Waloon: people who speak a French dialect and live in southern and eastern Belgium and neighboring parts of France.
Huguenot: a French Protestant of the 16th–17th centuries
The breaking out of war between France and Spain in 1635 caused a large
influx of Protestant refugees into England from Picardy, Artois,
Hainault and Flanders. Amiens was the capital of the Amienois in
Picardy.
The Huguenots had
long been persecuted in their homelands. Many families, in terror, fled
for other lands after the fall of La Rochelle and Montauban. The West
Indies, inviting because of its climate and fruitfulness, was becoming
the refuge of many Huguenots for whom the cold region of Canada had no
attractions.
Removals to these islands had been going on under the
direction of a company formed at Paris in 1626, under M. D'Enantbus, who
the
year before had visited the island of St. Christopher in a brigantine
from Dieppe. There he planted the first colony in 1627. In 1635,
Martinique was occupied by a hundred old and experienced settlers from
St. Christopher, including Phillippe Casier and his wife Maria Taine.
In 1640 Jesuit missionaries arrived at Martinique
where there were almost a thousand French, "without mass, without
priest,". Having been reluctantly admitted by the governor and the
people, the Jesuits heightened the public dissensions which broke out in
the islands and which grew so violent five years later, especially in
Martinique, that many of the Huguenots were glad to get back to Europe.
Many of them went to the Netherlands, some of them, as the Casier family of Calais, eventually finding safe haven at Harlem, New York.
Those seeking their Huguenot or Walloon ancestors may find the following helpful:
Huguenot Ships Passenger Lists
Huguenot Family Names
Huguenot Historical Overview
Huguenots to South Africa
I have written a book about one Walloon immigrant who settled in New Amsterdam (now New York City), New Netherland.
New Netherland Settlers: A Walloon in New Amsterdam:: Adriaen Vincent and his Wife Magdaleen Eloy - 2nd edition! available on Amazon
Adriaen Vincent, a Walloon from Belgium, made the perilous journey to
New Netherland with his wife Magdaleen and their young family in the
early 1640s. A former West Indies Company soldier, Adriaen was embarking
on a new life. The family settled in the village of New Amsterdam,
which would one day become the city of New York. Life could not have
been easy for the couple, faced with a different culture and language.
But settlers were pouring in and New Amsterdam was flourishing. Within a
few years Adriaen and Magdaleen opened a tavern which catered to
sailors and new arrivals. Their fortunes soon took a turn for the better
and the family settled into their new life. This book contains new
information on the family in the Netherlands and New Netherland, as well
as details on descendants of Adriaen and Magdaleen
The sites for both Huguenot Ships and Surnames took me to an AOL site. You might want to check the links. Thanks for your good work and inspiring blog.
ReplyDeleteHi Newfylady
ReplyDeleteI am not sure where you see these AOL links but when you go to my Huguenot Ships on Olive Tree Genealogy at https://www.olivetreegenealogy.com/ships/hug_index.shtml every ship on that page is on Olive Tree Genealogy. The little trees show you that they are mine, but you can also confirm this by clicking on the links.
Likewise when you go to Huguenot Surnames page on my site at https://www.olivetreegenealogy.com/hug/surnames/index.shtml the top 4 names are all on Olive Tree Genealogy site
I am removing the few AOL links at the bottom. Thanks for spotting those