
René-Robert-Cavelier, Sieur de
La Salle
Explorer, born at Rouen, 1643; died in Texas, 1687.
In his youth he displayed an unusual precocity in mathematics
and a predilection for natural science; his outlook upon life
was somewhat puritanical. Whether or not he was educated with
a view to entering the Society of Jesus is a matter of doubt,
though some religious order he must have subsequently joined,
for to this fact is assigned the forfeiture of his estates.
The career of a churchman was definitely abandoned, however,
when, after receiving the feudal grant of a tract of land at
La Chine on the St. Lawrence from the Sulpicians, seigneurs
of Montreal--perhaps through the influence of a elder brother
who was a member of the order at that place--he came to Canada
as an adventurer and trader in 1666. For three years La Salle
remained quietly upon his little estate, mastering Indian dialects
and meditating on a southwest passage. Upon the latter quest
he set out in 1669 with a party of Sulpicians, who, deeming
that there was greater missionary work among the north-western
tribes, soon abandoned the expedition. La salle's subsequent
travels on this occasion are shrouded in an obscurity that will
perhaps never be dispelled. Whether he was the first white man
to gaze upon Niagara, whether he explored the Allegheny valley
or the Ohio river, he seems not to have reached the Mississippi,
Joliet's undisputed claim to that distinction during La Salle's
residence in Canada being regarded, at present, as finally established.
Indeed Joliet's announcement, some few years later, that the
Grande Rivière flowed into the Gulf of Mexico perceptibly
stimulated La Salle to fashion and carry out those schemes which
must have been taking shape even in the novitiate of Rouen--dreams
of acquiring a monopoly of the fur trade and of building up
the empire of New France. The French doctrine that the discovery
of a river gave an inchoate right to the land drained by its
tributaries suggested to La Salle and Governor Frontenac a "
plan to effect a military occupation of the whole Mississippi
valley...by means of military posts which should control the
communication and sway the policy of the Indian tribes",
as well as present an impassable barrior to the English colonies.
The money needed for such a plan drove La Salle to those attempts
at a monopoly which engendered such persistent opposition, and
which account, partly at least, for the failure of his plans.
A trip to France in the autumn of 1674 followed his erection
of Fort Frontenac for the protection of the fur trade at the
outset of Lake Ontario. The king gave him a grant of his fort
and the adjacent territory, promised to garrison it at his own
expense, and conferred upon him the rank of esquire. Upon his
return, La Salle rebuilt the fort, launched upon the Niagara
River the "Griffin", a forty-five ton schooner with
five guns, in which, with Hennepin, a Franciscan, and the Neapolitan
Henri de Tonty, he set sail in the autumn of 1678, passed over
Lakes Erie and Huron, and reached the southern extremity of
Lake Michigan. Here the gunboat was sent back, unlawfully laden
with furs to appease La Salle's creditors, and was never heard
from again. The expedition pushed on to the Illinois, where
Fort Crevecoeur was built. After waiting through the winter
for the return of the "Griffin", La Salle, leaving
the faithful Tonty in charge of the fort, resolved to return
one thousand miles on foot to Montreal, accompanied by four
Frenchmen and an Indian guide. The sufferings of his famous
retreat were borne with incredible fortitude, and he was returning
with supplies when it was learned that the garrison at Fort
Crevecoeur had mutinied, had driven Tonty into the wilderness,
and were then cruising about Lake Ontario in the hope of murdering
La Salle. The dauntless Frenchman pushed out at once upon the
lake, captured the mutineers, sent them back in irons to the
governor, and then went to the rescue of Tonty, whom he met
at Mackinaw on his return trip after abandoning the search.
For a brief space in 1682 La Salle's fate seems more propitious,
when, on 9 April, we catch a glimpse of him planting the fleurs-de-lis
on the banks of the Mississippi, and claiming for France the
wide territory that it drained. But, five years later, in the
wretched failure of an attempt to plant a colony at the mouth
of the Mississippi, he was murdered by mutineers from ambush.
La Salle's schemes of empire and of trade were far too vast
for his own generation to accomplish, though it was along the
lines that he projected that France pursued her colonial policy
in the New World in the eighteenth century until finally overthrown
by the English in the French and Indian Wars
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Belle" ---