Marie Rose (other)
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Marie Rose (other)
Marie Rose may refer to: People * Marie Marguerite Rose (1717–1757), Guinea-born Canadian slave * Marie Rose Abousefian, Armenian actress and writer * Marie Rose (Delorme) Smith (1861-1960), Métis rancher, homesteader, medicine woman, midwife, and author. * Marie-Rose Armesto (1960–2007), Spanish-born Belgian journalist * Marie-Rose Astié de Valsayre (1846–1939), French violinist, feminist, nurse and writer * Marie Rose Cavelan (1752 - fl. 1795), French-Afro-Grenadian planter and revolutionary * Marie-Rose Carême, French professional football manager * Marie-Rose Léodille Delaunay (1827–1906), a Haitian educator * Marie Rose Durocher (1811–1849), Canadian Roman Catholic nun who founded the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary * Marie Rose Ferron (1902–1936), often called the Little Rose, Canadian-American Roman Catholic mystic * Marie-Rose Gaillard (1944–2022), former Belgian racing cyclist * Marie Rose Guiraud (1944–2020), Ivorian dancer and choreogr ...
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Marie Marguerite Rose
Marie Marguerite Rose (1717–1757) was a Guinea-born Canadian slave. In 2008, Rose was made a Person of National Historic Significance by the Government of Canada. Biography In 1736, Jean Chrysostome Loppinot, a French naval officer posted in Louisbourg, on Île Royale, modern-day Cape Breton, purchased Rose at an unknown price. She was then baptized in September, given a French name and possibly branded. The certificate of her baptism places her at approximately nineteen years old. For nineteen years she performed domestic duties; cooking meals, washing clothes and scrubbing floors in the Loppinot household, which included up to 12 children. During this time, she became pregnant to an unknown father, later giving birth to a son, Jean-Francois. Jean-Francois became a de facto slave until his death at the age of thirteen. Shortly after the fall of Louisbourg in 1745, she and her son, along with the Loppinot family, moved to Rochefort, despite the illegality of slavery in Fra ...
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