On
June 3, 1608 French explorer Samuel de Champlain founded Ville
de Québec—Quebec City at the site of Stadacona, a long abandoned St. Lawrence
Iroquoian settlement. It was the first permanent settlement in North America built outside of Spanish possessions. The town was built in an easily fortified position on the top of bluffs on the north side of the St. Lawrence River where it narrows
considerably. It is surrounded by a low plain—later named The Plains of Abraham—that comprise
some of the richest agricultural land
in Canada.
The site was already familiar to the French. Early explorer Jacques Cartier built a crude
palisade fort to protect him from the natives
and wintered on the site in
1535. He returned to France the next
year with news of his discoveries
and to raise money and gather settlers for a permanent settlement. He
returned in 1541 to try to raise a colony there but was driven off within a year by hostile natives and a harsh
winter.
Champlain was a member of a family of mariners. He made
his first voyages to the New World
with François Gravé Du Pont in 1503
and participated in the exploration of Acadia
and helped build the early trading
post and fort at Port Royal. On a subsequent voyage he explored the eastern seaboard as far south as Cape Cod.
No life portraits exist of Champlain, a non-noble merchant and trader. This 1870 rendering by
Théophile Hamel was based on three earlier inauthentic portraits going back to 1650.
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In 1608 he was outfitted
for settlement of the St. Lawrence by the Protestant merchant Pierre
Dugua de Mons. Champlain was in command of the largest of three ships which carried in addition to trade goods a compliment of working men
intended as permanent settlers.
Champlain and his men landed at the site of Quebec in early July.
He immediately began fortifying the position and building
the Habitation. By the end of the summer he had built
three main wooden buildings, each two
stories tall inside a palisade. He made
this his base for further exploration of the area. The next summer he made peace with local Huron and
other Algonquin speaking tribes, the basis for a hoped for fur
trade.
The Habitation of Quebec. |
As a condition of the alliance they required him to help make
war on their traditional Iroquoian enemies
to the south. On the journey he explored
and mapped Lake Champlain. With three other Frenchmen and a party of
about 50 warriors, he encountered a large party of as many as 200 Iroquois near
the later site of Ft. Ticonderoga. When they attacked Champlain fired his arquebus, an early fuse fired gun, killing two chiefs
and scattering the rest of the astonished
enemy which never seen or heard anything like it.
The skirmish set the pattern
of alliances that would mark the next 150 years—the Hurons and their allies
with the French and the Iroquois aligning
with the eventual English colonists.
Champlain himself drew the sketch on which this wood block illustation of him firing his arquebus in a skirmish with the Iroquois near Lake Champlain in 1609. |
In 1610 Champlain returned to France to find new support
when the Court turned against Protestants like his patron. He returned in 1613 with the backing of new
merchants from Rouen with the proper
connections at Court and Catholic bona
fides. From that point on Champlain was
the de
facto governor of New France.
He personally explored
deep into the continent in search of a fabled
passage to the “northern sea”—now
known as Hudson’s Bay.
On another trip back to France maps, illustrations, and
a detailed account of his
explorations which were published as his Voyages. He also formed his own merchant company, Compagnie
When he returned he brought with him the first of the Black Robes, the Roman Catholic Jesuit missionary priests who would be supported by
a new seigneurie
consisting of 30% of the best land in Canada. For the next 20 Champlain would explore,
trade, and build a stable and prosperous colony around his bastion at Quebec
City between periodic trips to France.
He explored and mapped much of the Great
Lakes and many of the rivers feeding
into them.
Powerful Cardinal Richelieu became Champlain's patron and protector at Court when he muscled his way into the partnership underwriting Champlain's lucrative fur trade. |
In 1627 powerful Cardinal Richelieu broke the previous trading
monopoly and formed a new company with himself at his head. Champlain was given a share and given the
title of Commander of New France in the
absence of my lord the Cardinal of Richelieu.
In 1628 Quebec was captured by a company of armed British merchants, the Kirke Brothers as part of a larger
war between England and France. Many
of the Quebec colonists were captured
and sent to England and eventually
repatriated to France. Champlain
stayed in London while working to
regain the colony because the city had been captured three months after peace had been settled in Europe. It was not, however, until the 1632 Treaty of Saint-Germain-en-Laye that Quebec was formally given back to
France. Kirke was knighted by the
English monarch and awarded the Charter for Newfoundland.
After an absence of five years
Champlain returned to Quebec with a new title bestowed by the Cardinal, Lieutenant General
of New France. He could not officially be
governor because he was not a noble. He
had to rebuild Quebec City on the
ruins left by the Kirke Brothers and strengthen its fortifications. He also established to other Habitations and
launched a war against the Iroquois, who had abetted the English.
The next year, 1634 Champlain suffered a stroke in October and died on Christmas Day. He left no direct heirs and his will was successfully contested by distant
relatives. In a real sense, Canada was his heir.
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