Bio: Bruley, Emery & Mary Philomene Bachamp
Contact: Stan
----Source: Bruley Family, Clark Co., Wis. History Buff Researchers
Surnames:
These are their stories 1840
THOMAS BRULE’, son of Alexis and Genevieve married ANGELIQUE BRUNET, daughter of
JOACHIM BRUNET, in Ottawa Cathedral on 19 October 1840. His brother Edouard
attended the ceremony and later married Zephirine Brunet, daughter of Janvier
Brunet. Recent research by Carol Ann Turner identified the Brunet girls as
cousins and found Thomas’ parents and grandparents. Thomas was classified as
‘laborer’ not a blacksmith. We have no information when Thomas left Rigaud for
Ottawa. Thomas was apparently astute enough to realize this and became a
blacksmith as did his son Emery. 1843
Emery Brule’ was born on the fourth of July, 1843, in Bytown, Carlton County,
Ontario, Canada. Today Bytown is knows as Ottawa, but the other place names
have not changed. When Emery married in 1886 he said his father was THOMAS
BRULE’ and his mother was SOPHIA CARIERS. I have never come across the name ‘Cariers.’ 1851
According to the 1851 census of Canada, Emery’s father Thomas, a blacksmith, was
born in Montreal around 1815 (Actually Rigaud, per church records). Thomas with
8 year-old Emery, 10 year-old Sophie, and 3 year-old Thomas lived in a two-story
log house on property which measured 33’ x 99’. Sophie Burnet, 25, is listed as
married and a family member. Living in the
house with Thomas and his wife are Zepphirine Brunet, a 20 year old widow with
Heloise Brule’, 4, Evina Brule’, 2 and Theodosia Brule’, age 1. Zepphirine was
Thomas’ brother Edouard’s widow. He died in 1851 before the census was taken.
Baptismal records show Edouard and Zepphirine had children as follows: Zepherine
who was born on 20 March 1848 and baptized on 2 April 1848; Maria Theodosie,
baptized 2 January 1852. Theodosie would die in February or March of 1854.
Evina [Hevina?] also died in early February or March 1854. These are not listed
as family members. All were Roman Catholics. The census
apparently lists married women by their maiden names. Angelique Brunet was also
called Sophie. In the 1851 census she is Sophie Brunet and is shown as 25 thus
she was only 14 or 15 when she married Thomas! Perhaps this wasn’t as
surprising for the times as the 20 year old widow who also lived with the family
had a 4 year-old child, thus would have married at 15. My cousin
Phyllis (Wiesner) Choura, daughter of Anita (Brule’) Wiesner, wrote in February
of 1982 that when her mother turned 65 and applied for Social Security she
discovered, in her records that her name was really Sophie Mary! Sophie Burnet
(Angelique) was named as a married family member of Thomas’ household in 1851;
we know Thomas named his first daughter Sophie. Mother told me her father Emery
was very fond of his mother, and thus may well have added Sophie to his first
daughter’s name. 1853
Ten years after Emery was born, his brother Edward was born in Ottawa on 10
August 1853. Grandfather’s sister Josephine is not listed in either the 1851
census or the 1861 census so I cannot estimate her birth year. I believe I have
a date for Josephine’s marriage to Joseph Desislets. On film LDS #1571038 from
Carol Ann Turner, on what appears to be an index card, Joseph and Josephine’s
names are listed along with the date of ‘1874 - 6/6.’ Mother recalled the
couple lived first in Great Falls, Montana and then in Seattle. Joseph was much
older than Josephine. He was a skilled piano finisher by profession. His
recipe for furniture care was to wash with Ivory soap, rinse well, follow with
vinegar/water rinse, then dry and wax. Their two sons were remembered as Claude,
a pharmacist in Portland, Oregon, and Irving. Mother said her Aunt Josephine
had pure white hair and was a nurse. She was tiny and very meticulous.
Josephine and her son Claude were in Neillsville at the Brule’ home when Dede
was born. By that time Josephine was a widow. She spoke French as fluently as
her brother Emery. Aunt Dede
said when Emery was a young man he played an E flat cornet in the Ottawa City
Band. The King of England was to visit to Ottawa, and the band was to play.
The king disliked the French. Emery, who was French Canadian, did not want to
welcome the king. He and a like-minded friend intentionally blew their horns
ahead of time, and were promptly dismissed from the band. In a snit, Emery
threw the cornet down the well, remarking "Here’s your darn parrot." What his
comment meant I don’t know. The cornet belonged to the band so I wonder if
Emery later fished it from the well. Emery also said he’d come home late more
than once, been locked out, and climbed down the chimney. 1858
Angelique (Sophie) Brule’, Thomas’ wife and the mother of his children, died on
30 Sep 1858. She was only 40 years old. Thomas Brule’ married ELMIRE BEDAD on
26 Dec 1858 at St. Paul d’Aylmer Church at Aylmer, Quebec. Emery would have
been about 15, Thomas 10, Edward 5. In those years men often remarried quickly
as, unless willing relatives lived nearby, there was on one to look after the
children, and the men needed to work to feed their families. 1861
In the 1861 Canadian census Emery is shown as a 17 year-old blacksmith living
with his father and stepmother in a larger house. The family had moved from a
log house to one of frame. The property measured 53’ x 70’. Edward was 7;
Zirephin who may be Josephine was 5 and Olivia 3, Olivia presumably was the
child of Thomas and his wife Elmire. Ottawa directories for 1861-1862 show
Thomas Brule’, a blacksmith; living on St. Patrick Street between Dalhousie and
Sussex. Sophie was
the first child to marry. She wed Joseph Pelletier on 28 August 1861 at Notre
Dame Cathedral in Ottawa. Both my mother and Aunt Dede believed the Pelletiers
lived in Green Bay, Wisconsin. 1862
Nineteen year-old Emery Brule’ married Philomene Bachants/Beauchamps at Notre
Dame Cathedral on 29 September. 1866
The young couple was shown as living at 45 Clarence in Ottawa in the 1866-1867
Directories per researcher, Jade Belyea. Emery, like his father, was a
blacksmith. In those directories Thomas Brule’ lived on the north side of Park
Street in Ottawa. I assume this is Emery’s father as Emery’s younger brother
Thomas would have been only 18. Both my
mother and Aunt Dede were aware that Emery did not care for his stepmother
Elmire. He was probably anxious to live away from her. 1868-1869
Emery and Philomene left Canada in 1868. The write-up in the 1881 Clark
County history says of Emery "…in 1868 went to Minneapolis, Minn., and
afterwards to La Crosse, where he met Mr. Stafford and came up with him to
Staffordsville, in 1868; came to Neillsville and started a blacksmith shop,
which ran for 9 years, then opened a clothing store." Emery’s
younger brother Thomas married Emma Loguer/Loyer on 23 October 1869 at Notre
Dame Cathedral in Ottawa. Emery’s uncle
Joseph (Eustache) came to Neillsville after Emery settled there. The families
may have been close in early days, but apparently not in later years. 1870
The census for Neillsville shows Emery as a 23 year old blacksmith who was born
in Canada West. Philomene is his 21 year old wife, also born in Canada West.
Real estate: $500; personal estate $150, Emery’s younger brother Edward is not
shown, thus I assume he was still in Canada. Mother said
her father was a most patriotic American, and his birth date was quite
appropriate for his adopted country. Emery filed his "Declaration of Intent" to
become a citizen on 5 November 1870 with the office of the Neillsville Clerk of
Circuit Courts. However, he, like many others, did not file what were called
"second papers" which would have made him eligible for citizenship. He may well
have thought he filed all that was needed to become a citizen of the United
States as he definitely believed he was. 1873-1874
Meanwhile back in Canada; I believe it is Emery’s brother Thomas who appears
in the Ottawa city directories as a grocer with a hotel at 128 Sussex in
Ottawa. Mother said her Uncle Tom had a hotel in Ottawa. 1876
Someplace along the way, youngest brother Edward followed Emery to Neillsville.
In 1876 he married Mary Campbell. 1869-1878
Neillsville - the site of Emery’s blacksmith shop during these years. 1880
Emery was in the clothing store business in Neillsville. He said his store
stock was valued at $9,000 and his annual business ws $25,000. Per the census,
35 year-old Emery ‘keeps clothing store.’ Both his and Philomene’s parents were
Canadian-born. Brother
Edward and wife Mary are also in the 1880 Census. They have 3 year-old Hannah
L., and one year-old Mary Elizabeth. I assume Hannah L. was the Leah who
married Isaac Stockwell. Mary Elizabeth (know as Mate) was later the wife of
Levy Williamson. Ida, not born by 1880, eventually was the bride of Dr. Warren
Bradbury. Louis was the Williamson’s only child; the Bradbury children were
Mary Elizabeth who married Samuel Groseclose; Robert and Philip. 1883
Businessman Emery was listed in Dun & Bradstreet. Aunt Dede had a copy of that
issue, but loaned it to a friend who lost the volume. Surprisingly, Dun and
Bradstreet records do not go back as far as 1883. 1885
This is the year Philomene and Emery planned and built a new eight room home.
But Philomene, his wife of twenty-three years, died on 24 April. Whether she
died before the house was completed or was too ill to move into the new home or
if she actually lived in it at the time of the death we do not know. We do know
some time before August of 1886 when Emery married Margarette "Maggie" McGinnis,
he and Richard Dewhurst traded houses. Emery and his bride would live in the
former Dewhurst home. Almost one
hundred years after Emery and Philomene’s home was built it became a museum.
Tufts Museum - Neillsville, Wisconsin
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