Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve

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Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve
(February 15, 1612September 9, 1676)

Statue at Place d'Armes in Old Montreal
Place of birth Neuville-sur-Vanne in Champagne, France.
Place of death Paris, France
Allegiance France
Other work military officer and the founder of Montreal.
Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve
Paul Chomedey de Maisonneuve

Paul Chomedey, sieur de Maisonneuve (February 15, 1612September 9, 1676) was a French military officer and the founder of Montreal.

He was born into the aristocracy in Neuville-sur-Vanne in Champagne, France.

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[edit] Career

He joined the military at the age of thirteen and had a successful career where he was noted for his ability and his piety. He was hired by Jérome le Royer de la Dauversiere, a Jesuit who was head of the Société de Notre Dame de Montréal. Based on a vision had by Royer de la Dauversiere, the society was attempting to build a mission on the Montreal Island in New France. Maisonneuve was hired to lead the colonists and ensure their security.

In 1641 he left from La Rochelle and after a difficult crossing of the Atlantic arrived in Quebec City and spent the winter there. There the governor attempted to dissuade the missionaries and Maisonneuve warning them of the danger of a settlement in the heart of Iroquois territory. Maisonneuve scoffed at the dangers and the next May he and the colonists left for the island.

[edit] Montreal

Cross on top of Mount Royal, at night
Cross on top of Mount Royal, at night

There they founded Ville-Marie, building a chapel and a small settlement. A hospital under the command of Jeanne Mance was also established. They maintained peaceful relations with the Algonquins and the first year of the colony's existence was peaceful. In 1643 a flood threatened the city, Maisonneuve prayed to the Virgin Mary to stop the inundation and when it abated he erected a cross atop Mount Royal, and a cross remains there to this day.

In 1643 the Iroquois discovered the settlement and a long conflict erupted between the French and the Natives that saw the colony severely threatened. Maisonneuve commanded its defence, using his military training. In 1644 he was almost killed when a group of thirty Montrealers were surrounded by over two hundred Iroquois and Maisonneuve barely managed to make it back to the safety of the fort.

In 1645 Maisonneuve received news that his father had died and he returned to France. While there he was offered the position of governor of New France, but turned it down waiting to continue his leadership of Ville-Marie. Maisonneuve returned to Montreal in 1647 and the wars with the Iroquois continued. In 1649, Maisonneuve stood as godfather for the first white child baptised in the colony. She was Pauline Hébert, infant daughter of fur-trader Augustin Hébert and his wife Adrienne Du Vivier, who had come to Montreal in 1648 with Maisonnueve and their elder daughter Jeanne. By 1652, the colony at Montreal had been so reduced, he was again forced to return to France to raise 100 volunteers to return to Montreal the following year. If the effort had failed, Montreal was to be abandoned and the survivors re-located downriver to Quebec City. When these 100 arrived in the fall of 1653, the population of Montreal was barely 50 persons, including a Jacques Archambault, who dug the first water well of the island in 1658, upon request by Maisonneuve.

Over time the colony grew in size and eventually was large enough to be secure from the Iroquois threat.

In control of the colony was taken from the missionary society and taken up by the crown in 1663. After twenty-four years at the head of the colony Maisonneuve was recalled to France in 1665. Settling in Paris he died in relative obscurity in 1676.

[edit] Honours

De Maisonneuve is commemorated with a statue at Place d'Armes in Old Montreal. De Maisonneuve Boulevard in Downtown Montreal is named for him, as is Collège de Maisonneuve, the neighbourhood of Chomedey in Laval and the Maisonneuve pavilion, a dormitory at the Royal Military College Saint-Jean.

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