Wednesday, June 4, 2025

An Overview of Gilberto Guillemard and Morgan Edwards

 Don Sharp recently sat down for an interview sharing more details on the lives of Gilberto Guillemard and Morgan Edwards (Hewitt). With the upcoming celebration of the 250th anniversary of the American Revolution, he feels it is important to recognize these two men and their families.

He tells about Guillemard's work in designing and building the three most iconic buildings in Louisiana, how and why he moved to Pensacola, FL, who he married and his only son's accomplishments. Millions of tourists visit New Orleans each year and marvel at Guillemard's buildings: St. Louis Cathedral, the Cabildo, and the Presbytere. 

The story weaves in and out with yellow fever outbreaks and the volatile period of time after the Louisiana Purchase and its repercussions throughout Spanish West Florida. It involves the surveying and improvements of St. Michael's Cemetery in Pensacola, where Guillemard was most likely buried a few years after he completed the survey of the cemetery. 

Characters involved include Governor Claiborne of Louisiana, General Andrew Jackson, and a host of others from New Orleans. It is a story of government ineptitude, failed financing, and broken promises, plus a few personal victories and disappointments along the way. 

Click on the "Play Triangle" in the video below to watch his report.



The Boisdore Geneaology Chart
Click on the image to make it larger. 


Guillemard Moves To Pensacola

Guillemard was born in Longwy, France, on September 17, 1746. He died at Pensacola, FL, on November 29, 1808. He was most likely buried in St. Michael's Cemetery, the same cemetery that he had been hired to survey when he first arrived in Pensacola. 

It is believed that Vicente Sebastian Pintado, another surveyor and map maker, hired Guillemard to survey this cemetery and also put together what became known as the Pintado Plan, a street map of Pensacola. It helped locate public buildings and churches. 

In honor of Guillemard's work, Pintado named a central square in Pensacola the  Guillemard Square. There is also a Guillemard Street in the city. St. Michael's Cemetery is the oldest cemetery in Pensacola, and it is said to contain the bodies of many yellow fever victims. In all likelihood, Guillemard died of yellow fever himself even though his obituary does not mention it. 


St. Michaels Cemetery location, downtown Pensacola


Google Street View

Although he was well-known throughout New Orleans and the northshore, mainly for his surveying work and designing and building St. Louis Cathedral, he and his wife had to move to Pensacola to be with his son when the politicians of New Orleans failed to pay him what they owed him. He was very familiar with the Gulf Coast, having drawn a map of Pensacola back in 1787.

Although his grave is not marked, Don Sharp believes he is buried in the same area with his son Arnould and other members of the Boisdore family (his wife's family.) 

Sharp also spoke about the life of Morgan Edwards, a key figure in early Mandeville history. 




Links of Interest:



Thursday, April 17, 2025

The End of the American Revolution Was In Madisonville

 The last confrontation of the American Revolution was recorded in the Florida Parishes some 27 years after the end of military hostilities and the subsequent political resolution, according to research done by historian Don Sharp. The final resolution of the conflict actually came with the raising of the American Flag in Madisonville in 1811. 


Sharp feels that the upcoming celebration of the 250th anniversary of American independence is a great time to focus on the part played by pioneer residents of St. Tammany and Tangipahoa Parish residents. 


The Florida Parishes, which are now considered by historians as the "14th colony," were actually the last to throw off foreign rule, made possible by the establishment of the Independent Republic of West Florida. The lingering animosity between new Americans there and the residents who had been loyal to Britain was still festering, however, and fighting was still going on in many areas in the Northshore. To calm things down, they were then quickly annexed into the United States. 



When America concluded the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 and the Florida parishes became surrounded by American territory, the last vestiges of fighting between patriots and the British loyalists had to be quelled by American intervention. 

Sharp lays the groundwork for the events leading up to the West Florida Republic representing the end of the American Revolution by listing the people who played an important part in the drama. Those people had lived through four different nations laying claim to the same area: from the French, the British, the Spanish and finally the Americans. 


This map shows the British and Spanish Colonies in the period 1763-1775, just before the American Revolution. Click on the image to make it larger. 


A close up look at what would become St. Tammany Parish

As a result, Sharp feels The Revolutionary War actually ended when the United States took over the Republic of West Florida.

It all started with the French period, when Bienville came in 1699. Bienville left in 1732, and Pierre Rigaud Cavagnial de Vaudreuil was appointed Governor of Louisiana. The Vaudreuil family was from Canada, and was well known in government circles there. Many Canadians settled in what would become St. Tammany Parish, around Lacombe. 

Vaudreuil bought a plantation in New Orleans which later became Audubon Park, and he (as governor) also gave himself a 4800 acre land grant on the north shore of Lake Pontchartrain  between Lacombe and Mandeville. Later land grant records showed the parcel owned by Jean Pierre Cousin (and later Francois Cousin) and this was where Vaudreuil's property was originally situated.) Vaudreuil started an indigo plantation on the property, according to records researched by Sharp.

The property included the location where inventor James Rumsey would, in 1774, develop a steam-engine powered water craft that would eventually revolutionize boat transportation.

Vaudreiul's wife Charlotte had a relative who lived in Montreal, Canada, and she was married to a gentleman by the name of Jacques Hertel de Rouville. Rouville eventually became owner of this land grant, and he left his mark on the Lacombe area with a Bayou named after him as well as a street still in use today. It was Rouville who sold part of the property in the early 1770's to Rumsey for his use as a hideaway for developing his steamboat. 

At that point in history, political anguish was mounting both in Canada and the 13 colonies on the Eastern seaboard, and Britain starting aggravating people with more and more restrictive mandates. Rouville left Lacombe to return to Canada to fight the political harassment against his family, and he turned over the Lacombe land grant to his wife. 

When the American Revolution broke out, Rumsey's work was in danger of falling into enemy's hands, so he moved to Baltimore, Maryland, and continued to work in secret on his boat design. His day job was serving as Chief Engineer to General George Washington. 

While the fighting in the 13 colonies may have ended militarily in 1781, for years after that emotions still ran high among those loyal to Britain during the war and the newly-minted American patriots. Bloody encounters continued to take lives among the inhabitants of the 13 colonies.

Sharp found that after the war ended in the 13 colonies, many of those who had been loyal to Britain left the eastern seaboard and came to settle in the Florida Parishes where Spain was still in charge, and they thought it would be more peaceful. Unfortunately, there were still hard feelings between them and those who had been cheering on the Americans. The hostility kept increasing between the two vengeance-minded groups. 

So the years wore on, and while many were trying to forget the anguish of the war, others were finding it hard to forgive the atrocities that had occurred during the conflict. So even after Britain surrendered, many still remembered what horrors had been done in Georgia where they were from. When a number of British loyalists also fled the 13 colonies and came to the Florida Parishes, tempers of the locals flared and fighting broke out. 

During the eastern seaboard war years earlier, one British commander had captured a number of revolutionaries in Georgia, burned their homes, killed their cattle, and hung them all, even a 13-year-old boy whose mother had pleaded for his life. That sort of thing was hard to forgive and forget. The residents of the Florida Parishes were surprised to find out that the very same British commander responsible for that now lived in the Bedico area. They found him, killed him, killed his cattle, and burned his crops. It was a time of great upheaval.

All this post-war fighting and discord resulted in efforts to create the Republic of West Florida, a free and independent country, Sharp stated. The republic didn't last long, since the United States "annexed" it within months.

The "annexation" was prompted by a need to help the Florida Parishes inhabitants cool off and work together, according to information found by Sharp. The American commandant in Baton Rouge John Shaw was becoming convinced he had to do something. Shaw's letters during this time period mentioned his concerns with the increasingly violent situation.  He and his troops entered the area, confronted those still fighting the revolutionary war and told them the war had been over for years. "We are all Americans now," he said. 

So when the American Revolution came to an end, it actually ended in three different stages: (1) with the cessation of military actions in 1781, (2) with the political paperwork signed by all parties in 1783, and (3) with the population all realizing that they were no longer French, Spanish or English. They were now indeed all Americans. And that realization fully occurred when the new United States took over the Republic of West Florida in 1811 and declared all its inhabitants "Americans." 

Raising the American flag in Madisonville on January 6, 1811, was a fitting symbol of that new status for all those who lived there. It didn't solve all their problems; there were still people who wanted to continue being the free and independent Republic of West Florida. But the die had been cast and the Florida Parishes became part of the United States, legally as well as in spirit. 

The timing was fortunate. Almost four years later to the day, General Andrew Jackson won the Battle of New Orleans on January 8, 1815, after bringing together a diverse band of American patriots, Native Americans, and even a pirate to fight British troops to preserve the independence of the new nation. On his way to the battle grounds in Chalmette, Jackson had passed through Covington and Madisonville.


A plaque at the Chalmette Battlefield monument explains the importance of the Choctaw Indian nation participation in support of General Jackson at the Battle of New Orleans


Links of Interest:

The Battle of New Orleans Revisited