Michel Leneuf du Hérisson


Michel Leneuf du Hérisson was a French-born administrator, nobleman, and businessman in the colony of Canada in the 17th century. In 1636, he and his family, which included his younger brother Jacques Leneuf, left Normandy and were the first of the French nobility to settle in the colony of New France, alongside their in-laws the Legardeurs.

Biography

He became one of the principal landholders and seigneurs in Canada, being granted several fiefs, and in 1645 was a co-founder and director along with his brother Jacques, of the Communauté des Habitants, a fur company that took over the mandate of the Company of One Hundred Associates for several years, before reverting back under direct control of the Crown. He was appointed as Lieutenant-General of the regional government of Trois-Rivières in 1664, a post he held until his death in October of 1672, except for a brief period in 1665 when he was suspended by the Sovereign Council of Canada due to illicit trading with the Native Americans. He sat as Interim Governor of the Trois-Rivières region in 1668.
He had one daughter named Anne from an unknown relationship back in Normandy, who married in 1647 Antoine Desrosiers, bourgeois of Trois-Rivières, who himself would go on to become a judge. They had eight children, and a large number of people today in North America and beyond can trace their descent to this family.