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Charles Rochon

Also Known As: "Rochon", "Rocheron"
Birthdate:
Birthplace: Chambly, Québec, Canada
Death: March 22, 1733 (59)
Dog River Plantation at Hollinger's Island, Mobile, Alabama
Immediate Family:

Son of Simon Dit Rocheron Rochon and Mathurine Rochon (Bisson)
Husband of Henriette Rochon (Colon)
Father of Charles Rochon, II; Pierre Rochon; Marie Henriette Rochon; Marie Joseph Demouy (Rochon); Louis Augustin Rochon, Sr and 5 others
Brother of Marguerite Rochon; Étienne Rocheron dit Rochon; Mathurine Rocheron; Geneviève Rochon / Rocheron and Jean-Charles Rochon
Half brother of Louis Pré and Nicolas Pré Pothier

Occupation: Fur Trader
Managed by: Courtney Mannino
Last Updated:

About Charles Rochon

Charles Rochon (1673–1733) was a French colonist and was one of the four founders of modern-day Mobile, Alabama.

Life and career

Rochon was born in 1673 in Quebec. He became a fur trapper and was associated with Henri de Tonti, accompanying him on many of his expeditions. In 1701 he came to colonial Louisiana, and he was a colonist at the settlement of Fort Louis De Mobile located at modern-day Axis, Alabama, an area of habitation that preceded the modern-day city of Mobile.

In 1706, along with Pierre LeBouef, Gilbert Dardenne and Claude Parent, Rochon left the settlement at Axis, moving down to a site at the mouth of the Mobile River, site of present-day Mobile. The success that the four had at this site was a contributing factor of the relocation of Mobile from the site at Axis to its present site in 1711.

After the city was moved to the Mobile River site, Charles Rochon again moved, this time to a site at the mouth of the Dog River, where he established a plantation that remained in the hands of his descendants until 1848. The plantation encompassed the majority of what is today known as Hollinger's Island. Rochon remained at this plantation until his death in 1733

Family

Charles Rochon was married to Henriette Colon, the half-Indian (Kaskaskia) daughter of Old Mobile settler Jean Baptiste (dit "LaViolette") Colon, as well as being the goddaughter of Henri de Tonti. They had several children, but only two survived past 1733. Their son, Louis Augustus, established a plantation on the eastern shore of Mobile Bay that became modern-day Spanish Fort.

Rochon has had a number of notable descendants in the Gulf Coast region including, but not limited to:

view all 13

Charles Rochon's Timeline

1673
July 4, 1673
Chambly, Québec, Canada
1716
January 6, 1716
Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, United States
1717
October 4, 1717
Dog River Plantation at Hollingers Island, Mobile, Alabama
1720
February 18, 1720
Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, United States
1722
March 19, 1722
1724
May 14, 1724
French, Mobile, Alabama, Mobile, Mobile County, Alabama, United States
1726
September 7, 1726
1728
December 25, 1728
1731
April 23, 1731
1733
February 28, 1733