Education
LeBreton received her Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy in history from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
LeBreton received her Bachelor of Arts, Master of Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy in history from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.
She joined the NSU faculty at the age of twenty-seven in 1963 as an instructor of social science. She was promoted to assistant professor of history in 1965, associate professor in 1970, and full professor in 1973. In 1980, she was named to succeed Donald Rawson as chairman of the NSU Department of History after president Rene Bienvenu tapped Rawson as the Dean of the Graduate School.
LeBreton left the chairmanship in 1983, when the department was renamed Social Sciences.
She returned to teaching and was still on the history faculty in the spring of 2009 when she was stricken with a brief but fatal illness. She died three weeks short of her 73rd birthday in a Shreveport hospital.
LeBreton authored Northwestern State University: A History 1884-1984, which was published in 1985 by the NSU Press for the university centennial. NSU President Randall J. Webb noted that LeBreton"s longevity was one of the most enduring in NSU history.
She was a faculty member for more than a third of the existence of the institution.
A native of New Orleans, LeBreton authored "The Acadians" chapter of Stephan Thernstrom"s Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. She also wrote a geographic and historical article about Dorcheat Bayou in southwestern Arkansas and Webster Parish, Louisiana, in the book Rivers and Bayous of Louisiana. In 1974, LeBreton wrote a position paper on Article III of the Louisiana Constitution of 1812 entitled "Edwin West. Edwards: The Role of the Governor in Louisiana Politics: An Historical Analysis", which was then published in the periodical, Louisiana History.
LeBreton died three weeks before her 73rd birthday.