Joseph (Gaudin Dit Bellefontaine)

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Joseph (Gaudin Dit Bellefontaine) (Gaudin)

Also Known As: "Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine", "Bellefontaine", "Beausejour", "Joseph Gaudin dit Beauséjour"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Riviere St-Jean, Acadie, Nouvelle-France
Death: December 23, 1776
Cherbourg, Normandie, France
Immediate Family:

Son of Gabriel Godin and Andrée -Angélique Lefebvre
Husband of Marie Anne Bergeron Dite D'ambroise
Father of Anastasie Godin dite Part; Bonaventure Gaudin; Jacques Gaudin; Jean Baptiste Gaudin and Barthelemy Gaudin dit Bellefontaine
Brother of Madeleine Gaudin (Godin); Louis Godin; Jacques Philippe Gaudin; Pierre-Joseph Godin dit Châtillon dit Préville; Jean-Baptiste Godin and 6 others

Occupation: militia officer, merchant, and interpreter
Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About Joseph (Gaudin Dit Bellefontaine)

also ?

Godin, Jacques (Dit Bellefeuille) (1697 - 1763)

b. 1697

d. 1763

father: Gaudin, Gabriel(1661 - )

mother: Cochon, Andree-Angelique(~1661 - )

spouse: Bergeron, Anne Marie (*1701 - )

http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=1915&&PHPSESSID...

GODIN, dit Bellefontaine, dit Beauséjour, JOSEPH, militia officer, merchant, and interpreter; b. 1697 in the parish of Sainte-Anne-du-Pays-Bas (Fredericton, N.B.), son of Gabriel Godin, dit Chatillon, dit Bellefontaine, and Marie-Angélique Robert Jasne (Robertjeanne); m. 1725 Marie-Anne Bergeron d’Amboise; d. after 1774, probably in Cherbourg, France.

     When Joseph Robinau* de Villebon, governor of Acadia, built Fort Saint-Joseph (known as Fort Nashwaak, now Fredericton) in 1692, he brought to the area a number of Acadian and Canadian settlers, including Gabriel Godin, dit Chatillon, a naval officer, and his wife. Robinau made Godin second lieutenant at the fort and granted him land with a frontage of three leagues on the Saint John River. This land was the origin of the name Bellefontaine. Godin developed the property and used it as a base for a substantial trade with other French colonies and with the Indians – Abenakis, Malecites, and Micmacs. He became so adept in the Indians’ languages that Robinau appointed him king’s interpreter. Joseph Godin worked closely with his father and inherited both his goods and his prestige. He too was a leading settler of the parish, and it was later claimed that “the Indians, like the French, did [nothing] without consulting him and submitted docilely to all his [decisions?].” Governor Beauharnois* commissioned him king’s interpreter, and in 1736 Godin and his brother-in-law, Michel Bergeron d’Amboise, went as deputies from the Saint John Acadians to the Annapolis Royal Council. They were imprisoned there by Governor Lawrence Armstrong* for failing to report to the Council immediately, but they were soon released and sent home with instructions to invite the Saint John Indians to the British post.

In 1749 Charles Deschamps de Boishébert organized the Saint John Acadians into a militia, and on 10 April Godin was appointed to its command. During the Seven Years’ War he supported and encouraged the Indians in their opposition to the British and even led some of their war pat-ties. When a party of rangers, under the command of Moses Hazen*, sacked Sainte-Anne in February 1759, they killed Godin’s daughter and three of his grandchildren because he had refused to swear allegiance to the British king and “by his speech and largess . . . had instigated and maintained the Indians in their hatred and war against the. English.” Godin was taken prisoner by the rangers and brought, after having been joined by his family, to Annapolis Royal. From there he was taken to Boston, Halifax, and England; later he was sent to Cherbourg. In 1767 he was living there and was one of a group of Acadians who asked for life annuities. He obtained a pension of 300 livres for his losses and services. In 1774 a proposal was made to place him and his wife in a religious house where they could be cared for. Recalling his services to the king, which he claimed had cost him 60,000 livres, Godin asked that instead they be allowed to remain at Cherbourg with a pension.
George MacBeath

AD, Calvados (Caen), C 1020, mémoire de Joseph Bellefontaine, dit Beauséjour, 15 janv. 1774. Placide Gaudet, “Acadian genealogy and notes,” PAC Report, 1905, II, pt.iii, 140, 241. N.S. Archives, III. [Joseph Rôbinau de Villebon], Acadia at the end of the seventeenth century; letters, journals and memoirs of Joseph Robineau de Villebon . . . , ed. J. C. Webster (Saint John, N. B., 1934), 99, 149, 154. L. M. B. Maxwell, An outline of the history of central New Brunswick to the time of confederation (Sackville, N.B., 1937).

© 2000 University of Toronto/Université Laval

See also http://www.acadian-home.org/saw-acadians-st-john-river.html - an account of the sacking of the area, in which Joseph attests to the murder of Anastasie, and his daughter in law, and 4 children

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Joseph (Gaudin Dit Bellefontaine)'s Timeline

1695
1695
Riviere St-Jean, Acadie, Nouvelle-France
1730
1730
Riviere St. Jean,, Nova Scotia, Canada
1735
1735
Ste.-Anne-du-Pays-Bas, Rivière St.-Jean, Acadie, British Colony
1736
1736
Acadie, British Colony
1740
1740
Ste.-Anne-du-Pays-Bas, Rivière St.-Jean, Acadie, British Colony
1746
1746
Ste.-Anne-du-Pays-Bas, Rivière St.-Jean, Acadie, British Colony
1776
December 23, 1776
Age 81
Cherbourg, Normandie, France
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