french huguenot surnames in south carolina

Edward, 259-60 http://www.nationalregister.sc.gov/charleston/S10817710068/S1081771 http://etd.lib.clemson.edu/documents/1211390439/umi-clemson-1644.pdf, If you would like to contribute to this page, please feel free to edit it. Paul, 78, 181, 254, 256 Nicholas, dit Petitbois. Domestique/Servant, 44, 55 Jeanne (Laurens), 201-2, 258, John, 277 Calison, 9 Marie (Chatagnier), 85 Elizabeth (Cater), 237 The Dubose ancestors were among the French Huguenots who left France seeking religious freedom. Marie, 155 Etienne, 162 John, 279 Jean, 29, 87, 106, 159-60 Elizabeth, 102-4 Elizabeth, 173 Picardy Province, France, 16, There is no one in the Carolinas who is of primarily Hugeunot ancestry, let alone a community of any such people. Little Thomas, 374-5 Peter, 211 Martha (Chauvin), 89 210, 258, 308 Cramah, France, 85 Paul, 35, 99, 173, 228, 259-60, Margaret, 104 Charlotte, 85 William, 73 Rue de la Juifrerie, 64 Jersey (Channel Island), 282, 310 Leslie, 39 Charlotte (de St. Julien), 9, 83, Lydia, 203-4 Bourges, France, 290 St. Philips Church, 36, 171, 231, 317-18, 339, 358 2 Hayes ABOUT USOur HistoryThe HuguenotsTimelineHuguenot Happenings. Mary (Potell), 63 Louis, 75, 122, 148, 180, 231, Margaret (Robert), 303 Nova Scotia, Canada, 39, 87, 108, Jean, 350 Pascaud Fousherole, 196 191, 216, 289 Thomas, 111 Thomas, Sr., 243 Mary (Ashby), 184 Meriwether, Robert L. The Expansion of South Carolina, 1729-1765. Marianne (Vandamme), 57 Benjamin Marion was a French Huguenot (Calvinist Protestant) from Chaunay, in the Poitou-Charentes region of western France. 161, 170, 175, 203, 223, 249, Turkey Cocks, 362, 371 See also Waites. 1928. Jeanne, 197, 199 Elizabeth (Robert), 89, 188 Petawn Branch/Creek, 20, 86, Logmore Reserve, 226 Jeanne (Videau), 348 Ann, 216, 232 Cooper, 48-9, 74, 75-6, 97, Fortress of the Soul: Violence, Metaphysics, and Material Life in the Huguenots' New World, 1517-1751 Johns Hopkins U. Susannah (Carrire), 76-7 Formally called St. James Episcopal-Santee, this church is more commonly known as the Brick Church at Wambaw for its location near Wambaw Creek in rural McClellanville.Also called simply the Brick Church or Wambaw Church, it was built in 1768 and is the fifth church to house the congregation of . Garden Burial, 340 334, 339, 373-4 Paul, 178, 184 Babet, 138 374-5 Claude, 164 Vissor, William, 308 Johnson, 51, 212, 302 Alexander, 115 333, 347-9, 351 Watts, David, 351 Benjamin, 269 Marie, 134 Ann Bivet, 78 John, 127, 188, 331 2, 108, 111-12, 157-8, 173, Josias, 178 150, 161, 167, 186, 207, Evans La Combe LeNoble. Preuilly, France, 268 137, 140, 165, 222, 283, Andrew (II), 288, 290, 294 Marianne/Marian, 154 De Le Conseillire. Brazier, 9, 115, 357 Frances, 196 John (II), 168, 266, 275, 276, Bichet, Mary, 177 Catherine (Gaillard), 126, 141 Rendon/s, Marie, 306 Marie (Blondeau), 250 Avila, Abraham, 358 95, 105, 124, 131, 137, 160, 199, 200, 231, 306, 339, Silk Throwster, 227, 357 Brewton, Robert, 273 Peter, 65, 147, 168, 178, 272 The Prevatt (e) Historical Society is composed of those who can trace their lineage to Pierre Prevot, the French Huguenot from whom we are descended. 102, 104, 111-12, 154-5, Physician, 75, 115, 135, 162, Elizabeth, 129, 241-2, 318 Judith (Manigault), 232 Catherine (DeBloys), 226, 348, Santee Swamp, 72, 163, 196, 237, 234, 248-9, 254, 255, 258-9, Elizabeth, 240 Simmons Antoine, 85 Varin Copyright 2022 Huguenot Society of South Carolina. Petit, Marguerite, 50 258, 267, 274-6, 297-8, 323, 373-5 Jeremy Creek, 39 143-4, 149-51, 210, 239, Mary (DuBose), 319 Judith, 260 256, 333, 355, 368, 371 Philip, 318 Her Miroir de l'me pecheresse, first published in 1531, then again as the first poem in the Marguerites (1547), provoked the censure of the Sorbonne theologians for its expression of ideas associated with the religious reform movement. Elizabeth, 275 See also Brathon and John, 177, 178, 184 Huguenot Names - The Huguenots of Spitalfields Mary (Couly), 345 Magdalen (Morinna), 297 Elwood, 169, 173 Elizabeth (Mayrant) de, 318, Bilonm, Mr., 178 255 (Daughter), 300 Anne, 103, 113, 160, 284, 286, Mary, 108 Colineau, Mme, 315 Jonas, 15, 75, 91, 100-1, 114, Mary, 266, 275, 277 Combe/ Comb Vincens, Marie, 120 Jean/John, 86, 155, 230, 239, 312 Abraham, 33, 35, 106, 163, 347-8, 351, 101, 172, 243, 244, The Affair of the Placards of 1534, changed the king's posture toward them: he stepped away from restraining persecution of the movement . John, 89 Johnson Eleanor, 204 242, 321, 330, 334, 375 Isaac, Jr., 318 Ann, 211 Adrienne Aracheguene de, 225 John, 261 Margaret, 347 Macaire, Franois, 44, 55, 59, Franois, 187 Sallens, Peter, 184 They constituted a majority of the colony's population throughout the period. 299, 345, 357 202, 247, 253-4, 298, 307, Susanne (Dutartre), 104 Wando Head, 100 Anne, 235, 238 St. Augustine, FL, 39, 196, 232 Salt Tax Collector, 120 William, 84, 247 Alexander, 263, 333 122, 127 Gabriel, 141, 151, 236, 351 John, 169, 306 284, 299 326, 329, 339, 345, 347-8, Marianne (Petineau), 188 Baron de Virasel, 79, 85 Guerry. School for, 142 Daniel, 337 Mary, 295 John, 30, 46, 101, 153-4, 157, Cobbler, 120 Horteman. Monck Mary (Stone), 77 Cooper River, 5, 6, 13, 30, 49, 51- Charlestown Regiment, 211 258-9, 375 John, 332 Etienne (Stephen), 106, 150, Israel, 366 See also Negroes. Pierre, Jr., 22, 131 Joel, 270 Hampton, 26, 18, 31, 39, 171, Find many great new & used options and get the best deals for Huguenot Church French Protestant Charleston South Carolina SC 1912 Postcard at the best online prices at eBay! Anne (Cordes), 237, 350-1 Savanna Creek, 123, 125 Dorothy, 334 Lidie, 310 220, 352-3, 375 Marie Izambert, sa femme. 251, 292, 301, 308, 344 Lewis, 86 Peter, 357 Frierson, 297 Washington, George, 39 Isaac, 96, 117 Catherine, 338-41 By 1562 there were two million Huguenots in France and over 2,000 churches. Kifiana (Gosfraight), 208 David, 35, 188, 191, 262, 331- They settled in port cities, Charleston, New York, and Boston, or founded rural communities (New Paltz and New Rochelle, New York, Orange Quarter and French Santee, South Carolina, and Manakintown, Virginia). Magdalene, 73, 132 161, 166, 188, 212, 219-20, Daniel de, 316, 318 George, 186, 245, 315 Elizabeth (Foissin), 173 For a time, at least, there was more freedom for the Huguenots. Ann/e (Robert), 172, 303 Francis, 187, 196 Thomas, 194 Marguerite, 197 Daniel, 155 Jonathan (II), 102-3 Jermain Ferry, 174, 334 371 William, 352-3 Hinde, John, 272 301, 302 (Eboe), 308, 316-17, See also Schult, Peter, 303 Indians competed for European trade goods, including cloth and guns.{{cite web|url=http://www.common-place.org/vol-03/no-01/reviews/hall.shtml |title=Joseph Hall, "The Great Indian Slave Caper", review of Alan Gallay, ''The Indian Slave Trade: The Rise of the English Empire in the American South, 16701717'', New Haven: Yale University Press, 2002, Common-place.org, vol. Peter, Jr., 196 Etienne, 73-4 123-4, 128, 137, 148-50, 192, 208, 225, 240, 248, Philippes, 219, 263 Hatier Chtelet Prison, Paris, France, Purrysburg, SC, 35, 41, 70-1, 155, 192, 222, 225, 227, 273 HISTORY: French Huguenots Flee to South Carolina Mary (Jeanneret), 192 Vieillevigne, France, 51 145, 229, 285-6, 300, 331 Jacques, 30, 299, 326, 357. Esther Elizabeth (Gourdin), 229, 256-7, 265, 310 Turner, St. Marks Parish, 90, 108, 295-6 Elizabeth, 341 Peter (II), 232 A few French Huguenot surnames that remain common today include the surnames Du Plessis, De Villiers, Joubert, Le Roux, Naude and Rousseau. Madeleine (Du Frenne), 168 William, 217 Roux. Marie, 338 Jeanne, 260, 295 Marguerite (De Bourdeaux), Loyal Jamaica, 133, 168 Bontecou Fayerweather, Samuel, 37 Andr/Andrew, 161-2, 191, 240-1, 318, 358 3rd. see Cothonneau. Pierre et lizabeth La Salle, leurs enfans nz en Caroline. Noah, 35, 87, 89, 92, 154, 160, Blanchier, Anne, 158 A coffee table book with many wonderful pictures. 166, 182, 261, 262, 289, Susannah (Stanley), 259 Cordes, 375 Susannah, 190-1 Church of England, 25, 34, 70, David, 242, 318 337-40, 345, 348, 369 Henry, 84, 252 Sarah (Wilkins), 342 Loule Elias, 35, 89, 167, 187-8, 304- Cherveux, France, 130, 132, 196 Csar, 212, 227, 240, 343, 347 Elizabeth, 284, 319 Mary, 182 Elizabeth Mary (Drinker), 222 Currier-Briggs, Noel, and Royston Gambier, Huguenot Ancestry; Phillimore, 1985. New London, SC, 30 Pierre, 210 281-3, 310, 315 Jeanne (Berchaud), 8, 60-2, Marianne, 200 Charron Potell/Postell, 53, 63, 90 Marie (Chapron), 56 Gray 357-8 William, 232 Mary, 238 Coteners/Cateners, Alex, 169 June Branch, 197 1. Stephen, 248 Judith (Robert), 305 Pierre de (IV), 317 Deputy Surveyor, 23, 124, Gwynn, Robin D., The Huguenots of London; United Kingdom, Sussex Academic Press, 1998. Elizabeth, 97 The History of Jacksonville dates way back to Jun 22nd, 1564 when the French Colony of Fort Caroline was first established on the site of what we now know as the city of Jacksonville. Causton Pons, 320 182, 191, 214-15, 222-3, Ann (Smith), 245 St. Martin, Ile-de-R, France, 74, Elias, 204 Monk, Thomas, 208 Bayeux, France, 298 Mary (Piedevin), 152 Dorcas, 104 James Edward, 194 Henry, 112, 349 Julienne (Michaud), 247 la Bastie 164, 368 124, 150, 162, 166, 185-9, Charles, 211, 320 Paul, 246 148, 210, 230, 239, 284 Thomas, 266 280, 323-4 Sieur dAnerville, 9, 68, 193, Elizabeth, 239 Jonathan (II), 337 26, 28-9, 31, 33, 37, 39, 69, Ann, 152, 240 Franois, 284 Elizabeth Marye, 133 Peter/Pierre, Jr., 165, 357-8 Muster House, 39 124, 128, 129, 130, 135, Elmwood, 169, 175 John, 276 106, 109, 150, 160, 163, 313, 316 Pierre, 46, 112-13, 264, 265, Constant (DuPlessis), 247 Bueis (Buis) 94, 98-105, 114, 119, 122- 286, 315, 321, 329, 370 See Birmont. Logan Peter, 265-6 Marianne (Porcher), 273 Moulles, Marguerite, 62 Franois, 209 George Thomas, 73 Martha, 324 Notary Public, 44, 64, 165, 178 Joseph, 281 Margueritte Henriette Mathews, Maurice, 97, 314 305 Lacam, Jean, 56 Surveyor, 180, 193, 305, 317, Hester (Vincent), 343 Biggin Creek, 206, 208, 314 267, 288, 302, 348-50, 357 Elizabeth (Sinclair), 103 New Orleans: Pelican Pub. Genealogy Detective: Michael Patrick Leahy Digs Deep into the Ancestry Henry (II), 204 Jeanne, 6, 297-8, 300, 302 Benjamin, 322 Jeffrion, Louis, 220 Susanne, 206 Susanna (de la Coussaye), 151, Gals Branch, 262, 335 Susanna, 129-30, 240-2 Rice Hope, 184 Sierre Leone, 62 Damaris Elizabeth, 239 230, 242-7, 253-4, 286, Wig Maker, 181 *ELIAS PRIOLEAU, fils de Samuel Prioleau, et de Jeanne Merlat, n en Xaintonge en France. Nanteuil-les-Meaux, France, 50 Madeleine, 104, 231, 288, 306- Graveyard, 35, 37, 40, 172, Porcher de Richebourg, 294 Jean Jacques, 44 Grimball Drapeau Mary-Anna, 254 Today, the Society has nearly 2,000 members who are descendants of those Huguenots." See the Huguenot Church in the United States Wiki page for more information . Sarah, 276 Elizabeth de, 237, 318 See also Roux. Agnes, 7, 9 Dearsly, George, 354 Anthony White, 352 Orleans, France, 110, 345 La Chabossire, 63, See also Jeanne Elisabeth (Boyd), 61-2, Sainte Soline, France, 72 Subscribe today! Mose, 280 Marie (Bonneau) de, 225-6, Chastasnier/Chasteigne/Chatagner Elisabet (Perdriau), 256 Louisa County Court Records Directory (Source: Court Records Free Reference and Directory) Superior Court of Law Common law order books, 1809-1847; chancery order books, 1809-1838, 1844-1851 Viewing restrictions apply (Source: FamilySearch) Henry, 150, 239-40 Jane, 272 Saltworker/Saunier, 90, 118 Elias (II), 347 Andr, 45 Jean Pierre, 189 Siocart. Strawberry Ferry Road, 123 354 John, 249, 359 See Marboeuf Sara, 110 Catherine (Chaillou), 327, 330 (Chastaigner), 83-4 Maidstown, Kent County, Susanna, 244 The Society is open Monday to Friday from 9am to 2pm. Marie, 323, 324 Simons, 227 Louis, 282 Elias (IV), 172 New Babylon to Eden: The Huguenots and Their Migration to Colonial South Carolina. Burlone, Daniel, 279 Pierre (Sieur), 338 Isaac, 94, 192, 247, 295, 325-6 324 Leiden, Holland, 98 Isaac, 279 Poupinel, Daniel, 211 Hewitt, in his History of South Carolina, says: "In 1690 King William sent a large body of Huguenots to Virginia. Abigail, 48-9 Joseph, 125, 319, 321 South Seas Annuities, 184 Hamon, Jean, 209 Peter, 113, 160, 201, 289 Elizabeth, 337 Marie (Pel), 203 Roda 205, 323 Edward, 244 Dawson, 325 Edward, 35, 352-3 Le Jau/Lejau Orei, 178 Cochrane, Sir John, 6 King Jeremy (Sewee), 18, 174, He settled along the Santee River and was eventually residing in the French Santee community near Charleston, S.C. Ousley, James, 309 Cordwainer, 45, 77, 134, 202, Isaac (III), 154 Marie Aime, 282, 284, 317 90, 99, 115, 118, 132, 134, Elizabeth (Richebourg), 297 Gautier. Ester/Esther, 327-330 Wambaw Graveyard, 40, 183, Daniel, 18, 35, 37, 39, 68, 109, - (Gignilliat), 272 Samuel, 85 Marie, 328, 332 Daniel, 110-11, 115, 117, 313, First Fleet, 240, 333 Swamp, 34, 90, 128, 183, 194, Christina/Christinaz 292, 317 Mary, 184 Whitaker, Mr., 340 Paul, 63 Mose, 73,-5, 78, 91, 96, 105, William, 337 150, 151, 152, 159, 165, 167, Magdalen (Postell), 276 Huguenot predecessors included the pro-reform and Gallican Catholics, like Jacques Lefevre. Peter, 54 Serjeant, 337 Protestants in France were inspired by the writings of John Calvin in the 1530s and the name Huguenots was already in use by the 1560s. Vergan French (Huguenot) Family history . Margaret, 189 Benjamin, 256 The Huguenot Church grew rapidly. Pierre Robert was the first Huguenot preacher to set foot on the shores of the New World. Dowries, 56-7, 138, 182, 273, 297 Wambaw, 22, 35, 37, 40, 144- He became pastor of the first Huguenot church in North America in that city. Stephen, 128 Wadmalaw Island, 77 Joseph, 35, 70-1, 90, 109, 287 52 Esther (Dutarque), 112 342 Elizabeth (Garnier), 133 Edward Brickell White was born on January 29, 1806 on the Chapel Hill Plantation of St. John's Berkeley Parish, South Carolina. 265 Constantia, 232 Prince Frederick Parish, William, 317-18 Pierre, 185-6, 242, 245-6 Col., 83 Peter Elias, 304 Madeleine, 168 Touraine Province, France, 6, 74, Besly Charleston is known as The Holy City due to the prominence of churches on the low-rise cityscape, particularly the numerous steeples which dot the city's skyline, and for the fact that it was one of the few cities in the original Thirteen Colonies|thirteen colonies to provide religious tolerance, albeit restricted to non-Catholics. Rni, 178 Lane On that day, soldiers and organized mobs fell upon the Huguenots, and thousands of them were slaughtered. Abraham, 5, 53, 58, 117-8, Acadia, Canada, 297 Margot See also Magdalen, 297 168 Varambaut Alexandre Auguste, 28, 81-5, Les Sables dOlonne, France, 233 139 Jane Judith (Peyre), 262 Sarah (Mounier), 48, 49, 248 Catherine, 264 Bowell, Mary, 56 Marie (Potell), 53-4, 273 James, 35, 92, 96, 130, 132, Henri IV (of France), 228 Brandt, J., 185 Netherlands, The, 121 Nicholas, 23, 67-8, 75, 87, 91, Black Pioneers (Carolina), 39 New England, 56, 289 Francis, 184 Kinloch, 61, 247 Ester, 203 Marie (Quillaud), 342 Gerosme, 284-5, 288 Jean, 98, 123, 251 Strode 319 Judith (Boyd), 56 Hall 95-6, 102, 126, 138, 140, Located in Charleston, the Society has one of the . Later, Huguenots followed the Lutheran movement, and finally, Calvinism. LEgar/Legare The original Carolina proprietors were aware of the threat posed by the French and Spanish colonies to the south, whose Roman Catholic monarchies were enemies of England and English Protestant values. Andr, 158 Send a message to the Project Manager to join us as a collaborator. Etienne/Stephen (II), 335 320, 322, 329, 370-2, 373, 375 Elizabet, 245 Susanna, 149, 152, 351 Daniel, 342 Esther (Berresford), 352-3 Bean, 76 Lewis, Kenneth E. The Guillebeau House: An Eighteenth Century Huguenot Structure in McCormick County, South Carolina. Of the latter there is a settlement on the Santee river. 326, 328, 336 Jane/Judith (Peyre), 260, 262 Mary (Lieubray), 77 William, 89, 188, 194, 222, Jacob, 206 Susanne (Ferr), 268 Jacques, 264 278, 280, 293, 300, 308, 314-5, Grady, Catherine, 156 Marguerite, 266, 276-7 Peter, 73, 166, 180, 202, 214, Montagne du Droit de Sonvilier, Pierre de (II), 55, 82-3, 98-9, Jane, 116 Mary, 334-5 Esther (Boisseau), 54-5, 261, Focusing on the experiences of a single lineage, the Huger family, it hopes to add to existing scholarship on the South Carolina Huguenot experience in two specific ways. 5 Andrew (III), 90, 163, 288, Elizabeth, 244-5 358 Sarah, 48 Jeanne (Prou), 281 254, 257-9, 278, 280, 286, Christian Marie, 111-12, 329, 192, 279 Philip, 244 286, 304 Esther, 134 Ball, 375 Pierre, 157 P., 138, 225 See also Pecott and Picot. Elizabeth, 192 270, 343 Augustus, 106 Jean Auguste, 60 Francis, 96, 130, 153, 202, 305 Free shipping for many products! 243 Susanna (Porcher), 273 Judge James, in his Life of Marion, says: About seventeen years after the first settlement of Carolina, in 1690, and a short time subsequently, between seventy and eighty French families, fleeing from the bloody persecutions exerted against them in their mother country, settled on the banks of the Santee. 264 William, 167 Farrar 147, 149, 154, 185, 190, 218, 167, 193-4, 279, 302-3, Gabrielle (Mercier), 47 Abraham, 9, 29-30, 35, 54, Elisabeth, 98 Lieubray/ Lieubre Charenton, le-de-France, France, Billy, 375 Pays de Vaud, France, 253 Sepvret, France, 158 Elizabeth Jane/Jeanne, 284, John, 54, 116 Suzanne, 264 Rachel, 279 5, 186, 209-10, 212-13, Etienne, 179, 254-7 223-4 James, 271, 294-6 Cockfield,William, 35 Hughes Thibaud/Thibaut/Thibout 302, 310, 312-14, 325, 333, 9, 311, 350 Cartel, ? 229, 253, 279, 326, 358 Although the French settlers of colonial Pennsyl vania were few in comparison with the English, the Germans, and the Scotch-Irish, it may be stated at . Margaret, 303 Van Ruymbeke, Bertrand, From New Babylon to Eden: The Huguenots and Their Migration to Colonial South Carolina; Columbia, SC, University of South Carolina Press, 2006. The Royal Colony of South Carolina - The French Huguenot Settlers Thomas, 77 Susannah Elizabeth, 52, 349 Marie, 203 Alexandre Thse, 6, 9, 13, 57, 151, 173, 184, 200, 241, 251, Unity Gayle, 296 PAUL BRUNEAU DE RIUEDOUX, Escuyer, fils de Arnaud Bruneau, et de n la Rochelle. Waccamaw Neck, 139 9, 11, 20, 23, 30, 34, 39, 42, Lucy, 344 Susanna/Susanne, 90-1, 98- Germany, 121, 265, 284, 287 Jean, 122 301, 339, 360, 364, 369 Rodolphe, 283 99, 110, 114-5, 117-8, 155, Charlotte, 157 Reissued Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1991. They were naturalized in 1689. David (III), 244 Frances, 268 Paul, 322 Henriette Marie, 85 Galiot, Daniel, 235 Chastain Guards, 254 Daniel, 45, 81, 91, 288, 294, 323 Wilcox, Mary, 338 Dispatch, 172 Mary, 125, 127, 272 262, 279, 286, 288, 298, 302-3, 83, 93, 104-5, 109-110, 125, Bonnetheau, John, 116, 233, 340 "French Santee, A Huguenot Settlement in Colonial South Carolina," by award-winning authors Susan Baldwin Bates and Harriott Cheves Leland, is now available. Ester/Esther (Jaudon), 75,163, Banet, Charles Henry. Germaine/Germon and Mary, 279 Louis, 55, 230-1 144, 171, 284 Boone Isaac, 303 Gabriel, 233 Paiset, Elizabeth, 268 Marie (Lucas), 201, 202, 203, Hannah, 51 Manigault Creek, 153, 180, 191, Balls Branch, 375 Frances (Gurin), 157 Mary, 77 Mary (Richards), 335 Wool carder, 50 Beer (small), 360, 371 Gosfraight, Kifiana, 208 Hannah (Atkins), 266 Huguenots were ordered to renounce their faith and join the Catholic Church. Jeanne Marie de, 316-7, 319 Elizabeth, 85 Challe, David, 178 223-4 166, 215, 219, 220, 301 294 Jeanne Elisabet, 51, 227, 288, 345, 352, 370, 374-5 Glasgow, Scotland, 320 Mose, 90, 99, 118, 119, 156, Columbia: Institute of Archeology and Anthropology, University of South Carolina, 1979. 253, 315, 343 (New York) Carolina, 206 Daho Lake, 31, 87, 89 John James David, 259 Robson, Urban, 74 Ashby Pierre, 110-11, 117 Jacob, 319-21 James, 252 Susannah, 297 Jean-Baptiste, 209 Accessed May 9, 2007. a claim lent credibility by the fact that it has the first established Livability Court in the country. Then, on April 13, 1598, as the newly crowned Henry IV, he issued the Edict of Nantes, which granted to the Huguenots toleration and liberty to worship in their own way. Stewarts Bluff, 31, 177, 334 188, 210, 211, 215, 219, The DuBois Family Association formation also dedicated itself to assemble and publish the genealogy of the DuBois family. Peter Tamplet, 337 Elizabeth (Porcher), 270, 272, Francis, Sr., 92 Marie (Argis), 264 Pecoates, 264 Ptremand, Marie, 297 Nombre/ Nombret Charlotte (Broughton), 84 New Hanover, NC, 199 127-8, 130-1, 133, 138, 261 Workinton, 49 Gendron, 34, 39, 73, 80, 98, 124 Rolinson, Daniel, 77 Catherine, 237 Jay, Auguste, 6 William, 129, 242 Daniel, 264, 266-7, 295, 323, 293 170-1, 175 Simon, Elizabeth, 259 Amsterdam, Holland, 134, 144, Anne, 350 Elizabeth (Clay), 243-5 Stuart, Adam, 259 278, 283, 297, 299-301, 251-2 101-2 Yemassee Indian War, 29-30, Trade with, 60 Mary (Jermain), 55, 174, 194 Eleuthre Irne du Pont|E.I. Peter (II), 266-8 Daniel , Jr., 87, 166 Jonathan, 336-7 195-6, 198-9, 206, 226-7, 237, Jacks Swamp, 76 Gadsden, Bishop, 38 Canary Islands, 5, 360 Scott See Martel. Attacks in NC, 291 Jouneau, 341 No, 22, 34, 45, 73, 86-7, 154, Draper, 120 Etienne, 37, 69, 86-7, 106-7, 95-6, 108, 126, 130, 135, 138, 301-2, 316, 325 (Mr.) Wolf-Trap, 34 Esther, 112 Margaret (Guignard), 172 Andrew, Jr. 114 Coutable, Jean, 64 308-9, 328, 332 292 12 Burcham, Samuel, 233 Francis, 64 Samuel, 192 Elizabeth Mathias, 108 Settlement, 6, 13, 16-7, 25, 33, Peter, 233 See Le Chevalier. Anne (Rnault), 112 Elizabeth, 350 Marguerite (Robert), 50 Cornifleau, Laurens, 45 Catherine, 173, 261, 349 Lands were allotted them on the James river, which by their diligence and industry, they soon improved into excellent estates. Paul, 7-8, 13, 35, 44, 58, 63, See also Prew and Prue, Boutignon, Prinne, 233 Rensselaer, IN: 1980. Pierre, 55, 230 Woodberry 290 Battery Warren, 239, 374 James, 14, 97, 121, 207, 370 Pepin. Clay Thomas, 341 Samuel, 354 Ester, 151, 234-6 Marie (Ptremand), 297 Pilot, 361 Susanna, 111 Andrew, Sr., 217, 288