The following information was assembled from numerous sources and cannot be used directly as proof of Qualifying Service or Lineage.
It is considered a research aid and is intended to assist in locating sources that can be used as proof.
State of Service: ESP
Qualifying Service: Soldier / Patriotic Service
Birth: abt 1739 Death: 09 Dec 1782 Opelousas / / LA
Qualifying Service Description:
Fusilier in the Opelousas Militia under General Bernard de Galvez
Additional References:
Susan B Douget, Sous Cette Pierre Repos, Tombstone inscriptions of the Old St Landry Church Cemetery, 1993
Churchill, SAR Spanish Records, pg 246
Spouse: Marianne Doucet Children: Members Who Share This Ancestor
None*
*This means that the NSSAR has no applications for this Patriot on file.
Instead the information provided is best effort, and from volunteers who have either researched grave sites, service records, or something similar. There is no documentation available at NSSAR HQ to order.
Michel Brignac was born about 1739. He was the son of Simon Jacques Brignac and Marie Madeleine Turpin. He was married to Marianne Doucet, according to the 1777 Opelousas Census.
He served as a fusilier [a soldier armed with a light flintlock musket] in the Opelousas militia, according to the militia list of June 1777 published by Churchill. In this capacity, he fought with Bernardo de Galvez during his lower Mississippi River campaigns, including the Battle of Baton Rouge.
The Patriot died in Opelousas on the 9th of December, 1782, and was buried in the Yellow Fever Cemetery in Washington, Province of Louisiana, New Spain.
Send a biographical sketch of your patriot!
Patriot biographies must be the original work of the author, and work submitted must not belong to another person or group, in observance with copyright law. Patriot biographies are to be written in complete sentences, follow the established rules of grammar, syntax and punctuation, be free of typographical errors, and follow a narrative format. The narrative should unfold in a logical manner (e.g. the narrative does not jump from time period to time period) or have repeated digressions, or tell the history of the patriot's line from the patriot ancestor to the author. The thinking here is that this is a patriot biography, not a lineage report or a kinship determination project or other report published in a genealogy journal. The biography should discuss the qualifying service (military, patriotic, civil) of the patriot ancestor, where the service was rendered, whether this was a specific state or Continental service, as well as significant events (as determined by the author) of the patriot's life. This is the entire purpose of a patriot's biography.
Additional guidelines around the Biography writeup can be found here:
Send your submission1, in a Microsoft Word compatible format, to patriotbios@sar.org for inclusion in this space 1Upon submission of a patriot biography, the patriot biography becomes the property of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution, and may be edited to conform to the patriot biography submission standards.