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Documents in History - A Primary View
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Canadahistory.com |
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1687 January
Memoir for the Marquis de Seignelay Regarding the
Dangers That Threaten Canada and the Means to Remedy
Them
Canada is encompassed by many powerful Colonies of
English who labor incessantly to ruin it by exciting all
our Indians, and drawing them away with their peltries
for which said English give them a great deal more
merchandise than the French, because the former pay no
duty to the King of England. That profit attracts
towards them, also, all our Coureurs de bois and French
libertines who carry their peltries to them, deserting
our Colony and establishing themselves among the English
who take great pains to encourage them. They employ
these French deserters to advantage in bringing the Far
Indians to them who formerly brought their peltries into
our Colony, whereby our trade is wholly destroyed. The
English have begun by the most powerful and best
disciplined Indians of all America, whom they have
excited entirely against us by their avowed protection
and manifest usurpation of the sovereignty they claim
over the country of those Indians which appertains
beyond contradiction to the King for nearly a century
without the English having, up to this present time, had
any pretence thereto. They also employ the Iroquois to
excite all our other Indians against us. They sent those
last year to attack the Hurons and the Outawas, our most
ancient subjects; from whom they swept by surprise more
than 75 prisoners, including some of their principal
Chiefs; killed several others, and finally offered peace
and the restitution of their prisoners, if they would
quit the French and acknowledge the English. They sent
those Iroquois to attack the Illinois and the Miamis,
our allies, who are in the neighborhood of Fort Saint
Louis, built by M. de La Salle on the Illinois River
which empties into the River Colbert or Mississipi;
those Iroquois massacred and burnt a great number of
them, and carried off many prisoners with threats of
entire extermination if they would not unite with them
against the French. Colonel Dongan, Governor of
New-York, has pushed this usurpation to the point of
sending Englishmen to take possession, in the King of
England's name, of the post of Mislimakinac which is a
Strait communicating between Lake Huron and the Lake of
the Illinois [Lake Michigan], and has even declared that
all those lakes, including the River Saint Lawrence
which serves as an outlet to them, and on which our
Colony is settled, belong to the English. The Reverend
Father Lamberville, a French Jesuit who, with one of his
brothers, also a Jesuit, has been 18 years a Missionary
among the Iroquois, wrote on the first of November to
Chevalier de Callieres, Governor of Montreal, who
informed the Governor-General thereof, that Colonel
Dongan has assembled the Five Iroquois Nations at
Manatte where he resides, and declared to them as
follows: 1st, That he forbids them to go to Cataracouy
or Fort Frontenac and to have any more intercourse with
French. 2d, That he orders them to restore the prisoners
they, took from the Hurons and Outawacs, in order to
attract these to him. 3d, That he is sending thirty
Englishmen to take possession of Missilimakinak and the
lakes, rivers and adjoining lands and orders the
Iroquois to escort them thither and to afford them
physical assistance. 4th, That he has sent to recall the
Iroquois Christians belonging to the Mohawks who reside
since a long time at the Saut Saint Louis, in the
vicinity of the Island of Montreal, where they have been
established by us, and converted by the care of our
Reverend Jesuit Fathers, and that he would give them
other land and an English Jesuit, to govern them. 5th,
That he wishes that there should not be any Missionaries
except his throughout the whole of the Five Nations of
Iroquois, and that the latter send away our French
Jesuits who have been so long established there. 6th,
That if they are attacked by Monsieur de Denonville the
latter will have to do with him. 7th, That he orders
them to plunder all the French who will visit them; to
bind them and bring them to him, and what they'll take
from them shall be good prize.
The Iroquois-He accompanied his orders with presents
to the Five Iroquois Nations, and dispatched his thirty
Englishmen, escorted by Iroquois, to make an
establishment at Missilirnakinak. The Iroquois plunder
our Frenchmen every where they meet them, and threaten
to fire their settlements which are much exposed and
without any fortifications. These measures, and the
discredit we are in among all the Indians for having
abandoned our allies in M. de la Barre's time, for
having suffered them to be exterminated by the Iroquois
and borne the insults of the latter, render war again
absolutely necessary to avert from us a general Indian
Rebellion which would bring down ruin on our trade and
cause eventually even the extirpation of our Colony. War
is likewise necessary for the establishment of the
Religion, which will never spread itself there except by
the destruction of the Iroquois: so that on the success
of hostilities, which the Governor-General of Canada
proposes to commence against the Iroquois on the 15th of
May next, depends either the ruin of the Country and of
the Religion if he be not assisted, or the Establishment
of the Religion, of Commerce and the King's Power over
all North America, if granted the required aid. If men
consider the Merit in the eyes of God, and the Glory and
utility which the King will derive from that succor, it
is easy to conclude that expense was never better
employed since, independent of the salvation of the
quantity of souls in that vast County to which His
Majesty will contribute by establishing the faith there,
he will secure to himself an Empire of more than a
thousand leagues in extent, from the Mouth of the River
Saint Lawrence to that of the River Mississippi in the
Gulf of Mexico; a country discovered by the French
alone, to which other Nations have no right, and from
which great Commercial advantages, and a considerable
augmentation of His Majesty's Revenues will eventually
be derived. The Marquis de Denonville, whose zeal,
industry and capacity admit of no addition, requires a
reinforcement of 1,500 men to succeed in his enterprise.
If less be granted him, success is doubtful and a war is
made to drag along, the continuation of which for many
years will be a greater expense to His Majesty than that
immediately necessary to guarantee its success and
prompt termination. The Iroquois must be attacked in two
directions. The first and principal attack must be on
the Seneca Nation on the borders of Lake Ontario, the
second, by the River Richelieu and Lake Champlain in the
direction of she Mohawks. Three thousand French will be
required for that purpose. Of these there are sixteen
companies which make 800 men and 800 drafted from the
militia, 100 of the best of whom the Governor-General
destines to conduct 50 canoes which will come and go
incessantly to convey provisions. Of the 3,000 French he
has only one-half, though he boasts of more for
reputation's sake, for the rest of the militia are
necessary to protect and cultivate the farms of the
Colony, and a part of the force must be employed in
guarding the posts of Fort - Frontenac, Niagara, Tarento
Missilimakinak so as to secure the aid he expects from
the Illinois and from the other Indians, on whom,
however, he cannot-rely unless he will be able alone to
defeat the Five Iroquois Nations. The Iroquois force
consists of two thousand picked Warriors (d'elite)
brave, active, more skilful in the use of the gun than
our Europeans and all well armed; besides twelve hundred
Mohegans (Loups), another tribe in alliance with them as
brave as they, not including the English who will supply
them with officers to lead them, and to intrench them in
their villages. If they be not attacked all at once at
the two points indicated, it is impossible to destroy
them or to drive them from their retreat, but if
encompassed on both sides, all their plantations of
Indian corn will be destroyed, their villages burnt,
their women, children and old men captured and their
warriors driven into the woods where they will be
pursued and annihilated by the other Indians. After
having defeated and dispersed them, the winter must be
spent in fortifying the post of Niagara, the most
important in America, by means of which all the other
Nations will be excluded from the lakes whence all the
peltries are obtained; it will be necessary to winter
troops at that and some other posts, to prevent the
Iroquois returning and reestablishing themselves there,
and to people those beautiful countries with other
Indians who will have served under us during this war.
As operations commence on the 15th of May, it is
necessary to hasten the reinforcement and to send it off
in the month of March next in order that it may arrive
in season to be employed, and that it be accompanied by
munitions of war and provisions, arms and other articles
required in the estimates of the Governor-General and
intendant of Canada. The vast extent of this country and
the inconveniences respecting the command which may
occur during the war suggest the great necessity of
appointing a Lieutenant- Governor over it, as well to
command the troops there in the absence, and under the
orders, of the Governor-General as to enforce these
throughout all parts of the Colony beyond the Island of
Montreal towards the great lakes which are at a
considerable distance from Quebec. The Marquis de
Denonville who sees the necessity of establishing that
office is of opinion that Chevalier de Callieres,
Governor of the Island of Montreal, is eminently
qualified for it by his application and industry in the
King's service, and his experience in war, said
Chevalier de Callieres having served twenty years with
reputation in his Majesty's armies throughout the whole
of his glorious campaigns.
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