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Antoine Solomon Maillet was born 13 Sep 1723. He was the son of Jacques Maillet Madeleine Hébert. He was baptized the next day at Port Royal. His godparents were Pierre Hebert and Marie La Fond.[1][2]
Around 1751, he married Marie Saulnier, daughter of Rene and Marie Josephe Trahan and settled in the village of Trahan in Grand-Pré. [3]
They had one child:
On 5 September 1755, Antoine-Salomon was imprisoned along with hundreds of other Acadian men at the St. Charles des Mines church in Grand-Pré. On a list of prisoners, (Winslow's List) he was said to live in the village des Trahan with 1 son (spouses were not included on the list), and owned 4 bullocks, 3 cows, 4 young cattle, 12 sheep, 6 hogs, and 1 horse. His property and livestock became forfeit to the crown, and his family was required to prepare for deportation within 30 days. [4] [5]
Antoine-Salomon managed to escape deportation and found refuge at Camp d'Espérance on the Miramichi around 1756. [6] In Miramichi, like other Acadian refugees, he worked for the French authorities. He was paid 4 livres tournois for unloading boats for two days on 12 June 1757, and 100 tt more for 19 barrels of coal destined to the blacksmith's workshop, on 18 October 1758. [5][7]
He married Marguerite Blanchard about 1761 in Acadie and had 8 known children.[8]
Their children were: [9]
By 1763 many of the Acadians in Acadie Française had been refugees for more than 8 years now, and forced to move often, making it difficult to provide proper shelter and food for their family. That year, Antoine-Salomon and Marguerite were in Halifax with 2 children but do not appear on the list of prisoners. [10] [11]
After 1763, those who stayed in Acadie were not allowed to return to their former lands. Their possessions had either been destroyed or were now owned by New England Planters. They could only settle in small family groups, dispersed in the interior of the peninsula, and often worked for low wages on former Acadian lands. Most importantly, they had to swear an oath of allegiance to the King of England.
In 1768 we find him with his second wife, Marguerite Blanchard in Pisiguit.[12] On May 26, 1768, he was in Kings County, Nova Scotia where he swore an oath of allegiance pledging allegiance to King George III.[13]
He was alive as of August 29, 1787 when he and his wife conveyed land in Clements Township, Annapolis County, to Charles Pinkney.[14]
He passed away before August 30, 1799 in Clare, Digby County, Nova Scotia.
Antoine Majet, village des Trahan with 1 son (spouses were not included on the list), and owned 4 bullocks, 3 cows, 4 young cattle, 12 sheep, 6 hogs, and 1 horse.
Il a échappé à la déportation et s'est réfugié au Camp d'Espérance, probablement en 1756, avec d'autres réfugiés. À Miramichi, Salomon Maillet a été payé 4 livres tournois pour avoir travaillé pendant deux jours à décharger des bateaux le 12 juin 1757, et 100 tt de plus pour 19 barriques de charbon destiné à la forge le 18 octobre 1758. (ANF: sér V7, no 10, fol 87, no 71, fol 368)
- He was paid 4 livres tournois for unloading boats for two days on 12 June 1757 p. 3/44
- He was paid 100 tt more for 19 barrels of coal destined to the blacksmith's workshop, on 18 October 1758
This week's featured connections are from the War of the Roses: Antoine Solomon is 18 degrees from Margaret England, 15 degrees from Edmund Beaufort, 17 degrees from Margaret Stanley, 16 degrees from John Butler, 18 degrees from Henry VI of England, 16 degrees from Louis XI de France, 17 degrees from Isabel of Clarence, 16 degrees from Edward IV of York, 16 degrees from Thomas Fitzgerald, 16 degrees from Richard III of England, 16 degrees from Henry Stafford and 17 degrees from Perkin Warbeck on our single family tree. Login to see how you relate to 33 million family members.
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Categories: Great Upheaval | Acadians on Winslow's List, 15 Sept 1755 | Port-Royal, Acadie | Acadians