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Paul Octave Hebert
15th Governor of Louisiana
Brigadier General (C. S. A.)

Preceded by Joseph M. Walker
Governor by Election
Served from January 22,1853
Served to January 30, 1856
Left Office by Term ended
Succeeded by Robert C. Wickliffe
 
Military Rank
Date
Brigadier General (C. S. A.)
August 1861
 
Born
Location
December 12, 1818
Iberville Parish
Died
Location
August 29, 1880
New Orleans
Age 61
Cause Cancer
Party Democratic
 
Education Jefferson College
Education U. S. Military Academy - 1840
1st of 42
Profession Engineer / Planter
 
Spouse Marie Coralie Vaughn
Children 4
Burial St. Raphael Cemetery
 
Spouse Penelope Lynch Andrews
Children 4
 
Plantation Acadia in Bayou Goula
Religion Catholic
Burial St. Paul Cemetery
Reintered St. Raphael Cemetery

1853 -1856

Paul Octave Hebert was the 15th governor of Louisiana.

He was born on November 12, 1818 in Iberville Parish at Bayou Goula and died from cancer on August 29, 1880 in New Orleans after returning from Allegany Springs, Va. 

Interment was at St. Paul Catholic Cemetery in Bayou Goula, La, which was eventually lost to the Mississippi River.  Reinterment was at St. Raphael Cemetery in Point Pleasant, located just upriver from Bayou Goula. 

Point Pleasant was the site of the Iberville Parish seat for a while.  It was moved to Plaquemine.

Paul Hebert graduated first out of forty-four in the U. S. Military Academy class of 1840.  Others in the class were William T. Sherman and Hancock.  He remained at West Point as Assistant Professor of Engineering before being appointed Chief Engineer for Louisiana by Gov. Mouton.

He then served in the Mexican War in the battles of Contreras, Molino de Ray and Chapultepee and the assault on Mexico City.  He was brevetted Colonel on September 8, 1847.

In 1851 he was appointed one of the Commissioners to World's Fair in France.  In 1852 he served on a convention for a new state constitution.  He was elected Governor in 1852 but was so ill with typhoid fever that Chief Justice Hyams came to Hebert's home in Bayou Goula to administer the oath of office.

He appointed Gen. W. T. Sherman as President of the Louisiana Military Academy at Alexander.

Gov. Hebert served during the worst epidemic of yellow fever to ever attack Louisiana.

During Gov. Hebert's term, Jefferson Davis was Secretary of War in the administration of President Pierce.  In early 1861, Jefferson Davis appointed Ex-Gov. Hebert one of five Brigadier Generals of the Provisional Army and all were later appointed the same in the Confederate Army.

Although anti-Grant after the war, Grant in 1873 appointed Hebert one of the Commissioners of Engineers for the Mississippi levee.

Paul Hebert was first married to Marie Coralie Vaughn, daughter of Thomas Vaughn, owner of the plantation and home called White Castle.  She died in 1847.  Her grave is pictured below.

Hebert's second wife, Penelope Lynch Andrews, is the granddaughter of Christopher Adams and Susan Johnson.  After moving to Louisiana, Christopher bought considerable land along the Mississippi River that became known as Bellegrove.  His son-in-law, John Andrews had the home built which was known as Belle Grove Plantation located just outside of White Castle, La.  The home was completed in 1857.

Paul Hebert is the brother-in-law of Gen. James Patrick Major, who is buried in Ascension Catholic Cemetery in Donaldsonville.  They married two of the Andrews' sisters.


Paul O. Hebert was a Confederate brigadier general during the war.

EX
GOV
P. O. Hebert
DIED
AUG 29, 1880

 

Governor Hebert's first wife is buried nearby.  The large stone in the foreground is that of  Marie Coralie Vaughn Hebert.  She preceded him in death by 33 years.

In the background, behind the tree, is the Governor Hebert memorial.

Marie Coralie Hebert
Born   24 July 1829
Died  21 May 1847

 

 

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La-Cemeteries©
Copyright © 2007-2012
All Rights Reserved.