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- ! <http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=348>Dictionary of Canadian Biography online1000-1700 (Volume I)H?BERT, LOUIS, apothecary, first officer of justice in New France, first Canadian settler to support himself from the soil,m. Marie Rollet; b. Paris 1575?; d. Quebec,January 1627. According to his descendant, Couillard Despr?s, he was the son of a Louis H?bert who was apothecary at the court of Catherine de M?dicis. Documents more recently discovered in Paris indicate that his father was Nicolas H?bert, an apothecary, and that Louis was born in the Mortier d?Or, a house near the Louvre. The niece of Nicolas H?bert?s wife married Jean de Biencourt de Poutrincourt, in 1590. This relationship would explain Louis H?bert?s interest in the early settlements in Acadia and his presence in Du Gua de Monts?s expedition. Lescarbot, in Port-Royal (Annapolis Royal, N.S.) in 1606, speaks with respect of his skill in healing and his pleasurein cultivating the soil, and, on his map of that region, indicates an island and a river named forH?bert. In the summer of 1606 H?bert sailed with Champlain and Poutrincourt along the coast to the southwest, seeking other sites suitable forsettlement. Poutrincourt and H?bert were so attracted by what is now Gloucester, Mass., that they planted a clearingthere to test the soil?s fertility. Both hoped to bring their families to settle in the New World. On this voyage H?bert showedthat, though intent on peaceful pursuits, he could be counted on for quick and courageous action in an emergency.With Champlain, Poutrincourt and several others, he leaped from the ship into a small boat, unclothed, in the middle of the night, in response to frantic cries from some foolhardy men who, having defied orders and remained on shore, were beingattacked by Indians. The Jonas, arriving from France in June 1607, brought the unwelcome news that, because ofthe cancellationof de Monts?s concessions, the company must returnto France. In 1610, H?bert was again in Port-Royal, with the group whom Poutrincourt hoped to establish there. As apothecary, he treated bothFrench and Indian patients. Apparently meals as well as medicine received his consideration; he preparedand administered both to chief Membertou in his last illness. He was in charge of the settlement when, in 1613, R?ne Le Coq de La Saussaye came with the Marquise de Guercheville?scolonists, withdrew the two Jesuit fathers from Port Royal, and sailedaway to start a new settlement elsewhere. The capture of this expedition at ?le des Monts Deserts by the English that same summer was followedby their destruction of Port-Royal (November 1613), and once more H?bert was forced to return to France. In the winter of 1616?17 he renewed acquaintance with Champlain who was in Paris seeking support for his colony at Quebec. This post, having survived for nineyears,probably seemed to H?bert a safe place for settlers, especially as Champlain obtainedfor him a favourable contract from the fur-trading company in control of the St. Lawrence region. Relying on these promises ? 200 crownsa year for his services as apothecary, and food and shelter for his family while gettingland cleared ? H?bert sold his house and garden in Paris and took his wife Marie Rollet and three children, Anne, Guillemette, and Guillaume, to Honfleur ready to embark.There he discovered that the company had no intention of honouring itsagreement. The besthe could obtain was a new contract, halving his salary and his land grant and stipulating that his family and his servant should be at the serviceofthecompany without pay. Having no alternative, he accepted and sailed with his family 11 March 1617.In Quebec hisapothecary?s skill and his small store of grain were a godsend to the sick and starving winterers. In spite of the company?sdemands on his and his servant?s time, he succeeded in clearing and planting some land. Champlain, on his brief visit of 1618, found cultivated land ?filled with fine grain? and gardens in which flourished a variety of vegetables, For many years H?bert was theonly man besides Champlain himself who took any interest in cultivating land. The tradingcompany did their utmost to discourage him. Both Champlain and Sagard say that the unlawful restrictions they imposed upon him and upon the disposal of his products prevented him from enjoying the fruits of his labours. When in 1620 Champlainreturned from France with (nominally) full authority over the colony, he gave H?bert responsibility in the administration of justiceby appointing him king?s attorney. In this capacity he signed the colony?s petition to the king in 1621. H?bert enjoyedthe confidence alsoofthe Indians, whom he, in contrast to many of his contemporaries, considered as intelligent human beings lacking only education. Many instances bear witness to their respect and affection for him. There is some question of trade relations with Guillaume de Ca?n, but in view of the fact that the surname H?bert isa very common one, this maybe a case of mistaken identity. In 1622 he petitioned the viceroy for a title to his land and on 4 Feb. 1623 received the grantguaranteeing him possession. Known later as the fief Sault-au-Matelot, the land included sites at present occupied by the Basilica, the seminary, and H?bert and Couillard streets. This title was ratified on 28 Feb. 1626 by the succeeding viceroy and some acres alongtheSt.Charles ? the fief Saint-Joseph, later known as fief de Lespinay ? were added, both holdings to be enjoyed?en fief noble.? H?bert hadachieved his cherished ambition: he had brought under his control enough of the wild land of the New World to support himself and his family in independence. The meadows along the St.Charles afforded pasture for cattle; on the higher ground he had grain fields, vegetable gardens, and an orchard planted with apple trees brought fromNormandy.All this hadbeenachieved in spite of the company?s opposition. Moreover,it hadbeen accomplished with hand tools only, not even a plough. (It was not until a year after the death of H?bert, that land was worked with plough and Oxen and agricultureon a largerscale couldbegin.) The winter of 1626 he had a fall onthe ice which proved fatal. He was buried in the Recollet cemetery on 25 Jan. 1627. In 1678 his bones still in their cedar coffin, were transferred to the vault of the newly erected Recollet chapel and with those of Brother Pacifique Duplessis were the first to rest there.Ethel M. G. BennettH?bert is mentioned in the following works of his contemporaries: Champlain, Works (Biggar), passim. JR (Thwaites), passim. Lescarbot, History (Grant), II,209, 234, 328, 331; III,246.Sagard,Histoire du Canada (Tross), I, 53, 83, 158?59. Le Clercq, while not strictly a contemporary, is near enough to the period to have gathered first-hand information and to have talked with H?bert?s daughter. Hegivesinformation about the family in First establishment of the faith (Shea), I,164?67, 281. Documents concerning company agreements, land grants, etc., are cited in Biggar, Early trading companies and in Azarie Couillard Despr?s, La premi?re famille fran?aise au Canada andLouis H?bert: premier colon canadien et sa famille (Lille, Paris, Bruges, 1913; Montr?al, 1918). The two latter works give detailed and imaginative, but as far as possible documented, accountsof the family and itsmembers. MadeleineJurgens,?Recherches sur Louis H?bert et sa famille,? SGCF M?moires, VIII (1957), 106?12, 135?45; XI (1960), 24?31. This is the general title of a series of three articles: the second (VIII (1957), 135?45) deals mainlywith NicolasH?bert; the third(XI (1960), 24?31) with Louis.
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