From Historical Sketches of Andover, Massachusetts
by Sarah Loring Bailey
Published in 1880
The sufferings undergone by the colonists in prosecuting  these wars of the mother country were extreme, not only in their actual  military service, but in their taxation and in the generally unsettled  condition of the country, which was in a perpetual commotion of military  musterings, impressments, etc., and with the burden of many sick and  disabled soldiers.  We are used to thinking of the Revolutionary period  as one of stir in military matters, but perhaps we do not fully realize  how largely war and its attendant evils interefered with the prosperity  of the province [Massachusetts] and the towns in the thirty years before  the Revolution [American Revolution].
Nor were the colonies of English settlement the only  sufferers in these quarrels of the rival nations of the old world.  Some  of the Acadians who took no part in the fighting, but professed to be  neutral, met with a hard fate.  Their neutrality was viewed with  suspicion; it being at best compulsory, and they being bound by ties of  blood and religion to the cause of the enermy [France].  Therefore, to  prevent all trouble from the, they were taken from tneir homes, put on  board vessels, and sent off to all parts of the States to spend in exile  a wretched existence; families sundered, children sent to one town,  parents to another, according as they chanced to be separated on board  the vessels to which they were driven at the point of the bayhonet.  The  story of some of these Acadians is known to every reader through the  poet's tale of "Evangeline", a story of Grand Pré.
After the villagers had been driven out, their houses  were set on fire, and as they sailed away, they saw the flames of their  beloved homes redden the skies.  In the destruction of the Acadian  villages, the force under Major Frye [who was from North Andover] took  an active part.  From all that can be gathered in regard to him, it  would seem that this officer was a humane and remarkably tender-hearted  man, and this military duty which he was called upon to perform must  have been exceedingly repugnant to his feelings.  He was ordered [see  Haliburton's "History of Nova Scotia"] to burn the buildings, over two  hundred and fifty houses from which the howners had been removed, and to  bring off the few women and children that remained.  The wretched  people had for the most part submitted with little resistance; but when  they saw their houses of workshop in flames, some three hundred French  and Indians, who were conceaeled in the woods, came upon our forces and  killed twenty or thirty before they realized than an enemy was near.
The dislike and distrust felt toward the poor  Acadians in Massachusetts was very great, owing to the prejudice against  their nation and their religion.  This appears in an address presented  to the Governor, deprecating their residence here, especially their  being quartered in Boston:  "The receiving among us so great a number of  persons whose gross bigotry to the Roman Catholick religion is  notorious and whose loyalty to his Majesty is suspected is a thing very  disagreeable to us."
When the Acadians were sent to the various towns, the  selectmen were ordered to bind out to service all children for whom  places could be found.  Thus, many were torn from their parents and put  to serve hard task masters and to perform heavy toils.  In the execution  of these, perhaps, in the circumstances, inevitable orders, instances  of great inhumanity occurred, actual violence being used to separate  parents and children.  One aged man (not, however of Andover) petitioned  the General Court, stating his sufferings at the hands of town  officers, that his hands and feet were tied and he was nearly strangled  to prevent his running after and calling out to his children who were  carried away.
Some Acadians drew up a petition to the General Court, praying for a  redress of their grievances.  It was signed by Acadians from Chelmsford,  Waltham, Oxford, Concord, Worcester and Andover.  The signers from  Andover were Jacques Esbert [Hébert] and Joseph Vincent.  Interestingly,  the townspeople used to call Jacques Hébert Jockey Bear not  knowing how to pronounce the name in French they sounded it out to what  they thought there were hearing.  The petition they had sent to the  General Court had the effect to procure the order that there should be  no more binding out but that houses shoul be provided for each family  that they might be kept together.  In February 1756, twenty two Acadians were sent to Andover:  "Germain  Landry, his wife, seven sons and thirteen daughters and one more child  was born after their arrival making it twenty-three who went to the town  of Andover.
One town record gives this account:
There is twenty-six of the afores'd French which we  keep in three Distinck places, that so they might be more constantly  Imployed, the old man German Laundre is an Infirm man and not capable of  any Labour, and in the winter time he was confined to his Bedd, and  needed a Great deel of Tendance more than his wife could perform and his  son Joseph is under such weekly Scorcomstances that we are obliged to  support him altogether.
There is three families that have eleven children,  the oldest of them is not above eight years of age, which there Fathers  are not Able to support; there is two young men and four young women  that for the most part support themselves. [Massachusetts State Archives, vol. xxiii., p. 44]  There are several accounts rendered by the selectmen of their expense in  providing for the support of the French neutrals, - provisions such as  pork, beef, Indian meal, pease, beans, sider, etc.  Too, there is an  account of October, 1757,, for medicine and attendances by Dr. Abiel  Abbot, and for "sundries delievered to the French by Mr. Isaac Abbot,  Retailer, and sundries delivered by Mr. Samuel Phillips."  To this  account as added a memorandum:  "Germain Laundry [Landry] and Joseph his  son, Jockey Bear [Jacques Hébert, Germain's son-in-law] and Charles  Bear [Hébert] were placed in a house on the estate of Mr. Jonathan Abbot  that would later be owned by his grandson.  [This property remained in  the Abbot family until 2002 when it was sold to a developer.  The house  then standing on the property was moved to another location for historic  preservation.  I visited the site while this was going on to take  photos, etc. and spoke with the owners who allowed me to take a stone  from what they believed was the original foundation of the house the  Acadians had lived in - that stone is now part of the field stone wall  on our own property.]
When the Acadians were in Andover, this house owned by Jonathan Abbot  was empty as he had built a new one.  It was however, a great annoyance  to the Puritan famer to have these Acadians living one of his houses -  foreigners and Roman Catholics, living near his own family home.  Later,  Jonathan Abbot's descendants would relate that the Acadians completely  conquered the prejudices of this family and of the community and gained  the good-will of all acquaintances.  They were industrious and frugal.   The women worked in the fields pulling flax and harvesting.  They  practised the rites of their religion in an inoffensive mannter and  commended it by their good conduct.  When they went away from Andover,  Mr. Abbot's family parted from them with sincere regret.  Two of them  sent a souvenir to Mr. Abbot, which the family kept for years until they  donated it to the local historical society where it remains to this  day.  It is a beautifully carved and polished powder-horn, made by their  own hands.  It is inscribed:
JONATHAN ABBOT
His horn made in Alenstown
April ye 5 1770
I powder with my brother ball
Most hero-lilke doth conquer all.   It is embellished with figures of animals:  a turtle, a deer, a fox,  dolphins, etc., and also with representations of armies fighting,  soldiers in uniform with muskets, sabre, bayonet, artillery men and  field pieces.
In 1760, some of the Acadians were removed from Andover and "set off to  the country of Hampshire".  The names of those in town July 20, 1760 as  given in the returns [Massachusetts State Archives, vol. xxiv, page 384]  were the following:
 
 Charles Bear (Hébert), age 36
  Amon Dupee (Amand Dupuis), age 30
   
 Margaret Bear (Marguerite-Monique Landry), age 24
  Mary (Marie-Blanche Landry), his wife, age 29
   
 Molly Bear, age 4
  Mary Joseph, age 5
   
 Charles Bear, age 2
  Margaret Dupee, age 2
   
 Margaret Bear, age 1
  Hermon Dupee, age 3
   
     
 
 Jno Laundry, age 26 (weakly)
  Mary Laundry, age 26
   
    
Germain Landry, son of Antoine and Marie Thibodeau  was born Abt. 1695.  He married Cécile Forest Abt. 1722.  She was the  daughter of Pierre (de) Forest and Cécile Richard from the parish of  Sainte Famille, Pisiguit, Acadia.  Germain and Cécile lived in the  Village-des-Antoines at Grand Pré at the time of the Deportation.   Transported to Massachusetts in 1755, they were with their children in  Andover as late as 1760 when they were removed to what is now New  Hampshire.  Three years later, they were among those Acadians who would  ask to be repatriated to French territory.  They had to wait until 1766  to be able to make their way to Quebec.  They settled in L'Assomption  Parish, where Germain was buried on 18 April 1770, at the age of 75.   Germain and Cécile had eleven children, among them Marie (1726-1790) who  with her husband Jacques Hébert was exiled with them to Andover.   Another daughter, Marguerite(-Monique) Landry and her husband Charles  Hébert was also exiled with them in Andover.
 
In February 2002 there was an article on the front page of the  Lawrence Tribune that a house was being moved and would be restored for  preservation from above Abbott property.  With camera in hand I headed  over to the property that morning.  This photo is of a subsequent house  built by Jonathan Abbott for his son. I spoke with the individual who  planned to restore the house and he allowed me to take two field stones  from what would have been the original cellar of the house.  They are  now part of our field stone wall.  Germain Landry is my 1st cousin 7 times removed.  His wife Cecile Forest  is my 1st cousin 6 times removed.  I am a 5th grandniece of Jacques  Hebert referred to Jockey Bear. 
Source:  Contact Acadia 2001 issue
Source:  Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes by Stephen A. White, page 919 (30) .    Bibliography:  Historical Sketches of Andover Massachusetts by S. L. Bailey
Massachusetts State Archives volumes xxiii & xiv.
From volumes xxiii and xxiv at the Massachusetts State Archives:
vol. xxiii: 44-45:  Andover:
Germain Landry, his wife, seven sons, thirteen daughters & one born  since, in all twenty-three came to town, February 4, 1756.
Vol. xxiii: 49: Andover:
Originally in French this is the translation.
To His Excellency the Governor General of the Province of  Massachusetts Bay in New England and to the honorable gentlemen of the  Council,
We  have taken the liberty to present to you this request as  we are in sorrow with regard to our children.  The loss that we have  suffered of our habitations and being brought here and our separations,  the one or the other, have nothing to compare to that which we find at  the present of the taking our children by force before our eyes.  Nature  itselff is not able to suffer this.  If it wee in our power to have our  choice, we would choose above all to tear our bodies from our souls  than to be separated from them.  It is for this we pray you in grace and  to Your honors that you have the goodness to temper these cruelties.   We do not at all refuse to work for the support of our children if by  that means it would suffice for our families.  We pray in grace that you  have the goodness to have a regard to our request and thus oblige us  your very humble and very obedient servants.
At Chelmsford            Jean Landry
At Oxford                   Claude Bennois
At Concord                 Claude LeBlanc
Pier Le Blanc
At Worcester              Augustin Blanc
At Andover                 Jacque Ebert 
Joseph Vincent
At Waltham                Antoine Ebert
Vol. xxiii: 49:  Andover:
In the House of Representatives, April 13, 1756
Read and ordered that Mr. Gridley and Mr. Tyng, with such as the  honorable Board shall join, be a committee to consider this petition and  report what they think proper for the Court to do thereon.
Sent up for concurrence,
Attest, Henry Gibbs, Clerk of the House of Representatives
In Council, April 19, Read and concurred and Jonathan Cushing Esq. Is joined in the affair
G. Willard, Secretary
Xxiii: 50: Andover:
The committee appointed on the petition of some of the  inhabitants of Nova Scotia lately sent here, having considered therein  and would  humbly preopose that it shuld be recommended to the selectmen  of the several towns whre they reside, or overseers of the poor, that  for the present the said selectmen or overseers should desist binding  any of them out.  That houses be provided for each family so that they  may keep together, if they see cause, till further orders.  That those  of them who are able to work support their families by their labor and  that the selectmen or overseers assist them in getting work and a  reasonable price for it.  And what may be necessary for them beyond that  be provided by the selectmen or overseers in such things as they may  work up for necessary clothing, &c.  And if hereafter any of them  should be bound out the assent of two justices of the peace in the  county be first had thereon.  And all of them treated with kindness and  humanity.
All of which is humbly submitted
By Jonathan Cushing per order
In Council April 15, 1756, read and accepted and it is recommended to  the selectmen or overseers of the poor within the respective towns to  proceed accordingly.
Sent down for concurrence,
G. Willard, Secretary
In the House of Representatives, April 17, 1756,
Read and non-concurred,
T. Hubbard, Speaker
Xxiii: 119:  Andover:
Account dated June 14, 1756
April 10 to June 14
Joseph Osgood, Moody Bridges, Obed. Johnson, Thomas Abbot, Isaac Abbot, Selectmen of Andover
Xxiii: 229:  Andover:
Account dated October 10, 1756
Obed. Johnson, Thomas Abbot, Moody Bridges, Isaac Abbot, Selectmen of Andover
xxiii:  477-478:  Andover:
Account dated October 1, 1757
Germain Landry & Joseph, his son, Jockey Bear & Charles Bear  have been sick & indisposed ever since the date of the last account.
Note:  Jockey Bear/Jacques Hébert and his brother Charles were not Germain’s sons – they were his sons-in-law.
xxiv: 47-48:  Andover:
Account from October 1, 1757 to June 5, 1758
There is twenty-six of the aforesaid French which we keep in  three distinct places that so they may be more constantly employed.   The old man, Germon Landre, is an infirm man and not capable of any  labor and in the winter time he was confined to his bed and needed a  great deal of attendance.  More than his wife could perform and his son,  Joseph, is under such weakly circumstances that we are oblighed to  support him altogether.  There are three families that have eleven  children, the oldest of them is not above eight years of age, which  their fathers are not able to support.  Thee is two young men and four  young women that for the most part support themselves.
Thomas Abbot, Joshue Frye, John Foster, Peter Osgood, George Abbot jun., Selectmen of Andover.
Council Minutes:  410-422:
July 20, 1760
Andover
Charles Bear              36
Margaret Bear           24
Molly                            4
Charles                         2
Margaret Bear             1
John Landry               35
Joseph Landry           26, weakly
Mary Landry              26
Amon Dupee[Dupuis]   30
Mary, his wife            29
Mary Joseph                5
Margaret Dupee          2
Hermon Dupee             ¾
Council Minutes:  410-422:
July 20, 1760
Methuen
Marron Tebedo/Marain Thibodeau 8, from Andover
Joseph Leblong/Leblanc from Amesbury 63
Margaret Leblong & infirm 61
Mary Richards 13, from Bradford
Xxiv: 409-411: Andover:
Account from February 29, 1760 to September 8, 1760
John Foster, Peter Osgood, George Abbot Jun., Ebenezer Abbot, Samuel Johnson, Selectmen of Andover
Essex
To the Selectmen o f the Town of Andover in said county, greeting,
Pursuant to the power and directions given by the Great and  Genereal Court to Benjamin Lynde, Icha. Plaisted, Stephen Higginson,  Caleb Cushing & Samuel Phillips Esq., in committee to proportion the  French inhabitants to the several towns in said county & to order  the overplus.
You are  hereby required forthwith to cause to be removed to  Springfied in the County of Hampshire Jermon Landry and Cicily, his  wife, with their children, Francis Landry, Isabelle Landry, Nustausse  (Anastasie) Landry, Mary Jos. Landry, & Cicily Landry, Jockey Bare  & Mary Bare, his wife with their children, viz., Molly, Peggy, Maria  Jos., Mary Magdalene, Elizabeth, James & Joseph, being sixteen of  the Neutrals, which are sent to you by order of the government &  them deliver to John Worthington Esq., or his orders who with others was  appointed to receive them.
You are also to receive Marron Leberdore, a boy, & deliver him to the Selectmen of Methuen, or any of them.
And you are to make return of your doings in the premises to  me with the names of the persons so returned & the particular  charge of removing them.
Salem, August 1760               Benjamin Lynde
Pursuant to this within order we have removed to Springfiedl the persons  hereafter named, Jarman Landry & Cicily, his wife, with their  children, Farncis, Issabelle, Nustusse, Mary Jjos., Cicily Landry,  Jockey Bear and Mary Bear with their children, viz., Moly, Peggy, Mary  Jos., Mary Magdelon, Elizabeth, James & Joseph.  And likewise we   have removed Marran Lebardore to Methuen & Delivered him to one of  the selectmen of that town.
Ebenezer Abbot, Peter Osgood, John Fost, Samuel John, George Abbot Jun., Selectmen of Andover.
When the Acadians were in Andover, this house owned by Jonathan Abbot was empty as he had built a new one. It was however, a great annoyance to the Puritan famer to have these Acadians living one of his houses - foreigners and Roman Catholics, living near his own family home. Later, Jonathan Abbot's descendants would relate that the Acadians completely conquered the prejudices of this family and of the community and gained the good-will of all acquaintances. They were industrious and frugal. The women worked in the fields pulling flax and harvesting. They practised the rites of their religion in an inoffensive mannter and commended it by their good conduct. When they went away from Andover, Mr. Abbot's family parted from them with sincere regret. Two of them sent a souvenir to Mr. Abbot, which the family kept for years until they donated it to the local historical society where it remains to this day. It is a beautifully carved and polished powder-horn, made by their own hands. It is inscribed:
His horn made in Alenstown
April ye 5 1770
I powder with my brother ball
Most hero-lilke doth conquer all.
In 1760, some of the Acadians were removed from Andover and "set off to the country of Hampshire". The names of those in town July 20, 1760 as given in the returns [Massachusetts State Archives, vol. xxiv, page 384] were the following:
Charles Bear (Hébert), age 36 |  Amon Dupee (Amand Dupuis), age 30 |  
Margaret Bear (Marguerite-Monique Landry), age 24 |  Mary (Marie-Blanche Landry), his wife, age 29 |  
Molly Bear, age 4 |  Mary Joseph, age 5 |  
Charles Bear, age 2 |  Margaret Dupee, age 2 |  
Margaret Bear, age 1 |  Hermon Dupee, age 3 |  
Jno Laundry, age 26 (weakly) |  Mary Laundry, age 26 |  
Germain Landry, son of Antoine and Marie Thibodeau was born Abt. 1695. He married Cécile Forest Abt. 1722. She was the daughter of Pierre (de) Forest and Cécile Richard from the parish of Sainte Famille, Pisiguit, Acadia. Germain and Cécile lived in the Village-des-Antoines at Grand Pré at the time of the Deportation. Transported to Massachusetts in 1755, they were with their children in Andover as late as 1760 when they were removed to what is now New Hampshire. Three years later, they were among those Acadians who would ask to be repatriated to French territory. They had to wait until 1766 to be able to make their way to Quebec. They settled in L'Assomption Parish, where Germain was buried on 18 April 1770, at the age of 75. Germain and Cécile had eleven children, among them Marie (1726-1790) who with her husband Jacques Hébert was exiled with them to Andover. Another daughter, Marguerite(-Monique) Landry and her husband Charles Hébert was also exiled with them in Andover.
Source: Contact Acadia 2001 issue![]()
In February 2002 there was an article on the front page of the Lawrence Tribune that a house was being moved and would be restored for preservation from above Abbott property. With camera in hand I headed over to the property that morning. This photo is of a subsequent house built by Jonathan Abbott for his son. I spoke with the individual who planned to restore the house and he allowed me to take two field stones from what would have been the original cellar of the house. They are now part of our field stone wall. Germain Landry is my 1st cousin 7 times removed. His wife Cecile Forest is my 1st cousin 6 times removed. I am a 5th grandniece of Jacques Hebert referred to Jockey Bear.
Source: Dictionnaire Généalogique des Familles Acadiennes by Stephen A. White, page 919 (30) . Bibliography: Historical Sketches of Andover Massachusetts by S. L. Bailey
Massachusetts State Archives volumes xxiii & xiv.
From volumes xxiii and xxiv at the Massachusetts State Archives:
vol. xxiii: 44-45: Andover:
Germain Landry, his wife, seven sons, thirteen daughters & one born since, in all twenty-three came to town, February 4, 1756.
Vol. xxiii: 49: Andover:
Originally in French this is the translation.
To His Excellency the Governor General of the Province of Massachusetts Bay in New England and to the honorable gentlemen of the Council,
We have taken the liberty to present to you this request as we are in sorrow with regard to our children. The loss that we have suffered of our habitations and being brought here and our separations, the one or the other, have nothing to compare to that which we find at the present of the taking our children by force before our eyes. Nature itselff is not able to suffer this. If it wee in our power to have our choice, we would choose above all to tear our bodies from our souls than to be separated from them. It is for this we pray you in grace and to Your honors that you have the goodness to temper these cruelties. We do not at all refuse to work for the support of our children if by that means it would suffice for our families. We pray in grace that you have the goodness to have a regard to our request and thus oblige us your very humble and very obedient servants.
At Chelmsford Jean Landry
At Oxford Claude Bennois
At Concord Claude LeBlanc
Pier Le Blanc
At Worcester Augustin Blanc
At Andover Jacque Ebert
Joseph Vincent
At Waltham Antoine Ebert
Vol. xxiii: 49: Andover:
In the House of Representatives, April 13, 1756
Read and ordered that Mr. Gridley and Mr. Tyng, with such as the honorable Board shall join, be a committee to consider this petition and report what they think proper for the Court to do thereon.
Sent up for concurrence,
Attest, Henry Gibbs, Clerk of the House of Representatives
In Council, April 19, Read and concurred and Jonathan Cushing Esq. Is joined in the affair
G. Willard, Secretary
Xxiii: 50: Andover:
The committee appointed on the petition of some of the inhabitants of Nova Scotia lately sent here, having considered therein and would humbly preopose that it shuld be recommended to the selectmen of the several towns whre they reside, or overseers of the poor, that for the present the said selectmen or overseers should desist binding any of them out. That houses be provided for each family so that they may keep together, if they see cause, till further orders. That those of them who are able to work support their families by their labor and that the selectmen or overseers assist them in getting work and a reasonable price for it. And what may be necessary for them beyond that be provided by the selectmen or overseers in such things as they may work up for necessary clothing, &c. And if hereafter any of them should be bound out the assent of two justices of the peace in the county be first had thereon. And all of them treated with kindness and humanity.
All of which is humbly submitted
By Jonathan Cushing per order
In Council April 15, 1756, read and accepted and it is recommended to the selectmen or overseers of the poor within the respective towns to proceed accordingly.
Sent down for concurrence,
G. Willard, Secretary
In the House of Representatives, April 17, 1756,
Read and non-concurred,
T. Hubbard, Speaker
Xxiii: 119: Andover:
Account dated June 14, 1756
April 10 to June 14
Joseph Osgood, Moody Bridges, Obed. Johnson, Thomas Abbot, Isaac Abbot, Selectmen of Andover
Xxiii: 229: Andover:
Account dated October 10, 1756
Obed. Johnson, Thomas Abbot, Moody Bridges, Isaac Abbot, Selectmen of Andover
xxiii: 477-478: Andover:
Account dated October 1, 1757
Germain Landry & Joseph, his son, Jockey Bear & Charles Bear have been sick & indisposed ever since the date of the last account.
Note: Jockey Bear/Jacques Hébert and his brother Charles were not Germain’s sons – they were his sons-in-law.
xxiv: 47-48: Andover:
Account from October 1, 1757 to June 5, 1758
There is twenty-six of the aforesaid French which we keep in three distinct places that so they may be more constantly employed. The old man, Germon Landre, is an infirm man and not capable of any labor and in the winter time he was confined to his bed and needed a great deal of attendance. More than his wife could perform and his son, Joseph, is under such weakly circumstances that we are oblighed to support him altogether. There are three families that have eleven children, the oldest of them is not above eight years of age, which their fathers are not able to support. Thee is two young men and four young women that for the most part support themselves.
Thomas Abbot, Joshue Frye, John Foster, Peter Osgood, George Abbot jun., Selectmen of Andover.
Council Minutes: 410-422:
July 20, 1760
Andover
Charles Bear 36
Margaret Bear 24
Molly 4
Charles 2
Margaret Bear 1
John Landry 35
Joseph Landry 26, weakly
Mary Landry 26
Amon Dupee[Dupuis] 30
Mary, his wife 29
Mary Joseph 5
Margaret Dupee 2
Hermon Dupee ¾
Council Minutes: 410-422:
July 20, 1760
Methuen
Marron Tebedo/Marain Thibodeau 8, from Andover
Joseph Leblong/Leblanc from Amesbury 63
Margaret Leblong & infirm 61
Mary Richards 13, from Bradford
Xxiv: 409-411: Andover:
Account from February 29, 1760 to September 8, 1760
John Foster, Peter Osgood, George Abbot Jun., Ebenezer Abbot, Samuel Johnson, Selectmen of Andover
Essex
To the Selectmen o f the Town of Andover in said county, greeting,
Pursuant to the power and directions given by the Great and Genereal Court to Benjamin Lynde, Icha. Plaisted, Stephen Higginson, Caleb Cushing & Samuel Phillips Esq., in committee to proportion the French inhabitants to the several towns in said county & to order the overplus.
You are hereby required forthwith to cause to be removed to Springfied in the County of Hampshire Jermon Landry and Cicily, his wife, with their children, Francis Landry, Isabelle Landry, Nustausse (Anastasie) Landry, Mary Jos. Landry, & Cicily Landry, Jockey Bare & Mary Bare, his wife with their children, viz., Molly, Peggy, Maria Jos., Mary Magdalene, Elizabeth, James & Joseph, being sixteen of the Neutrals, which are sent to you by order of the government & them deliver to John Worthington Esq., or his orders who with others was appointed to receive them.
You are also to receive Marron Leberdore, a boy, & deliver him to the Selectmen of Methuen, or any of them.
And you are to make return of your doings in the premises to me with the names of the persons so returned & the particular charge of removing them.
Salem, August 1760 Benjamin Lynde
Pursuant to this within order we have removed to Springfiedl the persons hereafter named, Jarman Landry & Cicily, his wife, with their children, Farncis, Issabelle, Nustusse, Mary Jjos., Cicily Landry, Jockey Bear and Mary Bear with their children, viz., Moly, Peggy, Mary Jos., Mary Magdelon, Elizabeth, James & Joseph. And likewise we have removed Marran Lebardore to Methuen & Delivered him to one of the selectmen of that town.
Ebenezer Abbot, Peter Osgood, John Fost, Samuel John, George Abbot Jun., Selectmen of Andover.

5 comments:
This is very good research, Lucie, and I am impressed. You know that I haven't any Acadian ancestry, but there are plenty of Abbotts and Osgoods in my family tree. I do find it interesting that these people were removed to Springfield, where many of the Scots Irish were also sent. They didn't want them in Boston, so they were dispersed to Londonderry, Worcester, Maine and Springfield.
Thank you for your post Heather.
The Acadians were dispersed through the colonies as well as British Ports and France.
In Massachusetts, they were dispersed all over the colony, north, south, east and west. There was a family here in Methuen.
Knowing what happened to our ancestors makes a difference as we view our heritage.
Lucie
And Jonathan Abbott is my 7x great grandfather!
Have you seen the powder horn yourself, Lucie? I might make a trip
up to Andover in the spring to see the house and the museum!
Hi Bill.. I remembered that!
I haven't seen the powder horn yet but it has been on my to-do list. I had called about it and I believe we need to make an appointment to see it. It is housed at the North Andover Historical Society - one individual told me he had seen it and was allowed to hold it/examine it. I would very much like to do that.
Lucie
Hi,
My name is Alexandre Landry from Montreal, Quebec, and I'm a descendant from Germain Landry.
I'm also very impressed by those research. This summer, I've planned a trip in Boston's area and I'll be glad to pass by Andover's historical society to see that famous powder horn. If someone can give me the exact adress of the house showed above, I'll be interested to pass by there too.
Thanks,
Alexandre Landry
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