Charles Trudeau (politician)

Charles Laveau Trudeau (17431816) also known as Charles Trudeau dit Laveau or Don Carlos Trudeau, served as the acting mayor[1] of New Orleans in 1812 (May 23 Oct. 8).[2] His name includes a French honorific, dit Laveau, a tradition often used to carry forward the name of a revered Woman in the family; in this case Charles' paternal great-great-grandmother, Marie Catherine de Lavaux (1621, Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, France 1688, Montreal, Québec, Canada).[3]

Charles Laveau Trudeau was the Surveyor General of Spanish Louisiana from the early 1780s until he resigned in 1805 (in the U.S. Territory of Orleans period), or about twenty years. His name on maps and grants is recorded as Don Carlos Trudeau. A few years later, he served as recorder, and as president, of the city council. It was during his tenure as recorder that James Mather resigned and Charles Trudeau became interim mayor.[4]

Charles Trudeau was born in New Orleans during the French regime to Jean-Baptiste Trudeau and Marianne Carrière. He married Charlotte Perrault (or Peyraud). The couple's children were: Caroline, who married Thomas Urquhart; Celestine, who became the second wife of General James Wilkinson; Josephine, who married Manuel Andry, Jr.; and Manette, who married Dr. Josias Eliot Kerr.[5] He is also the grandfather of Marie Laveau, whose father was his own mulatto illegitimate son also named Charles, and mother was Marguerite D'Arcantel, a free woman of color.[6]

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Preceded by
James Mather
Mayor of New Orleans
May 23, 1812 October 8, 1812
Succeeded by
Nicolas Girod
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