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  1. Granddaughter Françoise Hébert married Guillaume Fournier, which ended the surname Hébert descended from Louis. However, some descendants of Louis Hébert and Marie Rollet may also share the name Hébert through marriage of female descendants with other men named Hébert as there were several other male Hébert immigrants to New France or ...

  2. Jan 21, 2008 · His wife, Marie Rollet, was the first Frenchwoman to scratch the soil of New France. It is said that, thanks to his medical knowledge among other reasons, Hébert was on good terms with the native people. Take our survey. Louis Hébert, apothecary, colonist (born circa 1575 in Paris; died in January 1627 in Québec). ...

  3. HÉBERT, LOUIS, apothecary, colonist, and king’s attorney; b. 1575 in Paris, son of Nicolas Hébert and Jacqueline Pajot, widow of a previous marriage and later widow of Louis de Cueilly; m. 19 Feb. 1601 Marie Rollet (who signed Rolet ), widow of François Dufeu, in the parish of Saint-Sulpice in Paris, and they had three children; d. 25 Jan ...

  4. Wikimedia Commons-of Nicolas Hébert’s marriage with Jacqueline Christophe Finot Pajot, who orphaned him in 1580. After studying for five years, he became an apothecary, like his father, and practiced his craft in Paris, where he married Marie Rollet (1580-1649) in 1601.

  5. Mar 7, 2017 · The English translation provided by Gail says that Luis Hebert and Marie Rollet married 18 February 1601. It also states that Marie was the widow of the merchant Francois Dufeu. This is exciting for those descending from Louis and Marie, of which I am one.

    • Candice Mcdonald
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  7. Louis was born abt 1575 to Nicolas Hébert and Jacqueline Pajot. His mother was on marriage two, having been widowed by Louis de Cueilly. This is where the affluence came from, as the homes managed by Nicolas actually came from his wife’s first husband’s first marriage.

  8. A few months later, his wife joined him at Port Royal and became one of the first French women to come to New France. The colony at Port Royal seemed to be taking root, but in 1613 it was destroyed by the English coming up from Virginia.

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