Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Daniel Hyacinthe Liénard de Beaujeu (9 or 19 August 1711 – 9 July 1755) was a French officer during King George's War and the French and Indian War. He participated in the Battle of Grand Pre (1747). He also organized the force that attacked General Edward Braddock's army after it forded the Monongahela River.

  2. Daniel-Hyacinthe-Marie Lienard de Beaujeu. Fort Necessity National Battlefield. Portrait of Beaujeu. Quick Facts. Significance: The French officer who mobilized the French and Indian attack on General Braddock's army. Place of Birth: Montréal, Canada. Date of Birth: August 9, 1711. Place of Death: On the battlefield near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

  3. Daniel Hyacinthe Marie Lienard de Beaujeu. Date of Birth - Death August 1711 – July 9, 1755. Daniel-Hyacinthe-Marie Liénard de Beaujeu was born on August 9, 1711 in Montreal, New France. Inspired by his father’s time as a soldier, , a teenaged Beaujeu joined the army as an officer candidate.

  4. Daniel-Hyacinthe-Marie Liénard de Beaujeu grew up in Montreal and, like his father, joined the armed forces as an officer candidate while still in his teens. He may have spent some of his boyhood in the west, his father having been at posts such as Michilimackinac.

  5. Daniel Hyacinthe Liénard de Beaujeu, né à Montréal le 19 août 1711 et mort près de Fort Duquesne le 9 juillet 1755, est un officier français durant la guerre de Sept Ans 1 commandant de Fort Niagara. Biographie. Fils de Louis Liénard de Beaujeu et de Denise-Thérèse Migeon.

  6. Chevalier Daniel Hyacinthe-Marie Liénard de Beaujeu aka Beaujeu. Born 19 Aug 1711 in Montreal, Ile-de-Montréal, Canada, Nouvelle-France. Ancestors. Son of Louis (Liénard) Liénard de Beaujeu and Thérèse-Denise Catherine Migeon.

  7. Liénard de Beaujeu, Daniel-Hyacinthe-Marie, officer in the colonial regular troops, seigneur, entrepreneur; born 9 August 1711 at Montreal, son of Louis Liénard de Beaujeu and Thérèse-Denise Migeon de Branssat; killed in action near Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), 9 July 1755.