Marguerite Josephe Breau

Female 1735 - 1811  (76 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Marguerite Josephe Breau was born 10 Apr 1735, Cobequid, Acadia, New France (daughter of Jospeh A Breau and Ursule Bourg); died 10 Sep 1811, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States; was buried 11 Sep 1811, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States.

    Marguerite married Simon Henry [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Marguerite Josèpthe Henry was born 2 Oct 1777, Bonaventure, Quebec, Canada; was christened 8 Mar 1778, Sainte Anne De Ritigouche Catholic,Carleton,Bonaventure,Quebec; died Deceased.
    2. Grégoire François Henry was born 1764, Bonaventure, Bonaventure, Québec, Canada; died 1 Aug 1839, New Brunswick, Canada.
    3. Marie Magloire Henry was born 30 Sep 1771, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Brittany, France; died 19 Jul 1843, St-Louis-de-Kent (St-Louis), Kent, Nouveau-Brunswick; was buried 7 Aug 1843, Saint-Louis, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Jospeh A Breau was born 1712, New Brunswick, Canada (son of Antoine Breaux and Marguerite Dugas); died 5 May 1782, Nantes, Loire Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France; was buried 1782, Nantes, Departement de la Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France.

    Notes:

    Joseph is the son of Antoine Brault and Marguerite Dugas. He married Ursule Bourg in 1735, in Cobequid, Colchester, Nova Scotia. He and his family were exiled to France where Urusle died shortly after arriving. Traveling together were:

    1) Joseph Brault, 47 years
    2) Ursule Bourg Brault, 46 years, died
    3) Ursule Brault, 18 years
    4) Francoise Brault, 15 years
    5) Luce Brault, 13 years
    6)Anne-Joseph (Marguerite-Josephe) Brault, (1736-1811) md Henry Simon
    7) Angelique Brault, 12 years
    8) Marie Brault, 8 years
    9) Rosalie Brault, 7 years
    10) Joseph Brault, 6 years
    11) Simon Joseph Brault, 2 years

    They were traveling on one of the "Cinq Paquebots Anglais" ("Five English Ships") - Yarmouth, Patience, Mathias, Restoration, John Samuel. They arrived in St-Malo on January 23, 1759.

    Note:
    They also are the parents of Marguerite-Josephe Brault. She was born in 1736, in Pisiquid, Acadie. She married Simon Henry on 7 January 1755, in Port La Joie, Ile St-Jean (PEI). She died on 22 September 1811, in Louisiana. She was buried in St-James.

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/145076909/joseph-brault

    Jospeh married Ursule Bourg About 1735, Cobequid, Acadia, New France. Ursule (daughter of Jean-Baptiste Bourg and Marie Catherine Barillot) was born 1713, Pisiquit, Acadia, New France; died 20 Feb 1759, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France; was buried , Cimetière de Rocabey Saint-Malo, Departement d'Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France . [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Ursule Bourg was born 1713, Pisiquit, Acadia, New France (daughter of Jean-Baptiste Bourg and Marie Catherine Barillot); died 20 Feb 1759, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France; was buried , Cimetière de Rocabey Saint-Malo, Departement d'Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France .

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/139682572/ursule-bourg

    Ursule is the daughter of Jean-Baptiste Bourg and Marie Beriault. She is the sister of Joseph Bourg and Alexandre Bourg, who were also on the boat with their families. Ursule died at the age of 46, in the hospital in St Malo, shortly after arriving in France, during the Acadian expulsion. She was traveling with her family who all survived, except for her youngest son:

    1) Joseph Brault, 47 years
    2) Ursule Bourg Brault, 46 years, died
    3) Ursule Brault, 18 years
    4) Francoise Brault, 15 years
    5) Luce Brault, 13 years
    6)Anne-Joseph (Marguerite-Josephe) Brault, (1736-1811) md Henry Simon
    7) Angelique Brault, 12 years
    8) Marie Brault, 8 years
    9) Rosalie Brault, 7 years
    10) Joseph Brault, 6 years
    11) Simon Joseph Brault, 2 years

    They were traveling on one of the "Cinq Paquebots Anglais" ("Five English Ships") - Yarmouth, Patience, Mathias, Restoration, John Samuel. They arrived in St-Malo on January 23, 1759.

    Note:
    They are also the parents of Marguerite-Josephe Brault. She was born in 1736, in Pisiquid, Acadie. She married Simon Henry on 7 January 1755, in Port La Joie, Ile St-Jean (PEI). She died on 22 September 1811, in Louisiana. She was buried in St-James.

    Children:
    1. 1. Marguerite Josephe Breau was born 10 Apr 1735, Cobequid, Acadia, New France; died 10 Sep 1811, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States; was buried 11 Sep 1811, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Antoine Breaux was born About 1690, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France (son of Antoine Breaux père and Marguerite Babin); died Deceased.

    Antoine married Marguerite Dugas Marguerite (daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marie Jeanne Guilbeaux) was born 1692; died From About 1715 to 1787. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Marguerite Dugas was born 1692 (daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marie Jeanne Guilbeaux); died From About 1715 to 1787.
    Children:
    1. 2. Jospeh A Breau was born 1712, New Brunswick, Canada; died 5 May 1782, Nantes, Loire Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France; was buried 1782, Nantes, Departement de la Loire-Atlantique, Pays de la Loire, France.

  3. 6.  Jean-Baptiste Bourg was born About 1684, Port Royal, Acadia, New France (son of Jean Bourg and Marguerite Martin); died 22 Feb 1757, Port Lajoie, Île Saint-Jean, Acadia, Canada; was buried , Port-la-Joye Cemetery Rocky Point, Queens County, Prince Edward Island, Canada .

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/145075758/jean-baptiste-bourg

    Jean-Baptiste is the son of Jean Bourg (1646-) and Marguerite Martin (1644-1707). He is the grandson of Antoine Bourg and Antoinette Landry. He married (1) Marie Beriault in 1706, in Cobequid, Acadie. They are the parents of the following:

    1) Alexandre (1709-1759) md Ursule Hebert
    2) Joseph (1711-1758) md Marie-Josephe Henry
    3) Ursule (1714-1759) md Joseph Brault
    4) Francois (1717-1759) md Marie-Josephe Hebert

    He married (2) Francoise Aucoin in about 1719 in Acadie. They are the parents of the following:

    1) Francoise (1720-) md Paul Doiron
    2) Marie-Josephe (1729-) md Prosper Landry

    Jean-Baptiste married Marie Catherine Barillot Marie (daughter of Nicholas Barillot and Martine Hébert) was born About 1687, Pisiguit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; died About 1718, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Marie Catherine Barillot was born About 1687, Pisiguit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada (daughter of Nicholas Barillot and Martine Hébert); died About 1718, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 3. Ursule Bourg was born 1713, Pisiquit, Acadia, New France; died 20 Feb 1759, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France; was buried , Cimetière de Rocabey Saint-Malo, Departement d'Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France .


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Antoine Breaux père was born 1666 (son of Vincent Brault and Marie Jeanne Bourg); died 1704, Pisiquit, Acadie, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    Antoine père, oldest son of Vincent born at Port-Royal in c1666, married Marguerite, daughter of Antoine Babin and Marie Mercier, probably at Port-Royal in c1687 and settled at Minas and Pigiguit. Between 1688 and the late 1720s, Marguerite gave Antoine 11 children, five sons and six daughters. Five of their daughters married into the Benoit, Blanchard, Darois, and Arseneau families. All five of Antoine's sons created their own families.

    Oldest son Antoine, fils, born probably at Minas in c1688, married Marguerite, daughter of Abraham Dugas and Jeanne Guilbeau, at Grand-Pré in November 1710 and settled at Pigiguit before moving on to Cobeguit. According to genealogist Stephen A. White, between 1712 and 1734, Marguerite gave Antoine, fils 10 children, seven sons and three daughters. Other records give them two more sons. Two of their daughters married into the Aucon, Guilbeau, and Bourg families. All of Antoine, fils's sons, however many there were, created their own families.

    Antoine, père's second son Alexandre, born probably at Minas in the mid-1690s, married Marie, another daughter of Abraham Dugas and Jeanne Guilbeau and widow of René Landry, in c1716 (Bona Arsenault says c1720) probably at Pigiguit and settled there. According to Arsenault, between 1725 and 1740, Marie gave Alexandre four sons, but other records give the couple a fifth son. The British deported the family to Maryland in 1755. Four of Alexandre's sons emigrated to Louisiana from Maryland in 1766 and 1768.

    Antoine, père's third son Jean, born probably at Minas in c1699, married Anne, daughter of Charles Gautrot and Françoise Rimbault, in c1722 perhaps at Minas and settled at Rivière-aux-Canards. Bona Arsenault insists that Jean was a son of Antoine's brother Pierre, but Stephen White says otherwise. According to Arsenault, between 1723 and 1737, Anne gave Jean 10 children, four sons and six daughters, including a set of twins, and that Jean and his family were at Port-Toulouse, Île Royale, in 1752. White says Jean died at Minas in February 1747, in his late 40s. A French official counted Anne, "widow of Jean Braud," and six of their children--Joseph, age 26; Marie, age 22; Ermant [Amand], age 20; Anne, age 18; Marguerite, age 15; and Madeleine, age 14--at Port-Toulouse in February 1752. The family evidently escaped the British in 1758 and sought refuge on the Gulf of St. Lawrence shore. Two of Jean's daughters married into the Petitpas and Guédry families. At least one of his sons created his own family.

    Antoine, père's fourth son Pierre le jeune, born at Minas in the mid-1700s, married Marguerite, daughter of Claude Gautrot and Marie Thériot, at Grand-Pré in June 1726 and likely remained there. According to Bona Arsenault, the Pierre who married Marguerite Gautrot was sans doute son of Pierre Breau and Anne Melanson and was born in c1720; White is followed here. Between 1733 and 1748, Marguerite gave Pierre at least five children, three sons and two daughters. The British deported most of the family to Maryland in 1755. Their second son, however, was deported to Virginia, sent on to England in 1756, and repatriated to France in 1763. According to Stephen White, Pierre died before July 1763, perhaps in Maryland. Arsenault says Pierre died at Québec in February 1767. White, again, is followed here. Pierre's widow Marguerte, their oldest son, and their two daughters emigrated to Louisiana from Maryland in 1768. Their second son emgrated to Louisiana from France in 1785. Pierre's daughters married into the Lejeune and Orillion dit Champagne families in the Spanish colony. His two surviving sons also created their own families.

    Antoine, père's fifth and youngest son Charles, born probably at Minas in the early 1700s, married Claire, daughter of Alexandre Trahan and Marie Pellerin, at Grand-Pré in November 1729 and settled there and at L'Assomption, Pigiguit. According to Bona Arsenault, between 1735 and 1750, Claire gave Charles six children, a son and four daughters. Other records give the couple two more sons. The British deported the family to Maryland in 1755. Colonial officials counted the family at Port Tobacco on the lower Potomac in July 1763. Charles died in Maryland after 1763, and his widow Claire took two of their sons and three of their daughters to Louisiana from Maryland in 1767-68. Also going with her were one of her son's widows and three of the son's children. Claire died at Fort San Luìs de Natchez on the Mississippi afar above Baton Rouge soon after the family reached the remote settlement. One of the daughters married into the Benoit and Cormier families on the river and the western prairies, and the other two became Ursuline nuns at New Orleans. Two of Charles's three sons, one of them posthumously, created their own families in the Spanish colony.

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    Antoine Brault
    Wife: Marguerite (Babin) Brault

    Antoine was born in Port Royal Acadia around 1666. He was the son of Vincent Breau and Marie Bourg. Marguerite was born in 1670. Antoine and Marguerite were married in Port Royal, Acadia, New France about 1687. Antoine and Marguerite are Acadians.

    They had twelve children: Marie Ann 1688, Antoine (Pierre) 1690, Madeleine 1692, Francoise 1693, Alexandre 1695-1697, Jean 1699, Marguerite 1701, Cecile 1704, Breau 1706, Pierre 1708, Anne 1708, Charles 1710. All the children were born in Acadia.

    Antoine married Marguerite Babin About 1687, Port Royal, Acadia, New France. Marguerite (daughter of Antoine Babin and Marie Angelique Mercier) was born About 1670, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died 12 Mar 1716, Pisquit, Hants, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Marguerite Babin was born About 1670, Port Royal, Acadia, New France (daughter of Antoine Babin and Marie Angelique Mercier); died 12 Mar 1716, Pisquit, Hants, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. Alexandre Breau was born About 1695, Cobequid, Acadia, New France; died 1739.
    2. Charles Breaux was born From 1701 to 1705; died From 1764 to 1768, Port Tobacco, Charles, Maryland, United States.
    3. Francoise Breau was born About 1693, Cobequid, Acadia, New France; died 1758, At Sea in route to France; was buried , Body buried at sea, Specifically: Atlantic Ocean.
    4. 4. Antoine Breaux was born About 1690, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; died Deceased.

  3. 10.  Abraham Dugas was born 1662, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of Abraham Dugas and Marie-Marguerite Doucet); died 3 May 1720, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 3 May 1720, St Jean Baptiste, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Abraham married Marie Jeanne Guilbeaux Marie (daughter of Pierre Guilbeaux and Catherine-Jeanne Theriot) was born From 1670 to 1682, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 3 May 1730, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  4. 11.  Marie Jeanne Guilbeaux was born From 1670 to 1682, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada (daughter of Pierre Guilbeaux and Catherine-Jeanne Theriot); died 3 May 1730, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. 5. Marguerite Dugas was born 1692; died From About 1715 to 1787.
    2. Joseph Dugas, I was born 1690, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died 4 Sep 1733, Louisbourg, Cape Breton, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 5 Sep 1733, Louisbourg Louisbourg, Cape Breton County, Nova Scotia, Canada.

  5. 12.  Jean Bourg was born 1649, Port Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of Antoine Bourg and Antoinette Landry); died 24 Apr 1707, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/161690367/jean-bourg

    Jean married Marguerite Martin About 1667, Cobequid, Acadia, Canada. Marguerite was born 1639, Port Royal, Acadia; died 24 Apr 1707, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 25 Apr 1707, Garrison Graveyard Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada . [Group Sheet]


  6. 13.  Marguerite Martin was born 1639, Port Royal, Acadia; died 24 Apr 1707, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; was buried 25 Apr 1707, Garrison Graveyard Annapolis Royal, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, Canada .

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/145115246/marguerite-martin

    Marguerite is the daughter of Pierre Martin and Catherine Vigneault. She was born about 1644. Marguerite married Jean Bourg in 1667. They are the parents of the following:
    1) Anne (1668-) md Pierre Thibodeau
    2) Marie (1678-) md Charles Robichaud
    3) Elisabeth (1678-) md Jean Gaudet
    4) Catherine (1681-) md Jean Turpin
    5) Jean-Baptiste (1684-1757) md (a) Francoise Aucoin and (b) Marie Beriault
    6) Louis (1690-) md Cecile Michel

    Children:
    1. Anne Marie Bourg was born 1668, Cobequid, Truro, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 16 Feb 1668, Cherbourg, Manche, Normandy, France; died 20 Oct 1752, Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. Marie Claire Bourg was born 1672, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died 30 May 1747, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; was buried 30 May 1747, Port Royal, Acadia, New France.
    3. 6. Jean-Baptiste Bourg was born About 1684, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died 22 Feb 1757, Port Lajoie, Île Saint-Jean, Acadia, Canada; was buried , Port-la-Joye Cemetery Rocky Point, Queens County, Prince Edward Island, Canada .
    4. Elisabeth Bourg was born About 1676, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada; died After 24 April 1735.

  7. 14.  Nicholas Barillot was born 1 Jan 1646, Saint-Servan, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne, France; was christened 1646, Dijon, Côte-d'Or, Bourgogne, France; died 25 Jan 1725, Pisiquit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, New France; was buried , Notre Dame de l'Assomption Pisiguit, Acadie, Nouvelle - Écosse, Canada.

    Notes:

    The Unbelievable Odyssey of the Barriaults (by James Carten, 1999, from the Acadian-Cajun Archives)Edited for this site by A. Côté 3 April 2008. The name Barriault has given place, since the arrival of the ancestor, Nicolas, in 1671, to many different [ortho]graphies: Barillaud, Barrios, Barillot, Bariault, Barriaux, Barilleaux, and even Bériau. All these variants return back to one forefather, Nicolas Barillot, born in France ca.1642 and married to Martine Hébert, daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Gaudet. Firstly settled in Port-Royal, he becomes, a few years later, one of the pioneers of Pisiguit, today Windsor, N.S. At the 1714 census, Nicolas Barillot is said to be a farmer and a landclearer, in the new parish of l'Assomption, at Pisiguit. A year before, the Treaty of Utrecht gave the Acadian Peninsula, as well as Newfoundland and the Hudson's Bay to England.[see note] The fact that Port-Royal, renamed Annapolis-Royal, became the capital of English Acadia, and since which is found strong English insurgence, surely incited Nicolas to settle further to the east, next to Pisiguit.
    Five years later, 1719, begins the construction of the fortress Louisbourg, at Cape Breton. Already many Acadian families are leaving to settle at the Ile-St. Jean (Prince Edward Island) and at Cape Breton, where they are assured to be in the presence of French troops. Nicolas, though, prefers to remain at Pisiguit, where he became, forcebly, a subject of the new King of England, Georges I, who had just been crowned.
    At the 1714 census, Nicolas Barillot has already ten children, of which four are sons; Antoine, b. 1697, Nicolas, b. 1703, Jacques, b. 1705, and Pierre, b. 1707. He had another son, Jean, the older, b. ca. 1685, but seems to be deceased at the moment of the census. He also had five daughters; Françoise, b. 1683, Marie, b. 1684, Catherine, b. 1687, Marguerite, b. 1689, and Madeleine, b. 1696. The descendants of his sons Antoine and Nicolas will settle in the region of St. Charles-de-Bellechasse, after the deportation. Those of Pierre will be principally in the Baie des Chaleurs in New Brunswick. Born at Pisiguit in 1707, Pierre Barillot, son of the forefather Nicolas, married in 1729 Véronique Girouard, daughter of Pierre Girouard and Marie Doiron, Véronique, who was born at St. Charles-des-Mines, was 17. Pierre was 22. They had baptized eight children at the church of l'Assomption-de-Pisiguit. Then, in 1750, doubting very much the eminent attack of the English, Pierre Barillot judged it prudent to transport his family to the Ile-St. Jean, remaining under the French administration. The family set up at the Rivière-du-Moulin-à-Scie where two other children were born. In August 1755 the storm broke loose in all of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. The Acadians are arrested, imprisoned, dispossessed then deported into the ports of New England: Boston, New London, New York, Philadelphia. They arrive by flows, sick and extenuated, to Maryland, to the Carolinas, Virginia and Georgia. The Iles Royale and St. Jean remained French, but in 1758, a second wave of deportation arose. The inhabitants are loaded aboard ships bound for England, where the prisons of Liverpool, London and Southampton awaited them. For Pierre Barillot and his wife Véronique, it turned out to be a tragic voyage, one that they would not see the end [of]. Both died while crossing the Atlantic. Their son, Olivier Barillot, then 19, will be imprisoned in England. After the Treaty of Paris in 1763, he returne[d] to France. His brother, Jean-Baptiste, forefather of the Barilleaux of Louisiana, took refuge in Cherbourg, then at St. Malo, along with his sisters Agathe, Thérèse and Euphrosine. Olivier hurried to rejoin them. They settled in the parish of Pleudihan, in Brittany, where they were still yet in 1772. Their uncle, Nicolas Barillot, brother of Pierre, had just died before the 1755 Deportation, at Port-Toulouse, Ile Madame, Cap-Breton. Their uncle Antoine Barillot took refuge in Québec. He was at St. Antoine-de-Bellechasse, in 1758. Finally their uncle Jacques Barillot had less luck. He was deported to England in 1758. He was at La Rochelle, in France, in 1761/62. A few years later, we will find him in French Guyana in South America. But, getting back to Olivier Barillot, son of Pierre, refugee at Pleudihan, Brittany, with his brother, Jean-Baptiste and his sisters. It is in the Breton village that he will marry, ca. 1763, an unfortunate companion of exile, Anastasie Boudrot, daughter of Jean Boudrot and of Agathe Thibodeau. Two years later, after the birth of a daughter, Anne-Marie, in 1765, Anastasie Boudrot will pass away. Three years later, the (10th of May 1768) 10-05-1768, this time at St. Servan-de-St. Malo, Olivier Barillot marries, a second time, another exiled Acadian, Élisabeth Landry, daughter of Pierre Landry and of Anne Thériot, of the Rivière-aux-Canards. A first child, Charles-Olivier Barillot, will be born to this second union, the (22nd of March 1771) 22-03-1771. Another son, Jean-Baptiste, will see the light of day two years later. In the spring of 1774, Olivier, his wife and their three children decide to re-locate. They are among thirty Acadians who were aboard two goëlettes (schooners) of Charles Robin and his brothers from Jersey, who recruited fishermen and workers for their fishing settlements and commerce in Gaspé. Jim Carten[Source]
    NOTE
    The Treaty of Utretcht did and could not "give" any land to England, since the French never "owned" the land, nor did the Original people ever cede, convey, or sell any of it to the French. [return to paragraph]
    Premier Ancêtre Nicolas Barillot-Barriault : nait en 1646 dans le Poitou au sud de la Normandie, il est venu du Berry pour s'installer en 1671 à Port-royal, Nouvelle-Écosse (Acadie), aujourd'hui Annapolis Royal. Vers 1680 il s'installe èa Pisiguit, Nouvelle-Écosse, aujourd'hui Windsor, Nova Scotia ou ils élevèrent leur 10 enfants; 6 filles et 4 garçons. en 1686 ils apparaissent dans le recensement. Autre information sur Acestry.com; Nicolas Barillot dit Bayol - An Acadian Mystery. In some geneology sites Nicolas Barillot (dit Bayol) is said to be the son of Nicolas Bayol and Barbe Bajolet and the brother of Rose Bayol. You might get a hit for Nicolas Barillot dit Bayol. Bayol is a variation of Bajolet. For some reason tha variations are extended to include Barillot but the Barillot name was already well established in France at the time. ( Nicolas Bayol b. 1605). Marie-Barbe Bajolet (b. 1608) was the daughter of one Antoine Bajolet or Bailolet (Bayol) who worked as a muleteer for Marie de Medici. Some sites list Nicholas Bayol as being married to Barbe Bajolet but the latter was married three times and in all cases to men of some power and wealth. Her marriages were well documented and so was the birth of all of her children. The Isaac Pesseley (her first husband) family was connected to the Baiolet - Bajolet. family. Barbe Bajolet's godparents were Pesseleys. All we know of Nicholas Bayol is that he sailed to Acadia on the St-Jehan with Marie-Barbe Bajolet's first husband Isaac Pesseley, in 1636. It is more likely that Nicholas Bayol was also a Baiolet -Bajolet, possibly a brother or a relative of Marie-Barbe Bajolet but certainly not her husband. We know that Bayol returned to France to collect his 9 year old daughter Rose in 1638. (Marie-Barbe Bayol, Rose Bayon). Marie-Barbe Bajolet married Isaac Pesseley in 1629, and was pregnant with her first child with Pesseley the very year of Rose Bayon's birth. In any event Bayol returned to Acadia with Rose and we never hear from him again. It is a certainty that both Bayol and Pesseley's widow were both in Port Royal in the year prior to Nicholas Barriault's Birth in France. Pesseley was killed in 1645. In 1646, Bajolet returned to France and married Martin Lefebvre. (1647). (Lefebvre died in 1648) The only remote possibility of Bajolet and Bayol being Barriault's mother is if she had been impregated by Bayol in Acadia just prior to her return to France but that is speculation. Nicholas Barillot dit Bayol a bastard son of Nicholas Bayol and Barbe Bajolet? Then why the name Barillot? Was the unwanted child raised by a Barillot family in France? Nicolas Bayol and Isaac Pesseley knew each other having sailed together as crew on the St-Jehan. Pesseley's wife Bajolet had not sailed with them on that voyage. Bayol would have known the Pesseley Bajolet couple quite well. It is more likely, once again, that Nicholas Bayol, given the similarity in name was more likely a relative of the Bajolets. Marie Barbe Bajolet married a third time in 1654. With her third husband and the children of her two preceding marriages, Barbe Bajolet returned to Acadia. Her family settled on a fief which was conceded to them by Charles de la Tour. A few years later, widowed again, thrice-widowed Barbe asked a vessel from Boston to give passage for her and her family to Port-Royal. It would be soon after that her daughter Marie Pesseley would marry Jean Pitre. There is no mention of a connection to Rose Bayol who we know to be Nicholas Bayol's daughter. So any connection to Nicholas becomes more and more distant. DNA testing has hinted that Rose Bayol was from Afro-Asian extraction. Was Nicholas Bayol black?
    Was he, in fact, a slave or a servant who simply carried the Bayol name as many other slaves carried the names of the families they served? It would explain the lack of interest on Marie-Barbe Bajolet's part in Rose Bayol who also lived in Port Royal. Nicholas Barillot was born in 1646 and arrived at Port Royal on the Oranger in 1671. Nicholas Bayol was most likely already dead by then. His daughter Rose Bayol had been married to Pierre Comeau since 1649. Marie-Barbe Bajolet, a widow for the third time was living alone in Port Royal. Of her 8 children only 2 were in Acadia and 6 were in France. How does a man like Barillot end up on the


    Nicholas married Martine Hébert Abt 1682, Port Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada. Martine (daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Ann Gaudet) was born About 1665, Port Royal, Acadia, New France; died About 1708, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France. [Group Sheet]


  8. 15.  Martine Hébert was born About 1665, Port Royal, Acadia, New France (daughter of Étienne Hébert and Marie Ann Gaudet); died About 1708, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France.
    Children:
    1. Marie Francoise Barrillot was born About 1684, Port-Royal, Acadia, New France; died Deceased; was buried , Garrison Graveyard, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. Marguerite Barillot was born About 1689, Pisiguit, Acadia, New France; died After September 1752, Rocky Point, Queens, Prince Edward Island, Canada; was buried , Unknown.
    3. 7. Marie Catherine Barillot was born About 1687, Pisiguit, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; died About 1718, Grand Pré, Kings County, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    4. Antoine Barillot was born 1697, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; died 22 Jan 1758, Saint-Charles-de-Bellechasse, Bellechasse, Quebec, Canada; was buried 23 Jan 1758, Saint-Charles-de-Bellechasse, Bellechasse, Quebec, Canada.