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Nicolas Louis and Antoine Horguelin


Horguelin Nicolas Louis, born in Pogny in Champagne (1752)
died in Paris (1826), son of Bartholomew and Horguelin
Boucart Louise.

Horguelin Antoine, born in Pogny (1781), died at Montrouge
(1864), son of John and Mary Margaret Horguelin Mallet
wife Jacqueline Delcroix (1783-1833).



Two Champagne in Paris during the Revolution.

Nicolas Louis Horguelin appears in the archives of the notaries of Paris in 1791. He was 39 years. It is "timber merchant residing Rue du Petit Vaugirard, parish of St. Sulpice." He praises
Julien Meirieu land "located between the streets of the Capuchins and Saint-Nicolas, Chaussee d'Antin." (1) Antoine

Horguelin, nephew and godson of the former, the subject in 1802 of a record kept in the archives of Paris, in the series "Direction des Domaines de la Seine." He is 21 years. He buys Jean Marie Cabiran "land located in Paris, rue Saint-Dominique, in Gros Caillou, from the location of the erstwhile church Gros Caillou, including the formerly adjoining cemetery (...) for the sum of 9,000 francs. " (20 Nivose year XI) (2)


Investigation Branch Areas of the Seine, 1799.

"Day 1 additional year VIII," the Director of Registration and the National Estate of Versailles wrote to his colleague in Paris: "I need positive information about the creditworthiness of Sieur Horguelin remaining floor of St. Croix 'Antin, No. 541. "
9 Brumaire, year IX (October 9, 1800), the response of citizen Director of Paris is: "the citizen is easy or at least lead the life of a man at ease, and it makes business transactions on the Exchange. " (3)


Sale of spare land to Omey Champagne, 1806.


January 19, 1806, "Sieur Antoine Horguelin, a merchant residing in Paris, Rue de l'Arcade No. 34, being present in the audit Omey Horguelin his father Sir John, a farmer at that place,
(...) sells several pieces of land (...) belonging to him as late Mary Margaret Mallet his deceased mother, wife Sieur Horguelin above named (...) ". (4)




Buying a house floor in Maine, near Paris, 1816.


January 8, 1816, "Mr. Antoine Horguelin, wholesale wine merchant residing at Petit Montrouge near Paris, Jean Baptiste Digeon buys" a big house, garden, outbuildings, located at Petit Montrouge, No. 22 Causeway Maine (...) the sum of twenty-four thousand francs (...) ". (5)


A councilor of Montrouge, 1826.

"Antoine Horguelin was alderman of Montrouge May 6, 1826 to April 24, 1830, and March 29, 1831 to November 7 1835, to reappear September 17, 1840, surviving if it can tell the Revolution of 1848, until the Empire (October 15, 1852 marking the appointment of mayors by the government) where he resumed his seat by imperial decree preceding October 31, November 14, 1855. It seems more in the list after the annexation of 1860. " (6)


Tommy's family Horguelin

Antoine Horguelin wife (before 1808) Jacqueline Delcroix born in Montrouge in 1783.
They have three children: Josephine
Adelaide, called Saint-Roch church in Paris July 30, 1808. She married at Chalons-sur-Marne Victor Laverne, born at Chalons December 18, 1793. Adelaide died September 2, 1891 and buried in the cemetery of Montrouge.
-Elisa, born April 27, 1811, died January 2, 1892, buried in the cemetery of Montrouge.
Victor Anthony, born November 7, 1819, died April 7, 1891, buried in Montrouge.

Delcroix Jacqueline died in Paris August 16, 1833 at the age of 50 years. Buried in Montrouge.
Horguelin Antoine died in Paris February 20, 1864 at the age 83. Buried at Montrouge.

All members of this family are buried in two graves in the cemetery nearby Montrouge (Section 2, against the wall along the Avenue de la Porte de Montrouge) (7)

Horguelin Nicolas Louis died in Paris and buried in Montrouge January 11, 1826. The tomb has disappeared. It was sold to another family in 1951:
"The body was interred January 11, 1826, but there is only a modern tomb (1951) in this location that was given to another family. Indeed, and as long as you can follow the trace, then it is exhumed April 12, 1951 to be reinterred in the crypt (5.4.2) where it is transferring them to new cemetery Chevilly la Rue 2 March 1990. (...) There was this body in the tomb. " (8)

Note: Montrouge cemetery was created on the site of an underground quarry. That career includes eight ossuaries. (9)




Original parts



Proceedings of baptism of Nicolas and Antoine Louis Horguelin

"Year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred fifty two, November 19, by me has been baptized in the church of that place (Omey), a son who was named Nicolas Louis, born the day before in legitimate marriage of Bartholomew Horguelin Boucart and Louise, and was godfather Laidebeur Nicolas Louis, and his Godmother Mary Rouse, who signed with us. "
Arch. Private, MH, parish registers of Omey, 1752.

"Antoine, legitimate son of John and Mary Margaret Horguelin Malet of this parish, was born February 24, 1781 and the next day was baptized by me the undersigned priest, who had for godfather Antoine Mathieu, son of Nicolas Mathieu laborer residing at Pogny, and for godmother Marie Francoise Notret, daughter of Francis wheelwright Notret Omey residing in, and signed with us. "
Arch. Private, MH, parish registers Pogny, 1781.


Baptismal Adelaide Josephine Horguelin, Paris, 1808.

"On Saturday 30 juillet1808 Adelaide was named Josephine, born yesterday, daughter of Antoine Horguelin, Commissioner, and his wife Jacqueline Delcroix, rue des Nettles 3.
The Godfather Nicolas Avelin even notice. Godmother, Marie Georgette Adelaide Perreau, Miss Major, rue Saint-Antoine, No. 9, which and the father signed with us. "
Eglise St-Roch, Paris, register of baptisms, 1808.


Real estate sale in Paris, 5 Prairial year XI (1803)

"Before Charles Francis Drugeon and his colleague, notary in Paris at the Court of Appeal, (...) this was Nicolas Horguelin, timber merchant residing in Paris, rue Sainte Croix No. 541,
Chaussee d'Antin, which was sold by these presents, CESD and abandoned now and forever, (...) to Charles Francois Thibault, a timber merchant residing in Paris, rue Saint-Dominique Division of the Fontaine de Grenelle No. 1050, to present (...):
(1) A portion of vacant land suitable for building, which has built an office and sheds, that land (...) by taking to the streets of New Capuchin the other that of St. Nicolas or sewer on one side and to Colincourt Cayoux and citizens across Gagne and son and Mrs. Jeanesson.
(2) and land at Paris rue du Houssay (...) taking a tip from the side of the Rue de Provence, (...) the other side of the street Chantereine today Victory (...) Said
Horguelin owner of these two properties, to wit the general appointed under Article I as having acquired Claude Jean de Sainte-Croix (...) by contract before Drugeon (...) June 8 thousand seven hundred and ninety two (... ) As for the field of street Houssay, said Horguelin owner as it is being delivered to the purchaser's name Chappe citizen, lawyer (...). And finally made the sale for the sum of forty thousand francs main price (...). Done in Paris, an XI of the Republic, on the fifth Prairial, and have signed these presents, reading ".
Arch. national MC/ET/XLVI/639, Drugeon study, year XI.


Receipts for Mr. Pommery, rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie, 1815.

("three discharges for the same to the same")

First Release, June 2, 1815.
"(...) Mr. Nicolas Armand Jean Pommery, a merchant residing in Paris, rue Ste-Croix de la Bretonnerie No. 20 recognizes (had received) Mr Gregory Valentin Breton, merchant Grenetier, and Antoine Horguelin, wine merchant Basically, both residing at Petit Montrouge No. 22 (Floor Maine) (...) the sum of two thousand six hundred and eighteen francs four ... cents.

Second Release, July 9, 1815.
"(...) the sum of two thousand four hundred and fifty four francs ninety one cents ...."

Third Release, July 12, 1815.
"(...) the sum of two thousand four hundred seventy-one francs seventy nine cents ...."

Arch. national MC/ET/I/746, study Desprez, 1815.



Notes

If Montrouge Tales, 1801-1819

"in Montrouge Dubreuil of Mazière (mayor from 1801 to 1819). The charity committee.
(...) The committee met under the chairmanship of the mayor and "his house" several times a year, convened. Members, were re-elected as Amaury Duval Antoine Horguelin or were renewed by thirds every three years on a proposal of five names of notables including the sub-prefect chose (...) ". Montrouge
The Magazine No. 58, June July 2004, page 39. Article by Patrick Vauzelle.


The Barriere du Maine, Paris, 1815.

Horguelin Anthony moved out of the gate of Maine (1815), which allowed to cross the walls of the Farmers General (1787) in the direction of Montrouge and the road to Orleans. The architect Claude Nicolas Ledoux had brought the two pavilions connected by granting a grid, which closed the gate.

"Ward of the barrier was conversant with Maine in 1840 a major upheaval with the construction of" the landing of the barrier of Maine, that is to say, the first station Montparnasse. The location of the house of Antoine Horguelin (22, Chaussée du Maine)
now estimated at about the height of the street Vandame. This area was particularly suitable for trade wine, if one believes Hillairet who wrote: "Rue de la Gaite
its name in 1830 near the old barriers of Montparnasse and Maine, surrounded by balls, guinguettes of restaurents, theaters, ( ...) made this street a land of plenty. A popular song boasted in 1825: A Cabaret
fence Maine
At the time when the wine was sold in six
When, six whites, there was no penalty,
A flat studs and bacon and cabbage.
(Six whites were now worth two sous and a half). "

Hillairet Jacques, "Historical Dictionary of the streets of Paris", 1997, Volume I, page 563.




Sources


(1) Arch. national central minute file, the 17th and 18th centuries. (See Horguelin and Meirieu)

(2) Arch. Paris, DQ/10/92, No. 1188, Direction des Domaines de la Seine, year XI.

(3) Arch. Paris, DQ/10/196, No. 7264, year VIII.

(4) Arch. Private, CH, study Arnould, 1806.

(5) Arch. national MC/ET/I/746, study Desprez, 1816.

(6) Arch. Private, MH, letter from Patrick Vauzelle, November 13, 2005.

(7) Municipal Cemetery Montrouge, register of burials, 1833-1892.

(8) Arch. Private, MH, letter from Patrick Vauzelle, February 13, 2006.

(9) Destrière Lawrence, "The Catacombs of Paris. Montrouge cemetery.
WEB Site Geo 1777 November 29, 2005.

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