
FIRST - European [French] Post in Missouri Valley - DeWitt, MO
Posted by:
YoSam.
N 39° 23.073 W 093° 13.289
15S E 480925 N 4359475
The French, and their contact with the natives of this land. Also, First Catholic Church, first navigation maps of Missouri River, and first naming of the tribe of Indians now called "Misuri's" or Missuri's...extinct tribe, last member died in 1907
Waymark Code: WM12149
Location: Missouri, United States
Date Posted: 01/29/2020
Views: 4
County of Marker: Carroll County
Location of Marker: US-24, Wiese Roadside Park, 1 mile NE of De Witt
Marker Moved to DeWitt Community Center Park: Summer 2013
Marker Erected by: State Historical Society of Missouri and State Highway Commission
Date Marker Erected: 1953
Marker Text:
Fort Orleans
Fort Orleans,
first European post in the Missouri Valley, was built by the French explorer Etienne Véniard De Bourgmond on the Missouri River close by, a few miles above the mouth of the Grand, 1723-24. The exact location of the fort is not known.
De Bourgmond, friend of the Indian and author of the first navigation report on the Missouri River, 1714, was chosen to build the fort by a French trading concern, The Company of the Indies. The fort was to serve as a check to any advance by the Spanish from the southwest and as a base for New Mexican and Indian trade. Some 40 men came with De Bourgmond on the fort building mission. Made Commandant on the Missouri, he was also in charge of making peace with the Comanche Indians.
A village of Missouri Indians was across the river from the fort. These Indians, of Souian stock, at one time called themselves Niutachis. They were probably first called Missouris, Algonquin for "he of the big canoe" by the Illinois Indians. The last of the Missouris died on the Oto Reservation in Oklahoma 1907.
Westernmost outpost of France in what is now Missouri, the establishment of Fort Orleans included a chapel, first Catholic church in the Missouri Valley. The first resident priest was Abbé Mercier.
When the fort was built, De Bourgmond traveled into what is now central Kansas, 1724, where he fulfilled his commission to make peace with the Comanches. In 1725 he returned to France taking several Indian chiefs and a young Missouri maiden along for a visit. The whole party delighted the French who called the girl "Princess of the Missouri," saw her baptized in Notre Dame, and married to a sergeant. De Bourgmond was made a noble and had for his coat of arms an Indian against a silver mountain.
De Bourgmond stayed in France, and in 1728 the fort was closed. Fort Orleans was built in territory claimed for France, 1682, and named Louisiana after Louis XIV by La Salle. France held the greater part of this claim for 80 years, then ceded it, 1762, to Spain which held it 38 years, returning it to France, 1800, which sold it to the United States, 1803.