New France Genealogy

Montjoie Saint Denis!

Delaporte, Suzanne

Female 1676 -


Generations:      Standard    |    Vertical    |    Compact    |    Box    |    Text    |    Ahnentafel    |    Fan Chart    |    Media    |    PDF

Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Delaporte, Suzanne was born 28 Feb 1675/1676 (daughter of Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques-Georges and Duchesne, Nicole).

    Other Events:

    • _UID: FD0C567C2DD6194BB6B27DE3B0B0F0CC26D6

    Notes:

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren


Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques-Georges was born 5 Mar 1626/1627, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France (son of Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques and Hamelin, Marie); died 26 Jan 1701/1702, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 06FEDC05E55BE24EA8ECD83145681AF2ABED
    • Birth: 5 Mar 1626/1627, Nocé, Au Perche, diocèse de Sées, parlement de Paris, intendance d'Alençon, élection de Mortagne, châtellenie de Bellefi
    • Census: 1666, Montréal, QC, Canada
    • Residence: 1670, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada
    • Death: Bef 11 Sep 1702, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada

    Notes:



    Laporte - text by Robert Prévost, Éditions Libre Expression

    Jacques Laporte dit Saint-Georges, one of the first Montréalistes

    "We hardly dared step out of doors to fetch our basic necessities", writes Dollier de Casson in A History of Montreal, so great was the Iroquois threat to Ville-Marie. One of the settlers who persevered in this remote outpost, far from the settlement at Québec, was Jacques Laporte dit Saint-Georges.

    The danger did not deter the Montréalistes, as the early settlers of Montreal were called. In 1664, two parties of hunters left the fort and made their way to some islands downstream. The expedition was so successful that they sent back a boat loaded with meat. But they were unable to return upstream against the Sainte-Marie current and the oarsman had to follow the shore, where the Iroquois were lying in wait. They killed or injured three or four of the hunting party. One of the attackers trying to seize the boat was “shot dead” with a rifle when “Messieurs Debelêtre (Picoté de Belestre), Saint Georges and other Frenchmen” ran to the aid of their friends.

    This "Saint-Georges" was undoubtely Jacques Laporte, from Nocé in Perche. We do not know when he crossed the Atlantic. He was not among the recruits of 1653 who saved Ville-Marie; and he would have been only 14 years old in 1641 when a group of settlers sailed under Paul de Chomedey, who had a mandate from the Société Notre-Dame de Montréal to build a fort on the island of Montreal.

    Jacques Laporte was baptized in Nocé on March 5, 1627. He was the son of an innkeeper and baker, also named Jacques, and of Marie Hamelin, who had married on June 7 of the previous year. In the Nocé church, there is an inscription dedicated to the memory of the colonist; it was the first plaque (March 10, 1963) installed in the churches of Perche under the aegis of the Association Perche-Canada.

    From Mortagne-au-Perche, take the D 938 south to Bellême (17 km), and turn left onto the D 955 towards Nogent-le-Rotrou. After driving for 9.5 km, you come to the intersection of the D 9, which takes you north to Nocé. An alternative route is to take the D203 from Bellême directly to Nocé. Nocé merits more than a perfunctory visit. The church was completed in the late Middle Ages, and its apse is Romanesque. The square tower has angle buttresses at the corners. On the facade of the tower and on the buttresses are flamboyantly decorated niches housing statuary. Just 2 km from the church, on the D 9, stands the Courboyer manor house, one of the most beautiful in Perche. It has two storeys, with mullioned windows, on either side of an octagonal tower.

    In 1655, Jacques Laporte must have decided to settle permanently in Ville-Marie. On August 31 of that year, the Sieur de Maisonneuve granted him a half-arpent lot within the city enclosure, enough land for a house and garden. And on August 23, 1657, before Jean de Saint-Père, he signed a marriage contract with Nicole Duchesne, daughter of François and of Marie Rolet. The Sulpician Gabriel Souart performed the marriage ceremony on September 3 in the presence of several witnesses, including the Sieur de Maisonneuve, Jeanne Mance, Lambert Closse and Charles Le Moyne.

    The Laporte / Duchesne couple had 11 children, including seven sons. Five of these were married in turn; Jacques, known as Labonté, in 1687 to Madeleine Paviot (7 children); Paul in 1688 to Marie Lussier (4 children), and in 1695 to Marguerite Matou (13 children); Georges in 1689 to Marie-Madeleine Guertin (2 children); Louis in 1695 to Marie-Madeleine Massault (8 children), and Pierre in 1703 to Marie-Anne Han (11 children). Only two of the four daughters started their own families: Catherine in 1675 with Philibert Couillaud, and Suzanne in 1695 with Pierre Ménard.

    We know that Jacques Laporte was a baker like his father. According to the censuses of 1666 and 1667, he was living in Montreal and does not appear to have been engaged in agriculture as he did not have any productive land. In the census of 1681, he was practising his trade in Boucherville, where Jeanne, his youngest child, would be born the following year. Jacques Laporte died in Contrecoeur in 1702.

    Although other Laportes immigrated to New France, they did not make a significant contribution to the perpetuation of the family name. The most prestigious was undoubtedly Louis de Laporte, Sieur de Louvigny, who arrived in 1683. The following year, he married Marie Nolan, daughter of Pierre and of Catherine Houart. His military career was so active and he was given so many missions and expeditions that is a wonder that his wife managed to have ten children. We find him first in Hudson's Bay, then in Michillimakinac and Fort Frontenac where he served as commander, then south of the Great Lakes in the territory of the Fox tribe, whom he was sent to neutralize. In 1720, he was in charge of all the western posts, which he was expected to visit every other year. On a visit to France, he was given command of Trois-Rivières, but never assumed this post as he died in the wreck of the Chameau off Cape Breton Island in 1725. He was survived by his wife and four of his children, six others having died young. A son, François, embarked on a military career, but he may have returned to France as there is no record of his marriage in our registers. Two of his three sisters started their own families: Marie-Anne in 1718 with Jacques Testard and Marie-Louise in 1727 with Didace Mouet.

    Another Laporte dit Saint-Georges, named Pierre, from Périgord, settled on Île Jésus. There, in 1707, he married Madeleine Fournier, daughter of Guillaume and of Françoise Hébert. The couple had five children including two sons: Joseph-Cécile and Pierre who married Angélique Nadon (1735) and Suzanne Labelle (1740), respectively.

    Finally, we should mention Étienne Laporte, from Agen, and Michel Laporte dit Labonté, from Rochefort, who married, respectively, Suzanne-Élisabeth Charbonneau in Charlesbourg in 1716 and Marie-Catherine Girard in Québec in 1727. None of these couples has descendants now bearing the Laporte name.

    Jacques Laporte the true patriarch of the Laportes of North America.

    Robert Prévost, Éditions Libre Expression

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Jacques-Georges married Duchesne, Nicole 3 Sep 1657, Notre-Dame de Montréal, Île de Montréal, QC, Canada. Nicole (daughter of Duchesne, Francois and Rolet, Marie) was born 1637, Villevaudé, Meaux, Seine et Marne, France; died 27 Jul 1703, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Duchesne, Nicole was born 1637, Villevaudé, Meaux, Seine et Marne, France (daughter of Duchesne, Francois and Rolet, Marie); died 27 Jul 1703, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada.

    Other Events:

    • Immigration: Arrived in New France in a ship belonging to shipowner François Perron de La Rochelle. The ship's captain was named Élie
    • _UID: CCE7DA75DABABE47A64BCE18F140F813AE57
    • Birth: Abt 1638, Villevaudé, Île-de-France, diocèse et élection de Meaux, parlement et intendance de Paris
    • Census: 1666, Montréal, Île de Montréal, QC, Canada
    • Death: 11 Sep 1702, Très-Ste-Trinité-de-Contrecoer, Verchères, QC, Canada

    Notes:

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Children:
    1. Laporte, Georges was born 23 Apr 1662; died c. 20 Août 1693, Boucherville, QC, Canada.
    2. Laporte dit St-Georges, Suzanne-Catherine was born Bef 12 Oct 1663, Montréal, Île de Montréal, Canada, New France; died 19 Feb 1730/1731, Varennes, Verchères, Canada, New France; was buried , Très-Ste-Trinité-de-Contrecoer, Verchères, Canada, New France.
    3. Delaporte, Jacques was born 26 Oct 1665.
    4. 1. Delaporte, Suzanne was born 28 Feb 1675/1676.
    5. Laporte, Suzanne was born 28 Feb 1675/1676, Repentigny, Canada, New France; died 27 Oct 1743, Contrecoeur, Canada, New France.
    6. Laporte dit St-Georges, Pierre was born 30 Apr 1678.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques was born 1596, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France; died 1676, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France.

    Other Events:

    • Occupation: hôtelier et boulanger
    • _UID: 094D3944157C9440988FFE47F0EE548359B2

    Notes:



    from La Porte dit Saint-Georges family

    Jacques de LaPorte dit St-Georges Jr is the son of Jacques de La Porte Sr who was born in France in 1596. The father of Jacques de La Porte Sr was probably Hugues de La Porte.

    Jacques de La Porte Sr got married in Nocé on June 7, 1626 with Marie Hamelin. Her origins are unknown except for the fact that her brother André lived nearby in Cohanard. Jacques and Marie had many children: Jacques (1627), Barbe (1629), Florimont (1634), Jehan (1638), Florimond (1642), Claude (1643), Loyse (1646) and Maryse.

    Jacques de La Porte Sr appears for the first time in legal notarized documents in 1625; at the time, he is described as an innkeeper. Jacques de La Porte Sr was a baker from the time of his marriage until his death, except for a brief four year interlude, i.e. form August 1639 to June 1643, where he appears to have resumed his profession of innkeeper in Nocé according to legal documents.

    One can assume that Jacques de La Porte Sr, innkeeper, baker, merchant, has ambitious plans for his children. He, himself, maintains very good relations with his Parish Priest and with his Lord. Despite his various occupations and his children, he accepts social activities which honor him and make him one of Nocé's most prominent citizens.

    In the upper Middle-Ages, there were devout brotherhoods known under the name of "Frères de charité" (Brothers of Charity) or "Charitons". These brotherhoods, swept away during the wars, saw life again in the XVth or XVIth century. At the head of the "Charité" are the "Councilman" and the "Provost" who are responsible for the management of the possessions of poor people after they die, and are chosen amongst the "notables". In 1637, in a legal document dated March 17, it is Jacques de La Porte Sr who is mentioned as "Provost" of the "Charity" for the Church of Nocé (written "Nocey" in those days).

    Jacques de La Porte Sr died in Nocé in 1676. His wife, Marie Hamelin, also died later in Nocé.

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Jacques married Hamelin, Marie 7 Jun 1626, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France. Marie was born 1605, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France; died , Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Hamelin, Marie was born 1605, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France; died , Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: F4F8AFF6D2647C4088226541439B9A80CB76
    • Birth: Abt 1610, Noce, pres Belleme, France

    Notes:

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Children:
    1. 2. Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques-Georges was born 5 Mar 1626/1627, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France; died 26 Jan 1701/1702, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada.
    2. de Laporte, Florimont (Florimond) was born 1634, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France.

  3. 6.  Duchesne, Francois was born Abt 1606, Villevaude, Seine et Marne, France; died , Villevaude, Seine et Marne, France.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 735E73C7D29B8C45B0BF4224C5690EC11BA2

    Notes:

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Francois married Rolet, Marie c. 1636, Villevaude, Meaux, Marne, France. Marie was born Abt 1610, France; died , Villevaude, Seine et Marne, France. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Rolet, Marie was born Abt 1610, France; died , Villevaude, Seine et Marne, France.

    Other Events:

    • _UID: 297F5FAB776D9345BA7D1122D02790BE1D2E

    Notes:

    Source: Please cite original sources.
    Compiled by: J. K. Loren

    Children:
    1. 3. Duchesne, Nicole was born 1637, Villevaudé, Meaux, Seine et Marne, France; died 27 Jul 1703, Contrecoeur, Verchères, QC, Canada.


Generation: 4

    Children:
    1. 4. Laporte dit Saint-Georges, Jacques was born 1596, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France; died 1676, Nocé, Mortagne, Perche, Orne, France.


This site powered by The Next Generation of Genealogy Sitebuilding ©, v. 11.1, written by Darrin Lythgoe 2001-2024.