Comeau family history from 1619 to 1755
Virtually all lines of any French-Canadian will expand in Canada back to the early pioneers of Quebec and Acadia (Nova Scotia). Everyone is different in the specifics of those ancestors, but many pioneers will appear in every tree. There are many ancestors at this era since the tree doubles with each generation. Prior to 1619, most of our ancestors are in Europe – in France, Great Britain, Switzerland, the Netherlands, Belgium, and more. If we call my siblings and cousins generation 1, then generation 11 is the first born in Quebec, generation 12 was born in France and emigrated, and generation 13 lived their whole life in France. At that 13th generation, they are called our 10th great grandparents, there are 4096 people just at that level alone. I will thus just pick a few noteworthy settlers of that era.
Hélène Desportes is our 8th great grandmother. She was the first child born in Canada to Europeans. We have eight great grandparents and so which one did she come through – well our great grandfather Trefle Comeau. Virginia Dare was the first child born in British territory in America from Europeans. That was in 1587. Hélène was born in 1620 – 33 years later. She then had 19 children in Quebec and afterwards in her old age became a midwife.
Pierre Comeau is the patriarch of the Comeau family in North America. He is the only Comeau ever to immigrate from France to North America so all Comeau are related to him. He was a barrel maker. Due to a lack of women in Port Royal, Nova Scotia, he did not marry until he was 52 years old. He is believed to have had 10 children and among them are Pierre Comeau dit L’Esturgeon and Antoine Comeau. Pierre the younger would have 19 children with his wife Jeanne Bourg. Next in our ancestry line is Abraham Comeau who would have 12 children. What a start to getting the name around.
Antoine Comeau was mentioned before since he is the only one to leave Acadia. He went with a friend to Maine in 1686. There he tried to fit into the society by changing his name to Anthony Coombs and claiming that he once studied to be a priest. He would have 11 children with Dorcas Wooden and spread the name Coombs around Massachusetts and Maine. The separation that Coombs wanted from the Comeau name stood for 323 years until 8 members of Coombs and Comeau families had DNA tests done. They all matched perfectly. Anthony Coombs was Antoine Comeau. The four Coombs that had the test were overjoyed, the four Comeau (one of which was me) were delighted to be of help.

In the previous post to this story, it was reported how Paul Brault had fared at Grand Pre. His children and he were deported and went to Quebec. They had left by overland flight from Grand Pre and walked or caught boats going to Quebec City. His elderly father Pierre Brault was not so lucky. Born in 1670 to Vincent Brault in the burgeoning city of Port Royal Acadia. At age 85, when the British decided to clear out all French from Nova Scotia, he was forcibly placed on a ship of men only and set afloat on the Atlantic. Some of the men must have had sailing experience, since they were able to make it to Boston. There he lived out the rest of his life in humiliation. John Faragher writes in his 2005 book A Great and Noble Scheme that there should have been 40 thousand Acadians found in 1780 at the various sites that they went to. But he could only get a number of 20 thousand. Only half were accounted for and since they were in Acadian only villages around the globe, there must have been a net decrease by half. It is known that a couple of ships of women only had sunk. Other ships were rejected at world ports and left at sea until people starved.
Jan Wybesse Spoor left Harlingen in the Friesland of the Netherlands in 1662 and worked as a contract servant for a rich Dutchman near Albany. He and his son Johannes were exceedingly frugal and after 30 years had enough money to buy land and build a home in Coxsackie in Greene County of New York. This Spoor homestead is on Spoor’s Hill or Spoorenberg. It was in Spoor hands for 180 years until it was sold outside the family in 1870. It still exists and a Spoor family cemetery is nearby. Our line passes from Jan to Johannes to Johannes to Johannes to Abraham and then picks up at a previous post of mine. Our Dutch-America forebears were like all old time Dutch-Americans. Hard-working and religious. Each fought for the country when needed in every century that I looked at the family. Abraham fought in the Revolutionary War and his grandson Orange Mansel Spoor would die of starvation during the American Civil War in a prison camp.
Jacques Archambault and Françoise Tourault arrived in Montreal in 1647 from La Rochelle of the western seaboard of France. They were early pioneers and had stories like so many of their compatriots. They needed to settle, build a house, and farm. They had brought their young children with them and they needed to be educated and taught religious values. These were the reasons that they had left La Rochelle. The city provided a large number of emigrants to Quebec since they were adventurous seafaring people but mostly since there was religious conflict in La Rochelle. It was very far from the Catholic monarchy that controlled Paris and nearby cities. Protestants flocked to La Rochelle to obtain religious freedom. The French army sieged the city and forced it to comply in 1573. The inhabitants were never comfortable with central government rule and the Catholics there started immigrating to Quebec and the Protestants to New York State. The Archambault family got caught up in this and took passage to the New World. There they had political and religious freedom and an adventurous new start.
Adrien Charles Legrain is the last of our stories in this segment. His father was born in France in the late 1600s but he came to Quebec to fight the British in a series of five wars fought in Quebec and New England. These were known as the French and Indian Wars and they ruined the southern Quebec countryside. Adrien was born near Fort Chambly in 1688. His father must have told him stories about the wars that he and his own father had fought in. Antoine readily joined the military. Some Native Americans had raided Deerfield Massachusetts during one battle of these wars – it was called the Deerfield Massacre since all white settlers died save one Thankful Stebbins. She was brought to Quebec by the Indians and adopted by Quebec pioneers. She was given the chance to return to Massachusetts but wanted to stay with her new family since she was well cared for. In 1711, Thankful Stebbins married the soldier Adrien Legrain in the church fort at Chambly. This gives us one of the few lines of British ancestry that we have.
