Anne Hebert was born 16 Mar 1722 She was baptized the same day at Saint Charles des Mines, Grand-Pré, Acadia. She was the daughter of Jacques Hébert and Marguerite Landry. Her godparents were Pierre Doucet and Marguerite Bourg.[1][2][3]
She married [[LeBlanc-1058|Charles Honoré Leblanc], son of Pierre Leblanc and Jeanne Terriot 16 Aug 1741 at Saint Charles des Mines, Grand-Pré, Acadia. [4][5]
On 5 September 1755, Charles-Honoré was imprisoned along with hundreds of other Acadian men at the St. Charles des Mines church in Grand-Pré. On a list of prisoners, he was said to live in the village of Jean Terriot with 1 daughter (spouses were not included on the list), and owned 4 bullocks, 7 cows, 13 young cattle, 35 sheep, 10 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. [6][7]
On 27 October 1755, Charles-Honoré, Anne and an unnamed daughter were deported to Virginia aboard one of the 14 ships that departed Grand-Pré on that day. The colony was not welcoming to these Frenchmen who spoke a different language and worshiped differently. They were also considered a financial burden. So 6 months later they sent the Acadians on to England. The family left Virginia in May 1756, aboard the Virginia Packet carrying 289 Acadians, and disembarked in Bristol, England on 19 June 1756. Acadians there were neglected and subjected to poor conditions. Many of them died from smallpox as a result.[7][8][9]
Charles Honore died between Sep 1755 and the end of Sep 1756. [10] Their young daughter also died between 1755 and 1756. [9]
Marguerite BOUDROT b: Abt 1758-1759 in Bristol, Gloucester, England
Marie BOUDROT b: Abt 1760 in Bristol, Gloucester, England
Elisabeth BOUDROT b: 29 Oct 1763 in Cotes d'Armor, France c: 29 Oct 1763 in Plouer, Cotes d'Armor, France
Joseph Marie BOUDROT b: 10 Aug 1768 in Cotes d'Armor, France c: 10 Aug 1768 in Plouer, Cotes d'Armor, France
In 1763 at the end of the war, the Acadians were freed after 7 years of detention and sent to France. Germain and Anne, and their daughters Marguerite and Marie coming from Bristol aboard the ship La Dorothée, were delivered to St Malo, France, in 1763[13] In 1765 the family was living in the small town of La Pommeraye in northwestern France. Their young daughters Marguerite and Marie born in 1759 and 1760 were buried there that year. [9] In September 1772, Germain and Anne and their children Joseph-Marie age 4 and Elisabeth age 9 appeared on a census in Saint-Malo. Germain was a laborer and Anne knew how to sew and spin. [14]
Germain and his family returned to England in 1773 [14] and made his way back to his homeland. Germain was recorded in present-day Prince Edward Island and Anne (after Germain's death?) in Cape Breton. [9]
↑ Title: Catholic Church Records, vol. 1a: Acadian Records, 1707-1748; Author: Diocese of Baton Rouge; Publication: Diocese, 1999. The Registers of St. Charles aux Mines in Acadia, from Grand Pré, carried into exile to St. Gabriel Church of Iberville, LA. p. 90
Text: Anne HÉBERT, daughter of Jacques HÉBERT & Marguerite LANDRY, born and baptized 16 Mar 1722. Sponsors: Pierre DOUCET & Marguerite BOURG (SGA-2, 31).
↑ Stephen A. White, Dictionnaire généalogique des familles acadiennes (Moncton, N.-B.: Centre d'études acadiennes, Université de Moncton, 1999) p. 826
She was on 1763 list of passengers from Southampton to France; on 1763 list of arrivals at St-Malo, age 44 years (sic). On 1772 census of St-Malo, age 53 years (sic).
↑ Catholic Church Records, vol. 1a: Acadian Records, 1707-1748; Author: Diocese of Baton Rouge; Publication: Diocese, 1999. The Registers of St. Charles aux Mines in Acadia, from Grand Pré, carried into exile to St. Gabriel Church of Iberville, LA. p. 90.
Text: Honoré LEBLANC, son of Pierre & Jeanne TERIOT, married on 16 Aug 1741 (consanguinity 3rd to 4 th degree) to Anne HÉBERT, daughter of Jacques HÉBERT & Marguerite LANDRY. Witnesses: Jean BABEIN [signed]; Paul LEBLANC [signed]; Jean TIBEAUDEAU [signed]; Jacques LEBLANC [signed]; Pie rre DOUCET [signed]; Jean DOUSAIT [signed]; Jacques HÉBERT (SGA-3, 10b).
↑ Lucie Leblanc Consentino, Acadian & French-Canadian Ancestral Home, "Deportees of Grand-Pré - 1755," citing Collection of the Nova Scotia Historical Society 1870-1884 - Journal of John Winslow, volumes 1-4; "Grand-Pré, September the 15th 1755," line # 42,
Norez LeBlanc, Village Jean Terriot, 1 daughter (spouses were not included on the list), 4 bullocks, 7 cows, 13 young cattle,35vsheep, 10 hogs, 1 horse.
↑ 7.07.1 Paul Delaney. La liste de Winslow expliquée. (Moncton, N.-B.: Éditions Perce-Neige, 2020 - Kindle Edition), p. 225
↑ White, Stephen A. Dictionnaire généalogique des familles acadiennes, "Ajouts et corrections" Ajouts et corrections; Université de Moncton, Centre d'études acadiennes; Online
p 1016 (sept 2003) Famille de Pierre LeBlanc (17)
b. Charles-Honoré. Sur la deuxième ligne, au lieu de «d entre 1755 & 1758», lire «d (selon P. Delaney) entre sept 1755 & fin sept 1756».
Germain - born 1724 at Pigiguit, Assumption Parish, married in same place in first nuptials to Marguerite TRAHANT, daughter of Jean and Charlotte COMEAU. Marguerite TRAHANT died at Bristol in August 1756 and all the children of this first marriage died in that place, all in the same year. Germain BOUDROT married in second nuptials in Bristol in 1758 to Anne HEBERT, daughter of Jacques and Marguerite LANDRY of the Mines. Germain BOUDROT lives with his family at St. Malo;
↑ Albert J. Robichaux, Acadians in Exile in Saint Malo 1758-1785; (Hebert Publications, Eunice, Louisiana 1981) Vol 1 p. 100, family #126;
↑ Milton P. and Norma Gaudet Rieder, "The Acadians in France", vol. II, Belle Isle en Mer Register & La Rochette Papers, (Metairie, LA: 1972). Page: p. 99.
"On the Role of the Acadian families embarked on the royal frigate La Dorothee, under Captain Lavenant, who acknowledged receiving them on 17 May 1763, to be delivered to Saint Malo, France. There are 45 numbered families, plus six prisoners of war from Bristol ... 37.
Germain Boudro;
Anne [Hebert] Boudro;
Marguerite Boudro;
Marie Boudro."
↑ 14.014.1 Milton P. Rieder and Norma Gaudet Rieder, The Acadians in France, 1762-1776; rolls of the Acadians living in France distributed by towns for the years 1762 to 1776. (Role of the Truly Acadian families - September 15, 1772) ( Metairie, La. : M. P. Rieder, 1967) p. 42 image 82 available online at https://archive.org/details/acadiansinfrance0000ried/mode/2up
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