Jacques Philippe Villeré (April 28, 1761 – March 7, 1830) was a Louisiana Creole politician who served as the second Governor of Louisiana after it became a state. He was the first native born Louisianian to govern the state.

Early life

Jacques Philippe Villeré was born on April 26, 1761, to Louise Marguerite de la Chaise and Joseph Antoine de Villeré on his maternal grandfather's plantation La Providence in present day Kenner in French Louisiana.

His father was an officer in the French Navy and later served as a militia captain in the German Coast area the Louisiana Colony. Here he met and later married Louise Marguerite de la Chaise, daughter of Jacques de la Chaise and granddaughter, on her mother's side, of Charles Frederick d’Arensbourg, the founder of the German Coast. A few years after 1763's cession of Louisiana to Spain, Joseph was sentenced to death by Governor Alejandro O'Reilly for participating in the Creole Revolt against the Spanish authority. He mysteriously died prior to the firing squad execution of the rebels, in October 1769.

After his father's death, Villeré was sent to France where he served as a page in the court of King Louis XVI. He spent several years being educated and was commissioned as an artillery officer in the French Army. He was deployed to Saint-Domingue with the rank of lieutenant but resigned his commission and returned to his family home in 1782 after receiving news of his mother's death.

In 1784, Villeré married Jeanne Henriette de Fazende, the daughter of Gabriel de Fazende, who owned a plantation below New Orleans in present-day Saint Bernard Parish. The couple raised eight children.

Career

Villeré and his family settled at his sugar plantation, Conseil, located in present day Meraux. He joined the Louisiana Militia as a Colonel and was later promoted to Major General and commanded the 1st Division of the militia during the Battle of New Orleans. His son Major René-Gabriell was tasked with guarding the home, but it was taken over by British forces who used it as a headquarters. René-Gabriell escaped captured and reported the news to General Andrew Jackson who ordered the night attack of December 23, 1814. Villeré and his division were assigned to the area near Lake Borgne and Bayou Dupre, as British forces approached New Orleans by sea.

Political career

Villeré began his career in politics when he joined the staff of Governor Pierre Clément Laussat after Louisiana was briefly returned to French rule in 1803. After the Louisiana Purchase he served as a member of the first state constitutional convention in 1811 and ran in the state's first gubernatorial election in 1812 but lost to William C. C. Clairborne. He ran again in the 1816 election against Virginian judge Joshua Lewis and won by a slim majority. Villeré was brought out of retirement to run again for governor in the 1824 election, but he and Bernard de Marigny split the Creole vote and Henry Johnson was elected governor.

He was preparing to run for Governor again in the 1830 special election; but he died March 7, 1830, before the election, at the plantation Conseil after a long illness. His remains were interred at St. Louis Cemetery No. 2, in New Orleans.

See also

  • Charles Jacques Villeré

References

  • Jacques Philippe Villeré Papers at The Historic New Orleans Collection