Saturday, April 4, 2015

Guillaume Couillard de Lespinay

June's 10th great grandfather.

Guillaume Couillard (1570 - 1621), 10th great grandfather of wife
Elizabeth Couillard (1631 - 1704), daughter of Guillaume Couillard
Joseph Guyon (1649 - 1712), son of Elizabeth Couillard
Angelique Guyon (1677 - 1718), daughter of Joseph Guyon
Marie Angelique Letourneau (1697 - 1765), daughter of Angelique Guyon
Marie Madeleine Leboeuf (1731 - ), daughter of Marie Angelique Letourneau
Jean Baptiste Gervais I (1753 - 1809), son of Marie Madeleine Leboeuf
Jean Baptiste Gervais II (1776 - 1811), son of Jean Baptiste Gervais I
Jean Baptiste Gervais III (1811 - 1887), son of Jean Baptiste Gervais II
Jean Baptiste Gervais IV (1832 - 1916), son of Jean Baptiste Gervais III
Achille Ovila Gervais (1886 - 1980), child of Jean Baptiste Gervais IV
Gladys Gervais (1915 - 1996), daughter of Achille Ovila Gervais
Barbara June Agla (1942 - ), daughter of Gladys Gervais

http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/couillard_de_lespinay_guillaume_1E.html

COUILLARD DE LESPINAY, GUILLAUME, carpenter, seaman, and caulker, son of Guillaume Couillard and Élisabeth de Vesins, son-in-law of Louis Hébert; and native of Saint-Malo or of the parish of Saint-Landry in Paris; b. c. 1591; d. 1663 at Quebec.

Couillard married Guillemette, daughter of Louis Hébert, at Quebec, about 26 Aug. 1621. By her he had 10 children, and because of the numerous descendants of these children Couillard appears in the genealogy of almost all the old French-Canadian families.

He had come to Canada about 1613 according to Champlain, who spoke highly of him in 1628. Couillard was one of the first to settle permanently in the colony. Louis Hébert, the first farmer, arrived at Quebec only in 1617. After his death in 1627, Couillard took over from him the farming of his lands, having inherited, through his wife, half of Hébert’s estate. Moreover, in the same year (1627) Champlain also granted to Couillard, for personal reasons, “a hundred acres of land to clear and seed,” which bordered on the St. Charles River. By 1632 Couillard had nearly 20 acres under cultivation, and in 1639 he owned a flour mill. On 8 July of the same year Huault de Montmagny appointed him a “clerk responsible for inspecting the sown lands and the food of the settlers of Quebec.” He had been the first person to make use of a plough, in the spring of 1628. In 1643 he was making lime for the Compagnie des Cent-Associés.

At the end of June 1628 Champlain, alarmed by the approach of the English and the threat of famine at Quebec, decided to send someone to Tadoussac to repair and bring back a boat, for the purpose of moving unessential people out towards the Gaspé. Couillard, the only man capable of carrying out this operation, stubbornly refused to do it, despite his normal readiness to be of help. In dread of being slaughtered by the Indians, “he feared for his skin, and did not want to leave his wife, for fear of losing her.”

When Quebec was captured in 1629, Guillaume Couillard’s family was the only complete family that agreed to live under the occupation, and Champlain entrusted to it two young Indian girls, Charité and Espérance, whom he had adopted. After the French returned in 1632 Couillard continued to work unsparingly for the colony and to be held in high regard generally: he took part in the defence against the Iroquois, frequently piloted boats between Quebec and Tadoussac, and became churchwarden of the parish, after having given a part of his land for the reconstruction of the church. Since he could not write, he used as his mark a most original little design, which appears on several historical documents that have been preserved.

In December 1654, under Governor Jean de Lauson’s administration, he was ennobled by the king, “on account of services rendered to the country of Canada.” According to family papers, Couillard’s coat of arms was “azure, a dove with wings outspread or, holding in its beak an olive branch proper,” with the device: “Dieu aide au premier colon.”

Guillaume Couillard died in his house on 4 March 1663, and was buried in the chapel of the Hôtel-Dieu in recognition of the gifts made by him to that institution. Three years later his widow sold his house and a good portion of his land to Bishop Laval*, for the establishment of the seminary of Quebec. The site of the house is marked today by a cairn in an inside courtyard of the seminary, and Guillaume Couillard has his statue, the work of the sculptor Alfred Laliberté, near Louis Hébert’s monument beside the city hall of Quebec.

Honorius Provost