flag male ancestor  Isidore  VINCENT dit CLEMENT

  (b. abt. 1745 Acadia, Canada   d. 6 March 1813 Vaudreuil, Lower Canada )  

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Isidore VINCENT dit CLEMENT was born abt. 1745 in Acadia, Canada

Isidore VINCENT dit CLEMENT was the child of Pierre VINCENT dit CLEMENT   and   Marie Blanche MICHEL and the grandchild of: (paternal)  Clement VINCENT and Madeleine LEVRON (maternal)  Louis MICHEL and Marguerite FOREST

Spouse(s)/Partner(s) and Child(ren):

Isidore  married  Marie-Anne PALIN dite DABONVILLE 26 February 1770 in Pointe-Claire, Montréal, Province of Québec, Canada .  The couple had (at least) 1 child.
Marie-Anne PALIN dite DABONVILLE  was born 15 November 1749 in Québec, Québec, Canada (Quebec City).  Marie-Anne died 1 March 1821 in Vaudreuil, Québec, Canada (Vaudreuil-Dorion).  Marie-Anne was the child of Antoine PALIN dit DABONVILLE and Barbe GESSERON dite BRULOT.

Isidore VINCENT dit CLEMENT died 6 March 1813 in Vaudreuil, Lower Canada .
Details of the family tree of Isidore appear below.

Occupation

Isidore VINCENT dit CLEMENT 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

farmer
Source: Old Sturbridge Village, Sturbridge, Massachusetts
Did You Know? Québec Généalogie - Over time, Québec has gone through a series of name changes
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.
Did You Know? Québec Généalogie - What is a 'dit/dite' name?  When the first settlers came to Québec from France it was a custom to add a 'dit' nickname to the surname. The English translation of 'dit' is 'said'. The Colonists of Nouvelle France added 'dit' names as distinguishers. A settler might have wanted to differentiate their family from their siblings by taking a 'dit' name that described the locale to which they had relocated. The acquiring of a 'dit' name might also be the result of a casual adoption, whereby the person wanted to honor the family who had raised them. Another reason was also to distinguish themselves by taking as a 'dit' name the town or village in France from which they originated. This custom ended around 1900 when people began using only one name, either the 'dit' nickname or their original surname.

Source: American-French Genealogical Society, Woonsocket, Rhode Island (www.afgs.org/ditnames/index1.html)

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