Pierre de Sales Laterrière
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Pierre de Sales Laterrière (1743 or 1747 near Albi – 14 June 1815), was an adventurer who left France in 1766. He was inspector and director of the Forges du Saint-Maurice and seigneur of Les Éboulements in Quebec.
Laterrière presented himself as the son of a French count, Jean-Pierre de Sales, after he arrived in Quebec but his real surname is believed to be Fabre. He was employed as a clerk by Alexandre Dumas at Quebec City. In 1769, he went to practice medicine with a doctor at Montmagny. Laterrière is believed to have begun practicing medicine with no medical training.
In 1771, he was employed as an agent for the Saint-Maurice ironworks at Quebec City. In 1775, Laterrière was hired as inspector for the ironworks and he moved to Trois-Rivières. In 1776, the director of the ironworks, Christophe Pélissier, was arrested by the British for supplying weapons and ammunition to the American army that was advancing towards Quebec. Laterrière was given the post of director after Pélissier fled to the United States. He also began living with Pélissier's wife, Marie-Catherine Delezenne. Despite public opinion and criticism from the clergy, this free thinker, defender of midwives and freemason lived unmarried with Marie-Catherine until they finally married in 1799 after the death of her first husband.
Imprisoned by Governor Frederick Haldimand on the day following the American Invasion, he was then exiled in Newfoundland from 1782 to 1783, following a false charge of treason. He returned to Quebec and settled on a farm at Baie-du-Febvre (later Baieville) where he resumed the practice of medicine. Once the province began to insist on doctors producing their credentials, Laterrière went on to study medicine at Harvard University in Massachusetts and qualified to practice medicine in 1789. In 1799, he moved his medical practice to Quebec City. His income from practicing medicine and investments allowed him to purchase the seigneury of Les Éboulements in 1810. He died at Quebec City in 1815.
His sons Marc Pascal and Pierre-Jean both became doctors and important figures in the province.