les Filles à Marier
Before the "Filles du Roi" (King's Daughters) came to
Québec beginning in 1663, a small group of young French women called "les Filles à Marier"
(or marriageable young girls) emigrated to Canada based solely on their willingness to marry when they arrived. It is estimated
that between the years 1634 and 1663, about 262 "Filles à Marier" arrived in New France . They were mainly recruited and chaperoned
by religious groups or wealthy individuals who had to vouch for each of them and ensure their good conduct and character.
Anne Antoinette De Liercourt [1634-1707] was a Filles
a Marier. She was first married to Blaise
Juillet dit Avignon [1611-1600], who was killed during an altercation with the
Iroquois in April 1660. Widowed with four young children, Anne married Hughes Picard (1618-1707) just two
months later, on 30 June 1660. Anne and both
of her husbands are my great grandparents.
I am descended from one of Anne’s daughters with Blaise Juillet and from two of her daughters with Hughes Picard. The Juillet connection
descends through my maternal Gadway/Bruso line while the Picard connection is
through my paternal Yelle/Boyea and Gervais/Jarvis lines.
The three lines that connect me to Anne de Liercourt:
Hughes Picard
(1618 – 1707)
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Hughes
Picard (1618 – 1707)
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Blaise
Juillet Dit Avignon (1611 – 1660)
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Mathurine Juillet (1651 - 1723)
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