(One of my early ancestors)

Antoine Adhemar de St-Martin, royal notary, clerk of court, process-server, surveyor, and prison keeper; b. c.1639, son of Michel Adhemar, a bourgeois of Saint-Salvy in the town of Albi (in the provice of Languedoc), and of Cecile Gasche; d. 15 April 1714 at Montreal.

Among the troops who landed at Quebec wth M. de Chastelard de Salieres on 17 Aug. 1665 was a soldier named Saint-Martin, in the company of M. de Saurel*; in Saint-Martin one is tempted to recognize Antoine Adhemar, all the more because it was at Sorel that the latter began his civil career, as royal notary in 1668. (In all probability, therefore, Adhemar took part in the expedition into the Mohawk country.) On 3 Nov. 1673, when Frontenac [Buade*] appointed him "royal process-server and serjeant-at-law for the whole of Canada", Adhemar was still living at Sorel, but received acts regularly in the seigneuries of Cap-de-la-Madeleine, Sainte-Anne de la Perade, Batiscan, Champlain, and even Chambly. He was about to go and set himself up at Champlain. According to documents dated 1681, 1682, and 1684, he added to his offices of royal notary and process-server those of prison keeper at Trois-Rivieres, clerk of court, and sworn surveyor; enough to keep him busy!

It was at Champlain that on 28 Aug. 1683 Genevieve Sageot, whom he had married on 10 Oct. 1667 at Quebec, died at the age of 33, leaving him four children. Adhemar remarried twice at Cap-de-la-Madeleine, where he seems to have lived from 1684: on 8 Feb. 1684 he took as his wife Marie Sedilot, the widow of Rene Blanchet by her second marriage, who died soon after the birth of a daughter; and on 20 Jan. 1687 he married Michelle, the daughter of the notary Jean Cusson, who bore him a sixth child.

At the time of his third marriage Adhemar was about to move to Montreal, where he had been summoned by DOLLIER de Casson, to replace Hilaire Bourgine* as clerk of the court for seigneurial justice. On 2 May 1687 Casson gave him his commission. Pursuing his career, but confining himself now to his responsibilities as notary and clerk of court, Adhemar also devoted much attention to the interests of the widow and under-age children of his brother-in-law Jean Aubuchon, who had been murdered in 1685. A large number of deeds, in which he appears in his capacity as guardian, concern this estate. After acting as court clerk for the seigneurs of Montreal from 1687 on, he was transferred by a commission dated 17 Nov. 1693 to the new royal jurisdiction of Montreal, to which he was to remain attached until his death. For a short time in 1703, he held the office of acting lieutenant-general there.

On leaving the Trois-Rivieres region in 1687, Adhemar had sold his land at Champlain to his brother-in-law, Jean Cusson; Jacques Babie had bought from him his "two oxen and the cow which are at M. Cusson's" for 140 livres. Thus, although he had made no declaration to this effect at the time of the 1681 census, Adhemar did have some cattle, and probably a few acres under cultivation. But he does not seem to have had a particular liking for the country, or rather he seems to have preferred the atmosphere of the town. In Montreal he rapidly became recognized as the notary of the merchants dealing in furs and the coureurs de bois.

His correspondence, which has been partiallly preserved, shows that once he was as Montreal he continued to maintain relationships with the settlers at Champlain, particularly with the merchant Jacques Babie, and afterwards with the latter's widow. From it we learn, among other things, that in the autumn of 1687 Adhemar, who had just settled at Montreal, was very ill, "and even in danger of dying". Adhemar was the confidential agent of Babie and of many others; he was entrusted with the most varied tasks, which he undertook moreover with good grace.

Adhemar owned some houses at Montreal and lived there in fairly comfortable circumstances. But he went after his debtors ruthlessly; the Registre du bailliage et des audiences enumerates no fewer than 155 suits that he instituted. Despite all this, the sums owing to him in February 1711 amounted to 2,066 livres, 8 sols, 3 deniers. The difficulty he experienced in recovering his money did not prevent him from being charitable: he was one of the first three directors of the office of the needy (Bureau des pauvres) at Montreal, and in 1695, after the fire in the Hotel-Dieu of Montreal, he subscribed 20 livres for its reconstruction. This man, obliging, hard-headed in business but responsive to those in distress, was also a careful official who earned praise in 1690 for his way of keeping the records. Unfortunately the last years of his life were saddened by his differences with his son-in-law, Deniau-Destailis. After Adhemar's death, Deniau and Tessier, his other son-in-law, started a dispute concerning his estate which was taken before the Conseil Souverain.

On 15 April 1714 Intendant Begon* gave Jean-Baptiste Adhemar*, Antoine's eldest son, a commission as a royal notary, in succession to his father.

(This was written by Andre Vachon in the French-Canadian & Acadian Genealogical Review.)