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Chandonne' Jean Baptiste

Female 1732 - 1733  (0 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Chandonne' Jean Baptiste was born on 25 Jun 1732 (daughter of Chandonne' Charles I. and BOURGET Elisabeth); died on 02 May 1733.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Chandonne' Charles I. was born in 1678 in St Calais, Lemans, Maine, France (son of Chandonne' Gatien and LEGUEAY Marguerite); died on 28 Jun 1756 in Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Immigration: 1709, Quebec, New France Age: 35
    Occupation: Sergeant in the troops of the company of D'alogny,
    Bailiff, Lawyer
    Religion: Catholic

    Charles Chandonnet dit Leveille

    Chandonnet descendants are unaware that their family name with so
    fine a French appearance is a diminutive for a place of origin:
    Chandon, attributed to several hamlets in
    France and to a community of the Loire in the arrondissement of
    Roanne. Chandonne and Chandonnais are only different names for the
    same bearers.

    Charles Chandonnet, child of Gatien and of Marguerite Legeay, was
    born about 1674 at Saint-Calais, arrondissement of Le Mans, today in
    la Sarthe. This locality has a
    long history. Its abbey, founded under the name of Anisola in the
    sixth century, in the twelfth century took the name of its founder
    Caislefus (Saint-Calais), a monk from
    Auvergne; in 1425, the English destroyed this monastery at the same
    time as the town. The abbey was rebuilt by Jean de Ronsard, the
    father of the great poet.

    It was in this civilized and religious atmosphere that Charles
    Chandonnet was raised. He was educated and signed his name with
    flourish "Chandone".

    It seems likely that Charles committed himself at the age of 20 to a
    military career. One does not become a soldier at the age of 35! I do
    not know his resume in France.
    When he arrived in Canada about 1709, he held the title of sergeant,
    a rank that he kept all his life. Sergeants were, in the beginning,
    servants, either at the Provost in Paris,
    or for the magistrates or the senechaux. Sergeant and servant were
    synonyms. In Charles's time, a sergeant was a non-commissioned
    officer in an infantry company. That
    definition, by and large, remains true today.

    AT QUEBEC

    Charles Chandonnet dit Leveille, was at Quebec in 1709. On 13
    December, he appeared at the church of Notre-Dame as godfather of
    Charles Jodouin, son of Claude and of
    Louise Renaud. Marie-Catherine Larcheveque accompanied him as god
    mother. The curate Pierre Pocquet did not miss the opportunity to
    mention the title of the spiritual
    guardian of the infant:

    "sergeant in the troops of the company d 'Alogny ".

    Charles-Henri Aloigny de la Groye, midshipman at Rochefort, had come
    to Canada in 1683 as a lieutenant. For 30 years, he pursued a very
    active military career here as
    captain, ship's ensign, commander at Fort Frontenac in 1700, major
    in 1702 and commander of troops in 1704. He would occupy this last
    position until his death in the
    autumn of 1714 in the shipwreck of the Saint-Jerome at Sable Island.
    Sergent Chandonnet was therefore under the orders of Charles-Henri
    Aloigny in 1709. It took this
    baptism to reveal to USA these valuable details. If Claude Jodouin
    had chosen Ancestor Leveille as godfather, it was because he was
    already favorably known at Quebec
    and perhaps had been so for a few years.

    From 1711 to 1712, Charles Chandonnet assisted as witness at four
    marriages. On 23 November 1711, Jean Chandelier dit Saint-Louis,
    soldier in the Co,mpany
    d'Aloigny, abandoned bachelorhood. He married Jeanne-Elisabeth Joly
    at the cathedral of Quebec. Sergeant Chandonnet and Nicolas Framery,
    soldiers in the same
    company, were honored to act as witness for their companion-in-arms.

    On 19 January of the following year, the same friends, Charles and
    Nicolas, did the same at the marriage of Louis Dautrepe dit Lanoix,
    soldier in the Company d'Aloigny,
    and Marie-Madeleine Delaunay, daughter of Henri and of Francoise
    Crete. Ten days later, it was the turn of soldier Rene Girard dit
    Brindamour and Marie-Josephe Poitras
    to commit themselves to the great company of married people. This
    time, Sergeant Charles Chandonnet enhanced this wedding at Quebec by
    his presence: along with, to his
    right Etienne de Villedonne, aide major of the troops, and to his
    left Jean Vergeat dit Penouveau, veteran sergeant at the garrison of
    Chateau Saint-Louis.

    Finally, on 5 April 1712, Jean Bonneau, royal baker, native of Saint-
    Quentin-les-Trod, took as his wife Marie-Madeleine Moreau, widow of
    Francois Rolland. In his
    lifetime Rolland had been a soldier in the company de Mantet and
    master baker. This widow, who was marrying again, was accompanied by
    a diverse crowd of people:
    Jean-Baptiste Lacoudray dit Tourangeau, inn keeper and merchant;
    Francois Pampalon dit Labranche, sergeant at the garrison of Quebec
    since 1703; Louis Guerrain, an
    unknown soldier; Claude-Charles Detisne, ensign of troops; and
    finally, Sergeant Charles Chandonnet.

    The presence of Charles Chandonnet appears again at the baptism of
    Marie-Charlotte Dautrepe, the eldest daughter of Louis. Accompanying
    the soldier on this 5 April 1712
    was Marie-Barbe Delaunay, the child's aunt and godmother.

    In short, the presence of Sergeant Charles Chandonnet did not pass
    unnoticed at Quebec. He was so kind! Did Charles decide to set up his
    home before white flakes fell on
    his roof?

    DAILY LIFE

    The life of sergeant Chandonnet appears rather tranquil and with
    reason. The Treaty of Utrecht, signed on 11 April 1713, gave Hudson
    Bay and Newfoundland to England.
    Acadia was already lost. With the permission of the king, the
    soldiers were used to strengthen the fortifications of the capital:
    they built a redoubt and a wall along the slope
    of the Palais to provide a curtain between the redoubt and Cap-au-
    Diamants. The sergeants, the first rank in the hierarchy of the non-
    commissioned officers, assured the
    supervision of these defensive works.

    After the death of his commander Aloigny, Charles changed companies.
    We know that in 1740, he belonged to the Company of La Ronde. Charles
    de Beauharnois
    (1726-1749) replaced Philippe Rigaud (1703-1725) as Governor of
    Canada.

    Chandonnet was educated. He sometimes used his talents as bailiff or
    lawyer. Thus, on 23 May 1725, he signed an official report of an
    account of expenses to be paid by
    the widow Duchesnaye at the request of Jean Badeau.

    On 8 August 1746, Sergeant Chandonne argued at the Sovereign Council
    the case of the late Jean-Baptiste Roy, who was during his lifetime,
    resident of Saint-Valier. And
    on the 13th of the same month, he produced the account of expenses
    to be paid by the widow Claire Cadrin. Another similar document for
    the same case was drawn up on
    the first of August 1747.

    On 26 March 1739, we learn that Chandonne and Larche owned a lot at
    Quebec rented to Joseph Huppe, hatmaker. The latter said he was
    unable to pay the 50 livres owed
    in arrears; he begged them to annul this debt, considering that he
    now was living at Terrebonne, and to take back this lot located on
    Rue Saint-Joseph and acquired in the
    presence of Pinguet on 13 and 18 December 1731. The debtor received
    an acquittal from his easy-going creditors.

    HOUSE SALE

    Elisabeth and Charles, residents of Rue Saint-Joseph, decided on 30
    June 1740 to sell to the tailor Pierre Lamothe, living with his wife
    Charlotte Boisandre at the carrefour
    Saint Jean,

    "a lot and house above built on it located and situated on the level
    of the said rue saint Joseph, containing about 24 feet 10 inches of
    frontage...by 38 deep ".

    The neighbors were Etienne Roy and the widow Badeau. The house 20
    feet wide, log on log, had only one floor with kitchen, bedroom, a
    small room, cellar and attic.

    Chandonnet had acquired the lot on 8 November 1715 from the Fathers
    of the College for 24 livres in non-redeemable annual rent. The
    buyers could draw their water from
    the Chandonnets' wells located on Rue de la Fabrique, near the heirs
    of Louis Vaillant. The tailor would pay a total amount of 700 livres
    to the sergeant. Charles and
    Elisabeth gave a receipt to Lamothe on 20 March 1742.

    At the time of the census of the city of Quebec in 1744, the
    Chandonne family was still living on Rue Saint-Joseph. Pierre
    Lamothe, tailor, and Francois Lachambre,
    shoemaker, were their neighbors.

    At that time, were the Chandonnets property owners or renters? A
    receipt from Sieur Couillard de Saint-Thomas given to Charles on 30
    April 1747 sheds some light. In the
    presence of the notary Louet on 18 March 1729, they had acquired
    this piece of land "from a division" to Sieur Couillard de Saint-
    Thomas after the death of his uncle
    Jean-Baptiste Couillard, Sieur de l'Espinay. Charles had paid 400
    livres to acquire this lot on which he was presently living with his
    family.

    THE CHANDONNET FAMILY

    At Quebec, the sun of life shone at least 13 times in the Bourget-
    Chandonnet cradle. But Charles, Marie, Madeleine, Marie-Anne, Antoine
    and Jean-Baptiste did not reach
    adulthood. I am unaware of the destiny of Etienne, baptized on 4
    September 1738, present in the census of 1744.

    There are stitches missing in the fabric of the history of this
    second generation. One day, a descendant researcher will bring new
    details.

    LAST WATCH

    Geography is learned by measurements, the history of a country by
    ones heart and the value of life by the number of years one has
    lived. Charles Chandonnet, sergeant
    major, had crossed the ocean to protect the property of his
    homeland. For almost a half-century, he was faithful to his post as
    sergeant in New France. Now he was ready to
    trade his military stripes in order to receive those of the chosen.
    On Sunday, 27 June 1756, there was a changing of the guard. He was 78
    years old. He was buried the next
    day at Quebec, in the presence of a single witness recorded in the
    registry, Jean Vallee. The officiating priest Jean Baptiste Rousseau
    could have said more but he seemed to
    have counted his words.

    On 20 September of the following year, Elisabeth Bourget ordered an
    inventory of the property of her late husband. Before the
    distribution, she had the right to 1,000 livres
    in dowry, 600 livres in preciput, her old clothes and her ornate
    bed. Half of the remaining property reverted to her as a wife married
    with community property. Thus, a
    fortune did not remain to be divided among the minor children.
    Etienne Chandonnet, Andre, Marie Marthe, Elisabeth, Marie-Anne,
    Josephe and Charles settled on the
    Riviere Saint-Jean.

    The number of inventoried objects is impressive. Not to mention the
    pots, iron trivets, skimmers, casseroles, numerous plates and the
    bird cage, I especially note the small
    frypan from the forges of Saint-Maurice with its sheet iron rack;
    the small iron pepper mill with its crank; the 13 inch mirror with a
    frame of gilded wood; the 2 small cotton
    curtains and their small iron rods; an old and new testament; 2
    prayer books; 2 dictionaries Latin and French; a box containing 3
    alphabets of copper for printing letters and
    an old copper horn.

    In the cellar were found 6 cords of firewood; a small oratory
    composed of a Christ and 9 small paintings with their frame; 1 basin
    of coarse crockery for shaving; 2 old
    spinning wheels, and so forth.

    The widow declared owning no silver. She owed the nuns of the Hotel-
    Dieu 10 livres for the care of her cow. Pierre Poulin was in debt to
    the Bourget-Chandonnet family
    in the amount of 450 livres "by a debt signed before Mr Sanguinet
    and Dulaurent" on 9 March 1752.

    That which Charles left was not important; the important thing is
    what he brought: an honest life shared with his loved ones, his
    homeland and his first commanding officer,
    the Lord and Master of people and men.

    The Chandonnet descendants have multiplied quietly in Quebec and
    elsewhere.


    FAMILY NAME VARIATIONS

    Chandon, Chandone, Chandonne, Chandonnais and Leveille.

    END NOTES

    1) Records of Barolet, 13 July 1750; 20 September 1757.
    2) Records of Dubreuil, 10 June 1712; 8 November 1715.
    3) Records of Dulaurent, 26 March 1739; 30 June 1740; 20 March 1742;
    30 August 1747.
    4) Record of Pinguet, 13 December 1731.
    5) Adrien Bergeron, Le Grand Arrangement des Acadiens au Ouebec
    (1981), Vol.2, p. 212-217.
    6) Albert Dauzat, DENFPF (1951), p,107.
    7) Rene Jette, DFO (1983), p.221.
    8) Andre Lafontaine, RAVO 1716 & 1744 (1983), pp.17, 156.
    9) ___. DBC, Vol.11, p.192. Thomas-Aime
    10) ___.Histoire et Archeologie (Ministry of Indian Affairs and of
    the North), Vol.17, p.366, no 1527. Before me Gilbert de Godefus,
    comes one Francois Morin hired to
    square off a house for Andre Chandonnet. This house of 30 x 25 x 9,
    with 8 openings, 6 for windows and 2 for doors; 150 beams and 300
    pine planks.
    11) ___. IJDCSNF 1717-1760, Vol.5, pp. 6, 39, 65.
    12) ___. RAPQ, Vol.51, pp. 82, 98, 99.
    13) ___. RHAF, Vol.l. DD. 200-201, 210-212, 234. The history of the
    Abbot T.-A. Chandonnet.

    Charles married BOURGET Elisabeth on 13 Jun 1712 in Church of Notre-Dame, Rue Coullard, New France. Elisabeth (daughter of LAVALLEE Pierre Bourget Dit and Lavallee) Marie Jean (Bourget Dit) was born on 28 Jun 1694 in Beaumont, QC. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  BOURGET Elisabeth was born on 28 Jun 1694 in Beaumont, QC (daughter of LAVALLEE Pierre Bourget Dit and Lavallee) Marie Jean (Bourget Dit).

    Notes:

    Occupation: Homemaker
    Religion: Catholic
    Alias/AKA: Isabelle

    ELISABETH BOURGET

    Jacques Turgeon, son of the Percheron Charles and of Pasquiere
    Lefebvre, was married at Beaumont on 26 November 1704, to Marie Jean,
    widow of Pierre Bourget dit
    Lavallee, mother of 4 children: Pierre, Elisabeth, Marie-Francoise
    and Marie-Madeleine. Elisabeth Bourget was born on 28 June 1694 at
    Beaumont where she was baptized
    two days later by the Recollet Joseph Remy and held at the baptismal
    font by Jean Cecile and Elisabeth Drouet.

    How to explain the meeting between Charles Chandonnet and Elisabeth
    Bourget in 1712 at Quebec? The 18-year old orphan was perhaps working
    as a maid for a family in
    the capital. At the home of Jean Giron? On 10 June, Elisabeth and
    Charles required the services of the notary Jean-Etienne Dubreuil to
    settle the terms of their marriage
    contract. At the time of this official ceremony, Elisabeth was
    called Isabelle. And here are the elegant witnesses participating in
    the celebration on this auspicious Friday:
    Chevalier Charles Aloigny, soldier from Saint-Louis, dame Genevieve
    Macard, his wife; Louis Deschamps de Bois Hebert; Nicolas Tramerit,
    Sieur de Lafosse; Denis
    Caffier, Sergeant; Jean Giron, bourgeois, and Charlotte de Chavigny,
    his wife in a second marriage.

    Charles endowed his bride "with a prefixed dowry of 1,000 livres".
    The promised and reciprocal dowry would be 600 livres. This was
    regal. Elisabeth's step-father hurried
    to give his step-daughter 30 minots of wheat and 10 cords of
    firewood. Elisabeth's wedding basket was overflowing! The action took
    place on Rue Couillard, at the house
    of Jean Giron. All these fine people, even the witness Louis
    Chalifour, signed before the apprehensive Isabelle. She did not know
    how to write.

    On Monday, 13 June 1712, there was the celebration of the wedding at
    the church of Notre-Dame. In those days a soldier had to obtain
    permission to marry. Thus, vicar
    general Des Maizerets had delivered a formal decree permitting this
    marriage, as had also Governor Philippe de Rigaud de Vaudreuil.
    Pastor Thomas Thiboult blessed this
    union in the presence of the witnesses recorded in the registry:
    Nicolas Framery (Tramerit) dit Lafosse, a Champenois friend of
    Charles; Denis Caffier dit Laplinterie, a
    sergeant in the company d'Eagly.

    In the census of Quebec, in 1716, the Chandonnets lived on Rue
    Couillard in the Upper Town, between neighbors Jean Badeau and Thomas
    Lemarier. The census taker
    recorded the age of Charles Chandonnet dit Leveille at 42 years.
    Already 2 children were living at their home: Charlotte and Marie-
    Marthe.

    Such was the beginning of the Chandonnet family in the heart of the
    city of Quebec, at the beginning of the eighteenth century.

    Children:
    1. Chandonne' Charlotte-Angelique
    2. Chandonne' Marie-Charlotte was born on 09 Jun 1713; died on 21 Mar 1750 in Quebec, New France.
    3. Chandonne' Charles III. was born in 1714.
    4. Chandonne' Marie-Marthe was born in 1716.
    5. Chandonne' Charles II. was born on 04 Apr 1718 in Quebec, Canada.
    6. Chandonne' Andre was born on 14 Apr 1720; died on 30 Jun 1797.
    7. Chandonne' Marie-Elisabeth was born on 01 Mar 1722.
    8. Chandonne' Marie-Madeleine was born on 29 Mar 1724; died on 10 Jan 1730.
    9. Chandonne' Anne was born on 07 Mar 1726.
    10. Chandonne' Marie-Anne was born on 15 Feb 1728; died on 23 May 1733.
    11. Chandonne' Antoine was born on 23 Sep 1729; died on 28 May 1730.
    12. 1. Chandonne' Jean Baptiste was born on 25 Jun 1732; died on 02 May 1733.
    13. Chandonne' Marie-Joseph was born on 01 Jul 1734.
    14. Chandonne' Etienne was born on 04 Sep 1738 in Quebec; died on 08 Feb 1830 in St Pierre, Nicolet, Quebec.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Chandonne' Gatien was born in 1646 in St-Calais, Diox, Du Mans, Maine.

    Gatien married LEGUEAY Marguerite in 1677. Marguerite was born in 1650. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 5.  LEGUEAY Marguerite was born in 1650.
    Children:
    1. 2. Chandonne' Charles I. was born in 1678 in St Calais, Lemans, Maine, France; died on 28 Jun 1756 in Quebec, Canada.

  3. 6.  LAVALLEE Pierre Bourget Dit was born in 1664 in Saintes Saintonge Maritime, France; died on 22 Sep 1699 in PQ, Canada.

    Notes:

    Occupation: Cooper, Maker of casks or wooden barrels

    Pierre married Lavallee) Marie Jean (Bourget Dit in 1691. Marie (daughter of VEIN Vivien Jean-Dit and DROUET Elizabeth Jean) was born in 1669. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  4. 7.  Lavallee) Marie Jean (Bourget Dit was born in 1669 (daughter of VEIN Vivien Jean-Dit and DROUET Elizabeth Jean).
    Children:
    1. LAVALLEE Marie-Francoise Borget Dit
    2. LAVALLEE Marie-Madeleine Bourget Dit
    3. LAVALLEE Pierre Bourget Dit
    4. 3. BOURGET Elisabeth was born on 28 Jun 1694 in Beaumont, QC.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  VEIN Vivien Jean-Dit was born in 1618 (son of VEIN Vivien and (Aurault) Suzanne Jean Herault); died in 1708.

    Vivien married DROUET Elizabeth Jean in 1650. Elizabeth was born in 1622; died in 1700. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  DROUET Elizabeth Jean was born in 1622; died in 1700.
    Children:
    1. 7. Lavallee) Marie Jean (Bourget Dit was born in 1669.