He immigrated to New France (Canada) in 1657 as a indentured servant. Records from CanadianHeadstones.com Index list this cemetery as his burial place, along with other members of his family.
He married Marie Anne Ancelin in Nov 1667 in Montmorency, Quebec, Canada. They had ten children: Pierre, Jean Baptiste, Marie Anne, Joseph, Pierre (the younger), Louis, Marie Elizabeth, Francois, Genevieve, and Marie Magdeleine.
The memorial shown in the photo is not at the cemetery. It is an historical marker near the St. Lawrence River in Kamouraska, Quebec, Canada.
SusanE contributed the following information:
"Pierre was enduring a cancer of the mouth, caused by pipe smoking. In 1701, Pierre and Marie made their will, with the consent of their children. The assets would go to the survivor of the two of them. Pierre died in 1702, sometime between the 28th of May and 15th of September"
(Our French-Canadian Ancestors, Thos. Laforest, Vol II)
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Following email was sent by Tari SG-Mitchell on Oct 19, 2020
The above bio states that this monument to Pierre Michaud and Marie Ancelin, and their children is not in a cemetery. The cemetery is long gone. This site, called Berceau de Kamouraska, the Cradle of Kamouraska, is where the two original churches and cemeteries in Kamouraska stood between 1692 and 1791. It states that on a sign there and that there were 1,300 pioneers buried there. So, in essence, it is in a cemetery. Most everything there is a monument of sorts.
Click Here For Pierre's Wikitree Biography
.
He immigrated to New France (Canada) in 1657 as a indentured servant. Records from CanadianHeadstones.com Index list this cemetery as his burial place, along with other members of his family.
He married Marie Anne Ancelin in Nov 1667 in Montmorency, Quebec, Canada. They had ten children: Pierre, Jean Baptiste, Marie Anne, Joseph, Pierre (the younger), Louis, Marie Elizabeth, Francois, Genevieve, and Marie Magdeleine.
The memorial shown in the photo is not at the cemetery. It is an historical marker near the St. Lawrence River in Kamouraska, Quebec, Canada.
SusanE contributed the following information:
"Pierre was enduring a cancer of the mouth, caused by pipe smoking. In 1701, Pierre and Marie made their will, with the consent of their children. The assets would go to the survivor of the two of them. Pierre died in 1702, sometime between the 28th of May and 15th of September"
(Our French-Canadian Ancestors, Thos. Laforest, Vol II)
----
Following email was sent by Tari SG-Mitchell on Oct 19, 2020
The above bio states that this monument to Pierre Michaud and Marie Ancelin, and their children is not in a cemetery. The cemetery is long gone. This site, called Berceau de Kamouraska, the Cradle of Kamouraska, is where the two original churches and cemeteries in Kamouraska stood between 1692 and 1791. It states that on a sign there and that there were 1,300 pioneers buried there. So, in essence, it is in a cemetery. Most everything there is a monument of sorts.
Click Here For Pierre's Wikitree Biography
.
Family Members
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Pierre Michaud
1672–1761
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Marie Anne Michaud Boucher
1676–1755
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Joseph Michaud
1678–1735
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Pierre (the younger) Michaud
1681–1760
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Louis Michaud
1684–1719
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Marie Elisabeth Michaud Levasseur
1685–1766
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François Zephirin Michaud
1687–1727
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Marie Genevieve Michaud
1690–1690
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Marie Magdeleine Michaud Roy
1692–1775
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