Person:Claude Petitpas (3)

Claude Petitpas, II
b.Est 1663
d.1731 Acadia
m. Abt 1658
  1. Marie PetitpasEst 1658 -
  2. Marguerite PetitpasAbt 1661 - 1703
  3. Claude Petitpas, IIEst 1663 - 1731
  4. Jacques PetitpasAbt 1666 - Abt 1694
  5. Jacques PetitpasEst 1667 -
  6. Elisabeth PetitpasAbt 1669 -
  7. Henriette PetitpasEst 1674 -
  8. Paul PetitpasEst 1675 -
  9. Charles PetitpasEst 1676 -
  10. Martin PetitpasEst 1677 -
  11. Pierre PetitpasEst 1681 -
  12. Anne PetitpasEst 1684 -
m. Abt 1686
  1. Barthélemy PetitpasAbt 1687 - 1747
  2. Judith * PetitpasAbt 1693 -
  3. Paul PetitpasAbt 1695 -
  4. Joseph PetitpasAbt 1699 -
  5. Marie-Louise PetitpasAbt 1701 -
  6. Isidore PetitpasAbt 1703 -
  7. Francoise Petitpas1706 - 1752
m. 7 Jan 1721
Facts and Events
Name Claude Petitpas, II
Alt Name[4] Claude Petitpas, Jr
Alt Name[3] Claude Petitpas
Gender Male
Birth[1][2] Est 1663
Alt Birth? 1663 Port Royal, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada
Alt Birth? 1663 Acadia
Alt Birth? 1663 Grand Pre Acadia
Alt Birth? 1663 Port Royal, Acadia ( in Musquodoboit 1708 census)
Alt Birth[6][7][3] Abt 1663 Port Royal, Acadia
Alt Birth? Abt 1663 Richmond, Port Royal, Canada
Census[6][3] 1671 Port Royal, Acadia
Alt Birth? 1682
Census[7][3] 1686 Port Royal, Acadia
Marriage Abt 1686 Acadiato Marie Thérèse Sauvagesse
Census[3][8] 1708 Mouscoudabouet, Acadia(now Chezzetcook)
Alt Death? Bet 1708 and 1755
Alt Death? Bet 1709 and 1755
Residence[8][9] Bef 1717 Port Toulouse (St. Peter?s), Acadia
Marriage 7 Jan 1721 Port Royal, Acadiato Françoise Lavergne
Occupation[5][3] Schooner Captain, Mi?kmaq Indian Interpreter, And Merchant, Between 1686-1731 At Acadia
Death? 1731 Acadia
Alt Death? Aft 1730 Port Toulouse, Isle Royale, Acadia
Alt Death? 1731 Port Toulouse, Cape Breton, Nova Scotia, Canada
Alt Death[3] Abt 1731 Acadia
Alt Death? 1761

Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online

"PETITPAS, CLAUDE, schooner captain, interpreter, known particularly for his collaboration with the English, third child of a family of 15, son of Claude Petitpas, Sieur de Lafleur, clerk of the court at Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.), and of Catherine Bugaret; b. c. 1663 at Port-Royal, d. some time between 1731 and 1733.

       During his youth Petitpas was closely associated in his voyages and activities with the Micmacs in the neighbourhood of Port-Royal, where he lived in his father’s home until his marriage. Around 1686 he married an Indian girl of that tribe named Marie-Thérèse, born in 1668, by whom he had at least seven children, according to the 1708 census. On 7 Jan. 1721, after his first wife’s death, he remarried, again at Port-Royal; his second wife was Françoise Lavergne from that town, daughter of Pierre Lavergne, Father Breslay’s servant, and of Anne Bernon. She was only 17; he was about 57. She bore him four children.
       While his first wife was alive Petitpas lived at Mouscoudabouet (Musquodoboit), where the Boston fishermen were active; as early as 1698, complaints arose about his association with them. In September 1718, a frigate sent from Boston by the governor of Massachusetts and commanded by Captain Thomas Smart anchored in Canso (Canseau) harbour. The English seized a fair number of French fishermen, among them Marc La Londe, the son-in-law of Claude Petitpas. The latter placed his own schooner at the disposal of the English so that they might better carry out their plan.
       On 30 June 1720 the legislative council of Boston, at his request, granted him the sum of £100 for having shown “tender regard . . . to sundry English captives in the late Indian War”; he had gone so far as to obtain their liberty by paying their ransom out of his own pocket. The council further resolved that the government would pay the tuition fees of one of his sons for four years at Harvard College.
       He probably went to live subsequently on Île Royale (Cape Breton Island), perhaps at Port-Toulouse (St Peters, N.S.) itself, where several of his children had settled. In 1728 Joseph de Brouillan, dit Saint-Ovide [Monbeton*], governor of Île Royale, went there to conduct an inquiry into the loyalty of the Indians towards the French. Claude Petitpas was apparently trying to influence the Indians, particularly the young ones, in favour of the English. Saint-Ovide therefore tried to send him to France towards the end of that same year, with two of his sons by his first marriage, in order to get rid of him. If this plan was in fact carried out, Claude Petitpas does not seem to have been absent more than two years.
       He died probably some time between 1731 and 1733: his last known child was born in 1731; moreover, in May 1733 the king gave his widow a sum of money for services rendered by her husband in his capacity as interpreter. In 1747 Governor Shirley of Massachusetts called Petitpas a “faithfull subject of the crown of Great Britain . . . [who] had received marks of favour from this government for his services.” Clarence J. d’Entremont

AN, Col., B, 59, f.516; C11B, 3, 4, 10, ff.67–69; Section Outre-Mer, G1, 466 (Recensements de l’Acadie, 1671, 1686). Newberry Library, Ayer Coll., La Chasse census (1708). PANS, MS docs., XXVI (parish register of Port-Royal), f.63. The acts and resolves, public and private, of the province of the Massachusetts bay (21v., Boston, 1869–1922), IX. Coll. doc. inédits Canada et Amérique (CF), III (1890), 165–68. Coll. de manuscrits relatifs à la N.-F., III, 38–39, 379. NYCD (O’Callaghan and Fernow), IX, 912.

       Arsenault, Hist. et généal. des Acadiens, I, 442, 477. Coleman, New England captives. Harvey, French régime in P.E.I., 215. McLennan, Louisbourg, 62–63. Murdoch, History of Nova-Scotia, I, 243." [S2]

Additional Notes

Facts about this person:

Alt. Born 1663

Name (Facts Pg) Claude Petitpas jr. Facts about this person:

Alt. Born Abt. 1663

Occupation Bet. 1686 - 1731 Schooner captain, Mi'kmaq Indian interpreter, and merchant

Degree Captain

Alt. Degree 1695 Acadia, the oath of loyalty to the King of Eng

Residence Bef. 1717 Port Toulouis, ile Royale Acadia

Census 1708 Mouscoudabouet,Acadia (now Chezzetcook)

Alt. Census 1671 Port Royal, Acadia

Alt. Census 1686 Port Royal, Acadia

References
  1. D.O.B.: "Acadian Genealogy Exchange", Vol. XX, No. 3, p. 83 (ref.: (13).
  2. Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
    Volume II, 1701-1740.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 Stephen A. White. TITLE (18). (Name: Centre D?études Acadiennes - Université de Moncton;).
  4. Bono Arsenualt. "History of the Acadiennes" Bono Arsenualt.
  5. Research compiled by Francis Snyder (sent via Jim Fraser).
  6. 6.0 6.1 Acadian Census (2).
  7. 7.0 7.1 Acadian Census (3).
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lucie LeBlanc Consentino. Acadian & French Ancestral Home.
  9. Bona Arsenault. TITLE (16).