Jacques Marquette
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Jacques Marquette, S.J. ({{#invoke:IPA|main}}; June 1, 1637 – May 18, 1675),<ref>Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> sometimes known as Père Marquette or James Marquette,<ref>Template:Cite CE1913</ref> was a French Jesuit missionary who founded Michigan's first European settlement, Sault Sainte Marie, and later founded Saint Ignace. In 1673, Marquette, with Louis Jolliet, an explorer born near Quebec City, was the first European to explore and map the northern portion of the Mississippi River Valley.
Early lifeEdit
Jacques Marquette was born in Laon, France, on June 1, 1637. He was the third of six children for Rose de la Salle and Nicolas Marquette. The de la Salles were a wealthy merchant family. The Marquette family had been well-respected for many years, as numerous members had served in the military and taken civil posts.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Jacques Marquette was sent to study at the Jesuit College in Reims at age 9. He remained there until he joined the Society of Jesus at age 17.<ref name="bio">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Marquette taught for a year at Auxerre, then studied philosophy at Ponta Mousson until 1659. He taught at Ponta Mousson, Reims, Charleville, and Langres until 1665.Template:Sfnp
Throughout this time, Marquette sent multiple requests to be sent on missionary work. The superior of the Jesuit mission in New France, Father Jérôme Lalemant, needed missionaries to work with the Five Nations. Marquette was ordained on the Feast of Saint Thomas of Aquinas in Toul on March 7, 1666. Months later, on September 20, he arrived in Quebec.Template:Sfnp
Missionary workEdit
Marquette was first sent to the mission of Saint Michel at Sillery. Because this mission served peaceful and friendly indigenous people from different tribes, it was considered an ideal place for training new missionaries. Marquette studied the languages and customs of the Algonquin, Abenaki, and Iroquois people that he often tended to at Sillery.Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
From there, he was assigned to Trois-Rivières on the Saint Lawrence River, where he assisted Gabriel Druillettes.<ref name="Spaulding">Template:Cite CE1913</ref> This mission was located in a river town that had permanent shops and taverns. A large number of French soldiers were stationed in the town, as there were frequent attacks from the Five Nations.Template:Sfnp During his two years at this mission, Marquette devoted himself to the study of the local languages and became fluent in six different dialects.<ref name="Spaulding" />Template:Sfnp
In 1668, Marquette was moved by his superiors to missions farther up the Saint Lawrence River, then into the western Great Lakes region. That year, he helped Druillettes, Brother Louis Broeme, and Father Claude-Jean Allouez found the mission at Sault Ste. Marie in present-day Michigan.<ref>Template:Cite DCB</ref>Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The missionaries planted crops, then built a chapel and barns. They established friendly relationships with the Ottawa and Chippewa that were inhabiting that area, and were allowed to baptize most of the infants and people who were dying.Template:Sfnp Marquette noted that the Chippewa were great businessmen and exceptionally skilled at catching whitefish from the rapids in the St. Marys River.Template:Sfnp
People from many tribes would travel to purchase the whitefish. Marquette and the other missionaries would explain their faith to the visiting Sioux, Cree, Miami, Potawatomi, Illinois, and Menominee. They hoped that these visitors would be interested in getting their own Jesuit missionary, or "Black Robe," as they were called by the indigenous people.Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> In 1669, Marquette was assigned to replace Allouez at the La Pointe du Saint Esprit mission. Father Claude Dablon arrived to continue and expand the missionary work at Sault Ste. Marie.Template:Sfnp
Marquette began the Template:Convert journey to his new assignment in August, travelling by canoe along the south shore of Lake Superior. The party soon encountered wintry conditions on the lake and were often unable to light a fire when they went ashore at night. The party reached their destination on September 13, and were greeted by the Petun Huron.Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Excited to have a Black Robe again, they quickly assembled a banquet.
In addition to the Petun Huron, Marquette was tasked with missionary work for three bands of Ottawa: the Keinouche, Sinagaux, and Kiskakon. Marquette visited and attended to all four settlements. Since he felt the Kiskakon were the most ready to accept Christianity, he spent more time working with them and even lived with the families in their village.Template:Sfnp
During his time at La Pointe, Marquette encountered members of the Illinois tribes, who told him about the important trading route of the Mississippi River. They invited him to come to their village and teach their people, whose settlements were mostly farther south.<ref name="bio" /> Marquette was eager to explore this river and asked for permission to take a leave from missionary work, but he first had to attend to an urgent matter.
The Hurons and Ottawa at La Pointe had begun fighting with the neighboring Lakota people. Because he feared an attack by the Lakota, Marquette felt it was necessary to find a new place for the mission.<ref name="bio" />Template:Sfnp Dablon agreed that a new mission was necessary and offered to find a location. Some of the men wanted to stay and fight. Marquette attempted to discourage the imminent war, but most of the men maintained their position. He promised those who wanted to avoid the war that he would take them to a new mission and told them to prepare to move east.Template:Sfnp
In the spring of 1671, Marquette and his party began their journey to the new St. Ignace Mission. The canoes were loaded with men, women, children, animals, and personal belongings. They travelled through Lake Superior and down to the Straits of Mackinac The mission that Dablon had established for them was located on Mackinac Island. The group would be welcomed by a small group of Ottawa who already inhabited the island.Template:Sfnp Shortly after the new residents arrived on the island, they became worried about the possibility of winter starvation. They had noticed that game was scarce and no corn had grown. A group of elders approached Marquette with these concerns, and Marquette agreed. In the fall, the mission was moved to the mainland at St. Ignace, Michigan.Template:Sfnp
ExplorationsEdit
Marquette's request to take a leave from missionary work to explore the great river was granted in 1673. Marquette joined the expedition of Louis Jolliet, a French-Canadian explorer. They departed from Saint Ignace on May 17, with two canoes and five voyageurs of French-Indian ancestry.<ref name=bio/> Four of these are known to be: Jacques Largillier, Jean Plattier, Pierre Moreau, and Jean Tiberge.Template:Sfnp They travelled through Lake Huron and Lake Michigan and into Green Bay.Template:Sfnp<ref name="Catton">Template:Cite book</ref>
This is where the party made their first encounter with indigenous people. They met the Menominee, who were known as the "wild rice" people.Template:Sfnp Marquette told them of his mission to spread religion to the people along the river. The Menominee tried to discourage Marquette and the others, warning them about the perils of the river and the people inhabiting the land along it.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpThe group of explorers next went up the Fox River, nearly to its headwaters.<ref name="Catton" /> They came upon a village inhabited by Miami, Mascouten, and Kickapoo. They allowed Marquette to teach them about Christianity, and listened attentively. He was especially impressed by the Miami. Marquette noted that they were pleasant in appearance and temperament, despite their reputation as warriors. When Marquette's party left the village, they were accompanied by two Miami that would assist them in finding their way to the Wisconsin River.Template:Sfnp From the Fox River, the Miami directed, and likely assisted, the men in portaging their canoes for almost two miles through marsh and oak plains to the Wisconsin River,<ref name="Catton" />Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp</ref> Many years later, the town of Portage, Wisconsin was built and named for the ancient path between the two rivers. They ventured forth from the portage and entered the Mississippi near present-day Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin on June 17.<ref name="Catton" />
Eight days later, the travelers found footprints near the Des Moines River and went to investigate. They were enthusiastically greeted by the Peoria people who lived nearby in three small villages. Marquette and the others were welcomed by the elders, who offered accommodations and had a banquet prepared.Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The men were offered many gifts by the Peoria. Since Marquette and the men were traveling, they had to decline the most of what was offered. Marquette did accept a calumet that was gifted to him by the chief. The chief explained that it was a symbol of peace and advised Marquette to display it as an indication of his amicable intentions. As the men left the village, the Peoria chief cautioned them against going too much farther south.Template:Sfnp
As the party continued south, Marquette hoped to find the Chanouananons. They were known to be friendly to French, and Marquette felt they may be interested in Christianity. They did not find the Chanouananons, but Marquette did notice iron in the Wabash area.Template:Sfnp Once the summer heat and mosquitoes began to cause great discomfort, the men stopped going ashore at night. They slept in the canoes, using the sails as protection from mosquitoes.Template:Sfnp This attracted the attention of some Native Americans, who pointed guns at the travelers. Marquette held the calumet over his head. He attempted to communicate by speaking Huron, but was unsuccessful. He felt they may have misunderstood the intentions of the men with guns, and that they may have been inviting them to their village. Marquette was correct. He and the other men followed them to their village, where they were fed beef and white plums.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
At the mouth of the Saint Francis River, the men spotted a village. They heard war cries and saw men jumping into the river, trying to get to them. Marquette held the calumet over his head. The elders standing on shore saw this, and called off the attack.Template:Sfnp The men were invited to the village of the Michigamea. One of the Michigamea was able to speak to Marquette in the Miami Illinois language, but most of the communication was done through gestures.Template:Sfnp The men were fed fish and corn stew, then given a place to sleep for the night.Template:Sfnp
In the morning, Michigamea warriors in dugout canoes escorted them to the Akansea.Template:Sfnp They were greeted by a group of men in canoes who held up their own calumet. Marquette and the others were invited to the village. Many residents came out to see the Frenchmen.Template:Sfnp A chief led them to a room where elders and other chiefs had gathered. Marquette used an interpreter to ask about what was south of them. He was told that it was extremely dangerous. The people were hostile, well-armed, and would attack anyone who could interfere with their trading arrangements.Template:Sfnp
The Jolliet-Marquette expedition had traveled to within Template:Convert of the Gulf of Mexico.<ref name="Catton" /> Marquette and the other men began to consider whether the danger was worth the risk.Template:Sfnp> By this point, they had encountered several natives carrying European trinkets, and they feared an encounter with explorers or colonists from Spain.<ref name="Catton" /> The explorers had mapped the areas where they had been, including their flora, wildlife, and resources. After staying with the Akansea for two nights, the party decided to end the exploration.Template:Sfnp
On July 17, they turned back at the mouth of the Arkansas River. They followed the Mississippi back to the mouth of the Illinois River, which they had learned from local natives provided a shorter route back to the Great Lakes. They reached Lake Michigan near the site of modern-day Chicago, by way of the Chicago Portage.<ref name="Campbell">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfnp The party encountered a village of Kaskaskia, who invited Marquette to return and establish a mission. When the explorers left the village, some of the Kaskaskia got in their own canoes and traveled with them to Saint Francis Xavier mission in Green Bay, Wisconsin.Template:Sfnp<ref name="Campbell" /> Jolliet returned to Quebec to relate the news of their discoveries.<ref name="Campbell"/>
Marquette and his party returned to the Illinois territory in late 1674, becoming the first Europeans to winter in what would become the city of Chicago. As welcomed guests of the Illinois Confederation, the explorers were feasted en route and fed ceremonial foods such as sagamite.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> As Marquette had promised, he established The Immaculate Conception mission for the Kaskaskia.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
DeathEdit
In the spring of 1675, Marquette traveled westward and celebrated a public Mass at the Grand Village of the Illinois near Starved Rock. A bout of dysentery he had contracted during the Mississippi expedition sapped his health. On the return trip to Saint Ignace, he died at 37 years of age near the modern-day town of Ludington, Michigan.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":3" /> His companions, Pierre Porteret and Jacques Largillier, buried his body at a spot that Marquette had chosen. They marked his burial site with a large cross. Porteret and Lagrillier continued on to St. Ignace, so they could inform those at the mission.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Two years later, Kiskakon Ottawa from the Saint Ignace mission found Marquette's gravesite. They cleaned his bones in preparation for their journey. Ottawa and Huron, in about thirty canoes, accompanied them back to the mission. Marquette's remains were presented to Fathers Nouvel and Piercon. They led funeral services before burying his bones in the chapel at Mission Saint-Ignace on June 9, 1677.Template:Sfnp<ref name=":3">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":2">Template:Cite journal</ref>
In 2018, residents of St. Ignace, some of them descendants of those led by Marquette to the mission, became aware that an ounce of Marquette's bones was located at Marquette University.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Talks between the residents and the university began. The Museum of Ojibwe Culture sent a formal request for the return of the bones. This request was accepted by Marquette University. Two Native American men, one an Anishinaabe elder, arrived at the university in March of 2022. They were presented with Marquette's bones, which they placed in a birch box for the return to St. Ignace.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Following a ceremony, the bones retrieved from the university were reburied with the rest of Marquette's bones on June 18, 2022.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
A Michigan Historical Marker in Ludington, MI reads: Template:Cquote
Adjacent to gravesite of Marquette on State Street in downtown Saint Ignace, a building was constructed that now houses the Museum of Ojibwa Culture.
However, a Michigan Historical Marker in Frankfort, MI reads: Template:Cquote
LegacyEdit
In the early 20th century Marquette was widely celebrated as a Catholic founding father of the region.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
PlacesEdit
- Marquette County, Michigan;<ref name="clarke">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> Marquette County, Wisconsin
- Several communities, including: Marquette, Michigan; Marquette, Wisconsin; Marquette, Iowa; Marquette, Illinois; Marquette Heights, Illinois; Pere Marquette Charter Township, Michigan;<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and Marquette, Manitoba
- Marquette University and Marquette University High School in Milwaukee, Wisconsin
- Marquette Island in Lake Huron
- Lake Marquette in Minnesota; Marquette Lake in Quebec
- Pere Marquette River and Pere Marquette Lake, which drain into Lake Michigan at Ludington, Michigan
- Marquette River in Quebec
- Pere Marquette Park in Milwaukee, WI
- Pere Marquette State Park near Grafton, Illinois
- Marquette Catholic High School, Alton, IL
- Marquette Academy Catholic High School, Ottawa, IL
- École Père-Marquette, a high school in Montreal, Quebec
- Marquette Park, Chicago, Illinois
- Hotel Pere Marquette, Peoria, Illinois
- Marquette Park, Gary, Indiana
- Marquette Park, Mackinac Island, Michigan
- Marquette Park, St. Louis, Missouri
- Pere Marquette Beach, a public beach in Muskegon, Michigan
- Pere Marquette State Forest, in Michigan
- The Pere Marquette Railway
- "Cité Marquette," former US-City-Base (1956–1966) built by Americans based on the NATO Air Force Base in Couvron (38th Bombardment Wing), Laon, France (his birthplace).
- Marquette Transportation Company, a towboat company using a silhouette of the Pere in his canoe as their emblem.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Marquette Building in Chicago; Marquette Building in Detroit; Marquette Building in Saint Louis, Missouri; Pere Marquette Hotel in Peoria, Illinois
- Marquette Avenue, a large street in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
MonumentsEdit
Marquette is memorialized by various statues, monuments, and historical markers:
- Father Marquette National Memorial near Saint Ignace, Michigan<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Chicago Portage National Historic Site, along with Louis Jolliet, near Lyons, Illinois
- Statues have been erected to Marquette various locations, including at Detroit, Michigan; Fort Mackinac, Michigan; Marquette, Michigan; Milwaukee, at Marquette University; Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin, Utica, Illinois; Laon, France; the National Statuary Hall of the United States Capitol; the Quebec Parliament Building
- The Legler Branch of the Chicago Public Library displays "Wilderness, Winter River Scene," a restored mural by Midwestern artist R. Fayerweather Babcock. The mural depicts Marquette and Native Americans trading by a river. Commissioned for Legler Branch in 1934, the mural was funded by the Works Projects Administration.<ref>Chicago Public Library. About Legler Branch.</ref>
Marquette has been honored twice on postage stamps issued by the United States:
- A one-cent stamp in 1898, part of Trans-Mississippi Issue, which shows him on the Mississippi River;<ref>Haimann, Alexander T., "Arago: people, postage & the post. 1-cent Marquette on the Mississippi". National Postal Museum. Accessed May 2, 2017.</ref> This is the first time a Catholic priest is honored by the U.S. Postal Department.
- A 6-cent stamp issued September 20, 1968, marking the 300th anniversary of his establishment of the Jesuit mission at Sault Ste. Marie.<ref>Tessa Sabol. "Trans-Mississippi Exposition Commemorative Stamp Issue and National Identity at the Turn of the Twentieth Century Template:Webarchive." National Postal Museum. Accessed May 2, 2017.</ref>
BibliographyEdit
GalleryEdit
- Marquette.jpg
Sketch of Marquette
- Marquette and jolliet map 1681.jpg
Ca. 1681 map of Marquette and Jolliet's 1673 expedition
- Stamp US 1898 1c Trans-Miss.jpg
"Marquette on the Mississippi", 1898 issue
- Marquette 1968 Issue-6c.jpg
"Marquette explorer", 1968 issue
- Marquette's Death - Michigan Historical Marker.jpg
Michigan Historical Marker: "Marquette's Death"
- Jacques Marquette Memorial in Laon France 2007-12-01.JPG
Memorial to Marquette in his birthplace of Laon, France
- Marquette NSHC.jpg
- Jacques Marquette.jpg
Alfred Laliberté's Marquette sculpture at Quebec Parliament Building
- JMMarquette.jpg
Statue of Marquette in Detroit, Michigan
- Pere Marquette Mackinac 2007.jpg
Statue of Marquette at Fort Mackinac
- PereMarquetteMarquetteMI.jpg
Statue of Marquette in Marquette, Michigan
- FrMarquetteStatue.jpg
Statue of Marquette in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin
- Marquette Winter Monument Chicago.JPG
Marker commemorating Marquette's wintering location in 1674–75, today in Chicago
- Pere Marquette Memorial - Utica, IL.jpg
Pere Marquette Memorial in Utica, Illinois
See alsoEdit
- Jacques Marquette (sculpture), a 2005 public art work by artist Ronald Knepper
- Pere Jacques Marquette (Queoff), a 1987 public art work by Tom Queoff
- Sagamite
- Marquette (disambiguation) for other places, buildings and geographic objects named after Marquette
- Chicago Portage
- Chicago Portage National Historic Site
NotesEdit
Template:Reflist Template:Catholic
External linksEdit
Template:Commons category-inline
- Iconographic sources of jesuit father Jacques Marquette fictitious portraits, Web Robert Derome, Professeur honoraire d'histoire de l'art, Université du Québec à Montréal.
- The Jesuit Relations and Allied Documents 1610 to 1791, including Marquette's journal (Chapters CXXXVI–CXXXVIII)
- Thwaites, Reuben G. Father Marquette New York: D. Appleton & Company, 1902.