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==Sources==
==Sources==
*[http://www.sos.louisiana.gov/tabid/364/Default.aspx State of Louisiana - Biography] {{broken link|date=April 2015}}
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080221023709/http://www.sos.louisiana.gov/tabid/364/Default.aspx State of Louisiana - Biography]


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 04:43, 26 July 2017

Pierre Derbigny
6th Governor of Louisiana
In office
December 15, 1828 – October 6, 1829
Preceded byHenry S. Johnson
Succeeded byArmand Beauvais
Secretary of State of Louisiana
In office
1820–1828
Preceded byEtienne Mazureau
Succeeded byGeorge A. Waggaman
Personal details
BornJune 30, 1769
Laon, France
DiedOctober 6, 1829(1829-10-06) (aged 60)
Gretna, Louisiana
Political partyNational Republican, Whig
SpouseFelicité Odile de Hault de Lassus

Pierre Augustin Charles Bourguignon Derbigny (June 30, 1769 – October 6, 1829) was the sixth Governor of Louisiana. Born in 1769, at Laon, France, the eldest son of Augustin Bourguignon d'Herbigny who was President of the Directoire de l'Aisne and Mayor of Laon, and Louise Angélique Blondela.

Derbigny studied law at Ste. Genevieve but fled France in 1791 during the French Revolution. He arrived in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and married Felicité Odile de Hault de Lassus with whom he would have five daughters and two sons.

He arrived in New Orleans, then a Spanish colony, in 1797 and by 1803 had been appointed Secretary of the Legislative Council. After the United States' annexation of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, Derbigny was one of the representatives of the new Americans in Washington seeking self-government for the Orleans Territory. His oration of July 4, 1804, also urges for the reopening of the slave trade.

As the territory was integrated into the United States, Derbigny opposed British common law in Louisiana and defended the retention of civil law practices established during the French and Spanish colonial periods. Following the Governance Act of 1804 that set up Louisiana's territorial government, Derbigny, along with Jean Noel Destréhan and Pierre Sauve, delivered to Washington, D.C., the protest created by citizens speaking out against this Congressional Act. This complaint was entitled, "Remonstrance of the People of Louisiana against the Political System Adopted by Congress for Them," and was ultimately presented to President Thomas Jefferson by the three men from Louisiana.[1]

Pierre Derbigny also led a movement to establish the College of Orleans and served as Regent. In 1812, he was selected as Secretary of the Territorial Senate. He also served in Captain Chauveneau's Company of cavalry in the Louisiana Militia.

From 1814 to 1820, Derbigny served as a Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court. He was one of the principal drafters of the 1825 Civil Code of Louisiana, along with Edward Livingston, François Xavier Martin, and Louis Moreau-Lislet.

In 1820, Derbigny resigned from the Supreme Court of Louisiana to run unsuccessfully for Governor against J. N. Destréhan, Abner L. Duncan, and Thomas B. Robertson. Despite his loss to Robertson, Derbigny was appointed Secretary of State of Louisiana and served from 1821 to 1828.

In 1828, he ran for Governor again and this time defeated his former supporter Bernard de Marigny, Thomas Butler, and Congressman Philemon Thomas. The Louisiana State Legislature confirmed his election over the other three candidates. Derbigny was affiliated with the nascent National Republican Party, an anti-Jackson group.

In Derbigny's inauguration speech, he urged internal improvements, which the legislature supported, including: incorporation of a gas light company for New Orleans, several navigation companies for the Mississippi River and important bayous in the state, and the construction and repair of levees. On October 3, 1829, after ten months in office, Governor Derbigny was thrown from a (horse-drawn) carriage and died three days later, in Gretna, Louisiana. Pierre Derbigny was interred in Saint Louis Cemetery Number 1 in New Orleans.

Sources

References

  1. ^ Kastor, Peter J. (2004). The Nation's Crucible: The Louisiana Purchase and the Creation of America. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 57–59.


Legal offices
Preceded by
newly created position
Justice of the Louisiana Supreme Court
1813–1821
Chief Justice May 29, 1813 – 1821
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Louisiana Secretary of State
1821–1828
Succeeded by
Preceded by Governor of Louisiana
1828–1829
Succeeded by