- François de Beauharnois de la Chaussaye, Baron de Beauville
François de Beauharnois de la Chaussaye, Baron de Beauville or François de Beauharnais de La Boëche / Boische (bap
19 September 1665 / 1668 – 8 or9 October 1746 , La Chaussée, near Orléans) was a French naval and colonial administrator in France itself and inNew France , and a member of theHouse of Beauharnais .Family
François de Beauharnais was the son of a lawyer in the Parlement (who was also a lieutenant général at the siege of
Orléans and achevalier de Saint-Louis ), a grandson of a premier maître d’hôtel ordinaire du roi (1652) and great-grandson of an Orléans merchant known as "one of the city's richest citizens" [Vergé-Franceschi (Michel), "Les officiers généraux de la marine royale au XVIIIe siècle, origines, conditions, services", Paris, 7 vol., Librairie de l’Inde, 1990, tome V.] . François's brothers includedCharles de Beauharnois de la Boische, Marquis de Beauharnois (who becameGovernor General of New France in 1726) andClaude de Beauharnois de Beaumont et de Villechauve (a French naval officer who three times commanded the ships that restocked the troops in New France)By a marriage between a female Beauharnais and a male from the
Phélypeaux family, he also found himself a cousin ofchancellor and Secretary of State of the NavyLouis Phélypeaux de Pontchartrain . Pontchartrain's son,Jérôme Phélypeaux de Pontchartrain , made François his protégé and between 1706 and 1710 sought a beneficial marriage alliance for him, in the end marrying him Anne, daughter of the sieur Des Gretz, the rich exempt of the Paris police.Life
François's career was considerably accelerated by Jérôme's ministerial favour - he became écrivain principal straightaway on 18 April 1691 at
Toulon and on 1 April the following year received his commission as commissaire ordinaire, serving in that role atToulon thenRochefort ,Le Havre and Brest until 1702. The creation of "charges vénales" marked the "de facto" suppression of "commissions ordinaires" and Beauharnais thus left the service.To avoid François having to pay for the purchase of a commission, and to gain experience for his further career progression in France, Jérôme Pontchartrain made François
intendant of New France on the recall ofJean Bochart de Champigny , leaving fromLe Havre and arriving in Quebec in 1702. As Jérôme's protégé, he was fairly free to make decisions that might be counter to the wishes of the governor,Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil who arrived in 1703. At this time the only real business ofNew France was the fur trade. However, the death ofAntoine-François Phélypeaux d’Herbault on 10 October 1704 after theBattle of Vélez-Málaga (August 1704) freed up the position of intendant of the navy ("intendant des armées navales"), which Jérôme (as Secretary of State of the Navy) then assigned to François. Thus, after a three year stay, François left Canada in December 1705 and took up the new role on 1 January 1706.On 1 January 1710, Beauharnais became "intendant des classes" following the reforms of Pierre Arnoul but he had little time to exercise his new functions - the death of Michel Bégon on 13 March 1710 left the intendances of
Rochefort and of thegénéralité ofLa Rochelle vacant. Beauharnais took up them both on 24 March 1710, but in 1715 had to abandon that of La Rochelle on the Regent's orders, under the pretext that he wasn't themaître des requêtes (Beauharnais was nevertheless offered the chance to buy that généralité, but refused). Following pressure on Maurepas, Beauharnais was also dismissed from the intendance of Rochefort and was made intendant of the navy for a second time on 1 April 1739.François de Beauharnais thus retired to his lands at Boëche, the old name of the seigneurie of La Chaussée (or la Chaussaye), located in the
faubourg s of Orléans, and died there on 9 October 1746.Properties in France and Canada
Besides his lands near Orléans, Beauharnais profited from his brief time in New France to procure the Banville (or Beauville or Bauville) estate there, located in
Acadia . The king gifted him, by a brevet of 2 April 1707, the land ofPort-Maltais (river comprising four places of the bank, two in the depths, with the adjacent islands). On 25 June 1707, by letters patent, this land was formed into thebarony of Banville.At the end of his life, Beauharnais enjoyed several pensions which totalled an annual income of 21,200 livres. His will ruled for his succession by his two nephews, sons of his younger brother Beauharnais de Beaumont. The older of the two, the marquis de Beauharnais, lieutenant général des armées navales, broke the will by dividing the inheritance between all the nephews and nieces, including Michel Bégon fils, premier commis du bureau des Fonds.
Heraldry
On the establishment of the Armorial général de France by
Pierre d'Hozier , François de Beauharnais arms were registered on 23 December 1699, at its Brest office, as : "d’argent, à une fasce de sable, accompagnée de trois merlettes de même, rangées en chef" [La Roche-Lambert-Moins (dir.), "Armorial général de France. Recueil officiel dressé en vertu de l’édit royal du 20 décembre 1696 par Charles d’Hozier, par provinces et généralités", Paris, 1903, 5 vol., tome IV, Bretagne II, Brest, p.13] .References
Bibliography
* Christian Frostin, « La famille ministérielle des Phélypeaux, esquisse d’un profil Pontchartrain, XVIe-XVIIIes » in "Annales de Bretagne", n° 1, 1979, pp.117-140
* Régis Roy, "Les intendants de la Nouvelle-France", Mémoire de la Société Royale du Canada, 1903
* Michel Vergé-Franceschi, "Les officiers généraux de la marine royale : 1715-1774. Origines, conditions, services", Paris, 7 vol., Librairie de l’Inde, 1990, tome V, pp.2115-2145
* Michel Vergé-Franceschi , "Dictionnaire d’histoire maritime", Paris, 2 vol., Robert Laffont, coll. Bouquins, 2002, tome I, p.191 et tome II, p.1 163.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=1206 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
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