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Noël Doiron

Also Known As: "Noel Doiron", "Noel Douaron", "Noel Douairon", "Neol Doiron", "Noel Doueron", "Noel D'Oiron", "Noel Donairon", "Noel Douaron Doiron", "Noel", "Noel Doiron Or Douaron"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Port-Royal, Acadie, Nouvelle-France
Death: circa December 13, 1758
At Sea on the Duke William en route to France (Ship wreck)
Place of Burial: at sea
Immediate Family:

Son of Jean-Baptiste Doiron and Marie-Anne De Canol
Husband of Marie Marguerite Henry
Father of Marie Madeleine Madeleine Pitre; Louis Mathieu Doiron; Marguerite Doiron; Paul Doiron; Joseph Doiron and 3 others
Brother of Abraham Alexandre Doiron; Charles Doiron; Jeanne Doiron; Jean Doiron; Pierre Doiron and 7 others
Half brother of Marie Doiron; Thomas Doiron; Paul Doiron; Marguerite Doiron; Alexandre Doiron and 3 others

Managed by: James Fred Patin, Jr.
Last Updated:

About Noël Doiron

According to this web site, he died about 13 December 1758 in the shipwreck of the Duke William on the way to France.

Information is not sourced.

Marriage registered at Port Royal 24 September 1706.

1752 census: Ile Saint Jean, Pointe

Noël Douaron, ploughman, native of l'Acadie, aged 70 years, and has been in the country 26 months. Married to Marie Henry, native of l'Acadie, aged 72 years. They have with them Jean Baptiste Douaron, their grandson, native of l'Acadie, aged 17 years. And in stock, two cows with their calves. The land upon which they are settled is situated at Pointe Prime. It was given to them verbally by Monsieur de Bonnaventure. On it they have made a clearing for the sowing of twelve bushels of grain in the coming spring.



From Wikipedia:

Noel Doiron (1684 - December 13, 1758) was a leader of the Acadians renowned for the decisions he made during the Deportation of the Acadians. Doiron was deported on a vessel known as the Duke William (1758). The sinking of the Duke William was one of the worst marine disasters in Canadian history. The Captain of the Duke William, William Nichols, described Noel Doiron as the "head prisoner" of the doomed vessel and of being revered as the "father" to all the Acadians on Prince Edward Island (then known as Ile St. Jean). For his "noble resignation" and self-sacrifice aboard the Duke William, Noel was celebrated in popular print throughout the 19th century in England and America. Doiron also is the namesake of the village Noel, Nova Scotia and the surrounding communities of Noel shore, East Noel, (also known as Densmore Mills), Noel Road and North Noel Road)


GEDCOM Note

Geni:
Noel Doiron
Birth  1684 • Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada
Death  Dec 13, 1758 • Route, Seine-et-Marne, France
Parents  Jean Doiron • Marie Anne Canol
Siblings  Abraham Doiron • Alexandre Doiron • Anne Marie Doiron • Charles Doiron • Jacques Doiron • Jean Doiron • Jeanne Doiron • Louis Doiron • Madeleine Doiron • Marie Catherine Doiron • Marie Doiron • Marie Doiron Older • Paul Doiron • Philippe Doiron • Pierre Doiron • Pierre Younger Doiron
Spouse  Marie Henry
Children  Alexis Doiron • Francois Doiron • Joseph Doiron • Louis Mathieu Doiron • Marguerite Doiron • Marie Madeleine Doiron • Paul Doiron • Pierre Doiron

Lead confidence: 3
Noël Doiron

GEDCOM Note

weRelate:
Noel Doiron
Birth  1684 • Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada
Death  Dec 13, 1758 • France
Marriage  1705 • Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
Parents  Jean Doiron • Marie-Anne Canol
Spouse  marie henry
https://www.werelate.org/wiki/Person:Noel+Doiron+%281%29

GEDCOM Note

wikiTrees:
noel doiron
Birth  1684 • Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada
Death  Dec 13, 1758 • Route, Seine-et-Marne, France
Marriage  1705 • Boston, Suffolk, Massachusetts, United States
Parents  jean doiron • marie anne canol
Spouse  marie henry
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/1682171

GEDCOM Note

Sources: Internet GG Lucie Le Blanc Note
Sources:
Internet GG Lucie Le Blanc
Notes:

GEDCOM Note

Line 29398 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Noel /Doiron/ GIVN Noel Line 29399 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Noel /Doiron/ SURN Doiron Line 29398 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Noel /Doiron/ GIVN Noel Line 29399 from GEDCOM File not recognizable or too long: NAME Noel /Doiron/ SURN Doiron

GEDCOM Note

!Wife Marie Henry marr. 24 Sep 1706. Info see father.

GEDCOM Note

NOEL DOIRON BIO Noel Doiron He was a leader of the Acadians renowned for the decision he made during the Deportation of the Acadians. He was deported on a vessel known as the "Duke William". The sinking of the "Duke William" was one of the worst marine disasters in the Canadian history. The captain of the "Duke William", William Nichols, described Noel Doiron as the "head prisoner" of the doomed vessel and of being revered as the "father" to all Acadians on Ile Saint-Jean (present-day Prince Edward Island). For his "noble resignation" and self-sacrifice aboard the "Duke William". He also is the namesake of the village Noel, Nova Scotia and the surrounding communities of Noel Shore, East Noel, (also known as Densmore Mills), Noel Road and North Noel Road. He lived most his childhood in the Parish of Sainte-Famille (present-day Falmouth, Nova Scotia). During Queen Anne's War in June 1704, at the age of 20, he was taken prisoner by Colonel Benjamin Church. Colonel Church came from Boston,Massachusetts and torched Acadian hamlets in an expedition that raided Grand-Pre, Pisguit (present-day Windsor, Nova Scotia) and Beaubassin. When Church returned to New England, he boosted that only five dwellings remained in all Acadia. Church made no distinctions between Canada, Native Americans or Acadians. They were all enemies. At this time, Church transported approximately 100 Acadian prisoners to Boston including Noel Doiron and his future Marie Henry. While forcibly removed from their home, Noel, Marie and the other Acadian hostages were initially permitted to roam freely in the streets of Boston, much to the dismay of New Englanders. The first group of Acadian prisoners were returned to Acadia in 1705. Noel and Marie Doiron were delayed in return because the New Englanders refused to release the notorious privateer Pierre Masonnait dit Baptiste. After two years in exile, Noel and the other Acadian prisoners finally returned to Acadia along with Pierre Masonnait. They arrived at Port-Royal on September 18, 1706. Within three days of their arrival, Noel and Marie had their first child, who was born while imprisoned in Boston, and baptized at Port-Royal. A marriage ceremony quickly followed. By 1714, Noel Doiron and his family were established in Vila Noel, Nova Scotia. The Doiron family grew to include five sons and three daughters --- one son died in Vila Noel before 1746. The three daughters would marry and leave the village while the surviving sons married and remained with their parents. Doiron lived in the village for 40 years. During the time he and his familybuilt dykes that still exist in the community as well as chapel at Burntcoat Head, Nova Scotia (formerly known as Steeple Point). As with most Acadians in the Cobequid region, Noel Doiron was likely a cattle farmer involved in supporting trade with the French Fortress of Louisbourg. In the early spring of 1750, he and residents of Noel, Nova Scotia, followed the direction of Jean-Louis Le Loutre and left the Cobequid and migrated to Pointe Prime, Ile-Saint-Jean (present-day Eldon, Prince Edward Island). Noel was followed by the other Acadians along the East Hants, Nova Scotia shore, such as those Acadians at present day Selma and Maitland, Nova Scotia. The shore was vacated by the end of 1750. Noel and other Acadians joined a larger migrants of the Copequid Acadians out of British-occupied mainland Nova Scotia. After the establishment of Halifax in 1749, Acadians wanted to leave the Cobequid for several reasons: they feared deportation to unknown colonies, the loss of civil liberties,religious intolerance, and aboriginal hostility. Noel left despite the fact that the British had imposed strict travel restrictions on the movement of Acadians. They were forbidden to travel beyond mainland Nova Scotia, and blockades were erected. Travel by boat impossible as all Acadian vessel leaving Mines Basin were seized by the Crown. Travels on roads was prohibited and groups of British soldiers were sent throughout the Mines Basin to ensure the travel ban was enforced. Public meetings were also forbidden and all firearms were confiscated, Noel and Marie Doiron spent eight years at Pointe Prime, Ile Saint-Jean. On October 20, 1758, he and most of the other inhabitants from the Noel Bay embarked for passage from Ile Saint-Jean to France on the "Duke William". Captain Nichols wrote that he and his crew, "...laid off the ship about half an hour, when their cries, and waving us to be gone, almost broke our hearts." The "Duke William" drifted, according to Nichols, "...till it fell calm, and as [it] went down decks blew up. The noise was like the explosion of a gun, or a loud clap of thunder." The "Duke William" sank about 20 leagues from the coast of France in the English Channel shortly after 4:00 p.m. on December 13, 1758. Noel Doiron died on the board along with his wife, Marie, five of their children with their spouses and over thirty grandchildren.


GEDCOM Note

Category: Great UpheavalCategory: Duke William, sailed 1758
Acadian
Category: Grand-Pré, Acadie

Biography

[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No%C3%ABl_Doiron| Noël Doiron] was born in Port-Royal, Acadie, Nouvelle Français (now Port Annapolis,Nova Scotia, Canada) in 1684 to Jean Doiron and Marie-Anne Canol.
He married Marie Henry, native of Mines, daughter of Robert Henry and Marie Magdelaine Gaudin habitants of the parish of Mines at Boston Massachussets. The marriage was re-validated 24 September 1706 at Port Royal.≤ref>Library and Archives Canada, Fonds de la paroisse catholique Saint-Jean-Baptiste (Port-Royal, N.-É.)-1870 C-1870 (image 123) http://heritage.canadiana.ca/view/oocihm.lac_reel_c1869/123?r=0&s=5≤/ref>≤ref>An Acadian Parish Remembered The Registers of St. Jean-Baptiste, Annapolis Royal, 1702-1755 Noel Douairon and Marie Henry marriage RG 1 volume 26 page 279 https://novascotia.ca/archives/acadian/archives.asp?ID=1213≤/ref>

Known Children

  1. Louis Mathieu DOIRON 1706-ca 1758
  2. Marie Madeleine DOIRON 1707-ca 1758
  3. Marguerite DOIRON ca 1709-
  4. Paul DOIRON 1710-ca 1758
  5. Pierre DOIRON ca 1711-/1746
  6. Francois DOIRON ca 1713-ca 1758
  7. Joseph DOIRON ca 1715-ca 1758
  8. Marguerite DOIRON ca 1720-1759

He died about 13 December 1758 in the shipwreck of Duke William on hisway to France aged about 74 years.

Sources

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Noël Doiron's Timeline

1684
1684
Port-Royal, Acadie, Nouvelle-France
1684
Pisiquit, Hants, Nova Scotia, Canada
1706
September 21, 1706
1707
September 28, 1707
Saint-Charles-des-Mines, Grand-Pré, Acadia, New France
1707
Cobequid, Acadia New, , France
1710
1710
Cobequid, Acadia
1715
1715
Cobequid, Acadia
1758
December 13, 1758
Age 74
At Sea on the Duke William en route to France
December 13, 1758
Age 74
at sea