Sauvolle, Man of Mystery

Similar documents
Vocabulary Matching. Name. Date. 48 Chapter 6 French Louisiana. Chapter 6. Column A. Column B

NEW ORLEANS NOSTALGIA

Wrote book on his explorations that generated excitement in others to develop trade with China and India 1st European who traveled the length of Asia

Name Class Date. Use the information from pages to complete the following.

Roanoke and Jamestown. Essential Question: How Does Geography Affect the Way People Live?

Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac built a fort near Detroit. He invited several tribes to move there.

The Louisiana Purchase. Chapter 9, Section 2

MUGNIER (GEORGE FRANÇOIS) STEREOGRAPHS (Mss. 1785) Inventory

These were admirable words about this important city and of its founder, although Bienville was not a coureur de bois.

Three G s Gold Obtain bullion (gold and silver) Export raw materials (timber, fur) and/or grow cash crops (tobacco, indigo) to make a profit Glory

Chapter 4: How and Why Europeans Came to the New World

Mapping the West: The Journey of Lewis and Clark By Michael Stahl

Exploration ( )

French Louisiana CHAPTER 6. Chapter Preview. People. Places. Terms

A Cartographic Template for the 1559 Spanish Luna Colony?

Brand History Marie Brizard

UNIT 2- GEORGIA S COLONIZATION

Study Guide- Age of Exploration

Chapter 20 Section 2 European Nations Settle North America. Chapter 20 Section 2 European Nations Settle North America 3/26/13

Part 4: First contacts with Europeans in the 16 th century

STEVE EMBER: Welcome to THE MAKING OF A NATION American history in VOA Special English. I m Steve Ember.

First Contact: The Norse

Part 4: First contacts with Europeans in the 16 th century

THE FIRST NORTH AMERICAN COLONIES

Welcome back to World History! Thursday, January 18, 2018

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

EQ: What was the impact of exploration and colonization on Europe?

Le Colisée de Paris, built between 1769 and 1771

Rome Wasn t Built in a Day, and Neither Was New Orleans: A Tricentennial Timeline

Unit 3: European Explorers

Thomas Jefferson: Expansion & Embargo

Louisiana Timeline. 1805~Map of Territory of Orleans

Michigan. Copyright 2011 WorksheetWeb

Unit 2: Three Worlds Meet

Finding Aid to the Martha s Vineyard Museum Record Unit 239 Gold Rush and the Vineyard By Karin Stanley and Jean Ross

Inland Waterway Mail Before the Civil War: Louisiana Bayous and Tributary Rivers

DISEASE PLANTS ANIMAL. Directions: Summarize the ideas of the readings in the chart below using point-form. Point-form Summary Notes

Woodlands Cultural Area Discover - Experience Connect Page 1 of 17

Lesson 1: The Voyages of Columbus

3 4 SPANISH EXPLORATION AND CONQUEST OF AMERICA,

Mardi Gras Trail Tours

A Tenuous Start New Orleans Is Celebrating Its 300 th Birthday But It Almost Didn t Make It to Its Fifth

The Battle for New Orleans at Chalmette Battlefield

The Struggles and Hardships of Early Jamestown

Name Period Test Date September Why did Europeans want to find new trade routes to India and East Asia? (page 122)

A MAP OF THE ROANOKE COLONY CAPTAIN'S LOG, A VOYAGE BEFORE THE COLONISTS

Section 2-1: Europeans Set Sail

The Aztec Empire: The Last Great Native Civilization in Mesoamerica

First Permanent English Settlement

Native Americans Culture

EUROPEAN SOCIETIES AROUND OBJECTIVE: To identify the factors that led European countries to explore the world

Unit 2, Activity 1, Age of Discovery Vocabulary

Leif Eriksson Leif Eriksson Viking Greenland Vinland first to step foot in North America

The First English Settlements in America

Westward Expansion Internet Scavenger Hunt WebQuest

9/21/14. Bell Work Fill in the blanks. Agenda. Complete vocabulary quiz. Finish Mansa Musa Instagram. Take notes on Songhai

Spanish Conquistadors

The Louisiana Purchase

US History, Ms. Brown Website: dph7history.weebly.com

Thomas Jefferson and the West.

EQ: Who was Mohandas Gandhi and what role did he play in India s independence movement? (AKS #58b)

Quiz Show. Chapter 2 European Explorers

Text 1: Europeans Fight over North American Land. Topic 3: The Revolutionary Era Lesson 1: The French and Indian War

Name: Date: Period: VUS.4 (pt. 1): The Road to Revolution. Filled In. Notes VUS.4 (pt. 1): The Road to Revolution 1

THE HISTORICAL HIGHLIGHTS OF THE LAKE PONTCHARTRAIN BASIN

Cabeza de Vaca Mini Q

Jambalaya on the Bayou

SSWH10 THE STUDENT WILL ANALYZE THE IMPACT OF THE AGE OF DISCOVERY AND EXPANSION INTO THE AMERICAS, AFRICA, AND ASIA

The First Americans. You didn t discover it, we were already here.

Cities of the dead. Tulane University. October 29, :00 AM Sally Asher

Exploration and Conquest of the New World

UNIT 7. OUR HISTORY. PRIMARY 3 / Social Science Pedro Antonio López Hernández

Pralines, Sweet New Orleans Delights

Religions of the Boyne City and the Charlevoix County area

ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE OF LOUISIANA SUGARCANE PRODUCTION IN 2017

Land bridge Pre-European contact Development of cultural regions Language map

Causes of the American Revolution

Native Americans and Early Explorers

The 13 English Colonies

Europe & the Age of Exploration Part 1

The California Gold Rush

KEY. Chapter 2: The Stone Age and Early Cultures Section 1: The First People

Great Britain was supplying Indians with guns and ammunition America halted trade with Great Britain

How far did the people of Acadia travel?

Students will be assessed through answering of the questions that follow as well as with a reading quiz.

LOUISIANA. The First 300 Years

EQ: Who was Mohandas Gandhi and what role did he play in India s independence movement?

Christopher Columbus Didn't Discover the New World; he Rediscovered it

Spain s Empire in the Americas

American Indians. The First Americans

What do you think Darug country would have looked like 250 years ago?

The Age of European Explorations

Binder Page Name Period New Spain & New France

Score / Name: P: CHAPTER 1 BELLWORK

*China s physical geography helped keep China economically and culturally isolated throughout its early dynasties *Its mountains and deserts

White Men Displace Red Men

Columbus was thrilled. In a later letter, he wrote, I write this to tell you how in thirty-three

New Orleans. The Great Mississippi River. The great water artery of the United States. A disaster waiting to happen that happened

History Department EXAMINATION-JULY 2013

Cortes and Pizarro, Columbian Exchange, and Colonial Empires

Transcription:

Sauvolle, Man of Mystery The Sieur de Sauvolle (c. 1671 1701), explorer and commander, first governor of the French colony of Louisiana, was indeed a man of mystery. First of all, we do not even know his first name; and, as for his surname, it has been spelled either Sauvole (with one l) or Sauvolle (with two). Although born in France, his date of birth and his parentage is unknown. Sauvolle served as the acting governor of Louisiana from May 2, 1699, until his death on August 22, 1701. Also, there is no painting, sketch or image left behind to give us an idea about his appearance. Sauvolle Historic Marker in Mississippi Statue of Iberville at Québec The journal he left behind, however, entitled The Journal of Sauvole: Historical Journal of the Establishment of the French in Louisiana, provides us with one of the first observations concerning France s early days in colonial Louisiana. Another mysterious component of Sauvolle s life is the confusion about his lineage. Some historians claimed that his first name was Antoine, or alternately François-Marie, or that his title was the sieur de la

Villantry, or that he was a sibling of Iberville and Bienville. For years, prominent Louisiana historians such as François Xavier Martin, Charles Gayarré and Alcée Fortier have all perpetuated this mistaken assumption that Sauvolle was a brother of Iberville and Bienville. Historian and columnist Charles Pie Dufour opined that no man has caused as much confusion among Louisiana historians than our mystery man. Gayarré even created a pitiful scene of mourning with Iberville bathed in tears at the grave of his brother, an event in no way supported by fact. Charles Étienne Arthur Gayarré, Louisiana historian (January 9, 1805 February 11, 1895) In that regard, Pie described historian Gayarré as a strange combination of a flamboyant romancer in the best (or worst) 19th century tradition and at the same time was a pioneer in modern historical research and writing. At times his narrative becomes

maudlin as well as inaccurate and at others he is an authoritative, highly readable trail-blazer in Louisiana history. Ocean Springs, site of Fort Maurepas, the Louisiana colony s first settlement, commanded by Sauvolle To reiterate, there is absolutely no evidence to support the assumption that Sauvolle was a Le Moyne or a brother of Iberville and Bienville. It is known, however, that, in 1699, Sauvolle served in the dual role of ship s ensign, as well as lieutenant in Bellecourt s company of marines. He was aboard Iberville s frigate, La Marin, as a member of the first expedition to Louisiana and accompanied the Le Moyne brothers, Iberville and Bienville, on their expeditions along the Mississippi and Alabama coasts and joined Iberville in his ascent of the Mississippi River. Sauvolle was also placed in command of the expedition when Iberville set out to investigate the Manchac-Amite-Lake Pontchartrain route to the Gulf of Mexico, March 24, 1699. The following month, Iberville founded the Louisiana colony s first settlement in April 1699, and called it Fort Maurepas to honor Louis Phélypeaux, comte de Maurepas (who became the comte de Pontchartrain in 1699). Later known as Old Biloxi, it was established at present-day Ocean Springs, Mississippi. Under Iberville s direction, the fort was completed on May 1, 1699, and on the following day Sauvolle was appointed commander of the new Fort Maurepas. Iberville sailed for France on May 4, leaving Sauvolle as the territory s first governor with Bienville as lieutenant.

Altogether about 100 people were left under their command while Iberville was away. Since Sauvolle kept a journal, we actually have some knowledge of what he actually did accomplish as governor. From the local Indian tribes, he received emissaries and fostered friendly relations with them. Of an exploratory nature, he organized and dispatched numerous expeditions along the Gulf coast and into the interior. He also strengthened the fortifications of the fledgling colony as best he could and dealt with the chronic food shortages experienced by his small garrison on the Mississippi coast. Yellow fever was also a problem, which took the life of Louisiana s first governor on August 22, 1701. Despite this and other challenges, the colony survived, and the stage was set for Bienville to assume command. He began the first of four terms as governor, the first being 1701-1713. Upon Iberville s final return to Louisiana in 1702, he ordered his younger brother to supervise the construction of a post on Dauphin Island and another at Mobile (Fort Louis). Although he was Iberville s brother, Bienville truly earned his appointment as governor. While Iberville was away, Bienville commanded a number of exploratory expeditions along the bayous, rivers and lakes in the lower Mississippi valley. And on one of these, he persuaded an English captain to turn the other way at a point on the Mississippi River later called English Turn. In Iberville s own journal, he wrote, My brother sent two men

to tell him to immediately leave the country, which was in the possession of the king, and that, if he did not leave, he would force him to. Louis Phélypeaux, comte de Maurepas (1687), comte de Pontchartrain (1699), namesake of Fort Maurepas, first settlement in the Louisiana colony at Ocean Springs, Mississippi Iberville also succumbed to yellow fever, in Havana, Cuba, on July 9, 1706. He was only 44 years of age.

NED HÉMARD New Orleans Nostalgia Sauvolle, Man of Mystery Ned Hémard Copyright 2018