Olivier Charbonneau
Bornc. 1613
Died(1687-11-20)20 November 1687
NationalityFrench, Quebecois

Olivier Charbonneau (France, Aunis c. 1613[1] Île de Montréal 20 November 1687[2]) was a frontiersman who lived in Old Montreal in New France.

Charbonneau started his working life as a sewer cleaner in Marans, Charente-Maritime. Widowed twice, by Ozanne Lussaud, and Roy in Marans (m. 13 April 1646),[1] he then married Marie-Marguerite Garnier c. 1656.[1] It is recorded that at that time his wife Marie-Marguerite was niece to Marguerite Bourgeoys.[3]

He was one of the first settlers of the Île Jésus (today, Laval). He is the ancestor of 35,000 living North Americans, and ancestor of the entire population of families with the surname Labelle, through his daughter Anne.

There are only two surviving records for the family name of Charbonneau: one for Olivier and his wife, landing in 1659, and another for an unrelated man, Jean and his wife, around 1675. Nothing in the record suggests that the two were closely related. It has been estimated that 97% of the Charbonneau families in North America are descended from Olivier Charbonneau and his wife. Descendants of Jean are fewer in number and in New France have tended to cluster in the Vaudreuil and Soulanges area of Quebec near the Ottawa river.[4]

Migration

In search of a better future, with his wife and their two-year-old daughter Anne, he sailed for New France on the ship "Saint-André" from La Rochelle on 2 July 1659.[1] In La Rochelle, less than a month earlier (as notarised by Demontreau on 5 June 1659),[1] he was hired as "manual labourer", that is to say, to do spade work on farms, not having his own plough, for Ville-Marie, Montreal by the Society of Our Lady of Montreal; he was recruited by Jeanne Mance. This two-year contract earned Charbonneau enough money for his passage to Quebec (175 livres and 31 livres 12 sols 6 deniers) plus accommodation costs at La Rochelle and buying a travel trunk "at home in this city of the Grace of God for their expenses and for acquiring a chest to put their clothes".[5][6]

Ten years later, on 10 October 1669 in Ville-Marie, the notary Bénigne Basset signed an amnesty of debtors in the hope of encouraging people to live in Ville-Marie. Their debts were enormous, each family's larger than an annual wage. The debt was wiped out by Jeanne Mance and her generous donors.

Charbonneau's family thus is one of the eight founding families of Aunis, and under that amnesty they were bound by contract to migrate to New France.[7]

Island of Montreal

Charbonneau and his wife raised a family at Ville-Marie: Anne (born 1657), Joseph (1660), Jean (1662), Élisabeth (1664), and Michel (1666).[2]

After some years they moved from Ville-Marie to Pointe-aux-Trembles (on the eastern tip of Île de Montréal), and there he built a windmill, with his son and, their partner Pierre Dagenets (Dagenais).[4]

On the île Jésus

His daughter Anne married Guillaume Labelle in 1671.[3] Olivier Charbonneau settled in the region which today constitutes the parish of St. Francis de Sales in Laval, where he became the first permanent resident with his son-in-law.[4] He is considered as the first citizen of the city of Laval, on the island north of Montreal.

On 29 October 1675 Olivier Charbonneau received the first land grant in this area. Pierre Boucher, formerly governor of Trois-Rivières became Procurator of the Prelate of Quebec François de Laval,[8] who signed the deed of sale.[3] Olivier has left his mark there, because, like most others of his time, he was illiterate.

Death

Charbonneau died in Pointe-aux-Trembles, Quebec on 20 November 1687, aged 74 years. and his burial took place the same day at Rivière-des-Prairies, close by.[2]

Notable descendants

Legend

  • The Avenue Olivier-Charbonneau in Montreal.
  • A statue in his image in Laval, Quebec.
  • The Olivier-Charbonneau berge (or parc) in Laval, in remembrance of the first population of île Jésus.
  • Both in France and in Quebec (until 2010) there are two "Charbonneau associations", the descendants of whom meet regularly.[10][11] The last meeting of record was in 2007 at St-Joseph-du-Lac, Quebec for the group in Canada.[12]
  • The Olivier-Charbonneau Bridge into Montreal, and Quebec Autoroute 25.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "CHARBONNEAU, Olivier". Fichier Origine (in French). Fédération québécoise des sociétés de généalogie; Fédération française de généalogie. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 Jetté, René (1998). Dictionnaire généalogique des familles du Québec, des origines à 1730'. University of Montreal. ISBN 2-7606-0646-5.
  3. 1 2 3 "Olivier Charbonneau - un pionnier de Montréal, A Montreal pioneer" (in French and English). 18 February 2009. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 Bergeron, Roger; Bergeron, Marie (1973). "Dominique-M. Charbonneau". Dictionnaire des mariages des Charbonneau. Montréal.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) (quoted by Charbonneau, Henri (24 February 1994). "Charbonneau, comme dans fabricant de charbon". Société de généalogie de l'Outaouais. Archived from the original on 11 July 2004. Retrieved 4 March 2014.
  5. "Traduction du contrat intervenu entre Jeanne-Mance et Olivier Charbonneau" [Translation of the contract between Jeanne-Mance and Olivier Charbonneau]. La Presse. Montreal. 14 January 1984.
  6. Charbonneau Murphy, Dora (2006). "Mon ancêtre, Olivier Charbonneau" [My Ancestor, Olivier Charbonneau] (PDF). Bulletin de la Société de généalogie de Lévis (in French). 6 (1): 5–12.
  7. Carpin, Gervais (September 2013). Le Réseau du Canada. Étude du mode migratoire de la France vers la Nouvelle-France (1628-1662) (in French). Septentrion. p. 230. ISBN 978-2894481974.
  8. Monseigneur de Laval est seigneur de l'île, au nom du Séminaire de Québec.
  9. "Programme de recherche en démographie historique (PRDH)". University of Montreal. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  10. "L'Association des Charbonneau d'Amérique" (in French). Archived from the original on 28 August 2012.
  11. "Les charbonneaux du vieux continent" (in French).
  12. "Charbonneau Association of America: Meeting September 9, 2007". The Guardian. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island. 12 June 2007. Archived from the original on 12 October 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.