NameThierry-Pierre Laurin 
Birth14 May 1657, Québec, Québec, Canada2
Christening15 May 1657, Notre-Dame-De-Québec, Québec, Canada2
Death18 Oct 1734, Rivière-Des-Prairies, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Burial18 Oct 1734, Saint-Joseph, Rivière-Des-Prairies, Montréal, Québec, Canada2
FlagsIroquois, Massacre de Lachine
Spouses
Birth26 May 1670, Québec, Québec, Canada2
Christening27 May 1670, Notre-Dame-De-Québec, Québec, Canada2
Death17 Sep 1744, Rivière-Des-Prairies, Montréal, Québec, Canada
Burial17 Sep 1744, Saint-Joseph, Rivière-Des-Prairies, Montréal, Québec, Canada2
Marriage29 Jul 1686, Notre-Dame-De-Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada2
Birth4 Jan 1667, Montréal, Québec, Canada12
Christening4 Jan 1667, Notre-Dame-De-Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada2
FlagsIroquois, Massacre de Lachine
Notes for Thierry-Pierre Laurin
“Barbe Perrin had married René Huguet in Lachine in mid-October 1680. The couple had three children. The youngest child died in January 1689, before he was four months old. Twenty-two-year-old Barbe was abducted that ill-fated morning in August, along with five-year-old André and three-year-old Anne-Françoise, her two remaining children, and taken to an Iroquois village in upper New York.[ 687] Barbe Perrin spent some five years in captivity in Iroquois country. When she was released in 1694, she was pregnant and had a two-year-old daughter with her. Thierry-Pierre Laurin, another French captive, had fathered both children.[ 688] Marie-Anne Laurin, born among the Iroquois of northern New York on November 1, 1692, was baptized on July 27, 1694.[ 689] Barbe gave birth to a son named Jean in Montréal on December 13, 1694. However, the infant died the next day. Of the two children taken captive with Barbe, André Huguet died in captivity. Anne-Françoise Huguet, eight years old in the summer of 1694, remained with her Indigenous family.[ 690] Barbe’s husband, René Huguet, had somehow survived the massacre at Lachine in 1689, but two years later, in the early morning hours of June 26, 1691, Iroquois ambushed and killed him as he worked in his wheat fields at Lachine. René’s brother-in-law, Jean-Baptiste Gourdon, also lost his life that morning. Both had come to New France as Carignan-Salières soldiers and had married and settled at Lachine. Also killed in the attack were Jean Guignard, a laborer, and four soldiers from Fort Rolland who were serving as armed guards for the men in the fields.”
— The Women of Ville-Marie: Pioneers of Seventeenth-Century Montréal by Susan McNelley
https://amzn.asia/dWvQcsw15Thierry-Pierre was married at the time of his abduction to Marie Mathon Labrie and had two young daughters. After his release he returned to his wife. The couple had eight more children
15
Notes for Barbe (Spouse 2)
“Barbe Perrin had married René Huguet in Lachine in mid-October 1680. The couple had three children. The youngest child died in January 1689, before he was four months old. Twenty-two-year-old Barbe was abducted that ill-fated morning in August, along with five-year-old André and three-year-old Anne-Françoise, her two remaining children, and taken to an Iroquois village in upper New York.[ 687] Barbe Perrin spent some five years in captivity in Iroquois country. When she was released in 1694, she was pregnant and had a two-year-old daughter with her. Thierry-Pierre Laurin, another French captive, had fathered both children.[ 688] Marie-Anne Laurin, born among the Iroquois of northern New York on November 1, 1692, was baptized on July 27, 1694.[ 689] Barbe gave birth to a son named Jean in Montréal on December 13, 1694. However, the infant died the next day. Of the two children taken captive with Barbe, André Huguet died in captivity. Anne-Françoise Huguet, eight years old in the summer of 1694, remained with her Indigenous family.[ 690] Barbe’s husband, René Huguet, had somehow survived the massacre at Lachine in 1689, but two years later, in the early morning hours of June 26, 1691, Iroquois ambushed and killed him as he worked in his wheat fields at Lachine. René’s brother-in-law, Jean-Baptiste Gourdon, also lost his life that morning. Both had come to New France as Carignan-Salières soldiers and had married and settled at Lachine. Also killed in the attack were Jean Guignard, a laborer, and four soldiers from Fort Rolland who were serving as armed guards for the men in the fields.”
— The Women of Ville-Marie: Pioneers of Seventeenth-Century Montréal by Susan McNelley
https://amzn.asia/dWvQcsw15