Wednesday, May 10, 2006

How To Make A Homemade Stereo Amplifier

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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