Seventh of a seven-part series describing the real and imagined life of Hilaire Béliveau of Montreal.
1901 begins on a sad note when granddaughter Alice Yvonne Provost (Michel & Ernestine Béliveau) dies in January. She was barely six years old. On a happier note, a new grandaughter, Ida, was born to Edmond Prince and Anna Béliveau. Hilaire and Aglaë were her godparents.
On February 22, 1902, Jeannette Provost was born to Michel Provost and Ernestine Béliveau in Maisonneuve. Both she and cousin Ida would be married to Louis Comeau of St-Ours, Jeannette as his first wife and Ida as his second.
The first census of the century took place on March 31, 1901. The population of Canada has reached over 5.3 million individuals.
In Pointe-aux-Trembles, Hilaire and Aglaë are empty-nesters. He is still a customs officer and earned $1200 in salary the previous year. Hilaire is bilingual, while Aglaë is francophone. Hilaire’s daughters Anna, Ernestine and Corinne are present in the census. The fate of his eldest daughter Célina Eliza (born in 1862) is not known. Anna and her husband Edmond Prince are living in Maisonneuve with their six children. It’s not clear what his occupation is but he earned $1000 in the previous year.
Ernestine and Michel Provost are also in Maisonneuve. Michel is employed and earned $550. Only their daughter Antoinette is living with them and is attending school.
Hilaire’s youngest daughter Corinne is now an Ursuline sister at the Roberval provincial convent which was founded in 1882 by Malvina Gagné (Mère Saint-Raphaël) to provide support to the colonization movement in the Lac St-Jean area. Mère St-Raphaël’s school was the first to provide a domestic science and agricultural program in the country.
The Stratford-area Beliveaus are also present in the 1901 census and are scattered in Village Beaulac, Compton and Winslow. Ephraim is a day worker and earned about $660 the previous year. He’s living in Village Beaulac with his wife and two children. Théodule is still farming in Compton and his brother Jean, sister Artemise and mother Eléonore are living in his household. Two of his brothers are his neighbours—Camille and Louis, also farmers. Camille’s household includes his wife and eight children. Louis is widowed and he has his 8 children living with him. William is in Winslow with his wife and seven children. He is still farming and he is noted as being bilingual.
On April 28, 1901, Hilaire’s mother, Eléonore Bernard, passed away in Stratford, Québec. Hilaire’s brothers Jean and Théodule were present at the burial on April 30, but it’s not known if Hilaire travelled to be with them.
In 1902, Aglaë prepares a will before notary Joseph Marion. In it she asks to be buried with her family (Beaudry) and she stipulates that as soon as possible $50 be set aside for a high mass and other prayers for her soul. She leaves her clothing to her three nieces (daughters of her brother Camille) and all her other property to her brother Camille.
The following year, on December 29, 1903, Hilaire Belliveau passed away. He was buried on January 4, 1904 in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery (section J3-00142) near his first wife Célina.
Hilaire was survived by his wife Aglaë Beaudry, brothers William, Ephraim, Camille, Théodule, Ulderic, Louis Pierre and Jean; and sister Artemise. He also left behind four daughters and ten grandchildren (according to known records).
Not long after the death of her father, Anna Béliveau gives birth to Arthur Hector Prince on April 30, 1904. About a week later, Anna likely succumbed to complications from the birth and passed away on May 5, 1904. She was also buried in Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery, near her parents.
In January 1905, Aglaë sells a lot in Pointe-aux-Trembles to Louis Beaudry for $300. It’s not clear what relation Louis is to her, if at all. Then in December, Aglaë borrows $100 from Achille Dubreuil (cultivateur de Pointe-aux-Trembles) to be repaid on the 26 of May 1906 with 5% interest per annum. Her brother Camille consented to guarantee the loan.
A year later, Aglaë is released from her debt and receives $500 from her brother Camille. There is no sign of Aglaë in the 1911 census. According to the notary documents for her loan transaction, she is living in Montréal and no longer in Pointe-aux-Trembles.
Our story of this family ends with the death of Aglaë on August 15, 1913 in Montréal. She was buried on August 18. Her obituary in Le Devoir was brief.
BÉLIVEAU, Aglaë Beaudry. 71 ans, veuve de Hilaire Béliveau, douanier.
Asile de la Providence.
Asile de la Providence was founded by the order Soeurs de la Providence and it was a refuge for aged and invalided women.

- Institut Généalogique Drouin, Drouin Collection. Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Notre-Dame (Montreal)
- 1901 Census of Canada. Library and Archives Canada.
- Nicole Thivierge. GAGNÉ, MALVINA, Saint-Raphaël. Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 14, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed October 12, 2019, http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/gagne_malvina_14E.html.
- Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec; Montréal, Quebec, Canada; District: Joliette; Title: Marion, Joseph (1863-1916) Quebec, Canada, Notarial Records, 1626-1935.
- Burial Location database, Cimetière Notre Dame des Neiges. https://www.cimetierenotredamedesneiges.ca/en/burial-location
- VENTES ENREGISTRÉES. Le Prix Courant, 1905-1-20, p. 49, col. 1; digital images, BaNQ Numerique. (http://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2747078?docsearchtext=aglae%20beaudry)
- Archives des notaires. Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec; Montréal, Quebec, Canada; District: Montréal; Title: Cormier, Joseph-Edouard (1894-1909)
- Deces. Le devoir, 1913-8-18, p. 192, col. 5; digital images, BaNQ (http://numerique.banq.qc.ca/patrimoine/details/52327/2791615?docsearchtext=aglae%20Béliveau) Patrimoine quebecois.
- Soeurs de la Providence. Répertoire du patrimoine culturel du Québec. Gouvernement du Québec, 2013. http://www.patrimoine-culturel.gouv.qc.ca/rpcq/detail.do?methode=consulter&id=18082&type=pge