So, albeit a day late, I'm going to answer this challenge for the three-quarters of my maternal lines that are Canadian. (My paternal lines are solidly English, Scots, and German.) My maternal grandmother's father descended from French-Canadian stock who first arrived in Quebec in the late 17th century, while my maternal grandfather immigrated to the U.S. from Prince Edward Island; his PEI forbears came from Scotland (Outer Hebrides) and Ireland.1
All except my 3x great-grandfather Michael Murphy were born in Quebec or Prince Edward Island, so for them there are no "arrival dates" or locations "where first settled". Instead I have listed their probable locations in 1867. (Michael Murphy arrived from Ireland ca 1820 and first settled in Georgetown, PEI.)
Ancestor | Relationship | Probable residence in 1867 |
*Louis Rabideau (1850-aft 1913) | 2x great-grandfather | Saint-Paul-de-Chester, PQ |
*Celina Cloutier (ca 1850-1881) | 2x great-grandmother | unknown |
Louis Robidas (1832-1921) | 3x great-grandfather | Saint-Paul-de-Chester, PQ |
Marie Deshaies-St. Cyr (1829-1895) | 3x great-grandmother | Saint-Paul-de-Chester, PQ |
Divine Louise Girardeau( 1790-1875) | 4x great-grandmother | prob Stoke or St. Camille, PQ |
**Jean-Baptiste Deshaies-St. Cyr (1806-unk) | 4x great-grandfather | possibly Nicolet, PQ |
**Victoire Lemire (1811-unk) | 4x great-grandmother | possibly Nicolet, PQ |
Dominic Murphy (1854-1914) | great-grandfather | Georgetown, PEI |
Rose Ann McIntyre (1862-1937) | great-grandmother | Lot 19, PEI |
William Murphy (1830-1909) | 2x great-grandfather | Georgetown, PEI |
Flora Ann McDonald (1832-1911) | 2x great-grandmother | Georgetown, PEI |
Neil McIntyre (1814-aft 1881) | 2x great-grandfather | Lot 19, PEI |
Mary Ann McLellan (1817-1896) | 2x great-grandmother | Lot 19, PEI |
**Michael Murphy (ca 1800-aft 1861) | 3x great-grandfather | Lot 41, PEI |
**Magdelen Morison (ca 1800-aft 1861) | 3x great-grandmother | Lot 41, PEI |
* Louis and Celina married in 1869, probably in New Hampshire, but I believe they were still in Quebec in 1867.
** These ancestors may well have been alive in 1867, but so far I haven't located any death records for them.
SOURCES
- PEI didn't actually join the Dominion until 1873, but since it is informally known as the "Cradle of Confederation" for hosting the 1864 Charlottetown Conference where the initial steps toward Confederation were taken, I'm going to stretch the bounds of the challenge a bit to include my PEI lines.