Photo courtest of the State Library of Louisiana
Jean-Noël Destréhan de Tours (1754 – October 4, 1823) was a
Creole politician in Louisiana and one-time owner of St. Charles
Parish's Destrehan Plantation, one of Louisiana's historic
antebellum landmarks. The community of Destrehan was named for his
family.
Destréhan was born in colonial New Orleans to Jean
Baptiste d'Estrehan and Jeanne Catherine de Gauvret (1729-1773) and
was educated in France. His father was the colonial treasurer for
France, and his brother-in-law was Etienne de Boré, who perfected
the sugar granulation process and served as New Orleans' first
mayor. Destréhan married Marie Claudine Eléonore Robin de Logny in
1786 and bought Destréhan Plantation in 1792.
After the
Louisiana Purchase, he served as Speaker of the territorial House of
Representatives from 1804 to 1806 before receiving an appointment
from President Thomas Jefferson to serve on the Orleans Territorial
Council. Destréhan served in this position during 1806 as president
of the council. President James Madison appointed him to a second
legislative council for Orleans Territory in 1811, where he served
again as president. The Orleans Territorial Council crafted a legal
system based on French and Spanish civil codes and established
Louisiana's parish system of governance.
Destréhan ran for
Governor in the first gubernatorial election since statehood, but he
placed a distant third behind William C. C. Claiborne and Jacques
Villeré. He was selected to serve in the United States Senate
instead, but he resigned within a month. He served in the Louisiana
State Senate from 1812 to 1817. He again ran for Governor in the
1820 election but placed fourth.
During the 1814-15 Battle of
New Orleans threat, Jean N. Destrehan served on the Committee of
Defense and three of his sons served in a cavalry unit.
He
continued planting, dying at his plantation on October 4, 1823.
Destréhan was buried at the St. Charles Borromeo Church cemetery in
Destrehan, Louisiana.
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