Jean Gallatin
Jean Gallatin was a Genevan watchmaker and politician who served as a member of the Council of Two Hundred.Jean Gallatin came from a Protestant family originally from Bugey that obtained citizenship in Geneva in 1510. He was the son of Abraham Gallatin, a watchmaker and merchant who served as a member of the Council of Two Hundred, auditor, and treasurer of the grain chamber, and Louise Suzanne Vaudenet, owner of the Vésenaz castle and a correspondent of Voltaire. Like his father, Gallatin engaged in the watchmaking trade. In 1755, he married Sophie Albertine Rolaz, from a Vaudois family that had acquired the lordship of Le Rosey, near Rolle. The couple had two children: Susanne Albertine and Albert Gallatin, who later became a prominent member of the political elite of the United States.Career
In 1760, Gallatin founded a trading company with his father. He became a member of the Council of Two Hundred in 1764.Gallatin's wife had a stake in a sugar plantation called Mat Rouge in the Dutch colony of Suriname, which employed 110 enslaved people. The estate, located on the Perica waterway, was managed by Nicolas David Guisan. After their mother's death in 1770, this stake passed to Albert Gallatin and his sister. Due to gaps in the historical sources, it is difficult to determine precisely how the operation unfolded. The Gallatins' share of Mat Rouge was subsequently sold, though the date and price are unknown.