Acadian Exile - Grand Derangement flag male ancestor  Joseph  VINCENT dit CLEMENT

  (b. 29 September 1715 Port Royal, Acadia   d. 13 December 1778 France )  

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Joseph VINCENT dit CLEMENT was born 29 September 1715 in Port Royal, Acadia

Joseph VINCENT dit CLEMENT was the child of Clement VINCENT   and   Madeleine LEVRON and the grandchild of: (paternal)  Pierre-Dit-Clement VINCENT and Anne GAUDET (maternal)  François LEVRON dit NANTAIS and Catherine SAVOIE

Joseph was deported as part of the Acadian Exile / Grand Derangement around 1755.
To learn more about the Acadian Exile / Grand Derangement, visit: What Was The Acadian Expulsion of 1755? Unraveling the Grand Dérangement


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

Joseph  married  Marguerite HEBERT abt. 1740 in Acadia, Canada .  Marguerite HEBERT  was born abt. 1716 in Windsor, Nova Scotia, Canada (Pisiquit, Acadia).  Marguerite died abt. 1758 in At Sea*.  Marguerite was the child of Jean HÉBERT and Jeanne DOIRON.

Joseph VINCENT dit CLEMENT died 13 December 1778 in France.
Details of the family tree of Joseph appear below.

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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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