The First of Our Family's Settlers in Wisconsin

Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine (1804-1881) traveled from Antwerp, Belgium to NE Wisconsin with his daughter Sylvie (1834-1898), and four sons in 1856.  Wife Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe (1810-1855) had passed away the year before.

We believe that this is a portrait of Jean Baptiste and Jeanne Marie, which was made in Belgium and brought to Wisconsin with the family.



Here are the five siblings, from whom all of us Le Capitaines, LeCaptains, and Captains descend:
Sylvie Josephe Le Capitaine (1834-1898)
Prosper Jean Francois LeCaptain (1837-1917)
Joseph Jean Francois Le Capitaine (1838-1920)
Constant Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine (1849-1922)
Jules LeCaptain (1851-1924)






Source: From Grez-Doiceau to Wisconsin : contribution à l'étude de l'émigration wallonne vers les États-Unis d'Amérique au XIXème siècle (1986) by Defnet, Mary A.; Ducat, Jean; Eggerickx, Thierry; Poulain, Michel

Where We Come From In Belgium



Our family comes from the Walloon Brabant province in Belgium.  (Pictured in the middle of the country, here, in light orange.)

The Provinces of Belgium

Some of the other areas may sound familiar--  There are towns in Wisconsin called Namur, Brussels, Luxemberg, and even Belgium.

 
Here is a map of just Walloon Brabant.  Most of our ancestors were born in Grez-Doiceau, or just Grez.



This is an old postcard image of Grez-Doiceau.  I don't know what year this is from.


The Immigration Journey

Many Belgians began immigrating to Wisconsin in the mid-to-late-1850s, for the promise of cheap, plentiful farmland.  Belgium at the time was quite overpopulated and many farmers worked as share-croppers on land they did not own.  After a few years of drought and crop diseases, the Belgians were tempted by letters from early travelers to the US and Wisconsin, which made the colonies sound like a dream come true.

Advertisements like this one stated the costs for ship travel to New York and Green Bay:

Source: "Our Marchant Relatives" by Jeanne and Les Rentmeester



Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine and his children made their journey to Wisconsin in 1856.
They departed Antwerp on 26 Mar 1856, aboard the ship "Lacedemon."
They arrived in Quebec on 12 May 1856.
In June 1856, they arrived at the Port of Green Bay.





Attempting to take this trip was a big risk, and our ancestors were fortunate to have survived the journey.  In the spring of 1856, another passenger ship sailing from Belgium to the USA was wrecked at sea and all several hundred passengers were lost.  Many passengers on another ship died from dysentery.

"The average time for a sailing ship to cross the Atlantic Ocean from east-to-west, against the prevailing wind, was forty-four days.  Most of the early Walloon emigrants came across in sailing-ships at a cost of about 35 dollars for an adult; steam-ships were just being introduced on the passenger routes in the late 1850s.  They cost about 60 dollars per adult and the trip took an average of 13 days."
 From Rentmeester, Jeanne and Les, 1995. "Our Marchant Relatives." Published by the Howard-Suamico Historical Society, Inc.

"Often during a heavy storm, the masts would snap and the sails would blow away."  "This happened several times to the ship 'LACEDEMON.'  Constant Delvaux has an interesting story of his voyage on that ship, which left Antwerp in March 1856 and had three masts snapped off when only ten miles out.  After repairs, they finally left on April 23rd and had a beautiful voyage to Quebec, arriving 12 May 1856.  They passed down the St. Lawrence River to Montreal, then to Toronto on Lake Ontario.  By railroad, they were transported across the Ontario isthmus to Collingwood.  There was a scheduled ship out of Collingwood to ports on Lake Michigan and Lake Huron several times a week, which allowed the Delvaux family to arrive in Green Bay around the middle of May 1856."
 From Rentmeester, Jeanne and Les, 1995. "Our Marchant Relatives." Published by the Howard-Suamico Historical Society, Inc.

Our Le Capitaine ancestors likely took a similar or identical journey after they left the ship Lacedemon, and arrived in Green Bay in June 1856.


Image of the book "Our Marchant Relatives."  A sailing ship, similar to the one our ancestors sailed on, is pictured on the right.


"Their ship, the "Lacedemon," headed out into the deep blue Atlantic ocean with nothing before their eyes except 3,000 miles of water. When about 10 miles out, they encountered a savage storm which snapped off the greater part of the main mast. It was necessary for them to return home for repairs which took 23 days, after which they started out again.

This time they had smooth sailing and arrived in the port of Quebec in Canada on May 12 after a 19-day voyage. There they transferred to a smaller boat on the St Lawrence river which took them to Montreal. Again transferring to still another boat that took them to Toronto, they boarded railroad cars which took them as far as Lake Mighigan.

From there they sailed to Green Bay where they heard the French language which made them feel like home. French and Belgian residents in Green Bay eagerly sought news from their native land."

From Tlachac, Math S., 1974. "The History of the Belgian Settlements in Door, Kewaunee and Brown Counties. ... A Legacy in 10 Parts." Published by Belgian-American Club, Brussels, Wisconsin.

Copy of the "Lacedemon" ship manifest, as appears in Defnet, Mary A.; Ducat, Jean; Eggerickx, Thierry; Poulain, Michel  "From Grez-Doiceau to Wisconsin : contribution à l'étude de l'émigration wallonne vers les États-Unis d'Amérique au XIXème siècle" 1986

Highly recommended resource for additional information and stories:  "Our Marchant Relatives" by Jeanne and Les Rentmeester, 1995.  Available online in its entirety, and searchable:
https://archive.org/details/OurMarchantRelatives/

The Le Capitaine Name And Its Variations

In getting to know extended family members, it seems that one question is intriguing to all of us---  Why did some of our ancestors change their name and others did not?

Most of us these days go by either Le Capitaine or LeCaptain.  Some go by simply Captain.  And there were a few along the line who went by Le Captaine (no first I.)

The original Belgian spelling of the family name was indeed Le Capitaine.  When Jean Baptiste and his four sons traveled to the USA from Belgium, that was their name.  One son, Joseph, kept the original spelling and so did all of Joseph's descendants.  But most of the members of the other three brothers' branches changed their names in some way.  How come?

Our family did not go through Ellis Island and get asked to change their name.  Our family came to the U.S. in 1856 and Ellis Island didn't open until 1892.  (And actually that whole idea of Ellis Island workers changing ethnic last names is a myth, anyway.  See: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smithsonian-institution/ask-smithsonian-did-ellis-island-officials-really-change-names-immigrants-180961544/)

Did our families change their names to try to sound more "American?"  Were they hoping to adopt a less ethnic/less Belgian/less French persona?  Did they eventually just get annoyed with having to spell out their last name all the time?  (I hear ya on that one, fellas!)

Personally, I think it was a less formal or structured decision than we might assume.  Records and IDs were not checked by a computer and rejected if there was a missing E or a missing space, as they are now.  Towns were smaller, people knew their neighbors, knew the business owners.  If a man or a family decided to simplify their name, it was probably really easy to do so.  One could just start filling out forms with that name.  Start telling that name to the census-taker, giving that name to the newspaper reporter, fill out their draft registration with that spelling, etc.

One newly-found-long-lost cousin told me that her father was not given a choice in changing his name.  That a person of authority-- a teacher, or pastor, etc-- told him that his name Le Capitaine meant "the captain," and therefore he would be called Captain.  He didn't argue, and so he lived his 99 years on Earth as Mr. Captain.

The family of Constant Jean Baptiste is a good example, of how these name changes don't seem very consistent, leading me to imagine it might have just been a matter of personal preference.
Constant was one of the four brothers who immigrated.  He had five sons who lived to adulthood.  Of these five sons, four went by Captain, and the fifth son, the youngest, kept Le Capitaine
In the 1880 census, the family was Le Capitaine.
In the 1901 city directory, Constant and his children were all listed as Captain.
In the 1915 city directory, Constant and his children were listed as Capitaine and Capitain.
When Constant's wife passed away, her newspaper obituary said Mrs. Constant Le Captaine.
When Constant himself passed away, his newspaper obituary said Constant Captain, and his headstone said Le Captaine.

No matter the spelling, all of us Le Capitaines, LeCaptains, and Captains are related.  We might be 4th or 5th cousins, but we all can trace our lines back to the family who traveled on a ship from Belgium to Wisconsin in 1856.

Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine





B:  12 Jan 1804 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant, Belgium
D:  30 Mar 1881 in Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin, USA

Parents:
Martin Le Capitaine  (1764-1831)
Marie Thérѐse Jadin  (1771-1883)










Married to Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe  (1810-1855) on 13 Dec 1832 in Longueville, Brabant, Belgium.

Marriage Record for Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine and Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe


Children:
🔸 Sylvie Josephe Le Capitaine  (1834-1898)
🔹 Prosper Jean Francois Le Capitaine  (1837-1917)
🔹 Joseph Jean Francois Le Capitaine  (1838-1920)
🔹 Hubert Joseph Le Capitaine  (1843-1843)
🔹 Hubert Joseph Le Capitaine  (1844-1852)
🔹 Constant Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine  (1849-1922)
🔹 Jules LeCaptain  (1851-1924)



Wife Jeanne died on 4 Mar 1855 in Grez, Brabant, Belgium.

Death Certificate for (Jeanne Marie) Adelaide Coppe

Translation of Jeanne Marie's death certificate, above:
"Death certificate N°22.
The year 1855, 4th of March, 2PM, in front of us Louis Duchesne, alderman, civil registrar of Grez-Doiceau, administrative district of Nivelles, province of Brabant, appeared Jean Baptiste Lecapitaine, 51 years old, worker, Grez-Doiceau resident, husband of the deceased, and Louis Joseph Maricq, 29 years old, writer, resident at said place, "friend" of the deceased, who told us that the 4th of March, 5 AM, died in this town, Adélaïde Coppe, 45 years old, household, born in Longueville, Grez-Doiceau resident, wife of said Lecapitaine, daughter of Hubert Coppe, deceased, and Marie Thérèse François, household, Longueville resident - The appearing persons have signed the present deed, after it has been read to them."
Signatures of JB Lecapitaine, Louis Duchesne & Marie Thérèse François.




26 Mar 1856 -  Jean Baptiste departed from Antwerp on the ship Lacedemon, with all five of his children and a few of their spouses/partners.

Source: From Grez-Doiceau to Wisconsin : contribution à l'étude de l'émigration wallonne vers les États-Unis d'Amérique au XIXème siècle (1986) by Defnet, Mary A.; Ducat, Jean; Eggerickx, Thierry; Poulain, Michel


From TLACHAC, MATH S., 1974. "The History of the Belgian Settlements in Door, Kewaunee and Brown Counties. ... A Legacy in 10 Parts." Published by Belgian-American Club, Brussels, Wisconsin:
"Their ship, the "Lacedemon," headed out into the deep blue Atlantic ocean with nothing before their eyes except 3,000 miles of water. When about 10 miles out, they encountered a savage storm which snapped off the greater part of the main mast. It was necessary for them to return home for repairs which took 23 days, after which they started out again.

This time they had smooth sailing and arrived in the port of Quebec in Canada on May 12 after a 19-day voyage. There they transferred to a smaller boat on the St Lawrence river which took them to Montreal. Again transferring to still another boat that took them to Toronto, they boarded railroad cars which took them as far as Lake Mighigan.

From there they sailed to Green Bay where they heard the French language which made them feel like home. French and Belgian residents in Green Bay eagerly sought news from their native land."



12 May 1856 - The ship arrived in Quebec.

Jun 1856 -  The family arrived in the Port of Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin.


Jean Baptiste and his family lived on a farm in Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.  (Daughter Sylvie and eldest son Prosper lived elsewhere.)

1870 Census for Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin
Jean Baptiste - age 69
son Joseph - age 30
Joseph's wife Henriette - age 29
J Joseph - age 2 (son of Joseph and Henriette)
Mary - age 8 months (daughter of Joseph and Henriette)
JB's son Constant - age 20
JB's son Jule - age 17



1880 Census for Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin
Jean Baptiste is living with son Joseph (highlighted here in yellow)


John Baptiste died on 30 Mar 1881 in Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.

He was buried on 31 Mar 1881 in Saint Hubert Cemetery, Rosiere, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.


Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine Death Record


Sylvie Josephe Le Capitaine - 1st Generation

B: 16 Aug 1834 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant, Belgium
D: 10 Feb 1898 in Lincoln Township, Kewaunee, Wisconsin, USA

Parents:
Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine  (1804-1881)
Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe  (1810-1855)

Married on 12 Jan 1856 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant Wallon, Belgium to Jean Francois "Frank" DeGuelle  (1823-1902) 

March 1856 -  Immigrated from Belgium to Wisconsin (age 22,) along with her father, brothers, and her husband.



Children:
🔹 Joseph DeGuelle  (1857-1891)
🔹 Constant DeGuelle  (1859-1941)
🔹 Jule DeGuelle, Sr  (1862-1941)
🔹 Desire DeGuelle  (1866-1891)
🔹 Felicien "Felix" DeGuelle  (1879-1932)


Sylvie and Frank, and their children, lived in Lincoln Township and farmed.

1870 Census - Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin


1880 Census - Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin


1895 Lincoln Township Land Owners - Sylvie and Frank may have owned one of the highlighted plots, or by this time, perhaps one or more of their sons owned land.  Based on other named near them on the censuses, I think they owned one of the plots in the Western area of the township.


Sylvie died on 10 Feb 1898 in Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.  She died of dropsy (edema) and heart disease. 

11 Feb 1898 - Algoma Record Herald



Prosper Jean Francois LeCaptain - 1st Generation

Prosper JF LeCaptain - date unknown









B: 10 Sep 1837 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant, Belgium
D: 1917 in Rosiere, Kewaunee, Wisconsin, USA

Parents:
Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine  (1804-1881)
Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe  (1810-1855)











March - June 1856 - Immigrated from Belgium to Wisconsin (age 19)


6 May 1858 -  Naturalization
Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin, USA

Prosper's Declaration of Intent.  Prosper signed the document with his "mark"-- an X -- likely because he was illiterate.


1 Jul 1861 - Prosper acquired land in Kewaunee County.

1 Jul 1861 - Prosper's land patent. 
Note the signature "by" President Abraham Lincoln.


Married in 1862 to Julienne May Martin  (1836-1901)

Children:
🔸 Melanie LeCaptain  (1860-1882)
🔸 Sylvia LeCaptain  (1864-1881)
🔸 Julia LeCaptain  (1865-1883)
🔸 Octavia LeCaptain  (1866-1883)
🔹 Constant LeCaptain  (1867-1943)
🔸 Mary P LeCaptain  (1870-1888)
🔹 Julius J LeCaptain  (1871-1945)
🔹 Frank LeCaptain  (1873-1968)
🔹 August Constant LeCaptain  (1876-1954)


Prosper and Julienne's first four daughters all passed away at young ages between 1881-1883.  The local papers published a note about the deaths after Octavia passed away (below.)
Their fifth and last remaining daughter died in 1888.  Their sons survived.

Sat 17 Mar 1883 - Green Bay Press Gazette


29 Apr 1898 - Algoma Record Herald


3 Jun 1898 - Algoma Record Herald


10 Jun 1898 - Algoma Record Herald


17 Nov 1899 - Algoma Record Herald



Wife Julienne died on 3 May 1901, in Rosiere, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.

5 May 1901 - Green Bay Press Gazette


Prosper died on 4 Nov 1917 in Rosiere, Kewaunee, Wisconsin at the age of 80.


He was buried on 7 Nov 1917 at St Hubert's Cemetery in Rosiere, Kewaunee, Wisconsin.


Prosper and Julienne's headstone (Julienne is misspelled) at St Hubert's Church in Rosiere, Wisconsin.
Photo by me in April 2018.


1962 - Town of Lincoln holds its Centennial and Prosper is mentioned in the newspaper article as being an early settler of the town.

19 Jun 1962 - Green Bay Press Gazette

Joseph Jean "JJ" Francois Le Capitaine - 1st Generation

B:  20 May 1838 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant, Belgium
D:  22 Jan 1920 in Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin, USA

Parents:
Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine  (1804-1881)
Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe  (1810-1855)


March - June 1856 - Immigrated to Wisconsin from Belgium (age 18)

Joseph Jean settled in Lincoln, Kewaunee, Wisconsin with his father and brothers.


Harriette in 1923, two years before her death




Married on 17 Sep 1867 to Harriette (Henriette) Josephe Detrie  (1841-1925)

Children:
🔹 John Joseph Le Capitaine  (1867-1950)
🔸 Mary Theresa Le Capitaine  (1870-1941)
🔹 Jules Le Capitaine  (1871-1962)
🔹 Desire Le Capitaine  (1876-1946)
🔹 Leopold "Paul" John Le Capitaine  (1878-1963)
🔹 Henry Le Capitaine  (1882-1969)












1897 - Joseph built and opened the Le Capitaine Grocery Store in Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin.

Tues 23 Mar 1897 - Green Bay Press Gazette
Thur 14 Apr 1898 - Green Bay Press Gazette


1910 Census - Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin
Joseph (head) - age 69  (he was actually 72...?)
Harriet (wife) - age 69
Desire (son) - age 27 (he was actually 34...?)
Henry (son) - age 28


Joseph died on 22 Jan 1920 in Green Bay, Brown, Wisconsin, at the age of 81.

23 Jan 1920 - Green Bay Press Gazette

24 Jan 1920 - Green Bay Press Gazette


Wife Harriette died on 15 June 1925, in Green Bay, Wisconsin at the age of 83.

15 Jun 1925 - Green Bay Press Gazette - (Age is incorrect)

17 Jun 1925 - Green Bay Press Gazette


Le Capitaine headstone in Allouez, Wisconsin.  Harriet and Joseph are in the middle.
Photo taken by me in November 2013.

Detail of the above headstone.
Photo taken by me in November 2013.


*** Note:  Joseph's line seems to be the only branch (among the four brothers) where all the descendants kept the original spelling of Le Capitaine.

Constant Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine - 1st Generation





B:  21 Apr 1849 in Grez-Doiceau, Brabant, Belgium
D:  28 Mar 1922 in Appleton, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA


Parents:
Jean Baptiste Le Capitaine  (1804-1881)
Jeanne Marie Adelaide Coppe  (1810-1855)









March 1856 - Immigration from Belgium to Wisconsin with his father and brothers. (age 7)


Married in about 1871 to Philomena Mignon  (1850-1920)

Children:
🔸 Josephine Le Capitaine  (1871-1941)
🔹 Desire Le Capitaine  (1873-1886)
🔹 Joseph Louis Captain  (1875-1954)
🔹 Julius Jules Captain  (1877-1962)
🔸 Selina Le Capitaine  (1879-1954)
🔹 Victor J Captain  (1881-1965)
🔹 Charles Joseph Captain, Sr  (1882-1965)
🔸 Elma Mary Le Capitaine  (1886-1981)
🔹 William Joseph Le Capitaine, Sr  (1888-1952)






The Peshtigo Fire took place on the night of 8 Oct 1871 and affected both the West and East sides of Green Bay.


There are many articles in the Algoma, Door County, and Green Bay newspapers in the following weeks detailing the people who perished in the fire, and listing property lost.  I have not found any Le Capitaine names among those lists, both for fatalities and property lost.  Many of the neighbors and in-laws of our family did lose their lives and property.

However!  Constant Le Capitaine is listed on a document from the Town Board of Brussels as a recipient of funds for folks who needed support after the fire.  His father-in-law, Charles Mignon was listed in the newspapers as having lost his home and property.  Because Constant did not yet own land of his own and because his father-in-law is listed on the document directly above him, I assume that Constant was living there with his young family and was also affected.


26 Oct 1871 - Door County Advocate


Constant and his father-in-law received funds from the Town of Brussels' Treasury


Charles Mignon and Constant Le Capitaine each received $7.87.  In today's money, that's about $149.01 each.  Barb Chisholm, a researcher of Belgian-Wisconsinites, found that "In 1872 an average horse cost $60.00, pigs $5.00, cows over $20.00."  So this money was not a lot to start over with, rather it was just a bare minimum to keep them going.


28 Sep 1877 -  Constant filed his Declaration of Intent at court house at Sturgeon Bay, Door, Wisconsin.

Declaration of Intent signed 28 Sep 1877
Constant signed with an "X," likely because he was illiterate


1880 Census


21 Feb 1883 - Naturalization

Constant Le Capitaine's Naturalization Record


30 Aug 1883 - Constant acquired land in Door County. 

30 Aug 1883 - Constant's land patent. 


Map showing Constant's land-- that smallest rectangle in the darkest orange.  80 acres.
Source: https://glorecords.blm.gov/details/patent/default.aspx?accession=WI1790__.305&docClass=STA&sid=g1o1ltvp.fwr#patentDetailsTabIndex=0


Front:  Charles Joseph Sr, Philomena Mignon, William Joseph Sr, Constant, Selina
Back:  Julius, Joseph Louis, Victor J   -   Photo taken approximately 1893












1901 - Lived in Appleton, at 1200 Spencer Street.

All the family is listed as "Captain" in this 1901 Appleton, WI City Directory

1915 Appleton City Directory, family is listed as "Capitaine"


Wife Philomena died on 16 Sep 1920 in Appleton, Outagamie, Wisconsin, at the age of 70.

17 Sep 1920 - The Appleton Post Crescent



Constant died on 28 Mar 1922, in Appleton, Outagamie, Wisconsin, at the age of 72.

29 Mar 1922 in the Appleton Post Crescent
The part about coming to Outagamie at age 6 is not correct...


Constant and Philomena are buried in Saint Mary's Cemetery in Appleton, Outagamie, Wisconsin.