BUTAUD FAMILY OF SOUTH LOUISIANA & SE TEXAS - Person Sheet
BUTAUD FAMILY OF SOUTH LOUISIANA & SE TEXAS - Person Sheet
NameAnne GUÉDRY 7169,5430
Birth1773, ACADIA5350,5182,4811,5381,7176
ReligionRoman Catholic
Family ID512W2.10.09.04
SurnameGuédry
ResidenceNova Scotia, CANADA (Chéticamp on Bay Sainte-Marie, Digby County - 1774; Baie Sainte-Marie, Digby County - 1799)
MotherMarie-Françoise JEANSON (1744-1826)
Notes for Anne GUÉDRY

AUGUSTIN GUEDRY, 1740, fils de Pierre et de Marguerite Brasseau, marié civilement, vers 1767, à Marie-Françoise Jeanson, fille de Guillaume et de Marie Aucoin. Enfants: Hermel-Pierre, 1767; Joseph-Félix, 1770; Augustin, 1771; Anne, 1773. Son mariage a été réhabilité à Windsor (Pisiguit), le 8 mai 1769. Il demeura à Windsor de 1767 à 1772 et il s’est établi à Chéticamp (Matéghan), à la baie Sainte-Marie, où il est décédé en 1826. “

Translation:
AUGUSTIN GUEDRY, 1740, son of Pierre and of Marguerite Brasseau, married civilly about 1767 to Marie-Françoise Jeanson, daughter of Guillaume and of Marie Aucoin. Children: Hermel-Pierre, 1767; Joseph-Félix, 1770; Augustin, 1771; Anne, 1773. His marriage was rehabilitated at Windsor (Pisiguit) 8 May 1769. He lived at Windsor from 1767 to 1772 and he settled at Chéticamp (Matéghan) on Bay Sainte-Marie where he died in 1826. “5350

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AUGUSTIN GUEDRY, né en 1740, fils de Pierre et de Marguerite Brasseau, marié vers 1767 à Marie-Françoise Jeanson, fille de Billie Jeanson. Enfants: Hermat-Pierre, 1767; Joseph-Félix, 1770; Augustin, 1771; Anne, 1773. Cette famille était à Pisiguit, en 1768 et en 1770, et s’est établie à Chéticamp, Cap-Breton, vers 1774. “

Translation:
AUGUSTIN GUEDRY, born in 1740, son of Pierre and of Marguerite Brasseau, married about 1767 to Marie-Françoise Jeanson, daughter of Billie Jeanson. Children: Hermat-Pierre, 1767; Joseph-Félix, 1770; Augustin, 1771; Anne, 1773. This family was a Pisiguit en 1768 and in 1770 and settled at Chéticamp, Cape Breton about 1774. “5182

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CHAPTER IV
AUGUSTIN ESCAPES, SETTLES IN ST. MARY’S BAY


Augustin Gedree was born in 1740, in either Pisiquit or Île Royale. He married Marie Francoise Jeanson around 1767, the year his father died. Augustin was the son of Pierre Guedry dit LaBine and Marguerite Brasseau and the grandson of Claude Guedry dit Grivois and Marguerite Petitpas. He is the ancestor of all the Guedry, Geddry, Guidrey, Guiddry, Jeddry and Jedrey families in Clare, Nova Scotia and New England.

Augustin is my great, great, great, grandfather. Somehow that seems a very close relationship for two people born almost two full centuries apart. The reason can be found by reviewing the Genealogy. Augustin and I are so close because I am the result of a string of births that happened when the age of the male members of the family averaged thirty-nine years.

Augustin Escapes

Augustin was captured by the English but was never deported. He was not deported because he escaped. He never left Acadia. This is his story.

In 1754, Augustin’s father Pierre dit LaBine was in Merligueche, probably with his family. Pierre is recorded as having surrendered to the English “at the time of the exile”, probably in 1755, on Île St-Jean (Prince Edward Island). Perhaps Augustin, then 14 or 15 years old was “taken” while Pierre was in Merligueche. Perhaps he was captured or detained at the time of his father’s surrender on Île St-Jean. In any case he was put on board a ship ready to sail for the English colonies. Somehow Augustin escaped from the ship before it sailed. Legend has it that he swam ashore and made a run for it, eventually making his way to La Heve in the region of Cape Sable, near his Grandfather’s old stomping grounds.

It is quite possible, but not verified, that the name of the ship he escaped from was the Pembroke. The Pembroke is recorded as the only ship that had experienced a mass escape of Acadian prisoners in 1755. It was docked at Goat Island off the shore of Port Royal when the escape took place.

Why Augustin would have been transported to Port Royal from Merligueche or Ile St Jean is unknown. A possible reason is “lack of transport”, not enough ships, to do the deed. English records are replete with complaints about “lack of transport”. If Augustin had been captured while Pierre was in Merligueche, and then was brought to Port Royal because transport was available there, that would explain why, when he escaped, he made his way back to Le Heve in the Merligueche area. He would have thought his father was still there.

We know that Augustin lived among the Micmac Indians for at least eight years. He remained a free man, one of the few Acadians who managed to do so. Of course he lived in constant fear of capture, but being the product of at least two generations of Coureurs de Bois, would have been quite comfortable living that way.

Augustin Settles in St. Mary’s Bay

In 1763, when the Acadians were again free to come back to their homeland (many did not), Augustin emerged from the woods and settled quietly on the west coast of Nova Scotia on land at Gilbert’s Cove near Hobb’s Hill and west of St. Croix Chapel. We believe it was there that he met and married Marie Jeanson and where at least three of their children, Hermat-Pierre, Joseph Felix and Augustin Jr. were born. In 1900, that land was owned by M. Charles Mande Melancon.

The couple initially entered into a civil marriage before witnesses in 1767. Their marriage was “rehabilitated” in a Church ceremony by a missionary from Windsor (now Truro) on May 8, 1769. One source reports that when English Colonists moved in beside him in 1787, he moved down the coast of St. Mary’s Bay, obtained a Grant of Land and became the pioneer settler of Cheticamp. This was certainly understandable given what he and his family had experienced under the English.

Bona Arsenault believed and had written in his books that Augustin settled in Cheticamp, Cape Breton. I wrote him and explained that there were two Cheticamps, the second in the St. Mary’s Bay area of Nova Scotia. At first he rejected the idea. Then one morning at seven A. M., while I was still asleep, the phone rang. The operator said, “Please hold for a call from the Office of the Vice-Premier of Canada”. That woke me up. Bona Arsenault, who was then a Member of Parliament, and for some reason was calling from that office, came on the line and apologized for not taking my Cheticamp, St. Mary’s Bay claim seriously at first, but, being the good Genealogist he was, he had looked into it and had now concluded I was correct. He told me I “would get full credit” in his future writings on the subject. I never checked. Bona and I had several other conversations over the next few months. I believe it was he who directed me to Father Partrice Gallant at the University of Moncton, New Brunswick.

The remainder of Augustine’s children were born in Cheticamp, St. Mary’s Bay, now known as St. Alphonse. During my visit to Meteghan in 1965, I was brought to a house, in St. Alphonse, that, I was told had been built by Augustin’s son Philippe. The story was that old Augustin might have lived out his final days there and this his son Evariste, my great grandfather was born there. In 1965, the house was owned by the Deveau family. There is a photograph of the house, substantially modified since the original of course, in the Picture Gallery.

A list of Augustin’s children is shown in Table 4. There is a gap of 10 years between Anne and Philippe. It is possible there were other children, but if there were, I have found no record of them.

Table 4
Children of Augustin Gedree and Marie Jeanson


Name Year of Birth

Hermat-Pierre 1767
Joseph Felix 1770
Augustin 1771
Anne 1773
Philippe 1783
Romain 1784
Frederic 1790
Jean 1790

Augustin, his son Augustin, Hermat-Pierre and Philippe appear on the Annapolis County Poll Tax record of 1792. At that time their name was spelled Gedree. The Pierre listed in the record is Hermat-Pierre.

The next we hear of Augustin’s children is in a census taken over the years 1818 to 1822 by Father Ligogne. In that census and subsequent censuses taken by the same Priest, we find the Gedrees, Philippe, some of his brothers, some of his children and Philippe’s mother, Marie Jeanson, still living in the St. Mary’s Bay area. Some lived in Meteghan, another in Plympton.

The 1818-1822 census indicates that Augustin was “deceased”. We interpret this confusing statement to mean Augustin died sometime between 1818 and 1822 while married to Marie-Jeanson.

Other entries indicate that Marie was living with her son Jean and his wife Rosalie Clothilde Robichau from 1822 to 1827 at least. Marie Jeanson was no longer living with her son according to the Ligogne census of 1840-1843, meaning she had probably passed away by then.

At least one Genealogist has suggested that Augustin had a second wife. I have found no evidence of it and there appears to be no knowledge of it within the family. The census of Father Ligogne seems to contradict it as well.

Four of Augustin’s Children Establish Families

Records indicate that two of Augustin’s children established families that remain today in the St. Mary’s Bay area and parts of New England, primarily Massachusetts. They are Hermat-Pierre and Philippe. I was told that Frederic and Jean also established families in the Nova Scotia/Cape Breton area but their trails has been harder to follow. I have included as much information as I was able to find about them in the narrative.

Of these four, the most extensive families, or at least the ones we know the most about, are those begun by Philippe and Hermat-Pierre. Hermat-Pierre’s name has been carried down through family records simply as Pierre. “5412

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“ The twenty-fifth of August 1799 I the undersigned priest have supplied the ceremonies of baptism to Marie Anne, born the 10th of July 1798 of the legitimate marriage between Pierre GIDDERY and Anne BELLIVEAU of this parish, she having been baptised by Marie JANSON (JOHNSON), her grandmother, for lack of a priest; thus have the father and mother of the child assured me, present at the ceremony. The godfather was Frederic GIDDERY, her uncle, and the godmother Marguerite GIDDERY, her aunt, also of this parish. /s/ Sigogne, priest. “7169,5430
Questions/Errors notes for Anne GUÉDRY
None
Names notes for Anne GUÉDRY
Anne Guédry
Anne Guedry
Anne Guidry
Anne Gedree
Marguerite Giddery
Last Modified 23 May 2008Created 15 Dec 2024 using Reunion for Macintosh