MySource:Aberksan/Biography of Jean Baptiste Rodrigue

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MySource Biography of Jean Baptiste Rodrigue
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Surname Rodrigue
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Biography of Jean Baptiste Rodrigue.

Biographical notes

Among the descendants of René and Élisabeth bearing the Rodrigue surname, the majority, descended from Jean (married to Dorothée Fougère in 1731 in Beauport, and then to Marie Boulet in 1759 in St-Joseph-de-Beauce), settled in Beauce (a region south of Québec); from there, they migrated to the Eastern Townships, Montréal, and New England (above all, Maine and New Hampshire).

One of Jean's sons, Jean-Baptiste, born in Beauport in 1736, migrated to Louisiana where he enrolled in the militia towards 1760. He married there twice, and had more than 20 children; his descendants are still many in Louisiana and in other states of the U.S. S3

Jean Baptiste Rodrigue

Jean Baptiste Rodrigue came to the German Coast of Louisiana at the end of the French and Indian War in 1760-62. He probably came with the exodus of soldiers and settlers who left the northern districts of Quebec after the fall of French Canada to the British. It was common at this time for Canadian immigrants in Louisiana to marry women from the German Coast and to settle down within the Cote des Allemands community. Now these were the last years of French rule in Louisiana that became exceedingly unprofitable; moreover, the territory by this time had become badly managed by government. In the countryside the area of southern Louisiana away from New Orleans was still largely Indian territory with a few speculators and enterprising traders to be found.

The great grandfather of Jean Baptiste was Joao Rodrigues from Sao Joao parish in Lisbon, Portugal. Joao came to Quebec, Canada, in 1668 probably by way of France. There he married Anne Le Roy in 1671. She was one of the so-called "daughters of the King", who were sent to Quebec with dowry by Louis XIV, the Sun King. She was born in St. Germain l'Auxerrois, Paris, France, the daughter of Francois Le Roy and Anne Bourdais. The fifth child of this marriage was Rene Rodrigue. Rene married Elizabeth Dauphin at Beauport, Canada, Nov. 22, 1703. The fourth child was Jean Rodrigue, who was raised by a stepfather after Rene died within four years. Jean married Dorothee Fougere, a widow with six stepchildren (of which only two survived), on May 7, 1731. Jean Baptiste was born on June 10, 1734 [date?].

In 1762, France ceded Louisiana to Spain, and it was during this year or the next that John Baptiste Rodrigue married Marie Josephe Dervain and settled down along the German Coast of Mississippi River, an area so named because of the many Germans who originally settled there. Jean Baptiste soon became a prominent member of the community of the Second German Coast, where he owned and cultivated with slaves about 305 acres on the west bank of the River.

In 1764, Jean Baptiste's and Marie's first child, Jean Charles Rodrigue, was born in the German community along the River. It was during these years and afterwards that settlements slowly began to increase along the Mississippi River

The Spanish authorities, however, were not especially desirous to take possession of the vast new lands, and as a result, they were slow to take over the official reins of the government of Louisiana. This had the effect of causing a vacuum of power between the years 1764 and 1768, and played into the hands of Frenchmen bent on remaining loyal French subjects. Finally when the Spanish did grasp governmental control, a certain royal decree was issued by the Madrid government, which had the effect of unduly restricting Louisiana colonial trade in an arbitrary manner. This unfortunate policy had the effect furthermore of placing in jeopardy the fortunes and personal situations of certain prominent Louisiana Frenchmen who never wanted to be ruled by the Spanish overlords. And so it happened that Frenchmen led by de Lafreniere, Foucault, and others conspired to revolt against Spanish rule.

The German community meanwhile had considerable economic interests at stake in the Rebellion of 1768. Another reason for their involvement in the armed rebellion were the family ties of the aging commandant of the German Coast, Charles Frederick D'Arensbourg to the French conspirators of the rebellion. One way or another, D'Arensbourg's offspring and descendants had married into the French civic leadership in Louisiana, that is, into a group of those very people who personally had the most to lose by the new Spanish trade policies. D'Arensbourg sided with the conspirators for economic and personal reasons, as did Joseph Villere, the head of the German Coast militia, an organization to which Jean Baptist Rodrigue belonged. Thus, Joseph Viller? organized about 300 Germans from the Coast who were led to New Orleans on the afternoon of October 28, 1768, armed, and drunk with wine the night before the action. Since Jean Baptiste Rodrigue was a volunteer in the militia and a prominent farmer in this community, it is almost certain that he participated in this armed action.

Governor O'Reilly restored order in the colony in 1769 and he had the five leaders of the plot executed. For this deed, O'Reilly came to be known throughout Louisiana and history as "'Bloody' O'Reilly".

Jean Baptiste Rodrigue prospered as a farmer and had many children.

Note: Jean Baptist Rodrigue name appears on the rolls of the 1770 militia list. For more information on the rebellion. See Reinhart Kondert, The German Involvement in the Rebellion of 1768, Louisiana History: The Journal of the Louisiana Historical Association, Vol. 26, 385-97.

Geneological information about Jean Baptiste taken from (Descendants of Jean Rodrigue and Anne Le Roy of Portugal--Canada--U.S.A. (Louisiana). Compiled by Wilma Boudreaux and Sandra Clark Henry. Edited by Sandra Clark Henry.)

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