Celeste Colette Hébert

Female 1778 - 1827  (48 years)


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Generation: 1

  1. 1.  Celeste Colette Hébert was born 13 Aug 1778, Iberville Parish, Louisiana, United States; was christened 16 Oct 1779, St Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States (daughter of Francois Hébert and Marie Josephe LeBlanc); died 21 Feb 1827, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States; was buried 22 Feb 1827, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States.

    Celeste married Joseph Alexandre Landry 1 Feb 1796, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States. Joseph (son of Etienne Landry and Marie-Josèphe Landry) was born 21 Dec 1775, Donaldsonville, Ascension, Louisiana, United States; was christened 25 Dec 1775, Donaldsonville, Ascension, Louisiana, United States; died Before 29 January 1846, Louisiana, United States. [Group Sheet]

    Children:
    1. Simon Landry was born 9 Feb 1805, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States; was christened 9 Feb 1805, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States; died 5 Apr 1832, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States; was buried 6 Apr 1832, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States.

Generation: 2

  1. 2.  Francois Hébert was born 10 Jun 1738, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 10 Jun 1738, St Charles, Mines, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of François Paul Hébert and Marie Josephe Melanson); died 9 Jun 1801, St Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; was buried , Cemetery of Our Lady of Sorrows Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, USA.

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/73585179/francois-hebert

    Family Group Sheet for Francois Hebert
    Husband: Francois Hebert
    Birth: 10 Jun 1738 in Grand Pre, Acadie, Nova Scotia
    Death: Jun 1801 in Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
    Burial: 10 Jun 1801 in St. Joseph Church, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
    USA

    Marriage: Abt. 1760 in Maryland, USA
    Christening: 10 Jun 1738 in St. Charles aux Mines Church, Grand Pre, Acadie, Nova Scotia
    Father:Francois Paul Hebert
    Mother:Marie Josephe Melancon
    Wife: Marie Josephe LeBlanc
    Birth: 12 Jan 1742 in Grand Pre, Acadie, Nova Scotia
    Death: 16 Mar 1806 in West Baton Rouge, Louisiana. USA
    Burial: 17 Mar 1806 in St. Joseph Church, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana,USA
    Christening: 12 Jan 1742 in St. Charles aux Mines Church, Grand Pre, Acadie, Nova Scotia
    Father:
    Mother:
    Children:

    Notes
    Francois Hebert
    Title: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records
    Author: Catholic Church
    Page: Vol 1-A pg 93
    Note: Francois Hebert (s/o.Francois & Marie Joseph Melancon) bn. 10 Jun 1738, bt 10 un 1738
    spo. Jacque Hebert and Cécile Melancon (SGA-2, 171)
    Title: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records
    Author: Catholic Church
    Page: Vol 2 pg 359
    Note: HEBERT, Francisco, age 56 yeaers, of this colony, bur 10 Jun 1801 (St. Joseph Ch.-vol. 4, pg.23)
    East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
    Marie Josephe LeBlanc
    Title: Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records
    Author: Catholic Church
    Page: Vol 1-A pg 145
    Note: The Book, Diocese of Baton Rouge Catholic Church Records, Acadian Records, 1707-1748, Vol 1- A
    which contains records abstracted from Acadian Records brought with Acadian Settlers to S t Gabriel
    Parish, Louisiana when they arrived from Acadie and France. Although they are in currently in deteriorating
    conditon, thanks to years of work by dedicated Volunteers, they are here saved for our day!
    Marie Joseph Leblanc (d/o.Michel Leblanc and Marie Joseph Trahan) bn. 12 Jan 1742 Bt. 12 Jan 174 2
    spo. Joseph Melanson & Henriete Dupuis (SGA-3, 13a)

    Francois married Marie Josephe LeBlanc Marie (daughter of François LeBlanc and Marie Josephe Labauve) was born 16 Oct 1730, Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia; was christened 28 Oct 1730, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia; died 17 Mar 1806, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States. [Group Sheet]


  2. 3.  Marie Josephe LeBlanc was born 16 Oct 1730, Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia; was christened 28 Oct 1730, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia (daughter of François LeBlanc and Marie Josephe Labauve); died 17 Mar 1806, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States.
    Children:
    1. Charles Hébert was born 1762, St Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; died 9 Feb 1838, Brusly, West Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States.
    2. 1. Celeste Colette Hébert was born 13 Aug 1778, Iberville Parish, Louisiana, United States; was christened 16 Oct 1779, St Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; died 21 Feb 1827, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States; was buried 22 Feb 1827, Plattenville, Assumption, Louisiana, United States.


Generation: 3

  1. 4.  François Paul Hébert was born 2 Apr 1710, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was christened 2 Apr 1710, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France (son of Jacques Hébert and Marie Marguerite Landry); died 28 Mar 1789, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; was buried 28 Mar 1789, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States.

    François married Marie Josephe Melanson Marie (daughter of Jean Dominique Melanson and Marguerite Dugas) was born 8 Jan 1713, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 8 Jan 1713, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died Before 27 July 1767, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, United States. [Group Sheet]


  2. 5.  Marie Josephe Melanson was born 8 Jan 1713, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 8 Jan 1713, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France (daughter of Jean Dominique Melanson and Marguerite Dugas); died Before 27 July 1767, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, United States.
    Children:
    1. Amand Thomas Hébert was born 5 Apr 1740, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 6 Apr 1740, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died Deceased; was buried 20 Dec 1784, aint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States.
    2. 2. Francois Hébert was born 10 Jun 1738, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 10 Jun 1738, St Charles, Mines, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 9 Jun 1801, St Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; was buried , Cemetery of Our Lady of Sorrows Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, USA.

  3. 6.  François LeBlanc was born About 1698, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France (son of Andre LeBlanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas); died Deceased.

    François married Marie Josephe Labauve Marie was born 1706, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1706, Canada; died 11 Apr 1781. [Group Sheet]


  4. 7.  Marie Josephe Labauve was born 1706, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1706, Canada; died 11 Apr 1781.
    Children:
    1. 3. Marie Josephe LeBlanc was born 16 Oct 1730, Grand-Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia; was christened 28 Oct 1730, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia; died 17 Mar 1806, Baton Rouge, East Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States.


Generation: 4

  1. 8.  Jacques Hébert was born 1684, Saint-Jean-Baptiste de Port-Royal, Annapolis Royal, Annapolis, Nouvelle-Écosse, Canada (son of Emmanuel Hébert and Andrée Brun); died 31 Dec 1747, Grand-Pré, Acadie, Nouvelle-France; was buried 1 Jan 1748, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand-Pré, Acadie, Nouvelle-France.

    Jacques married Marie Marguerite Landry Marie (daughter of Antoine Landry and Marie Elizabeth Thibodeau) was born 4 Sep 1682, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 25 Jun 1684, Roman Catholic Church, Beaubassin, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 27 Apr 1734, Cobequid, New Brunswick, Canada; was buried 1734, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  2. 9.  Marie Marguerite Landry was born 4 Sep 1682, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 25 Jun 1684, Roman Catholic Church, Beaubassin, Nova Scotia, Canada (daughter of Antoine Landry and Marie Elizabeth Thibodeau); died 27 Apr 1734, Cobequid, New Brunswick, Canada; was buried 1734, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    Children:
    1. Marie Osite Hebert was born About 1730, Acadia, New France; was christened 21 Apr 1734, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 31 Aug 1805, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States; was buried 1 Sep 1805, Saint James Cemetery, Saint James, St. James, Louisiana, United States.
    2. Catherine Hébert was born About 1728, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 12 Sep 1803, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; was buried 13 Sep 1803, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States.
    3. 4. François Paul Hébert was born 2 Apr 1710, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; was christened 2 Apr 1710, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand Pré, Acadia, New France; died 28 Mar 1789, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States; was buried 28 Mar 1789, Saint Gabriel, Iberville, Louisiana, United States.
    4. Charles Hébert was born 3 Nov 1708, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 3 Nov 1708, Saint-Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died 2 Jan 1770, Laprairie, Quebec, Canada.

  3. 10.  Jean Dominique Melanson was born 1681, Nova Scotia, Canada (son of Pierre Melanson and Marie Marguerite Anne Mius D'Entremont); died 23 Nov 1760, France.

    Notes:

    https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/207614507/jean-dominique-melanson

    Jean married Marguerite Dugas Marguerite (daughter of Claude Dugas and Françoise Bourgeois) was born 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; was christened 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; died Before 28 February 1729, Acadia, New France. [Group Sheet]


  4. 11.  Marguerite Dugas was born 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France; was christened 19 Mar 1681, Beaubassin, Acadia, New France (daughter of Claude Dugas and Françoise Bourgeois); died Before 28 February 1729, Acadia, New France.
    Children:
    1. Alexander Miguoin Melanson was born 1716, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 1769, Snowhill, Worcester, Maryland, United States; was buried 1769, Snow Hill, Wocester, Maryland, United States.
    2. Pierre B Melanson was born 4 Sep 1710, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 4 Sep 1710, Saint Charles des Mines, Gand Pre, Acadia, New France; died 1759, Donaldsonville, Ascension, Louisiana, United States.
    3. 5. Marie Josephe Melanson was born 8 Jan 1713, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; was christened 8 Jan 1713, Saint Charles des Mines, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died Before 27 July 1767, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, United States.
    4. Marguerite Josephe Melanson was born 6 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 16 Nov 1718, Grand Pre, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 29 Mar 1772, Morlaix, Finistère, Bretagne, France.
    5. Jean-Baptiste Melanson, I was born 28 Feb 1706, Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada; was christened 1706, Grand Pre Nova Scotia; died 7 Jul 1763, Snow Hill, Worcester, Maryland, British Colonial America; was buried , Maryland, British Colonial America.

  5. 12.  Andre LeBlanc was born 1659, Port Royale, l'Acadie (son of Daniel LeBlanc and Marie Francoise Gaudet); died 4 May 1743, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, Nouvelle Ecosse, Canada.

    Notes:

    In 1659, André, son of Daniel Leblanc and Françoise-Marie Gaudet, was born in Port-Royal.

    In 1672, after decades of living under the seigneural system with its feudal control over them, the Acadians and began to look elsewhere for new areas to settle. Port-Royal?s resident surgeon, Jacques Bourgeois, with a few others, sailed north to explore the inlets and estuaries along the neck of land connecting peninsular Nova Scotia to the mainland, known as the Isthmus of Chignecto.

    The western part of the isthmus is an expanse of open wetlands, sparsely treed, much of it close to sea-level. Ordinarily unusable as farmland because of the high salt content impregnating the intertidal soil, the Acadians had a unique skill learned in similar coastal areas of France, that allowed them to forgo the strenuous work of clearing thick forest and instead, farm the treeless soil below the high-tide line using an ingenious device called an aboiteau (plural: aboiteaux): a dike (Fr: levée), holding the sea at bay while successive rains gradually flushed salt out of the alluvial soil into sluices with clever built-in valves called clapets that opened and closed with the tides; the falling sea at ebb tide releasing pressure on the sea-side of the wooden valves, allowing the weight of the accumulated runoff to push open the clapets and drain away, and the returning flood tide pushing the clapets shut, preventing the rising sea from back flowing into the sluices. After two or three years, the saline content of the otherwise fertile soil was low enough that the land became arable, and bountiful; supporting huge harvests.

    A short distance up one of the rivers Jacques Bourgeois and his partners founded a farming settlement that they named Mésagouèche (the adjoining river thus became the Missaguash River). As more families from Port-Royal joined them they referred to it simply as: the Bourgeois Colony.

    In the late 1670s, the governor of New France, Louis de Buade Comte de Frontenac, anxious to reinforce France?s hold over Acadia, assigned administrative control of the troublesome colony to Michel Leneuf de la Vallière, and granted him a wide swath of the Isthme-de-Chignectou as a seigneury (fief). Leneuf founded a colony just across the Missaguash River from the Bourgeois Colony. He named his new colony Beaubassin (?Beautiful Basin?).

    Despite Governor Frontenac?s intention that the Bourgeois Colony remain independent of Michel Leneuf?s seigneury, their close proximity to each other inevitably melded them together and the name Bourgeois Colony disappeared; the entire area afterwards referred to as Beaubassin.

    Soon afterwards, Pierre Melanson dit la Verdure and Marie-Marguerite Mius d?Entremont led a few other Port-Royal families on a colonizing expedition north to a large sheltered bay they named Bassin-de-Minas (Minas Basin) where they established the colony Grand-Pré (?Great Meadow?); the area as a whole sometimes referred to as, Les Minas.

    Over the next ten years, more families arrived in Les Minas and the available farmland around Grand-Pré was used up. Newcomers spread eastward along the banks of a deep estuary and its tributaries (present-day Avon River); an area they named Pisiguit.

    In 1683, André Leblanc married Marie-Jeanne Dugas, daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marguerite-Louise Doucet, in Port-Royal.

    In 1684, Jean, son of André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas, was born in Port-Royal.

    In 1686, André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas move their family to Grand-Pré.

    In 1689, the settlement of Cobequid was established at the eastern end of Bassin-de-Minas.

    In the spring of 1690, New England militia led by Sir William Phips landed at Port-Royal. With its unfinished stockade and eighteen cannons out of firing position, Governor Meneval saw no point in resistance and surrendered the fort. The Acadians were allowed to stay, but were asked to swear allegiance to King William, an oath they feared would obligate them to fight against France and their native allies. Phips? troops sacked the fort and the nearby farms but did not consolidate their victory by providing an occupation force, instead withdrawing to Boston with Port-Royal?s seventy-man garrison and Governor Meneval as prisoners, leaving the leadership of Port-Royal in the hands of a council of locals that included Daniel Leblanc.

    In the 1693 census of Grand-Pré, André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas own 8 horned cattle, 3 sheep, 5 pigs, almost 8 acres of cultivated land and 1 gun.

    About 1696, Daniel Leblanc, patriarch of the Leblanc surname in Acadia, died. By the year of Daniel?s death, most of his family had left the volatile Port-Royal basin and moved north to Grand-Pré. Only Pierre remained near Port-Royal, having inherited his father?s land.

    In 1696, New England militia led by Benjamin Church attacked Beaubassin, burning buildings, slaughtering livestock and killing some of its inhabitants, but most fled inland and hid-out. The following year the Treaty of Ryswick ended King William?s War and restored Acadia to France.

    In the 1701 census of Grand-Pré, André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas have 5 sons, 2 daughters, 8 horned cattle, 5 sheep, 8 pigs, 3 acres of land (currently under cultivation) and 1 gun.

    In 1704, Jean Leblanc, son of André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas, married Jeanne Bourgeois, daughter of Guillaume Bourgeois and Marie-Anne d'Aprendestiguy de Martignon. Jeanne Bourgeois was also the great-granddaughter of Charles de Saint-Étienne de La Tour, the former governor of Acadia, who produced a daughter, Jeanne, with an Amerindian woman. Jeanne married into the d'Aprendestiguy de Martignon family, and her granddaughter was Jeanne Bourgeois.

    In June 1704, New England militia, again led by Benjamin Church attacked Acadia with a force of seven hundred Bostonians and Massachusetts natives. At Grand-Pré, Church's soldiers sacked the colony, killing livestock, burning houses, and breaking open the salt-marsh dikes which flooded the enclosed farmland with seawater, threatening to destroy the land?s usefulness for several years; but after Church?s men left the Acadians quickly repaired the dikes, saving the soil from complete salt saturation and allowing them to plant crops the following year. Leblancs living in Les Mines at the time included the families of Jean, André, and Jacques.

    Church then sailed to Port-Royal, but the fort repulsed all his probing attacks and ultimately he gave up, finding the French defenders too well-entrenched. After ravaging a few of the surrounding farms he left, turning north for Chignecto Bay and attacked Beaubassin.

    When the soldiers sailed away, they took forty-five prisoners with them to Boston, to exchange for New Englanders captured in a French attack earlier that year.

    In 1707, the Acts of Union united the crowns of England and Scotland into a single entity: Great Britain. The current monarch, Queen Anne, was now Queen of Great Britain and Ireland.

    In 1710, a fleet of English and New England ships commanded by General Francis Nicholson, sailed into Port-Royal basin with two thousand troops and laid siege to the fort. After a few days of bombardment Governor Subercase surrendered. The French troops were paroled back to France but the Acadian civilians were allowed to stay for two years. Port-Royal was renamed Annapolis Royal and given a small occupation force and a military commander.

    In 1713, the Treaty of Utrecht ended The War of Spanish Succession in Europe and its North American extension: Queen Anne?s War. France ceded Acadia and Newfoundland to England but retained the St. Lawrence valley and the islands of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, including Île Saint-Jean and Île Royale.

    As part of the treaty, France evacuated its colonists in Newfoundland to the fishing port of Havre à l'Anglois on Île Royale. The French authorities began building a fortress on the rocky headland above the harbour mouth: they named it Louisbourg. But when they tried to bring the Nova Scotia Acadians north and re-establish them on Île Royale, the Acadians were reluctant to leave their existing fertile lands around the Bay of Fundy for the hardship of starting over on a rocky island (reputed to be a poor place for pasturing animals and crop growth), with its very real threat of famine.

    About 1720, ships carrying three hundred farmers, fisherman, craftsmen and thirty soldiers, arrived in Louisbourg from France. Their job was to develop Île Saint-Jean as a new source of food. The expedition continued on to the island where some of the colonists chose a deep bay on the northern shore as a sheltered place to build a home port for their new cod fishery. They named it Havre Saint-Pierre (St. Peter?s Bay). The remaining colonists sailed around the island to the southern shore where they entered a large, crenelated bay and started clearing ground on the west side of the harbour entrance, for a new colony headquarters. They named it Port-la-Joie (Port la Joye).

    In 1730, François, grandson of André Leblanc and Marie-Jeanne Dugas, was born in Grand-Pré.

    In 1743, André Leblanc, son of Daniel Leblanc and Françoise-Marie Gaudet, died in Grand Pré.

    For more information on the life of André Leblanc's son Jean, see Jean Leblanc's Life Sketch, ID=LDSB-T2J


    Andre married Marie-Jeanne Dugas Abt. 1683. Marie-Jeanne (daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marie-Marguerite Doucet) was born Bet. 1665-1667, Peut-etre, Port Royale, l'Acadie; died 14 Jan 1734, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, Nouvelle Ecosse, Canada. [Group Sheet]


  6. 13.  Marie-Jeanne Dugas was born Bet. 1665-1667, Peut-etre, Port Royale, l'Acadie (daughter of Abraham Dugas and Marie-Marguerite Doucet); died 14 Jan 1734, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, Nouvelle Ecosse, Canada.
    Children:
    1. Jean LeBlanc was born 1687, Port Royale, l'Acadie; died 10 Jun 1747, Grande Pre, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Can.; was buried , Grand Pré, Kings, Nova Scotia, Canada.
    2. Pierre LeBlanc was born 1689, Les Mines, l'Acadie; died Aft. 1756.
    3. Anne LeBlanc was born 1692; died Deceased.
    4. Claude LeBlanc was born Abt. 1695; died 5 Oct 1765, Boulogne-sur-Mer (Saint-Nicolas), France.
    5. Jacques LeBlanc was born 1701, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, l'Acadie; died Abt. 1742, St. Charles-aux-Mines, Grande-Pre, l'Acadie.
    6. Claire LeBlanc was born 1710; died Bef. 1806.
    7. 6. François LeBlanc was born About 1698, Grand Pre, Acadia, New France; died Deceased.
    8. Marie LeBlanc was born About 1687, Grand-Pre, Acadia, Nova Scotia, Canada; died 16 Jan 1758, Quebec, Quebec, Canada; was buried 18 Jan 1758, Quebec, Quebec, Canada.