Adrienne Du Vivier

Adrienne Du Vivier
Born 1626
Corbeny, Picardy, France
Died October 20, 1706(1706-10-20)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Resting place Notre-Dame Church (Montreal)
Known for Early settler of Montreal
Religion Roman Catholic
Spouse(s) Augustin Hébert (m. 1646–53)
Robert Lecavelier (m. 1654–99)
Children 8
Parent(s) Antoine Du Vivier
Catherine Journe

Adrienne Du Vivier (1626[1] – 20 October 1706) was a French pioneer and one of the first white women to settle in the colony of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. She and her husband are often referred to as "Montreal's First Citizens."[2]

Arrival in Montreal

Adrienne was born in 1626 in Corbeny, Picardy, France, a daughter of Antoine Du Vivier and Catherine Journe.

In 1646, in St. Bartholemi, Paris, at the age of twenty, she married a soldier Augustin Hébert (1623 23 November 1653) who had just returned from Canada.[3] He was a son of Jean Hebert and Isabeau Troussart [4] of Caen, Normandy. In 1647, their first child Jeanne was born and baptised in St. Bartholemi, Paris.

At the end of the year, Adrienne, her husband and baby Jeanne sailed from La Rochelle to New France along with the founder of Montreal Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve. They arrived at Montreal Island, in early 1648, and they settled in Montreal, which was then called Fort Ville-Marie. Adrienne was one of the few white women in the colony apart from Jeanne Mance who had founded a hospital with a group of nuns.

Early in 1649, she had another daughter, Pauline, who was the first white child baptised in Montreal.[5] Maisonneuve stood as godfather, Jeanne Mance was godmother. The child died a few weeks later.

Augustin and Adrienne were deeded a huge parcel of land on the island. Augustin was a fur-trader, merchant, farmer and master-mason. He often traded with the Iroquois Indians. He and Adrienne had four children, of whom three reached adulthood. Adrienne and her husband were the first colonists to enroll an indentured servant otherwise known as an engagé.

Second marriage

In 1653, her husband Augustin died. His goods and property were transferred to her and she became one of Montreal's largest landowners.[5] Adrienne married secondly 19 November 1654, Robert Lecavelier, a gunsmith from Cherbourg, Normandy (died 28 July 1699). By Lecavelier, she had four children. They are listed on the 1666 Montreal Census.[1]

Adrienne died on 20 October 1706 at the age of eighty. She was buried in Notre Dame de Montreal. She has numerous descendants in Canada, the United States, and Europe. These include Felix Hebert, Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Robert Bourassa, Jules Léger, Daniel Johnson Sr., Daniel Johnson Jr., Pierre-Marc Johnson, Paul Martin Sr., Paul Martin Jr., Jacques Parizeau, Joseph-Armand Bombardier, Alanis Morissette, and Mario Lemieux. Her name is engraved on the Pioneers Obelisk along with other Montreal pioneers in the city's Place d'Youville, commissioned by the Historical Society of Montreal.

Adrienne Du Vivier was buried in the Notre-Dame Church

List of children

References

  1. 1 2 1666 Montreal Census
  2. "History of Montreal"
  3. Marcel Trudel "Catalogue des Immigrants 1632-1662"
  4. Programme de recherche en demographie historique (PRDH) Individual #25027
  5. 1 2 AugustinAdrienne Hébert page]

External links

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