

Michel Boudreau, who was born in La Rochelle, St.
Jean Cougner Parish, France around 1600 and who settled in Acadia during the
1630s, is the ancestor of the Acadian family of that name.
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He was probably recruited by Gov. Charles d'Aulnay since he was present at the
baptism of the governor's daughter, Marie d'Aulnay, on Sept. 21, 1639, in his
capacity as First Trustee of Port-Royal.
He was also one of the signatories of an attestation favorable to d'Aulnay's
works in 1687.
At the Port-Royal census of 1671, he was 71 years old and the father of a family
of 11 children, three of whom were married. He had married Michelle Aucoin in
France. In 1686, he was lieutenant
general and judge of the
Port-Royal tribunal. His son Charles settled at Pisiguit and Claude at
Grand-Pre, while Jean and Michel went to Beaubassin. His other sons stayed at
Port-Royal, including Abraham, who was a navigator and merchant. He traded with
Boston on his shallop, the Marie.
In January 1693, Commander de Villebon sent him on a mission to Boston where he
was to
make discreet inquiries about the state of affairs there and to report to him.
He seems to have
acquitted himself of his mission with success.
Following in the footsteps of Abraham, several descendants of Michel Boudreau
and Michelle
Aucion became navigators.
In 1755, the Boudreau family was a large one and established in several
communities in Acadia. This family was deported in several places in North
America and in Europe. Several can be found in different New England colonies,
including Massachusetts, Philadelphia, Connecticut and Louisiana.
Many were thrown in prisons in southern England (Bristol and Southampton in
particular), and were later transported to France after the Treaty of Paris, in
1763.
These families were established at Belle-Isle-en-Mer, Cherbourg and Saint-Malo
in Northern
France.
Several
of those families found a way of returning to Acadia. Among them, the family of
Germain Boudreau who was one of the pioneers of Cheticamp in Cape Breton.
Several Boudreau families living at Beaubassin, Ile Saint-Jean and Cape Breton
were able to escape the Deportation and found refuge in Quebec. They are to be
found in different communities but notably in the Nicolet, Repentigny and
Deschambault areas.
Others made their way to the Iles-de-la-Madeleine and at Petit Degrat on Cape
Breton.
Several families settled in New Brunswick in the Memramcook - Saint Anselme
area, in
Caraquet and in Petit-Rocher.
The family of Pierre Boudreau and Madeleine Melanson from Port-Royal established
itself at
Memramcook. Their son, Isaac Boudreau, became the captain of a company of
Acadians who supported the American War of Independence. Another of his sons
settled at Inkerman in the northern part of the province.
Joseph Boudreau, son of Anselme and Marguerite Gaudet of Beaubassin, found
refuge at
Rrestigouche on Chaleur Bay where he married Jeanne Hache in 1761. He later
lived during a few years on Miscou before settling in Caraquet. He died at
Nipisiguit in 1797.
However, he is not the sole ancestor of that family in Petit-Rocher since
another Boudreau,
Joseph-Athanase, who had lived for several years at Deschambault, Que., also
settled in
Petit-Rocher at the close of the 18th century.
The latter was a miller and is the ancestor of the Boudreau of Beresford.
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