born on 07 Sep 1742 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada; died on 16 May 1819 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  BOUCHER Pierre was born on 04 May 1673 in Ste. Famille, PQ, Canada (son of BOUCHER Pierre "Dit Pitoche" and St-Denis Marie Anne); died on 17 Jun 1714 in Montmorency, PQ, Canada.

    Pierre married DANCOSSE Marie Madeleine on 04 Feb 1697 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. Marie (daughter of (Dancause) Pierre Dancosse and BOUCHARD Marie Madeleine) was born on 24 Jun 1680 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  DANCOSSE Marie Madeleine was born on 24 Jun 1680 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada (daughter of (Dancause) Pierre Dancosse and BOUCHARD Marie Madeleine).

    Notes:

    The oldest, Marie-Madeleine, after her birth at Riviere-Ouelle, was
    brought to Quebec to be baptized on 30 June 1680. Jean Marchand, a
    carpenter from Quebec, and Marie
    Gachet, wife in a second marriage to Charles Roger, Sieur des
    Colombiers, served as her godparents. At the end of her sixteenth
    year, Marie-Madeleine became the wife of
    Pierre Boucher, at Riviere-Ouelle, on 4 February 1697, and gave him
    ten children. After the death of her first husband, Madeleine married
    the twenty year old
    Jean-Baptiste Maisonneuve, a Gascon from Bayonne, on 21 March 1716.
    She had four more children by him.

    Children:
    1. 2. BOUCHER Pierre was born on 16 Nov 1697 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada; died in 1774.
    2. BOUCHER Marie Anne was born on 02 Jun 1701 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.
    3. BOUCHER Rosalie was born on 04 Mar 1710 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.

  3. 6.  LIZOTTE Noel was born on 19 Sep 1677 in Grande-Anse Ou laPocatiere, QC; died on 12 Feb 1740 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.

    Noel married MENEUX Catherine on 28 Feb 1702 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. Catherine was born on 23 Oct 1682 in Ste-Famille, I.O., Quebec, PQ, Canada; died on 12 Dec 1751 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  MENEUX Catherine was born on 23 Oct 1682 in Ste-Famille, I.O., Quebec, PQ, Canada; died on 12 Dec 1751 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 3. LIZOTTE Catherine was born about 1703 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada; died on 16 Apr 1779.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  BOUCHER Pierre "Dit Pitoche" was born on 13 Feb 1639 in Quebec, PQ, Canada (son of BOUCHER Marin and (Mallette) Perrine (Prinne) Mallet); died on 13 May 1707 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.

    Notes:

    A HARD CROSSING

    Pierre Boucher, interpreter, soldier and the Governor of Trois-
    Rivieres, had devoted his life to his new homeland. He was sent to
    Paris on 22 October 1661, carrying dispatches from the civil and
    religious authorities of New France. On the occasion of this official
    visit, the Sieur de Grosbois took the opportunity to hire 100
    workmen, including Pierre Dancause, at La Rochelle. Indeed, a costly
    enterprise! According to Raymond Douville, Pierre Boucher could rely
    on two ships for his return to Canada; along with the men he had
    hired and about one hundred soldiers. These ships were the Saint-Jean-
    Baptiste displacing 150 tons, and the 300 ton l'Aigle d'Or. Between
    them they, carried the 300 passengers of this last contingent of the
    year 1662. Those who had their contracts signed in the presence of
    notary Moreau, like Pierre Dancause, took their passage in the Angle
    d'Or.

    This was a long, perilous, difficult and, as it turns out, a rather
    macabre crossing. Pierre Dancause left La Rochelle on 15 July 1662.
    The sea voyage lasted almost three months. Half the immigrants fell
    ill while death visited many others. Seventy-five were too sick to
    continue and were put ashore at Newfoundland. One hundred fifty-nine
    more were disembarked at Tadoussac, at the end of October. Pierre
    Boucher arrived by small boat at Quebec on 27 October, according to
    the Journal des Jesuites. Only by 12 November did the boats bring
    everyone who had come from France "both healthy and ill", to Quebec.


    BIRTH-BURIAL-MARRIAGE-COMMENT-CENSUS: Page 136, Page 137. 28
    At the recording of 1666 and 1667, he was living on the Isle of
    Orleans, and at the recording of 1681, in Chateau-Richer.

    ______________

    During the 17th century, Pierre Boucher dit Pitoche lived on both the north and south coasts of the St. Lawrence River, as well as a major island in between.

    Pierre started out life in Quebec City, born there to Marin Boucher and Perrine Mallet on February 13, 1639. The Boucher family had migrated among the first wave of colonists after the French took Quebec back from the English. Pierre grew up with six siblings, plus a half-brother from his father’s earlier marriage (there were several half-sisters who had remained in France). The first few years of Pierre's life were spent in the Beauport section of Quebec before his father acquired land in Château-Richer in 1648.

    The Bouchers lived in Château-Richer on a large tract with 8 arpents of river frontage. It was said that their home was used by the community for religious functions before the church was built in about 1661. On April 4, 1663, Pierre got married in the new church; his bride was Marie Saint-Denys, who had arrived from France with her parents in 1659.

    At some point, the nickname “Pitoche” was added to Pierre’s name. This was likely because there was a famous Pierre Boucher who was the governor of Trois-Rivières. Pierre had more humble pursuits—he was a farmer who supplemented his income building carts.

    Pierre and his wife spent the first couple years of their marriage in Château-Richer where their first two children were born, then by 1666, they moved to Île d’Orleans. He acquired land with 3 arpents of frontage in Ste-Famille, the oldest settlement on the island. The family grew to include five more children, then in 1679, he moved back to Château-Richer where they had five more. His widowed mother lived nearby, and some time after she died in 1687, Pierre moved again, this time to the southern shore of the St. Lawrence.

    The place Pierre settled was Rivière-Ouelle; his older brother Galleran was already living there, and so was his daughter Marie-Sainte and her husband. Rivière-Ouelle was downriver towards the Atlantic, far enough so that ocean fish were within reach. It was said that Pierre had land at a location that was ideally suited for fishing, but it isn’t certain whether he made a living that way.

    Pierre’s wife died in January 1705, and he passed away two year later on May 13, 1707. Many of Pierre’s descendants remained in the Rivière-Ouelle area for generations. Three of his great-grandsons served in the Rivière-Ouelle militia against the Americans during the Revolutionary War.

    Pierre was a direct ancestor of Madonna.

    —Reference found at: http://ancestorbios.blogspot.com/2019/02/both-sides-of-river-pierre-boucher-dit.html

    Died:
    Burial: May 13, 1707, Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada

    Pierre married St-Denis Marie Anne on 04 Apr 1663 in Chateau-Richer, Montmorency, PQ, Canada. Marie (daughter of St-Denis Pierre and BRUNEL Vivianne) was born about 1650 in Chateau-Richer, PQ, Canada; died on 23 Jan 1705 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  St-Denis Marie Anne was born about 1650 in Chateau-Richer, PQ, Canada (daughter of St-Denis Pierre and BRUNEL Vivianne); died on 23 Jan 1705 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.

    Notes:

    BIRTH-DEATH-BURIAL-CENSUS: Page 137 and 1029. 28
    She answered that she was 16 in 1666, 20 in 1667 and 32 in 1681.

    Died:
    Burial: Jan 24, 1705 Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada

    Children:
    1. BOUCHER Barbe was born on 13 Dec 1663 in Chateau-Richer, Montmorency, PQ, Canada; died on 20 Mar 1724 in Pointe-de-Lévy (Lauzon) [Co. Lévis, Québec].
    2. BOUCHER Pierre was born on 01 Jan 1666 in Chateau-Richer, PQ, Canada; died on 17 Jun 1666 in Montmorency, PQ, Canada.
    3. BOUCHER Jacques was born on 04 Jan 1667 in Ste-Famille, I'le D'Orleans, PQ, Canada; died on 06 Jan 1667.
    4. BOUCHER Marie-Sainte was born on 11 Aug 1668 in St-Famille, Ile D'Orleans, QC; died on 15 Jul 1717 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.
    5. BOUCHER Jean was born on 14 Jan 1671 in Ste-Famille, I'le D'Orleans, PQ, Canada.
    6. 4. BOUCHER Pierre was born on 04 May 1673 in Ste. Famille, PQ, Canada; died on 17 Jun 1714 in Montmorency, PQ, Canada.
    7. BOUCHER Angelique was born on 27 Oct 1676 in Ste-Famille, I'le D'Orleans, PQ, Canada; died on 02 Mar 1717.
    8. BOUCHER Charles was born on 07 Sep 1679 in Chateau-Richer, PQ, Canada; died on 04 May 1709 in Riviere-Ouelle, L'Assomption, Kamouraska, Quebec.
    9. BOUCHER Marie-Therese was born on 09 Jan 1683 in Chateau-Richer, Montmorency, PQ, Canada; died on 15 Jul 1743.
    10. BOUCHER Genevieve was born on 12 Sep 1685 in Chateau-Richer, PQ, Canada; died on 23 Jun 1769 in St-Roch Des Aulnaies, QC.
    11. BOUCHER Prisque was born on 22 Apr 1689 in Chateau-Richer, Montmorency, PQ, Canada; died on 09 May 1768 in Pointe-de-Lévy (Lauzon) [Co. Lévis, Québec].
    12. BOUCHER Marguerite was born on 12 May 1692 in Montmorency, PQ, Canada; died on 13 Mar 1747 in St-Roch Des Aulnaies, QC.

  3. 10.  (Dancause) Pierre Dancosse was born in 1641 in LaRochelle, Aunis, France; died on 13 Aug 1697 in Quebec, QC.

    Notes:

    Pierre Dancause

    Dancause is a surname which recalls the names of two communities in
    France: Encausse-les-Thermes and Encausse itself. Today the first
    is in the department of the Haute-Garonne, arrondissement of Saint-
    Gaudens. This locality is poised at an altitude of more than 360
    meters
    on the flanks of the Pyrenees, and is famous for its mineral waters.
    As for the other community mentioned above, it has no special
    attraction. Did Pierre come from one of these two Encausse villages?
    We really know little or nothing about it.

    Pierre Dancosse or Dancause appeared for the first time at La
    Rochelle on 17 June 1662. He went to New France at the age of 18,
    having
    been hired to work for Pierre Boucher, the Sieur de Grosbois. He
    lived at Trois-Rivieres, where he worked for three years as an
    apprentice
    cartwright and carpenter. As for the French origins of our ancestor,
    the Canadian records give no information about his parents and/or his
    parish, therefore we cannot identify his French roots.

    A HARD CROSSING

    Pierre Boucher, interpreter, soldier and the Governor of Trois-
    Rivieres, had devoted his life to his new homeland. He was sent to
    Paris on
    22 October 1661, carrying dispatches from the civil and religious
    authorities of New France. On the occasion of this official visit,
    the Sieur
    de Grosbois took the opportunity to hire 100 workmen, including
    Pierre Dancause, at La Rochelle. Indeed, a costly enterprise!
    According to
    Raymond Douville, Pierre Boucher could rely on two ships for his
    return to Canada; along with the men he had hired and about one
    hundred soldiers. These ships were the Saint-Jean-Baptiste
    displacing 150 tons, and the 300 ton l'Aigle d'Or. Between them they,
    carried the
    300 passengers of this last contingent of the year 1662. Those who
    had their contracts signed in the presence of notary Moreau, like
    Pierre
    Dancause, took their passage in the Angle d'Or.

    This was a long, perilous, difficult and, as it turns out, a rather
    macabre crossing. Pierre Dancause left La Rochelle on 15 July 1662.
    The sea
    voyage lasted almost three months. Half the immigrants fell ill
    while death visited many others. Seventy-five were too sick to
    continue and
    were put ashore at Newfoundland. One hundred fifty-nine more were
    disembarked at Tadoussac, at the end of October. Pierre Boucher
    arrived by small boat at Quebec on 27 October, according to the
    Journal des Jesuites. Only by 12 November did the boats bring
    everyone
    who had come from France "both healthy and ill", to Quebec.

    Was Pierre Dancause inconvenienced by illness, desiccation or
    malnutrition, like his unfortunate companions? This secret has been
    well-guarded by history. He had to spend the winter at Trois-
    Rivieres with his master Pierre Boucher. There he lived for three
    years,
    probably until 17 June 1665.

    CAP-DE-LA-MADELEINE TO RIVIERE-OUELLE

    After the end of his commitment, what did Pierre Dancause do? The
    census of 1667 finds him living with Antoine Marcereau, a
    Bourguignon at Cap-de-la-Madeleine. Together the two friends had
    eight arpents of land under cultivation. Then Antoine left Pierre to
    marry
    Marie-Marthe Bourgouin, the widow of Nicolas Godbout. They were wed
    on 11 July 1675, at Sainte Famille, on the Ile d'Orleans.

    We have found no contract by notaries Ameau or Cusson referring to
    Pierre Dancausse. Did he have his own land grant? If so, to whom
    did he sell? He must have left the region of Trois-Rivieres with his
    friend before 1675.

    The first appearance of Pierre in our parish registries was on 3
    March 1679 when he became the godfather of Martin Fouquet from
    Ste-Anne-de-la-Pocatiere. The godmother was Marie Trotin, wife of
    Michel Bouchard, his future mother-in-law. Father Pierre Thrury
    recorded the baptism at Quebec.

    On 11 May of the same year, Pierre gave his name to his godson
    Pierre Hudon of Riviere-Ouelle. He was accompanied by
    Marie-Madeleine Bouchard, his future wife. The priest Thomas Morel,
    former pastor of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupre, officiated at the baptism.

    Born about 1645, Pierre Dancause was still a bachelor in the spring
    of 1679. He was 34 years old and had 17 years experience in this
    country. He was not a vagabond. On 19 March 1676, the Seigneur
    Deschamps ceded him a plot of frontal land, 7 arpents by 12 deep,
    bordered on one side by Jacques Miville dit Deschesnes and on the
    other side by the widow Chatillon.

    Marie-Madeleine Bouchard was born at Chateau-Richer on the Beaupre
    Coast, on 31 May 1665, and was baptized in her native parish on 2
    June of the same year, by the missionary priest Thomas Morel. It
    appears that her father Michel Bouchard, in Canada since 1657, first
    lived
    in the territory of Chateau-Richer, then at Sainte-Anne until 1674.
    Michel was a native of Andilly-les-Marais, canton of Marans,
    arrondissement of La Rochelle. His wife Marie Trotin, daughter of
    the late Jean, a weaver, and the late Madeleine Blanchard, was born
    at
    Poitou.

    The Bouchard family moved to Riviere-Ouelle about 1675. It was there
    that Pierre Dancause met Marie-Madeleine Bouchard. She became
    his wife in the summer of 1679. Alas! the act was lost. A first
    child was born to them on the feast day of St-Jean in 1680.

    COLONIST NEAR THE RIVER

    Pierre Dancause may have known the Bouchards on the Beaupre Coast.
    Did he help them to move about 1675? There is room for this
    hypotheses.

    On 9 September 1677, Pierre Dancause went to notary Pierre Duquet in
    Quebec with Simon Mars, a merchant of the Lower Town. Pierre
    signed a loan for 210 livres of merchandise made to him by the
    aforesaid creditor. At the time Pierre was living at Riviere-Ouelle.
    Additional proof is provided by the act of sale from Jacques Bernier
    to Jacques Miville dit Deschenes, on the first of September 1677. It
    states that the six arpents of land sold were bordered on one side
    by the Ouelle River and on the other side by Pierre Dancause. This
    concession had belonged to Michel Bouchard on 2 March 1677.

    In the census of 1691, Pierre Dancause lived at Riviere-Ouelle,
    between Pierre Hudon and Jacques Miville. His second neighbors were
    Damien Berube and his father-in-law Michel Bouchard. Pierre Dancause
    owned eight head of cattle and had seven arpents under cultivation.
    On 29 September 1692, he donated 1 1/2 arpents of frontage on the
    Ouelle River in order to build a chapel ...Pierre and Marie-Madeleine
    even gave "authority to take heating wood from their homestead for
    Public use if it will be necessary ".

    On 15 April 1694, the Seigneur de la Bouteillerie in his turn gave 4
    arpents of land for the church and the cemetery, however Pierre and
    Madeleine did not have the honor of having the church built on their
    property. The baptismal act of Louise Grondin, recorded on 3 January
    1695, was the first official act in the registries of Riviere-
    Ouelle.

    In the middle of summer 1699, on the afternoon of 19 July, Madame
    Dancause was at Quebec, before the notary Rageot. She presented a
    document signed by her husband on the 12th of the same month,
    authorizing her to act as his proxy.

    She declared that they owed a debt of 495 livres to Hughes Cochran
    dit Floridor, a Scottish merchant of the town. Curiosity does not
    allow
    USA to verify the quality and the amount of the merchandise but we
    do know that the widow Marie-Ursule Philipeau signed a receipt for
    this enormous debt to Marie-Madeleine Bouchard on 7 September 1696.

    THREATS FROM THE SEA

    In 1690, bad omens came from the sea. Charles, the brother of Marie-
    Madeleine Bouchard had married Marie-Madeleine Dube on 4 April
    1690. On Wednesday, the 26th of the same month, the tide carried him
    away. He was buried the following Sunday, at Riviere-Ouelle.

    That same summer the anxious inhabitants of Riviere-Ouelle watched
    the waves coming from the east. They carried the unpleasant odor of
    battle.

    Sir William Phips, the British Admiral in command of 32 ships and
    2,000 militiamen, appeared on the river opposite Riviere-Ouelle at
    the
    beginning of October. The inhabitants were scattered all -along the
    Coast and seemed easy prey to capture. At high tide Phips debarked
    six
    boats loaded with 25 men each.

    Without the seigneur, the local priest, Father de Francheville,
    mobilized the available men, thirty all told, including Pierre
    Dancause. The
    improvised soldiers took cover in the brush along the river bank,
    each having a musket, some powder and a handful of bullets. At the
    opportune moment, at the thunderous command of their leader, they
    fired three times, so well that each volley sent several of the
    attackers to
    meet his maker, while several others were wounded. Quickly, the
    aggressors retreated to their ships. Riviere-Ouelle was saved. And
    life
    continued as usual along the river.

    Pierre Dancause got a piece of land from Louise Cloutier, widow of
    Jean Mignault dit Chatillon, presently the wife of Jean Matteau of
    Chateau-Richer. He resold it on 24 June 1695 to Etienne Janneau, a
    notary and merchant at Quebec, for 320 livres.

    On 10 June 1697, Pierre bought his immense domain, a stretch of land
    12 arpents wide by a league deep on the Ouelle River, from Marie
    Fayet, widow of Nicolas Huot dit Saint-Laurent. Thomas Langlois and
    Robert Levesque were his neighbors. Evidently, the rights to fish on
    the river at la Pointe were included in the contract. This was the
    last purchase made by our ancestor.

    EIGHT DAUGHTERS AND ONE SON

    The Bouchard-Dancause couple were blessed with eight daughters and a
    single son. Here are their names in chronological order:
    Marie-Madeleine, Anne, Marie, Catherine, Pierre, Genevieve, Marie-
    Angelique, Marie-Francoise and Marie-Elisabeth.

    1. The fate of Marie-Angelique, born at Riviere-Ouelle on 17 June
    1689, is unknown.

    2. The youngest, Marie-Elisabeth, died at the age of five. She was
    buried in her native parish on 27 March 1698.

    3. The oldest, Marie-Madeleine, after her birth at Riviere-Ouelle,
    was brought to Quebec to be baptized on 30 June 1680. Jean Marchand,
    a
    carpenter from Quebec, and Marie Gachet, wife in a second marriage
    to Charles Roger, Sieur des Colombiers, served as her godparents. At
    the end of her sixteenth year, Marie-Madeleine became the wife of
    Pierre Boucher, at Riviere-Ouelle, on 4 February 1697, and gave him
    ten
    children. After the death of her first husband, Madeleine married
    the twenty year old Jean-Baptiste Maisonneuve, a Gascon from Bayonne,
    on 21 March 1716. She had four more children by him.

    4. Anne, god-daughter of Marie Leclerc, wife of Jean-Galleran
    Boucher, had her baptism recorded at l'Islet. She gave her heart to
    ancestor
    Michel Dupere dit Lariviere, widower of Marie Chretien, father of
    seven children, on 17 August 1703. Anne was buried after the death of
    her fourth child, Anne-Angelique, on 29 February 1712. Etienne and
    Pierre Auclair were witnesses to her burial, recorded in the registry
    of
    Notre-Dame de Quebec.

    5. Jean Raby, the thirty year old son of Jean, a judge, and of
    Jeanne Ceillier, from Cravans in Saintonge, became the husband of the
    fifteen
    year old Marie Dancause, on 18 February 1697, at Riviere-Ouelle.
    This couple had no children.

    6. In the presence of witnesses Jean Lavoie, Jacques Gagnon, Pierre
    Boucher, Etienne Bouchard and Pierre Dancause, Catherine was joined
    in matrimony on 20 June 1707 to Jean Brisson, son of Rene and of
    Anne Vezina. Their first five children were baptized at Riviere-
    Ouelle
    and the last four at La Pocatiere.

    7. Pierre, the only son to carry on the Dancause surname, shared his
    married life with Marie-Francoise Duval, on 10 July 1719 at
    Riviere-Ouelle. His bride, daughter of Francois Duval and of Marie-
    Anne Boucher, gave birth to five Dancause sons and two Dancause
    daughters.

    8. Genevieve, god-daughter of Genevieve Huot dit St-Laurent on 26
    December 1787, took Pierre Berube as her husband for life. He was
    the son of Pierre and of Marie-Madeleine Bouchard, on 8 January
    1706, at Riviere-Ouelle. This family increased by ten.

    9. Marie-Francoise Dancause, had Jean Abraham, English by origin,
    and Marie-Ursule Philipeau as godparents when she was baptized at
    Quebec on 10 June 1691. It is to be noted that the widow of Hugues
    Cochran dit Floridor was the creditor of Madame Dancause, the bride's
    mother. This is proof that debts do not always break up a
    friendship. Marie-Francoise became Joseph Lizot's companion for life
    on 24
    November 1710. Their family counted eight blossoms at La Pocatiere.

    Thus, the Dancause grandparents had fifty-two grandchildren, a more
    than enviable accumulation of human capital.

    NEW CHALLENGE

    After more than a half-century of life, ancestor Pierre Dancause
    felt his strength ebbing. He went to seek help at the Hotel-Dieu in
    the
    summer of 1697. There he died and was buried at Quebec on Tuesday,
    13 August. The witnesses recorded in the registry were Jacques
    Michelon dit Lorange, master nailsmith, and Jean Dubreuil,
    inhabitant of the Ile d'Orleans.

    The thirty-two year old Marie-Madeleine Bouchard must now take on a
    new challenge, that of bringing her children to maturity. The
    question of inheritance could have spoiled the sauce but, on 19
    August 1697, a very generous arrangement was made. Jean Raby and his
    wife Marie Dancause renounced their claim in the presence of notary
    Genaple, at Quebec. The reasons put forth were the following: When
    Madame Dancause was married, there were only four arpents of cleared
    land on the homestead at Riviere-Ouelle. Whatever they owned had
    been gained during the lifetime of their mother and mother-in-law.
    Therefore, she would keep the family property for her use, according
    to
    the costume of Paris. It appears that Pierre Dancause and Marie-
    Madeleine Bouchard had been married without a contract.

    In 1699, Francois Deserre, son of Antoine and of Mathurine Belanger,
    an audacious twenty-one year old gentleman, proposed marriage to
    her on 22 September, in the presence of the notary. Later, Marie-
    Madeleine thought it over and courageously decided that it was wiser
    to
    bear his natural child than to ruin her whole life.

    Marie-Anne was baptized on the day of her birth, 18 June 1700. This
    surprise gift became the wife of Pierre Roy dit Desjardins on 7 June
    1717 at Riviere-Ouelle

    Jean-Francois Gauvin, son of Jean and of Anne Magnan, fell in love
    with Marie-Madeleine Bouchard in 1702. It was at Riviere-Ouelle that
    her second wedding was celebrated on 29 May. On the following 15
    June, a marriage contract was signed before Chambalon at Quebec.
    There were no children.

    During the same period, the widow Dancause had a house built. A
    notarized act informs USA that on 24 October 1702, she owed 160
    livres to Pierre Soucy de la Grande Anse, "for framework of a house
    which the said Soucy had previously built for her." On the first of
    October 1713, the widow Dancause decided to have an official paper
    drawn up by the notary Janneau. She simply declared that her
    surviving children: Madeleine, Genevieve, Catherine, Francoise and
    Pierre had right to the inheritance left by their late father.
    Marie-Madeleine Bouchard was still going to live a long-time.

    A LONG OLD AGE

    On 21 June 1705, stepfather Francois Gauvin and some associates,
    including his step-son-in-law Pierre Boucher, established the first
    porpoise fishing association at Riviere-Ouelle. On 13 July 1707,
    they received explicit permission from the Intendant to fish in front
    of their
    domain.

    On the following 15 July, wealthy merchants Peire and Hazeur, who
    tried to "muscle" in on Gauvin and company, lost their case in court.
    On 31 October 1708, Gauvin leased his fishing rights to Louis Rouer
    d'Artigny. This proved to be a mistake. Rouer joined the first
    potentates of porpoise fishing, Peire and Hazeur. "Tel est pris I
    qui croyait prendre."

    Then Madeleine Bouchard, on the first of October 1713, ceded to her
    children, as heirs, the land bought by her late husband in 1697. The
    fishing rights were a part of this inheritance ... so for the step-
    father, it was a bouquet of thistles! Gauvin declared war. The
    Dancause clan
    made a lot of racket on the bank and lit fires. Alerted, the
    authorities intervened and fines were issued on 23 March and 23
    April, 1714. This
    great dissention left hearts with wounds difficult to heal.

    The Dancause heirs and step-father Gauvin went to the home of notary
    Janneau on 8 January 1722. There, a certain Pierre Frontigny dit
    Mechin, a merchant of Quebec and former maitre d'hotel from Begon,
    proposed a deal. The whole Dancause family, the step-father, Pierre
    Dancause, son, and the brothers-in-law had the opportunity to join
    in a -common effort to exploit the porpoise fishing on the Ouelle
    River.
    Frontigny would furnish "the tools for the said fishing;" the family
    would furnish the poles. In addition, they could fish at night and
    keep
    the skins; thus profits would be assured. The commitment was for
    fifteen years. The intriguing part of the text is that the agreement
    covered
    the years from 1732 to 1747, instead of 1723 to 1737. Was this a
    mistake of the lawyer caused by the winter cold or the homemade wine?
    Whatever, the Dancausse were still porpoise fishing in 1744.

    On 12 March 1730, Marie-Madeleine Bouchard, "being confined in a
    chair in her room, sane of mind and memory," had notary Janneau
    come to draw up the terms of her will. After a very Catholic prayer,
    our ancestress bequeathed to the church of her parish, 1 arpent of
    frontal land by 42 deep. The neighbors were Etienne Bouchard and
    Jean Lavoie. In return, for this gift, the pastor would conduct her
    funeral, perform an annual service, in addition to the 100 masses
    promised and a yearly mass in perpetuity. The Recollet Father Maurice
    Imbault or his replacement was charged with carrying out the wishes
    of the donor.

    Madame Dancause triumphed over the inconvenience caused by the hard
    Canadian winter. She extended her days until a very advanced age.
    She died a nonagenarian and was buried at Riviere-Ouelle on 22
    November 1755.

    FAMILY NAME VARIATIONS

    The most common variation of Dancause is Dancosse. Others are known
    to be Dancoss, Dangosse, Dencoss, Duncos and Duncost.

    END NOTES

    1) Chambalon, Louis., Records of 10 June 1697; 15 June 1702; 24
    October 1702; 7 April 17 10.
    2) Duquet, Pierre., Record of 9 September 1677.
    3) Genaple, Francois., Record of 19 August 1697.
    4) Janneau, Etienne., Records of 24 June 1695; 1 October 1713; 12
    March 1730.
    5) Michon, Abel., Record of I July 1724.
    6) Rageot, Gilles., Records of 1 September 1677; 18 July 1689; 7
    September 1696.
    7) Casgrain, Henri R., Un Paroisse Canadienne (1880), pp. 30-61.
    8) Drouin, Gabriel., DNCF (1965), Volume 3, pp. 1855-1858.
    9) Gariepy, Raymond., les Seigneuries de Beaupre et de I'ile
    d'Orleans (1974), pp. 141, 151. Michel Bouchard.
    10) Hudon, P.-H., Riviere-Ouelle (1972), pp 9, 31, 39, 54, 110-114.
    11) Jette, Rene., DGFQ (1983), pp. 302-303.
    12) Lafontaine, Andre., RANF 1666 & 1667 (1985), p. 185; 1681
    (1981), p. 198.
    13) Morissette, Roger., (de Repentigny), personal notes.
    14) Roy, Leon., Les Terres de la Grande-Anse (195 1), pp.' 84, 95,
    140, 239.
    15) Roy, P.-G., IOINF (1919), Volume 1, pp. 41, 100, 101, 102, 134,
    135, 148, 149.
    16) Trudel, Marcel., Catalogue des Immigrants 1631-1662 (1983), page
    483.
    17) ------ DBC, Volume 2, pp. 86-91. Pierre Boucher.
    18) ------ JJ (1892), pp. 313-134.
    19) ------ MSGCF, Vol. 5, pp. 37-38.
    20) ------ RAPQ, Volume 49, p. 121.
    21) ------ RHAF, Volume 6, p. 391.
    22) ------ SGQ, I'Ancetre, Volume 6, pp. 245-247.

    Died:
    Burial: Aug. 13, 1697 at Quebec, PQ

    Pierre married BOUCHARD Marie Madeleine in 1679 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada. Marie (daughter of BOUCHARD Michel and TROTINNE Marie) was born on 31 May 1665 in Chateau Richer, QC. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 11.  BOUCHARD Marie Madeleine was born on 31 May 1665 in Chateau Richer, QC (daughter of BOUCHARD Michel and TROTINNE Marie).

    Notes:

    Marie-Madeleine Bouchard was born at Chateau-Richer on the Beaupre
    Coast, on 31 May 1665, and was baptized in her native parish on 2
    June of the same year, by the missionary priest Thomas Morel. It
    appears that her father Michel Bouchard, in Canada since 1657, first
    lived in the territory of Chateau-Richer, then at Sainte-Anne until
    1674. Michel was a native of Andilly-les-Marais, canton of Marans,
    arrondissement of La Rochelle. His wife Marie Trotin, daughter of the
    late Jean, a weaver, and the late Madeleine Blanchard, was born at
    Poitou.

    The Bouchard family moved to Riviere-Ouelle about 1675. It was there
    that Pierre Dancause met Marie-Madeleine Bouchard. She became his
    wife in the summer of 1679. Alas! the act was lost. A first child was
    born to them on the feast day of St-Jean in 1680.


    NEW CHALLENGE

    After more than a half-century of life, ancestor Pierre Dancause
    felt his strength ebbing. He went to seek help at the Hotel-Dieu in
    the summer of 1697. There he died and was buried at Quebec on
    Tuesday, 13 August. The witnesses recorded in the registry were
    Jacques Michelon dit Lorange, master nailsmith, and Jean Dubreuil,
    inhabitant of the Ile d'Orleans.

    The thirty-two year old Marie-Madeleine Bouchard must now take on a
    new challenge, that of bringing her children to maturity. The
    question of inheritance could have spoiled the sauce but, on 19
    August 1697, a very generous arrangement was made. Jean Raby and his
    wife Marie Dancause renounced their claim in the presence of notary
    Genaple, at Quebec. The reasons put forth were the following: When
    Madame Dancause was married, there were only four arpents of cleared
    land on the homestead at Riviere-Ouelle. Whatever they owned had been
    gained during the lifetime of their mother and mother-in-law.
    Therefore, she would keep the family property for her use, according
    to the costume of Paris. It appears that Pierre Dancause and Marie-
    Madeleine Bouchard had been married without a contract.

    In 1699, Francois Deserre, son of Antoine and of Mathurine Belanger,
    an audacious twenty-one year old gentleman, proposed marriage to her
    on 22 September, in the presence of the notary. Later, Marie-
    Madeleine thought it over and courageously decided that it was wiser
    to bear his natural child than to ruin her whole life.

    Marie-Anne was baptized on the day of her birth, 18 June 1700. This
    surprise gift became the wife of Pierre Roy dit Desjardins on 7 June
    1717 at Riviere-Ouelle

    Jean-Francois Gauvin, son of Jean and of Anne Magnan, fell in love
    with Marie-Madeleine Bouchard in 1702. It was at
    Riviere-Ouelle that her second wedding was celebrated on 29 May. On
    the following 15 June, a marriage contract was signed before
    Chambalon at Quebec. There were no children.

    During the same period, the widow Dancause had a house built. A
    notarized act informs USA that on 24 October 1702, she owed 160
    livres to Pierre Soucy de la Grande Anse, "for framework of a house
    which the said Soucy had previously built for her." On the first of
    October 1713, the widow Dancause decided to have an official paper
    drawn up by the notary Janneau. She simply declared that her
    surviving children: Madeleine, Genevieve, Catherine, Francoise and
    Pierre had right to the inheritance left by their late father. Marie-
    Madeleine Bouchard was still going to live a long-time.

    Children:
    1. (Dancause) Anne Dancosse died in Feb 1712 in Quebec, Canada.
    2. (Dancause) Catherine Dancosse
    3. (Dancause) Pierre Dancosse
    4. 5. DANCOSSE Marie Madeleine was born on 24 Jun 1680 in Riviere-Quelle, PQ, Canada.
    5. (Dancause) Marie Dancosse was born in 1682.
    6. DANCOSSE Genevieve was born in 1687; died in 1745.
    7. (Dancause) Marie-Angelique Dancosse was born on 17 Jun 1689 in Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec, New France.
    8. (Dancause) Marie-Francoise Dancosse was born about 1691.
    9. (Dancause) Marie-Elisabeth Dancosse was born in 1693; died in Mar 1698 in Riviere-Ouelle, Quebec, New France.