Person Sheet


Name Jean Baptiste RICHARD dit LAFLEUR
Occupation Voyageur, Interpreter, Blacksmith111
Birth Date Mar 19, 1682112
Birth Place Pointe-aux-Trembles Parish, PQ Canada
Baptism Date Mar 19, 1682113
Baptism Place Pointe-aux-Trembles Parish, PQ Canada
Baptism Memo Father Seguenot. Also present were his uncle Jean-Baptiste Tessier, and his aunt Anne Lemire (wife of Laurent Tessier).
Death Date ?
Religion Roman Catholic113
Father Guillaume RICHARD dit LA FLEUR (1641-1690)
Mother Agnes TESSIER dite LAVIGNE (<1659-<1733)
Spouses
1 Marie-Ann YOU dite DELADECOUVERTE
Birth Date ca 1694114,115
Birth Place Ouitanon IN US
Baptism Date May 22, 1710111
Baptism Place Ste-Anne-de-Détroit Parish, Detroit, Wayne Co. MI US
Baptism Memo age 15
Death Date ?
Religion Roman Catholic113
Father Pierre YOU , Sieur de la Découverte (ca1669-1718)
Mother Elizabeth la Sauvagesse
Marriage Date Aug 15, 1718113
Marriage Place Montréal Parish, PQ Canada
Marriage Memo Fathers Belmont (Grand Vicar) and Rangeard. Also present were Claude Duconge, François Feron, Jean Baptiste Quenville and Henri Catin.
Children Marie Suzanne (1717-1800)
Agnes (1719-?)
Jean (1721-1807)
Marie Josephe
Notes for Jean Baptiste RICHARD dit LAFLEUR
Jean Baptiste was the fourth child and second son. He became a voyageur, and travelled at one point to Ouiatanon, a Miami Indian village near the present Lafayette, Indiana. Here he "obtained the services" of Marie-Ann, whom he later married.111 Both parties were unable to sign when they were married.113

In 1722, they returned to Ouiatanon from Montréal. The passport issued to them reads as follows:

"No. 12. Permission to Jean Richard, September 3, 1722. [In margin: Richard, permit for the Ouitanon. Took out sixteen pots of brandy for the four men, left September 9.]
"There appeared at the record office of the royal jurisdiction of Montreal before the clerk undersigned the Sieur Jean Richard, who presented permission which monseigneur the governor general had granted him to go to the post of Ouitanon this day, for which permission he requested registration in conformity with itself and with the declaration of the king of April 28, 1716, the record requested granted him by said clerk for his use and to be used as may be thought proper and immediately the said permission was registered by said clerk as follows. Done at Montreal at said record office, September 3, 1722.
"Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil, Knight Grand Cross of the military order of St. Louis, governor and lieutenant general for the king in all New France.
"The man named Jean Richard, formerly interpreter and blacksmith at the post of the Ouiatanon, where he served under the Sieurs de Vincennes, father and son, has represented to us that his wife, who is of the Ouiatanon nation, and who has been continually ill for the two years that she came to live in this colony, wishes to return to her country to recover her health, if it would please us to grant him permission to take her back to said post of the Ouitanon with her children; and since the Sieur de Vincennes fils who commands there has asked us for the said Richard, whom he needs because he is a blacksmith as well as a good interpreter and a man of good will to serve in the conversation which he is obliged to hold for the interests of the savages, we have permitted said Jean Richard to return to said post with his wife and three children in a canoe, taking with him the men named Joseph Larrivé, Louis Goulet, and François Seran to aid him in conducting the said canoe, in which he has declared to us that he is taking the things necessary for his housekeeping, his clothes and those of his family, with a hundred pounds of flour, three hundred pounds of biscuit, two pots of brandy, fifteen pots of wine, and two pots of strawberry brandy, and that his entire merchandise consists of only one hundred pounds of powder, one hundred pounds of lead, nine ells of woollen cloth, a gross of knives, and two pounds of vermilion. We forbid the said Richard to carry or to allow to be carried in said canoe for his three employees any other merchandise or brandy than that declared above under the penalties carried by the ordinances; we also forbid them to do any trading or commerce with the savages in the dependencies of Fort Frontenac, of Detroit, or elsewhere than at the said post of the Ouiatanon. The said Richard will be required to have these presents registered before his departure from this town at the record office of the royal jurisdiction of Montreal. We enjoin the three employees of the said Richard to return to this colony and to be back during the month of July of next year at the latest, each with his gun, which they will be required to have upon leaving from here and to bring back upon their return, without being allowed to get rid of them by trading them to the savages under penalty of three months in prison. "Done at Montreal, September 3, 1722; signed, VAUDREUIL, and lower down, for monseigneur, DE LESTAGE."111
Research Notes
NAME: His first name(s) is/are also given as Jean, and his last name as RICHAR.113

BIRTH: Jean Baptiste's parentage and birthplace are confirmed, with no date given.111 113

BAPTISM: The date and place of his baptism are confirmed.111

MARRIAGE: The date and place of his marriage to Marie-Anne are confirmed.116 112 111 The date of the marriage is also given as Apr 15, 1718.117 The marriage is confirmed with no date or place given.118

MISC: His occupation as interpreter is confirmed.112
Last Modified Dec 30, 2003 Created Dec 31, 2003 by Reunion for Macintosh

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