Pierre Cormier

Male 1734 - 1818  (83 years)


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  • Name Pierre Cormier 
    Born 3 Aug 1734  Beaubassin,NS,Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Christened 3 Aug 1734  Beaubassin,NS,Cang Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Died 24 Mar 1818 
    Buried 25 March 1818 
    Person ID I1561  OGrady Family Tree
    Last Modified 22 Jun 2020 

    Father Pierre Cormier, II,   b. About 1704, Beaubassin,NB,Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. About 1750  (Age ~ 46 years) 
    Relationship Birth 
    Mother Cecile Thibodeau,   b. 5 Nov 1712, Grand Pre, Acadie, Nouvelle-France Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. abt. 1787, Memramcook, Westmorland, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 74 years) 
    Relationship Birth 
    Married 17 Jul 1730  Grand Pre,NS,Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F1713  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Anne Gaudet,   b. 12 Sep 1716,   d. Oct 1806, Memramcook,NB,Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 90 years) 
    Married About 1755  Tintamarre,, Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Children 
    +1. Pierre Cormier,   b. Abt 1756, Memramcook, Westmorland, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 31 Aug 1824, Memramcook, Westmoreland, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age ~ 68 years)  [Birth]
    +2. Francois Cormier,   b. 1758, Carleton, Kent, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 31 Jul 1832, Barachois, Beaubassin East, Westmorland, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 74 years)  [Birth]
    +3. Marie Anne Cormier,   b. 22 Nov 1762, L'Islet, Quebec, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 19 Mar 1817, Pokemouche Landing, Allardville, Gloucester, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 54 years)  [Birth]
    +4. Claude Cormier dit Glaude,   b. 1765, Quebec, Quebec, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location,   d. 31 Jul 1832, Barachois, Beaubassin East, Westmorland, New Brunswick, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location  (Age 67 years)  [Birth]
    Last Modified 22 Jun 2020 
    Family ID F1712  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Notes 
    • Pierre was a prisoner at Fort Cumberland, escaped and was a refugee ay St John River in 1756. Then to Islet and Kamouraska from 1758-1767, then to St Anne in 1767.


      CORMIER, PIERRE, settler; b. 3 Aug. 1734 in Rivière-des-Héberts (near River Hebert), N.S., son of Pierre Cormier and Cécile Thibodeau (Thibaudeau); d. 24 March 1818 in Memramcook, N.B.

      Pierre Cormier?s family moved about 1750 to the French-controlled side of the Chignecto Isthmus, perhaps in response to the blandishments of Jean-Louis Le Loutre*, and in 1752 they were living at Aulac (N.B.). Early in 1755 Pierre married Anne Gaudet, daughter of Augustin Gaudet and Agnès Chiasson of nearby Tintemarre (Tantramar). Anne was often called Nannette; hence Pierre came to be nicknamed Pierrot à Nannette. They were to have five sons and two daughters.

      Cormier?s repute derives from the colourful tradition of his escape from the British on the eve of the Acadian deportation of 1755 [see Charles Lawrence*]. There is more than one version of this tradition, but the greatest credibility may be given that recorded in 1877 by the genealogist Placide Gaudet*, who had the advantage of consulting many of Cormier?s grandchildren. According to Gaudet?s account, Pierrot, taken prisoner with his brothers at Jolic?ur (Jolicure, N.B.), was put aboard a Carolina-bound deportation vessel but slipped overboard the night before its departure. By creeping through the tall hay on shore he attained an aboiteau guarded by British soldiers and, when their backs were turned, clambered onto the butt of a timber over the water. Swinging from one butt end to another, he succeeded in crossing the aboiteau unobserved. On the other bank he again crept through the fields until he was able to break for the woods. After narrowly evading a band of soldiers tracking him with a dog, he arrived at an extent of water separating him from an Acadian encampment. Once recognized he was soon crossed over. Learning from these families that his own had fled the night before toward Quebec, Pierrot immediately left in search of them. The Cormiers were reunited at Sainte-Anne (near Fredericton, N.B.), where they remained until Robert Monckton*?s raids persuaded them to move to Kamouraska (Que.), likely in 1758.

      According to another tradition, Pierrot, Jacques, and François Cormier were serving in the militia at the fall of Quebec in 1759. Subsequently they joined a French frigate at Pointe-Lévy (Lauzon and Lévis), lured with other young Acadians by promises of passage to France. After engagement with two British war vessels near the fîlets Jacques-Cartier, the frigate ran aground. Only about 60 of 160 crew members managed to swim ashore through the icy April waters, but these included the three Cormier brothers. This tradition likely refers to the encounter off Cap-Rouge between Jean Vauquelin* and Robert Swanton* in May 1760.

      Pierre Cormier and Anne Gaudet resided at L?Islet (Que.) between 1761 and 1764, but about 1765 they returned to Sainte-Anne with his mother and four brothers. By July 1783 Pierrot had cleared 20 acres of a tract he had continuously occupied for 13 years. The Acadians of Sainte-Anne had not secured title to their farms, however, and grants to disbanded soldiers and loyalists were soon encroaching on what they considered to be their land. They deemed the small acreage reserved to them insufficient to support their families. Learning of vacant land on the west side of the Memramcook River, about 20 families removed there between autumn 1786 and summer 1787, including those of Pierre Cormier and four of his married children. Pierrot had meantime lost his Nannette, and his aged mother died during the trip.

      The vacant land at Memramcook had been granted to Joseph Goreham* and then sold to Joseph Frederick Wallet DesBarres*. On 5 June 1792 the Cormiers and others presented a memorial to the New Brunswick government complaining of the ?extravagant? demands of DesBarres?s assign, Mary Cannon*, and arguing that his land should be escheated and granted to them in consideration of the substantial improvements made during their occupation. Their efforts were thwarted by DesBarres and his agents, but it was not until after 1809 that they were turned out to find other places to live in the Memramcook valley.

      Stephen A. White

      AD, Charente-Maritime (La Rochelle), État civil, Beaubassin, 1712?48 (mfm. at CÉA). AN, Section Outre-mer, G1, 466, no.30. Arch. paroissiales, Saint-Thomas (Memramcook, N.-B.), Reg. des baptémes, mariages et sépultures (mfm. at CÉA). CÉA, Fonds Placide Gaudet, 1.28-6,1.33-7, 1.64-24; ?Notes généalogiques sur les familles acadiennes, c.1600?1900,? dossier Cormier-3. PANB, RG 10, RS108, Petition of William Anderson, 1785; Petition of Charles Bickle, 1785; Petition of French inhabitants of Dorchester, 1809; Petition of John Jouett, 1785; Petition of John Ruso, 1785; Petition of Joseph Sayre, 1786. PANS, RG 1, 409. Tanguay, Dictionnaire, 3: 129. Clément Cormier, ?La famille Cormier en Amérique,? L?Évangéline (Moncton, N.-B.), 8 août 1951: 4?5; 10 août 1951: 5. Placide Gaudet, ?La famille Cormier,? Le Moniteur acadien (Shédiac, N.-B.), 22, 29 janv. 1885.

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