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Encyclopedia Dubuque

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MARQUETTE, Jacques: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:marquette.gif|left|thumb|250px|]]
[[Image:marquette.gif|left|thumb|250px|]]
MARQUETTE, Jacques. (Laon, France, June 1, 1637-near Ludington, MI, May 18, 1675). Missionary and explorer. Marquette, with a group of explorers, was the first white man to view the present site of Dubuque. In 1672-1673 Father Marquette, a Jesuit priest, set out with [[JOLLIET, Louis|Louis JOLLIET]] to explore what Native Americans of the region called "the great river" -the [[MISSISSIPPI RIVER]].  
MARQUETTE, Jacques. (Laon, France, June 1, 1637-near Ludington, MI, May 18, 1675). Frenchman Jacques Marquette became an explorer in the mid-1600s. At age 17, Marquette joined the Society of Jesus and became a Jesuit missionary. He studied and taught in the Jesuit colleges of France for about twelve years before his superiors assigned him in 1666 to be a missionary to the nztive people of the Americas. He traveled to Quebec, Canada, where he demonstrated his talent for learning Native American languages. Marquette learned to fluently speak in six different Native American dialects and became an expert in the Huron language.


The explorers entered Green Bay from Lake Michigan. They paddled up the Fox River and made an easy portage to the Wisconsin River that they drifted along until it emptied into the Mississippi. This feat led them to become the first Europeans to reach the upper levels of this river. They paddled down the Mississippi past the area on which Dubuque would be built to the Arkansas River where they were told the river emptied into the Gulf of Mexico. To avoid Spanish rulers in the area, the party turned northward and entered the Illinois River on their way to the present site of Chicago.
In 1668, Marquette was sent to establish more missions farther up the St. Lawrence River in the western Great Lakes region. He helped establish missions at Sault Ste. Marie in what is now Michigan—the state's first European settlement—in 1668 and at St. Ignace, also in Michigan, in 1671.
 
On May 17, 1673, Marquette and his friend [[JOLIET, Louis|Louis Joliet]] , a French-Canadian fur trader and explorer, were chosen to lead an expedition that included five men and two canoes to find the direction and mouth of the [[MISSISSIPPI RIVER]], which natives had called Messipi, "the Great Water."
 
Despite sharing a goal to find the river, the two leaders' ambitions were different: Joliet, an experienced mapmaker and geographer, was focused on the finding itself, while Marquette wanted to spread the word of God among the people they met.  
 
Marquette's group traveled westward to Green Bay in present-day Wisconsin, ascended the Fox River to a portage that crossed to the Wisconsin River and entered the Mississippi near Prairie du Chien on June 17, 1673. Following the river to the mouth of the Arkansas River—within 435 miles of the Gulf of Mexico—Marquette and Joliet learned that it flowed through hostile Spanish territory. Fearing an encounter with Spanish colonists and explorers, they decided to return by way of the Illinois River in mid-July.
 
While Joliet continued on to Canada to relay news of the expedition and its discoveries, Marquette stayed behind in Green Bay. In 1694, he set out to found a mission among the Illinois Indians. As a result of the cold winter weather, he and two companions camped near the site of what is now Chicago, becoming the first Europeans to live there. In the spring, Marquette reached the Indians he sought, but illness—dysentery he contracted while on his mission—forced him to return home. He died on May 18, 1675, en route to St. Ignace at the mouth of a river later named Père Marquette in his honor.


[[Image:imp952.jpg|left|thumb|250px|First Day of Issue cover honoring Jacques Marquette. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding]]
[[Image:imp952.jpg|left|thumb|250px|First Day of Issue cover honoring Jacques Marquette. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding]]

Revision as of 03:06, 11 April 2013

Marquette.gif

MARQUETTE, Jacques. (Laon, France, June 1, 1637-near Ludington, MI, May 18, 1675). Frenchman Jacques Marquette became an explorer in the mid-1600s. At age 17, Marquette joined the Society of Jesus and became a Jesuit missionary. He studied and taught in the Jesuit colleges of France for about twelve years before his superiors assigned him in 1666 to be a missionary to the nztive people of the Americas. He traveled to Quebec, Canada, where he demonstrated his talent for learning Native American languages. Marquette learned to fluently speak in six different Native American dialects and became an expert in the Huron language.

In 1668, Marquette was sent to establish more missions farther up the St. Lawrence River in the western Great Lakes region. He helped establish missions at Sault Ste. Marie in what is now Michigan—the state's first European settlement—in 1668 and at St. Ignace, also in Michigan, in 1671.

On May 17, 1673, Marquette and his friend Louis Joliet , a French-Canadian fur trader and explorer, were chosen to lead an expedition that included five men and two canoes to find the direction and mouth of the MISSISSIPPI RIVER, which natives had called Messipi, "the Great Water."

Despite sharing a goal to find the river, the two leaders' ambitions were different: Joliet, an experienced mapmaker and geographer, was focused on the finding itself, while Marquette wanted to spread the word of God among the people they met.

Marquette's group traveled westward to Green Bay in present-day Wisconsin, ascended the Fox River to a portage that crossed to the Wisconsin River and entered the Mississippi near Prairie du Chien on June 17, 1673. Following the river to the mouth of the Arkansas River—within 435 miles of the Gulf of Mexico—Marquette and Joliet learned that it flowed through hostile Spanish territory. Fearing an encounter with Spanish colonists and explorers, they decided to return by way of the Illinois River in mid-July.

While Joliet continued on to Canada to relay news of the expedition and its discoveries, Marquette stayed behind in Green Bay. In 1694, he set out to found a mission among the Illinois Indians. As a result of the cold winter weather, he and two companions camped near the site of what is now Chicago, becoming the first Europeans to live there. In the spring, Marquette reached the Indians he sought, but illness—dysentery he contracted while on his mission—forced him to return home. He died on May 18, 1675, en route to St. Ignace at the mouth of a river later named Père Marquette in his honor.

First Day of Issue cover honoring Jacques Marquette. Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Photo courtesy: Bob Reding
Photo courtesy: Bob Reding