Beaupre (Boe - 'pray) is a primarily Catholic family that lives mostly in northern New England and Michigan.
The history of the Beaupre family can be accurately traced to about AD 1045 to 1050. Ancestors of this family may well have fought in the Battle of Hastings in 1066, when Duke William the Conqueror of Normandy defeated King Harold of England, making himself King of England, yet still only the Duke of Normandy. The current age of the Beaupre family name is approximately 960 years.
One ancient pedigree is that of Sir Edmonde Beaupre of Beaupre Hall, Outwell/Upwell, Norfolk, he is descended from:
Edmonde Beaupre of Beaupre Hall, was the last of the male line of his Beaupre family. By his wife Katherine, he had one daughter, Dorothy, who m.
Eventually, members of the Beaupre family moved to Quebec, Canada to a town now known as Beaupre. Ste. Anne's Cathedral is located there.
Gradually the Beaupre family has moved down to New England, in the United States. This is considered by much of the family to be the 'home area' although parts of the family have also moved to (Biloxi, Mississippi), Minnesota, York, South Carolina and to both Wolfe Island, Ontario and Winnipeg, Canada; Chiemsee, Alaska; the Dakotas; Heerlen, Netherlands; and even Baghdad, Iraq, during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Others have moved down to Michigan from Quebec around the middle 19th century.
The Beaupre family has recently mixed with the German Kilian family, which has ancestors who lived in Germany, Poland and possibly even Russia.
A completely separate Beaupre (Beaupré) family existed in the Nancy area of France in the 17th century and later moved to Besançon. A member of the family moved to England in 1824 in the service of George Canning as chef and interpreter. While the family is no longer in France they remain in England with members in Wellington, Somerset, Whitstable in Kent, parts of London and elsewhere. Information about this family was collated by the late Frederick Beaupré Higgs, and is held by Robert Beaupré [1].
Beaupré was a name with ecclesiastical connections in the early Middle Ages. A priory with the name existed in South Wales, and monks moving into the community took the name with them so that it appears (as a surname) on church lists of vicars from the 12th and 13th centuries, especially in Devon and Cornwall.
The name Bonhomme dis Beaupré was also in Norfolk during the 16th century. Here a hall and a school both retain Beaupre in their names.
This name has been passed down to generations, and is used in Saint Charles Parish, Louisiana, during crawfish season to describe how the crawfish season is going. However the full name is 'Bonhomme du Beaupre', which is French for 'Good Man of the Beautiful Prairie'. The name was shortened to simply 'Beaupre' after a few generations, most likely due to difficulties in writing or pronouncing such a long name.