The hazardous fundamentals.
Anne Robelin (born around 1675) married on November 14, 1702 Esme Bailly in Montagny-lès-Beaune. They have nine children, all of whom die young except Françoise Bailly who married Denis Bouzereau in 1734 and gave future life to all the current Bouzereau.
Marguerite Perdrier (born in 1789) married on November 14, 1813 Jean Baptiste Bouzereau in Montagny-lès-Beaune. They have four children, all of whom die very quickly except for the second, Jean Baptiste, our great-great grandfather. Marguerite dies giving birth to her last son, stillborn.
Marie Roullier (1747 – died around 1820) married a second time around 1787 Mathurin Davy in Saint-Laurent-de-la-Plaine. She had seven children with her first husband, but her first child with Mathurin died quickly, and then she gave birth to Jacques Davy at the age of forty-four.
Jacques marks the transition between the Davy and the David. He was born Davy in 1791 and died David in 1828 under the fingers of "Louis Pierre Duverdier de la Sorinière, Knight of the Royal and Military Order of St Louis, Mayor and Civil Registrar of the commune of Chemillé, arrondissement of Beaupreau, department of Maine et Loire”. That was the end of the Davy.
Left page second paragraph
The mythical
Jeanne Anne Chappé (1826 – 1899) married around 1848 Dominique Bigarel, a tailor, and they decided to emigrate to San Francisco around 1850. Since Dominique was a tailor (''Das tapfere Schneiderlein''), ogether they had seven children in California, then went back to Paris twenty years later.The Bigarel girls then gave life to the Gossot, Poincet and Luquin.
Louise Elvire Pécheux (1851 – 1941) married on July 17, 1869 Louis Auguste Morellon in La Ferté-Milon, and they had ten children, the basis of the current descendants of Morellon, David, Benjamin, Bouzereau, Chiboust, David, Savetier, ...).
Elvire is mythical for us, our mother told us so much about her that we really feel like if we knew her.
The ones we would have liked to know
Simone did not known her maternal grandmother,
Cécile Pied, who died at the age of twenty-eight when her daughter Suzanne - Simone's mother - was one year old. Emile Bouzereau, her husband, Simone's grandfather, is also mine.
Simone Domergue is my paternal grandmother, she died in Perros-Guirec in 1929, when her son Jean-Pierre was nine years old.