Pierre SAUVÉ-LAPLANTE
- Born: 27 Feb 1652, Libourne, Bordeaux, Libourne, , Aquitaine, France
- Marriage: Marie Renee MICHAUD-MICHEL on 27 Feb 1695 in Lachine, Montreal, Québec, Canada
- Died: 4 May 1737, Sainte Anne De Bellevue, Montréal, Québec, Canada at age 85
General Notes:
The following history came from the Sauve Family History website
In response to a question from Gilles Laplante regarding the origins of the Sauve dit Laplante family. Firstly it should be stated that the Carignan Regiment stayed only three years in New France, that being 1665 to 1668. It is possible that Jacques Dumesny, sieur de Noray, and Pierre Sauve dit Laplante were among the 400 demobilized soldiers who chose to stay in Canada.
The troops of the Compagnies Franche de la Marine were sent from France starting in 1680, the time of intensification of colonial rivalries and of the Iroquois threat. They established garrisons of soldiers in fortified posts surrounding Montreal Island, notably Fort Remy (a.k.a. Fort Lachine) and Fort Rolland situated on the Lachine shores. A number of soldiers married young Canadian women and according to the custom of the time high ranking officers were asked to be godfathers and witnesses at thier marriages. The name Dumesny appears as such in the Lachine parish register for the first time on January 16th, 1686 on the occasion of the marriage of Corporal François Philippon to Gertrude Andre.
After Desire Girouard, Dumesny took over command of Fort Rolland from 1690-91 until 1694 as well as between the years 1696-1698. He died in Montreal in 1714.
As for Pierre Sauve we find him mentioned in the Lachine parish register for the first time on the occasion of his marriage to Marie Michaud on February 27th, 1696. The witnesses to this marriage were: Jean Pare (Commander of Fort Lachine), Pierre Jammes dit Carriere, Dumesny, Marie-Madeleine Michau (sister of the bride), Jeanne Gourdon et Marie-Anne Rapin (two cousins who lived in the area).
Pierre Sauve dit Laplante was the son of François dit Laplante and Marie Malleret of Libourne, France. He was buried at Ste.-Anne-de-Bellevue on May 4th, 1737. Marie Michau, sometimes called Marie-Renee, was the daughter of Jean and Marie Marchessault (the widow of Albert Boutin), married in Quebec on November 25, 1670. She was baptized in Montreal on June 18th, 1677 and confirmed at Lachine in 1688. She was buried at Ste.-Anne on November 17th, 1750.
After a few years at Fort Frontenac, or Cataracouy, with his family Jean Michel or Michau acquired lot 455 (3 arpents frontage and 20 arpents deep), a lot located approximately where 21st and 22nd Streets are today. During the summer of 1689, despite the state of war against the Iroquois, Governor Vaudreuil took advantage of a period of seeming calm to authorize the citizens of the coast who were working their fields to no longer seek refuge each night in the fortified positions in the area as they had done for the previous two years. Many officers were on leave in Montreal. This is the time chosen by the Iroquois to attack the citizens of Lachine, with the result which we know: 25 dead left there and about sixty prisoners lead into captivity. Jean Michau, his son Pierre aged 17, the same for Albert Boutin, the son of the first marriage of Marie Marchessault were all killed and were buried were they were found the day after the massacre. They were among the 25 victims whose corpses were retrieved five years later, and were officially buried in the Lachine church cemetery by the priest Pierre Remy. Marie Marchessault was undoubtedly taken prisoner and died in captivity on an unknown date. Three children survived, Marie, who married Pierre Sauve in 1696, Madeleine married Jacques Leduc in 1701, and François who became an interpreter under the name of Michauville.
Pierre Sauve is one of the numerous soldiers married at Lachine between 1686 and 1699. Hubert Ranger whose daughter Louise married Jacques Sauve in 1726 is another. Around 1697-9, the priests of the Saint-Sulpice Seminary, seigneurs of Montreal, gave up a large number of new pieces of land along Lake St. Louis, towards Bout-de-l-I'le. Pierre Sauve acquired at this point lot 154, close to the current church of Pointe-Claire. All of this territory then formed part of the Lachine parish, until the creation of the parishes of Ste.-Anne-de-Bellevue (1703) and Point Claire (1711). This is the reason why we find the descendants of the Sauve dit Laplante family in the registers of the different parishes.
Noted events in his life were:
• Occupation: Soldier of Dumesny, 1696.
• Occupation: Laborer, 1698.
Pierre married Marie Renee MICHAUD-MICHEL, daughter of Jean MICHEL-MICHAUD and Marie MARCHESSAULT, on 27 Feb 1695 in Lachine, Montreal, Québec, Canada. (Marie Renee MICHAUD-MICHEL was born on 18 Jun 1677 in Montréal, , Québec, Canada and died on 19 Nov 1750 in Sainte Anne De Bellevue, Montréal, Québec, Canada.)
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