Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Louis was trained in medical arts and science, becoming a specialist in pharmacology. It was from this that he developed what was to become a lifelong interest in plants and gardening. By 1600, Louis was established in Paris as an apothecary and spice merchant. In 1601, [1] he married Marie Rollet. [3]
Marie Rollet was a French woman and early settler in Quebec. Her second husband, Louis Hébert , was apothecary to Samuel Champlain 's expeditions to Acadia and Quebec on 1606 and 1610–13. When she and her three surviving children traveled with her husband to Quebec in 1617, [ 1 ] she became the first European woman to settle in Quebec.
On the first of October 1634, Hélène married Joseph Guillaume Hébert, son of Louis Hébert and Marie Rollet. Joseph's family had remained in Québec during the occupation and had the first settler's farm there. His father Louis Hébert had been involved in early expeditions to Port Royal with Champlain and others.
Among the first successful French settlers were Marie Rollet and her husband, Louis Hébert, credited as "les premier agriculteurs du Canada" [10] by 1617. The first French child born in Quebec was Helene Desportes, in 1620, to Pierre Desportes and Francoise Langlois, whose father was a member of the Hundred Associates .
George is the author of several historical books including The Trial of Louis Riel: Justice and Mercy Denied, The Metis: Memorable Events and Memorable Personalities, and Louis Hebert and Marie Rollet: Canada's Premier Pioneers, the latter two with his wife Terry Goulet as co-author.
Louis Hébert, his wife Marie Rollet and three children settle in Quebec.Hébert becomes the first apothecary in New France.In 1800, Hébert and his wife would already have 4592 married descendants in Quebec, making the couple one of the most important in French-Canadian ancestry.
J.P. Rosenbaum and Ashley Hebert at WE tv ‘Marriage Boot Camp: Family Edition’ premiere at Skybar at Mondrian in Los Angeles on October 10, 2019. Broadimage/Shutterstock The state of things.
In 1616, the Habitation du Québec became the first permanent establishment of the Indes occidentales françaises [22] with the arrival of its two very first settlers: Louis Hébert [23] and Marie Rollet. [24] The French quickly established trading posts throughout their territory, trading for fur with aboriginal hunters.