Blanchard, Olivier – Ste-Anne-du-Bocage (Caraquet, Gloucester, New Brunswick)

Transcript:
BLANCHARD
OLIVIER
FILS DE RENE ET MARGUERITE TERIOT
NE A PETICOUDIAC 1726, EPOUSA EN 1751
CATHERINE AMIRAULT, FILLE DE PIERRE ET ANNE BRUN. OLIVIER DECEDE A
CARAQUET LE 16 AOUT 1796
LE COMITE 1994
Translation:
Blanchard Olivier - Son of Rene and Marguerite Teriot – born in Peticoudiac 1726, married in 1751 to Catherine Amirault, daughter of Pierre and Anne Brun. Olivier died in Caraquet on 16 Aug 1786. The Comittee 1994
Olivier Blanchard is a descendant of one of the original Acadian couples – Guillaume Blanchard and Huguette Poirier – who are believed to have arrived in Acadie in the mid 1630s. According to Fidele Theriault’s book “Les Familles de Caraquet”, the Blanchards arrived in Caraquet after a long ordeal which began with the destruction of the Village des Blanchard in 1758 by Major Scott. The Blanchards had taken refuge on the estuary of the Restigouche, then Nipisiguit but were eventually taken prisoner along with 300 other Acadians to the British Fort Cumberland. Theriault then explains (based on the work of Stephen A. White) that the Blanchards were transferred to a Halifax prison, and then eventually found their way from Arichat (Cape Breton) to Prince Edward Island. Olivier Blanchard and Catherine Amirault were one of the Acadian couples who received land in what is called the Grande Concession de 1784 (Great Land Grant) so the Blanchards were pioneers of both Acadie and Caraquet!
Note: Olivier’s mother Marguerite Theriault and our ancestor Joseph Theriault (m. Marguerite Melanson) were both children of Germain Theriault and Anne Richard.
Source: Theriault, Fidele (1985). Les Familles de Caraquet: Dictionnaire Genealogique. ISBN 0-9692151-0-X . Mr. Theriault’s book contains genealogical data of the Blanchards in Caraquet as well as more extensive biographical information, anecdotes and pictures.
Note: Not all Blanchards are Acadians – some are descendants of French-Canadian Blanchards.
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A Del.ici.ous Idea

This week many of us geneabloggers are blogging about the ways in which new technologies can support us in our genealogy work. I think that social bookmarking sites are one of the best tools around to help us organize our mass of genealogy links. You can find more information about it in my previous post about del.icio.us genealogy
Janet Iles (The Researcher Gal: http://researchergal.blogspot.com/ )
has an interesting account at:http://delicious.com/researchergal/
Vintage Postcard: A “modern” dog cart in the Gaspe
A Gaspe (Quebec, Canada) farm scene: Children, traditional dog cart and machinery.


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Draggers in Port – Caraquet, New Brunswick
Caraquet’s position on Chaleurs Bay was ideal for Early Acadian Pioneers and it also attracted many fishermen from the Channel Islands. One shore of Chaleurs Bay is in Quebec and the other in New Brunswick and it has long been known as a rich fishing area.


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Desperately Seeking Elizabeth(1)
I’m writing this series for my immediate family but if you’re interested in the Doucets – or if you know something about my Elizabeth – I’d be delighted to hear from you in the Comment Box below.
*****
When I began writing our family history over a decade ago I was able to develop a lot of information using a wide variety of resources and approaches such as:
- Genealogical reports prepared for family members
- Parish registers and local histories at McGill University and other librairies.
- Genealogy trips to Gloucester, New Brunswick and the Gaspe and Matapedia Valley in Quebec
- Researchers I was able to contact directly (e.g. Fidele Theriault of Les Familles de Caraquet)
- Online information from government databases etc.
Now that I’ve honed my skills and can access more primary documents, I’m going back over our lines with a fine tooth comb – and taking a second look at some brickwalls. Some of you mentioned that you’d like to learn more about how genealogy is done, so I thought I might let you take a peek over my shoulder as I desperately seek Elizabeth!
Elizabeth Doucet of Gloucester, New Brunswick
I first found out about Elizabeth when I asked my mother who her grandparents were. She gave me their names (Joseph Lagace and Elizabeth Doucet) but said she didn’t remember anything else about their ancestors. However she did offer to get me a professional genealogy report that one of her brothers had ordered.
The genealogy report turned out to be from the venerable Insitut Drouin and what I received a few weeks later was a hefty, red three-volume edition of the Dictionnaire National des Canadiens Francais and a hand-calligraphed Arbre Genealogique (family tree) tracing our Lagace lines from the twentieth century back to the 1600s.
I was in seventh heaven – this was going to be easy! And in some ways it was. I learned to navigate through the red Drouins and then moved on to other sources and various parish registers. The early French-Canadian period is quite well covered in many different publications and I was able to progress quite rapidly. I was in for a surprise though – the closer I got to the present, the more difficult it became to document my information – and I finally hit a brickwall with my great-grandmother Elizabeth Doucet.
According to my Drouin family tree, Elizabeth Doucet married Joseph Lagace on June 26th, 1894 in Ste-Therese, Gloucester, New Brunswick.

So far, so good – but Drouin didn’t include her parents. I faced two challenges. Most of the materials I’d been working with covered Quebec, whereas my Lagaces had migrated to New Brunswick in the 18th century and my local librairies didn’t have local parish histories or registries for New Brunswick.
What I quickly learned was that the New Brunswick government has some wonderful online resources at their Vital Records website. As you can see at the left, Elizabeth and Joseph’s marriage is in their index (although their surnames are written differently) and the marriage date was the same as on the Drouin reports – but her parents’ names still didn’t appear. I know now that what I should have done next was to request written documentation from the New Brunswick Provincial Archives but I was a “newbie” so I just posted a few queries on a message board, made no progress and promptly moved on to greener fields!
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Early French-Canadian Pioneers: The Meuniers of Quebec
Meunier, Gaspard | Madeleine Poupart dit Lafleur
November 23rd, 1732
Meunier/Lapierre, Pierre | Barbe Richaume
October 12th, 1675
Meunier/Le Mousnier, Mathurin | Francoise Fafard
November 3rd, 1647
Meunier/Menien/St-Jean, Philippe | Marie-Marthe Poyer
February 17th, 1760
Meunier/Munier/Bellrose, Pierre | Marie-Madeleine Cote
January 25th, 1761
_________________
Mignier/Minier/Lagace, Andre | Jacquette Michel
October 23rd, 1668
*Andre Mignier was not a Meunier, but some of his descendants carried that surname
Meunier/Mounier, Marie | Sebatien Hodiau
May 30th, 1637
Meunier – Variations and associated surnames
Bellerose, De Pecausi, Dignier, Duval, Frappe d’Abord, Frappedabord, Jolicoeur, Lafleur, Lafontaine, Laframboise, Lagace, Lagiroflee, Laliberte, Laperiere, Laperriere, Lapierre, Laramee, Lameusnier, Lemo(u)nier, Lemounier, Menier, Menut, Mesnier, Meusnier, Meynier, Mignier, Mo(n)nier, Mosnier, Mounier, Munier, Musnier, Sans(s)oucy
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For a discussion of the various surname variations of Andre Mignier dit Lagace’s descendants see - “You like po-tato and I like po-tahto!”
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General View of Caraquet – From the College Collection
(Home of many Acadians after the deportation)

Detail: Fencing, poles awaitingtelephone/electricity?


Postmarked: November 13th, 1907, New Brunswick
Addressee: Monsieur Augustin Hache, Meteghan, Royal Hotel, N.S.
Message: Nous jouissons tous d’une excellente santé. Je vous écrirai une longue letter bien vite. Recevez les respects de toute la famille. Votre cousine Euphémie Godin
Translation: We are all enjoying excellent health. Soon I’ll write you a long letter. Our whole family sends its respects. Your cousin Euphémie Godin.
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