Edouard
TREMBLAY
(b.
20 June 1819
,
Baie-Saint-Paul, Lower Canada
d.
3 July 1841
,
Baie-Saint-Paul, Canada East
)
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TREMBLAY Family Tree – Connecting the Past to the Present!
Edouard TREMBLAY was born 20 June 1819 in Baie-Saint-Paul, Lower Canada
Edouard TREMBLAY was the child of Jacques TREMBLAY and Quirille GAUTHIER dite LAROUCHE and the grandchild of: (paternal) Jacques TREMBLAY and Modeste LAVOIE (maternal) Augustin GAUTHIER dit LAROUCHE and Marie-Modeste TREMBLAYSpouse(s)/Partner(s) and Child(ren):
Edouard married Eulalie COTE 9 February 1841 in Baie-Saint-Paul, Canada East . Eulalie COTE was born 17 January 1818 in Baie-Saint-Paul, Québec, Canada (Saint-Pierre-et-Saint-Paul-de-Baie-Saint-Paul). Eulalie died 10 March 1887 in Alma, Québec, Canada (St-Joseph-d'Alma) (Riverbend). Eulalie was the child of Moise COTE and Olive GAUTHIER dite LAROUCHE.
Edouard TREMBLAY died 3 July 1841 in Baie-Saint-Paul, Canada East .
Details of the family tree of Edouard appear below.

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Occupation
Edouard TREMBLAY was a Cultivateur.
The farmer, cultivateur, or cultivator, was a person who cultivated and exploited the land in order to get a crop.
He may have been the proprietor of his own parcel(s) of land. He could, depending on the land size, have employed other agricultural workers. If he didn't own the land, he was called a tenant farmer.
Source: tfcq.ca

Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Life as a Cultivateur in 18th Century New France: Tilling the Soil of History
Edouard TREMBLAY was a Cultivateur.
The farmer, cultivateur, or cultivator, was a person who cultivated and exploited the land in order to get a crop.
He may have been the proprietor of his own parcel(s) of land. He could, depending on the land size, have employed other agricultural workers. If he didn't own the land, he was called a tenant farmer.
Source: tfcq.ca

Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Life as a Cultivateur in 18th Century New France: Tilling the Soil of History
From its inception in the early 1600s until 1760, it was called Canada, New France.
1760 to 1763, it was simply Canada
1763 to 1791 - Province of Québec
1791 to 1867 - Lower Canada
1867 to present - Québec, Canada.
Thanks to Micheline Gadbois MacDonald for providing this information.
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