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Today begins a two-part series written by guest author
and historian Tracy Potter of Bismarck. Tomorrow is the 320th birthday
of Pierre Gaultier, who would inherit the title of La Verendrye and become
known to generations of North Dakota school children as the first non-Indian
to visit the state.
Pierre was born in Three Rivers, Quebec, a town known for its explorers
and fur traders. His father was Governor of the colony, as was his grandfather.
Three Rivers was a frontier community in a violent time. The French and
their Indian allies were involved in a series of hot and cold wars against
the English and their Indian allies.
Pierre became a soldier before he was even old enough to be called a man.
As a young officer, he participated in a bloody attack on Deerfield, Massachusetts,
and helped lead a hundred English captives men, women and children
on a difficult winter march on snowshoes back to New France.
Pierre also fought in Newfoundland and then, after his brother Louis died
in battle in Europe, Pierre inherited the title La Verendrye. Pierre took
Louiss place, joining his brothers Regiment de Bretagne.
In France, he fought in the War of Spanish Succession. He was wounded
nine times and left for dead at Malplaquet, the critical battle of that
war. La Verendrye proved tough, however, and didnt die. He was captured
by the English and nursed back to health. Eventually he was released,
probably in a prisoner exchange.
As the war ended in Europe, La Verendrye returned to Canada and married
Marie-Anne Dondoneau, a young woman from a prominent Three Rivers' family.
Together they raised children, crops and cattle for more than fifteen
years . . . before La Verendrye appears to have suffered a mid-life crisis.
At age 44, he left the farm in his wife's capable hands and headed west.
At a fur trade post in the woods above Lake Superior, he began to hear
fantastic tales of ferocious four-foot tall men and great rivers that
led to sea coasts where white men rode horses, sailed ships and fired
cannons.
He also heard of a people the Cree Indians called Ouachippouennes or the
Sioux who go underground. These were described as a nation of bearded
white people who lived in houses like the French and farmed miles of land
near a great river of the west. They were a peaceful nation, who preferred
trade to war, but were brave in defense of their homeland. They grew grain
and squash, and the land along their river had limited timber, so they
burned buffalo chips to warm their homes.
Imagine that the country from Manitoba to Nebraska was not a sea of grass,
but a sea of water. That was the official belief of the French government
in the 1730s. That Western Sea did not exist, but it was every bit as
real to the French of the early 18th century as the Fountain of Youth
or the Seven Cities of Gold had been to Spanish explorers of an earlier
period.
Believing their river might lead to the Western Sea, La Verendrye decided
he needed to meet those Sioux who go underground people he came
to call the Mantannes, which was probably an Assiniboine name for the
earth-lodge dwellers.
Tune in tomorrow for part 2.
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