Arbre Généalogique Guertin Rondeau Family Tree - Person Sheet
Arbre Généalogique Guertin Rondeau Family Tree - Person Sheet
NameMarie-Elisabeth Corse
Birth14 Feb 1696, Deerfield, Massachusetts, USA2
Christening14 Jul 1705, Notre-Dame-De-Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada2
Death29 Jan 1766, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
Burial30 Jan 1766, La-Nativité-De-La-Sainte-Vierge, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
FlagsDeerfield, English Colonies prisonner
FatherJames Corse (-<1704)
MotherElisabeth Catlin (-1704)
Spouses
Birthabt 1667, Saint-Martin, Blond, Limoges, France2
Death20 May 1729, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
Burial21 May 1729, La-Nativité-De-La-Sainte-Vierge, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
ReligionHuguenot
Marriage6 Nov 1712, La-Nativité-De-La-Sainte-Vierge, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
ChildrenJean-Baptiste (1724-)
Marriage19 Jan 1730, La-Nativité-De-La-Sainte-Vierge, La Prairie, Québec, Canada2
Notes for Marie-Elisabeth Corse
“In 1704, Pierre Roy and Catherine Ducharme took into their home Elizabeth Corse, an eight-year-old English girl taken captive in the Deerfield raid. The child was born in Deerfield on February 6, 1696, the daughter of James Corse and Elizabeth Catlin. Her father was deceased at the time of the raid and her mother died on the march north. Catherine Ducharme stood as her godmother when Elizabeth was baptized into the Catholic faith in Montréal on July 14, 1705. In 1706, the child requested citizenship in New France.[ 886] Elizabeth Corse had a child out of wedlock in the spring of 1712, when she was sixteen, highlighting the vulnerability of female captives and servants. In the fall of that year, she married Jean-Baptiste Dumontet dit Lagrandeur, a thirty-year-old French Huguenot who had come to the French colony from New York. The couple had eight children before Jean died in 1729. In January 1730, less than eight months after the death of her first husband, Elizabeth, at age thirty-four, married Pierre Monet dit Laverdure, a man eight years her junior. It was about this time that her brother James came from Deerfield in an unsuccessful attempt to get her to return to her family in New England. Pierre and Elizabeth had six children in six years. Elizabeth lived to be just shy of seventy when she died and was buried at La Prairie in 1766.[ 887] Elizabeth Corse was a first cousin of Freedom, Marthe, and Abigail French. Their father was Thomas French, a blacksmith, town clerk, and deacon in Deerfield. Thomas and his wife Mary Caitlin had six children: Mary, Thomas, Freedom, Marthe, Abigail, and Jonathon. The youngest was born on February 1, 1704, six weeks before the raid. All were taken captive; however, Mary Caitlin and their newborn infant were murdered shortly after capture. Thomas and the remaining five children were marched north and survived the winter journey. Apparently, they spent a couple of years with their First Nations captors. Thomas French, along with Mary and Thomas, two of his children, were ransomed two years later and returned to their New England home.[ 888]”

— The Women of Ville-Marie: Pioneers of Seventeenth-Century Montréal by Susan McNelley
https://amzn.asia/hzhhUrY
Last Modified 9 Mar 2024Created 7 Jun 2024 using Reunion for Macintosh
Mis a jour le 07 Juin 2024. Last updated 07 Juin 2024
Familles Guertin et Rondeau