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                  41 to 60 (of 713)
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                   1668. Massicotte has wondered whether he was related to the notary
                   
                  Ancienne Lorette with Mother Bourgeoys* for this purpose. Philéas Gagnon has noted that for want of a notary in his region, Abbé Basset
                   
                   Sept. 1714 before the notary Pierre Rivet* Cavelier and agreed to by his mother, called upon the latter to lodge and maintain the newly
                   
                  1677. On 6 Nov. 1683 he married Anne Auber, daughter of the notary Claude Auber, at Quebec. Baudouin was
                   
                  Aubert* de La Chesnaye. In the 1667 census, 14 persons are listed as sharing his house at Quebec; in addition to his wife, his employees lived with him. The notarial documents of the period show
                  married Catherine-Élisabeth-Aglaé Chenet, daughter of Antoine Chenet, notary and seigneur of Vincelotte. Joseph-Octave Beaubien soon embarked on a
                   
                  , lawyers, and notaries. After some 12 years, and repeated appeals for articles to print, Beauchamp, like his predecessor Mathieu, decided to make La Revue légale simply a collection of legal
                  training of his employees. As the firm expanded and diversified its operations, Beauchemin went into partnership in 1864 with his brother-in-law, notary Joseph-Moïse Valois, under the trade name of
                   
                  AJQ, Contrat de mariage de Claude de Beauharnois Chevalier de Beaumont, capitaine de frégate, avec Mademoiselle Renée Hardouineau (before Masson and Soullard, notaries at La Rochelle, 11 May
                   
                  BECQUET, ROMAIN, notary, court officer, clerk of the diocesan officiality (l’officialité diocésaine), seigneurial judge
                   
                  business he used French-speaking notaries and for his construction work he hired several Canadians. Bell was an opportunist, particularly during the
                   
                  . 1806. There were seemingly three rival groups: John Mure*, notary Michel Berthelot who was
                   
                  Quebec area, particularly in Charlesbourg, where his father lived, and in the Montreal region, where he was often represented by the notary Louis Guy
                   Bendixen had been widowed by 1881. Before her death in 1899 she bequeathed her business interests, namely her saloon and two lots in Barkerville, to Hugh Cochrane, the town’s notary public, who had married
                  success. Benjamin also initiated the macadamizing of roads in his district. His early appointments included that of notary public in 1836 and town clerk
                   
                  BERMEN, LAURENT, notary at Quebec from 1647 to
                   
                  , legal practitioner, seigneurial attorney, and notary; b. c. 1640 in France; buried 1 Dec. 1729 at Quebec. Hilaire Bernard de La
                   
                  instruments signed before a notary in connection with loans, leases, and transactions concerning buildings have been located. Real estate seems to have
                   
                  BERTHELOT DARTIGNY (d’Artigny), MICHEL-AMABLE, lawyer, notary, judge, and politician; b
                   
                  -Louis where the Grande Allée now runs. His son, Michel-Amable Berthelot Dartigny, who inherited his land and fortune, turned to the professions of lawyer and notary. In 1793 he was elected by acclamation
                  41 to 60 (of 713)
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