Louis Juchereau de Saint-Denis (born Sept. 17, 1676, Beauport, Quebec—died June 11, 1744, Natchitoches, Louisiana Territory [now in U.S.]) was a French-Canadian explorer and soldier, leader of a 1714 expedition from French-held Natchitoches, in the Louisiana Territory, to the Spanish town of San Juan Bautista (modern Villahermosa) on the Rio Grande.
From 1703 to 1707 Saint-Denis explored the lower Mississippi valley. In 1713 he was commissioned by the governor of Louisiana to open a trade route to Mexico, where he arrived in July 1714. Interned by the Spanish authorities, he obtained his release by leading an expedition party to establish missions in Texas. He was again imprisoned for smuggling in 1717 and was allowed to return home permanently in 1719. When France and Spain went to war that year, he served in the defense of Mobile, Ala., and from 1720 as commandant of the Natchitoches area.
Saint-Denis is known in history as one of the French explorers who sought to make friends with local Indian tribes as well as with the Spanish in Mexico and Texas, but his work was short-lived. Many of the Spanish settlements he founded in Texas could not be maintained, and Spain and France continued to compete on the North American continent.