Of interest to us is general and specific genealogical information about our French-Canadian (QUÉBEC in particular) and Franco-American ancestors. I hope to post pertinent info here on a regular basis as my research progresses. Details concerning genetic anomalies and hereditary diseases found among French-Canadians and their descendants would be welcome. Your input, corrections and comments are most welcome.
Born in 1809 on her father’s farm on Côte Terrebonne in the city of the same name, Esther BLONDIN lived like other female children of her era. She learned the chores necessary to become a good wife & homemaker.
At age 20, she was hired as a domestic for a village merchant. Soon afterward, she accepted a similar job at the convent of the Sisters of the Congregation of Notre-Dame (CND), who staffed the local school. It is thanks to the sisters that Esther learned to read & write, knowledge that was not deemed essential by her parents for a daughter. Eventually, Esther entered the community of the CND sisters having been attracted by the lifestyle of the Sisters for whom she worked. She had to leave the novitiate because of illness. Esther then met a former CND novice, who had opened a school in Vaudreuil, QC where she began her teaching career.
In 1850, with the encouragement of the Montréal clergy, Esther founded the Roman Catholic religious teaching community of the Sisters of Saint Anne. As a nun, she was known as Sister Marie-Anne. Esther died in 1890 at the Mother House of the Sisters in Lachine, QC.
Female founders of religious communities in Québec did not have an easy life. Like all women of their era, the sisters were subject to the clergy, who regulated every aspect of their daily life even though they were quite capable of administering schools, hospitals and other social institutions. Despite their abilities, the Sisters were looked upon by the all-male clergy as “inferior” beings, who must be “guided” at all times by the watchful authority of men.
Hence, it may be worth your while to read one or more biographies of such women in QC as Esther BLONDIN. Such reading will bear witness to the influence that the Roman Catholic Church had upon the life of our ancestors in QC during the 17th, 18th & early 19th centuries.
Click onthetitle above
to be brought to the homepage
of the
Sisters of Saint Anne.
SUREAU dit BLONDIN (1) Jacques SUREAU Honorée POULLET Poitou (Vienne) FRANCE (2) Hilaire SUREAU dit BLONDIN Louise PARADIS 1691-06-18 Québec City, QC (3) Pierre SUREAU dit BLONDIN Agnès LEDOUX 1723-05-18 Montréal, QC Catherine PETITCLERC 1745-01-07 Terrebonne, Terrebonne County, QC (4) Jean-Baptiste SUREAU dit BLONDIN Thérèse MARIÉ 1778-02-02 Terrebonne, Terrebonne County, QC (5) Jean-Baptiste SUREAU dit BLONDIN Marie-Rose LIMOGES 1804-10-08 Laval, Île-Jésus County, QC (6) Esther BLONDIN (1809-1890)
Judy SCHNEIDER, who is living in Germany, has devoted much time to the research of her maternal CATUDAL dit ST-JEAN ancestry. As a result of this work, she has published 2 voluntes entitled: The Extended Catudal Family History; An In-depth Study of 8 Family Lineages including the Families: Boisse, Catudal, Chabot, Couture, Daragon dit Lafrance, Godard dit Lapointe, Fabre dit Larosée and Tremblay.
Judy's CATUDAL lineage is as follows:
CATUDAL dit ST-JEAN
Unknown ancestors
(1)
Jean-Baptiste CATUDAL
Angélique SABOURIN
1728-07-18
Saint-Joseph-de-Chambly, Chambly County, QC
(2)
Joseph CATUDAL dit ST-JEAN
Charlotte ROCQUE
1756-05-03
St-Charles-sur-Richelieu, Saint-Hyacinthe County, QC
(3)
Michel CATUDAL dit ST-JEAN
Élisabeth/Isabelle VIDAL
1794-09-22
Saint-Mathias-sur-Richelieu, Rouville County, QC
(4)
Jean-Baptiste CATUDAL dit ST-JEAN
Sophie PAQUET
1821-06-25
Marieville, Rouville County, QC
(5)
Magloire CATUDAL
Philomène CHABOT
1856-04-22
Saint-Césaire, Rouville County, QC
(6)
Barthélémy CATUDAL
Joséphine BOISSÉ
1896-02-17
Valcourt, Shefford County, QC
(7)
Adélard CATUDAL
Yvonne TREMBLAY
1929-04-01
Haileybury, ON
Having unearthed many CATUDAL pictures through the years, Judy has decided to share some of them on her Webshots site.
For those of you, who are interested in viewing them,
simply CLICK on the title above to be brought to her site.
I was born in early morn...
An American living in Canada since 1971, I have finally come to grips with my French-Canadian heritage, which isn't as easy as it may sound. Although many Quebecers immigrated to the U.S., wherever they went, they were the minority, despite filling the factories along the Merrimack River on the east coast. So, I'm not "an American in Paris," but an "AMERICAN in QUÉBEC"!