286 76 42MB
English Pages [970] Year 1735
L
U
N
I
E)
RARY
OF THL I
VERS ITY
or ILLINOIS
9171
Ll3nE 1905 ILL HIST. SURVfcl
LAHONTAN'S
NEW VOYAGES TO NORTH-AMERICA EDITED BY
REUBEN GOLD THWAITES,
Volume
I
LL.D.
in A. C. McCLURG & CO.'S series of LIBRARY REPRINTS OF AMERICANA THE EXPEDITION OF LEWIS AND CLARK
Volumes
Reprinted from the Edition of 1814. With Introduction and Index by James K. Hosmer, LL.D. In two volumes, with photogravure portraits and maps, $5.00 net.
HENNEPIN'S "A
NEW DISCOVERY"
Exact Reprint of the Second Issue of 1698. With Introduction, Notes, and an analytical Index by Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL.D. In two volumes, with facsimiles of original title-pages and of the seven original full-page illustrations, and two large folding maps. $6.00 net.
GASS'S
LEWIS
JOURNAL OF THE
AND CLARK EXPEDITION
Reprinted from the Edition of 181 1. With an analytiand Introduction by James Kendall Hosmer, LL.D. In one volume, with facsimiles of the original
cal Index,
title-page
and of the
five original illustrations,
reproduction of a rare portrait of Gass.
$3.50
and a net.
LAHONTAN'S NEW VOYAGES
TO NORTH AMERICA Exact Reprint of the English Edition of 1703. With Introduction, Notes, and an analytical Index by Reuben In two volumes, with facGold Thwaites, LL.D. similes of the original title-pages, and of the twentyfour maps and illustrations. ^7-5° "''•
NEW VOYAGES TO
NORTH-AMERICA BY THE
BARON
DE
LAHONTAN
Reprinted from the English edition of ijo^^ with facsimiles of original title-pages^ maps, and illustrations, and the addition of Introduction, Notes,
and Index
By Reuben Gold Thwaites, LL.D. Editor of
"The
and Allied Documents,^' Hennepin's Discovery " etc.
Jesuit Relations
"New
3n
CttJo l^olumeis
Volume
A. C.
I
CHICAGO McCLURG & 1905
CO.
Copyright A. C.
McCLURG &
CO.
1905
Published February 25, 1905
Chicago. Composition by The Dial Press. Press, Cambridge. Press-work by The University
CONTENTS — VOLUME
>
^ -si
— The Editor Bibliography —
I PAGE
Introduction
Lahonton
ix
Victor
Hugo
Paltsits
.
.
Lahontan's "New Voyages to North-America" Volume I.
—
Title-page (facsimile of original)
Dedication to the
Duke
I
of Devonshire
3
Preface
b J
5
Contents of Letters, Memoirs, Discourses, Dialogue etc., in
Letters
I
both Volumes (November 8, 1683) -XXV (January
13 31
1694)
25
Memoirs of North-America ical
_ '^
"^
;
containing a Geograph-
Defcription of that vaft Continent
Introductory Remarks
the Cuftoms
.... .... ....
A fhort Defcription of Canada A Lift of the Savage Nations of Canada A Lift of the Animals of Canada A Defcription of fuch Animals or Beafts, A
Lift of the
Fowl or Birds
Countries of Canada -J
;
and Commerce of the Inhabitants, &c.
not mention'd in the Letters >5^
li
The
.
.
299 301
339 343
as are
.....
345
that frequent the South
Birds of the North Countries of Canada
.
350 351
Contents
vi
PAGE
A
Defcription of fuch Birds as are not accounted for in
A
my
353
Defcription of the Infects of Canada
The Names from
The
of the
its
Fifti in
Mouth
The
.
357
.
the River of St. Laurence,
to the
Lakes of Canada
Fifh that are found in the
and
A
Letters
358
.
Lakes of Canada,
in the Rivers that fall into
'em
.
.
.
359
Fifh found in the River of Miffifipi
.
.
359
Defcription of the Fifh that are not mention'd
360
in the Letters
The Trees and
Fruits of the South Countries of
Canada
The
3^4
Trees and Fruits of the
North Countries of
Canada
A
3^4
Defcription of the above-mention'd Trees and
366
Fruits
A
Defcription of the Trees and Fruits of the
Northern Countries
A
General view of the
The Names
Commerce
37® of
Canada
.
their Rates
An
379
Account of the Government of Canada
in
3^^
General
A
Difcourfe of the Interefl of the French, and of the Englifh, in North-America
A
373
of the Skins given in exchange, with
.
.
Table explaining fome Terms made ufe of both Volumes
.
394
in
401
"
ILLUSTRATIONS— VOLUME
I
(facsimiles of originals) PAGE
A
the
beaver;
of buffaloes;
hunting
savages
drying their meat
Map Map
Frontispiece
of the Great Lakes of the
"Canows plans
straits
"The Hunting
.
•
Rackets, and the
of divers Animals"
Difcovery of an Ambufcade "
"A Map that
of y^
fall
Com.
and jj
•
,,124
•
>»
15^
o
,,
188
•
way of
.
.
.
„
220
.
.
.
„
254
„
284
»
3^^
,,
344
»
3^4
Long River and of fome
others
into that fmall part of y^ Great River
of Miflifipi which
is
here laid
down"
— with
sketch-plans of a house, a vessel, and a medal "
The Attack
"
The
Map
oo
call'd
.....
curiofity of the
hunting Elks"
France,
.
.
.
.
.
.
i
,,36
....••••
Canada"
The
— sketches
made of Birch-bark "
M^ De la Barre's camp " "A General Map of New
"
...
of Mackinac
"
"The
Facing
of Quebec
Great bay of Placentia " of Newfoundland
.... .
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
INTRODUCTION department of the Basse-Pyrenees, once a INparttheoffrontier the ancient province Beam, gently-undulating of
hillsides
which occupy middle ground between the broadstretching pastures and marshes of the Landes and
ViUageof Lahontan.
over-topping escarpments of the Pyrenees,
^j^g
pleasant
the
village
little
twelve hundred souls, is
on
it
A
of Lahontan.
lies
community of
boasts of an interesting history, but
now almost unknown in its dreamy isolation, save that the may remember that it was once the fief of the illus-
scholar trious
Montaigne.
About
the middle of the seventeenth century,
Lahontan
Lom,
Sieur
d'Arce, the father of our author, was the second baron.
The
was erected into
Lahontan's father.
Sieur d'Arce was famous as a civil engineer, having
made
vessels
a barony, of which Isaac de
(1630-48).
As
military services, Louis
ever (1658) a
Bayonne navigable for sea-going
the port of
recompense for
a
XIV
this
and certain
granted to him and his heirs for-
monopoly of navigation and transportation
in
the harbor of Bayonne, and a pension of three thousand livres
per
annum
for a
dozen years
reformer-general of
Beam,
Navarre, a chevalier of
His
first
St.
;
in later years,
a councillor of the
he was
made
parlement of
Michel, and a bourgeois of Bayonne.
wife (Jeanne Guerin), with
whom
he had lived
for fifteen years, having died in 1663 without issue, he con-
X
Introduction
tracted
in
his old
age a second marriage, this time with
Jeanne-Fran^oise
Birth of
our author,
^^g )^^^^
le
Fascheux de Couttes.
Lahontan, the ninth of June, 1666,
^^
Louis-Armand, whose book of adventurous heart of
North America we
was presented than the sister,
at the
Comte
the
the stage
travel
in
The
are here reprinting.
the
infant
baptismal font by no less personages
de Guiche, then governor of Beam, and his
Marquise de Lons, of
To them
life,
in
—a
distinguished welcome to
strong contrast
to
experiences
the
incident to his departure.
When young at the
age of eighty.
Baron Isaac A
Louis was but eight years old,
shattered
estate.
until
after,
his father died
Honors and wealth had accompanied
about the time of
his son's
he became involved in the
toils of
obligations
incurred by his great engineering operations, and of
the lawsuits incidental thereto.
Le Baron de Lahontan
et
The son
inherited the
title
of
Hesleche (to-day, d'Esleich), and
shattered estate which went from bad to worse.
wonder is
birth; there-
It is
a
small
that one of the characteristic features of his Voyages
an unquenchable bitterness against lawyers and legal pro-
cesses.
After the fashion of the times, the third baron had from his cradle
been destined for the army; and while
still
a child,
family influence secured for him a cadetship in the famous
Bourbon regiment. Later, young noblcmau Dedicated to the army.
the
^^g entered
as a
in
the effort to secure for the
a
more rapid advancement, he
"garde"
in the
marine corps
—
Department of the Marine being then entrusted with the
Introduction
xi
From earliest boyhood, Louis had heard Canada. From a neighboring seignory had gone
care of colonies.
much
of
forth the Baron de St. Castin, famous in the annals of Maine;
the land of the Basques, on both the Spanish and the French slopes of the Pyrenees, had for nearly two centuries been a recruiting
ground
for adventurers to the
New World;
Louis's relative, Claude Bragelonne, a high
official
and
in
the
French army, had been one of the Company of the Hundred
monopoly long exploited the commerce
Associates, whose
of the king's ambitious colony over seas.
had but
just
France.
Lefebvre de
la
Barre
succeeded Count Frontenac as governor of
His
petition to the court for eight
troops to be used
in
New
hundred regular
proposed chastisements of the death-
dealing Iroquois, had been in part met by sending to his assistance three companies of
of 1683.
Enrolled
among
exactly in what official
Armand de Lorn
French marines
autumn
in the
—
members of this detachment was Louiscapacity, we do not know the
—
d'Arce, the youthful Baron de Lahontan,
then seventeen years of age.
Lahontan's outlook on
made
of him a cynic.
The
a life of reverses first
had thus early
Letter in his Voyages^ describ-
ing the trip to America, contains premonitory that caustic
pen
;
humor which was soon
here, as later, description
is
and information with persiflage. late
when
freely
The
the frigate left Rochelle
November, with
;
it
mingled with season was
was already
Lawrence and
scoffing, Arrival in
^^^
France.
its
rugged
when Quebec was reached
after a
drift ice in the St.
shores white with snow,
symptoms of
to be characteristic of his
Introduction
xii
tempestuous voyage.
"I cannot," Lahontan
mous correspondent, "as Country, excepting that
yet give
'tis
anony-
tells his
you any account of the
The day
mortally cold."
ing the arrival of the troops, the great
La
follow-
Salle left the little
wilderness capital on his voyage to France, whence he was to
embark
for the Gulf of
Mexico upon
his
fateful
final,
enterprise.
The marines
at
once went into winter quarters "
Villages or Cantons adjacent."
It fell to
fome
in
Lahontan's share to
be billeted among the habitants of Beaupre, some seventeen miles
down
the river from Quebec.
boors of thofe Mauors
A
winter
at
Beauprd.
convcniency than an
There, he declares, "the live
infinity
with
more
House."
furnifh'd
enormous
all
a well
and the
month
of
Decem-
appears to have been contented with his
frost, the lad
in
meafure, from the
Despite the nipping and protracted
ber, to that of April."
Hunting
good and
fire-places,
wood consumed, "by reafon of the they make to guard themfelves from the Cold,
beyond
there
is
"lives in a
remarks the vast
this "free fort
quantities of
prodigious Fires
which
He
whom
and
of the Gentlemen in
France;" and he has many pleasant words for of People," every one of
eafe
company with
lot.
the Indians, acquiring the dialects
of the tribesmen, and visiting their villages in sledges and
upon snow-shoes, with
now and then hill-top in
a
few
gay assembly
official
duties intermingled, and
at the little colonial
court on the
neighboring Quebec, furnished agreeable diversity
of occupation.
among
a
the
His
letters give us a pleasing picture of life
easy-going habitants in the suburbs; and from
Introduction
them we
xiii
also obtain a vivid notion of the aspect of the little
frontier capital, in this hey-day of
New
France.
In the spring (1684), Lahontan proceeded under orders
Along
to Montreal.
the way, during a leisurely progress, he
picked up odds and ends of information, and cleverly described
accompanied
an
what he saw. expedition
Late
which
in
in brief
June, he
Governor La
phrase
An Iroquois ""^p^'S"-
Barre undertook against the recalcitrant Iroquois, and on the eleventh of the following at
month
arrived with the advance party
Fort Frontenac, where they awaited the main body of the
army; but owing to the delays incident to such enterprises
under primitive conditions, a start
was some
five
weeks
later before
Crossing Lake Ontario the
could be made.
umn took up
it
little col-
near Famine River, being there so
a position
wasted by malarial fever that La Barre was forced to an igno-
minious peace, which soon led to his
The
recall
story of this unfortunate expedition
from the colony.
is
skilfully told
by
Lahontan, who gives the speeches of the governor and of the Iroquois envoys
In
phrases which have become classic examples
of Indian oratory and diplomacy.
The at
following winter, the young baron passed in garrison
With
Montreal.
the opening of spring (1685) he was sent
with a detachment to the frontier fort of Chambly, where the
summer was spent
in the congenial
occupation of accompany-
ing the neighboring habitants and tribesmen .
their •
,
,
1
.
upon
hunting and fishing parties, which he de•
,
,
f
close observer of nature.
sportsman and
fishing
expeditions.
.
scribes with the gusto of a true
Hunting and
.
a
In September he was ordered to
Introduction
xiv
on the habitants
Bouchervllle, to be quartered
of a year and a half
—
for he was given his at
for the space
a protracted sojourn, but without ennui, fill
of sport, especially of elk hunting,
one tima being absent upon such an excursion for three
months
in
mid-winter.
On
another occasion, he spent an
autumn month "in a Canow upon feveral Rivers, Marflies, and Pools, that difembogue in the Champlain Lake, being accompany'd with
thirty or forty of the Savages that are very
expert in Shooting and Hunting, and perfedly well acquainted
with the proper places for finding Water-foul, Deer, and
He
other fallow Beafts." of the
gives us careful reports not only
chase, but of the habits of the birds
methods of the
and animals, spiced with much humor and keen comment on
men and
things.
Dearly as the baron loved sport, he appears to have
devoted much of his spare time, even when
in forest
camps
amid rude wood-rangers and savages, to study and to mental A
student
of the
growth. °
" Befides the pleafure of fo
forts of Diverfion," he writes,
ciassics.
^^}^5jj j„ tj^g
old Gentlemen that liv'd in
Companions. with us, but
many ti
"I was hkewiie enter-
my
with the
dear Lucian, were
my
infeperable
Ariftotle too defir'd paffionately to
my Canow
was too
age of Peripatetick Silogifms
:
little
We
go along
to hold his bulky Equip-
So that he was e'en
trudge back to the Jefuits, who vouchfaf'd him ourable Reception."
different -r
company of the honeft former Ages. Honeft Homer, the
Woods
amiable Anacreon, and
t
doubtless obtain here a
a
fain to
very hon-
ghmpse of
the source of the Dialogues with Adario, which occupy so
xv
Introduction large a share of the second volume
;
Lucian apparently
fur-
nished the model for those caustic satires on the Christianity civilization of the seventeenth century.
and
The
studies and pleasures of this interesting
at-arms were
by the
occasionally interfered with
He
of the priests about him.
young manausterities
when
indignantly relates that
stationed in Montreal he was "inrag'd at the impertinent Zeal
room in his absence, the Romance of the this over-zealous Table, he fell upon it with Adventures of Petronius upon my Seeking
of the Curate of this City."
his
ecclesiastic " finding
an unimaginable fury, and tore out almoft
This Book caftrated;
I
valued more than
and indeed
wrack, that
if
my
I
was
my
all
Life, becaufe 'twas not
provok'd when
fo
the Leaves.
I
Landlord had not held me,
saw I
it all
in
had gone
immediately to that turbulent Paftor's House, and would have pluck'd out the Hairs of his Beard with as did the Leaves of
St.
was about to try quois, into
mercy
as he
my Book."
In the spring of 1687
tlements on the
little
all
was bustling confusion
Lawrence.
his
hand
at
In the set-
new governor,
Denonville, the
subduing the irrepressible
Iro-
whom Champlain had unwittingly converted The
sworn enemies of the French. ...
.
,
r
^
expedition yet projected was fitted out
largest
11 by
second iroquois
campaign.
the
soldier-governor, and rendezvoused at the island of St. Helen,
opposite Montreal.
Eight hundred regulars had been sent
over from France, doubling the
With
the
number already
new troops came an order from
allow the return of
in the colony.
the
ministry to
young Lahontan, whose tangled
affairs
Introduction
xvi
were sadly
in
need of
his
presence
in Paris; his relatives
much
secured his furlough by the exercise of
But the governor, needing
ence.
compliance, promising
Lahontan had no
it
all
his useful
personal
had
influ-
men, deferred
for the close of the campaign, and
alternative but to advance a second time into
the country of the Iroquois.
This campaign, while more
than the preceding,
fruitful
effected nothing further than an invasion of the land of the
Seneca, the laying waste of their villages and harvests, and the construction at Niagara of a fort designed to check their
aggressions. Iroquois,
It
who
was upon
this expedition that the
few friendly
had, under missionary tutelage, settled around
Fort Frontenac, were captured by the French and sent oners to France to serve in the royal galleys
—
pris-
a piece
of
arrant treachery, which the wretched and misguided colony
was to expiate two years massacre
at
Lachine.
later in the fire
and blood of the
Lahontan's sympathies were so keenly
aroused by the unmerited sufferings of these innocent prisoners at Fort Frontenac, that he stood in close a victim to the
wrath of the Algonkin
allies,
savage fashion, delighted in maltreating the
whom own
danger of
who,
ill-fated
falling
in their
Iroquois,
the missionaries had segregated from the care of their
people.
The baron had soundly
thrashed some of the
young tormentors, but was immediately infuriated band,
me."
He
dians,
who
who
set
upon by
the
"flew to their Fufees, in order to kill
was saved only by the interposition of the Cana" affur'd 'em
I
was drunk
drunken Perfons are always excus'd
:
(Among
the Savages,
for, the Bottle attones
xvii
Introduction
Crimes), that
for
all
me
either
Wine
all
the French were prohibited to give
or Brandy, and that
fhould
I
certainly be
Campaign were over." The campaign finished, Lahontan hoped to be allowed
imprifon'd as foon as the
return
France,
to
but
reminding Denonville of
his
an
having
before
to
opportunity of
promise of a furlough, the luck-
was summoned to the great man's presence and informed that because of his knowledge
less officer
q^^^^^j^^ the
Upper
of native languages and his skill in forest diplomacy,
he was detailed forthwith to the
command
of a detachment
destined to the upper lakes, in response to the request of the
Huron and Ottawa
wily a
of
Lake Huron, who wished
to " fee
Fort fo conveniently plac'd, which might favour their
treat
upon any Expedition
Iroquefe ... At
againft the
re-
the
fame time he affur'd me, he would inform the Court of the Reafons that mov'd him to detain me in Canada, notwithftanding that he had orders to give
You may
eafily guefs. Sir, that I
News, when
I
had fed myfelf
all
returning to France, and promoting fo
by
much thwarted." The commands of
leave to
go home.
along with the hopes of
my
Intereft,
which
is
now
the governor were not to be questioned
a subordinate, so the disappointed
his grief
me
was thunderftruck with thefe
Lahontan, smothering
with reflections upon his professional advancement,
once more turned his back on home, and hastily made preparations for his journey into the vast and almost
region of the Northwest.
"
The Men
he writes, " are brisk proper fellows, and b
unknown
my Detachment," my Canows are both
of
Introduction
xviii
new and
large.
I
Gentleman, who
is
am a
go along with Mr. Dulhut,
to
a Lions
Perfon of great Merit, and has done his
M. de Company of
king and his Country very confiderable Services.
Tonti makes another of our Company Savages
his assault
the motley war-party which Denonville had led to
on the insolent Iroquois, was
Indians " brought by their commandant, Fort St
^^^ distant post of Mackinac. flotilla
of birch-bark canoes,
his savage forces at the
Huron
to
Lake the
1687, in
a
to follow us."
is
Among
Joseph,
and
;
a
band of the "
far
La Durantaye, from Sweeping down in a
La Durantaye had
halted
strait leading from Lake and there, on " the seventh of June,
head of the
St. Clair;
presence of the reverend Father Angeleran,
superior of the mission of the Outaouas at Michilimachinac, of Ste. Marie du Sault, of the Miamis, of the
Bale des Puans and of the Sioux, of
mandant of the
fort at St.
Louis
M.
de
la
Illinois,
of the
Forest, late com-
at the Illinois,
and of
M.
de
Beauvais, our lieutenant of the fort of St. Joseph at the strait
of Lakes
Huron and
Erie," had erected the arms of France
and taken formal possession of
this vast region in the
name
of the king.i
The
little
fort of St.
Joseph was a bastioned block-house
of logs, built the previous year by Duluth of the governor
— one
upon
the orders
of the long chain of French posts
designed to keep English negotiants from the fur country. ^ Prise de possession (vol.x, fol. 206, Archives du Canada, at Paris), quoted in Roy's excellent paper on " Le Baron de Lahontan," in Can. Roy. Soc. Proceed-
ings, 1894, sec.
i,
p. 79, note.
xix
Introduction
and to control the vagrant coureiirs des bois. This hnportant vantage point, refounded (1701) some miles below by La Mothe de la Cadillac, was the place to which the young
Gascon was designated, and for whose command he was required to abandon the gayeties of Paris, and the more important business regarding his estates. Setting forth from Fort Niagara on the third of August, Lahontan and his companions proceeded westward as fast as the crude transportation facilities of their day
would permit.
The
first
Thejour-
"^y°"'stage was the long Niagara portage, "being oblig'd to tranfport our Canows from a League and a half below the
great Fall of Niagara, to half a League above
it.
Before we
got at any beaten or level Path, we were forc'd to climb up three Mountains,
upon which an hundred Iroquefe might
on the head with Stones." Frequently attacked by these " cruel Fellows," Lahontan was naturally much alarmed at the danger of falling into the hands of such
have knock'd us
all
expert torturers, declaring that " live in the
midft of Fire
is
To
die
is
nothing but to
This constant fear
too much."
apparently paralyzed our author's usual powers of description, for he
dismisses with a scant paragraph the " fearful
Cataract," which nine years before the garrulous Friar
Hen-
nepin had so carefully pictured with both pen and pencil.
The
little
company
the North-Coaft of the fish
of whites and savages " coafted along
Lake of Erie,"
and wild turkeys, and arrived
Huron on
feasting abundantly
at
mouth
the
the fourteenth of September.
"
You
of
on
Lake
cannot im-
agine," he assures his correspondent, " the pleafant
profped
XX
Introduction
of this Strelght, and of the
The
garrison of the
little
Poft very chearfully"
from duty,
relieved
in the
and quickly
fur-traders,
camps of the savages. Duluth and Tonty having in
left
[of St. Clair]
for
log fortress " surrendered their
newcomers and, being now
way of
their kind at once turned
scattered
throughout the distant
tarried for a few days, the former
some supplies
at this station
and being interested
Joseph.
Spring.
Charmed with
the beauty and free
country, the youthful
|.j^g
he had become
the
chase, to which
passionately devoted, and dallying with parties
of tribesmen that passed up and
or hunting.
of
life
commandant passed
autumn agreeably enough, occupied with the
down bent on
war, plunder,
But the ensuing winter was rigorous to
that restricted hunting, is
;
forts of wild Fruit-Trees."
a crop of Indian corn which he had sown the previous
Life at Fort St.
all
the
to
Lake
little
their banks are cover'd with
a
degree
and the consequent short commons
suggested by Lahontan's
remark that the Jesuit Father
sly
Claude Aveneau, who arrived towards the end of November to serve as chaplain, "
found no occafion to trouble himfelf
with preaching Abftinance from
By
the
first
Meat
in the
time of Lent."
of April (1688), the restless
doubt intensely wearied by the long and
commander, no
inactive winter, sought
excuse in his lack of provisions to set out with the majority of Departure for
Mackinac.
his forcc
—
£qj. ^j^g
— a Small httle
garrison being
left at
the fort
French military and trading station
then on the north shore of the
strait of
Mackinac, to " buy
up Corn from the Hurons and Outaouans."
Soon
after his
Introduction
xxi
arrival at that distant outpost, there
La Salle's austere Texan colony of
Cavelier,
France were
World
desperate
in
brother, and the other survivors
learned also that his
From
straits.
own
the " fagg
" he thereupon addressed a letter to the
three
hundred Crowns
Gaves of by a
Guns
Son of
fifty
Beam Gun Ship, .
.
in
end of the
An
appeal
^°' protection,
Gentleman that fpent
a
affairs in
Marquis de
Seignelay, then powerful at court, craving his protection for the "
Abbe
that ill-fated explorer.
of the lost
At Mackinac Lahontan
appeared there
deepening the Water of the two
rendering the Bar of Bayonne paffable
.
whereas
durft not venture over
in
former times a Frigot of ten
it
.
.
and the bringing down
.
of Mafts and Yards from the Pyrenean Mountains, which
could never have been effected,
if
he had not by his Care,
and by the disburfing of immenfe Sums, enlarged the quantity of
Water
Not
in
the
Gave of Oleron
only, pleads our petitioner,
and fees been cut
to a double proportion."
had the entailed privileges
off at his father's death,
been denied several high
political positions,
but the son had *'
all
which were
mine by Inheritance"; and now there followed "an unjuft Seizure
that
fome pretended Creditors have made of the
Barony of
la
Hontan, of
tiguous to
it,
and of
the hands of the
a
a piece of
Chamber
that his absence in the
of Bayonne."
American wilds
of his creditors, and asks for
Year," that he
"Leave
may confront and
The wander
Ground
that lies con-
hundred thoufand Livres that
is
to
He
is
lay in
confident
the sole justification
come home
the next
rout them.
lust strong within his veins, the
adventurous
Introduction
xxii lieutenant roved
as far afield
neighboring regions, and Rovings
in
as Sault
Ste.
Marie and the
July joined a party of Chippewa
o^ ^^ inglorious raid into the Iroquois country,
in
the Northwest,
Lake Huron, stopping at his fort only to It was upon this excursion, far land a few sacks of corn. removed from his field of duty, that Lahontan was accom^^g^ q£
Huron
panied by the
and immortalized Late
chief.
The
under the
in his Voyages^
summer he returned situation now untenable.
in the
found the
had stopped
at the
whom
Rat,
he has idealized
title
" Adario."
to Fort St. Joseph, but Parties of Indians
who
post for the usual parleying and present-
begging, brought news of the reduction of the garrison at Niagara
joseph
by disease and
destitution, of its
probable abandonment, also of the peace which Denonville was " clapping up " with their common foe, the Iroquois.
Lahontan reasoned that
all
this
rendered his fort
of no value, that he had an accumulation of scarce two months' provisions, and having received neither orders nor supplies
from the governor, was thus thrown upon
He
therefore abandoned his
house and
its
own
command, burned
discretion.
the block-
stockade, and on the twenty-seventh of
embarked with
his
all
men
August
for Mackinac, where he arrived
the tenth of the following month. his
his
on
In the French edition of
work, the commandant elaborately argues that while the
abandonment of officer in
his
Europe,
it
post would be a misdemeanor in an
was
in the
example of military sagacity.
ment on
this
question, there
far interior of
America an
Whatever may be one's judgis
no evidence that Lahontan
xxiii
Introduction
because of this action was either reprimanded or degraded
Doubless Fort
rank.
of
and
affairs,
Upon
at this juncture
destruction certainly resulted in no disad-
its
New
vantage to
Joseph was valueless
St.
France.
reaching Mackinac with his detachment, the baron
found advices to the
effect that
ordered to return with
his
men
he had been relieved, and to
Quebec, provided " the
Seafon and other Circumftances permit; or to tarry here
the Spring
till
if I
ordered
to
^"'=''"-
forefee unfurmountable Dif-
ficulties in the Paffage."
But the convoys for that year had
returned to the lower country, and the inac
in
and the savages united
commandant
at
Mack-
representing to him the
in
diffi-
culties of the journey, the rapids to be run, the hazardous With comparatively inexperienced portages to be made.
soldiers this
was
all
but impossible, and they must perforce
content themselves in the upper country until the arrival of spring.
Lahontan himself has been our guide; his accounts of his own adventures and shortcomings have been recorded in the letters with a naivete and a wealth of detail
Thus
far
that bear the
stamp of
But we now come
verity.
...
that apochryphal relation in the Voyages^
many years
has caused the entire
by historians
Long.
as fiction
Writing to
announces
his
Countries that
my
felf
up here
his friend
intention I
— the
work
which for
this
J
^^
^^.^.^^
to the
River Loag.
to be rejected
alleged journey to the River
under date of September
"to
travel
Winter."
The
i8,
he
through the Southern
have fo often heard of," for "
all
to
following
I
cannot
May
mew
he gives
xxiv to
Introduction
correspondent
his
a particularized
and highly readable
account of the tour which he pretends to have made, accompanied by "
my own Detachment
and
the Outaouas," later supplemented by
five
good Huntsmen of
Fox (Outagami)
guides.
Leaving Mackinac on the twenty-fourth of September, the story goes, the explorers coasted along the northwest
shore of Lake Michigan, visited the Sauk, Potawatomi, and
Menominee
villages
the mile-and-a-half
on Green Bay, ascended Fox River, made
swampy portage
to the Wisconsin (Octo-
ber 16-19), and arrived at the Mississippi four days
Working
their
of the River
way up
that river, the party reached the
Long on
the second of
baron claims to have ascended for its
November.
many leagues,
later.
mouth
This the
visiting
upon
banks the wonderful nations of the Eokoros, Esanapes,
and Gnacsitares, from
whom
he gathered information con-
Mozeemlek and Tahuglauk beyond also of a West that emptied itself into a salt lake of hundred leagues in circumference. At the western
cerning the
;
river in the far
three
limit of this voyage,
Lahontan, as was the custom of French
explorers in that day, set of France done
Upon
up
a
long pole, bearing the
"Arms
a Plate of Lead."
the twenty-sixth of January (1689), the adventurers
set out
upon
ond
March.
of
upon
the return, reaching the Mississippi
Continuing their
trip as far
on the
sec-
down stream
as
mouth of the Ohio, they returned to Illinois River, by means of which and the Chicago portage they entered Lake Michigan, finally arriving at Mackinac the twenty-second of May. Two weeks later, in the company of twelve Ottawa the
xxv
Introduction
Indians, in two canoes, our author set out for Montreal by
the Ottawa River route, after an absence of two years in the
wilderness and
among
"July the 9th
I
the savages of the Northwest.
arriv'd at Montreal, after venturing
feveral fearful Cataracts in the River of the
enduring the hardfhips of
fome of which are above
a
fifteen or
League
down
Outaouas, and
twenty Land-carriages,
Near-
in length."
fhe return '«
ing Montreal, his canoe overturned in the Sault St.
Quebec.
Louis, but he was saved by the adroitness of the Chevalier de
Vaudreuil
— "The only time
I
"through the whole courfe of
was
my
in
danger," he exclaims,
He
Voyages."
found the
colony calmly watching the departure of the unpopular Governor Denonville, but eagerly awaiting the return of the Count
de Frontenac, "for that Governour drew Efteem and Veneration, not only
from the French, but from
this vaft Continent,
who look'd upon him
all
the Nations of
Guardian
as their
Angel."
But when the new governor came on the ber, he "
.
.
.
I
had to go for France,
me a free accefs to his Pocket and am bound to obey." Frontenac made penniless and now disconsolate baron a com-
and has
offer'd
and
of the
countermanded the leave
fo
at the farthest outposts,
and
took counsel of him
desperate condition of
New
;
his
The
Table friend of
f''°°te°3 167, 185,
189, 190, and 191; a folded Signatures. Copies.
— A— K
— ]CB,
Suite |
Du
I
Voyage,
I
— French — Vol. De I'Amerique,
|
Baron de Lahontan
Contenant une defcription I
Peuples Sauvages.
Danemarc, dans
|
|
Avec
lefquels
|
Et d'un
|
Ou Dialogues
|
Sauvage,
exacte des moeurs les
Voyages du
on trouve des
3.
&
meme
parti-
|
|
en Portgugal
|
cularitez tres curieufes,
|
|
Londres, chez David Mortier, Li-
M. DCCIV.
Collation.
& en
enrichi de Cartes
\
|
|
De Mon-
des coutumes de ces
|
1
|
Dans I'Amerique.
& qu'on n'avoit point encore remarquees. Le tout & de Figures. \_Small scrolled ornament^ A Amsterdam, Chez la Veuve de Boeteman, d'Erafme.
p. 5.
LP. 1704
fieur le
"Carte generale de Canada" opp.
in twelves.
— i2mo;
|
Et
fe
vend
|
A
braire dans le Strand, a I'Enfeigne
|
title,
verso blank; " Preface," pp. (12);
"Avis
Lahontan Bibliography
De
I'Auteur
Au
Lecteur," pp. (2); "Dialogues," pp. 1-103;
blank;
half-title:
tugal,
Et en
I
I
"Voyages
and 9th
Plates.
— Opposite pp.
—*
Signatures. is
of
[105];
is
p.
of vols.
1704
I
new
The
118, 149, and 155; a
i,
A— I
— LLQ, 1704
Dialogues Sauvage,
moeurs
du
|
3d, 5th,
ist,
map
of Portugal at
in twelves,
K
This volume
in three.
A
|
— French
De
&
Dialogues issue
:
Monfieur
le
|
&
en
Chez
|
la
|
M. DCCIV.
Collation.
— This
which
as already
original with a
new
— BM,
is
3.
Baron de Lahontan
|
Et d'un
|
Avec
|
Danemarc, dans
lefquels
& qu'on n'avoit & de Figures.
\_Cut,
tout enrichi de Cartes
Amsterdam,
Copies.
— Vol.
des coutumes de ces Peuples Sauvages.
en Portugal
Le
Erafme.
of the Supl'ement ; by the
|
Contenant une defcription exacte des
|
|
|
|
les
Voyages
on trouve des
point encore remar-
Veuve de Boeteman,
Londres, chez David Mortier, Li-
year,
have seen sets of the "Angel issue "
1704 called Dialogues {vide next item).
issue of
cularitez tres curieuses,
I
quees.
|
Supl'e-
NL.
Dans I'Amerique.
|
meme
parti-
We
title-page.
and by the
Suite,
Por-
at p. 145.
and 2 accompanied by the 1703 edition
Copies.
[104]
blank; text of
[106]
mispaged 89.
p.
En
|
merely a reissue of the original sheets of the 1703 edition of the
ment, with a
d'
Baron de Lahontan
of imprint printed in red.
Denmark
in eight,
|
p.
P. 86
and place
lines
107, and a map
p.
Du
|
Danemarc," on
"Voyages," pp. 107-222. 7th,
Ixv
|
a vase offlowers\
Et
fe
braire dans le Strand, a
1'
vend
|
A
Enfeigne
I
a separate issue of the Suite
shown
in loco
is
title-page.
C, JCB,
NL
(two).
Du
Voyage of this
merely the sheets of the 1703
Lahontan Bibliography
Ixvi
— French:
1705
Voyages tentrionale,
y habitent
du Baron
|
nature de leur Gouvernement
la
Coutumes, leur Religion,
&
teret des Franfois
ces Nations I
en Guerre avec
I
Tome
{.Cut,
A
Premier.
La Haye,
Voyages
pp. (8);
— i2mo
"Table
merce
and figures\
&
:
qui leur
L'ln-
|
avec
qu'ils font
de Lahontan ";
Tome
des Lettres du
&
&
title,
de Figures.
augmentee.
|
\
Compagnie.
engraved frontispiece, w^ith 1
Guerre
tout enrichi de Cartes
scene, globe, pillar
;
Commerce,
|
Seconde Edition, revue, corrigee,
|
du Barron
|
Le
|
Chez Jonas I'Honore,
|
|
|
I'Angleterre peut retirer de ce Pais, etant
|
France.
la
Com-
le
Sep-
|
differens Peuples
leur
;
i.
I'Amerique
|
leur maniere de faire la
|
des Anglois dans
with emblematic
Collation. I
&
I'avantage que
;
dans
|
Qui contiennent une Relation des
|
;
La Hontan
de
|
— Vol.
Jonas VHonore
mdccv.
|
title:
"
|
Nouveaux
verso blank; "Preface,"
Premier," pp. (8); "Voyages"
or text, pp. [i]-364; " Explication de quelques Termes," pp. 365-376.
No
The
mispaging.
ist, 3d,
5th, 6th,
nth
place and date of imprint printed in red. in
all,
the paper of signatures
Pto«.
— Opposite
pp.
I,
N—P
I.
The
In some copies,
(pp. 289-360)
is
if
not indeed
browned.
38, 53, 82, 91, 118, 127, 174, 244, 303,
324, and 340; a folded "Carte que
opp. p.
to 14th, and i6th lines and
les
Gnacsitares ont dessine," etc.,
only characteristic variation between the Jonas and
Franfois I'Honore issues of this year seems to be their title-pages. Signatures.
—*
in nine,
Copies.— "QM, JCB,
1
Memoires
|
Voyages de Mr. fcription
Franfois
— French
705 de
|
des
|
|
eight.
|
Anglois, leurs
— VoL.
2.
ou
la
Septentrionale,
Baron de La Hontan:
d'une grande etendue
&
Jonas VHonore
:
I'Amerique
|
le
A — P in twelves, Q in NYHS (imperfect).
NL,
|
|
|
des
la
De-
Suite
Qui contiennent
de Pais de ce Continent, I'interet des
Commerces,
leurs Navigations,
|
les
Lahontan Bibliography
&
Moeurs de
Coutumes
les
Langue du
la
Tome
Second.
|
Pais.
des Sauvages, &c.
Le
|
Avec un
|
petit Dictionaire
&
tout enrichi de Cartes
de Figures.
Seconde Edition, augmentee des Conversations de
I'Auteur avec un Sauvage diftingue.
A
Ixvii
Amsterdam,
|
\_Same cut as in first volume]
|
Pour Jonas THonore
a la
Haye.
|
M DCC v.
|
|
\
|
—
Collation. i2mo; title, verso blank; "Memoires," pp. 5-196; " Conversations de I'Auteur de ces Voyages avec Adario,"pp. 197-310; half-title:
p.
"Dictionaire
de
|
la
Langue
des Sauvages," on p. [311];
|
"Table Des Matieres
[312] blank; "Dictionaire," pp. 313-336;
principales contenues dans ce II
The
and 14th
6th, 7th, 12th,
1st, 3d,
Volume," lines
pp.
No
(2).
mispaging.
and place and date of im-
print printed in red.
Plates.— Opposite pp. 95, 104, 125, 129, 133, 148, 155, 160, 185, 187,
189, and 191;
frontispiece
"Carte Generale de Canada
a petit
point," and a large folded " Carte Generale de Canada " opp. p. Signatures.
— Title-page, A3 — [A12] B — O ,
P
in twelves,
in
5.
one.
Co^-«.— BM, JCB.NL. 1705
Voyages tentrionale,
|
|
du Baron
Francois
de
|
La Hontan
Coutumes,
leur Religion,
&
&
en Guerre avec
Figures.
mentee.
A M
|
I
Tome
dans
|
I.
I'Amerique
|
Sep-
difierens Peuples
Com-
|
I
|
|
Commerce,
|
leur maniere de faire la le
|
Guerre:
merce
|
qu'ils font
I'Angleterre peut retirer de ce Pais, |
Le
tout enrichi de Cartes
Seconde Edition, revue, corrigee,
&
&
Chez Franfois I'Honore
vis-a-vis
de
la
de
aug-
\_Emblematic cut, a globe with five figures seated near a colutnni
Amsterdam,
D CC V.
|
France.
la
Premier.
|
des Anglois dans
avec ces Nations; I'avantage que |
|
— VOL.
nature de leur Gouvernement; leur
la
L'Interet des Francois
etant
V Honor'e
Qui contiennent une Relation des
qui y habitent; leurs
— French:
Bourfe.
\
|
Lahontan Bibliography
Ixviii Collation.
Voyages pp. (8);
|
— i2mo; engraved frontispiece, with
du Barron
"Table
No
376. lines
title:
"Nouveaux
I
verso blank; "Preface,"
title,
Premier," pp. (8); "Voyages"
364; "Explication de quelques Termes," pp. 365-
The
mispaging.
and place and date
Plates.
Tome
des Lettres du
—
or text, pp. [i]
de Lahontan";
|
— Opposite
ist,
3d, 5th, 6th,
nth
to 14th, and i6th
of imprint printed in red.
pp.
i,
38, 53, 82 (corrected from 72), 91, 118,
" Carte que les Gnacsitares 127, 174, 244, 303, 324, and 340; a folded
ont dessine,"
etc., opp. p.
The
volume.
Jonas I'Honore issues of Signatures. Copies.
—*
— B,
but often found at some other location in the
|
le
seems to be their
this year
C,
A— P
in twelves,
Q
title-pages.
in eight.
HC.
— French
de
|
Voyages de Mr. fcription
,
in nine,
BM,
1705
Memoires
i
only characteristic variation between the Franfois and
:
Francois VHonor'e
I'Amerique
1
Septentrionale,
Baron de La Hontan
d'une grande etendue
|
— VOL.
:
|
|
ou
2.
suite
la
Qui contiennent
des
|
De-
la
de Pais de ce Continent, I'interet des
& des Anglois, leurs Commerces, leurs Navigations, les Moeurs & les Coutumes des Sauvages, &c. Avec un petit Dictionaire Le tout enrichi de Cartes & de Figures. de la Langue du Pais. Francois
|
I
|
|
Tome
Second.
|
|
Seconde Edition, augmentee des Conversations de
I'Auteur avec un Sauvage diftingue.
A Amsterdam, Collation.
|
|
[_Same cut as in first volume'}
Chez Franfois I'Honore &Compagnie.|
— i2mo;
title,
verso blank;
" Conversations," pp. 197-310;
half-title:
"Memoires,"
Dictionare
|
de
|
|
M DCC v.
|
pp. 5-196; la
Langue
|
des Sauvages," on p. [311]; p. [312] blank; "Dictionaire," pp. 313-
336; "Table Des Matieres principales contenues dans ce pp. (2).
No
mispaging.
The
ist, 3d,
and place and date of imprint printed
II
Volume,"
6th, 7th, 12th, and 14th lines
in red.
Lahontan Bibliography /'/, yijv 6pC): For you muft know that when or twelve days before.^
the Pilots reckon they approach to Land, they ufe the pre-
caution of fending up Sailors to the Top-Maft, in order to
fome difcovery
Night comes,
till
is
and thefe Sailors are
;
at
which time they
not yet defcry'd
:
So that
reliev'd every
furl their Sails
in the
two hours
if
the
Land
Night-time they fcarce
how important it is make any way. From to know the Coaft, before you approach to it nay, the Paffengers put fuch a value upon the difcovery, that they prefent In the mean time, the firft difcoverer with fome Piftoles. this
it
appears
;
you'll
be pleas'd to obferve, that the Needle of the Compafs,
which naturally points to the North, turns upon the bank of Newfound-Land, twenty three Degrees towards the North-
Weft; that
is,
it
points there a degree nearer to the Weft,
than North-North- Weft.
This remark we made by our Com-
pafs of Variation.
We
Cape about Noon and in order to conDifcovery, ftood in upon it with all fails aloft. At
defcry'd the
firm the
;
1 The name Race, applied to the southeastern extremity of Newfoundland, is met under the form " Cap Rogo," on a map of about the year 1500. The name seems to have been given from the French word " ras," bare or flat. See Harrisse, Ed. Decowverte et Evolution cartographique de Terre-Newve (Paris, 1900) p. 43.
first
,
—
iVor^i-America.
to
29
being affur'd that 'twas the Promontory we look'd
laft,
for,
an univerfal joy was [4] fpread throughout the Ship, and the fate of the
wretches that we had thrown over-board, was quite
Then
forgot.
the Sailors fet about the Chriftening of thofe
who had never made done
it
fooner,
Voyage
the
before, and indeed they had
had not been for the death of our above-
if it
The
mention'd Companions.
Chriftening
I
fpeak
impertinent Ceremony, pradis'd by Sea-faring
humours
are as ftrange and extravagant, as the
upon which they
an
Men, whofe
Element
By
foolifhly truft themfelves.
of, is
it felf,
vertue of a
Cuftom of old ftanding, they profane the Sacrament of Bap-
Upon
tifm in an unaccountable manner.
old Sailors being blacken'd
over, and difguis'd with
Rags
fort that have never pafs'd
fome
down on
their
of Sea Charts, that
upon
all
and Ropes, force the greener
that occafion, the
certain degrees of Latitude before, to fall
Knees, and to fwear upon a all
Book
occafions they will pradtife
mony
that
is
then
made
iftring of this ridiculous
Water upon
their
upon
others, the fame Cere-
ufe of towards them. After the admin-
Oath, they throw
Head,
Belly,
fifty
Buckets
full
and Thighs, and indeed
of all
over their Body, without any regard to times or feafons.
This piece of
folly
is
chiefly pradlis'd
under the Tropicks, under the Polar of Newfound-Land;
and
Sund^ and the Dardanelloes. acter,
in
under the ^Equator,
Circles,
the Streights
As
upon
the
bank
of Gibraltar^ the
for Perfons of
Note or Char-
they are exempted from the Ceremony, at the expence
of five or
fix
bottles of
Brandy for the Ships Crew.
New
Some
30
Three or four days
while
;
Mouth
performance of fo
made up
Solem-
this
to St. Laurence
we were becalm'd for a little Calm, we had a clearer and pleafanter
of which
and during that
we had
day, than any
after the
Cape Raye} and
nity, v/e difcover'd
Bay, in the
Voyages
the Paffage.
feerl in
It
look'd as
that
if
day had been vouchfaf'd us by way of recompence [5] for the
Winds, that we incounter'd by the
Rains, Foggs, and high
There we faw an Engagement between
way.
* Efpadon, a Fijh between 10 and 15 Foot
ihot
iv.g
and having
Snout a fort of IS
be-
four Foot in circum-
ference,
.
long,
in its
Saw which
, r, J ; J four Foot, long, four In-
and
ches broad,
fix
Lines
a
We
from our Frigat.
fedtly
a
Gun-
were per-
charm'd when we faw the Sword-
pj^ j^^p ^^^ ,
^f ^^^ ^^^^^
o
.
•
mto to dart Its Spear ^ Whale, when oblig'd
1
the
-^^
-n
1
^^der 1
/•
Body of the •'
to take breath.
This entertaining fhow
thick.
Whale and
Sword-Fifh, at the diftance of a
*
lafted at leaft
two hours, fometimes to the Starboard, and fometimes to the Larboard of the Ship. ftition prevails as
a prefage of
much
as
The Sailors, among whom Superamong the Egyptians, took this for
fome mighty Storm
;
but the Prophecy ended
two or three days of contrary Winds, during which time we travers'd between the Ifland of Nezvfound-Land, and that Two days after we came in fight of the of Cape Breton. in
Ifland of Fowls,
by the help of
drove us from the Anticofti, 1
Mouth
a North-Eaft
Wind
;
of St. Laurence Bay, to the
which Ifle
upon the bank of which, we thought to have been
Cape Ray
appeared on a
is at
map
the southwestern extremity of
of 1600.
Harrisse, op.
cit.,
Newfoundland Ed.
p. 285.
—
;
the
name
of
cafl first
to
away, by nearing
North'h.vnmcdL,
too much.
it
31
Mouth
In the
of that River
we fell Into a fecond calm, which was follow'd by a contrary Wind, that oblig'd us to lye bye for fome days. At laft we made Tadoiijfac^ by gradual approaches, and there came to an Anchor.^
This River twenty two it
four Leagues broad where
is
Mouth
at its
approaches to
fafe
but
fource.
its
ing Eaft, we weigh'd
got
;
Anchor
it
contracts
Two ;
days
after, the
Currents are apt to turn a Veffel on one
the Coafl: of the
caft
laft
lies
Wind
ftand-
Ifland, in
which the
fide, as well as at the
fome Leagues higher.^ But upon
[6] Ifland,
we had
certainly ftruck
upon
we had not drop'd an Anchor. Had the Ship away at that place, we might eafily have fav'd our
the Rocks,
been
which
gradually, as
and being favor'd by the Tyde,
through the Channel of the Red
Ifland of Coudres,
we then rode, and
it felf
if
1 The Island of Fowls is probably the group still known as Bird Rocks, in St, Lawrence Gulf, north of Magdalen Islands. Anticosti is a large island one hundred and forty miles long by about twentyseven in average breadth. It lies in the mouth of St. Lawrence River, and three years before this voyage of Lahontan had been granted as a seigniory of Louis Jolliet, the
Mississippi explorer.
Tadoussac, at the entrance of Saguenay River, is one of the oldest towns in Canada, having been founded before Quebec. It was the favorite resort of the MonThe Recollects tagnais Indians, and the centre of a thriving fur-trade and fishery. and here the hostile English fleet, under Admiral said mass here as early as 1617 The Jesuits began a mission at Tadoussac Sir David Kirk, anchored in July, 1628. Ed. before 1642, and one of their early churches (built 1647-50) is still to be seen. ;
—
2
Red
Island
is
that
now known
as Isle
Rouge,
in the St.
Lawrence opposite
It was early noted for its seal fishing. See Jesuit Relations, xxxii, p. 93. aux Coudres was so designated for the hazelnut bushes with which it abounded, and appears to have been so named by Cartier. The early voyagers speak of the Ed. number of elk to be found on this island.
Tadoussac. Isle
—
Some
32 felves
But
:
prov'd
it
New
fo, that
we were more
Next Morning we weighed with the next day after mente,
came
to an
Voyages
a frefh gale
Anchor over
aflfraid
than hurt.
from the
Cape Tour-
againft
where we had not above two Leagues over, tho'
fame time
'tis
a
at the
dangerous place to thofe who are unacquainted
with the Channel.^ failing to the
and
Eaft,
From
thence we had but feven Leagues
Port of Quebec, where we now ride
at
Anchor.
we faw fuch floats of Ice, and fo much Snow upon the Land, that we were upon the point of turning back for France, tho' we were not In our Paffage from the red Ifland to this place,
We
then above thirty Leagues off our defired Port. affraid of
we
being ftop'd by the
Ice,
and
fo loft
;
were
but thank
God
'fcap'd.
We
have receiv'd advice, that the Governor has mark'd
out Quarters for our Troops in fome Villages or Cantons adjacent to this City; fo that afhore,
I
am
oblig'd to prepare to go
and therefore muft make an end of
this Letter.
I
cannot as yet give you any account of the Country, excepting that
'tis
already mortally cold.
give you a it
better.
from
his
more
We
As
ample defcription of
to the River, it,
when
I
I
come
mean to
to
know
Mr. de la Salle is juft return' Travels, which he undertook upon the difcovery of are informed that
a great River that falls into the Gulf of Mexico
;
and that he
1 Cape Tourmente is a lofty promontory on the St. Lawrence, about twenty miles below Quebec, towering nineteen hundred feet above the meadows (Beaupre) at its " however little wind It was so named by Champlain (1608), who noted that base. may blow the sea there is as if it were high tide. At this place the water begins to
be fresh. "
— Ed.
to
North- hxntnc2i.
imbarques to morrow for France}
He
33
is
perfedlly well ac-
quainted with Canada^ and for that reafon you ought to him,
if
you go
to Paris this Winter.
I
vifit
am,
SIR, Tours, &c. 1
Rene Robert
Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle, had just returned from his successful
journey into the interior, where he had explored the Mississippi and in Illinois
founded the colony
of St. Louis.
new governor gave
a ready ear to
Frontenac, his patron, had been replaced, and the
La
Salle's detractors.
The
fortunes of the explorer
were desperate, and he was about to embark for France to seek redress at court. This was his farewell to Canada, his final voyage being made to the Gulf of Mexico,
upon whose waters he was assassinated (March
i8, 1687).
— Ed.
New
Some
34
Voyages
LETTER Dated
at the
II.
Canton of Beaupr^,^
May
1684.
2.
Containing a Defcription of the Plantations of Canada, and the
manner
which they were firfl form' d :
in
the Tranfportation of JVhores together with a
view of
its
As
from France
Climate and
alfo to
an account of
that Country
Soil.
SIR,
AS
foon as we landed three
Companies
Neighbourhood
laft
in
of Quebec.
year,
Mr.
de la Barre lodg'd our
fome Cantons or Quarters
The
Planters
call thefe
in the
places Cotes^
no more than the Sea-Coaft tho' in this Country where the names of Town and Village are unknown, that word is made ufe of to exprefs a Seignory or Manour,
which
in France iignifies
;
Houfes of which lie at the diftance of two or three hundred Paces one from another, and are feated on the brink of
the
the River of St. Laurence.-
In earneft.
Sir,
the Boors of thofe
It three companies were quartered at villages in the vicinity of Quebec. Lahontan's lot to pass the winter in the seigniory of Beaupre, which stretched Montfor six leagues along the river and embraced more than the present county of morency. Beaupre was early settled, and as a Jesuit seigniory received much attenAt this time it was considered the most orderly and thrift)' settlement in the tion.
iThe
fell to
colony. 2
— Ed.
Feudalism was established in
New
France by the act
of Richelieu, in his
grant
One Hundred Associates (1627) Seigniorial tenure was not abolOn the influence of this ished in Lower Canada (Province of Quebec) until 1854. Weir, system see Parkman, Old Regime in Canada (Boston, 1874), chap, xv Ed. Administration of the Old Regime in Canada (Montreal, 1896-97). to the
Company
of
.
;
—
;
A^or^/6- America.
to
Manors
live
with more eafe and conveniency, than an infinity
of the Gentlemen in France.
Boors, for that name
whether
it
is
I
am
as little
out indeed in calling 'em
known
that the eafinefs of their Life, puts
The
'em upon a level with the Nobility.
--, pooreft of them have four in front,
Urpents of
J An Arpent is a fpot .f^,,^^^ containing 100
thirty or forty in
Perches fquare, each of
.
,
depth
and
.
.
,
The whole Country being
:
here as in Spain;
be that they pay no Taxes, and injoy the liberty of
Hunting and Fiihing; or
Ground
35
a con-
tinued Forreft of lofty Trees, the ftumps
which
is
[8] of which muft be grub'd up, before they can a
Plough.
at firft
for
;
'Tis true, this
but
when
in a fhort
is
time after they is
make
ufe of
make up
their Loffes
capable of receiving Seed,
it
Corn
is
yields an increafe to the rate of an
there fown in
Foot
troublefom and chargeable task
a
the Virgin ground
eighteen
'°"^"
May, and reap'd about
hundred
fold.
the middle of September.
Inftead of threfhing the Sheafs in the Field, they convey 'em to Barns, at
where they
lie till
which time the Grain
Ear.
the coldeft feafon of the Winter,
is
more
eafily
difengag'd from the
In this Country they likewife fow Peafe, which are
efteem'd in France. well as Butchers
All forts of Grain are very cheap here, as
The
Meat and Fowl.
price of
almoft nothing, in comparifon with the charge of
which after
all is
remov'd hither from to fet
Wood
its
is
carriage,
very inconfiderable. are a free fort of People that
Moft of the Inhabitants
Money
much
France,
up withal
:
and brought with 'em but
The
reft are
about thirty or forty years ago,
at
thofe
who were
little
Soldiers
which time the Regiment
New
Some
36
Voyages
of Carigtian was broke, and they exchang'd a Military Poft,
Trade of
for the
Neither the one nor the other
Agriculture}
pay'd any thing for the grounds they poffefs, no more than the Officers of thefe Troops,
Continent
vaft
is
nothing
The Governours General Leagues of ground pleas'd
and
;
at the
who mark'd out
to themfelves,
unmanur'd and woody Lands; for
certain portions of
elfe
allow'd the Officers three or four
much depth
front, with as
in
this
than one continued Forreft.
as they
fame time the Officers gave the Soldiers
much ground as they pleas'd, upon payment of a Crown per Jrpent, by way as
the condition of the of Fief.
After the reform of thefe Troops, feveral Ships were fent hither
from France, with
a
Cargoe of
Women
of an ordinary
Reputation, under the diredlion [9] of fome old ftale Nuns, who rang'd 'em in three Claffes. The Veftal Virgins were
heap'd up, different
(if
I
may
Brides, juft as a Butcher do's an
Sheep.
In thefe three
for here was
fatisfie
fome big fome
and fome meagre. ^
Lahontan's chronology
In is
fine,
ordered to America.
Coming
the Iroquois.
A
to
there was fuch variety and
the moft whimfical Appetites;
little,
fome
fair
fome brown, fome
there was fuch
quite inaccurate
since the regiment of Carignan-Salieres, the
Turks.
in three
Ewe from amongft a Flock of
Seraglio's,
change of Diet, as could
fat
one above another,
fo fpeak)
Apartments, where the Bridegrooms fingled out their
first
;
Accommodation,
scarcely twenty years
regular troops in
New
had passed France, was
This command had seen service in France and against the Canada in 1665, the soldiers were effectively employed against
few years
later several companies were disbanded, and urged to Rewards in money and land were given those who married and settled in the province, and the descendants of these soldiers were among the most able and prominent citizens of the colony. See Suite, " Le Regiment deCarignan," in
become
colonists.
Canadian Royal Society Proceedings, 2d
series, viii,
pp. 25-95.
— Ed.
iVo;Y/6-America.
to
might be
that every one
fitted to his
37
Mind
And
:
indeed the
had fuch a run, that in fifteen days time, they were
Market
difpos'd of.
I
am
went
told, that the fatteft
off befl,
all
upon
the apprehenfion that thefe being lefs adive, would keep truer to their Ingagements, and hold out better againft the nipping
cold of the Winter
But
:
after
all,
Adventurers found themfelves miftaken
However,
Remark
;
be as
that
let
will,
it
many
a great
it
in
of the
their
He-
meafures.
affords a very curious
namely. That in fome parts of the World, to which
the vicious European
Women are
tranfported, the
Mob
of thofe
Countries do's ferioufly believe, that their Sins are fo defac'd I
took notice of before, that
as
Ladies of Vertue, of Honour,
by the ridiculous Chriflening, they are look'd
upon ever after
and of an untarnifh'd
condud of Life. The Sparks
to be married,
made
Governefl'es, to
whom
their
Goods and
they were oblig'd to give an account of
Eftates, before they
were allow'd to make
After the choice was deter-
min'd, the Marriage was concluded
upon
prefence of a Priefl, and a publick Notary the Governor-General beftow'd
Cow,
a
Hog,
a
certain
Coat of Arms
call'd
;
the fpot, in the
and the next day
;
upon the married Couple,
Sow, a Cock,
Meat, and eleven Crowns
fait
wanted
their Addreffes to the above-mention'd
their choice in the three Seraglio's.
Bull, a
that
a
a
Hen, two Barrels of
together with [lo] a
by the Greeks
\\
Kipara}
This slanderous and apparently malicious account of the mothers of the Canamuch obloquy upon our author. For a refutation from contemporary documents, see Parkman, Old Regime, pp. 221-230 Roy, " Le Baron deLahontan," Can. Roy. Soc.Proc, 1894, sec. i,pp. 150-162; Suite, " Pretendues Ed. Origines des Canadiens fran(ais," in Id., 1885, sec. i, pp. 13-26. 1
dian population has brought
;
—
New
Some
38
The
Voyages made
Officers having a nicer tafte than the Soldiers,
their
AppHcation to the Daughters of the ancient Gentlemen of the Country, or thofe of the richer fort of Inhabitants
know
that
hundred
Canada has been
poffefs'd
years.
Houfe
;
is
there
make
beyond
meafure, from the
During
or four foot deep
and the Snow upon the ground,
;
;
which
is
three lies
Latitude of forty feven Degrees, and fome odd Minutes.
Whatever
is in that matter, I
to the
The Weather
longer here than at Paris. ferene, that in three
the Horizon.
I
Weeks
is
number
replenifh'd.
muft take notice of one thing,
Summer
that feems very ftrange, namely, that the
fifteen
is
very ftrange in a Country that
of Mountains, with which this vaft Continent
I
of
that fpace of time, the
Moft People impute the extraordinary Snow
for
from the
Month
always frozen over, notwithftanding the flowing and
ebbing of the Sea
in the
to guard themfelves
all
December^ to that of April. is
a well fur-
Their Chimnies are very large, by reafon of
the prodigious Fires they
Cold, which
good and
and moft of the Houfes are of Wood, and two
Stories high.
River
you
by the French above an
In this Country every one lives in a nifh'd
for
;
time you
is
fhall
days are
then fo clear and
not fee a Cloud in
hope to go to Quebec with the
firft
opportunity;
have orders to be in a readinefs to imbarque within
days for Monreal, which
that lies fartheft
is
the City of this Country,
up towards the Head of the River. I
am,
SIR, Yours,
&c.
to
North- Knitnc2i,
LETTER
[11]
Dated
at
Quebec
39
III.
May
15. 1684.
Containing an ample Defcription of the City of Quebec, and of the Ifland of Orleans.
SIR,
BEFORE
I
fet
the Ifland of Orleans^ which
and three
breadth:
in
I
had the curiofity to view
is
feven Leagues in length,
out for Monreal,
Tourmente, to within a
It
extends from over
League
place the River divides
it
felf
againfl:
Cape
and a half of Quebec, at which
two branches.
into
The
Ships
through the South Channel; for the North Channel is fo foul with Shelves and Rocks, that the fmall Boats can only fail
The Ifland belongs to a General Farmer of Fr^wc^, who would make out of it a thoufand Crowns of yearly pafs that way.
Rent,
if
himfelf had the
management of
with Plantations, that produce Quebec
League grees,
in
is
all
it.
'Tis furrounded
forts of Grain.^
the Metropolitan of New-France, being almofl: a
Circumference
and 12 Minutes.
;
It lies
in the
The Longitude
Latitude of 47 De-
of this place
is
uncer-
iThe island of Orleans, which lies in the St. Lawrence near Quebec, is twentyone miles long by about five in width. It was named by Cartier (1535) Isle of BacThis chus, but subsequently given its present appellation by the same explorer. At the time of Lahontan it was a fief-noble island was granted as a fief in 1636. See Bois, L' Isle d' Orleans (Quebec, in the possession of the family of Berthelot. 189s).— Ed.
Some
40
tain,i as well as that
New
Voyages
of feveral other Countries, with the leave
of the Geographers, that reckon you
up 1200 Leagues from
Rochel to Quebec, without taking the pains to meafure the
However,
Courfe:
I
am
fure that
but
lies
it
at
too great a
from France, for the Ships that are bound hither; For their paiTage commonly lafts for two Months and a half,
diftance
whereas the homeward bound Ships may failing, eafily
make
the Belle
Ifle,
which
is
30 or 40 days
in
the fureft [12] and
moft ufual Land, that a Ship makes upon a long Voyage. reafon of this diflPerence,
100 days of the year, Quebec
is
Merchants
is,
that the
Winds
and Wefterly for 260.
divided into the upper and the lower City.
live in the latter, for the
Houfes, three
fine
Story high, of a fort of Stone that's as hard as Marble.
the lower. ftands
upon
Both
is full
as populous,
Cities are
and
as well
commanded by
the higheft Ground.
The
conveniency of the Har-
bor; upon which they have built very
upper or high City
The
are Eafterly for
This Caftle
is
a
The
adorn'd as
Caftle,
that
the Refidence
of the Governours, and affords them not only convenient Apartments, but the nobleft and moft extenfive Profpe6l in the World.
Quebec wants two effential things, namely, a
and Fortifications
;
Key
though both the one and the other might
be eafily made, confidering the conveniency of Stones lying
upon
the fpot.^
iThe
'Tis incompafs'd with feveral Springs, of the
true latitude of
Greenwich.
Quebec
is
46° 49' north; the longitude, 71° 13' west of
— Ed.
2 Champlain began the fortifications of Quebec by the founding of Fort St. Louis on the citadel rock. This building was replaced in stone by his successor Montmagny, who also laid the foundations for the first Chateau St. Louis, which w-s
^
iVor^^- America.
to
Water
beft frefh
out of Wells
knows how
that not one of 'em
Thofe who upper
order to
to convey the
raife either flat
on the River
live
much
half fo
World, which the Inhabitants draw
in the
for they are fo ignorant of the Hydroftaticks,
;
tain Bafins, in
41
Water
to cer-
or fpouting Fountains.
fide, in the
lower City, are not
pinch'd with the Cold, as the Inhabitants of the
befides that the former have a peculiar conveniency
;
of tranfporting in Boats, Corn, to the very
Doors of
their
Wood, and
Houfes
But
:
other NecefTaries,
as the latter are
more
expofs'd to the injuries of the Cold, fo they injoy the benefit
and pleafure of
a cooler
the one City to the other
Houfes on each
upon
The
a
;
only
from
Houfes
its
Quebec fl:ands
are not uniform.
[13] bottom, at fome fmall difl;ance
fide of a little River,
up the City
Laurence^ coops
a little fl:eep.
'tis ;
in a
leads
pretty broad, and adorn'd with
is
Ground and
Intendant lives
from the St.
fide
very uneven
The way which
Summer.
which by joyning the River of Angle.
in a right
His Houfe
is
the Palace in which the Soveraign Council affembles four times a
Week^; and on one
demolished
during his
in
1694 to
last years.
fide of which,
we
fee great
Magazines
make way for tne finer structure which Frontenac constructed See Gagnon, Le Fort et le Chateau St. Louis (Quebec, 1895).
Quebec's walls were not built until the latter years of Frontenac; again, in 1720, Chassegros de Lery made great improvements in the circumvallation, and enlarged Repairs and improvements were maintained throughout
the area contained therein.
the French rdgime.
See
1903)1 PP- 101-145. 1
For a plan
of
Suite, Histoire des
work, p. 49. 2
The
Doughty and Dionne, ^lebec under Tivo Flags (Quebec,
— Ed. Quebec
at this period, see that of J.
Canadiens fran^ais,
— Ed.
ii,
p. 32
;
B. Franquelin (1683), in of 1700 in the same
and another
sovereign council was established by the king upon the retrocession of the
colony by the
Company
of
New France
(1663).
It
was
first
composed
of the governor,
Some
42 of
Ammunition and
High
the
City
Prebendaries,
New
Voyages There
Provifions.
The Cathedral confifts of a Bifhop, and twelve who live in common in the Chapter-Houfe, the
Priefl:s
are a very
good
is
truly wonderful.
People
fort of
tent themfelves with bare Necefl"aries,
which
Jefuits, flately,
Roman
way.^
The fecond Church
and the number gradually increased
is
a fair,
Later, the intendant %vas added to the council,
to twelve.
Its
functions were mainly judicial,
likewise took cognizance of civil and financial affairs.
it
that of the
and
;
and well lighted Edifice. The great Altar of the Jefuits
bishop, and five appointed councillors.
but
they con-
perform'd
is
is
Center of the City
fl:ands in the
;
and meddle with nothing
but the Affairs of the Church, where the Service after the
in
:
Magnificence and Architedlure of which
Thefe poor
Churches
are fix
Its
records have been
published.
At
first
the council met in the ante-room of the governor's palace, but
complaint of the intendant the ministry ordered the purchase of the
site of
upon the
a brewery
Talon upon St. Charles River. Here the intendant's palace was This was burned in 1713, being rebuilt upon a scale of splendor. The site Ed. once more occupied by a brewery. ^ The cathedral of Notre Dame, now called the " Basilica," was long the only
formerly erected by
begun. is
—
Begun in 1647, the first mass was said therein three years was consecrated by Bishop Laval in 1666. In the early eighteenth century its was found inadequate, and it was rebuilt after the plans of the chief engineer of
parish church of Quebec. later size
New
;
it
The
France, Chaussegros de Lery (1747-48).
English siege (1759),
all
the
wooden
building suffered
parts being burned.
much during the
Repairs were instituted
when only minor changes have been made. The chapter house, or Seminary, which had been begun in 1678, was considered one of the finest buildings See Tetu, Histoire du palais episcopal de ^lebec (Quebec, 1896). in the country.
in 1769-71, since
The Seminary
priests officiated as secular parish cures.
Lahontan's enconiums are
more remarkable, that his sympathies were seldom with ecclesiastics. It appears that the altar and its columns was a superfluous invention upon his part. The Jesuit historian Charlevoix, writing of this church in 1720 {Journal Historique, letter iii), " One would indicates that there was no such ornament, and indulgently remarks the
:
voluntarily pardon that author [Lahontan] /Mster to churche?."
— Ed.
if
he disfigured the truth only to give
North' hrnQvic^.
to
Church, Stone
;
is
43
adorn'd with four great Cylindrical Columns of one
The Stone being
a fort of
Canada Porphyry, and black Thefe Fathers have
as Jet, without either Spots or Veins.
very convenient and large Apartments, beautify'd with pleafant
Gardens, and feveral rows of Trees, which are fo thick
and bufhy, that an Ice-Houfe: that there
is
Summer one might take their Walks for indeed we may fay without ftretching,
in
And
Ice not far
from 'em, for the good Fathers are
never without a referve in two or three places, for the cooling
Their College
of their Drink.
is
fo fmall, that at the beft
The
they have fcarce fifty Scholars at a time.^ is
Church
third
that of the RecoUedts, who, through the interceffion of
Count
Frontenac^ obtain'd leave of the
Chappel (which ftrances of
Mr.
Jefuits, us'd his
I call
a
King
in concert
The
with the
utmoft Efforts for ten years together to hinder
Before the building [14] of this Chappel, they
it.2
little
Church;) notwithftanding the Remon-
Laval our Bifhop, who,
de
to build a
liv'd in a
Canada
in 1625, and thereafter played a prominent part Their college was founded in 1635, a year before that of Harvard, making it the oldest institution of learning on the North American continent. The church occupied the northeast angle of the college, on the site of the 1
in the
Jesuits
came
development
present Jesuit barracks. college
and
its
and decoration 2
to
of the colony.
The
gardens.
At
now
city hall
covers the larger portion of the
the time of Lahontan's
far superior to the cathedral.
Franfois de Montmorency-Laval,
educated in a Jesuit seminary.
Upon
seigniory in France, but renounced
it
first
visit,
the Jesuit church
site of
was
the
in size
— Ed.
bishop of Canada, was born in 1623 and
the death of his brothers, he for the service of the church.
became
heir of a
In 1658 he was
and sent as vicar apostolic to New France. In 1674 Quebec and Laval made first bishop thereof, a position which he resigned in 1684. Four years later he returned to spend the remainder of his days He supported the Jesuits, and was opposed to in Canada, where he died in 1708. Ed. the re-introduction of the Recollects.
made bishop was
of Petraea
raised to a bishopric,
—
New
Some
44 little
Voyages
Hofpital that the Bifliop had order'd to be built for 'em;
and fome of 'em continue there
The
ftill.^
fourth Church
is
down two or Advantage. The fifth is
that of the Urfelines, which has been burn'd
three times, and
rebuilt to the
ftill
that of the Hofpital-Order,
who
Sick, tho' themfelves are poor,
The Soveraign Council
is
take a particular Care of the
and but
held at Quebec.
Exphca-
^^^
of
It confifts
Capa y de fpada, who fupreme Judicature, and decide all
twelve Counfellors "^See the
lodg'd.^
ill
^j^g
of *
The Intendant
Caufes without Appeal.
claims a Right of being Prefident to the Council; but in the Juftice-Hall the Governour-General places himfelf fo as to face
him, the Judges being
on both
fet
fides of
them
would think they are both Prefidents. While The
1
Recollects (a branch of the Franciscans) were the
;
fo that
one
Monficiir de Fron-
first
ecclesiastics to enter
During their first occupation they had a small convent called Notre Dame des Anges, on St. Charles River, where the General HosAfter the capture of Quebec by the English (1628) pital of Quebec is now situated. and the order did not return to this field until the friars were sent back to France
New
France, coming over in 1615.
,
;
1670,
they built
were
they were sent out as a counterpoise to the Jesuits. Frontenac favored and gave them a concession of land facing the governor's palace, where the chapel here mentioned by Lahontan, although some of the brothers This church living at their suburban convent, Notre Dame des Anges.
when
this order,
still
of the Recollects
was one
of the
finest
in
New
France, being finished in 1681.
Charlevoix said in the next century, that it was "worthy of Versailles." In 1796 it was burned, the site now being occupied by the Anglican cathedral of Quebec the ;
court house occupies a portion of the convent grounds. 2
The
Ursulines were the
first
they did under the patronage of their convent,
which
still
— Ed.
order of nuns to come to
Madame
de
la Peltrie.
occupies the original
site,
New
Two
France (1639), which years later they began
although the buildings have sev-
been burned, and recently much enlarged. The Hospitalieres came over at the same time as the Ursulines, and founded Hotel Dieu, a great hospital which still exists on the same site where the corner stone was
eral times
laid in 1654.
— Ed.
to
was
tenac
in
Canada^ he laugh'd
of the Intendants as
North- Am^nc^i,
;
pretended Precedency
at the
nay he ufed the
45
Members
of that Afifembly
roughly as Cromwell did the Parliament of England.
Court every one pleads
this
own
his
Barrifters never appear there
Caufe, for Sollicitors or
by which means
;
pafs, that Law-Suits are quickly
At
brought to
it
comes
to
without
a Period,
demanding Court Fees or any other Charges from the con-
The Judges, who have but
tending Parties.
four hundred
Livers a Year from the King, have a Difpenfation of not
wearing the Robe and the Cap. have
in
this
Country
a
Befides this Tribunal,
we
Lieutenant-General, both Civil and
Military, an Attorney-General, the Great Provoft, and a Chief Juftice in Eyre.^
The way Country,
is
of travelling in the Winter, whether in that of Sledges
infenfible of the Cold, that
January and February ^?ind [15] midft of a
Wood,
I
drawn by Horfes have feen
in the
fifty
Snow up
upon
Ice, the
fixty of
are fo
'em
in
to their Breaft, in the
travel
from Quebec to
River being then frozen over; and
that occafion thefe Sledges will run
you
fifteen
Leagues
Others have their Sledges drawn by two Maftiff Dogs,
a day.
but then they are longer by the way. travelling in
when
who
or
without ever offering to go near their
Owner's Houfe. In the Winter-time they
Monreal upon the
or
;
Town
I
^One
come
Summer,
I
fhall
for their
tranfmit you an
to be better inform'd.
of the chief causes of dissension
As
I
am
way of
Account of
it,
told that the People
between Frontenac and the intendant, was
See Parkman, Frontenac, pp. 47-71. On Ed. the officers of justice, see Weir, Administration of Old Regime, pp. 63-67.
the presidency of the supreme council.
—
Some
46
New
Voyages
Canows of may exped, as foon as I have made ufe of 'em. The Eafterly Winds prevail here commonly in the Spring and Autumn and the Wefterly have the Afcendant in Winter and Summer. Adieu Sir: I muft now of this Country will go a thoufand Leagues in
Bark; a Defcription of which you
;
make an end All
I
can
of
fay,
relates to the
my Letter,
is,
we
now going
to
Command
Days time
I
for in
all
to
to
Memoirs
Thefe you may
Appearance our
Conclufion of the Campaign that
make
mean
Gov-
in the
Country of the
Iroqtiefe,
In feven or
imbark for Monreal ; and
make
in the
Progrefs to the Villages of
a
of Saut de la Chaudiere, and of Lorete^ which are inhab-
Scilleri,
by the Abenakis and the Hurons.
above three or four Leagues eafe next
Week. As
for the
off;
Knowledge
Thefe Places are not
fo that
Manners of
pretend to defcribe 'em fo foon
I
Ecclefiaftical
of Monfietir de la Barre.
mean time am going ited
and
full fatisfadlion. ;
fhort.
better inftru6led in what
Civil
Opportunity
firft
will return after the
eight
am
tranfmit you fuch exadl
I'll
give you
as fhall
Troops
under the
I
Matter begins to run
Commerce, and the
expedl with the
are
my
that as foon as
ernment of the Country, of the fame,
for
;
I
may
return with
the People,
I
cannot
for a juft Obfervation and
of thefe things cannot be compafs'd without time.
have been this Winter at hunting with thirty or [16] forty
young
Jlgonkins,
Defign
which
in
is
who were
well
made
clever Fellows.
accompanying them, was, to learn
mightily efteem'd in this Country
;
their
for
Language,
all
the other
Nations for a thoufand Leagues round (excepting the
and the Hurons) underftand
it
perfedlly well;
My
nay,
Iroqtiefe all
their
to
iVor^Z>-America.
refpedive Tongues come as near to to the Spanifli}
Words
I
have already
this, as
made my
47 the Portuguefe does
felf
Mafter of fome
with a great deal of Facility; and they being mightily
pleafed in feeing a Stranger ftudy their inable pains to inftrudl me.
I
Tongue
take
all
imag-
am,
SIR, Yours,
&c.
1 The Algonquian language was the most wide-spread of the Indian dialects North America, being used by most of the tribes east of the Mississippi and south
of of
The Huron-Iroquois stock were aliens in their midst. See Powell, "Linguistic Families of North America," in U. S. Bureau of Ethnology Report, 1885-86.
Hudson Bay.
The Algonkins Quebec.
proper were a tribe whose original
See Jesuit Relations, index.
— Ed.
home was
in the province of
New
Some
48
Voyages
LETTER Dated
at
IV.
Monreal, June
14. 1684.
Containing a h'ief Defcription of the Habitations of the Savages in the
&€. as far up ^ "^
Of the River of St. Lawrence, Monreal; Of a curious way of fifhing Eels; and of the Cities o/TroIs Rivieres and Mon-
Neighbourhood of Quebec
^
as
,
Coureurs
Bois. See the
de
Ex-
plication Table.
;
-^
-^
r
^^^^
'•
'together with
1
r>
j
ex
an Account of the Londutl
of the * Forrefl Rangers or Pedlers.
SIR,
BEFORE my Departure
from Quebec,
Villages inhabited by the Savages.
I
vifited the adjacent
The
Village oi Lorete
peopled by two hundred Families [17] of Hurons, who were converted to Chriftianity by the Jefuits, though with a great is
deal of Reludancy.^
The
Villages of
Silleri,
and of Saut de
la
Chaudiere, are compos'd of three hundred Famihes oiAbenakis, who are likewife Chriftians, and among whom the Jefuits have
^The
was a mission colony of the Jesuits, founded after the Huron mission by the Iroquois (16+9). Part of the instructed
village of Lorette
destruction of the
Hurons sought
the fathers at Quebec, and were
first
established on the Isle of Orleans
;
during the Iroquois war, the remnant was removed to a less-exposed situation, few years later, and by 1669 settled at Notre Dame de Foye (now Ste. Foye). there Lahonthis colony removed to the village of Lorette (now Ancienne Lorette) and later,
A ,
In 1697, impelled by need of fresh fuel and land, they founded the final home, village of Jeune Lorette, eight miles from Montreal, which became their Ed. found. be still to is race Huron of the and where a remnant
tan visited them.
—
North'AvciQv\c2i,
to
fetled MifHonaries.^
I
return'd to Quebec time enough, and
imbarqued under the condud: of have had a
49
Winds wafted us in five or fix days which is the name of a fmall City, feated Leagues from hence.
three Rivers, that fpring
The North-
Soldiers.
to Trois Rivieres^
Eaft
thirty
would rather
a Mafter, that
Lading of Goods, than of
at the diftance of
That City derives
its
from one Channel, and
name from
after continu-
ing their divifion for fome fpace re-unite into a joynt Stream, that falls into the River of St. Laurence, about half a quarter of a
Had we
League below the Town.
would have carry'd us thither that the River
ture
upon
in the
it
of
is full
;
fo,
fail'd all
Night, the Tides
two days time
Rocks and
dark
Night, which did not
in
at all difpleafe
me
in
regard
we
durft not ven-
to an
Anchor every
Shelves,
we came
but
;
;
for in the courfe of
thirty Leagues, (notwithfl:anding the darknefs of the Night) it
gave
me
an opportunity of viewing an
infinite
number
of
Habitations on each fide of the River, which are not above a
Musket-Shot
diftant
diverted ^The
me
and
very agreeably with the
mission colony
tagnais, etc.; but
its
The
one from another.
that are fetled between Quebec
at Sillery
fifteen fifiiing
was originally founded
Inhabitants
Leagues higher, of Eels.
for the
At low
Algonkins,
Mon-
inhabitants were decimated by disease and the ravages of intoxi-
cation, so that the converted
Abenaki from Maine, who began coming
to
Canada
about 1680, formed the main body of the colony. The mission was maintained here until 1699, when the land which had been ceded in trust for the Indian converts was retroceded to the Jesuit order.
" Le Saut de la Chaudiere " was a village on the river of that name, opposite Quebec, where was established about the time Lahontan arrived in Canada, the Abenaki mission of St. Frangois de Sales. In 1700 all the scattered villages were collected in one,
which
exists
County, Quebec.
till
— Ed. 4
the present time
— that
of St. Francois
du Lac, in Yamaska
New
Some
50
Voyages Water-M ark;
water they ftretch out Hurdles to the lo weft
and that fpace of ground being then dry by the retreat of the Water,
is
Between
cover'd over, and fhut up by the Hurdles.
the Hurdles they place at certain diftances Inftruments call'd
Ruches^ from the refemblance they bear to a Bee-hive
Baskets and
and
Bouteux,
Then
Bouts de Quievres.
Now
Autumn.
befides
Nets belag'd upon a Pole, which they
little
Months
fafhion for three
;
they
and two
in [i8] the Spring,
as often as the
call
let all ftand in this
Tide comes
in,
in the
the Eels look-
ing out for fhallow places, and making towards the Shoar,
croud
among
in
the Hurdles, which hinder 'em afterwards to
with the Ebb-water; upon that they are forc'd to bury
retire
themfelves in the abovementioned Ingines, which are fometimes fo over-cram'd, that they break.
When
low water,
'tis
the Inhabitants take out thefe Eels, which are certainly the biggeft,
and the longeft
Barrels,
where
And
they'll
in the
keep
a
World.
They
fait
them up
in
whole year without fpoiling
indeed they give an admirable
Sauces
relifh in all
;
nay,
there's nothing that the Council of Quebec defires more, than
that this Fifhery fhould be equally plentiful in Trois Rivieres
of forty Pales.
fix
is
a little paltry
Degrees;
The
'tis
Town,
all
years.
feated in the Latitude
not fortified neither with Stone, nor
River to which
it
owes
its
name, takes
hundred Leagues to the North- Weft, from the of Mountains in the Univerfe.
The
its rife
an
greateft ridge
Algonkins
who
are at
prefent an Erratick fort of Savages, and, like the Jrabs, have
no
fetled
Abode;
that People,
the banks of this River,
I fay,
feldom ftraggle far from
upon which they have
excellent Beaver-
North' Ammc2i,
to
51
In former times the Iroquefe cut off three fourths of
hunting.
but they have not dar'd to renew their Incur-
that Nation
;
fions, fince
the French have Peopled the Countries that
higher up upon the River of ieres a little
itants
though
;
ftately
Town, with at the
Laurence.
fame time they are very has
made
it
Governor, who would die for Hunger, with the Natives for Beavers, Befides, a
Man
that
would
per with a Dog, or at
leaft
when
place
make
I
am
Leagues long, and had
live there,
Mouth
difficulty
Calms oblig'd us to
of which,
Towards
Houfes.2
live in
if
he did not trade out:
is
muft be of the like tem-
more numerous than
inform'd, that the Natives of this
I
caft
defcry'd with
the Evening
St. Peter's
enough
receives three or four Rivers that
the
and
the beft Soldiers in the Country.^
the frequent It
rich,
the Refidence of a
he muft take pleafure in fcratching
Three Leagues higher we enter'd fix
Trois Riv-
his fmall allowance
[19] his Skin, for the Flea's are there the grains of Sand.
I call'd
reference to the paucity of the Inhab-
The King
Houfes.
St.
lie
we
Lake, which
in croffing
Anchor
;
Fifh
;
upon
Telefcope very
fail'd
for
feveral times.
abound with
my
it
is
fine
out of that Lake
^ For the history of Trois Rivieres, on the St. Lawrence at the mouth of Maurice River, see Suite, " La Riviere des Trois Rivieres," Roy. Soc. Proc, 1901, pp. 97-
116.
— Ed.
2
Lake
crossing
it
St.
Peters
on the day
enlargement of the midst of the most
was christened Lac d'AngouIeme by Cartier but Champlain changed the name in the iatter's honor. It is an ;
of the saint,
St.
fertile
Lawrence, twenty-five miles long by about nine broad, in the It receives several rivers, chief of region of Lower Canada.
which are the Du Loup and Maskinonge from the north the Nicoiet, St. Francis, and Yamaska from the south, not including River Richelieu, which enters the St. Lawrence at the upper end of the lake. Ed. ;
—
UBRARf
Some
52
with a frelh Eafterly Gale Sails,
New ;
Voyages
and though we hoifted up
the Current run fo ftrong againft us, that 'twas three
hours before we could make
Leagues
Sorel
ofiF.^
is
a
Sorely
a certain River
waters of Champlain Lake, to the after having
partly of flack
Laurence^
St.
at Cbambli.^
eight Leagues from Sorel to Monreal,
we fpent three days
in failing
between 'em
by reafon
;
Winds, and partly of the ftrength of the Cur-
In this courfe
fides of the
River of
in front,
conveys the
form'd a Water-fall of two Leagues
Though we reckon but
rents.
which was two fmall
Canton of four Leagues
neighbourhood of which,
in the
yet
our
all
River
all
we faw nothing but Iflands and both along from Quebec to this place, are fo ;
replenifh'd with Inhabitants, that one
may
juflly call
'em two
continued Villages of fixty Leagues in length.
This place, which goes by the name of Monreal,
lies in
Minutes is
about
;
or
Fillemarie,
the Latitude of forty five Degrees, and fome
being feated in an Ifland of the fame name, which
five
Leagues broad, and fourteen Leagues long.
The
Directors of the Seminary of St. Sulpitius at Paris, are the Proprietors of the Ifland, and have the nomination of a
and feveral other Magifbrates
;
Bailifi^,
nay, in former times they
had
Fort Sorel was built by an officer of that
name (Pierre de Saurel), In 1665. he married the daughter of a Canadian seigneur, and in 1672 received a grant of the seigniory of Sorel, where he lived until his death in 1682. Ed, ^
Three years
later
—
^Chambly was named ment,
whom
Jacques de Chambly, captain in the Carignan regiTracy sent (1665) to build an advance fort against the Iroquois. He for
received the surounding land as a seigniory in 1672, but the next year
command nephew.
In
Acadia.
— Ed.
Later he removed to Grenada, and
was
Chambly passed
sent to to his
;
North' A.m.tv\c2i,
to
53
This
the priviledge of nominating a Governor.^
open without any Fortification [20] either of Stone
lies all
Wood
or
:
But
flanding that that
it
Town
little
might
its
fituation
ftands
it
is
advantageous, notwith-
fo
upon an uneven and fandy Ground,
The
be made an impregnable Poft.
eafily
River
of St. Laurence which runs juft by the Houfes, on one fide of
Town,
this
is
not Navigable further, by reafon of
for about half a quarter of a
has but a
in
of rapid
Mr. Perot the Governor of the Town, who thoufand Crowns a year Sallary has made fhift to
fifty
;
thoufand
in a
Skins and Furs.^
by
'tis full
Eddy's, ^c.
falls,
get
League higher,
rapidity
its
his place,
few years, by trading with the Savages
The
Bailiff of the
no more than
Town
his Officers
chants are the only Perfons that
:
gets but
little
So that the Mer-
make Money
here
;
for
the Savages that frequent the great Lakes of Canada^ come
down
hither almoft every year with a prodigious quantity of
Montreal was a religious colony, founded (1642) by a society
1
who received the island being much diminished, the
of Associates of
In 1663 the number of the Asso-
Montreal,
as a seigniory.
ciates
Sulpitians of Paris agreed to take charge of the
and the seigniory was transferred to them, with the rights here mentioned by Lahontan. The Sulpitians held their seigniorial privileges until the abolition of Ed. they still retain much land in Montreal and vicinity. feudal tenure in 1854 enterprise,
—
;
2
Francois Marie Perrot came
niece he had married.
Upon
to
Canada with
Talon (1670), whose Sulpitians named him gov-
the intendant
the request of Talon, the
ernor of Montreal, a grant which was later confirmed by the king.
Perrot abused his
and protected the coureurs des bois. Involved in a dispute with Frontenac, the governor arrested Perrot and sent him to France for trial. The ministry, after punishing him by a brief imprisonment in the Bastille, restored privileges to enrich himself,
him
to his governorship,
where he remained
until
1684.
In this year he was ap-
pointed governor of Acadia, which position he held for three years.
After his recall,
he remained in the country as a trader, and in 1690 was captured by the English.
The
date of his death
is
unknown.
— Ed.
Some
54
New
Voyages
Beavers-Skins, to be given in exchange for Arms, Kettles,
Axes, Knives, and a thoufand fuch things, upon which the
Merchants
clear
Commonly
two hundred per Cent.
the
Gov-
ernor General comes hither about the time of their coming
down, that
order to fhare the
in
People.
The
profit,
Pedlers call'd
from hence every year
de Bois, export
Coiirettrs
Canows
feveral
which they difpofe of among
and receive Prefents from
full
of Merchandife,
the Savage Nations of the
all
Continent, by way of exchange for Beaver-Skins. eight days ago,
I
faw twenty
return with heavy Cargoes
Men, and
or three
;
each
Seven or
or thirty of thefe
five
Canows
Canow was manag'd by two
carry'd twenty
hundred weight,
/'.
e.
forty
packs of Beaver Skins, which are worth an hundred Crowns a
Thefe Canows had been
piece.
out.
You would be amaz'd
lers are
when they return
;
if
and eighteen Months*
a year
you faw how lewd thefe Ped-
how
they Feafb and
Game, and
how prodigal they are, not only in their Cloaths, but [21] upon Women. Such of 'em as are married, have the wifdom but the Batchelors a6t juft to retire to their own Houfes for they as our Eafi-India-Nltn, and Pirates are wont to do Lavifh, Eat, Drink, and Play all away as long as the Goods hold out and when thefe are gone, they e'en fell their Em;
;
;
broidery, their Lace, and their Cloaths. forc'd to
The
go upon
a
new Voyage
This done, they are
for Subfiflance.
Dire6tors of the Seminary of
St. Sulpitius,
take care
who live under very much refpeded in
to fend MifTionaries hither from time to time,
the diredlion of a Superiour, that the Country.
is
They have Apartments
allotted for 'em in a
North-Amtncz,
to ftately, great,
Houfe
and pleafant Houfe,
Model
built after the
is
and the Altar ftands by
55 This
built of Free-ftone.^
of that of St. Sulpice at Paris juft like
it felf,
;
Their
that at Paris.
Seignories or Cantons that lye on the South-fide of the Ifland,
produce
a confiderable
Revenue
and the Inhabitants are rich
for the Plantations are good,
;
Corn, Cattle, Fowl, and a
in
thoufand other Commodities, for which they find a Mercat the City:
But the North part of the
Thefe
Ifland lies wafte.
Diredors would never fuffer the Jefuits or Recolledts to play their Banners here
long run a
though
;
League from the Town,
faw
I
Priefts of the
Order of
Siilpitius,^
dif-
conjedlur'd, that at the
be forc'd to confent to
they'll
At
it.
the diftance of
at the foot of a
who
Mountain, a
are infl:ru6led
by two
and I'm inform'd of
a larger
Plantation of Iroqueje Chriftians, *
'tis
in
whose priests were known as Sulpitians, was by Jean Jacques Olier, a young Parisian priest, one of The next year the Seminary was established at Paris, the Associates of Montreal, and by 1657 the first Sulpitian arrived in Canada. At Montreal they were eagerly welcomed, became the cures of the parish, and later seigneurs of the island (see ante, The first superior was Queylus, upon whose retirement (1671) p. 53, note i). Franfois Casson de Dollier succeeded to the position. The latter came to Canada in His first office was chaplain in an expedi1666 after service in the armies of France. later (1669) he accompanied La Salle on his first voyage tion against the Mohawks 1
The Seminary
founded
at
of St.
Vaugirard
Sulpice,
in 1640,
,
;
of
Western exploration.
Returning to Montreal the following spring, he served as
superior of the Sulpitians until his death (1671-1701).
Montreal, his manuscript was 2
The
first
published in 1871,
The
earliest historian of
— Ed.
Sulpitians founded (1677) the Iroquois mission called from
La Montagne, where were an Indian
village, a school for boys,
its
and another
location. for girls,
During Frontenac's War (1691) this village all aided by a pension from the king. was raided and thirty-five prisoners taken. Some years later (1704) the mission was removed to Sault au Recollet, and sixteen years later became the nucleus of the Indian See Canadian village of Oka on the Lake of Two Mountains, which still exists. Ed. Indian Department Report, 1901, p. 49. ,
—
Some
56
New
Voyages
and more populous Plantation on t'other fide of the River, at the diftance of two Leagues from hence, which is took care of
by Father Bruyas the foon as Mr.
go to Fort
by the fame name. erly in
hope to
fet
upon
the arrival of the
Frontenac^
If I
may
A6lion againft the
out from hence, as
from France ; for he
de la Barre receives advice
defigns to leave Quebec refolve to
I
Jefuit.^
upon
the
credit thofe
Iroquefe,
Lake
firft
Ship.
I
that [22] goes
who have been form-
I fhall
be able upon
my
return from this Campaign, to inform you of fome things that
feem as ftrange to you, as they
will
I
felf.
will
be difagreeable to
my
am,
SIR, Tours, &c.
was known as St. Francois du Sault, from its location on was established at La Prairie de la Madeleine in 1669, and in Father Jacques 1676 removed to this place, which is now known as Caughnawaga. Bruyas came to the Canadian mission in 1666, and labored during the rest of his life 1
The
Jesuit mission
Sault St. Louis.
It
the Iroquois. In 1679 he took charge of the mission at Sault St. Louis, where he lived until his death in 1712. He was superior of Canada missions 1693-98, and linguist of in 1700-01 was instrumental in adjusting peace with the Iroquois. Ed. repute, he prepared the first grammar of the Mohawk language.
among
—
A
to
North- h.vntnc2.,
LETTER Dated In which of the
is
at
57
V.
Monreal June
18. 1684.
view
contain'd a /hort account of the Iroquefe, with a
War
and
means by which
Peace they
made with
the
French, and of the
zvas brought about.
it
SIR,
WROTE
you but four days ago, and did not think to have heard from you fo foon; but this Morning I met with very agreeable Surprifal, in receiving a Packet addrefs'd to to
I a
me by
You may be
your Brother.
fure
I
was
pleas'd, in
being given to underftand what
Europe fince
I
is
left
it.
The knowledge
infinitely well
has
pafs'd
in
of the Affairs oi Europe
comfortable to one that's doom'd to another World, fuch
as this
is,
and
I
cannot but acknowledge
my
felf infinitely in-
In as
debted to you, for the exa6lnefs of your Intelligence.
much
as
you require of me an account of the
would have me to prefent you with and Government that, or
;
I
would
any other point
:
a juft
view of their
willingly fatisfie
But
in
my
felf
ent, is
Temper
regard [23] that
I
am
morrow,
:
So that
only to acquaint you with what
all I I
can do
in
oblig'd I
of things, or to confult thofe
have been in the Country before
and
and oblige you
to fet out for Fort Frontenac the day after to
not time to inform
Iroquefe,
have
who
at pref-
have learn'd this
Winter, from Perfons that have fojourn'd twenty years
among
New
Some
58 'em.
As
foon as
I
In the
mean
may
a
affure
more immediate converfation with your
felf
Thefe Barbarians are drawn up
in
names, viz. the
Tho'
thefe
one joynt
I'll
it
to you.
what follows. Cantons, not unlike
in five
Cantons are
intereft, yet
impart
all
of one Nation,
they go by different
Tfonontotians, the Goyogoans, the Onnotagues^ the
Their Language
and the Agnies.
Onoyouts,
and the
that
time, be pleas'd to accept of
thofe of the Swijfes.
and united
my knowl-
have an opportunity of inlarging
edge upon that Head, by themfelves, you
Voyages
five Villages
is
almoft the fame
or Plantations in which they
the diflance of thirty Leagues one from another, being feated near the South fide of the nac. Every year Union Feaft, and
Nations.
five
to
fmoak
Each
annuated Men, 4000
Tho' indeed fome 1
in the great Calumet, or
Village or e.
i.
all
Ontario^ or of Fronte-
the five Cantons fend Deputies to
teen thoufand Souls,
loooo or
Lake of
;
live, lie at
alTift
at the
Pipe of the
Canton contains about
four-
1500 that bear Arms, 2000 Super-
Women, 2000 Maids,
will tell you, that
and 4000 Children:
each Village has not above
There has been an Alliance of long
1000 Souls.^
ftanding between thefe Nations and the
Engli/Ji,
and by trad-
ing in Furrs to New-For^, they are fupply'd by the EngUJh 1
"Iroquois" was a title bestowed by the French the tribesmen " People of the Long House "; to the English, they were known ;
selves
Lahontan gives the
Nations."
names
five
called themas the
" Five
confederates of the league in the French form of
—
them proceeding in the same order, from west to Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, and Mohawk. Among the Onondaga was the principal council house, where each year the " union feast " was held, and Lahontan has greatly exaggerated the numbers the forthcoming policy deliberated. it is doubtful whether they ever mustered more than 2,500 warriors, of these Indians their east
;
the English called
— Seneca,
;
implying a population of 10,000 Ed. Jesuits, p. Ixvi.
to 12,000.
See Jesuit Relations, index
;
Parkman,
;
North-Kvamcdi.
to
with Arms, Ammunition, and
all
59
other Neceffaries, at a cheaper
They have no
other
confideration for England or France^ than what depends
upon
rate than the French can afford 'em at.
the occafion they have for
Nations
;
though
for they pay for
They laugh
after
the
Commodities of
them four times more than they
at the
are worth.
Menaces of our Kings and Governors,
they have no notion of dependence, nay, the very word
They look upon
them infupportable.
from the firft
fettlement of our Colonies in Canada^ to the
firft
Count of
and de
made Head
againft the Agniis
Traci,
upon
;
fome hundred of
the Champlain Lake, in
they could not boaft of any their Villages, p"^ rarry'd
their Children,
of
mention'd Iroquefe Chriftians are fprung. off ninety ^
The
or an hundred Warriours
Iroquois had harassed
New
Mcjfieurs
both of 'em Governors-General,
Summer but They only burnt
as well as in
great Succefs.^
Government.
Frontenac's
de Courfelles,
off
to
themfelves as Sov-
God alone, whom they call They waged War with us almoft always,
Spirit.
years of the
Winter
is
for
none but
eraigns, accountable to
The Great
two
thefe
they [24] give an over-purchafe
all
;
whom
the
above-
'Tis true, they cut
but in compenfation for
France almost from
its
inception.
Alexandre
de Prouville, marquis de Tracy, was chosen (1664) lieufenant-general of French colonies in
America.
An
after
army officer who had served with efficiency in the West was hailed with joy by the distressed colonists. Shortly
old
Indies, his arrival (1665)
came Daniel de Remy,
sieur de Courcelle, the newly-appointed governor,
detachments of the Carignan regiment. quois, in the winter of 1665-66,
matter, and in the
burned the
autumn
Mohawk
of
Courcelle's
was without
success.
first
and
expedition against the Iro-
Whereupon Tracy
took up the
1666 led an expedition via Lake Champlain, which
towns and cowed these savages into an advantageous peace.
The
following year (1667) Tracy returned to France, to die there three years later. Courcelle remained as governor until 1672, when failing health caused his retirement,
he being replaced by Count de Frontenac.
— Ed.
New
Some
6o
that, feveral Canadans,
Voyages
and feveral Soldiers of the Regiment
of Carignan, being unprovided againft the unfuflferable cold loft their
Count
who fucceeded Mr.
Frontenac
their Life
Limbs, and even
of the Climate,
it felf.
perceiving that
Courfelle,^
the Barbarians had the advantage of the Europeans, as to the
waging of
War
in that
Country; upon
this apprehenfion,
I
he declin'd fuch fruitlefs Expeditions, which were very
fay,
chargeable to the King, and us'd
all
his efforts to difpofe the
This judicious Gov-
Savages to a fmcere and lafting Peace. ernor had three things in view
The
;
was to incourage
firft
the greateft part of the French Inhabitants,
who would have
abdicated the Colony, and return'd to France, continued.
His fecond Topick was,
Peace would difpofe an
infinity
if
the
War
had
that the conclufion of a
of People to marry, and to
grub up the Trees, upon which the Colony would be better Peopled and inlarg'd. The third Argument that diffuaded him from carrying [25] on the War, was a defign of purfuing the difcovery of the Lakes, and of the Savages that live upon their banks, in order to fettle a
fame time to ingage them in cafe of a
in
Rupture with the
Commerce with
our
by good Alliances,
interefts,
Iroquefe.
Upon
of thefe Reafons, he fent fome Canadans by
Embaffy 1
'em, and at the
the confideration
way of
a formal
to the Iroquefe Villages, in order to acquaint them,
Louis de Baude, count de Frontenac (born in 1620)
,
had from
his fifteenth year
seen service in French armies, and was also an accomplished courtier. He was made lieutenant-general of New France in 1672, and while the most able of the governors,
The his imperious disposition and autocratic temper involved him in many disputes. Seven years later, the opposition became so great that he was recalled in 1682. This peril of the colony was such that Frontenac was again summoned to defend it. he did vigorously, his expedition of 1696 crushing the Iroquois, and saving Canada to the French.
He
died at Quebec
November
28, 1698.
— Ed.
to
on
At
War
was
car-
him from France to make peace
the fame time the Ambaffadors had orders to
ftipulate all the
the
had
againft them,
with 'em.
fent
6i
that a groundlefs
King being inform'd
that the ried
iVor/^-America.
Commerce.
advantages they could obtain with reference to
The
deal of Satisfadion
Iroqiiefe
;
order'd his Governor
for in
they continu'd to wage
and that they would
heard this Propofal with a great
Charles
II.
New-Tork
War
King
of England^ had
to reprefent to 'em, that
with the French^ they were ruin'd,
by the numerous
find themfelves crufh'd
Forces that were ready to
if
fail
from France.
In effed, they
promis'd to the Ambaffadors that four hundred of their number fhould meet Count Frontenac, attended by an equal number of his
Men,
at
the place where Fort Frontenac
Accordingly, fome Months
after,
now
ftands.
both the one and the other
appointed, and fo a Peace was concluded.
met
at the place
Mr.
de la Salle w^s very ferviceable to this Governor, in giving
him good and feafonable Advices, which
I
cannot
now
upon, being oblig'd to make fome preparations for
When
age.^
from me.
the
In the
Campaign
mean
time,
is I
over,
enter
my Voy-
you may exped to hear
am,
SIR, Tours, &c. Lahontan here refers to Frontenac's expedition of 1673, which built Fort Fronand made peace with the Iroquois. La Salle was one of the messengers sent to Onondaga to summon the chiefs to council. See Parkman, La Salle (Boston, 1892), ^
tenac,
chap.
vi.
Thomas Dongan, governor of New York
(1682-88)
,
was an
Irish
gentleman who
English and French armies in Europe, and had acted as lieutenantgovernor of Tangiers, He attempted to thwart the plans of the French, to control the Iroquois and monopolize the trade with the interior, which conduct brought upon
had served
in both
him reprimands from
the English king, then subservient to the
crown
of France.
— Ed.
New
Some
62
Voyages
LETTER Dated
at
VI.
Monreal June
20. 1684.
Being an ample Defcription of the Canows made of Birch-barky
which the Canadans perform of the
manner
in
all
in
their Voyages; with an account
which they are made and manag'd.
SIR,
THOUGHT
I
to have fet out as this day
our Complement of great Canows
our Voyage time upon
is
fenting you with
a fliort
I
but
regard that
in
not yet brought up,
Having
put off for two days.
my Hands,
is
;
fo
much
have a mind to imploy
it
leifure in pre-
view of thefe flender Contrivances
which the Canadans perform
all
their
Voyages
And
:
in
this will
you with an Idaa of the Voiture of this Country. I faw but now above an hundred Canows, fome great and fome httle; but confidering that the former are only proper for furnifh
Martial Expeditions, and long Voyages, Defcription to that fizes;
fort.
all
Breech, as in a Coffin gers eafily
move
fhall
confine
my
great ones are of different
from ten to twenty eight Foot long.
for they run
Indeed the lead of
Even the
I
;
hold but two Perfons
and are apt to
to one fide or t'other
:
fet
over-fet,
But thofe of
afford ftowage for fourteen Perfons
;
if
upon
their
the Paffen-
a larger fize will
tho' they are
monly mann'd only with three Men, when they
com-
are imploy'd
;:
North-\mtv\c^,
to
in tranfporting Provifions they'll carry
63
and Merchandize
twenty hundred weight.
The
and even then
;
largeft fort are fafe
and [27] fteddy, when they are made of the Bark of the Birchtree, which comes off with hot Water in the Winter time.
The
Trees afford the
greateft
oftentimes the Bark of one Tree
tom of
the Boat
artfully few'd
Barks for Canows
beft is
not
;
The
fufficient.
but bot-
of one piece, to which the fides are fo
is all
by the Savages, that the whole Boat appears
They
one continu'd Bark.
are trimm'd
as
and ftrengthn'd with
wicker Wreaths, and ribs of Cedar- Wood, which are almoft as light as
Cork
;
Wreaths
the
are as thick as a Crown-piece
but the Bark has the thicknefs of two Crowns, and the Ribs
On
are as thick as three.
the two fides of the Boat, there
runs from one end to the other two principal Head-bars, in
which the ends of the Ribs are inchas'd, and Spars are
made
faft,
which the
that run a-crofs the Boat and keep
Thefe Boats have twenty Inches
pa6l.
in
in
depth, that
the upper edge to the Platform of the Ribs
it
com-
is,
from
their length
;
extends to twenty eight Foot, and the width at the middle
Rib
is
computed
to be four
Foot and
a half.
They
are very
convenient upon the account of their extream lightnefs, and the drawing of very brittle
little
Water
and tender Fabrick,
inconveniency
;
for
if
is
an
but
;
Argument
gets
in,
of an equivalent
fly
upon Stone
open, upon which the
and fpoils the Provifions and Merchandize
Every day there over.
fame time their
they do but touch or grate
or Sand, the cracks of the Bark
Water
at the
is
fome new chink or feam to be gumm'd
At Night they
are always unloaded,
and carried on
New
Some
64
made
fhoar where they are
with Pegs,
faft
For they
blow 'em away:
Voyages fhould
Men
two
are fo light, that
'em upon their fhoulders with
Wind
the
left
carry
This conveniency of
eafe.
lightnefs and eafie carriage, renders 'em very ferviceable in
the Rivers of Canada, which are full of Catara6ls, Water-falls,
and Currents
For
:
Rivers
in thefe
we
obhg'd either to
are
tranfport [28] 'em over-land where fuch obftrudions happen,
or
elfe to
and the
tow 'em along where the Current
if
;
Waves would fwallow 'em up, fhoar when a wind arifes.^ 'Tis
for the
they could not reach the
true, the Inhabitants venture in
from one Ifland to another Weather, and nothing
is
'em for four or but then
;
made
the rifque of being over-fet, the
dammag'd by
Goods
are in
Sails
little
;
but
if
the
it, 'tis
When
always in calm for befides
;
danger of being
Wind
the feafon ferves,
be but
impoffible to
without running the rifque of Ship-wrack.
lies diredlly
Leagues,
the Water, efpecially the Furs which are the
tho' they run right afore it
'tis
five
ufe of but Oars
moft valuable part of the Cargoe. they carry
not over-rapid,
Thefe Boats are of no ufe for the
ftioar is accejflible.
Navigation of Lakes
is
South, they cannot put up
fail
a little brisk,
make any If their
ufe of
courfe
without the wind
ftands at one of the eight points, between North-Weft and
North-Eaft (unlefs ^
it
For a
;
and
if
a
wind happens to fpring any where
comes from the Land which they brief description of the
McKenney, Tour of saying that these craft
process
of
making
a
coaft along) they birch bark canoe,
Lakes (Baltimore, 1827), PP- 319. 320. Lahontan were unfitted for the navigation of the lakes he was
the
learn of their usefulness on those waters.
;
— Ed.
elfe,
see
errs in later to
North- AA-ntv\c2i.
to
are obllg'd to put In to the fhoar with
and unload the Boat out of hand,
65 pofTible expedition,
all
fuch time as a calm
till
returns.
As
working of thefe Boats, the Canow-Men ply
for the
fometlmes on their Knees, namely, when they run down the fmall Water-falls
by
rent
fometlmes ftanding, when they ftem a Cur-
Boat along with Poles; and fometlmes
fmooth and ftagnating water.
fitting, viz. in
make
;
fetting the
ufe of are
made
The Handle Egg.
is
When
rents, they
de fond.
ufe of Poles
Boat along with
The Canows
made
is
as a
Pigeons
is
what they
call Piqiier
have neither Stern nor Prow, for they :
Neither have they Keels, Nails Steerfman, or he
who
the Boat, rows without interruption as well as the
reft.
The common do's not
The
purchafe of fuch a Boat
laft
This day
I
above
five
or
fix
is
Crowns
eighty
Governor of
;
but
years.
have received advice, that Mr. de
rals'd the Militia in the
the
Oar
of Pine-wood; and the
thefe, [29]
or Pegs, in the whole Strudture.
it
of the
they have occafion to run up agalnft rapid Cur-
run to a point at both ends
Conns
The Blade
is
Inches broad, and four Lines thick:
about three Foot long, and as big
make
fetting of the
fix
they
of Maple-wood, and their form
reprefented In the annex'd Cutt.
twenty Inches long,
The Oars
la
Barre has
neighbourhood of Quebec^ and that
this Ifland has recelv'd orders to
of the adjacent Cantons in readinefs to march.
SIR, Tours &c. ^
I
have that
am,
Some
66
New
Voyages
LETTER Dated
at
Monreal Novemb.
Defcribing the Coiirfe of the River of to
VII.
St.
2.
1684.
Laurence, /row Monreal
the firfi great Lake 0/ Canada; with the Water-falls Catara^ls, ^
and Navigation
As
of that River :
Advantages that accrue from tial account of the
it.
alfo
For/ Frontenac, and the
Together with a Circumftan-
Expedition of Mr. de la Barre, the Governor-
General^ againft the Iroquefe; the Speeches he made, the Replies
he received, and the final Accommodation of the difference.
SIR,
THANK God
have
I
finifh'd this
Campaign, and am now
return'd in fafety to this place.
To
prefent you with
the Hiftory of our Campaign, be [30] pleas'd to in
two or three days
after the date of
my
laft, I
know
that
imbarqu'd on
a Canow that was work'd by three expert CanowMen. Every Canow contain'd two Soldiers and we all row'd up againft the Current of the River till we arriv'd at Saut de St. Louis, about three Leagues above this Town, which is a little Water-fall, but fo rapid, that our Watermen were forc'd to
board of
;
ftand in the water
Canows
up
againft the
to their Middle, in order to drag the
Stream for
half a quarter of a League.^
1 Sault St. Louis was the name originally given to Lachine Rapids, just above Montreal, by Champlain (1611), apparently in memory of a lad named Louis who
;
North-Avntnc2i,
to
We
reimbarqu'd above
and row'd about twelve
Pafs,
this
6y
Leagues up the River, and thro' the Lake of
half a quarter of a
League.
but there was a Catara6l a le
CataraBe dn
Troii.
difficulty of failing
Land-carriage matter,
I
I
had taken up
I
with fome labour
which they
it,
call
a notion that the only
confifted in the trouble of
came
to be a Spedlator
of the
found that the ftemming of the Currents whether
towing of the Canows, or
was equally laborious.
came
above
little
over-land, about
we might have tow'd
in this place
up the River,
but when
;
Baggage
'Tis true,
our Boats againft the Stream
we
till
where we were forc'd to
arriv'd at a place call'd the Cafcades,
turn out and carry our Boats and
St. Louis^
them along with
in fetting
About
five
or
fix
in
Poles,
Leagues higher we
to the Water-falls call'd Sauts des Cedres, and du Buiffon,
where we were forc'd to tranfport our Boats
Some Leagues above
paces over Land.
Lake of
St. Francis,
which
is
faid to
Circumference; and having crofs'd rents as before, particularly at a
we had recourfe
it,
that,
five
hundred
we enter'd
be twenty Leagues
met with
fall call'd
the in
as flirong Cur-
Long
Saui,
to Land-carriage for half a League.
where
Then
at this place. The head of navigation upon the St. Lawrence, Cartler ascended to this point on his second voyage (1535), and explored the region in 1541. The name " Lachine " commemorates the derision excited among the enemies of La Salle; upon his embarication thither for the West (1669), they said he was headed
was drowned
for
China (La Chine)
,
an allusion to the then prevalent notion that
in the
West might
be found a transcontinental waterway which should prove a short-cut to China. The term " La Chine " was equivalent to our " China-town." The Lachine Rapids are the most dangerous
on the
St.
Lawrence, and are now avoided by the Lachine canal,
eight and a half miles long, on the northern side.
constructed passenger steamers
people of Montreal.
— Ed.
In descending, however, specially-
" shoot the rapids,"
a favorite
amusement among the
New
Some
68
we were and
forc'd to drag
Voyages
up the Boats
after a great deal of fatigue
la Galete^
againft the rapid Stream;
came
Pafs call'd
at laft to a
from whence we had but twenty Leagues This [31] Pafs was the laft for above it the water was as
Fort Frontenac} to furmount
;
Pool, and then our
Watermen
failing to
we had
difficulty ftill
as that of a
ply'd with their Oars in ftead
of Poles.
The
we
Maringouins, which
troublefom
Midges^ are unfufferably
call
Countries of Canada.
in all the
We
were haunted
with fuch clouds of 'em, that we thought to be eat up
fmoaking being the only Artifice that could keep 'em
Remedy was worfe
than the Difeafe
:
People fhelter themfelves from 'em
made
after the following
Stakes or
little
from another,
In the Night-time the in
down
falls
Bowers or Arbours,
form
at a certain diftance
a femicircular
they put a Quilt and Bedcloaths, covering Sheet that
the
manner. They drive into the Ground
branches of Trees,
fo as to
and
;
off,
it
Ground on
to the
Figure
;
all
which
in
above with fides,
one
a large
and
fo
hinders the Infeds to enter.
We landed
at
Fort Frontenac after twenty days
immediately upon our chief,
;
and
Mr. Duta our Commander
in
view'd the Fortifications of the place, and three large
Barques that ^
arrival,
failing
lay at
Anchor
in the Port.^
We
repair'd the
Lahontan here describes in some detail the passage from Montreal to Lake For a similar description in reverse order, with enumeration of the rapids,
Ontario.
see Journal of Father
The Long 2
Bonnecamps (1749),
Sault of the St. Lawrence
Captain
Du Tas
is
(Tartre) was in
provisions to Fort Frontenac.
See
now
in Jesuit Relations, Ixix, pp.
195, 197.
paralleled by the Cornwall canal.
command
New York
of the
advance guard sent
Colonial Documents,
ix, p.
to
— Ed.
convey
234.
He
North-h.vi\tnc2i.
to
Fortifications in a very
little
This Fort was
Barques.
a Square, confifting of large
two Battlements, and the Walls were climb
upon 'em
his
one might
fo low, that
After Mr. de
Iroqueje^ the
Heirs the property of
might have
upon
this place
;
but he was fo
Commerce
oufly for a
may I
Fort
is
fituated very advantage-
five Iroqiiefe
Nations
:
For
their
Neighbourhood of the Lake^ upon which
Canows with more [32] eafe, 'em over-land to New- For/;. In time of
tranfport their Furs in
than they can carry
War
this
Trade with the
Villages lye in the
they
he was confiderably out of pocket
aflForded,
To my mind
it.^
la Salle
King beftow'd upon
negligent, that inftead of enriching himfelf by the it
Cur-
thefe Flanks had but
;
v/ithout a Ladder.
concluded the Peace with the
him and
up the three
time, and fitted
tains flanked with four little Baftions
eafily
69
take
to be indefenfible
it
;
for the Cataradls and Cur-
rents of the River are fuch, that fifty Iroqiiefe
may
there ftop
stopped but a brief time in the colony, but again brought reinforcements in 1690, sent him to guard the St. Lawrence. He served in the English Channel in 1692 went to Hudson Bay (1695), ^^^ ^^^ following year was in the campaign in Acadia. Ed.
when Frontenac
;
—
1
Courcelle had recommended the
Lawrence in 1673,
Two years
later.
site of
Fort Frontenac (Catarakouy) on his
His successor, acting upon the suggestion, advanced up the
expedition of 1671.
^"^^ built the
La
stockade on the present
Salle, strongly
Versailles a grant of the fort
and
site of
St.
Kingston, Ontario.
endorsed by Frontenac, obtained from the court
district as a seignioiy.
merchant, he would, as Lahontan suggests, have made his
Had La
at
mere fortune therefrom. Using it Salle been a
merely as the base of Western exploration, he became involved in financial
difficulties,
and upon the departure of his patron Frontenac it was seized by his enemies, headed by La Barre (1683). Upon the order of the king, it was restored the following year to
La
Salle's lieutenant.
At
the outbreak of Frontenac's
orders for the destruction of this fort
maintained
it
until its capture
;
War
but Frontenac restored
by the British
in 1758.
— Ed.
(1689), Denonvillegave it
in 1695,
and the French
Some
70 five
Voyages
hundred French^ without any other Arms but Stones.
but confider, is
New
Sir, that
fo rapid, that
fhoar;
Befides,
mated above,
for twenty
we dare not
Leagues together the River
the
fet
Do
Canow
Canada being nothing but
four paces off the a Forreft, as I inti-
impoffible to travel there without falling
'tis
every foot into Ambufcades, efpecially upon the banks of this
Woods,
that render 'em inac-
the Savages can skip
from Rock to Rock,
River, which are lin'd with thick cefTible.
None but
and fcour thro' the Thickets,
as
if
'twere an
open
Field.
If
we were capable of fuch Adventures, we might march five or hundred Men by Land to guard the Canows that carry
fix
the Provifions; but at the fame time
'tis
to be confider'd, that
before they arriv'd at the Fort, they would confume more Provifions than the the Iroqucfe
would
Canows can
ftill
relating to the Fort,
I
Not to mention that out-number 'em. As to the particulars fhall take notice of 'em v/hen I come to carry
;
give a general defcription of Ntw-France.
While we continued at
Ganeoujfe and
at
Qiiente,
Fort Frontenac, the Iroquefe at
^
;
in
of feven or eight
in
In 1668 several Cayugas, asking for a missionary,
settlement recently
live
upon us Harts, Roe-bucks, exchange for Needles, Knives, Powder
Leagues from thence,^ threw
Turkeys and Fifh
the diftance
who
made on Quinte Bay, on
Sulpitians sent out tvvo of their members,
came
to
the north shore of
who maintained
Montreal from a new
Lake Ontario.
The
the mission until 1673,
the Recollects the chaplaincy of his new fort. Hennepin was stationed here, and administered to the mission for several years. See Hennepin, Nenv Disco-very (Thwaites's ed., Chicago, 1903), pp. 47, 97. The mission was abandoned during the Iroquois disturbances just preceding the outbreak of Frontenac's War (or about 1687). Ed.
when Frontenac granted
—
;
iVo/tZ'-America.
to
and us
Towards
Ball.
;
manner among moft of Companies were
;
ill
de la
Bane
his Militia
;
This Feaver was of the
and the convulfive Motions, Tremblings,
moft of our fick
Men
Their Blood was [33] of
Fit.
our three
fo that only
and frequency of the Pulfe that attended the cold violent, that
ioyn'd
of a Feaver, which rag'd in like
from Sicknefs.
free
intermitting kind
Mr.
the end of Auguft
but he was dangeroufly
71
Fit,
were
fo
dy'd in the fecond or third
brown
a blackifh
colour, and
tainted with a fort of ycllovv'ifh Serum, not unlike Pus or cor-
Mr.
rupt Matter.
knew
as little of the true caufes of
Galen, and a I
fay,
who
my
in
hundred thoufand befides
it
mighty Phyfician,
this
;
I
now fpeak
to the unfavourable qualities of the Air
His plea was,
Aliment.
opinion
Feavers as Hippocrates or
pretending to trace the caufe of the Feaver
imputed
of,
de la Barre's Phyfician,
and the
that the exceflive heat of the feafon,
put the Vapours or Exhalations into an over-rapid Motion that the Air fufficient
was
fo over-rarify'd, that
quantity of
it
;
we did not fuck in a we did receive
that the fmall quantity
was loaded with Infedts and impure Corpufculum's, which the fatal neceflity of Refpiration oblig'd us to
by
this
means nature was put
the ufe of
Brandy and
fait
into diforder
Meat fower'd
fwallow :
He
;
and that
added, that
the Blood, that this
fowernefs occafion'd a fort of Coagulation of the Chyle and
Blood, that the Coagulation hindered
Heart
with a due degree of Celerity
it
;
to circulate thro' the
and that thereupon
there infued an extraordinary Fermentation, which elfe
but a Feaver.
But
after
all,
to
my mind
this
is
nothing
Gentleman's
New
72
Some
Syfteme was too
much upon
Voyages
the Iroquefe ftrain
the DIftemper muft have feiz'd
rate
all
;
for at that
without diftin6lion,
whereas neither our Soldiers nor the feafon'd Canadans were troubled with
it
;
for
raged only among the Militia, who
it
being unacquainted with the way of fetting the Boats with Poles, were forc'd at every turn to get into the water and drag
'em up againft the rapid Stream
Country being naturally
cold,
Now,
:
and the heat being
Blood might thereupon freeze by way of occafion
Maxim,
the Feaver
I
the waters of that
fpeak
of,
Oninis repentina mutatio
excefTive, the
purfuant to the
efl
and
Antiperiflafis^
perkiilofa^
i.
e.
fo
common
All fiidden
changes are of dangerous Confequence.
[34] in
As foon
as
Mr.
de la Barre recover'd, he imbarqu'd
order to continue his march; tho' he might have
known, that
when
after halting fourteen or fifteen days at that Fort,
the feafon was fo far advanc'd, he could not pretend to
compafs the end of
his Expedition.
Weather being very calm, and
the
eafily
We
row'd Night and Day
in five or fix
days came
before the River of Famine^ where we were forc'd to put in
upon the apprehenfion of a Storm.^ Here we met with a Canow that Mr. Dulhiit had fent from Mijfilimakinac, with advice, that purfuant to orders he
had ingag'd the
Htirons,
Onondaga (Oswego) River, was Salmon River, Oswego County, N. Y. See N. Y, Colonial Documents, ix, p. 242. The region was not named for lack of La Barre supplies in La Barre's army, but from some previous Indian famine. encamped on the northwest side of the river, opposite the present Port Ontario. See Ed. Hawley, Early Chapters of Cayuga History (Auburn, 1879). 1
Riviere la
Famine was previously
but later investigations have proven that
identified with
it
—
,
North-hmtnc2i,
to
fome other People, to joyn
Outaoua'sy and
,
Mr.
to
brave
Army;
his
,
n
de la Barre
1
but
;
was very much perplexed
1
at the ;
in
which
* Foreft
Thefe News were very acceptable
Rangers. , ,
two hundred
above
had
he
73
.
r
,
fame time he
^^^
Coureurs
de Bois cr
in
the
,
for I'm perfwaded
he repented oftner than once, of his entring upon an Expedition that he forefaw
would prove Succefslefs
;
and to aggra-
vate the danger of his Enterprife, the Iroquefe had at that
time an opportunity to
fall
upon
us.
In
fine, after a
mature
confideration of the Confequences, and of the Difficulties that
ftood in the way, he fent back the
Canow
to
Mr. Dulhut, with
orders to difmifs the Foreft Rangers and Savages immediately,
where ever he was, and by
all
means
to avoid the approaching
By good luck Mr. Dulhut had not yet
to his Troops.
Niagara^ when
he
receiv'd
Orders
thefe
Savages that accompany'd him were fo
threw out
As ^
all
manner of Invedlives
foon as Mr. de
la
;
reach'd
with which
diffatisfied, that
the
they
againft the French Nation.^
Barre had difpatch'd this Canow, he
Daniel Greysolon DuLuth (duLhut), " king of coureurs des bois," had been
French army. Coming to Canada before 1674, lie set out four years on an expedition to the Sioux country, and remained in the Northwest for over twelve years, exploring, trading, and securing the Indians in the French interest. He was so powerful that his services were sought by successive governors. He brought an
officer in the
later
Denonville in 1687 and in 1694 was fighting the Iroyears later he was commandant at Fort Frontenac,
an Indian force to the aid
of
quois under Frontenac.
Two
and died
pp. 39-47. cited
McLennan " Gentlemen of the King's Guard," in Harper's and " Death of DuLuth " in Roy. Soc. Proc, 2d series, ix, The Huron and Ottawa who composed his party upon the occasion here
in 1710.
Magazine,
;
See
Sept., 1893
;
by Lahontan, were from those tribes that had under French protection at Fort Mackinac.
settled
fled
from the Iroquois attacks and
— Ed.
New
Some
74 fent
Mr.
le
Moine
Voyages
to the Village of the Onnontagues,
was
which lay
This Mr.
about eighteen Leagues up the River.
le
Moine
Gentleman of Normandy^ and highly efleem'd by the
a
Iroquefe,
who
[35] call'd
him
Akouejfan,
Orders were, to indeavour by
i.
e.
him fome of the old ftanders of that Nation he return'd
in a
His
the Partridge}
means to bring along with
all
;
and accordingly
few days, accompany'd with one of their moft
confiderable Grandees,
who had
a
Train of thirty young War-
and was diftinguifh'd by the Title of the Grangula}
riours,
As foon
debarqued, Mr. de
as he
Barre fent him a Prefent
la
of Bread and Wine, and of thirty Salmon-Trouts, which they fifh'd in that
hundred
at
place in fuch plenty, that they brought
one
caft
of a
Net
:
At
up
a
the fame time he gave the
Grandee to underftand, that he congratulated
his
and would be glad to have an Interview with him
after he
had
that he
had
refted himfelf for
fome days.
You
muft
know
Arrival,
us'd the precaution of fending the fick back to the Colony, ^
Charles Le Moyne, sieur de Longueuil, was a native of Dieppe, born in 1624.
He came
to
settled at
Montreal.
(1668).
His sons distinguished themselves in the history of the colony; the
and after four years among the Huron with the Jesuits, There he acted for many years as interpreter of the colony, and captain of militia. In 1655 he was captured by the Iroquois, who were so impressed by his intrepidity that they adopted him into their tribe, and sent him home unharmed. The value of his ser^'ices to the colony was so great that he was ennobled by the king first
baron
Canada
of
in 1641,
Longueuil, was governor of Canada
founders of Louisiana.
By
;
Iberville
eldest,
and Bienville were the
— Ed.
form Lahontan designates the Iroquois chieftain known by La Grande Gueule (Big Mouth), in allusion to his oratorical ability. His Indian name was Otreouate, and he belonged to the Onondaga tribe. Although not one of their great chiefs, he was a wily diplom.atist, and owed his influence to 2
this Latinized
the French as
skill in
oratory and powers of dissimulation.
clan, see
N. Y. Colon. Docs.,
ix, p.
386.
For
— Ed.
his signature in the totems of his
to
North- hxntx\C2i,
the Iroquefe might
that
the weaknefs of his
perceive
not
75
Forces; and to favour the Stratagem, Mr.
Body
fented to the Grangida, that the
behind
at
left
But unhappily one of the
the General's Guards.
a fmattering of the French
had
Iroquefe that
Tongue, having
the Night-time towards our Tents, over-heard what
ftroul'd in faid,
Moine repre-
Army was
Fort Frontenac, and that the Troops he faw in our
Camp, were
we
le
of the
and
Two
fo reveal'd the Secret.
Grangula gave notice to Mr. de
arrival, the
days after their la
Barre that he
was ready for an Interview; and accordingly an hour being appointed, the whole fents
Company
appear'd as the figure repre-
it.
The Grangula head of
fat
on the Eaft
Men, with
his
his
being plac'd
fide,
He
was very attentive to the
following Harangue, pronounc'd by our Interpreters
you cannot well underftand, without the Calumet^ and the CoUers that [36]
Calumet of Peace
it
is
four or
five
foot long
Inches long, and the is
lodg'd,
is
Hammer. The Savages make Affairs,
and
Calumet
in their is
the
Mouth
body
or
The
which
mentions.
made
of certain Stones, or
The Pipe
of the Calumet
Head
three Inches in length;
that of a
Calumet
;
;
a previous explication of
of Marble, whether red, black, or white. is
the
Pipe in his Mouth, and the great
Calumet of Peace before him.
The
at
in which the
its
or Stalk is
eight
Tobacco
figure approaches to
red Calumets are moft efteem'd.
ufe of 'em for Negotiations and State
efpecially in
Voyages
;
for
when they have
hand, they go where they will in fafety.
trimm'd with yellow, white, and
a
The
p^reen Feathers,
76
Some
and has the fame
effefl
New among
friencKhip has amongft us
the Savages, that the Flag of
for to violate the Rights of this
among them a flaming Crime, that will draw upon their Nations.^ As for the Colters, they
venerable Pipe,
down
;
Voyages
is
mifchief
two or three Foot
are certain fwathes of
Inches in breadth
;
being deck'd with
certain fort of fhells that they find
New-^ory^ and Virginia. as a little
Pea
Their colour
and
fix
Beads made of a
the Sea fhoar, between
Thefe Beads are round, and
as thick
but they are twice as long as a grain of Corn
;
either blew or white
is
jufl like Pearl,
upon
in length,
little
;
and they are bor'd thro'
being run after the fame manner upon ftrings
that lye fideways one to another.
Without the intervention
of thefe Coliers, there's no bufinefs to be negotiated with the
Savages
make
;
for being altogether unacquainted with writing, they
ufe of
them
they keep for an their
for
Age
Mark,
iQn
in
regard that every Colier has
its
they learn from the old Perfons, the Circum-
ftances of the time after that age
Sometimes
the Coliers that they have receiv'd from
Neighbours; and
peculiar
known
Contrads and Obligations.
is
and place
in
over, they are
which they were deliver'd
made
ufe of for
new
but
;
Treaties.^
The red stone is the uses of the calumet, see Jesuit Relations, index. from the artist George Catlin, who was the first to explore
as "catlinite,"
—
Ed. Minnesota. by the French; the English entitled them " belts") were made of wampum, of which Lahontan has here described the primitive type in Later they were made of beads. See Jesuit Relations, viii, note the form of shells. " Wampum Records " in Popular Science Monthly, February, Indian 70 also Hale, and describe the quarries 2
These "collars"
at Pipestone,
(so called
;
1897.
Belts of
wampum
were always used in the negotiation of Indian
treaties
;
they
were sent with envoys as credentials, preserved by a chief as the ensign of his authority, employed in ransom and atonement for crime, and also as ornament and in place of " porcelain."— Ed. money. The English term was "wampum"; that of the French,
North- PiTCitriQ^.,
to
[37] ^^^'
Barre's Harangue^ was
1'^
The King, my
upon
the meafures of Peace,
Guard, and to fend
tagues, in
in the
being
Mafter,
to this
inform'd
purpofe.
that
the
five
made infradions order'd me to come hither with
have for a long time
Nations
Iroqitefe
a
'^^
77
Canton of the Onno-
Akoiiejfan to the
order to an Interview with their principal Leaders,
Neighbourhood of my Camp.
means, that you and
I
This great Monarch
fhould fmoak together in the great
Calumet of Peace, with the Provifo, that you ingage in the
name of
the Tfonnontouans, Goyoguans, Onnotagiies, OnnoyouteSy
and Agnies^ to make reparation to
Subjeds, and to be
his
guilty of nothing for the future, that
may
occafion a fatal
rupture. '
The
Tfonnontouans, Goyogouans, Onnotagues^ Onnoyoiites and
Agnies^ have ftrip'd, rob'd, that travel'd in the lUineJe^ of the
are
my
and abus'd
way of Trade
all
the Foreft-Rangers,
to the
Country of the
Oumamis^ and of feveral other Nations, who
Now
Matter's Children.^
this ufage
being
violation of the Treaties of Peace concluded with ceffor, ^
I
am commanded
According
to
to
La
Salle's canoes.
this permission to seize several canoes
Parkman, Frontenac, pp.
The
The
Illinois Indians, of
only to have
this
high
Predeat the
about by giving leave to
Indians had taken advantage of
and employes
of the governor himself.
See
86, 87.
Algonquian
stock,
the state to which they have given their name.
among them,
my
demand Reparation, and
Parkman, La Barre had brought
the Iroquois to plunder
in
it
were encountered by the French in
La
raided by the Iroquois.
Salle
had founded
his colony
See Hennepin, Ne-zv Discovery
(Thwaites's ed.), pp. 337-342. The Miami (Oumamis) were first encountered by men in Wisconsin. On their migrations see fris. Hist. Colts., xvi, pp. 41, 99,
white
127, 285, 361, 398.
— Ed.
Some
78 '
fame time to declare, that
'with '
New
War
my
in cafe of their refufal to
comply
demands, or of relapfing into the like Robberies,
pofitively proclaim'd.
is
This Colier makes '
Voyages
The Warriours
my words
good.
of thefe five Nations have introduc'd the
my Mafter, whom my Mafter
'
EngUpi to the Lakes, belonging to the King
'
and
into the
Country of thofe Nations
'
Father
This they have done with a defign to ruine the
'
Commerce
'
depart from their due Allegiance
'
monftrances of the
'
thro the danger that
'
felves to.
'
but
'
exprefs orders to declare
if
:
to
'
At
notwithftanding the Re-
;
Governor [38] of N^w-Tofk, who faw both they and the Engli/h expos'd them-
late
prefent
I
am
willing to forget thofe A6lions
ever you be guilty of the like for the future,
upon
the
Country of the
'They have maffacred
I
have
War. my Words.
The fame Warriours have made
fions
a
of his Subjeds, and to oblige thefe Nations to
This Colier warrants
'
is
barbarous Incur-
feveral
lUineJe,
and the Oumamis.
Men, Women, and
Children; they
number
of the
'
have took, bound, and carried
'
Natives of thofe Countries,
'
in their Villages in a
'
Matter's Children, and therefore muft hereafter ceafe to be
'
your Slaves.
'
and to fend 'em home without delay
I
off
an
infinite
who thought
themfelves fecure
Thefe People are
time of Peace.
my
charge you to reftore 'em to their Liberty, ;
for
if
the five Nations
iVo/tZ?- America.
to
'
refufe to
'
declare
comply with
this
demand,
This
had to
is all I
report to the
'
five
'
commanded me
'
him to fend
my words
prove
'
troubled,
'
He
to make.
them
if it
whom
Army to
:
And
defire to
I
my
Nations, this Declaration, that
a potent
fatal to
good.
fay to the Grangiila,
Mafter
wifhes they had not oblig'd
the Fort of * Cat-
order to carry on
aracouy, in
'
have exprefs orders to
War. This Colier makes
'
I
79
War
a
he will be very
fo falls out, that this
^7-^^ French
that will
call
much
Fort which
a
is
work
'
Peace, muft be imploy'd for a Prifon to your Militia.
'
mifchiefs ought to be prevented by mutual endeavours
*
French
'
will
I
eflfed
'
'
;
wifh
I
for
me
to
my words
they do not,
if
of New-ror/^, afTift
;
who
I
may produce
Nations, fatis-
the defir'd
has orders from the King his Mafter, to
burn the
While Mr. de
The
oblig'd to joyn the Governor
five Villages,
and cut you
This Colier confirms '
:
religious obfervers of their
[39]
am
five
of
Thefe
provided they make the
now demand, and prove
'Treaties. '
and Friends of the
are the Brethren
never difturb their Repofe
faction
'
who
Fort
it
Frontenac.
la
Barrels
off.
my word.
Interpreter
pronounc'd
this
Harangue, the Grangula did nothing but look'd upon the end of his Pipe After the Speech was finifh'd he rofe, and having :
took
five
or
fix
turns in the Ring that the French and the
Savages made, he return'd to his place, and {landing upright
New
Some
8o
Voyages
fpoke after the following manner to the General, who
—
,.
5fe— ^ This
^ .
,
,
* Onnontio, '
Title they
honour you, and
I
-^
.
give
the
to
'
Warriors that accompany
'
Your
»
Difcourfe, and
Gov-
ernor-General
of
Canada. '
fat in
Chair of State.
his
My Voice '
me do
I
my
glides to your Ear, pray liften to
Onnontio^ in fetting out
the fame
made an end of his come to begin mine.
Interpreter has
now
the
all
'
words.
from Quebec^ you muft needs have
Beams
Sun had burnt down
'
fancy'd that the fcorching
'
the Forefts which render our Country unaccefTible to the
'
French
'
rounded our Cottages, and confin'd us
;
or
of the
Lake had
the Inundations of the
elfe that
was your thought; and
This
as Prifoners.
could be nothing
fur-
but
'
certainly
'
the curiofity of feeing a burnt or drown'd Country, that
'
mov'd you
'
have an opportunity of being undeceiv'd, for
'
like Retinue
'
uans^ Onnontagues, Onnoyoutes cindJgnies, are not yet deftroy'd.
it
But now you
to undertake a Journey hither.
come
to affure you, that the
elfe
I
and
Tjonontouam
my ^
war-
Goyogo-
return you thanks in their name, for bringing into their
'
I
*
Country the Calumet of Peace, that your Predeceffor receiv'd
'
from
At
their hands.
the fame time
'Happinefs, "^
Burying the Axe
.
*
^j^^
^^^.
fignifies Peace.
.
'
'
tell
I
congratulate your [40]
having left under Ground ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^^
in
/•
you, Onnontio,
I
am
not afleep,
my Eyes
'
the Sun that vouchfafes the light, gives
'
great Captain at the head of a
«
as
if
t-^
.
dy d with the blood of the French.
he were afleep.
He
Troop
me
are
n
t
muft
I
open
;
and
a clear view of a
of Soldiers,
who fpeaks
pretends that he do's not approach
/.v ^
Stti'a^^s rj/viii^tuiagreacSa770ttj
u±^/v
^f^irc/t 6nr^
cinj Jtaiidm^ iiprtc//it
tZ' it/l
ifjcatj.
'
to iVor^y^- America.
to this
'
8i
view, than to
Lake with any other
fmoak with the
but the Grangida knows
^
Onnotagues in the great Calumet;
'
better things, he fees plainly that the Onnontio mean'd to
'
knock 'em on the Head,
'
much weaken'd. '
perceive
I
if
the French
Arms had
Camp
Onnontio raves in a
that the
not been fo
of fick
'
People, whofe lives the great Spirit has fav'd by vifiting
'
them with
Do
Infirmities.
*
had took up their Clubbs
'
Men, had
'
if
our Warlike
Men
^Jkoueffan your
But
'
I
;
hear, Onnontio^ our
I'll
Camp
Bows and Arrows, and difarm'd 'em, when
with their
had not ftop'd
talk
Women
and the Children and the old
Ambaffadour appear'd before my
have done,
You
'
your
vifited
you
no more of
Village.
that.
muft know, Onnontio, we have robb'd no French-Men,
'but thofe
who
fupply'd the
Iliinefe
and the Oiimamis (our
'Enemies) with Fufees, with Powder, and with Ball: Thefe '
indeed we took care
'
us our
'
that of the
'
are
'
(hould knock them in the Head.
life.
of,
becaufe fuch
Our Condud in that point is Jefuits, who ftave all the barrels
brought to our Cantons,
left
exchange for
'
Beavers to give
'
the French
'
do not think of bearing Arms.
;
and
[41] '
'
*
*
We
Arms might
in
as for the old
have coft
of a piece with of Brandy that
the People getting drunk
all
Our Warriours have no the Arms they take from
fuperannuated People, they
This Colier comprehends my word.
have conducted the EngUPi to our
Lakes, in order to traffick with the Outaouas,
and the Hurons ;
juft
as
the Algonkins
con-
* They pretend '"
^'''
property
Some
82
New
Voyages order to carry on a
'
du6led the French to our
'
Commerce
'
are born Freemen, and have no dependance either upon the
.[.^
''
the
is
in
We
that the Engli/h lay claim to as their Right.
,,
.
,
fCorlar
Cantons,
five
Onnontio or
t\\t
go where we
pleafe, to
Title of the
'
Governor of
'to the places we refort
New-\orVi.
t
where we think
We have
Corlar}
'\
power to '^
condu6l who we
will
and to buy and
to,
fell
If
your Allies are your
treat
'em as fuch, and rob
fit.
you may e'en
a
'
Slaves or Children,
'
'em of the liberty of entertaining any other Nation but your
'
own. This Colier contains '
We
down
cut
'
aries to
'
our Lands
capital to
our Frontiers.
,
Savages,
the Illineje and the Oumamis, becaufe they
the trees of Peace that ferv'd for limits or bound-
'
o
upon
fell
tts
my word.
;
They came
to hunt Beavers
and contrary to the cuftom of
have carried off whole Stocks, ||both Male and
'
Female.
a
They have ingag'd -^
_
^^ their intereft,
all
'
Country.^
i
'
and entertain'd 'em
They
have done
in their
fupply'd 'em with Fire-Arms,
after the concerting of
We
the Chaouanons
.
Crime
the Beavers of
the Savages,
'
'
dejlroy
all
upon
lefs
ill
defigns againft us.
than the Engli/h and the
1 The significance of the word Onontio, by which the Iroquois designated the governor of Canada, was said to be " great " or " beautiful mountain," and to have
been a translation of the name of the second governor, Montmagny. Corlaer, the Indian name for the governor of New York, was derived from Van Curler, an early
Dutch trader who had much 2
The Shawnee
influence
among
the
Mohawk.
— Ed.
(French Chaouanon) were an Algonquian
tribe,
concerning
whose migrations and relations there has been considerable controversy. La Salle found them in the Ohio country, where in the eighteenth century they were a terror See Jesuit Relations, xlvii, p. 316 Ixi, to the Western settlers of the United States. Ed. Ifis. Hist. Colls., xvi, pp. 48, 364; xvii, index. p. 249 ;
;
—
North-Kmtvicdi..
to
'
'
*
'
who without any right, have ufurp'd the Grounds they are now poffefs'd of; and of which they have diflodg'd feveral Nations, in order to make way for their building of French,
Cities, Villages,
and Forts.
'
give you to know, Onnontio^ that
I
'
of the five Iroquefe Cantons.
'
incline '
your Ear, and
The
my word.
This Colier contains
[42]
*
83
This
liften to v/hat
my
Voice
their
is
they reprefent.
Tfonontouans, Goyogouans, Onnontagues, Onnoyoutes, and
Agnies declare, that
they interr'd
*
the ^'
Axe
the Voice
is
Anfwer, pray
m the prefence of your .
at Cataracouy,
Interring the Axe,
^^,„-^^^ ^^^
^^^;„^
^y
*
Precedeffor, in the very center of the Fort;
a Peace; and the dig-
'
and planted the Tree of Peace
gingofit up imports a
'
place, that
'
that 'twas then ftipulated, that the Fort fhould be us'd as a
'
place of retreat for Merchants, and not a refuge for Soldiers
'
in the
fame
might be carefully preferv'd
it
;
and that inftead of Arms and Ammunition,
^^^•
^^^^«^^^'