Clan Munro USA
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Alphonsine Fauteux

Alphonsine Fauteux

Female Abt 1852 - Yes, date unknown

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Alphonsine Fauteux was born about 1852 (daughter of Louis-Gonzague Fauteux and Hermine Leduc); and died.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Alphonsine married Guillaume Napoleon Moncel on 10 Jan 1871 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Guillaume was born about 1850 in Griffintown, Montreal, Quebec, Canada; died in Nov 1923 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried in Nov 1923 in Notre-Dame-Des-N, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]

    Notes:

    Married:
    Guillaume and Alphonsine were married in the Notre Dame Cathedral.

    Children:
    1. Alphonsine Moncel was born about 1871; and died.
    2. Guillaume Moncel was born about 1876; and died.
    3. Charles Moncel was born about 1877; and died.
    4. Rene' Edouard Moncel was born in 1880; died in 1958.
    5. Cocoune Beatrice Moncel was born about 1882; and died.
    6. Moncel was born about 1884; and died.
    7. Moncel was born about 1886; and died.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Louis-Gonzague Fauteux was born about 1825; and died.

    Notes:

    From THE FRENCH QUARTER by RON GRAHAM: P148
    "In 1867 my great-great grandfather Louis-Gonzague Fauteux was a well-to-do merchant with an office on Rue Saint-Francis-Xavier in Old Montreal and a home on Rue de La Gauchetiere. He had been born in a village on the north shore of the St Laurence toward Trois-Rivieres. His father, his grandfather, his great-grandfather and his great-great grandfather had all been named Pierre Fauteux after the first Fauteux to come to New France, from Normandy around 1666, and his older brother Pierre had married Laurent Laroux's grandaughter in 1842. Through that connection Louis had met and married my ancestress Hermine Leduc, Hugh Munro's granddaughter."

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9
    Oct 1996

    Louis-Gonzague married Hermine Leduc. Hermine (daughter of Joseph Leduc, M.D. and Marie-Charlotte Munro) was born about 1827; and died. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Hermine Leduc was born about 1827 (daughter of Joseph Leduc, M.D. and Marie-Charlotte Munro); and died.

    Notes:

    !Information from file of Henry de L Harwood.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Birth:
    Estimate: This birth date is an estimate based on the birth dates of nearest relatives or contemporaries, or based on other clues such as christening date, marriage date, birth order, etc.

    Children:
    1. Hermine Fauteux was born about 1850; and died.
    2. 1. Alphonsine Fauteux was born about 1852; and died.
    3. Eugenie Fauteux was born about 1854; and died.


Generation: 3

  1. 6.  Joseph Leduc, M.D. was born on 3 Aug 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; died in 1829 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada.

    Notes:

    !Additional deaths listed from L'Assumption Parish: Antoine Leduc 29 Aug 1782, 20 Months and Appoline Leduc 4 Apr 1794, 8 1/2 Months.

    BIO:The LeDuc family was also local to the L'Assumption parish as a long established French family. Joseph LeDuc was born at L'Assumption on the 3rd of August 1795, the last of twelve children born to Antoine LeDuc and Catherine Poitras.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Joseph married Marie-Charlotte Munro on 15 Feb 1819 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada. Marie-Charlotte (daughter of Hugh Munro and Angelique Leroux) was born on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1830. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 7.  Marie-Charlotte Munro was born on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath (daughter of Hugh Munro and Angelique Leroux); died in 1830.

    Notes:

    BIO:Note from French-Canadian Journal:

    TBL:........"his brother, much younger, Dr. Joseph LeDuc (1793-1829) graduated medicine in 18--, practiced at St. Roch L'Achigan, Montreal and finally at St. Polycarp where he died. He had married well, in 1819 in Montreal, Charlotte Munro (1798-1830), neice of her namesake the seigneuresse of Vaudreuil .... and daughter of Hugh Munro of St Esprit de Montcalm, Merchant, and of Angelique LeRoux (They married Montreal 1793). She had previously married in 1781 Francois Antoine Larocque (1753-92) who was elected deputy for L'Assumption in 1792 but dies prior to taking his seat."

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    Children:
    1. 3. Hermine Leduc was born about 1827; and died.


Generation: 4

  1. 14.  Hugh Munro was born on 15 Oct 1764 in Albany, Albany Co., New York, USA; was christened in in New York, New York Co., New York, USA (son of Capt. Hon. John Munro and Mary Brower); died on 22 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada; was buried on 25 Sep 1825 in St. Esprit, , Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    Ref: Clan Munro files - Stroud, Anna Margaret

    Hugh was the oldest son of John and Maria, but their third child as he was preceeded by two sisters. He was born in Albany City, New York, where his father was a merchant. He would have been nearly five years old when they moved to their new home in the Albany County wilderness - later to become part of the state of Vermont. These would have been busy times for his parents as his father continued to build his new estate and oversee the clearing and planting of the fields, the workings of the new mills, and the settlement of numerous small tenant farmers.

    According to the old Scottish practice, as the oldest son, Hugh would be expected to eventually manage and inherit the main property at the Fowlis estate upon his father's death, and he would be educated and trained for that occupation.

    Hugh had a very busy childhood. He was probably schooled at home or with a tutor until there was an appropriate school available. He would ride out with his father to visit the tenant farmers, and oversee the workings at the mills, potash works and forges. In addition he would be a silent witness to the many casual meetings and conferences where John helped his many friends and neighbors with their problems.

    Hugh witnessed the distress of his father's tenants and settlers who were accosted and attacked by Ethan Allen and his "Green Mountain Boys," who thought they had a prior right to the land through their adjoining New Hampshire grants. Allen was determined to drive John Munro, "The Yorker," from his lands, or discredit him to break his influence with the settlers. The conflict escalated, and Hugh was home when the Allen cohorts burst into the manorhouse at Fowlis and bullied his mother and frightened his brothers and sisters before his father finally managed to eject them from the house, and then drive them from the yard where they had tried to set fire to the porch and house. He also helped to carry water in the vain attempt to control the fire at the potash works also set by the same unruly mob.

    By 1775 Hugh was 11 years old, and wise beyond his years with the knowledge that political conflict was spreading through the land like wildfire. As expected, he and his mother bore the responsibility for the estate on the ever more frequent occasions when his father was absent on some mysterious errand about the countryside, or to Albany, Schenectady, or even Boston or New York. He was firmly bound with his father in his unswerving loyalty to King George, and heard many heated discussions about local "loyalists" and "rebels." He overheard enough to know that his father was secretly encouraging veterans of the old regiments to sign up for service in Captain John's new loyalist company in the Scottish Royal Highland Emigrant Regiment newly formed by British General Alan McLean.

    Then, the summer before Hugh had his 12th birthday, the whole secure world at Fowlis suddenly was blown apart for the Munros. John was arrested and taken to Albany to appear before the rebel Committee of Safety to ascertain his political leanings and to prove he was not spying for the Crown. He testified and was parolled, then arrested and required to appear again. During his absence light-fingered cohorts of the Allen gang and fellow patriots visited Mary to bully and frighten her and the tenants, and also to liberate usable items from the Munro estate.

    The family's worst fears are confirmed when they recieve word that John had been thrown into the Albany prison as a Loyalist Tory and traitor to the American cause. Eventually John's name appeared on the list of landowners whose estates were to be confiscated for activity against the new independant American Colonies, and a committee arrived to strip the estate of all remaining supplies, stock, horses, and even to ransack the house for any useful plunder that may have been overlooked on previous occasions. At first a fairly sympathetic rebel allowed Mary to retain one riding horse and saddle for their use, but he later reconsidered this generosity and sent it away with the others. After he heard her plea in the name of her seven children, he allowed her to keep one milk cow - but only as a loan until it may also be called for. Hugh struggled to help Mary find enough for the family to eat from day to day.

    John was identified as being too influencial to be risked, so he was sentenced to be hung. He was put in irons and is sent to a prison ship on the Hudson River near Esopus. Mary was desperate when she heard he was not at Albany. She was told that he was hung. John was told that his wife and family were all murdered.

    After 18 months in prison, John escaped with a group of prisoners and found his way to the British lines near Fort Ticonderoga where he joined "Gentleman Johnny" Burgoyne. Old friends told him his family was alive and he sent word to Mary to find a way to join him in Canada. Mary's reply pleads for him to help her get away from their home where she is constantly harrassed by American rebels.

    Hugh helped Mary and the girls make packs to carry the extra clothing and the few remaining valuable items that they had sucessfully hidden from the looters, and they started off on the long walk to Schenectady to seek help from family or friends. His youngest brother, John Jr. is hardly four years old and Hugh assumed the responsibility of carrying him or encouraging him along. Hugh also scouted the roadway, looked for food, found the evening stopping place, looked after Cornelius and Harry, and worried about their safety - a long list of responsibilities for a 12 year old boy. The older girls, Christine and Cornelia, were fully occupied in helping their mother with the bundles and in taking turns carrying baby Charlotte, a toddler not yet two years old.

    How discouraged and angry Hugh must have been when they finally reached Schenectady and the Brouwer relatives refused to help them. Selling a piece of silver to a merchant at least gave them good Dutch food to fill their stomachs for a short while. They were finally rescued and hidden away by old merchant friends of John for a few months of rest, but all of them were aware of the rebel hatred of "Tory traitors" and were determined to find some way to get to Canada. The last few pieces of hidden silver plate and all of the salvaged best dresses and finery of Mary and the girls were sold to help provide the needed bribes to get a pass and make the journey to Canada possible. Ten years later Capt. John, ever the honorable Scot, listed as debts the expenses owed to John Glen of Schenectady and Richard Duncan of Albany for the feeding and care of his family and expenses for their escape to Canada.

    Outfitted in their sturdiest shoes and warmest clothing Hugh finally headed the group of women and straggling children on the trail north from Albany to Fort Ticonderoga, a trail fought over by both Loyalist and Rebel troops in the two years previous, and also frequented by Indians of unknown sympathies. It was early Autumn with warm days for walking, but nights that could be bone chilling in the open without adequate shelter or blankets. They ate sparingly of the food they carryied for they knew it might be hard to find sympathetic farmers along the road. The early days on the trail are again a trial for Mary in her poor health.

    When they had traveled beyond the area where Hugh had visited farmers and friends with his father, it became a daily trial to attempt to identify the political sympathies of settlers along the way so they would know if it would be safe to ask for food or shelter because they were constantly at risk of being reported to the local Militia. Hugh was especially at risk because he was nearly 14 years old and it was common practice for the Americans to conscript into the rebel army, the male children of Tories over 12 years old.

    The sore-footed, bedraggled family finally passed the front lines of the Americans and arrived at the forested shore of Lake George only to find no escort waiting to take them across the bay and up the river to Canada. There were no boats available of any kind, and they were in a no man's land frequented by hostile Indians. For six long days, shivering with cold and with little to eat, they lay hidden in the dense undergrowth, so near, and yet so far, from sanctuary in Canada. To their immense relief, late on the seventh day they were joined by another party of escaping Tory women and children, and found an escort who was able to provide transportation for all of them. Even then they did not escape without one last fright, for as they were taken by canoe across Lake George to the British boats they were discovered and closely pursued by a canoe manned by a war party of Indians.

    One can only imagine their joy when they at last reached Fort St. John and were met on the landing by John. It must have been with immense relief that Hugh lay down his burden of responsibility for his mother and siblings. And when the story of their trials was related in detail, Hugh must have felt great reward in the praise and approval from his father. Indeed, it was probably at that moment that John acceded to Hugh's request to join the army, finding him matured way beyond his tender years from the past three year ordeal. Hugh signed the enlistment roll of the First Battalion of the King's Royal Regiment of New York on 10 Oct 1778, just five days short of his 14th birthday.

    Hugh would have been warmly welcomed into his father's First Battalion Company of the King's Royal Regiment of New York as it was made up almost entirely of the old Scottish friends, neighbors, and tenants of the Munros - many of them disbanded veterans of the Seven Years War. They would welcome this eldest son of their Captain, and would be kind in teaching him the necessary Army drills and Manual of Arms, as well as the unpublished "Manual of Skills" so necessary for rank and file survival.

    Complete records were not preserved of the enlisted men in the King's Royal Regiment, but some muster and provision rolls were saved that list Hugh in Captain John Munro's Company. His early duties would probably have been at Fort St. John on the Richelieu River. With the onset of winter in 1778, Captain John was ordered to Montreal to find and supervise housing for some of the New York Loyalists. He moved Mary and his children there for their protection and care.

    In Oct 1780 Captain John was detailed to take fifty men and a party of Indians and Rangers down to Albany where he was to join Colonel Sir John Johnson who was raiding through the Mohawk Valley. Together they were to sweep north through the settlements burning and destroying the field crops and forage of the rebels, encourage able bodied Loyalists to join up, and, hopefully, capture a few important officers and rebels for the exchange of imprisoned Loyalists. It is likely that Hugh was among the soldiers on this excursion, traveling over the same route on which he had shepherded the family two years before.

    Hugh must have fared well with the men of Captain Munro's Company as he rose to the rank of Ensign on 13 Nov 1781, and, at the age of 19, he was promoted to the rank of Lieutenant on 24 Oct 1783. Along with the rest of the officers of the First Battalion he was reduced to half pay at the end of 1784 and subject to recall if the Army had need of him.

    By 1785 Hugh wass residing at L'Assumption, an old french village on the horse-shoe bend of the L'Assumption River. It was long known as "la Portage" by both the French and the Coureurs de Bois of the Fur Trade, as canoes were beached at the north side of the river bend, carried down the main street, Rue Portage, and launched again on the south side, thus avoiding the intervening falls. L'Assumption became an important hub for fur trading and commerce for the area east of Montreal. Hugh's mother, Mary, and the rest of the family had been settled here before his father sailed to England to hopefully gain reparation for the lands and fortune he lost to the American rebels in New York and Vermont. Once again, as the oldest son, Hugh feelt the responsibility for the family.

    As a commissioned officer and the son of Captain John Munro, Hugh was a desirable single guest to grace the dinner tables and evening socials of the well placed families in village. Under British rule it was a political necessity for the French to make friends and trade connections with influencial English Loyalists. The business and social elite at L'Assumption included the Leroux d'Esneval and LaRocque families, now united by the marriage of Angelique to Francois Antoine LaRocque. LaRocque soon found Hugh a most desireable employee, and an amiable dinner companion and guest. The Larocque Company was building a prosperous trade in lumber and wheat, and Hugh, as its English representative, was a great asset when dealing with the British merchants in Montreal. By the time his father returned to L'Assumption in 1787 and prepared to move his growing family to promised land grants on the upper reaches of the St. Lawrence River, Hugh was firmly established with the LaRocque firm.

    Hugh had been educated and trained to manage the family estates and a tremenous task awaited the Munros in Upper Canada where they would be starting over in unsettled lands. Already disappointed in his claims to the British government, John could not have been happy when Hugh announced that he was staying at L'Assumption with the LaRocque firm. Indeed, he must have felt it a real betrayal of his duty to him, his father, and to the family. John was nearly 60 years old, had limited funds, and needed the help of his sons in this new endeavor. More than that, he had counted on Hugh to set the pace for his brother, Cornelius was 20 but not overly ambitious, Harry was totally immersed in his books and studies to be a doctor, and John Jr., at 14, was just too easy going and indecisive to train for any leadership.

    It is not hard to imagine the argument that must have raged between this war-weary, army-hardened, tough old Scot and his equally stubborn, independant eldest son. At 23, Hugh was two years past his legal majority. Was he to be expected to give up the job he valued, the friends who respected him as an individual, and the life he had built for himself, to return to living in a virtual wilderness, clearing land and grubbing in the dirt to plant a crop ? He acknowledged his duty to the family, but, in return, had he not paid full measure ? What of the lost years of his youth spent carrying the burden of an abandoned family in New York ? This was a new country. He had given it nearly seven years of military service - did he not then deserve, at last, to make a decision to lead his own life as he saw fit ? How could his father criticize his work as a merchant when he, himself, had built his fortune in America beginning as a merchant in Albany ? Perhaps his father was too old to see the opportunities and genteel life he enjoyed in Montreal and L'Assumption. He was now fluent in French and he enjoyed their life style. He had no need to live in an all English community.

    In the end, John and the family left for the new lands in Upper Canada, and Hugh continued his life in L'Assumption. An uneasy, unsettled silence continued between father and son.

    As the LaRocque business grew and prospered, Francois felt the need to widen his influence, and was soon involved in the political scene, leaving more of the merchant duties to Hugh. At last, in 1792, he was elected to represent the L'Assumption district at the first Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada. Alas, before he was able to attend even one session he fell ill and died on 2 Nov 1792 at the age of forty-one. He left his young widow with two young sons age six and eight, and a thriving business managed by Hugh.

    With Francois only a short six months in his grave, the widow LaRocque and Hugh journeyed down the L'Assumption River to Montreal to plight their troth before the Reverend Delisle in the Anglican Church on 4 May 1793. On 12 Oct of the same year Angelique gave birth to their first child, a daughter who died just after her birth. She was buried in the family plot beside the four little LaRocque infants.

    At the age of 28 Hugh took over the LaRocque business and ran it successfully for twenty years before selling it to Angelique's brother, Laurent Laroux. Called back for army duty at erratic intervals, Hugh served during the war with the United States in 1812 as a Captain. Having sold the business, he moved his family to the village of Saint-Esprit, northwest of L'Assumption, where, as a retired officer living on half pay, he became the local Magistrate and Justice of the Peace.

    Except for the death of their daughter Lucie at the age of 13, these were tranquil years for Hugh and Angelique. Their five surviving children found their places in the world. Hugh, Jr. left on his great adventure to the Far West. Horatio was married and established as a farmer. The daughters, Marie Angelique and Charlotte, were married and gone. Only the youngest child, Emilie, lives at home with her parents.

    Hugh became almost totally immersed in the French community and culture. He maintained a close relationship with his older sister Christine, and his brother Doctor Henry, who both married French spouses and lived in Montreal with growing families. They served as god-parents for each other's children, and attended the many festive family Catholic christening and marriage ceremonies. He maintained a more distant relationship with his youngest sister Charlotte and her famous French husband, Chartier Alain de Lotbiniere, who dropped his French title as Marquis in deference to the new British ownership of Canada.

    Sharing as they did a pride as prickly as a Scottish thistle, it is doubtful that Hugh and his father comletely resolved their long-standing dispute before John's death in Oct 1800. Hugh had already divorced himself from the Upper Canada location by selling his Crown land grants there to his brother, Henry. John, however, could not carry his anger beyond the grave, and willed a share of land to Hugh's son equal in size to that willed to each of his other grandchildren. He also directed Hugh, as the eldest son, to be given his valued minature portrait. Finally humbling himself in a letter enclosed with his will, he stated his children were "all equally loved by their poor old father," and begged them all to be "friendly and kind with one another."

    Hugh had gone to Upper Canada to bury his father in 1800, and returned to bury his mother in 1815. His brother Cornelius was prematurely taken in death in 1806, his sister Cornelia widowed in 1809 with the death of the seemingly indestructable fur trapper Allen Patterson. Dr. Philip Mount left the eldest sister, Christine, a bereaved widow in 1816, and out in far Bas-Caraquet, New Brunswick, even the baby of the family, William Johnson, was not spared by the grim reaper from an untimely death in 1820. Also Charlotte was to find that neither wealth nor advantages could buy health and longer life for the great de Lotbiniere, who died in 1822. By 1825 only Hugh, Henry, and John Jr. were left of the five brothers, and the three sisters were all widows.

    Now it was Hugh's turn to mentally review the many adventures of his sixty one years as he lay seriously ill with an "inflamation of the breast." He must have derived the most comfort from his bride of thirty-two years as they had comforted each other during tragic periods in their life together, the deaths of parents and other family members, but most of all the early deaths of five of their own ten children. Although attended by local physicians his condition only continued to worsen, and he sliped away from the family gathered about his bed on 22 Sep 1825. Having converted to the Roman Catholic faith, he was attended by Father Arsenault and was buried in the Catholic cemetery at St. Ours du St. Esprit. Signing his death notice in the parish register were his brother, Dr. Henry Munro; his brother-in-law, Laurent Laroux; and his step-son, Francois Antoine LaRocque, Jr.

    Because there were two or three other Hugh Munros listed in Captain John Munro's Company, there has been some errors made in other references. This Hugh is not the same person as Hugh Munro [4778], born 1744 in Scotland, Enlisted in the British army 19 Jun 1776, served in Watt's Company 1776-1777, in McDonnell's Company 1781, in Munro's company 1781-1783, married Catherine Campbell and had two sons and two daughters in 1784.

    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Buried:
    Hugh was buried at Saint-Ours-du-Saint-Esprit Catholic Church in Saint-Esprit, Quebec, Canada.

    Hugh married Angelique Leroux on 4 May 1793 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Canada. Angelique was born on 6 Nov 1865 in Montreal/L'assum, Quebec; died on 22 Nov 1837 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 24 Nov 1837 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 15.  Angelique Leroux was born on 6 Nov 1865 in Montreal/L'assum, Quebec; died on 22 Nov 1837 in Montreal, , Québec, Canada; was buried on 24 Nov 1837 in Notre Dame Cathedral, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

    Notes:

    TBL:Listings for Angelique appear under various spelling errors in public records. Angelique Laroque (Larocque)is listed as "Mrs., Widow" in the Anglican Church Records of 4 May 1793 for this Marriage. ("Marriages 1766-1850 Christ Church Cathedral, Montreal, QC, Canada", Pub Quebec Family History Society, Quebec, Canada, 1991) She is listed as Angelique Leroux (m. Laroque) daughter of Francis-Marie Leroux and Veronique Trotier (2nd m. 1747) in notes from Henry de L. Harwood. She is listed in the Loiselle Marriage Index (under marriage of her daughter Emilie to Francis-X Olivier Boucher) as Angelique le Rouix D'noval - this should be Angelique Leroux d'Esneval: see notes under baptisms of her Larocque children formother members of her family with this name.

    Translation from the French - Canadian Genealogy Journal:
    "...Dr. Joseph LeDuc (1793-1829) graduated medicine in 18--, practiced at St. Roch L'Achigan, Montreal and finally at St. Polycarp where he died. He had married well, in 1819 in Montreal, Charlotte Munro (1798-1830), NEICE OF HER NAMESAKE, THE SEIGNEURESSE OF VAUDREUIL,... DAUGHTER OF HUGH MUNRO OF ST ESPRIT DE MONTCALM, MERCHANT, AND OF ANGELIQUE LEROUX (THEY MARRIED MONTREAL 1793). SHE HAD PREVIOUSLY MARRIED FRANCOIS ANTOINE LA ROCQUE (1753-92) WHO WAS ELECTED DEPUTY FOR L'ASSUMPTION IN 1792 BUT DIES PRIOR TO TAKING HIS SEAT."

    The Anglican Church as Christ Church Cathedral has had a distinguished role

    in the history of Montreal and the province of Quebec since the first Anglican Church under this name opened its doors on 20 December, 1789. Prior to the establishment of Christ Church, Anglican services had been conducted since 1760 in various Catholic chapels in Montreal.
    Rev. Delisle, first Anglican Minister, served in this capacity for thirty years beginning in 1766. Before the establishment of permanent congregations and buildings he "rode circuit" in the surrounding areas, visiting Chambly and other areas as much as twice every year. Many of the earlier records recorded in this volume are journal entries of Marriages performed outside the Montreal area. There is no notation of the actual location of this ceremony. It could have been placed in the L'Assumtion area north of Montreal on the St. Lawrence River as both Hugh and Angelique lived in that area and the Baptisms and buriels of their children are recorded in the L'Assumption Parish Registers for the Catholic Church. ("La Paroise di L'Assumption Repertoire des Baptisms 1724-1800", Publication #17 (1981) La Centre de Genealogie S.C., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada and "L'Assumption Repertoire des Sepultures 1724-1800" Vol 1, Publication #18 (1981) Hugh's father, Capt. John Munro had found housing for his family at L'Assumption after his regiment was disbanded (awaiting peace signing) where he was surrounded by old friends and compatriots, including Allen Paterson (his son-in-law) Simon McTavish, McGill and many others. He had enrolled his sons in school with Rev. Stuart in Montreal. However, when Mary wrote to John in 1785 (when he was in England petitioning for compensation for Loyalist Claims) she addresses her letter from "L'ASSUMPTION". At that time she talks of sons William, John and Cornelius being home with her also. (See Letters from Munro Box at McCord Museum/McGill University.)

    BIO:ANGELIQUE LEROUX d'ESNEVAL

    BIO: Angelique Leroux's genealogy is perhaps best outlined by her great-great-great-great grandson, Ron Graham: Ron Graham, descendant of Hugh Munro and Angelique Leroux d'Esneval through their daughter Charlotte, is the author of THE FRENCH QUARTER (Pub. 1992, Macfarlane, Walter & Ross, Toronto, CAN) a political commentary on French-English relationships in Canada containing genealogical outlines. He comments on Angelique and her family: (P 125-6)

    TBL:"Angelique was a Leroux d'Esneval - and therefore, goes the family gossip, a direct descendant of the twelfth-century French king Louis the Fat. Her father had come to New France in the 1740's as a soldier, before he too became a successful merchant in L'Assumption and died in 1792, but her mother's line went all the way back to Beaufort in the 1640's. Her brother, Laurent Leroux, was a famous fur trader for the Northwest Company, the first white man to explore Great Slave Lake, the father of four girls by an Ojibwa "wife" in the North, a Justice of the Peace, captain of the militia, member of the assembly, autodictact, and yet another L'Assumption merchant who made a fortune in grain, hardware, potash, and real estate.
    "Angelique moved through the most sophisticated circles of commerce and politics, made up of practical French Canadiens who were ready (even anxious) to deal and connect with their new rulers [the British]. ... Her first husband was less than a year in his grave when she and Hugh were married on May 4, 1793, in Montreal's Anglican Christ Church." ______________________________________________________________________________

    BIO:FIRST MARRIAGE - FRANCOIS-ANTOINE LAROCQUE

    BIO: Angelique was probably born in either Montreal or L'Assumption where she spent the most of her life. Her birthdate is based on her death record. She was married to Francois Antoine LaRocque by 1781 at the age of sixteen. During the eleven years of their marriage she bore him six children, of whom only two survived infancy. Their marriage ended with Francois' death in 1792.

    BIO:SECOND MARRIAGE - LT. HUGH MUNRO

    BIO:After a brief mourning period she married, in the Anglican Church in Montreal in 1793, a Scottish Presbyterian British Army officer on half pay, Lt. Hugh Munro. Between 1793 and 1809 she bore ten more children, again burying four infants at L'Assumption beside her four LaRocque children, plus a thirteen year old daughter at the St. Our du St. Esprit churchyard. Her thirty-two year marriage to Hugh ended with his death in the fall of 1825.

    BIO:Since Hugh was living as a "retired officer on half pay", Angelique would have no income after Hugh's death. With the help of her son, F.A. LaRocque Jr., she applied for a "Deceased Officer's Widow Pension" to provide for her needs. Soon after Hugh's death she moved to Montreal where both LaRocque and her son, Horatio Munro, were living.

    BIO:In the Provincial Archives of Ontario at Ottawa is found a microfilm of Angelicque's Petition for a widow's pension. (C-2782)

    TBL:From Thomas Slott, Quebec, dated 2 February 1826: Petition of Angelicque Munro, widow of the late Lt. Hugh Munro of the Royal Regiment of New York applying for pension of a deceased officer, and begs consideration by the Secretary of War. Capt. Hugh Munro died at St. Ours du St. Esprit on the 21st September, 1825 of an inflammation of the breast.
    Recommendation that pension be granted signed by Col. John Johnson on 14th day of January 1826.
    Notary of marriage by Francois Antoine LaRocque, Justice of the Peace of Montreal, dated 26th December, 1825. Copy of church marriage record.
    Affidavit of death of Hugh Munro by Martin Strong Parker who attended him, and certified by P.C. Buckley, Physician at St. Ours du St. Esprit.
    Separate copy of the church death register signed by Fr. Arsenault, Priest at St Ours du St. Esprit.
    To Major General Darling, Quebec, from Angelique Munro, Montreal; Application for Deceased Officer Pension, dated 5 September, 1826.

    BIO:HER FINAL YEARS IN MONTREAL

    BIO:Angelique lived the last years of her life in Montreal for her children and grandchildren. She saw Emilie, her last spinster daughter, married in 1832 to Dr. Francis Boucher of Maskinonge'. She buries yet another daughter, Charlotte, in 1830. Of the sixteen children she has borne she now is comforted by only three. Has she given up hope that Hugh Jr., absent so long in the western wilderness, will return before she dies ? Her mind frequently dwells on the loved ones who have died, and, as a devout Catholic, much of her time is spent on prayers for all of them.

    BIO:Angelique survives Hugh by a full twelve years, dying in Montreal in 1837 at the age of seventy-two.

    BIO:Family record entry from notes at the Museum of Soulanges-Vaudreil,Quebec:

    TBL:DIED: Beloved mother, Angelique Leroux, widow of Hugh Munro, died at the home of Dr. Lebourdais, a close friend, at Montreal, on the 22nd day of November 1837, after a period of illness, at the age of 72 years and 18 days, and was buried on the 24th day of November 1837 in the Leroux d'Esneval Vault of the Notre Dame' Church in Montreal.

    References:

    (1) Clan Munro files - Munro, Henry Dallas - GEDCOM file HMUNRO.GED dated 9 Oct
    1996

    (2) "The Munro Eagle" - number 27 - summer 1997-1998 - p. 34

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    Compiled and edited by Allen Alger, Genealogist, Clan Munro Association, USA

    Children:
    1. Marie Olympe Munro was born on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 12 Oct 1793 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; died in 1793.
    2. Marie Charlotte Munro was born on 13 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 15 Jan 1795 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was buried on 18 Jan 1797 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic.
    3. Marie-Angelique Munro was born on 10 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada; was christened on 11 Jan 1796 in L'assumption, Quebec, Canada, Catholic; died on 9 Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Mar 1861 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, St. Hyasinthe, Hotel D Churchyd.
    4. 7. Marie-Charlotte Munro was born on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 4 Jun 1797 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1830.
    5. Marie Lucie Munro was born on 11 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 12 Jun 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was buried on 14 Jul 1798 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Ch.
    6. Hugh Munro, Jr. was born on 25 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, Canada; was christened on 26 Aug 1799 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died in 1896 in Browning, Glacier Co., MT Blackfoot, Indian Res; was buried in 1896 in Holy Family Ceme, MT, Blackfoot Indian, Reservation.
    7. Anonymous Munro was born on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 29 Sep 1800 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec.
    8. Marie Lucille Munro was born on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm Co., Quebec; was christened on 25 Mar 1802 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; died on 13 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec; was buried on 14 Apr 1815 in St. Jacque, L'achigan, Quebec, St. Jacque Cath.
    9. Patrice Horace Raphael Munro was born on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 18 Mar 1804 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; died on 23 Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, L'hotel Dieu, Quebec; was buried in Aug 1870 in St Hyasinthe, Quebec, L'hotel-Dieu, Churchyd.
    10. Marie-Emilie Munro was born on 13 Mar 1809 in L'assumption, Montcalm, Quebec; was christened on 14 Mar 1809 in L'assumption Cat, Montcalm, Quebec, St Surplice Cath; and died.