Who was LOUIS MICHAUD ?






  Born between his brother, Pierre, the youngest, and his sister Élisabeth, Louis saw the light of day at the end of 1683 or at the beginning of 1684.  Since 1672, his mother Marie Ancelin, had given birth to a child every two years, without ever going beyond an interval of 35 months.  At this time, missionnaries who moved on both shores of the St. Lawrence river temporarily registered the baptisms on memories to retranscribe them thereafter in the registers of Quebec.  It is supposed that some were lost.  No trace either of the birth of this child.

  Since 1682, the family had left l'Ile-aux-Grues and had settled on the south shore of the St. Lawrence river.  On the 24 January 1683 took place a gathering of settlers to consider the building of the church of Cap-Saint-Ignace. Pierre Micheau promises to contribute four days of work, to supply 200 stakes to enclose the cemetary and in addition five rough planks which would ensure, with others, the preservation of the building.  On October 18, 1704, Marie Ancelin hands over to her son,  Louis, a piece of land of four arpents and 7 1/2 perches, situated in Greater Kamouraska, east of her own holdings.  A few lots had been granted to her to enable to settle her last two sons.  Louis is then ready to seek a wife whom he finds on Lauzon.  Françoise Levasseur accepts to leave her father, Laurent, and Marie Marchand, her mother, on October 22, 1708.  The young husband, in the presence of the notary Janneau, who draws up the marriage contract, declares his age : he is 24 years old.  His wife, Françoise, baptized on the december 2, 1691, is in her seventeenth year.

  Louis and Françoise will be happy parents of three children : André unfortunately deceased at the age of eighteen and buried in the cemetary in Kamouraska on June 12, 1730.  André's baptismal records as well of those of his brother, Louis, and his sister, Élisabeth, disappeared in the fire which destroyed the Kamouraska registers for 1709 to 1727.  On February 4, 1717, because of his family connection with his nephew, Louis is a witness to the guardianship agreement of Antoine, son of his brother Joseph, widowed after the death of Catherine Dionne, his first wife.  This is, we believe, the last appearance of Louis because on May 31, 1719, Françoise Levasseur appears before notary Janneau who draws up the marriage contract of a new union with François Autin.

  Louis, deceased probably in 1718 at the age of 34, is the first of Pierre and Marie's children to disappear so young.  The date of his burial was lost among the burned registers.  On November 15, 1734, Louis, son of the late Louis and Françoise Levasseur, married Geneviève, daughter of Pierre Albert and Louise Grondin, in the church in Kamouraska.  Ten children will be born of this wedlock.  Three sons, Louis-Jean, baptized in 1744 will be buried in 1745 in the Kamouraska cemetary;  Jean-Baptiste, baptized in 1746, will live only 10 years, buried on 1756;  finally, Louis, the last son, baptized in 1752, will be buried three years later in 1755.  The descendants of Louis Michaud, fifth son of Pierre and Marie Ancelin, are all women.  Élisabeth, daughter of Louis and Françoise Levasseur, marries in 1738, Jean-Bernard Lévesque, son of Pierre-Joachim and Angélique Letartre.  Their five children were all baptized in Rivière-Ouelle.
 
 

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