Ignace François Broutin

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A postcard of the ruins of Fort Rosalie, 1907

Ignace François Broutin (La Bassée, 1690[1]–1751) was a French military officer, commander of Fort Rosalie among the Natchez people, and later an architect in colonial Louisiana. He is chiefly remembered for designing the Ursuline Convent in New Orleans.

A native of La Bassée in northern France, Broutin arrived in Louisiana in 1720 and married Madeleine la Maire (likely a cousin - his mother's maiden name was la Mairée), widow of Pierre Philippe de Marigny and mother of Antoine Philippe de Marigny. In 1748 his daughter married Louis Xavier Martin de Lino de Chalmette, whose Chalmette Plantation became the site of the 1815 Battle of New Orleans and the source of the name of the seat of St. Bernard Parish: Chalmette.[2]

He is said to have died in New Orleans, on August 9, 1751; but the whereabouts of his remains are unknown.[3]

References

  1. Regio Basiliensis - Volumes 18 à 20 - Page 68 Geographisch-Ethnologische Gesellschaft Basel - 1977 "... der Witwe Marie-Madelaine Le-Maire verehelichte, belegen, dass dieser, ein Sohn von Pierre Broutin und Michèle la Mairée, um 1690/91 in la Bassée, einem Flecken bei der heutigen Stadt Lille in Nordfrankreich zur Welt gekommen war.
  2. Stanley Clisby Arthur, George Campbell Huchet De Kernion Old Families of Louisiana Page 322 1998 "He married, in New Orleans, Madeline Marguerite Broutin, daughter of Ignace François Broutin, royal engineer in the colony and commandant of the Natchez Post, and Madeline le Maire."
  3. Ignace Broutin on Find a Grave

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