Françoise-Marie Jacquelin

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A portrait of Françoise-Marie Jacquelin.
Jacqueliln at the Siege of St. John (1745)
"Madame La Tour a Prisoner at Penobscot", by W L Sheppard

Françoise-Marie Jacquelin (1621 – 1645) was an Acadian heroine and wife of Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour.[1]

Biography

Françoise-Marie Jacquelin was born in 1621 - Nogent-Le-Rotrou in France Baptisée le 18 juillet 1621 à Nogent-le-Rotrou (Source Jean-Marie Germe (2001) Les Amitiés Généalogiques Canadiennes-Françaises/DGFA Moncton 2003) .[1][2] According to Charles de Menou d'Aulnay, Jacquelin was the daughter of an actress in Paris. According to others, she was the daughter of a doctor,[1] and was born in Nogent-le-Rotrou,[2] or that she was the daughter of a businesswoman.[2] There is no evidence to support these allegations.[1]

In 1640 she sailed from France to Port Royal to marry de la Tour. They settled at Fort la Tour at the mouth of the Saint John River.[1]

Jacquelin quickly became involved in the Acadian Civil War, her husband's struggle with Charles de Menou d'Aulnay for control of Acadia. She evaded a blockade d'Aulnay had established and returned to France to plead her husband's case to the king. She returned to Acadia with a warship laden with supplies for Fort la Tour.[1]

In 1645, while la Tour was in Boston, d'Aulnay attacked the fort. Jacquelin assumed command of the garrison there, refused to surrender, and led a pitched three-day battle to defend the fort. On the fourth day, with the walls of the fort breached and having taken heavy casualties, Jacquelin surrendered. D'Aulnay executed the surviving soldiers. Madame de La Tour was forced to watch the hangings. She died three weeks later.[1]

See also

References

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