Henry E. Chotard was the son of Jean Marie Chotard de la Place. Chotard was said to be a native of
Saint-Domingue (now
Haiti), from near
Port-au-Prince, himself the son of a Frenchman from
Brittany whose children had been educated at
Nantes. Chotard was reportedly appointed to serve the colonial governor of
Saint-Domingue (present-day
Haiti) and married Jeanne Henriette Serafine Lafon. Mississippi historian
Dunbar Rowland claimed she was "a daughter of Governor Lefont". A 20th-century genealogical compilation claimed that it was Chotard who was related to a governor of Saint-Domingue. Jean and Henriette had two children, Henry Chotard and Amenaïde Chotard. Chotard reportedly sent his children back to France for their education, and/or, upon the coming of the
Haitian Revolution, he sent his wife and children back to France. Jean Marie Chotard de la Place had two sisters who lived on Saint-Domingue, Madame Cotin and Madame Barruct, and during the revolution they had "their husbands murdered in their own homes, their homes desolated and themselves plundered" and they had then escaped to
Cuba. at the beginning of the
Haitian Revolution During the voyage to France, Henriette and the children contracted
smallpox. Henriette Lafon died at sea. The children landed in
Bordeaux and were received and raised by a Monsieur Demeyure. Amenaïde Chotard married and lived out her days in France. According to a daughter of his second marriage, "The disastrous results of the St. Domingo insurrection drove the refugees to different points. My father went to
Philadelphia,
Baltimore,
Charleston,
Savanah,
Augusta and finally with many of his fellow sufferers, wandered to the interior, to the little town of
Washington. There the French element was manifested in forming an agreeable society." Thus, Chotard de la Place was probably part of the first of three migrations of refugees from Saint-Domingue, the 1793 exodus to the
East Coast of the United States. He married his second wife, Sarah Williams Willis, of Washington,
Wilkes County, Georgia, around 1798. Chotard was Williams' second husband; Sarah Williams "was a native of
Greenville, S.C., and was married when very young to Col. Henry Willis of Virginia; was left a widow with two children when she was twenty years old, and was married to Mr. Chotard in Greenville, S. C." Sarah Williams was Henry Willis' second wife; his first wife had been Nancy Savage, and she was heir to property in Mississippi that the young couple were planning to claim when Wills caught "the stranger's disease" (
yellow fever) in Charleston and died. In 1798, Chotard "returned to St. Domingo to see about his property, and to France to see his two children. He was gone sixteen months in fruitless efforts to recover some remuneration for his losses, but only realized the distressing fact that his pecuniary prospects were blighted, and that then at about 40 years of age, after a life of ease and luxury, he was thrown upon his own exertions, the obtaining of my mother's patrimony, and her portion of her first husband's estate, which lay mainly in the Mississippi territory." John Chotard de la Place settled in
Adams County, Mississippi Territory around 1805. According to his daughter's autobiography, John and Sarah Chotard joined "John Turnbull of Charleston with two
flat boats, taking his negroes to
Walnut Hills, which he, his brother Frederick, and Mr. Gaillard owned and established as a cotton plantation." The children were sent to Mississippi in 1806 traveling by wagon "until we finally reached
Marysville on the
Tennessee River, where two flat boats were in readiness for us. One contained a large number of Negroes for Walnut Hills, the other was for the white family, including Mrs. Gaillard and a gentleman." In 1809, the Spanish colonial government expelled the French-national refugees from Saint-Domingue, and the widowed Chotard sisters and at least one of their daughters obtained passage to New Orleans in a crowded vessel. They settled in Natchez around 1810 and opened a school. John Chotard "made a settlement on a plantation on the
Liberty road" and lived there until his death on August 8, 1810. He had apparently "enjoyed fine health until 1810, when he got wet at
Colonel Burling's funeral, at which he was a pall bearer. He came home sick with a violent headache and on the 8th of August died with brain fever." == Early life ==