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Louis Hébert (French pronunciation: [lwi ebɛʁ]; c. 1575 – 25 January 1627) is widely considered the first European apothecary in the region that would later become Canada, as well as the first European to farm in said region. He was born around 1575 at 129 de la rue Saint-Honoré in Paris to Nicolas Hébert and Jacqueline Pajot.
Louis Hébert died January 7, 1901, on the east bank of Bayou Teche, 6 miles (9.7 km) north of Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, where he was interred. [3] Because his burial site was located on private land, with assistance from the Sons of Confederate Veterans on October 26, 2002, Hébert's remains were disinterred and moved to St. Joseph Catholic ...
After Joseph Hebert died in 1639, Hélène at age nineteen, was left with three living children, Joseph (1636–1662), Françoise (1638–1716), and Angélique (born 1639). She then married Noël Morin — a native of the parish of St-Étienne in Brie-Comte-Robert , a village near Paris — on January 9, 1640, in Quebec City .
Her husband Louis Hebert died in 1627, and she remarried in 1629. Quebec was captured and occupied by British privateers in 1627, during the Anglo-French War of (1627–1629) . Although the English returned many of the settlers to France, Rollet and her family, remained.
Lionel Hebert, American golfer; Louis Hébert, early Quebec farmer; Louis Hébert (officer), Confederate soldier; Louis-Charles-Auguste Hébert, French religious; Louis-Philippe Hébert, Canadian sculptor; Marie Marguerite Françoise Hébert, wife of Jacques Hébert; Paul D.N. Hebert, Canadian biologist; Paul M. Hebert, judge at the Nuremberg ...
Louis IV 920–954 King of the Franks r. 936–954: Emma of Italy b. c. 948: Lothair 941–986 King of the Franks r. 954–986: Matilda 943–992: Conrad I 925–993 King of Burgundy: Charles 945–953: Henry 953–953: Charles 953–993 Duke of Lower Lorraine: Louis 948–954 Capetians: Louis V c. 967 –987 King of the Franks r. 986–987 ...
Newton police arrested Wichita police Officer Louis Hebert on Oct. 8 after he was caught driving and in possession of a gun while intoxicated, authorities have said. Former Wichita cop sentenced ...
At about the same time, Hebert (who was third-in-command) led the 3rd Louisiana and the 4th, 14th, and 15th Arkansas infantry regiments into Morgan's Woods. When the staff officers of the fallen generals went looking for Hebert, he had disappeared into the woods, leaving McCulloch's division leaderless. [13]