- Chretien DuBois
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Chretien du Bois was the father of three protestant French-speaking immigrants to colonial New York.[1] One of these, Louis Dubois, was among the founders of New Paltz, New York, in the late 1600s. Chretien du Bois was the son of Antoine du Bois and Anne Cousin, and was married to Françoise le Poivre.[2]
Chretien du Bois lived in the village of Wicres, outside of Lille. Documents from the Archives Départementales de Lille indicate he was bailli, lieutenant, greffier & receveur of the Comté of Coupigny. He died sometime after 1641.
Internet pages frequently—and incorrectly—claim that Chretien du Bois' wife was named "Cornelia." This claim was first made by researcher Matthew Hilt Murphy in a 1980 presentation later re-printed in William Heidgerd, "The American Descendants of Chretien Dubois of Wicres, France." Murphy referenced a 1646 item in the church records of Middlebourg, Zeeland referring to "Bois/Cornelia du/vefve de Jen de Chrestien, native de Tournay." Murphy, who apparently was not familiar with the French custom of referring to women in documents by their maiden names throughout their lives, misinterpreted this as a reference to a woman who had married (1) Jean du Bois and (2) Chretien DuBois. In fact, the record refers to a woman whose maiden name was "Cornelia du Bois", who was the widow of "Jean de Chrestien." There is no basis to associate her with Chretien du Bois of Wicres.
Chretien du Bois is of particular interest to American genealogists, both because of the notability of his descendants and because several different -- and inaccurate -- versions of noble ancestry have been claimed for him.[1]
Several prominent Americans figure among Chretien du Bois' descendants, including former governor of Massachusetts William Floyd Weld[3], actor Marlon Brando, Jr.,[4] painter Mary Cassatt[5], journalist Maria Owings Shriver (wife of California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger), Samuel Walton, General George Smith Patton III[6] and film director George Lucas. W.E.B. Dubois is also said to be a descendant.[7]
References
- ^ a b Henry B. Hoff, F.A.S.G., F.G.B.S., Some Observations on the Du Bois Family, New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, July 1995, pp. 175-177
- ^ Horton, Monte. "The Memory of the Just is Blessed". Dubois Family News. http://www.dbfa.org/DBFAnewsletter0611.pdf. Retrieved 4 June 2011.
- ^ William Ogden Wheeler, Ogden Family in America (Philadelphia, J.B. Lippincott Co., 1907) pp. 249-250 (No. 885), p. 369 (No. 2068) (Dubois, Floyd)
- ^ Gary Boyd Roberts, "Royal Descents, Notable Kin and Printed Sources #78: Ten Further Hollywood Figures (or Groups Thereof)," www.newenglandancestors.org (visited 2 Sep 2005)
- ^ Dubois Family Association Newsletter, June 1994, n.p. (This indicates her grandfather was Denis Cassatt, her great-grandfather Daniel Cassatt, and does not give the name of Margaretta (Van Este) Cassatt's husband, shown as the great-great-grandfather.); National Cyclopedia of American Biography, vol XXXIII (New York: James T. White & Co., 1947), pp. 128-129 (This states from the immigrant, Jacques Cossairt and wife Lydia Willems "the descent was through David and Styntje Joris (Van Hoorne) Cossairt; Francis, who served in the convention which framed the first constitution of Pennsylvania and Mary (Van Nest) Cassat, and Daniel and Lydia (Simpson) Cassat, the artist's grandparents."); Anne Cassat Nash, David Williams Cassat and Lilliam May Berryhill: Their Descendants and Ancestors (n.p.: by author, 1986), pp. 95-98, 150-54 (Cassatt, Van Nest)(This does not list Daniel Cassatt among the children of Francis and Margaretta (Van Nest) Cassatt).
- ^ Gary Boyd Roberts, "Notable Kin: American Ancestors and Kinsmen Via Robert Porteus, Jr., of H.M. Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother and H.M. the Queen", NEHGS NEXUS IV (Feb.-March 1987), p.27; Mowbray sec. 2, vol. 9, pp. 1184, 1754, 1756,
- ^ DAB, Supp. VII (1961-1965) (1981), pp. 200-05; David Levering Lewis, W.E.B. Dubois: Biography of a Race, 1868-1919 (New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1993), pp. 20-21; Dubois Family Association Newsletter, June 1994, n.p.
External links
Categories:- 17th-century French people
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