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Carl & Elaine (Grove) Rhodes' Genealogy Pages

This Site is Dedicated to Our Forebears, and their Descendants

Matthew Dubois

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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Matthew Dubois (son of Louis Dubois and Catherine Blanchin).

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Louis Dubois was born on 27 Oct 1627 in Lille, Labarree, Flanders, France (son of Chretian Maximillian Des Dubois); died in 1695-1696.

    Notes:

    "HANS GRAF AND HIS DESCENDANTS" by Lindsey M. Brien. (Handtyped book
    at Allen County Public Library, Fort Wayne, IN: "The name du Bois means
    from the forest and was a family name in Artois and Normandy before
    William the Conqueror left his native shore. The Heraldic Records in
    the Royal Library of Paris declare that the DuBois family is one of
    the oldest of the noble families of the Bailiwick of Contentin,
    Normandy. The genealogy begins with Geoffroi du Bois, a Knight
    Banneret under William the Conqueror whom he accompanied in 1066 into
    England." The Du Bois is a very old family, also a military family
    and furnished to France some able soldiers. From Welles Ancestral
    Chart: "Louis DuBois was the progenitor of the family in America.
    He was the son of Chretian DuBois and was born on the farm at Wicres,
    Oct 27 1626, but little is known of his early life. His hand writing
    proves that went to school...It is certain that he was a protestant
    and a calvinest, or one who in his native land was called a Huguenot.
    When a young man he left his native land and went to Manheim in the
    Paltz, or German Palatinate; while there he married Catherine
    Blanchin, Oct 10, 1655. She was the daughter of Matthys or Matthew
    Blanchan, who came to New Amsterdam, 27 Apr. 1660 on the ship "Gilden
    Otter" (the wife of Matthew was Madelin Gore (or Goore or Jorissen, as
    it is sometimes written)" Baid--The Huguenot Immigration to America,
    p. 187 "Among the Walloons that came to New Netherland in the last
    days of Dutch occupation, was Louis DuBois, founder of the Huguenot
    settlement of New Paltz, in Ulster County, N.Y. Louis was the son of
    Chretian DuBois, an inhabitant of Wicres, a hamlet in the district of
    LaBarree near Lille in Flanders, where he was born, 27 Oct. 1627."
    Two sons of Chretian DuBois came to America, Louis and Jacques. Louis
    was called "par excellence, the Walloon." The date of their landing
    is not definitely known. The will of Louis DuBois is dated 16 May
    1679 and proved June 23, 1696. His widow survived him many years and
    married, second Jean Cottin of New York."
    "AMERICAN VAN METRE FAMILY" Smyth, (Allen County Public Library, Fort
    Wayne, IN) "Louis du Bois de Fiennes, born Oct. 10, 1626, in
    LaBasse, near Lille, in the province of Artois, France, married, Oct.
    10, 1655, at Mannheim, in the Lower Palatinate of Germany, to
    Catherine Blanchan, daughter of Mathese and Madelaine (Jorisse)
    Blanchan, who were co-refugees with the du Bois from French Flanders
    to Wieres, Artois, France. Louis died 1695. Monsieur Le Turque, of
    the Genealogical Institute of Paris, has developed a line of ancestors
    running back to the days of the Scyrri which includes descent from
    Charlemagne, Emperor of the West; Alfred the Great; Hugh Capet, King
    of France, and Henry I, Emperor of Germany. The most important of
    these lines have been compared and verified; and where the line is
    broken the cause is attributed to the summary action of Louis XIV's
    minister, Cardinal Mazarin, and Marshall Turenne, who decreed that the
    names of many of the noble families of France, who espoused and held
    the faith of Protestantism, should be erased from the rolls of
    nobility and their property confiscated.....thousands of French
    families fled to England, Germany, Switzerland, and Holland. It was
    during the latter part of this reign of terror that the father of
    Louis du Bois found shelter in the Palatinate of the Rhine.
    According to this tracing of the family the line begins wtih Guelph,
    Prince of the Scyrri, A.D. 476. Azo, Marquis of Liguria, A.D. 1030, a
    descendant of the Prince in the fourteenth generation, married Marie,
    a descendant of the powerful house of Este, in Italy. The Estes were
    of the Aetii of Rome who settled in Lombardy about 500 B.C. Guelph,
    grandson of Azo and Marie, Count of Bavaria and Saxe, A.D. 1107,
    married Judith, a descendant of Charlemagne. A great grandson of
    Guelph and Judith, Henry V, Duke of Bavaria and Saxe, A.D. 1195,
    married Mathilde, a descendant of William the Conqueror, thru Henry I,
    and Henry II, of England. Henry VI, son of the Duke of Bavaria and
    Saxe and Mathilde, married A.D. 1200, Agnes, Countess of Palatine, a
    descendant of Alfred the Great. A descendant of Henry VI, and Agnes,
    Madame Claude de Lanney, married Charles du Bois, Seigneur des
    Querder, who was a descendant of MacQuaire du Bois, Count de Roussey,
    A.D. 1110 The oldest children of Louis du Bois were born in
    Mannheim; and in 1660 the family came to America. Upon their arrival
    here they proceeded to New Village (New Pals) in Ulster Co. NY, wher
    Louis rapidly rose to prominence in the local civil and religious
    affairs....Louis was also a member of the first Court of Sessions held
    at Kingston, the seat of Ulster County He led in demanding of the
    English government...that there should be no taxation without the
    consent of the people, and for this daring attitude he lost his
    commission, thus anticipating the crisis of 1775 In 1663, Louis du
    Bois headed an expedition against the Minnisink Indians, and was of
    the colonial forces against them in 1670. The first-named punitive
    expedition of June 7, 1663, was known in New York history as the
    Eusopus War. It was organized at the time the settlement was attacked
    by the Minnisinks, who burned Hurley, killed and injured some of the
    settlers, and carried away prisoners, the wife of Louis du Bois, his
    three children, and at least two of Jan Joosten's. These were taken
    to the fastnesses of the Catskill Mountains and there remained in
    captivity for months, but were rescued on the eve of torture by du
    Bois and Capt. Martin Kreiger's company of Manhattan soldiers; the
    trainband finally rounded up the Indians and defeated them on Sep. 3,
    1663. In connection with this tragic experience the following
    statement is quoted: "About ten weeks after the capture of the women
    and children, the Indians decided to celebrate their own escape from
    pursuit by burning some of their victims and the ones selected were
    Catherine du Bois, and her baby Sara, who afterward married her
    companion in captivity, John Van Metre. A cubical pile of logs was
    arranged and the mother and child placed thereon; when the Indians
    were about to apply the torch, Catherine began to sing the 137th Psalm
    as a death chant. The Indians withheld the fire and gave her respite
    while they listened; when she had finished they demanded more, and
    before she had finished the last one her husband and the Dutch
    soldiers from New Amsterdam arrived and surrounded the savages, killed
    and captured some, and otherwise inflicted terrible punishment upon
    the, and released the prisoners" (from Martin Kreiger's Journal,
    Mackenzie's Col Fam. U.S. VII, p. 472) Louis du Bois was one of the
    founders, and first elder of the Reformed Dutch Church at New
    Paltz...After his death, in 1695, his widow married Jean Cotton."
    "HISTORY OF SHEPHERD AND RELATED FAMILIES" by Frank Shepherd (1858-?)
    pub 1943 (Indiana State Library), p. 3,4,6 "When Louis du Bois grew
    to a man's estate and could not bring himself to accept the religious
    faith of the Jesuits--when he saw with horror the bloody axe of the
    guillotine and knew that would be his fate if he refused to bow the
    knee to their demands and surrender the right to obey his conscience,
    to save his life he fled to the lower Palatinate of Germany where many
    other Huguenots had found refuge. Here, on Oct. 10, 1655, he married
    Catherine Blanchan the daughter of Mathese Blanchen a co-refugee with
    him from Flanders. For five years they lived at Manheim Germany
    until their first two children were born. But Germany even in those
    early days over populated and crowded and many were looking towards
    the new world across the sea for new homes. To escape we find Louis
    du Bois and his family emigrating to America in 1660 on the good ship
    Saint Marie to land in New Amsterdam, (now New York City) and went up
    the Hudson River to settle at 'Nieum Village' now known as Hurley near
    Kingston in Ulster County At this time there were but a few settlers
    there and the Minnesink Indians, who claimed all that country, were
    suspicious and troublesome. Life in outlying settlements was very
    insecure. Indian raids and massacres were frequent happenings while
    the new settlers lived in constant dread of surprises and capture not
    knowing the tragic moment of an Indian uprising with all its horrible
    possibilties--death was ever in their thoughts." (after the capture
    of his wife and child and subsequent return) Seven years later the
    Indians went on the warpath again and Louis du Bois served in the
    Colonial force against them. Soon after Louis du Bois came to Ulster
    County he rose to promince in the civil and religious life of the
    settlement. He was one of the 12 original patentees of New Peltz, a
    village next to Hurley. He later became one of the magistrates of a
    jurisdiction comprising both New Paltz and Herley. He is credited
    with being the founder of and first elder in the French Reformed
    Church at New Paltz. Louis du Bois lived to a ripe old age of 70. At
    his death in 1696 (his will probated on Mar. 27) he left a widow and
    ten children."

    Louis married Catherine Blanchin on 10 Oct 1655. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 3.  Catherine Blanchin (daughter of Matthys Blanchin and Madelin Gore).
    Children:
    1. David Dubois
    2. Solomon Dubois
    3. 1. Matthew Dubois
    4. Abraham Dubois was born about 1657 in Manheim, Palatinate, Germany.
    5. Isaac Dubois was born about 1659 in Manheim, Palatinate, Germany; died on 28 Jun 1690.
    6. Jacob Dubois was born in 1661 in Kingston, Ulster County, NY; was christened on 4 Oct 1661 in Ulster County, NY; died in Jun 1745 in Ulster County, NY.
    7. Sarah Dubois was born in Kingston, Ulster County, NY; was christened on 14 Sep 1664 in Kingston, Ulster County, NY; died in Salem County?, NJ.
    8. Rebecca Du Bois was born in 1671; was christened on 18 Jun 1671 in Hurley, Ulster County, NY; died before 1681 in Young; was buried in 1681.
    9. Rachel Dubois was born in 1675; was christened on 18 Apr 1675 in Kingston, Ulster County, NY; died in Died Young.
    10. Louis Dubois was born in 1677; was christened about 1677 in Kingston, Ulster County, NY; died in 1749 in Ulster County, NY.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  Chretian Maximillian Des Dubois was born about 1595 in Wicres, Labarree, Flanders, France (son of Charles Maximillian Des Dubois and Henrietta De Reignier De Boisieau).

    Notes:

    "AMERICAN VAN METRE FAMILY" by Smyth (Allen County Public Library, Fort
    Wayne, IN): Chretian Maxamillien de Fiennes, Seigneur de Beaufermez
    and de Bource, married.......? The record of the erasure of
    Chretian's marriage and family, that is, the Chretien known to have
    been the father of Louis du Bois, makes a break in Louis' line of
    descent. The official record was obviously destroyed because of his
    Protestantism, and to prevent him--or any of his descendants-- from
    ever after establishing a claim to the title or estates. We are
    informed that there were not two branches after the resumption of the
    title of Marquis des Fiennes. We are also advised that Louis was a
    second son; and that the title and arms of the des Fiennes became
    extinct with the death of the Marchioness de Poyanne, in 1761.
    "HISTORY OF SHEPHERD AND RELATED FAMILIES" by Frank Shepherd (1858-?)
    pub 1943 (Indiana State Library) "Cretian Mazimillian des Fiennes,
    Marquis des Feinnes was a captain of cavalry in his father' regiment."

    Died:
    Y
    Y
    Y
    Y

    Children:
    1. Jacques Dubois
    2. Francoise Dubois
    3. 2. Louis Dubois was born on 27 Oct 1627 in Lille, Labarree, Flanders, France; died in 1695-1696.

  2. 6.  Matthys Blanchin

    Matthys married Madelin Gore. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  3. 7.  Madelin Gore
    Children:
    1. 3. Catherine Blanchin


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Charles Maximillian Des Dubois (son of Maximillian Des Fennes Dubois and Louise Charlotte D'etamps).

    Charles married Henrietta De Reignier De Boisieau. [Group Sheet] [Family Chart]


  2. 9.  Henrietta De Reignier De Boisieau
    Children:
    1. 4. Chretian Maximillian Des Dubois was born about 1595 in Wicres, Labarree, Flanders, France.


Today's Genealogical Quote

If we know where we came from; we way better know where to go. If we know who we came from; we may better understand who we are