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"To everything there is a season,
and a time to every purpose under the heaven.
A time to be born and a time to die: a
time to plant,
and a time to pluck up that which is
planted."
-
Ecclesiastes 3: 1-2
Roy Family Celebrates 350 years in the
Descendants of everyone mentioned below
will congregate in 2011 to celebrate
350 years in the
http://home.comcast.net/~RobRoy8/Roy_Family_Quebec.htm
Contact RobRoy810@Gmail.Com
to sign up for this event.
Louis Roy dit Leroi circa 1620-1663 Married Anne Lemaistre 27-Apr-1638, St.Remi de
Dieppe, Normandie France. He is my Great
Great Great Great Great Great Great Grandfather.
They had a son; Nicholas Roy dit Leroy emigrated from Normandy France,
sailed the Atlantic Ocean and arrived to settle in the
They had a son; Jean-Baptiste Roy (or Leroy) Born @ La
They had a son; Jean-Baptiste Roy who married Marie-Magdeleine Tangue 22-July-1748
@ St.Vallier,
They had a son; Bazile Roy who married Marie-Louise Boulet 17-Jan-1785 @
St.Francois-Riviere-du-Sud.
They had a son; Etienne Roy who married Marguerite LaCroix 12-Aug-1828, @ St
Gervais,
They had a son; Narcisse Roy who married Philomene Couture 9-April-1861 @ St.Raphael,
They had a son; Francois Roy who married Odelie Gonthier-Bernard
13-May-1895, St.Raphael,
They had a son; Arthur Guillaume Roy Born 6-August-1902, St.Raphael,
They had a son; Robert Arthur Roy, Born 19-November-1952,
( Also known as Rob Roy ).
Robert married Lynn Knauf 24-June-1978 Wolcott
Her parents: George Knauf
& Margaret Downes.
They had a son; Christian Knauf Roy, Born 24-September-1982,
Descendants of all of the above will congregate in
2011
to celebrate 350 years in the
Contact RobRoy810@Gmail.Com
to sign up for this event.
"To everything there is a season,
and a time to every purpose
under the heaven.
A time to be born and a time to die: a time to plant,
and a time to pluck up that
which is planted."
- Ecclesiastes 3: 1-2
The above seems to me a very apt
thought upon which to dwell as we begin to discuss the following lives of our
ancestors. If nothing else, it has a poetic power to remind us of our mortal
nature. Essentially, all genealogy has a similar power.
A magazine article which I
read recently stated: "A gene is a gift given us by our parents".
There is comfort to be found in that assertion if we know definitively that our
parents' lives demonstrated "good genes", which is understood to mean
long, healthy lives, as well as our eye color.
Jeanne Lelievre Leroy is a
long-lived woman in our Roy Family Tree.
She lived from 1638 to 1728, an adventuresome 89 years. She was the
brave woman who emigrated in 1661 from
They had sailed from the
Only in September of 1663 did
they finally arrive at
On the 8th of June, 1664,
Nicholas officially acquired a land-grant of two arpents in width (about
three American acres) by one mile deep at Boischatel, just east of the
Their eighth and ninth born
children, Elisabeth and Jean, were both baptised at nearby L 'Ange
Gardien, on the Beaupre coast. However, their tenth and last child, Jean-Baptiste,
destined as our next of the
Why had
Nicholas and Jeanne Leroy decided to leave an apparently successful farm and a
good beginning in this area so blessed of scenery? The answer lies in that a
crime was committed against them, one that evokes outrage to this day. While
several accounts can be found, that of Eugena Poulin, PhD., in her 1998 article
"Crime and Seventeenth Century Women in New World" (2) is the most succinct. She wrote:
"Society considered some
crimes so heinous that the death penalty appeared insufficient”.
In 1669, the court found
Jacques Nourry guilty of raping four and a half year old Marie Leroy. The
latter was the daughter of Nicholas and of Jeanne Lievre. Nourry was hanged,
his body mutilated, decapitated and his head displayed on a post. The fine
added to his punishment amounted to three hundred livres to be awarded to the victim."
Although Ms. Poulin does not
recount it, Nourry was a single man of age 29, who farmed land next to the
Leroys. Later documents record that his land was confiscated by the High Court
of Beaupre, and on September 7, 1669 this farm of Noury was awarded to the
above mentioned Charles Garnier.
The family once again
prospered at La Durantaye, far from the scene of the crime and its
grisly punishment. Having sold his farm at Beaupre in 1679 for five hundred livres, Nicholas acquired twenty arpents of
land at Durantaye.
His
eldest sons, Louis and Nicholas,
would also own land adjoining his acreage. A third son, Noel, would buy land in
1688 in the adjoining Seigneurie de Berthier from Jean Daniau dit la
Prise, of La Durantaye. This man is an ancestor of Gerard Daigneault,
brother-in-law of this writer.
As for little Marie, she grew
up normally due to the love of her parents. On 31-July-1679 she wed Jean
Gaudreau, by whom she had three children. Following the loss of her first
husband, Marie then rewarded to Jean Fournier, bearing him ten more children.
Nicholas Leroy's passing
sometime before October of 1691 was not nearly as well documented as that of
his wife, whose 1728 burial record has been termed "bizarre". Here is a translation of that account by the
priest at the
"The year one thousand
seven hundred twenty-eight, the 11th of January, has been buried in the
cemetery of this parish, by myself, the undersigned priest, missionary of Saint
Michael, the body of the late widow Roy, deceased at the age of 88 or 9 years
without any illness; she had received a precaution eight days before from the
Saint Viatique. All the parish assisted at her internment." Leclair,
Priest.
What are we to think of this
woman who had visions of a Saint, who told her that her time was near? In our age
of unbelief we might regard her as senile. Quite obviously her neighbors of
that day admired her Faith and loved her. For myself the real point of interest
here is that she had enjoyed good health right up to her last day: "... .decedee
a 1 'age de 88 ou 9 ans sans aucune maladie" --- when it was her
time to die.
Thus we've seen the dual
themes of our opening quote, as the comparison of the "pluck up that which
is planted" was to the up-rooting of people who emigrate from the land of
their origin. Jeanne and Nicholas sailed from old
Essentially, they set an
example for all of the
They
followed the rivers which were the routes of exploration and easy travel into
the interior of
It was Theophile's generation
that experienced the Industrial Revolution, that great 19th Century upheaval of
society which emptied the farms. He and Astree left
Evidently, they had left
The story of how our
As a key part of telling this
history, it has been necessary to study the building of French parishs, an
occupation which their priests undertook with a zeal seldom seen.
In fact, their organizations
became a crusade of a sort, called "La Survivance ", denoting
a firm intention to preserve the Quebecois language and culture. Such
zeal inevitably raised alarms among the anglophile officials of 19th Century
Protestant
In this attempt to write a
description of the up-rooting of the lives of our ancestors it was necessary to
learn more of the French language. This effort, too, impressed us with a
greater realization that our generation had indeed lost our roots.
The four children of
Theophile and Astree retained some of their ethnic French-Canadian background
by attending French-speaking parishes here in the
Today, most of the
But please don't misread my meaning
here. While I wish to honor the lives of those who preceded us, I believe
strongly that to them
What needs to be recalled
here is simply that we, too, are descended from immigrants to
I believe that the
descendants of the Pilgrims on the ship Mayflower have very little on us when
it comes to arguing who was here first! However, be advised: do not get into
any such discussion with those guys who own the new casinos in
http://home.comcast.net/~RobRoy8/ http://picasaweb.google.com/RobRoy810
This is a definitive history
of the
American-French Genealogical
Society, Woonsocket, R.I.
Poulin, Eugena, Php,
"Crime and Seventeenth Century Women in
Je
Me Souviens, the
magazine published by the American -French Genealogical Society,
Talbot, Eloi-Gerard, "Genealogie
des Familles originaires des Comtes de
Montmagny Islet
Bellechasse", 1976, Vol. 14, p.167.
http://home.comcast.net/~RobRoy8/Roy_Family_Quebec.htm
My
name is Robert Arthur Roy. (also known
as “Rob Roy”). I am part of the 8th
generation of
My
father is Arthur G. Roy, and my mother is Rose Roy, her maiden name was Rose
Aimee Nadeau. My parents were married
July 6, 1936 in Ste. Appoline de Patton,
We
trace back to my father’s father’s father’s father’s father’s father’s father’s
father’s father, Louis Roy dit Leroi (See number 9) who stayed in
-----------------------------------------------------
1.Guillaume-Arthur
Roy
+Rose Aimee Nadeau m.
6-July-1936, Ste.Appoline de Patton,
(Her parents: Johnny (Jean?) Nadeau & Rose-Anna Labbe, m.3-Feb-1896,
@ St.Neree)
(His parents: Francois Roy & Odelie Gonthier-Bernard)
2.Francois
Roy
+Odelie Gonthier-Bernard
m.13-May-1895, St.Raphael,
(Her parents: Louis Gonthier-Bernard & Adelaide Theberge)
(His parents: Narcisse Roy & Philomene Couture, of St.Raphael)
3.
Narcisse Roy
+Philomene Couture m.9-April-1861
@ St.Raphael,
(Her parents: Leon Couture & Adelaide
Gonthier)
(His parents: Etienne Roy & Marguerite LaCroix)
4.
Etienne Roy
+ Marguerite LaCroix m.12-Aug-1828, @ St
Gervais, Bellechasse Cty.
(Her parents:
(His parents; Bazile Roy & Louise Boulet)
5.
Bazile Roy
+ Marie-Louise Boulet m.17-Jan-1785 @ St.Francois-Riviere-du-Sud
(Her parents: Jean-Marc Boule & Marie-Anne Fortier)
( His parents: Jean-Baptiste Roy & Magdeleine Tangue)
6.
Jean.-Baptiste Roy
+Marie-Magdeleine Tangue m. 22-July-1748 @
St.Vallier
(Her parents: Jean.-Baptiste Tangue & M. Magdeleine
Cymar)
(His parents: Jean-Baptiste Roy & Claire Cadrin)
7.
Jean-Baptiste Roy (or
Leroy)
born @ La Durantaye,
+ Claire Cadrin-Leclerc m. 17-Oct-1701 @ St.Michel
(Her parents: Nicholas Cadrin-Leclerc & Francoise
DeLaunay)
(His parents: Nicholas Roy dit Leroy & Jeanne Lelievre)
8.
Nicholas Roy dit Leroy, 1639-1691, born @St.Remi de Dieppe, Normandie; d. La
Durantaye
+ Jeanne
Lelievre
m. Feb-1658 @ St.Leonard de Honfleur, Normandie
9.
Louis Roy dit Leroi, circa 1620-1663
+Anne
Lemaistre
m. 27-Apr-1638, St.Remi de Dieppe, Normandie France
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Quebec Je Me Souviens Les Filles du
Roy
Québec "Where the river narrows" http://home.comcast.net/~RobRoy8/Roy_Family_Quebec.htm