Marie Rose Bourg was baptized on 24 Oct 1765 at the church of Saint-Énogat in Saint-Malo, Bretagne (today Ille-et-Vilaine), France. She was the daughter of Madeleine-Josèphe Bourg and the tenth child of Alexis Doiron. (Note: see the biography of her younger brother Joseph, regarding records apparently showing that the latter was born 6 months after Marie Rose.)[1]
Research Notes
A different couple, with same names: From web page "The Island Register" retrieved 6/13/2022: 23. JEAN CAUDE3 PITRE (JEAN DENIS2, JEAN1) was born 1701 in Cobequid, Acadia. He married MARGUERITE DOIRON 1726 in Cobequid, Acadia. She was born 1710 in Cobequid, Acadia. Children of JEAN PITRE and MARGUERITE DOIRON are: i. PAUL HYPOLITE4 PITRE, b. 1732, Cobequid, Acadia; d. 31 January 1767, St. Suliac, France; m. MARIE LOUISE VALET, 8 February 1763, St. Suliac, France; b. 15 December 1743, Ile St. Jean, Acadia. 42. ii. OLIVIER PITRE, b. 1743, Acadia; d. Aft. 1766.[1]Fetterly-28 01:49, 14 June 2022 (UTC)
Sources
↑ Source: #S-1792403613 Page: 1755: The History and the Stories Data: Date: c2006 Note: http://cfml.ci.umoncton.ca/1755-html/indexc15f.html?id=010805000&lang=en&style=G&admin=false&linking= Note: Data: Text: Alexis Doiron (1723-?)Alexis Doiron, son of Louis Doiron and Marguerite Barrieau, was born in Pigiguit in former Acadie in 1723. In 1745, he married his first wife, Marguerite Thibodeau, with whom he had two children. During the uncertain period before the Deportation of the Acadians, Alexis took refuge in île Saint-Jean (today's Prince Edward Island) with his family. In 1750, Alexis was a widower and living with his mother in Grande-Anse. In 1758 he married his second wife, Madeleine Bourg, daughter of François Bourg and Marguerite Hébert of Cobéquit. At the end of November 1758, Alexis and his family were deported to France along with the majority of the 5,000 Acadians who lived in île Saint-Jean. Alexis and Madeleine had three children while they were in France. In the 1770s, Alexis and his family returned to settle in the Rustico region of île Saint-Jean, where they had five more children.
See also:
Arsenault, Georges. 1996. "The Saga of Alexis Doiron." The Island Magazine, No. 39 (Spring/Summer):12-18. Also posted online at [2] and at [3].
Bernard, Jean. 2012. Généalogie des familles acadiennes de l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard c. 1764-c. 1900. Vol. III. Baie de Malpèque PE : Édité par l’auteur. Pages 1502-1503. And 2015, Vol. VI, pp. 3739-3740.
Robichaux, Albert J., Jr. 1981. The Acadian Exiles in Saint-Malo 1758-1785. 3 vols. Eunice, LA: Hebert Publications. See vol. 1, Family Genealogies A-G, pp. 266-268.
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DNA Connections
It may be possible to confirm family relationships with Marie Rose by comparing test results with other carriers of her mitochondrial DNA.
Mitochondrial DNA test-takers in the direct maternal line: