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BOUCHER Charles

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  BOUCHER Charles was born in 1620 in Mortagne, Perche, France (son of BOUCHER Gaspard and LEMAIRE Nicole).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  BOUCHER Gaspard was born in Mortagne, Perche, France (son of BOUCHER Jacques and PAIGNE Francoise); died after 20 May 1662 in Trois Rivieres, QC.

    Notes:

    Immigration: 1635, Quebec, New France
    Occupation: Master Carpenter
    Religion: Catholic

    Gaspard Boucher may count among his descendants a great number of the
    most remarkable families in Canada. Such is, in substance, the
    finding of Msgr. Cyprien Tanguay contained in a short three-line
    notation, which must be read with a magnifying glass because it
    appears as a footnote to a page in his monumental work "Dictionnaire
    genealogique des familles canadiennes." (1)

    THE HEAD OF A CANADIAN DYNASTY

    Indeed, this remarkable descendancy includes a Governor, a Prime
    Minister, Ministers, Legislators, Bishops, illustrious warriors as
    well as renowned male and female educators. We have here an entire
    dynasty about which one could write a saga more captivating even than
    the "Chronique des Pasquier, Jean-Christophe, or the Comedie
    humaine." (2) There are also various intrigues from which an expert
    writer could create a compellingly passionate tale.

    In the meantime, while waiting for the legend of the Bouchers, to
    flow from the pen of an historian who, with a little poetic flavor,
    would reveal the exploits and feats-of-arms of these three centuries
    and until all of the scattered documents have been assembled, let USA
    portray the ancestor Gaspard as a humble settler who came from Perche
    with his entire family in 1635. He had no intention of accomplishing
    feats of arms and entering his name in the history books. He would
    leave this task to his son Pierre and to the latter's offspring.
    Moreover, if Gaspard Boucher and Pierre had not taken the initiative
    of' settling in Trois-Rivieres, the destiny of this family would have
    been different. Providence, in its unfathomable wisdom, often knows
    how to place good people in the right place at the right time.

    From 1629 to 1632, while New France suffered under the yoke of the
    Kirke brothers, very few Frenchmen lived in that area of the world.
    For his part, Robert Giffard, Seigneur of Beauport, had returned to
    France. In 1634 he decided to come back to Canada, but this time with
    his wife, his children and as many colonists as he could recruit.
    Jean Guyon, Zacharie Cloutier, Noel Langlois and Jean Juchereau came
    with this first group. Meanwhile, Gaspard Boucher was making his
    final decision to leave the land of his fathers.

    FATHER, MOTHER AND FIVE CHILDREN, CROSS THE SEA

    Born at the end of the XVI century, Gaspard, probably the son of
    Jacques Boucher and of Francoise Paigne, was married to Nicole
    Lemaire when he was about twenty years old. At least eight children
    were born of this union, five of whom crossed the seas with their
    parents. However, on 25 May 1633, it is not at all certain that our
    ancestor had any intention of leaving his homeland. On that date our
    master carpenter acquired from his mother-in-law, Marie Gastrie, a
    plot of land and an orchard at Perruchet, in the parish of Saint-
    Hilaire. But he sold this property on 1 February 1634. Had he already
    made the decision to go to New France? It is quite possible. However,
    he was not on the first voyage, the one in 1634, as several
    historians have stated.

    Besides, on the following 20 April, (3) we learn that Marie Gastrie,
    "abandoned wife of Pierre Delorme, her second husband," ensured her
    son-in-law and daughter a legacy superior to that of her other heirs
    because Gaspard and Nicole had provided for the forsaken lady without
    recompense for eighteen months. Pierre Boucher himself stated in his
    Memoires that he was one of the earliest inhabitants of New France,
    "having been brought over to this country by my late father in 1635.
    " (4) In addition, an act by notary Decourtemanche discovered by
    Madame Pierre Montagne in the archives of Alencon confirms this. (5)
    On 19 March 1635, the Boucher's were still in France; but on that day
    they sold, left, ceded and transferred forever to Jeanne Desjouis,
    two parcels of plowed but unsown land at Charbonniers, adjoining the
    monastery of Val-Dieu. (6)

    This was probably Gaspard's last transaction in his native Perche. A
    few days later, the family bade adieu to their relatives and friends,
    received the blessing of the Cure Alexandre Chevalier, traveled the
    forty leagues (160 km) by wagon, (from Mortagne to Dieppe) and
    embarked on one of the ships commanded by Duplessis-Bouchart.(7)
    Coming out of the English Channel, the convoy evaded a fleet of
    Turkish ships and made the transit, beset by the usual Atlantic
    storms. This voyage was longer than the one the previous year, but
    they finally reached the promised land on 4 July. A long-boat sent
    from Tadoussac announced their imminent arrival at Quebec. The good
    ship Saint-Jacques, commanded by Roche-Jacquelin, arrived there eight
    days later.

    CHAMPLAIN WELCOMES THE NEW ARRIVALS

    "Samuel de Champlain, who was still living, (he died on Christmas
    Day 1635), writes Montarville de la Bruere, welcomed the new arrivals
    at Fort Saint-Louis. Without doubt he could not have suspected that
    one among them, a young boy of thirteen, would later be one of the
    principal instruments of the salvation of his dear colony. However,
    it was a great consolation during his last days, to see added to his
    nation such an industrious and honest family. " (8)

    Gaspard himself asked Champlain for protection on his arrival at
    Quebec. He then took advantage of this to inform the Governor of an
    incident in which he was a victim. Thomas Giroust, a traveling
    companion to whom he had entrusted some personal effects, refused to
    return them. Champlain ordered Giroust to return the property that he
    had kept illegally. Giroust pretended to obey, but later swore that
    he would not. This affair dragged on for three years, and finally
    justice was done. On 12 September 1638, Gaspard recounted that he had
    asked Giroust to take him from Mortagne to Dieppe, with baggage which
    contained, among other things, "two large salt cellars, two large
    flower vases, two large plates, six porridge bowls, all in a tin
    case, eight to ten plates, three small bowls, two of pewter and one
    of tin, a ceramic bottle containing rosewater, two bushels of cooked
    pears and one bushel of cooked prunes." (9) All of these items were
    put aboard the ship and brought to Quebec. This theft of utensils did
    not benefit Giroust, because it appears that he was obligated to sell
    his property and return to France.

    THE INFLUENCE OF THE BOUCHER FAMILY IN TROIS-RIVIERES

    During the first ten years of his stay in New France, it seems that
    Gaspard Boucher was a farmer for the Jesuits at Beauport. In 1644 he
    received a section of land at Trois-Rivieres, probably granted by the
    Governor, Charles Hualt de Montmagny. The Boucher family was well
    established by 1646, because in that year two of the ancestor's
    daughters, 12 year old Madeleine and 15 year old Marguerite, were
    listed in the civil records of the town as godmothers, paired with
    Michel Leneuf and Jean Godefroy.

    "At the post of Trois-Rivieres, writes Sister Estelle Mitchell, (10)
    the Boucher family had great influence, being made up of eighteen
    people while the total population did not exceed one hundred. (11)
    Gaspard, the father, as well as his sons-in-law Baudry and Lafond,
    signed the official report of the election, as trustee, of Michel
    Leneuf du Herisson in September 1648. (12) ... On Sunday, 17 January
    1649, at the home of Gaspard Boucher, a marriage contract was signed
    between his son Pierre and Marie Chrestien(sic), a Huron woman living
    in Trois-Rivieres and who was related to the Pachirini family. (13)
    Marie-Madeleine Chretienne, as historians call her, was a boarder for
    a few years at the Ursuline convent." Mother Marie de l'Incarnation
    said about her: "There are some among the Hurons who persevered in
    their studies and whom we raised as French girls. We provide for them
    and they do very well in reading, writing and speaking French. We
    have introduced one of these girls to Monsieur Boucher who has been
    for some time the Governor of Trois-Rivieres." (14)

    The whole Boucher family fully approved of this marriage.

    On 16 June 1649, Gaspard sold his property to Jean Sauvaget, (15)
    but Governor d'Ailleboust granted him another on 1 June 1650, as "a
    place to build a house at the bottom of the hillside where the fort
    is situated." ( 16) This property had an area of 300 toises; 10 in
    frontage by 30 in depth, located near the road which ran from the
    town to the common. Gaspard's immediate neighbor was his son Pierre,
    who also received a grant on the same day. He was located to the
    north-west, on the land called the "Marquisat du Sable;" a boundary
    which corresponds today with the rue Badeaux. (17)

    From 1650 until his unexpected death, few documents detail Gaspard
    Boucher's life in Trois-Rivieres. Undoubtedly he cultivated his land,
    worked at his trade of carpenter, and above all, he influenced his
    son Pierre, who often needed his wise counsel. On 22 November 1655,
    the archives of the Provost of Trois-Rivieres mention a lawsuit
    brought by, Gaspard against two competitors, the master carpenter
    Elie Bourbaut and his associate Michel Lemay: Then we hear no more.

    DID GASPARD DIE IN A FIRE IN HIS HOUSE?

    On 27 June 1668, Madeleine Boucher, Gaspard's daughter and wife of
    Urbain Baudry dit Lamarche, declared that the title to the 24 arpents
    of land that her father had received from Governor Hualt de
    Montmagny, on 21 March 1646, situated on the Saint-Maurice River "was
    burned with the house of the said Gaspard Boucher, in which it was
    kept." (18) Can we infer from this evidence that our ancestor himself
    perished in his house? Most historians think so: It is certain that
    Gaspard passed away between 1662 and 1668. As for his wife Nicole
    Lemaire, was she also a victim of this fire? We just don't know. It
    was said that she was still alive on 19 June 1652 when the records
    mention her as a godmother. After that date there was nothing more.
    The burial records of Gaspard and Nicole have fallen into one of the
    numerous voids in the registry of Trois-Rivieres.


    THE CHILDREN OF GASPARD BOUCHER AND NICOLE LEMAIRE

    1. Charles (1620), was born at Mortagne and died an infant.

    2. Antoinette (1621-?), was born at Mortagne and died, in France.

    3. Pierre (1622-1717).

    4. Nicolas (1625-1649), was born at Mortagne and died at Trois-
    Rivieres.

    5. Charles (1628-?), was born at Mortagne and died in France.

    6. Marie (1629-1706), was born at Mortagne, married Etienne Pepin de
    Lafond in 1645 and died at Batiscan.

    7. Marguerite (1631-1669), was born at Mortagne, married Toussaint
    Toupin, a master boatman, and died in the Quebec region.

    8. Madeleine (1634-1691), was probably born during the Atlantic
    crossing. In 1647 she married Urbain Baudry dit Lamarche, an edge-
    tool maker and master blacksmith. They lived for a time in Quebec but
    then lived in Trois-Rivieres for more than thirty years, where she
    died.

    THE CHILDREN OF PIERRE BOUCHER AND JEANNE CREVIER

    1. Pierre (1653-1724?), Sieur de Boucherville, married Charlotte
    Denis in 1683 at Quebec. They had 12 children.

    2. Marie, also known as Marie-Ursule (1655-after 1688), married
    Rene' Gauthier, Sieur de Varennes, in 1667. They had 11
    children.

    3. Lambert (1656-1699), Sieur de Grandpre, married Marie-Marguerite
    rite Vauvril in 1693 at Quebec. They had 3 children.

    4. Ignace (1659-1699), Sieur de Grosbois, married Marie-Anne Margane
    in 1694 at Montreal. They had 5 children.

    5. Madeleine (1661-after 160), married Pierre-NoeI LeGardeur, Sieur
    de Tilly, in 1680 at Boucherville. They had 12 children.

    6. Marguerite also known as Marie (1663-1698), married Nicolas
    Danieu, Sieur de Muy, in 1687 at Boucherville. They had 7 children.

    7. Philipp (1665-1721) was ordained a priest in 1689. He died at
    Lauzon.

    8. Jean (1667-after 1715) Sieur de Monbrun, married Francoise-Claire
    Charet in 1692 at Lauzon. They had 12 children.

    9. Rene (1668-after 1726) Sieur de LaPerriere, married Marie-
    Francoise Maillot at Montreal in 1705. She died a few days after the
    birth of their second child.

    10. Jeanne (1670-1703) married Jacques-Charles Sabrevios, Sieur de
    Bleury, in 1695 at Boucherville. They had 6 children.

    11. Louise (1670-?) was the twin of Jeanne. Born at Boucherville but
    no further information.

    12. Nicolas (1672-?) was ordained a priest in 1696.

    13. Jean-Baptiste (1673-after 1628), Sieur de Niverville , married
    Marguerite-Therese Hertel in 1710 at Chambly. They had 12 children.

    14. Jacques was the twin of Jean-Baptiste. He died at Boucherville
    in 1688.

    15. Genevieve was born in 1676 at Boucherville. She became an
    Ursuline nun at Quebec in 1696. (21)

    END NOTES

    1) Volume 1, page 71.
    2) Work of Georges Duhamel, Romain Rollard and Honore de Balzac.
    3) Act of Roussel, notary of Mortagne.
    4) BRH, 1926. Page 398.
    5) Author of Tourouvre et les Juchereau. This great friend of Canada
    has gathered all the notarial information about the origins of our
    ancestors who came from Perche in the XVII century.
    6) Quote from Messire Pierre Boucher, the splendid work of Sister
    Estelle Mitchell, published on the occasion of the 250th anniversary
    of the death of the founder of Boucherville.
    7) Charles Duplessis-Bouchart, Admiral of the Fleet of the One
    Hundred-Associates. The previous year he had participated in the
    founding of Trois-Rivieres, by Laviolette on 4 July 1634. The town
    took its name from the three channels through which the Saint-Maurice
    River enters the Saint-Lawrence.
    8) Cahiers des Dix, No 2, Montreal, 1937, pages 239-240.
    9) Guillaume Tronquet, the Secretary to Governor Montmagny, drew up
    the official report of testimony.
    10) Op Cit (6), pages 63-64.
    11) BRH, 1924, page 171.
    12) Ibid,1923, page 252.
    13) Benjamin Sulte, HCF, Volume 1, page 101. Charles Pachirini was
    an Algonquin Chief.
    14) Richardeau, Volume 2, page 364. This was an excerpt from a
    letter to her son, Dom Claude Martin.
    15) Record of the notary Laurent Berman.
    16) Record of the notary Guillaume Audouart.
    17) Marcel Trudel. Le terrier du Saint-Laurent, 1663. Page 392.
    18) Pierre-Georges Roy. Papier terrier de la compagnie des Indes
    occidentales. Page 319.
    19) J. Richard Lebel. "Je Me Souviens" , Journal of the American
    French Genealogical Society, Spring 1982, pages 3-7.
    20) Taguay, Jette, et al.
    21) Rene Jette. Dictionnaire genealogique des familles du Quebec.
    Page 136.

    Gaspard married LEMAIRE Nicole on 01 Jan 1619 in St-Langis-Les-Mortagne, France. Nicole (daughter of LEMAIRE ? and CASTRIE Marie) was born in Mamers, LeMans, Maine, France; died after 19 Jun 1652 in Trois Rivieres, QC. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  LEMAIRE Nicole was born in Mamers, LeMans, Maine, France (daughter of LEMAIRE ? and CASTRIE Marie); died after 19 Jun 1652 in Trois Rivieres, QC.

    Notes:

    Immigration: 1635, Quebec, New France
    Religion: Catholic

    Children:
    1. 1. BOUCHER Charles was born in 1620 in Mortagne, Perche, France.
    2. BOUCHER Antoinette was born in 1621 in Mortagne, Perche, France.
    3. De BOUCHERVILLE Pierre Boucher Sieur was born on 01 Aug 1622 in Notre Dame, Mortagne, Perche, France; died on 19 Apr 1717 in Boucherville, QC.
    4. BOUCHER Nicholas was born in 1625 in Mortagne, Perche, France; died in 1649 in Trois-Rivieres, Quebec, New France.
    5. BOUCHER Charles was born in 1628 in Mortagne, Perche, France.
    6. BOUCHER Marie was born on 22 Jan 1629 in Notre Dame, Mortagne, Perche, France; died on 29 Nov 1706 in Batiscan, Champlain, Quebec, Canada.
    7. BOUCHER Marguerite was born on 28 Jul 1631 in Notre Dame, Mortagne, Perche, France; died before 03 Jun 1669 in Chateau Richer, QC.
    8. BOUCHER Madeleine was born about 1634; died on 13 Sep 1691 in Trois Rivieres, QC.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  BOUCHER Jacques died before 30 Jul 1611.

    Jacques married PAIGNE Francoise. Francoise died before 30 Jul 1611. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  PAIGNE Francoise died before 30 Jul 1611.
    Children:
    1. 2. BOUCHER Gaspard was born in Mortagne, Perche, France; died after 20 May 1662 in Trois Rivieres, QC.
    2. BOUCHER Marin was born on 01 Jan 1589 in Mortagne, Chartres, Perche, France; died on 25 Mar 1671 in Chateau-Richer, Montmorency, PQ, Canada.
    3. BOUCHER Jeanne was born about 1607 in St-Jean, Mortagne, Perche, France; died before 08 Sep 1670 in Cote St-Francis, QC.

  3. 6.  LEMAIRE ?

    ? married CASTRIE Marie. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  CASTRIE Marie
    Children:
    1. 3. LEMAIRE Nicole was born in Mamers, LeMans, Maine, France; died after 19 Jun 1652 in Trois Rivieres, QC.