Joseph Alexandre Godin, dit Beauséjour (1697 - 1763) was an Acadian and the leader of the Acadian Militia in the Saint John River valley. A British officer described Godin as having "a man of some consequence and had a commission as Major of Militia."[1] His home was at Sainte-Anne-du-Pays-Bas (present-day Fredericton).

Joseph Godin
Deputy (Acadian)
In office
1736–1742
MonarchLouis XIII
Deputy France
Preceded byNicholas Gautier
Succeeded byLouis Robichaux
Personal details
Born
Joseph Alexandre Godin

1695
Fredericton, (Sainte-Anne-du-Pays-Bas) New Brunswick, Canada
Died1776
Cherbourg, Normandy, France
NationalityAcadian
SpouseMarie Anne Bergeron (1709-1770)
Children5+
ParentGabriel Gaudin dit Chatillon
Known forBritish Empire resistance
Military career
Service/branch French Army
Years of servicec.1740-1763
RankMajor

Early life edit

His father Gabriel Godin, dit Chatillon, a naval officer, was the second lieutenant at Fort Saint-Joseph (Fort Nashwaak) in 1692. His father was a trader with the Wabanaki Confederacy. Joseph worked with his father and eventually became the King's interpreter. As an Acadian deputy, he represented the Acadians from Saint John to the Nova Scotia Council in 1736.

In 1749, at the outbreak of Father Le Loutre’s War, Godin became the official leader of the Acadian militia on the Saint John River. They rebuffed the efforts of both John Gorham (1748) and John Rous (1749) to establish control of the river.

St. John River Campaign edit

During the St. John River Campaign, in February 1759, Acadian militia leader Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine and a group of Acadians ambushed the Rangers.[2] Eventually Godin and his militia was overwhelmed by Hazen's rangers. Godin resisted Hazen's efforts to get him to sign an oath of allegiance, even in the face of Hazen's torturing and killing some of Godin's family members in front of him. The Rangers scalped six Acadians and took six prisoners during this raid.[3][4] Godin "by his speech and largess . . . had instigated and maintained the Indians in their hatred and war against the English." Godin was taken prisoner by the Rangers and brought, after having been joined by his family, to Annapolis Royal. From there he was taken to Boston, Halifax, and England; later he was sent to Cherbourg.[5]

Godin's official statement to the French Crown states: "The Sieur Joseph [Godin] [Sieur de] Beauséjour of the Saint John River, son of Gabriel (officer aboard the king`s vessels in Canada (in Acadie) and of Angélique-Roberte Jeanna), was major of all the Saint John River Militia by order of Monsieur de la Galissonnière, from the 10 April 1749 and always was in these functions during the said war until he was captured by the enemy, and he owns several leagues of land, where he had the grief to have seen the massacre of one of his daughters and her three children by the English, who wanted, out of cruelty and fear to force him to take their part ... he only escaped such a fate by his flight into the woods, carrying with him two other children of the daughter." He and his wife spent the remainder of their lives in Cherbourg, Normandy, France where they received 300 French Livres of annual revenue as compensation [6][7][8][9]

See also edit

Notes edit

Joseph had a brother named Jacques Phillipe dit Bellefontaine Godin, they were married to sisters. Make sure to differentiate them.

References edit

  1. ^ Seven Years' War journal of the proceedings of the 35th Regiment of Foot. 1757.
  2. ^ Burt G. Loescher. Rogers Rangers: First Green Berets, p. 71, p. 220
  3. ^ Grenier_p61
  4. ^ MacBeath, George (1979). "Godin, Bellefontaine, Beauséjour, Joseph". In Halpenny, Francess G (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. IV (1771–1800) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  5. ^ AD, Calvados (Caen), C 1020, mémoire de Joseph Bellefontaine, dit Beauséjour, 15 janv. 1774. Placide Gaudet, "Acadian genealogy and notes," PAC Report, 1905, II, pt.iii, 140, 241. N.S. Archives, III. [Joseph Rôbinau de Villebon], Acadia at the end of the seventeenth century; letters, journals and memoirs of Joseph Robineau de Villebon . . . , ed. J. C. Webster (Saint John, N. B., 1934), 99, 149, 154. L. M. B. Maxwell, An outline of the history of central New Brunswick to the time of confederation (Sackville, N.B., 1937). ; Dictionary of Canadian Biography, Volume IV (1771-1800)
  6. ^ Burial record notates that Jacques Godin 'dit' Bellefontaine an Acadian who resided in Gentilly (where he died) and that he was about 60 years of age. Also went by the name Jacques Godin 'dit' Beauséjour
  7. ^ There are other primary sources that support his assertions. A letter from Fort Frederick which was printed in Parker’s New York Gazette or Weekly Post-Boy on 2 April 1759 provides some additional details of the behavior of the rangers. Also see Raymond, Wm. O. (1910). The River St. John: Its Physical Features, Legends and History, from 1604 to 1784. Saint John, New Brunswick: John A. Bowes. pp. 96-107.
  8. ^ New England Rangers had a long tradition of scalping enemy combatants and noncombatants in their participation in colonial conflicts against French colonists and their Native allies, which was allowed and even encouraged to varying degrees by successive colonial administrations in Thirteen Colonies and Nova Scotia. (See Grenier, p.152, Faragher, p. 405).
  9. ^ The scalping of Acadians in this instance was unique for the Maritimes. New England colonists had been scalping native peoples in the area for generations, but unlike French colonists on Ile Royale, they had refrained from authorizing the taking of scalps from individuals identified as being of European descent. (See Plank, p. 67)