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TURGEON, LOUIS, notary, jp, politician, militia officer, and seigneur; b. 10 April
 
Bégon*, seigneurial judge, and royal notary; b. c. 1670 at Le Havre-de-Grâce, in the diocese of Rouen, son of Charles Barbel and Catherine Provost; d. 29 July 1740 at
DÉMARAY, PIERRE-PAUL, notary, office holder, justice of the peace, militia officer, Patriote, and politician; b. 8
 
PANET, PIERRE (Pierre-Méru), notary, office holder, lawyer, judge, and politician; b. 1731 in the parish of Saint-Germain
 
HICHÉ, HENRY, merchant, seigneur, royal notary, king’s attorney, subdelegate of the intendant, councillor of the Conseil Supérieur of
PACAUD, PHILIPPE-NAPOLÉON, notary and Patriote; b. 22 Jan. 1812 at Quebec City, son of Joseph Pacaud, a carpenter, navigator
), notary, politician, businessman, and office holder; b. 15 Jan. 1831 at Quebec, son of Jean Guillet, dit Tourangeau, and Adélaïde Bernier; m. there 28 Oct. 1861 Victoire
 
BADEAUX, JOSEPH, militia officer, notary, landowner, jp, office holder, politician, and seigneur; b. 25
 
LEBRUN (Le Brun) DE DUPLESSIS, JEAN-BAPTISTE, lawyer, notary, merchant, office holder, and pamphleteer; b. c. 1739 in
McLENNAN, WILLIAM, notary, translator, and author; b. 8 May 1856 in Montreal, fourth child of Hugh
 
BIGOT, FRANÇOIS, seigneurial attorney, royal notary, court officer, son of François Bigot, dit Lamothe, and
 
to Chartier a guaranteed salary of 100 livres and a salary in advance of 120 livres. He acted as a witness for a will, several notarial acts, marriage contracts, and bills of
 
occupations, so that it is not surprising to discover that Michel Cotton was successively shoemaker and silversmith. Two contracts, signed before the notary Jean-Étienne
 
COTÉ (Côté), JOSEPH-OLIVIER, notary, public servant, and author; b. 8 April 1820 at Quebec
 
. Callière named him an ensign in October. In 1703 Coulon de Villiers was garrisoned at Montreal, where his name appears in several notarial acts. He seems to have married in 1705, for on 7 December of
 
school at Quebec under the care of the notary Paul-Antoine-François Lanoullier Des Granges. The third, Thérèse, stayed with him in Louisbourg where he appears to have attended to her every need, including
 
documents in 1730. On 6 May that year he married Marie-Louise-Catherine Juillet at Batiscan. In his marriage contract, signed on the preceding 19 February before the notary Nicolas-Auguste Guillet
 
GENDRON, PIERRE-SAMUEL, notary and politician; b. at Sainte-Rosalie, Lower Canada, and baptized 31 Aug. 1828
 
the notarial profession. The boy’s wishes finally prevailed and in 1816 he was sent to London, England, to serve his apprenticeship as a sail-maker. Letters from his father in Quebec contained good
 
. In 1728 he was in business in Quebec but did not stay there long, for on 25 June 1736, before the notary François-Michel Lepailleur in Montreal, he signed a “farming lease for three full
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