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Marin Boucher

He was born around 1589 to Souligny la Trappe, near St-Langis-lès-Mortagne, Perche, France.
February 7, 1611, at St-Jean-de-Mortagne, Marin Boucher married Julienne Baril.
From their union were born seven children: Nicole, John, Louise, Francis, Etiennette, Charlotte and Mary.
Among these children, only Francis and will survive the long journey to New France.
December 16, 1627, Julienne Baril was buried in Saint-Langis-les-Mortagne, she will never see in Canada.
In 1629, in Saint-Langis-les-Mortagne, Marin Boucher wife Perrine Mallet. The new couple had two children who were baptized in St. Langis.
June 4, 1634, Marin Boucher and Perrine Mallet arrived at Quebec, they are accompanied by three children: Louis Marino (4 years), Jean-Galleran (1 year) and Francis aged 16.
Upon arrival, the family settled on the banks of the River St. Charles.

Here is his house Saint-Langis-de-Mortagne au Perche. It still exists today.
The owner plans to restore it into a shelter for BOUCHER Canada who will be passing through this land.

To see the ancestral home of Marin Boucher St-Langis-les-Mortagne as it is today,

The first four years following their arrival in the country took place without major events. In 1638, August 24, Marin was called to testify about the circumstances of the voyage of Gaspard Boucher, his relative, who also arrived in 1634. We know that operating a first field that Récollets had to abandon in 1629, following the surrender of Québec to the Kirke brothers. Later, he began to farm with his brother Thomas Hayot, the domain of the Jesuits at Beauport. On June 11, 1646, reports the Journal of the Jesuits the 1892 edition, page 52, the two farmers separated. Hayot Boucher kept the farm and went to take a concession similar to that of Olivier Le Tardif.
Subsequently, Boucher and his family are moving permanently to the coast of Beaupré. Marino then sold his old farm of three acres of frontage on the St. Charles River "from the stream which leads the field of Reverend Fathers Récollets cleared of vegetation and when it ends the desert to meet Jacques Caumont. Marino claims to have had the concession of the Society of New France, but Récollets claim this land as theirs, when they return to Canada in 1670. The ancestor Marin Boucher has played a special role in the founding of Beauport. Mason by trade and lives, an important part of construction work entrusted to it.
In the census of 1667, Marino is 80 years. He died March 29, 1671, aged about 84 years and is buried in the cemetery of Chateau-Richer. His widow, Perrine Malet, died 16 years later and was buried in Quebec City, August 25, 1687.

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her children

list of known children:
1. Nicole Boucher (1611 -) (from Julienne Baril )
2. Jean Boucher (1613 - 1617) (from Julienne Baril )
3. Louise Boucher (1615 -) (from Julienne Baril )
4. Francois Boucher (1617 - 1678) (from Julienne Baril )
5. Etiennette Boucher (1620 -) (from Julienne Baril )
6. Charlotte Boucher (1622 -) (from Julienne Baril )
7. Marie Boucher (1625 -) (from Julienne Baril )
8. Louis Marin Boucher said Boisbuisson (1630 - 1700) (from Perrine Mallet )
9. John Galleran Boucher (1633 - 1714) (from Perrine Mallet )
10. Francoise Boucher (1636 - 1711) (from Perrine Mallet )
11. Pierre Boucher said Pitoche (1639 - 1707) (from Perrine Mallet )
12. Madeleine Boucher (1641 - 1709) (from Perrine Mallet )
13. Marie Boucher (1644 - 1712) (from Perrine Mallet )
14. William Boucher (1647 - 1729) (from Perrine Mallet )

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Saint-Langis-de-Mortagne Mortagne au Perche

is the village of our ancestors MARIN BOUCHER towards the 1650
Mortagne was the capital of the former province French Perche. Some of the first hired to New France were recruited to Mortagne and neighboring villages, and La Tourouvre Ventrouze.
Located in the hillside south of Mortagne, the town Saint Langis the Mortagne now offers a beautiful panorama of natural landscapes with, in the background, the forest Bellême. To relax, the town offers a number of hiking trails, equestrian and mountain bike close to Mortagne.
When you walk, you can find accommodation diverse, quality, and taste the many local products. It is a pleasant stay in the heart of the Perche awaits you with the assurance of finding the true joys of nature.

Here is a site to explore with pleasure, to learn more about the town.
http://www.chez.com/stlangis/

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The Perch is the name we gave to the 17th century to the province from which came many of the oldest families in Quebec: Aubin, Baril, Beaulac, Bouchard, Boucher, Cloutier, Drouin, Gagnon , Giguere, Lambert, Landry, Leduc, Lefebvre, Mercier, Pelletier, Rivard, Smith and many others. For 2 centuries, the name of the Perche no longer used in France and the region is part of Normandy.
Maps and Information on
Mortagne au Perche
(Lower Normandy - Orne)



Common Name: Mortagne au Perche
Region: Lower Normandy
Department: Orne (61)
Zip code: 61400
Altitude: 225 meters




General Historical
Province of Perche, capital in the 17th and 18th. Mortagne would "Mauritania" Gallo-Roman times. Monastery founded in the 7th and castle in the Carolingian period, it was rebuilt further west and fortified in the 12th, then called Fort Toussaint. St. Louis went to Mortagne repeatedly. The town was the 14th defensive enclosure currently defines the ancient city. Despite a period of prosperity from the end of the Hundred Years War to the Wars of Religion, Mortagne undergoes then twenty-two assaults and sieges: the dismantling of the ramparts and castle, fire of Notre Dame. The city, faithful to Catholicism, was besieged and taken by Coligny by Henri IV. In 1610, became the capital Mortagne Perche judicial and administrative. In the 17th, many residents took part in the settlement of Canada. The Revolution resulted in the destruction of religious buildings. After a period of regression, Mortagne, historic city center of an opulent, is booming economic and tourism. Home of Pierre Boucher, the most famous Percheron emigrants in Canada (commemorated by a street and a window of the church), and philosopher Alain, born in 1868.

Civil Architecture:
few remnants of Toussaint Fort, overlooking the Miss, integrated housing. Porte Saint-Denis * (IMH), a former city gate with the 12th Renaissance gallery (Museum Percheron). City Hall * 18th: fairs and wood Louis XV French gardens with statue of Fremiet. Remnants of the old hospital Saint-Nicolas (court of the post): windows and bas-reliefs Renaissance (IMH). Halle grain 1825. Many old houses, * including hotel Fontenay 17th, 13 rue du Colonel Guérin facade and roof courtyard (IMH), forehearth, balcony, decorated windows (house of Works); hotel Puisaye: 16th turret; tower house (IMH), 13 Place Général de Gaulle, former hotel Longueil (IMH), current school Bignon, rue du General Leclerc: front courtyard, entrance gate, 15th round, home of the "Dean of All Saints "(IMH), Palace Square, home of Counts of Perche 16th (IMH), 8 rue de la Porte Saint-Denis (associations of "Friends of Perch" and "Friends of Alain): facade and roof, library, hotel 18th (MH), 30 rue Sainte- Croix hotel Sizing 18th (IMH), 3 rue des Sizes: 2 lodges and hotel entrance gate, chapel house with roof fairing, 1 rue des sizes; home 15th/16th Henry IV (IMH) , 2 bis rue Toussaint: front, fireplace and carved door in the tower house of Marie d'Armagnac 16th: courtyard with turret hotel mesenger: House facade with turrets burner Chaplain. Birthplace of the philosopher Alain (IMH) 3 rue de la Comedie. Hippodrome: 3 stands (IMH). Building 15th and loft square, remnants of the ancient priory of Sainte-Madeleine Chartrage. Rural hamlet of laws *: whole town and surrounding area (SI). Castles of 19th and La Champaillaume Forgetterie.

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Chateau-Richer 1650

Region Map
Chateau-Richer is located about twenty miles east of Quebec City. With that which was around the north-east side, St. Anne de Beaupre, and the southwest side of Ange-Gardien, Château-Richer was part of the Lordship of Beaupre whose boundary to the southwest was the Montmorency Falls. A manor was opened for settlement since the early 1640s, Robert Giffard had led a number of settlers. This section of coast facing the island of Orleans, whose development, while simultaneously, was the numerous land exchanges and family relations, intimately linked to the coast.

This area of the shore of St. Lawrence is a plateau overlooking a low area along the river where it is separated by a terrace or hillside well marked. In some sections of the Beaupré coast, the Royal Road found itself at the time and sometimes on top of the hill and sometimes followed the foot of the terrace. At Chateau-Richer, except the village that had developed on a flat middle road is found at the bottom. Houses arranged along the road huddled at the foot of the terrace to counter the wind.


Here the location of the land of Marin Boucher
Marin Boucher had immigrated to New France around 1634 with his second wife, Perine Mallet, his son Francis, aged 16 years and from his first marriage to Julienne Baril and two children from this second marriage: Louis Marino, age 4 and Jean-Galeran, one year old when it stood at Chateau-Richer (circa 1646).
For various transactions, including acts of concession, Marin Boucher had acquired an area large enough to establish several families. His land with a width of 8 acres and 6 perches to a depth of 1 1 / 2 mile, was located on the southwest side of the current village of Chateau-Richer. To follow the recommendations of the government Marin Boucher subdivided his land into four roughly equal.
The first two acres of the north-east side were reserved for his younger son, William The 2 acres and 6 perches following from the south-west remained the property of Marin Boucher when he had his home. The following two acres were sold in the spring of 1655 Plante and Jean Francoise Boucher. Finally, the last two acres, still from the southwest side, were assigned to his son John Galeran Boucher.
To implement the recommendations of the government Marin Boucher off from the land he had left three small locations near his home, which everyone had to build a house. So there was a small cluster of three houses: one of Marin Boucher would happen later in the hands of his son William, of John Plant (location 8 perches in area) and Jean-Galeran Boucher (location 7 1 / 2 perches in area). As for the location of 8 poles area reserved to William Boucher, having being born in 1647, he had only fifteen years at that time, the latter did not build homes on its site and instead stayed with his parents. Indeed. his father died in 1671, a year before her marriage.

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signature

exclusive document authenticated by

Drouin Genealogical Institute

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ancestry

documents concerning his birth has never been found.
His father and mother we are therefore unknown.
The following table, published by some genealogists, perhaps real
but it raises some controversy.
(to consult with moderation)

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creators of Dynasty burial


Direct Descendants MARIN BOUCHER
De Francoise Plante
families ... From Madeleine ... families Houle, Houde, Durocher, Desrochers, Marie Clair De ...
families Godin

direct descendants of François BOUCHER
From Elizabeth ... families Guyon, Dion, Dumontier
From Mary ... families Chodillon
From Mary Francoise families ... Thibault

direct descendents of JOHN BOUCHER Galeran
From Mary ... families Thiboutot and Autin
From Mary-Anne ... families Duval
From Mary Magdalene ... the families of Catherine Lavoie
Gertrude ... families Lajoie

And this is only the first generation.
Add the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, and until today ...
that left tens of thousands of cousins to know.

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Register Chateau-Richer of March 29, 1671

year of Lord nost Jesus Christ, one thousand six hundred seventy-one died March 29 after vescu Marin Boucher in his Christian Sts received the sacraments of penance and Eucharist sacrament of extreme unction and fust buried in the cemetery of Chateau Richer accompanied by Mr. Morel New Reverend Father and myself for being in the pastoral functions in the coast of Beaupré.
F. Fillion, Prest. Missionary

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Act of 2001 Chateau-Richer

in Chateau-Richer QC
September 13, 2001
Denis (B001) was

This house is built on the exact location of the inhabited MARIN BOUCHER Château-Richer. A plaque on the door reminds us. His land was right on top of the cliff behind the house.

In the cemetery located next to the church of Chateau-Richer, there is no monument to MARIN BOUCHER.

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life ancestors

How our ancestors lived in the fifteenth century?
see http://origine-des-immigrants-franais.blogspot.com/2006/06/la-vie-au-xve-sicle.html

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thank you