AILLEBOUST DE MANTHET (Menthet), NICOLAS D’, soldier, fur-trader; baptized 12 April 1663 at Montreal, son of Charles-Joseph d’Ailleboust* Des Muceaux and Catherine Legardeur de Repentigny; d. 1709 at Hudson Bay.

Nicolas d’Ailleboust de Manthet rose by successive stages in his military career and on 1 April 1702 reached the rank of captain. From 1684 on he had been a companion of Daniel Greysolon Dulhut in the pays den haut, and on 16 Oct. 1689 took part with him in a raid on a group of Seneca at Lac des Deux-Montagnes. The same year, having barely landed to take up his second mandate as governor, Buade* de Frontenac sent him with all speed to Cataracoui (Fort Frontenac), to stop the fort from being abandoned and destroyed, as ordered by Brisay de Denonville. But it was already too late: Clément Du Vuault de Valrennes had blown up the fortifications. In January 1690, with Le Moyne* de Sainte-Hélène, he directed the raid planned by Frontenac against Schenectady. On 18 February, at nightfall, the party, made up of 210 men – of whom 114 were Canadians – attacked the English post. When they withdrew several hours later, they left behind them some 60 dead, smoking ruins, and a helpless population who sought refuge at Albany. The next day they headed back to Montreal with 25 captives.

In 1693, during the War of the League of Augsburg, Nicolas de Manthet, together with Robutel de La Noue and Augustin Le Gardeur de Courtemanche, led a party of 625 men who were sent on an expedition against the Mohawk in the region of Albany. The expedition left Montreal on 25 January and three weeks later reached the territory where war was to be waged. After setting fire to villages and capturing 300 people, two-thirds of whom were women and children, the party, burdened with its prisoners, turned back and made for Montreal. On the way home it was twice attacked by Anglo-Mohawk bands who inflicted only light casualties, but who delayed its progress and thus exposed its members to starvation; this danger became a disaster after the thaw ruined the provisions in the caches. The captives were set free. A few soldiers starved to death. More than a hundred were compelled to await help. The others managed with difficulty to get to Montreal, after ridding themselves of their muskets and blankets in order to travel more lightly.

It was on a similar expedition, this time against Fort Albany on James Bay in July 1709, that the Sieur de Manthet perished. Rigaud de Vaudreuil had ordered him to seize this fort, but the undertaking resulted in a failure attributable, in the governor’s opinion, to the excessive recklessness of the soldiers and an inadequate knowledge of the area.

Like all soldiers of his stamp, Nicolas de Manthet served on several occasions as a diplomatic agent among France’s indigenous allies; it was above all important, particularly during the first two intercolonial conflicts, to keep them within the sphere of French influence. In 1703 Vaudreuil said of Manthet that no one at that time had so much ascendancy over these allies and even over the French in the pays den haut.

Official missions to the west apparently served as a cover for trafficking in pelts on a fairly large scale. In 1706 Vaudreuil and Jacques Raudot were obliged to apologize to the minister on Nicolas de Manthet’s behalf, stating that on his journeys towards the posts on the Great Lakes he had to take the goods required to meet his own needs. Manthet was a shareholder of the Compagnie de la Colonie and maintained business relations with Charles Aubert de La Chesnaye. Official correspondence and notarial acts show that he was involved in the fur trade from 1699 up to the year of his death, 1709, when he was sentenced to pay 3,039 livres to the Sieur Regnard Duplessis, the agent general of the Compagnie de la Colonie.

On 9 June 1696 Nicolas d’Ailleboust de Manthet had married Françoise Denis de La Ronde, Guillaume Bouthier’s widow; by her he had six daughters whom we know of and perhaps a seventh about whom we have no information.

Jean Blain

AN, Col., B, 23, f.26. Coll. de manuscrits relatifs à la N.-F., I, 482–531. Charlevoix, Histoire (1744), III, 184–88; IV, 57f. “Correspondance de Vaudreuil,” APQ Rapport, 1938–39, 1939–40, 1942–43. P.-G Roy, “Ce que Callières pensait de nos officiers,” BRH, XXVI (1920), 327; Inv. ord. int., I, 21, 71. [François Vachon] de Belmont, Histoire du Canada, 30. Godbout, “Nos ancêtres,” APQ Rapport, 1951–53, 471f. Eccles, Frontenac, 224f., 252–54. Ægidius Fauteux, La famille dAilleboust (Montréal, 1917), 122–26. P.-G. Roy, “Philippe Clément Du Vuault De Valrennes,” BRH, XI (1905), 195.

Revisions based on:
Bibliothèque et Arch. Nationales du Québec, Centre d’arch. de Montréal, CE601-S51, 12 avril 1663; Centre d’arch. de Québec, CE301-S1, 9 juin 1696.

Cite This Article

Jean Blain, “AILLEBOUST DE MANTHET (Menthet), NICOLAS D’,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 2, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed October 15, 2024, https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/ailleboust_de_manthet_nicolas_d_2E.html.

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Permalink:   https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/ailleboust_de_manthet_nicolas_d_2E.html
Author of Article:   Jean Blain
Title of Article:   AILLEBOUST DE MANTHET (Menthet), NICOLAS D’
Publication Name:   Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 2
Publisher:   University of Toronto/Université Laval
Year of publication:   1969
Year of revision:   2022
Access Date:   October 15, 2024