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Marie Grandin: Sent by the King


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Date Created: 2010-09-08
Date Modified: 2010-09-08

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Author: Elise Dallemagne-Cookson
Binding: Hardback
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Publisher: Xlibris Corporation
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Publication Year: 2003
ISBN#: 1-41340-752-8
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Pages: 348
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Travel back into the wild frontier of 17th century Canada in an exciting tale of love, adventure, and war. Elise Dallemagne-Cookson's "Marie Grandin - Sent by the King" is the fascinating story of a brave young woman who was among the first French settlers to colonize North America.

This book is the life story of Marie Grandin and the part she and her husband, Jean Baudet, played in the establishment of the New World. She was among the famous young women known as "Les Filles du Roi" - daughters of the King - sent by King Louis XIV of France to help colonize his possessions in North America. Follow her every adventure as she pioneers the settlement of Lotbiniere in Quebec, participates in La Salle's exploration of the Mississippi, dramatically rescues her daughter from the Mohawks, and witnesses Governor Frontenac's struggle for peace with the Iroquois Confederacy. Vibrant with accurate detail, Marie Grandin recounts the adventurous lives and struggles of the pioneers in the primeval forest wilderness of 17th century Canada.

Based on the fascinating chronicles of her own ancestors, author Elise Dallemagne-Cookson, a direct descendant of Marie Grandin, tells Marie's story against a backdrop that is one of the most fascinating chapters in North American history.