White — Elias Bouhereau of La Rochelle. 145 



de nos ministres, le corps de feu Dame ; auquel enterrement ont 



assiste M}^ Bouhereau, pere et fils, et M. Jourdan, ministre, qui ont dit que 

 la dite Dame estoit aagee lors de son deceds de 95 ou environ." 



It is evident that the missing name is Blandine Bichard Bouhereau. The 

 officiating minister probably knew her only as Dr. Bouhereau's mother, 

 and intended to ask the exact name the next time he met him. These 

 registers afford many examples of similar lacunce, which can only be ascribed 

 to this habit of putting off till to-morrow. 



Madame Marguerite Massiot (Maciot, Matiot) Bouhereau was buried 

 23rd May, 1704, when it was stated that she was about sixty years old at 

 the time of her death. The eldest daughter Marguerite was buried 

 23rd April, 1707. She was then about thirty-four years of age. She had 

 been married, 21st July, 1703, to Louis Quartier (later Cartier), "ministre de 

 I'eglise frangoise de St. Patrick a Dublin." They had at least three 

 daughters, one of whom, Jane, survived her parents, and received one-fifth of 

 her grandfather's property. She married Jean Freboul, July 12th, 1730. 

 Her account of her family will be found in the Appendix, p. 150. Her 

 father, Louis Quartier, was buried 23rd October, 1715. 



Of Elie Bouhereau's " numerous family " only four sm-vived him : — 



(1) Eichard. This son bore the additional surname of Des Herbiers. An 

 account of his career can be seen in The Staiements of French Pensioners, 1702, 

 1713 (the latter in his father's handwriting). He served all through King 

 William's wars, and lost his left arm at the siege of Ebernburg, 



Agnew [op. cit., vol. ii., p. 308) states that one of Bouhereau's sons became 

 Mayor of Dublin, and had a son Eichard who changed his name to Borough ; 

 that he had two sons : Lieut.-Col. William Blakenay Borough and Sir 

 Eichard Borough (1756-1837; Bart., 11th November, 1813). Sir Eichard 

 married, in 1799, Anna Maria, daughter of Gerard, Viscount Lake, and had a 

 son. Sir Edward Eichard Borough, born 1800, and married to Lady Elizabeth 

 St. Lawrence. Their two sons, Edward and William, died respectively in 

 1855 and 1856. They had five daughters. ISTow, there was no Mayor of 

 Dublin named Borough in the eighteenth century. But Smiles {op. cit.) and 

 Burke's Peerage agree in describing the office as that of " town-major." This 

 agrees with the recollections of Jane Quartier, p. 151. 



(2) Amateur appears in a baptismal entry of September, 1738, as 

 Monsieur le Major Amateur {BorhoicY Bouhereau. He is probably the same 

 as Arteur Borough, mentioned as a parrain, 22nd April, 1733. The names 



' " Borhou " is interpolated in a later hand. 



