Ryeland Family Tree

The Genealogy of the Ryeland and connected Families

Pierre GAREMAN, Dit Lepicard

Male Abt 1600 - 1653  (53 years)


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  • Name Pierre GAREMAN  [1
    Suffix Dit Lepicard 
    Birth Abt 1600  Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Gender Male 
    _UID 71DEADDEB8B24F918DCB04454F99F155F3E7 
    Death 13 Jun 1653  Cap-Rouge, , Qu Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    • Captured By Iroquois Indians
    Person ID I35865  Ryeland Family Tree
    Last Modified 19 Apr 2024 

    Father Pierre GAREMAN,   b. Abt 1565, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. France Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Family ID F11785  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family Madeleine CHARLOT,   b. Abt 1605, Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Bef 29 Jan 1651, Quebec, , Qu Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 46 years) 
    Marriage Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this location  [1
    Children 
     1. Nicole Madeleine GAREMAN,   b. 1631, Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Find all individuals with events at this locationd. Bef 10 Apr 1688, Neuville, Portneuf, , Qu Find all individuals with events at this location (Age 57 years)
    Last Modified 27 Nov 2014 
    Family ID F11784  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

  • Event Map
    Link to Google MapsBirth - Abt 1600 - Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsDeath - 13 Jun 1653 - Cap-Rouge, , Qu Link to Google Earth
    Link to Google MapsMarriage - - Bagneux, Canton Vic-Sur-Aisne, Soissons, Picardie, France Link to Google Earth
     = Link to Google Earth 

  • Notes 
    • ------------The following paragraphs taken (and chronologically reorganized) from James Carten's postings:In 1628, Pierre Gareman of Bagneux, Picardie married Marguerite Charlot. Their first child arrived in 1629 and their second in 1631, they were girls, Florence and Nicole. This little family migrated to Quebec before the birth and baptism of their third daughter, Marguerite, in 1639. They had, Charles, their only son in 1643. They baptized Charles in Trois-Rivieres.According to Marcel Trudel (Terrier,p.307), the Gareman was in the region of Portneuf from 1640 to work in the service of Jacques Le Neuf de la Poterie. A short time later, around 1642, the Iroquois forced them to take refuge in Sillery, at the hospice. It was about the same era that Pierre stayed sometime in Trois-Rivieres. He shows up as a witness in 1643. The 25-05-1646, the seigneur Le Neuf came back again and signed with Gareman and Rene Mezeray a contract that incites them to take up where they left off in Portneuf. This contract did not have the desired follow-up because Mr. de la Poterie will declare in 1668 that the Iroquois danger obliged him and "many of his tenant farmers, had to abondon the area twenty years ago" because the buildings were burned," in which they suffered notable losses that cost him a lot to presently settle and could not do it earlier because there were no troops in the country" (The Carignan Reg.). The historian Trudel concludes that the occupation of the area is not yet really underway before 1663, because the only two known residants at that time are Pierre Gareman and Rene Mezerets dit Nopce.In 1652 or before, the Compagnie des Cent-Associes granted to Pierre Gareman some land of four arpents wide on the (St. Lawrence) river, to which originally was twelve and a half arpents deep, and later to fifty. [In 26-03-1656, the inheritors will sell this land with buildings to Etienne Letellier, for the sum of 300 pounds. This property, today, takes up the major part of the parishes of Ste.Ursule and St. Benoit at the western end of the city of Ste. Foy.]In 10-06-1653, when he was living at Cap Rouge with his family, Pierre and his son Charles, 8 years old, are captured by the Iroquois. In the Histoire De Notre-Dame de Ste.Foy, the priest H.-A. Scott writes (pp.295-296):" the 10-06-1653, Francois Boule, called Petit Homme, was working in his field, which bordered on that of Rene Mezerets, when he was hit by three gunshots, one in the stomach, in the groin, and in the thigh, then scalped. His other neighbor, Pierre Gareman, called the Picard, had a consequence even more sad, as he was taken alive with his son Charles, of eight years, and a young man named Hugues Couturier, and reserved to these terrible tortures so often written about.The Jesuit Journal also tells about the attack on 10-06-1653 by the Onieda tribe of the Iroquois on Cap Rouge. The Journal refers to ten year old son, Charles. The Iroquois did not approve of men letting themselves be captured. They usually tortured and killed them, as they did with our Pierre Gareman.Sources include: Ref: Ancetres by Jacques Saintonge #162; "One Hundred French-Canadian Families", p. 167-168, by Phillip Moore; and Jette
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  • Sources 
    1. [S479] Sharrow, Charron, Sharon, Carveth, Abbott, Armstrong, Miarecki and other Ancestors Rootsweb Tree.


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