LOUISIANA ITS DISCOVERY AND VICISSITUDES
Louisiana, and its eventful history. The
Expedition of De Soto. The Missionary Marquette. His
voyage on the Upper Mississippi. The Expedition
of La Salle. Michilimackinac. Its
History. Fate of the “Griffin.” Grief
of La Salle. His voyage of Discovery. Sale
of Louisiana to the United States. Remarks
of Napoleon.
The transfer of Louisiana to the United
States is one of the most interesting events in the
history of our country. In the year 1800, Spain,
then in possession of the vast region west of the Mississippi,
ceded it to France. The whole country west of
the majestic river appropriately called the Father
of Waters, was then called Louisiana, and its boundaries
were very obscurely defined. Indeed neither the
missionary nor the hunter had penetrated but a very
short distance into those unknown wilds. It was
in the year 1541 that De Soto, marching from Florida
across the country, came to the banks of this magnificent
river, near the present site of Memphis. He knew
not where it took its rise, or where it emptied its
swollen flood. But he found a stream more than
a mile in width, of almost fathomless depth, rolling
its rapid, turbid stream, on which were floated innumerable
logs and trees, through an almost uninhabited country
of wonderful luxuriance. He was in search of
gold, and crossing the river, advanced in a north-westerly
direction about two hundred miles, till he came within
sight of the Highlands of the White River. He
then turned in a southerly direction, and continued
his explorations, till death soon terminated his melancholy
career.
More than one hundred and thirty years
passed over these solitudes, when James Marquette,
a French missionary among the Indians at Saint Marys,
the outlet of Lake Superior, resolved to explore the
Mississippi, of whose magnificence he had heard much
from the lips of the Indians, who had occasionally
extended their hunting tours to its banks. He
was inured to all the hardships of the wilderness,
seemed to despise worldly comforts, and had a soul
of bravery which could apparently set all perils at
defiance. And still he was indued with a poetic
nature, which reveled in the charms of these wild
and romantic realms, as he climbed its mountains and
floated in his canoe over its silent and placid streams.
Even then it was not known whether the Mississippi
emptied its majestic flood into the Pacific Ocean
or into the Gulf of Mexico. The foot of the white
man upon the shores of Lake Superior, had never penetrated
beyond the Indian village, where the Fox River enters
into Green Bay. From this point Marquette started
for the exploration of the Mississippi. The party
consisted of Mr. Marquette, a French gentleman by
the name of Joliete, five French voyageurs and two
Indian guides. They transported their two birch
canoes on their shoulders across the portage from
the Fox River to the Wisconsin river. Paddling
rapidly down this stream through realms of silence
and solitude, they soon entered the majestic Mississippi,
more than fifteen hundred miles above its mouth.
Marquette seems to have experienced
in the highest degree the romance of his wonderful
voyage, for he says that he commenced the descent of
the mighty river with “a joy that could not
be expressed.” It was the beautiful month
of June, 1673, the most genial season of the year.
The skies were bright above them. The placid
stream was fringed with banks of wonderful luxuriance
and beauty, the rocky cliffs at times assuming the
aspect of majestic castles of every variety of architecture;
again the gently swelling hills were robed in sublime
forests, and again the smooth meadows, in their verdure,
spread far away to the horizon. Rapidly the canoes,
gently guided by the paddles, floated down the stream.
Having descended the river about one
hundred and eighty miles, they came to a very well
trod Indian trail leading back from the river into
the interior. Marquette and Joliete had the curiosity
and the courage to follow this trail for six miles,
until they came to an Indian village. It would
seem that some of the Indians there, in their hunting
excursions, had wandered to some of the French settlements;
for four of their leading men, dressed in the most
gorgeous display of barbaric pomp, “brilliant
with many colored plumes,” came out to meet them
and conducted them to the cabin of their chief.
He addressed them in the following words:
“How beautiful is the sun, Frenchman,
when thou comest to visit us. Our whole village
welcomes thee. In peace thou shalt enter all our
dwellings.”
After a very pleasant visit they returned
to their boats and resumed their voyage. They
floated by the mouth of the turbid Missouri, little
dreaming of the grandeur of the realms watered by that
imperial stream and its tributaries. They passed
the mouth of the Ohio, which they recognized as the
Belle Riviere, which the Indians then called
the Wabash. As they floated rapidly away towards
the south they visited many Indian villages on the
banks of the stream, where the devoted missionary,
Marquette, endeavored to proclaim the gospel of Christ.
“I did not,” says Marquette,
“fear death. I should have esteemed it the
greatest happiness to have died for the glory of God.”
Thus they continued their exploration
as far south as the mouth of the Arkansas river, where
they were hospitably received in a very flourishing
Indian village. Being now satisfied that the Mississippi
river entered the Gulf of Mexico, somewhere between
Florida and California, they returned to Green Bay
by the route of the Illinois river. By taking
advantage of the eddies, on either side of the stream,
it was not difficult for them, in their light canoes,
to make the ascent.
Marquette landed on the western banks
of Lake Michigan to preach the gospel to a tribe of
Indians called the Miames, residing near the present
site of Chicago. Joliete returned to Quebec to
announce the result of their discoveries. He
was received with great rejoicing. The whole
population flocked to the cathedral, where the Te
Deum was sung.
Five years passed away, during which
the great river flowed almost unthought of, through
its vast and sombre wilderness. At length in the
year 1678, La Salle received a commission from Louis
the XIV. of France to explore the Mississippi to its
mouth. Having received from the king the command
of Fort Frontenac, at the northern extremity of Lake
Ontario, and a monopoly of the fur trade in all the
countries he should discover, he sailed from Larochelle
in a ship well armed and abundantly supplied, in June,
1678. Ascending the St. Lawrence to Quebec, he
repaired to Fort Frontenac. With a large number
of men he paddled, in birch canoes, to the southern
extremity of Lake Ontario, and, by a portage around
the falls of Niagara, entered Lake Erie. Here
he built a substantial vessel, called the Griffin,
which was the first vessel ever launched upon the
waters of that lake. Embarking in this vessel
with forty men, in the month of September, a genial
and gorgeous month in those latitudes, he traversed
with favoring breezes the whole length of the lake,
a voyage of two hundred and sixty-five miles, ascended
the straits and passed through the Lake of St. Clair,
and ran along the coast of Lake Huron three hundred
and sixty miles to Michilimackinac, where the three
majestic lakes, Superior, Michigan and Huron, form
a junction.
Here a trading post was established,
which subsequently attained world-wide renown, and
to which the Indians flocked with their furs from
almost boundless realms. Mr. Schoolcraft, who
some years after visited this romantic spot, gives
the following interesting account of the scenery and
strange life witnessed there. As these phases
of human life have now passed away, never to be renewed,
it seems important that the memory of them should
be perpetuated:
“Nothing can present a more
picturesque and refreshing spectacle to the traveler,
wearied with the lifeless monotony of a voyage through
Lake Huron, than the first sight of the island of
Michilimackinac, which rises from the watery horizon
in lofty bluffs imprinting a rugged outline along
the sky and capped with a fortress on which the American
flag is seen waving against the blue heavens.
The name is a compound of the word Misril,
signifying great, and Mackinac the Indian word
for turtle, from a fancied resemblance of the island
to a great turtle lying upon the water.
“It is a spot of much interest,
aside from its romantic beauty, in consequence of
its historical associations and natural curiosities.
It is nine miles in circumference, and its extreme
elevation above the lake is over three hundred feet.
The town is pleasantly situated around a small bay
at the southern extremity of the island, and contains
a few hundred souls, which are sometimes swelled to
one or two thousand by the influx of voyageurs, traders
and Indians. On these occasions its beautiful
harbor is seen checkered with American vessels at anchor,
and Indian canoes rapidly shooting across the water
in every direction.
“It was formerly the seat of
an extensive fur trade; at present it is noted for
the great amount of trout and white fish annually exported.
Fort Mackinac stood on a rocky bluff overlooking the
town. The ruins of Fort Holmes are on the apex
of the island. It was built by the British in
the war of 1812, under the name of Fort George, and
was changed to its present appellation after the surrender
to the Americans, in compliment to the memory of Major
Holmes, who fell in the attack upon the island.
“The old town of Michilimackinac
stood at the extreme point of the peninsula of Michigan,
nine miles south of the island. Eight years before
La Salle’s expedition, Father Marquette, the
French missionary, visited this spot with a party
of Hurons, upon whom he prevailed to locate themselves.
A fort was soon constructed, and became an important
post. It continued to be the seat of the fur trade,
and the undisturbed rendezvous of the Indian tribes
during the whole period that the French exercised
dominion over the Cañadas.”
Here at Michilimackinac, La Salle
purchased a rich cargo of furs, exchanging for them
his goods at an immense profit. The Griffin,
laden with wealth, set out on her return and was wrecked
by the way with total loss. La Salle with his
companions had embarked in birch canoes, and descending
Lake Michigan to near its southern extremity, they
landed and erected a fort which they called Miamis.
They then carried their canoes across to the Illinois
river and paddled down that stream until they came
near to the present site of Peoria, where they established
another fort, which La Salle, grief-stricken in view
of his loss, named Crève-Coeur, or Heartsore.
Here the energetic and courageous adventurer left
his men in winter quarters, while, with but three
companions, he traversed the wilderness on foot, amidst
the snows of winter, to Fort Frontenac, a distance
of fifteen hundred miles. After an absence of
several weeks, he returned with additional men and
the means of building a large and substantial flat-bottomed
boat, with which to descend the Illinois river to
the Mississippi, and the latter stream to its mouth.
The romantic achievement was successfully
accomplished. The banners of France were unfurled
along the banks of the majestic river and upon the
shores of the Gulf of Mexico. This whole region
which France claimed by the right of discovery, was
named in honor of the king of France, Louisiana.
Its limits were necessarily quite undefined. In
1684, a French colony of two hundred and eighty persons
was sent out to effect a settlement on the Lower Mississippi.
Passing by the mouth of the river without discovering
it, they landed in Texas, and took possession of the
country in the name of the king of France. Disaster
followed disaster. La Salle died, and the colonists
were exterminated by the Indians. Not long after
this, all the country west of the Mississippi was ceded
by France to Spain, and again, some years after, was
surrendered back again by Spain to France. We
have not space here to allude to the details of these
varied transactions. But this comprehensive record
seems to be essential to the full understanding of
the narrative upon which we have entered.
It was in the year 1763 that Louisiana
was ceded, by France, to Spain. In the year 1800,
it was yielded back to France, under Napoleon, by a
secret article in the treaty of Sn. Ildefonso.
It had now become a matter of infinite moment to the
United States that the great Republic should have
undisputed command of the Mississippi, from its source
to its mouth. President Jefferson instructed
our Minister at Paris, Robert Livingston, to negotiate
with the French Government for the purchase of Louisiana.
France was then at war with England. The British
fleet swept triumphantly all the seas. Napoleon,
conscious that he could not protect Louisiana from
British arms, consented to the sale. We are informed
that on the 10th of April, 1803, he summoned two of
his ministers in council, and said to them:
“I am fully sensible of the
value of Louisiana; and it was my wish to repair the
error of the French diplomatists who abandoned it in
1763. I have scarcely recovered it before I run
the risk of losing it. But if I am obliged to
give it up it shall cost more to those who force me
to part with it, than to those to whom I yield it.
The English have despoiled France of all her Northern
possessions in America, and now they covet those of
the South. I am determined that they shall not
have the Mississippi. Although Louisiana is but
a trifle compared with their vast possessions in other
parts of the globe, yet, judging from the vexation
they have manifested on seeing it return to the power
of France, I am certain that their first object will
be to obtain possession of it.
“They will probably commence
the war in that quarter. They have twenty vessels
in the Gulf of Mexico, and our affairs in St. Domingo
are daily getting worse, since the death of Le Clere.
The conquest of Louisiana might be easily made, and
I have not a moment to lose in putting it out of their
reach. I am not sure but that they have already
began an attack upon it. Such a measure would
be in accordance with their habits; and in their place
I should not wait. I am inclined, in order to
deprive them of all prospect of ever possessing it,
to cede it to the United States. Indeed I can
hardly say I cede it, for I do not yet possess it.
And if I wait but a short time, my enemies may leave
me nothing but an empty title to grant to the Republic
I wish to conciliate. They only ask for one city
of Louisiana; but I consider the whole colony as lost.
And I believe that in the hands of this rising power,
it will be more useful to the political and even the
commercial interests of France, than if I should attempt
to retain it. Let me have both of your opinions
upon this subject.”
One of the ministers, Barbe Marbois,
cordially approved of the plan of “cession.”
The other opposed it. After long deliberation,
the conference was closed, without Napoleon making
known his decision. The next day he sent for
Barbe Marbois, and said to him:
“The season for deliberation
is over. I have determined to part with Louisiana.
I shall give up not only New Orleans, but the whole
colony without reservation. That I do not undervalue
Louisiana I have sufficiently proved, as the object
of my first treaty with Spain was to recover it.
But though I regret parting with it, I am convinced
that it would be folly to persist in trying to keep
it. I commission you, therefore, to negotiate
this affair with the envoys of the United States.
Do not wait the arrival of Mr. Munroe, but go this
very day and confer with Mr. Livingston.
“Remember, however, that I need
ample funds for carrying on the war; and I do not
wish to commence it by levying new taxes. During
the last century, France and Spain have incurred great
expense in the improvement of Louisiana, for which
her trade has never indemnified them. Large sums
have been advanced to different companies, which have
never returned to the treasury. It is fair that
I should require payment for these. Were I to
regulate my demands by the importance of this territory
to the United States, they would be unbounded.
But being obliged to part with it, I shall be moderate
in my terms. Still, remember I must have fifty
millions of francs ($10,000,000), and I will not consent
to take less. I would rather make some desperate
effort to preserve this fine country.”
Negotiations commenced that day.
Soon Mr. Munroe arrived. On the 30th of April,
1803, the treaty was signed, the United States paying
fifteen million dollars for the entire territory.
It was stipulated by Napoleon that Louisiana should
be, as soon as possible, incorporated into the Union;
and that its inhabitants should enjoy the same rights,
privileges, and immunities as other citizens of the
United States. The third article of the treaty,
securing to them these benefits, was drawn up by Napoleon
himself. He presented it to the plenipotentiaries
with these words:
“Make it known to the people
of Louisiana, that we regret to part with them; that
we have stipulated for all the advantages they could
desire; and that France, in giving them up, has insured
to them the greatest of all. They could never
have prospered under any European government, as they
will when they become independent. But while they
enjoy the privileges of liberty, let them ever remember
that they are French, and preserve for their mother
country that affection, which a common origin inspires.”
This purchase was an immense acquisition
to the United States. “I consider,”
said Mr. Livingston, “that from this day, the
United States take rank with the first powers of Europe,
and now she has entirely escaped from the power of
England.”
Napoleon was also well pleased with
the transaction, “By this cession,” he
said, “I have secured the power of the United
States, and given to England a maritime rival, who,
at some future time, will humble her pride.”
The boundaries of this unexampled
purchase could not be clearly defined. There
was not any known landmarks to which reference could
be made. The United States thus had the sole
claim to the vast territory west of the Mississippi,
extending on the north through Oregon to the Pacific
Ocean, and on the south to the Mexican dominions.
From the day of the transfer, the natural resources
of the great valley of the Mississippi began to be
rapidly developed.
The accompanying map will enable the
reader more fully to understand the geography of the
above narrative.