Valcour Aime

Valcour Aime
Portrait by Jacques Amans
Born
François-Gabriel Aime

1797
DiedJanuary 1, 1867(1867-01-01) (aged 68–69)
Saint James Refinery, St. James Parish, Louisiana, U.S.
Burial placeSaint Louis Cemetery No. 3, New Orleans
NationalityCreole-American
OccupationPlanter
Spouse
Joséphine Roman
(m. 1819)
ChildrenEdwige, Joséphine, Félicité "Emma," Felicie, Gabriel

François-Gabriel "Valcour" Aime (1797–1867) was an American sugar planter, slave owner, and pioneer in the large-scale refining of sugar. Known as the "Louis XIV of Louisiana," he was reputedly the wealthiest person in the South.

Aime owned a plantation in Vacherie, Louisiana, called the St. James Refinery Plantation, but it became known as Le Petit Versailles due to its opulence. (The plantation mansion burned down in 1920.)