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DUBE Mathurin

Male 1631 - 1695  (64 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  DUBE Mathurin was born in 1631 in Chapelle-Themer, France (son of DUBE Jean and SUZANNE Renee); died in 1695.

    Notes:

    Immigration: 1660, Quebec, New France Age: 29
    Occupation: Farmer
    Religion: Catholic

    Mathurin Dube

    It has been 3 and 1/4 centuries since the Poitevin, Mathurin Dube,
    left his native village of Chapelle-Themer to try his luck in New
    France. Since this time long ago, there have always been Dubes in
    Canada and there still remain some who perpetuate, from generation to
    generation, the ancestral line in this humble village in the Vendee.

    THE LAST OF THE DUBES IN CHAPELLE-THEMER

    In 1928 J.A. Dube, bookkeeper for the J.A. Larochelle firm of
    Quebec, began to search for the place of origin of his ancestors. (1)
    Thanks to the information provided by two highly esteemed
    genealogists of his time, Msgr Amedee Gosselin and Father Archange
    Godbout, the researcher succeeded in locating the small village which
    for a long time, he had dreamed of visiting. There, he was privileged
    to meet the last surviving relative from the French family of his
    Canadian ancestor: Jules Dube, son of Louis.

    Nine years later, J.A. Dube returned to Chapelle-Themer in order to
    renew his ties of friendship with his cousins from France. Alas!
    Jules had left for another world in 1934 at the age of 72, but his
    mother, the wife of Louis, still lived and the local population was
    getting ready to celebrate her 100th birth day. In reality the
    venerable ancestress had turned 100 on 28 September 1937, but the
    village celebration was on 3 October. On the road which leads to
    Sainte-Hermine a la Caillere, near Beau-Raisin, at the crest of the
    road going down to the village of Magnils (2), an arch of triumph
    carried these words: "Honor to our centenarian."

    "The small road, reports the author of the article, was changed into
    a lane of greenery and flowers. The village party held in her honor,
    that evening, took place in the large yard of Madame Dube and was a
    big success. It was there that Monsieur the Mayor, surrounded by all
    the council members and speaking for all his administrators, offered
    the centenarian the warmest congratulations. The musicians from la
    Chapelle and from Thire played selections in her honor. It appeared
    that Madame Dube herself was a part of the melody,"

    Born in the village of Magnils on 28 September 1837, Madame Dube was
    baptized two days later, made her first communion in 1847, was
    married on 14 July 1856, her husband died in 1924 and her son in
    1934. We do not know exactly when Madame Dube died, but there were
    still some Dubes who lived in the community of Chapelle-Themer,
    somewhere between Sainte-Hermine and Frontenay-le-Comte. Some
    Canadians who recently finished a pilgrimage to the land of their
    ancestors have confirmed this.

    SERVANT FOR MSGR DE LAVAL

    Mathurin Dube, the pioneer of the Canadian families bearing this
    name, arrived in New France around 1660, maybe even 1659, at the same
    time as Msgr de Laval, for whom he worked for several years. Even if
    the ancestor was not listed in the census of 1666 and 1667, it is
    certain that he lived in the Quebec region. On 22 June 1667 an act by
    notary Paul Vachon reveals that the bishop of Petree conceded his
    servant a piece of land, 3 arpents in frontage by half that in width,
    on the Ile d'Orleans, within the boundaries of the parish of Saint-
    Jean, facing the south bank of the Saint-Lawrence River. His
    neighbors were Pierre Michaud and Jacques Jahan.


    The first six children of Mathurin and Marie were born on the Ile
    d'Orleans: four of whom were baptized at Sainte Famille and the other
    two at Saint-Jean. It was in this last parish that the family was
    listed in the census of 1681. (6) The master of the house was said to
    be 50 years old, and his wife 27; five children were counted:
    Mathurin, Madeleine, Louis, Pierre and Charles. The ancestor still
    worked only 3 arpents of land and kept but 1 cow; his immediate
    neighbors were Jean Moirier (Amaury) and Rene Asseline (Ancelin).

    A little later, Mathurin signed 2 farming leases whose contracts
    were initialed at the home of notary Gilles Rageot. One, on 26
    September, 1684, on behalf of Francois Magdelaine Ruette d'Auteuil et
    de Monceaux, councillor and procurer general to the Sovereign
    Council; the other on 20 October, from Eleanore de Grandmaison, widow
    of Jacques Cailhaut de la Tesserie, former councillor to the same
    Council; all of this is to say that Mathurin was the farmer for these
    two important people, after having been the farmer for Msgr de Laval;
    this would also explain why he hardly had the time to enlarge the
    cleared portion of his own land.

    FARMER OF THE SEIGNEUR OF AUTEUIL

    The contract of 26 September marked the departure of Mathurin and
    his family. On 10 October he sold his land at Saint-Jean to Julien
    Dumont dit Lafleur. (7) By this time he had already crossed the river
    to work the land of the seigneur of Auteuil at Grand-Anse, in the
    seigneurie of la Pocatiere. Proud of his seven year lease, Dube
    housed his family near to the seigneurial manor where he could use
    the bakehouse, the barn, the stable, as well as work the land and the
    fields. He had as neighbors Guillaume Lizot to the northeast, and
    Monsieur de Saint-Denis to the southeast. The lease specified that
    the tenant was to cultivate the land, to seed half of it and to raise
    as many cows as he could.

    Mathurin Dube was the farmer of the seigneur of Auteuil when LeRouge
    surveyed this seigneurie in 1692. In his official report the latter
    wrote: "I have measured all the lands of the aforementioned
    seigneurie, both those of the domain and the conceded dwellings and
    those not conceded, namely first, the domain which begins at a
    boundary marker which I planted that separates the aforementioned
    seigneurie from that of Monsieur de Saint-Denis, and from the above-
    mentioned marker I measured 14 arpents to the river where the mill is
    built, and from the aforementioned river to the dwelling of Guillaume
    Lizot there are 9 arpents 9 perches, and at the end of this I drew a
    line from the northeast to the southeast to a small hill, the above-
    mentioned line making a separation from the previously mentioned
    seigneurie of Monsieur Auteil from the dwelling of Guillaume Lizot,
    and on the aforementioned line I planted 2 stone markers under which
    are buried some pieces of brick."

    Mathurin Dube had his last 2 children baptized at Sainte Anne-de-la-
    Pocatiere, but they seem to have died in infancy. However, 5 of his 6
    offspring had families of their own. "Mathurin Dube, wrote Leon Roy
    (9), had barely finished his lease with the seigneurs of Pocatiere
    when he died at about 64 years of age. He was buried at Riviere-
    Ouelle on 30 December 1695. Marie Campion, his spouse, died before 30
    December 1703. (10) Their sons Mathurin, Laurent, and Pierre
    established themselves in the first row of the seigneurie of
    Aulnaies, but the last apparently gave up his land to his brother
    Laurent before 1714 (no. 13 des Aulnaies). In 1723, son Pierre Dube
    had some property in the seigneurie of Lauzon and in 1728 he lived in
    the Montreal region, while his brother Louis lived in the parish of
    Notre-Dame-de-Liesse (of Riviere-Quelle). Their only sister,
    Madeleine, lived at Pocatiere until the death of her husband, Jean
    Miville (1672-1711)."

    NUMEROUS FAMILIES

    Even though ancestor Mathurin Dube had an average size family-at
    that time eight children was not considered large- the four sons who
    took wives did better in this respect than their father. Louis, the
    second son, was the champion with about 20 offspring. In 1719 at the
    age of 42, he married Marguerite Lebel in a second marriage, who was
    the same age as his eldest son, 19 years old. He began, so to speak,
    to raise a second family. Here are some details concerning the 8
    children of Mathurin Dube and Marie Campion:


    THE DUBES DIT DELORME

    Towards the end of the French regime a soldier, by the name of Jean
    Dube dit Delorme came from France, without doubt to participate in
    the defense of the colony threatened by the English army. After the
    conquest, Jean Dube settled down in the region of Richelieu. His act
    of marriage, inscribed in the registry of Saint-Denis on 13 January
    1766, indicates that he was the son of Pierre Dube's (sic) and of
    Marie Bourgette (Bourgatte or Bourgotte) and on that day married
    Marie-Anne Martin, born about 1741, daughter of Jean-Baptiste and of
    Marie-Anne Renaud dit Deslauriers. Jean Dube dit Delorme had been a
    merchant, and then a surgeon beginning in 1774. He died during the
    night of 28 or 29 March 1789 at Saint Denis and was buried in the
    same place on 30
    March. Six sons and seven daughters were the issue from this union.
    Three sons: Jean-Baptiste born in 1766, Joseph born in 1774 and
    Charles born in 1785, had descendants. Most of these families live
    today in the region of Saint-Hyacinthe. (11)



    ENDNOTES

    (1) This fact is reported in the journal Le Soleil of 16 February
    1938, by Madame Louis Dube.
    (2) These four small hamlets formed the commune de la Chapelle
    Themer: Fougeroux, La Jousse-Liniere, Les Magnils and l'Orbire.
    (3) Silvio Dumas, Les Filles du roi en Nouvelle-France, p 72.
    (4) Romain Becquet act of 28 August 1670. Becquet wrote Dubay
    instead of Dube and la chapelle de May instead of la Chapelle-Themer.
    Tanguay read la Chapelle Detrer from the marriage act of 3 September
    in the parish register of Sainte-Famille.
    (5) Sainte-Famille was the only parish on the lle d'Orleans at that
    time. The parish of Saint-Jean was not founded until 1679.
    (6) Benjamin Sulte, HCF, Volume 5, p 87.
    (7) Gilles Rageot, act of 10 October 1686.
    (8) Leon Roy, Les Terres de la Grande-Anse, des Aulnaies et du Port-
    Joly, p 147. The orthography of this "proces-verbal" in the old text
    has been modernized in order better understand it in todays
    publications.
    (11) (9) Ibid, p 147.
    (10) Etienne Janneau, act of 30 December 1703. On this same date
    notary Janneau wrote a privately recorded contract of marriage
    between Pierre Dube and Marie-Therese Boucher, in which he deposed
    Pierre as stating that he had no mother and father (orphelin).
    (11) Tanguay lists no variations on the name Dube, however Delorme
    is listed also as Sanscrainte (fearless). Most likely this name
    derived from the military background of Jean Dube dit Delorme.

    Died:
    Burial Dec 30, 1695, Riviere-Quelle, News France

    Mathurin married CAMPION Marie on 03 Sep 1670 in Ste-Famille Church, Ile D'Orleans, Montmorency Ile, PQ, Canada. Marie (daughter of CAMPION Pierre and HENAULT Marguerite) was born in 1654 in St-Malo, Brittany (Ille-Et-Vilaine), France; died on 30 Dec 1703. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Children:
    1. DUBE Marie Madeleine was born on 17 Sep 1673 in Ste-Famille, I'le D'Orleans, PQ, Canada; died before 25 Dec 1747 in Riviere Quelle, Kamouraska, PQ, Canada.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  DUBE Jean

    Jean married SUZANNE Renee. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  SUZANNE Renee
    Children:
    1. 1. DUBE Mathurin was born in 1631 in Chapelle-Themer, France; died in 1695.