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Flight from France - Esther Hewlett (nee Beuzeville)
After the Edict of Nantes was revoked by Louis XIV in 1685
Huguenots found life intolerable and left France by the thousands.
"It was arranged for the family to travel to the coast in detachments, the two elder boys went with their mother (Margaret Langlois) to Calais, and Marie, the eldest daughter, was to follow with her brothers, Stephen and Frances aged eight and five years.
As soon as they were out of sight, Marie knocked off the inanimate contents of the pannier. the little boy lifted up his arms towards her, and she saw that he was covered in blood from a severe cut to one of them. He had understood that if he had cried out his own life and the lives of his brother and sister would have been lost, and he bravely bore the pain and was silent." Meanwhile Madame Roussel, carrying what valuables she could secrete, had arrived in another disguise in Calais, and at the appointed place mother and children met once more. A boat had been hired to take them across the Channel: an open boat, for which they had paid thirty guineas. The crossing probably took two days, with the family suffering from exposure and concern about the wounded arm of Francis. It is believed that when the boat was some distance from land the boatman declared that unless they doubled his fee he would return them to France. Marguerite boldly replied that if he did that she would denounce him for aiding heretics to escape. The family landed safely on English soil with one trunk containing plate, valuables and about the equivalent of five hundred pounds.
Laurens Roussel died on August 1, 1691, a prisoner in his own house. He was buried privately in his own garden at St. Germain (a suburb of Pont Audemer) near the church of St. Germains. Just how the family fared initially on reaching England we do not know, but we can be certain that they were received well by other Huguenot families. Presumably Marguerite found some means of making a living, as her sons were too young to work, or she may have been supported by a Friendly Society. A Kidnapping and a Strange Twist of FateThe troubles of this family were by no means over, however, and
soon after they arrived in England a strange disaster befell them. Several
versions of this story exist, and here W. Gilbert Wiblin is quoted:
"The two families thus became acquainted, and the boy and girl were inseparable. But their happiness was rudely interrupted... (one day) ... got lost in the strange city, and it was several years before his stricken family had any knowledge of his fate. "At length one of their neighbours, who had known about the boy's disappearance, happened to go to Maryland (USA). when visiting a plantation she heard the name 'Lawrence Roussel' called over at a muster of the planter's slaves. He obtained an interview, and found that the slave in question was indeed the missing Huguenot boy, who had lost his way somewhere down by the Thames, and had been carried off on to a ship and taken to the colony and sold into slavery. "Laurens asked the gentleman to take back news of him to his Mother, and handed him a small silver earpick, one of his Father's surgical instruments, which he had in his pocket: the sole survivor of him, which he was sure would identify him to his Mother. the planter gave him a most excellent character, but refused to part with him, as owing to his ability to read and write, he had become indispensable. "However, the neighbour's report and the production of the earpick relieved the anxieties of his family, and gave hope of a reunion. this took place a few years later when the planter died, leaving Lawrence his freedom and a comfortable fortune. "Not only did he lose no time in returning to London, but found that the girl he had rescued from the parrot had not forgotten him through his fifteen years of captivity and exile. He made her his bride, and afterwards practised as a physician in London." Her name was Bridget Crawford. |
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