| The year was 1659 when Pierre Chastain was born in the 
				ancient Province of Berry, in or near the village of Charost, 
				which is almost the geographic center of France. Pierre Chastain 
				was the son of Estienne Chastain and Jeanne Laurent. Pierre's 
				father, Estienne and his grandfather, Jacques Chastain, had both 
				served as notaire royal at Charost. Estienne was born circa 
				1625, the son of Jacques and Jeanne Audet Chastain. It is 
				thought that Jacques, born circa 1598-1600, was either the son 
				or grandson of the Estienne Chastain who fled the city of 
				Bourges at the time of the Massacre of St. Bartholomew's Day in 
				1572. | 
			
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				| Proof of Pierre's first wife comes from the registers of 
				Vevey in cantonal archives in Lausanne, Switzerland. This proof 
				also corrects the assumption that Magdalaine de la Rochefaucald 
				was Pierre's first wife. Pierre Chastain married Susanne 
				Reynaud, daughter of Pierre Reynaud, from the village of 
				Issoudun. By 1696, the Pierre Chastain family had fled from 
				Charost across the Jura Mountains to Vevey, Canton Vaud, 
				Switzerland to escape religious persecution. Sometime after 
				September 1698, the family departed Vevey and was found at The 
				Hague in The Netherlands (Holland). | 
			
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				| From there, the family moved to London, England where they 
				remained a short time while Pierre became active in gathering 
				together a group of French Huguenot refugees for colonization in 
				Virginia. Pierre Chastain, his wife Susanne Reynaud Chastain and 
				five children were among the group of 207 passengers who 
				embarked from Gravesend, England on April 19, 1700 aboard the 
				ship Mary and Ann of 
				London. This ship arrived at the mouth of the James River on 
				July 12, 1700. The group settled in Manakin, Virginia about 
				twenty miles up the James River. The group was given a 10,000 
				acre tract of land south of the James in an area once occupied 
				by the Monacan Tribe of Indians. | 
			
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				| Pierre's wife, Susanne, died after February 1701 and before 
				November 1701, two of the children also had died. Pierre then 
				married Anne Soblet. Ann was the daughter of Abraham Soblet and 
				Susanne Brian. The marriage to Anne Soblet produced eight 
				children. Anne Soblet Chastain died on April 3, 1723. Pierre 
				married a third time to Mary Magdaline (Verrueil) Trabue, 
				daughter of Moise and Madelene Verrueil and widow of Antoine 
				Trabue. | 
			
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				| Pierre Chastain died in Goochland County, Virginia in the 
				fall of 1728. He had made his will on October 3, 1728 and this 
				will was probated on November 20, 1728. He was buried in the 
				family cemetery near his home. Magdeline Chastain died in late 
				Spring of 1731, she and Pierre did not have children. | 
			
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				| The family cemetery where Pierre Chastain was buried is 
				located near Manakin Episcopal church. The Cemetery was located 
				a few yards from the family home and contained several field 
				stones and as many as 30 graves. A brick wall surrounding the 
				family plot was torn down in 1929 by a farmer who used the 
				bricks to build a house. | 
			
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				| In 1982, Lowell Chastain, then President of the Association, 
				erected a grave marker for Pierre Chastain and constructed a 
				chain-link fence around his grave. |