1. Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc was a Quebecois Jesuit.

1. Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc was a Quebecois Jesuit.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc's career started as a missionary in the Pacific Northwest, where he resided for eight years.
Jean-Baptiste Bolduc was born in Saint-Joachim, Quebec and ordained as a priest on 22 August 1841.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc occupied his time by teaching at a school for Native Hawaiian children.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc was to winter at the St Francis Xavier Mission while Langlois was to remain at St Paul.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc was eager to explore the northern Puget Sound, along with Vancouver Island, to locate the site of a permanent missionary station.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc joined James Douglas and a detachment of HBC employees at Fort Nisqually on 10 March 1843.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc estimated that a gathering of 1,200 Klallams, Cowichans and Songhees was convened on the 19th, a Sunday, to hear his sermon.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc spent several days waiting for Netlam, a prominent nobleman among the Lower Skagit tribe.
Netlam had sailed north to Vancouver prior to Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc's arrival, expecting to accompany the priest to his village.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc left the Mission in October 1844 for a school in the Willamette Valley for primarily the children of American and French-Canadian farmers, where he remained throughout 1845.
Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc acted as Vicar of Saint-Roch, along with serving as chaplain of the naval hospital in Quebec City from 1851 to 1867.
From 1851 to his death, Jean-Baptiste-Zacharie Bolduc was chaplain of an asylum.