Blogiversary: 10/2/2013
Showing posts with label Ancestral Biographies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ancestral Biographies. Show all posts

Thursday, October 1, 2015

Simon-Amable Drouillard

From Drouillard
Simon Amable DROUILLARD (Jean Baptiste, Simon Argentcour, Jean) was born on 4 Mar 1733/1734 in Montreal, Quebec, CANADA. He died on 26 Jul 1805 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA.

Simon married Marguerite MARTIN, daughter of Jean MARTIN and Theresa ENAUD, on 29 Aug 1757 in Soulanges. Marguerite was born in 1739. She died on 18 Nov 1803 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA.

Simon and Marguerite had the following child:
+ 5 M i. Jean Baptiste DROUILLARD was born on 28 Aug 1773 and died on 11 Nov 1819.

From Yelnam @ Tripod
Simon Amable Drouillard was the son of Jean Baptiste Drouillard and Elizabeth Rapin. Simon was born on March 3rd 1734 and was the second of eleven children. Simon was baptized on March 4th in the church of Saint Francis de Sales on the Ile Jesus. Like most boys in New France Simon had to grow up quick in the French settlement of Lachine, located just below Montreal.

Life back then was not easy in this harsh climate and untamed wilderness. Amazingly at the age of seven the family was on the move to even more dangerous territory as Simon’s father entered the military service under Joseph Marin de la Malgue, enlisting in the War with the Foxes in Wisconsin and Illinois. Simon with his family, during this period, moved from one trading post (or fort) to another.

At the age of ten Simon’s father left the military and began managing canoe trains from Montreal to Detroit. This had Jean Baptiste gone for long periods of time, but after a few years his father finally settled down a bit and in July 1749 the family of father, mother, five sons and 3 daughters moved to the settlement in Detroit on 3 arpents of farm land situated on the south side of the Detroit River.

Simon like his father worked as a young man as a voyageur and a trapper. The family built a homestead, but in 1755 father John Baptiste went back into the service and left the farm to defend Fort Duquesne with another 100 Frenchmen and several hundred Indians. Simon’s father would not return.

In April 1757 Simon and his brother Francois entered into a Voyageur Engagement in Montreal. to take goods to Detroit. In that same year Simon would marry Margaret Martin dit St. Jean, (born 1739, the daughter of John Martin dit St. Jean and Teresa Henault dit Canada). Simon and Margaret had twelve children. They were known to be faithful members of Assumption Parish.

On 21 Feb 1759 Simon Amable Drouillard was godfather to two Indian children who were born at the Sault St Louis. Both children were named Simon after their godfather.

In 1780 a petition was granted to the inhabitants of Petite Cote for a watermill to be built, owned and operated by Simon Drouillard. Simon would run this mill for eleven years. Simon sided with England in the Great War and his name is on tax roll in 1802, stating that he remained a British subject at close of revolutionary war.

Margaret would die in 1803 and at age of seventy Simon re-married May 14, 1804 to his second wife, sixty year old Mary Meny daughter of Anthony Meny and Jane Seguin dit Laderout. Simon would die a year later in 1805. 72 years of a life with purpose.

Jean-Baptiste Drouillard


Father Jean Baptiste Drouillard 1707 - 1754

A Voyageur who traveled from Quebec to Detroit. Killed by British in the French and Indian War as a member of Beaujeu force that fought at Fort Duquesne in 1755 against the British led by George Washington. 

Drouillard.US 

If ever there was a Voyageur (which literally means "traveller") it was Jean Baptiste Drouillard. Born February 14th 1707 on the Ile Jesus, which is in the Saint Lawrence River across from Montreal. Jean Baptiste was the son of Simon dit Argentcourt Drouillard and his mother Marquerite. It would be no surprise to learn that he was born in the rear of a canoe, but it for certain that Jean Baptiste was born with adventure in his veins and a spirit as large and as brave as New France itself.

Jean Baptiste was a courageous man who had learned his fighting skills from his father, who was a soldier with Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac. He was also a young entrepreneur who trapped furs and traded with the Native Indians. Much of Jean Baptiste youth was spent on the rivers of New France, in a canoe trapping and fur trading which was very lucrative for New France. Jean Baptiste risked the journey west and north through hostile Iroquois territory from the settlements around Montreal to the pays d'en haut, or "upper country" (the area around the Great Lakes) to trap and trade with Native Indians.

In 1731 at the age of 26, Jean Baptiste was married at Lachine to Elizabeth Rapin who was born in 1712. Elizabeth was the daughter of John Baptiste Rapin and Catherine Janson dit Lapalme. The wedding was a family affair and it was recorded in church records that it was well attended. Lachine was a settlement just below Montreal at Lake St. Louis. Jean continued his free-spirited trade while at the same time started a family having three children in Lachine. Sometime around 1741 the family was on the move. John Baptiste was in the military service under Joseph Marin de la Malgue who was a French officer that was involved in the War with the Foxes in Wisconsin and Illinois. Jean and his family, during this period, moved from one trading post (or fort) to another, and this fact alone, may explain the reason why some of the birthplaces of his children are unknown.

In 1744 Jean Baptiste left the military and began managing canoe trains from Montreal to Detroit. This route was filled with danger as the fierce Iroquois it seemed where hiding behind every tree. The canoe trains started from Montreal up the Ottawa River to Lake Nipissing then down the French River to Georgian Bay. Entering Lake Huron they drifted past Cape Kurd following the coast line of Lake Huron down to Port Huron. They were in large groups of 100 or more and at the time they were the lifeline for the struggling settlement at Detroit.

Jean Baptiste Drouillard took a liking to area and on the 26th of July 1749, he arrived in Detroit to settle there with his Elizabeth, five sons and 3 daughters. They took up 3 arpents of farm land situated on the south side of the Detroit River. The family built a homestead, but farming it seems was no life for the adventurous John Baptiste and he went back into the service as a Major in the French militia. Duty called and Jean Baptiste left Fort Pontchartrain in 1755 with about 100 Frenchmen and several hundred Indians under Beaujeu, their leader, to reinforce the garrison at Fort Duquesne, which is today the town of Pittsburg Pennsylvania. In this campaign of the French and Indian War, Jean Baptiste would fight but not survive the fray. Jean Baptiste would never return to his family but he died as he lived, adventurous to the end.



Tuesday, August 5, 2014

Joseph and Mary - Laurain and Laura Progenitors of Wayne Co., Michigan

This is from the Lorrain plot at Michigan Memorial Park in Flat Rock, Michigan, near Bernadine Laurain's grave, my 2nd cousin 2x removed.  Photo courtesy of  Stoneseeker23 at Findagrave.com


The memorial says:
Joseph Lorrain (1757-1805) married Mary Louisa Dagenais, came to Wayne County, Michigan from Montreal, Canada in 1783. Purchased 140 acres on the River Rouge near what is now General George Patton Park.  
 Joseph and Mary Lorrain are the progenitors of the Laurain and Laura families of Wayne County, Michigan who gathered at Michigan Memorial Park on April 18, 1956. 199 years after the birth of Joseph Lorrain to commemorate his memory and receive this Memorial in his behalf.
Courtesy of Google Maps.  You can see Holy Cross Cemetery (that is where my grandfather Mamerto is buried)  River Rouge is where Joseph and Mary Louisa Lorrain settled, and had land all the way up to near General Patton Park.

Joseph Lorrain's wife was actually named Louise-Marie-Thérèse Dagenais.  Mary Louisa is her Anglicized name. They are my 5th great-grandparents.


This is my connection to them down to my grandmother Lenore Evelyn Barron:
5th Great Grandparents
Louise-Marie-Thérèse Dagenais was born circa 1762.  She married Joseph Lorrain November 22, 1779 in Saint-Martin Île-Jésus, Québec. Joseph Lorrain was born December 30, 1757 in Saint-Vincent-de-Paul, Québec and died January 12, 1805 in Detroit, Michigan.
They had:
Amable Lorrain (October 10, 1797)

4th Great Grandparents
Amable Lorrain was born October 10, 1797 in Détroit, Michigan.  He married Archange Larabel January 19, 1818 in Détroit, Michigan. Archange Larabel was born May 28, 1798. Amable Lorrain died January 11, 1847 in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan, United States.
They had:
Jean-Baptiste Lorrain (August 3, 1820)

3rd Great Grandparents
Jean-Baptiste Lorrain (name changed to John Baptist Laurain) was born August 3, 1820 in Détroit, Michigan.  He married Euphrosine "Fresen" Leduc.  Jean-Baptiste Lorrain died circa 1887.
They had:
Francis Xavier Laurain (November 2, 1847)

2nd Great Grandparents
Francis Xavier Laurain was born November 2, 1847.  He married Sarah Roe.  Sarah Roe was born October 27, 1859 in Newport, Monroe, Michigan, USA and died July 13, 1935 in Detroit, Wayne, Michigan, USA. Francis Xavier Laurain died October 4, 1914.
They had:
Susan Laurain (January 25, 1885)

Great Grandparents
Susan Laurain was born January 25, 1885 in Detroit, Wayne County, Michigan, USA.  She married Harvey Joseph Barron.  Harvey Joseph Barron was born July 17, 1887 in Windsor, Ontario, Canada and died August 1973 in Frenchtown, Monroe County, Michigan, USA.  Susan Laurain died January 27, 1967 in Estral Beach, Michigan, USA.
They had:
Lenore Evelyn Barron (January 8, 1923)

Tuesday, March 11, 2014

The Death of Cha Seung Yul, 성길 차

Today, I asked my mother about the death of her father, why exactly he died and what she remembered about the death.  My maternal grandfather's name was Seung Yul Cha (or by Korean tradition of surname first- Cha Seung Yul, 성길 차).  He was a journalist and a politician of the Democratic party in South Korea, and in the middle of a campaign to become one of the leaders of his town (a mayor, a governor, councilman, we're unsure).  An article was written by my grandfather and was printed in the Chosun Ilbo that basically brought his life to an end.

Apparently, he knew too much about something he wrote and men came to my mother's home in the middle of the night while everyone was asleep, and dragged him out.  My mom said she was told that her father was tortured for days regarding this article, and was interrogated to which he could not give a sufficient enough answer as to why he knew what he knew.

My grandmother called upon one of her nephews (her sister's son), a high ranking officer in the Korean army, by the name of "Oh" (phonetic spelling) to help her find Cha Seung Yul.  He knew exactly where to go.  When he found my grandfather, my grandfather was on the floor, still being electrocuted and begging to be shot to end the torture and interrogation. Oh stopped the men from the attacks and scooped my grandfather up and put him on his shoulder and carried him home.

He made it to a hospital and my grandmother was pregnant with my uncle at the same time.  They laid side-by-side in the hospital.  My grandfather called my mother's name, asking for water.  He was breathing hard.  The last thing he said was my mother's name when he passed away.  My grandfather was still in the midst of his campaign and needed only 6 more votes when he passed.

Against Korean tradition of the eldest son to be the role of Sangju (master of ceremonies), my mother, the second born between her father and mother (her father had children from a different relationship), got the role.  She attended his funeral for the duration of 3 days up until the burial.  My mother doesn't know the official "cause of death" but she said he was bleeding internally.  He was buried on a mountain (possibly Surak mountain) near a tree.

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Jean-Baptiste Drouillard dit Argentcourt

Jean-Baptiste Drouillard was a known as an adventurous voyageur who traveled from Québec to Détroit.   He was born February 14, 1707 at Île Jésus, Québec in the back of a canoe.  He grew up to be a fur trader among the Native Americans.  At the age of 26 in 1731, Jean-Baptiste Drouillard married Isabelle Rapin in Lachine, Québec.  At about 1741 Jean-Baptiste was in the military under the order of Joseph Marin de la Malgue, a French officer involved with the "War with the Foxes" in Wisconsin and Illinois.  At this time, Jean and his family moved from one trading post to the next.   In 1744, Jean-Baptiste left the military and began managing cone trains from Montréal to Détroit.

Jean-Baptiste liked the Détroit settlement and moved his wife and children there.  They had 3 arpents of land on the south end of the Rivière Détroit.  He tried his hand at farming which didn't prove to be successful, so he rejoined the military as a Major in the French militia.  Jean-Baptiste Drouillard and about 100 other French men and hundreds of Natives left Fort Pontchartrain in 1755 under Beaujeu to reinforce the garrison at Fort Duquesne (Pittsburg, Pennsylvania).  This war was known as the French and Indian War.  He was killed by the British, led by first President and General George Washington.

Simon Drouillard dit Argentcourt

Simon Drouillard being assassinated by the Iroquois while he was defending Détroit.

Drawing of Simon Drouillard, courtesy of defunct website Drouillard.us
My 9th great-grandfather, Simon Drouillard, was born November 10, 1668 and baptized Catholic at St. Pierre church on November 11, 1668, in the diocese of Saintes, Saintonge, France. His godparents were Simon Chaudart and Marie Dumas. 

While a teenager in France he was a day laborer and a ship carpenter.  In 1684, at the age of 16, Simon Drouillard dit Argentcourt came to Nouvelle France as a soldier with Lestringant de Saint-Marin.  In 1698, Simon married Marguerite Ferré.  A year after his wife's death on September 12, 1711, Simon married Anne Cadoret.  It was at this time, Simon was recruited by the French pioneer Antoine Laumet de Lamothe, Sieur de Cadillac (also known as Antoine Cadillac) in the campaign against the Iroquois.

Simon was killed by the Iroquois while defending the Détroit settlement, approximately 3 miles east of the fort.  His body was brought back to the settlement to buried on October 21, 1733.



Huntington Sans Sauna and Oriental Gardens Spa

In the 1970s my mom began working for a company called Huntington Sans Sauna.  It was located at 16385 Bolsa Chica Road, Huntington Beach, California, 92649.  The cross-streets were Bolsa Chica Road and Heil Avenue.  There were 2 spas in the same center, 2 doors from each other, my mom's and another spa.  The other spa had a jacuzzi and my mom had the dry sauna.  Although it seemed there would be competition, my mom and the other owner, Norma, were great friends and sent each other clients.

My mom eventually bought Huntington Sans Sauna and the name from the previous owner.  This image is an ad from March 25, 1981 in the Orange County Register. My mom's ad is second from the top-right.  To the left of the ad there's an advertisement for Cal-Copa Spa.  My mom learned of Cal-Copa Spa because of the then-owner of the CalCopa massage school, Roland Clark (she called him Rollie).  She was good friends with him, and he was someone who my mom turned to as a mentor.  Roland Clark's name is in the baby book my father started for me, as someone who gave my mom a babyshower when she was pregnant with me.  My mom bought Cal-Copa Spa and changed the name to Oriental Gardens Spa in the mid-late 1980s, after she closed Huntington Sans Sauna.  Oriental Gardens Spa was located at 17061 Newland Street, Huntington Beach, California, 92647 at the corner of Newland and Warner in "Dutch Haven Plaza."  

March 25, 1981 - Orange County Register - pg. 72
August 22, 1986 - Orange County Register - pg. 96

In the beginning of the massage industry in Huntington Beach, there was no license or certification required to work or operate a spa.  By the time my mom owned Huntington Sans Sauna, 100 hours of massage education was required and she attended CalCopa to become a certified massage therapist.  During the operation of Oriental Gardens Spa, it went up to 200 hours, then 300 hours, and it kept going up and then the new requirement was to become Nationally Certified.  

English being her second language, made things difficult for her, and she chose to not become a Nationally Certified Massage Therapist, yet continued her Massage Therapy education.  In 1997, Oriental Gardens Spa came to a close and she relocated to Fullerton, California where we had a family-owned massage spa.  In 1998 I became a certified massage therapist, also having attended CalCopa massage school.

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Biographie de Jules-Gilles Trottier

I wanted to write a biography for my 10th great-grandfather, Gilles Trottier, and began doing research on him by "Googling" his name.  Lo and behold, there was an excellent biography already typed up.  I copied and pasted it here, as there really is nothing I can add to it.  Jane Goodrich told it better than I could!

Notes by Jane Goodrich:
From ancestor Gilles to the present generations, the Trottiers show proof of a continuous ability in the worlds of industry and commerce. One could even say that they have a gift for business. At the time of his arrival in New France in 1646, Gilles was sent to manage the farm at Portneuf, then belonging to Jacques Le Neuf de la Poterie. This "providential man of many talents" as Father Archange Godbout referred to him, must have packed up and returned to Trois-Rivieres to avoid getting himself killed by the Iroquois Indians.

His son, Antoine Trottier dit Desruisseaux was one of the most important merchants of his time in the colony; his granddaughter Marguerite, a religious of the Congregation of Notre Dame, was the mother superior of her community; great-grandaughter Marie, was the first superior of the Ursulines of Trois-Rivieres; two sons of Giles-Antoine were seigneurs; one on Ile-Perrot, the other on Riviere-du-Loup ( Louisville); a great-grandson, Pierre dit Desaultniers, was a leader in the merchants association of Quebec and a pioneer in naval construction in Canada; Joseph Beaubien was the founder of the town of Outremont; and Jean-Baptiste Beaubien, who settled at Chicago, may be considered as one of the founders of that city.

We know very little about ancestor Gilles, who was sometimes called Jules or even Julien. Father Godbout, historian, states that " It was at La Rochelle, in the study of notary Teuleron, that on July 4, 1646, the destiny of the Trottiers of America was determined. The document written that day can be summarized thus: On the morning of July 4, two people met with Master Teuleron at his home: Pierre Legardeur, Sieur de Repentigny , in charge of finding new recruits for New France, and Gilles Trottier, master carpenter and cattle breeder, living in the parish of Chemilli, in Perche. With no fixed domicile, Giles Trottier, artisan and farmer was until then an itinerant who went where work was at his trades. In 1633, we find him at Mamers ( Sarthe) in 1636 and in 1640 at Ige (Orne) and now we find him presently living at Chemilli. Clever and resourceful, although without property--it was necessary to advance him 46 livres at the time of his departure to clothe himself- Trottier was the man for whom Msgr de Repentigny was searching on behalf of his brother-in-law, Jacques LaNeuf, Sieur de la Poterie"

This contract made by Teuleron tells us that the tenant farm at Portneuf, with its appurtenances, houses, arable land, meadows and woods, all located near Quebec in New France, was to be worked by Trottier for seven consecutive years and "gather and raise fruits which will begin at the time of the arrival of said Trottier in the said country." He was obliged to work, to sow, to hoe, to cut, to thresh the wheat, and clean, "all wisely". On his part, the employer would provide four cows and two bulls as well as an experienced hired hand to help him. The two men must make planks directly from pines cut on the land. Proprietor and tenant farmer would profit from this in equal parts. In addition, Gilles would clear an arpent and a half of woods and deliver to his employer twelve chickens, six capons, and twenty pounds of butter from each of the four cows.

Although the contract makes no reference to the family of the new farmer they are sure to have embarked with him. They all left La Rochelle by July 24, because the last arrangements for the departure of the small fleet destined for Canada, comprised of the ships "Cardinal" "Notre-Dame" and "Navire Neuf", were made at the Admiralty of La Rochelle four days earlier, On July 18, 1646.

Pierre Legardeur de Repentigny himself commanded the "Cardinal" a spacious ship of 300 tons, in which the Trottier family must have made the crossing. The three vessels arrived almost simultaneously at Quebec. The one carrying Maisonneuve arrived three days ahead of that in which the Sieur de Repentigny was embarked. On September 27, four days after debarking, the Trottiers brought little Jean-Baptiste to the baptismal font at Quebec. He was born during the crossing.

Giles worked the farm at Portneuf only for a short time. As if warned of their presence, the Iroquois were not slow to pick up a tomahawk and chase the settlers from their homes. In all probability the Trottier family took refuge at Trois-Rivieres by 1647 at the latest. In the following year, Gilles was called upon to vote in the election for mayor. He became a land holder on June 7, 1650, accepting from Governor Louis d'Ailleboust a sit neighboring that of Guillaume Pepin, in the town of Trois-Rivieres. It was a lot with ten toises in frontage and twenty toises in depth, running along the rue St Michel. Unable to construct a house there, as he was obliged to do, he sold off the southwest half which was re-ceded to Baptiste Bourgery in 1655. As for the other half, his heirs abandoned it to Jacques Fournier dit Laville and Pierre Couc dit Fleur-de-Coignac's benefit.

In August 1652, Mathurin Guillet dit Laroche, brother of Pierre Guillet dit Lajeunesse, fell into the hands of the Iroquois, at the same time as several other Frenchmen. Mathurin had acquired, On June 1, 1649, a piece of land with two arpents frontage by twenty deep in the seigneurie of Cap-de-la-Madeleine, a few arpents below the Faverel brook. On November 24, 1642, his heirs sold it to Gilles Trottier for 200 livres. Gilles went on to settle there with his family. Our ancestor also owned another homestead in the neighborhood of Trois-Rivieres, on the second range bordering the northwest edge of town. Jacques La Neuf de la Poterie took it over after the death of Gilles, his former tenant farmer.

Gilles stay at Cap-de-la-Madeleine was rather brief. He died there after two and a half years in residence. His death was recorded in the registry at Trois-Rivieres on May 10, 1655.

The stated age of our ancestor at death leads us to believe that he must have been born about 1590. His wife, Catherine survived him only by a few months, being buried January 28, 1656 at the age of 60.
Gilles and Catherine did not live ten years in New France, but their descendants form one of the most vigorous and dynamic lines of Percheron roots to populate North America.