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Jeanette Forchet, or Fourchet (also referred to as Flore, Jeannette Flore, and Susan Jeannette) [1] was one of few free African-Americans in St. Louis, Missouri in the 1700s. [2] A 1796 census only listed forty-one free blacks living in St. Louis other than Forchet. [3] Forchet was born around 1736, most likely in Illinois country. [2] She ended up as a slave at a French outpost in Cahokia, Illinois. In 1763, the Catholic priest there felt his output falling into Protestant hands and freed all of his slaves. With nowhere to go, many of the slaves wandered around the area and eventually settled in newly founded St. Louis. Forchet was one of these freed slaves. [4]
Pierre Laclede gave her a town lot in St. Louis, Missouri in 1765. [2] This made her one of the first lot owners in St. Louis and matriarch of one of the most prominent African-America families in the city. [4] On her lot, Forchet built a twenty-five by twenty foot house, where she raised her family. The house was on Rue de L'eglise, later known as Second Street. Jeanette was married to Gregory, a free blacksmith, who died in 1770. After his death, Jeannette was left with a farm plot, two sons, and two daughters. The family supported themselves by growing corn and raising livestock, including cows, pigs, and chickens. [2] Forchet also had a home laundry business to supplement their income. [4]
In 1773, Forchet married Pierre Ignac, a free black gunsmith who was known as Valentin. [2] The two signed a prenuptial agreement, as was customary at the time and in keeping with French custom. [4] Forchet prepared an inventory of all of her property, which included real estate, animals, household goods, and two copper candlesticks. Her property totaled 1,349 livres and her husbands totaled 1,220 livres. The family grew crops on their farm, including wheat, tobacco, and corn. Valentin worked as a trapper, gunsmith, and helped with the farming. In 1788, Spanish authorities gave Valentin permission to hunt in the territory of the Grand Osage Indians southwest of St. Louis. Valentin did not return from his trip, having died in 1789. Jeanette did not learn of his death until 1790. She was a widow a second time, at age fifty-four. During their marriage, the couple increased the value of their assets to 3,763 livres. Jeanette and Valentin had no children together. [2]
Jeanette died in 1803. After her death, her descendants subdivided her land among themselves and it was later sold to developers. [2] This would have amounted to eight arpents of land, according to a 1793 survey. [1] Forchet was survived by a daughter, Susanne; a son, Augustin; and a grandson, Jean Baptiste Marly. [4] Two of Jeanette's children died before she did, including the mother of Jean Baptiste. [5] Augustin died not longer after his mother. Jean Baptiste never married and dabbled in real estate. Susanne later married a well to do Frenchman named Jean Baptist Irbour. They had a daughter, Julie. [4] In 1850, Julie, married Antoine Labbadie, who was considered one of St. Louis's wealthiest black men. [2] Their family became one of the city's largest and most prominent black families. [4]
Forchet was one of a small number of free blacks in colonial St. Louis. She retained her personal freedom and had many rights that were denied to slaves. [2] Under French and Spanish law, she could own property, marry, and enter into contracts. [1] However, she still had to obey social and legal restrictions in place at the time. She had to have permission to leave St. Louis and she never earned the title of Veuve Forchet, an honorific title for widows in colonial St. Louis. [2]
Jean Baptiste Point du Sable is regarded as the first permanent non-Native settler of what would later become Chicago, Illinois, and is recognized as the city's founder. The site where he settled near the mouth of the Chicago River around the 1780s is memorialized as a National Historic Landmark, now located in Pioneer Court.
The history of Missouri begins with settlement of the region by indigenous people during the Paleo-Indian period beginning in about 12,000 BC. Subsequent periods of native life emerged until the 17th century. New France set up small settlements, and in 1803, Napoleonic France sold the area to the U.S. as part of the Louisiana Purchase. Statehood for Missouri came following the Missouri Compromise in 1820 that allowed slavery. Settlement was rapid after 1820, aided by a network of rivers navigable by steamboats, centered in the City of St. Louis. It attracted European immigrants, especially Germans; the business community had a large Yankee element as well. The Civil War saw numerous small battles and control by the Union. After the war, its economy diversified, and railroads centered in Kansas City, opened up new farmlands in the west.
Lucy Delaney was an African American seamstress, slave narrator, and community leader. She was born into slavery and was primarily held by the Major Taylor Berry and Judge Robert Wash families. As a teenager, she was the subject of a freedom lawsuit, because her mother lived in Illinois, a free state, longer than 90 days. According to Illinois state law, enslaved people that reside in Illinois for more than 90 days should be indentured and freed. The country's rule of partus sequitur ventrem asserts that if the mother was free at the child's birth, the child should be free. After Delaney's mother, Polly Berry, filed a lawsuit for herself, she filed a lawsuit on her daughter's behalf in 1842. Delaney was held in jail for 17 months while awaiting the trial.
Polly Berry was an African American woman notable for winning two freedom suits in St. Louis, one for herself, which she won in 1843, and one for her daughter Lucy, which she won in 1844. Having acquired the surnames of her slaveholders, she was also known as Polly Crockett and Polly Wash, the latter of which was the name used in her freedom suit.
Joseph Robidoux IV (1783–1868), was an American fur trader credited as the founder of St. Joseph, Missouri, which developed around his Blacksnake Hills Trading Post. His buildings in St. Joseph, known as Robidoux Row, are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Of French Canadian descent, he was born in St. Louis, as were his mother and most of his brothers, when it was a predominately French-speaking colonial town.
René-Auguste Chouteau Jr., also known as Auguste Chouteau, was the founder of St. Louis, Missouri, a successful fur trader and a politician. He and his partner had a monopoly for many years of fur trade with the large Osage tribe on the Missouri River. He had numerous business interests in St. Louis and was well-connected with the various rulers: French, Spanish, and American.
Plaçage was a recognized extralegal system in French and Spanish slave colonies of North America by which ethnic European men entered into civil unions with non-Europeans of African, Native American and mixed-race descent. The term comes from the French placer meaning "to place with". The women were not legally recognized as wives but were known as placées; their relationships were recognized among the free people of color as mariages de la main gauche or left-handed marriages. They became institutionalized with contracts or negotiations that settled property on the woman and her children and, in some cases, gave them freedom if they were enslaved. The system flourished throughout the French and Spanish colonial periods, reaching its zenith during the latter, between 1769 and 1803.
Henriette Díaz DeLille, SSF was a Louisiana Creole of color and Catholic religious sister from New Orleans. She founded the Sisters of the Holy Family in 1836 and served as their first Mother Superior. The sisters are the second-oldest surviving congregation of African-American religious.
Jean-Baptiste du Casse was a French naval officer, privateer, slave trader and colonial administrator who served as the first governor of Saint-Domingue from 1691 to 1700. Born on 2 August 1646 in Saubusse, France to a Huguenot family, du Casse enlisted in the French merchant navy before joining the French East India Company and the Compagnie du Sénégal. He subsequently enlisted in the French Navy and took part in several victorious expeditions during the Nine Years' War in the West Indies and South America.
Jean-Pierre Chouteau was a French Creole fur trader, merchant, politician, and slaveholder. An early settler of St. Louis from New Orleans, he became one of its most prominent citizens. He and his family were prominent in establishing the fur trade in the city, which became the early source of its wealth.
Adrienne Du Vivier was a French pioneer and one of the first white women to settle in the colony of Montreal, Quebec, Canada. She and her husband are often referred to as "Montreal's First Citizens."
St. Augustine Catholic Church and Cemetery, or the Isle Brevelle Church, is a historic Catholic parish property founded in 1829 near Melrose, Natchitoches Parish, Louisiana. It is the cultural center of the Cane River area's historic French, Spanish, Native American and Black Creole community. It is also the oldest surviving Black Catholic church in the United States.
Fort St. Jean Baptiste State Historic Site in Natchitoches, Louisiana, US, is a replica of an early French fort based upon the original 1716 blueprints by Sieur Du Tisné with the improvements made in 1731 by Boutin. The French called the original fort: Fort Saint Jean Baptiste des Natchitoches. In the 1970's, the State of Louisiana anglicized the name to Fort Saint Jean Baptiste.
Marguerite Scypion, also known in court files as Marguerite, was an African-Natchez woman, born into slavery in St. Louis, then located in French Upper Louisiana. She was held first by Joseph Tayon and later by Jean Pierre Chouteau, one of the most powerful men in the city.
Freedom suits were lawsuits in the Thirteen Colonies and the United States filed by slaves against slaveholders to assert claims to freedom, often based on descent from a free maternal ancestor, or time held as a resident in a free state or territory.
The Colonial history of Missouri covers the French and Spanish exploration and colonization: 1673–1803, and ends with the American takeover through the Louisiana Purchase
Judith Philip was a free, Afro-Grenadian business woman who amassed one of the largest estates in Grenada. By the time Britain emancipated slaves in the West Indies she owned 275 slaves and was compensated 6,603 pounds sterling, one of the largest settlements in the colony.
Robert Wash served on the Supreme Court of Missouri from September 1825 to May 1837. During his term, the pro-slavery judge, who owned slaves himself, wrote the dissenting opinion on several important freedom suits, including Milly v. Smith, Julia v. McKinney and Marguerite v. Chouteau. However, he did join in the unanimous finding for the plaintiff in the landmark Rachel v. Walker case.
Priscilla "Mother" Baltimore was an multiracial abolitionist and a social worker. She adopted orphaned children and assisted former slaves. She is also known as the founder of Brooklyn, Illinois.
Marie Baude (1703-?) was a Senegambian woman who was married to convicted murderer, Jean Pinet. Despite a lack of significant evidence regarding her life, Baude's narrative embodies the intricate dynamics of the transatlantic slave trade era, from her ascent as a signare, wielding influence amid the trade, to the events surrounding her husband's trial and deportation.