<h3> CHAPTER VI </h3>
<h4>
LA V�RENDRYES' LATTER DAYS
</h4>
<p>During all this time the elder La Verendrye had been working at other
plans for discovery and for trade in the Far West. In the year 1739,
on his return from the first visit to the Mandans, he had sent his son
Fran�ois to build a fort on the Lake of the Prairies, now known as Lake
Manitoba. When young La Verendrye had built this fort, he went farther
north to Cedar Lake, near the mouth of the Saskatchewan river, and
there built another fort. The purpose was to intercept the trade of
the Indians with the English on Hudson Bay. For over half a century
the Indians of this region had taken their furs down the rivers leading
from Lake Winnipeg to the trading-posts of the Hudson's Bay Company on
the shores of the Bay, but now the French intended to offer them a
market nearer home and divert to themselves this profitable trade. The
first of their new forts was named Fort Dauphin, and the one on Cedar
Lake was called Fort Bourbon.</p>
<p>Having built Fort Bourbon, Fran�ois La Verendrye had ascended the
Saskatchewan river as far as the Forks, where the north and south
branches of that great river join. Here he met a number of Crees, whom
he questioned as to the source of the Saskatchewan. They told him that
it came from a great distance, rising among lofty mountains far to the
west, and that beyond those mountains they knew of a great lake, as
they called it, the water of which was not good to drink. The
mountains were of course the Rocky Mountains, and the waters of the
great lake which the Crees spoke of were the salt waters of the Pacific
ocean. Fran�ois La Verendrye had continued his work of building forts.
Shortly after building Fort Bourbon, he built Fort Paskoyac, on the
Saskatchewan, at a place now known as the Pas, between Cedar Lake and
the Forks. It is interesting to know that a railway has just been
completed to this place, and that it is to be continued from there to
the shores of Hudson Bay. How this modern change would have startled
the old fur-traders! Even if they could have dreamed of anything so
wonderful as a railway, we can imagine their ridicule of the idea that
some day men should travel from the East to the far-off
shores of
the Saskatchewan in two or three days, a trip which cost them months of
wearisome paddling.</p>
<p>In carrying on his work in the West, La Verendrye had to face
difficulties even greater than those caused by the hard life in the
wilderness. His base of supplies was in danger. He had many enemies
in Canada, who took advantage of his absence in the West to prejudice
the governor against him. They even sent false reports to the king of
France, saying that he was spending his time, not in searching for a
way to the Western Sea, but in making money out of the fur trade. This
was not true. Not only was he making no money out of the fur trade,
but, as we have seen, he was heavily in debt because of the enormous
cost of carrying on his explorations. For a time, however, the truth
did not help him. The tales told by his enemies were believed, and he
was ordered to return to Montreal with his sons. He and they withdrew
from their work in the West, left behind their promising beginnings,
and returned to the East. Never again, as it happened, was the father
to resume his work. Another officer, M. de Noyelle, was sent to the
West to continue the work of exploration. Noyelle spent two years in
the West without
adding anything to the information La Verendrye
had gained. By that time a natural reaction had come in favour of La
Verendrye, and the acting governor of Canada, the Marquis de La
Galissoni�re, decided to put the work of exploration again in charge of
La Verendrye and his sons. In recognition of his services he was given
the rank of captain and was decorated with the Cross of St Louis.</p>
<p>While these events were ripening, the years passed, and not until 1749
was La Verendrye restored to his leadership in the West. Though now
sixty-four years old, he was overjoyed at the prospect. Not only was
he permitted to continue his search for the Western Sea; the quality of
his work was recognized, for the governor and the king had at last
understood that, instead of seeking his own profit in his explorations,
as his enemies had said, he had the one object of adding to the honour
and glory of his country. He made preparations to start from Montreal
in the spring of 1750, and intended to push forward as rapidly as
possible to Fort Bourbon, or Fort Paskoyac, where he would spend the
winter. In the spring of the following year he would ascend the
Saskatchewan river and make his way over the mountains to the shores of
the Western
Sea, the Pacific ocean as we know it to-day. But the
greatest of all enemies now blocked his way. La Verendrye was taken
ill while making his preparations for the expedition, and before the
close of the year 1749 he had set out on the journey from which no man
returns.</p>
<SPAN name="img-096"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-096.jpg" ALT="The Marquis de la Galissoni�re. From an engraving in the Ch�teau de Ramezay." BORDER="2" WIDTH="455" HEIGHT="692">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 455px">
The Marquis de la Galissoni�re. <br/>
From an engraving in the Ch�teau de Ramezay.
</h4>
</center>
<p>After the death of La Verendrye, his sons made preparations to carry
out his plan for reaching the Western Sea by way of the Saskatchewan
river. They had the same unselfish desire to bring honour to their
king and to add new territories to their native land. Moreover, this
project, which their father had had so much at heart, had become now
for them a sacred duty. To their dismay, however, they soon found that
the promise made to their father did not extend to themselves. Another
officer, Legardeur de Saint-Pierre, was appointed by the governor of
Canada to carry on the search for the Western Sea. They had spent
years of toil and discomfort in the wilderness and endured countless
hardships and dangers. They had carefully studied the languages,
manners, and customs of the Indian tribes, and they had found out by
hard experience what would be the best means of completing their
discovery. Yet now they were thrown aside in
favour of an officer
who had never been in the Far West and who knew nothing of the
conditions he would there be compelled to meet.</p>
<p>They could at least appeal for justice. In a last attempt to obtain
this for himself and his brothers, Fran�ois de La Verendrye wrote this
letter to the king's minister:</p>
<br/>
<p class="block">
The only resource left to me is to throw myself at the feet of your
Lordship and to trouble you with the story of my misfortunes. My name
is La Verendrye; my late father is known here [in Canada] and in France
by the exploration for the discovery of the Western Sea to which he
devoted the last fifteen years of his life. He travelled and made
myself and my brothers travel with such vigour that we should have
reached our goal, if he had had only a little more help, and if he had
not been so much thwarted, especially by envy. Envy is still here,
more than elsewhere, a prevailing passion against, which one has no
protection. While my father, my brothers, and myself were exhausting
ourselves with toil, and while we were incurring a crushing burden of
expense, his steps and ours were represented as directed only towards
[our own gain by] the finding of
beaver; the outlay he was forced
to incur was described as dissipation; and his narratives were spoken
of as a pack of lies. Envy as it exists in this country is no half
envy; its principle is to calumniate furiously in the hope that if even
half of what is said finds favour, it will be enough to injure. In
point of fact, my father, thus opposed, had to his sorrow been obliged
more than once to return and to make us return because of the lack of
help and protection. He has even been reproached by the court [for not
giving adequate reports upon his work]; he was, indeed, more intent on
making progress than on telling what he was doing until he could give
definite statements. He was running into debt, he failed to receive
promotions. Yet his zeal for his project never slackened, persuaded as
he was that sooner or later his labours would be crowned with success
and recompense.</p>
<p class="block">
At the time when he was most eager in the good work, envy won the day,
and he saw the posts he had established and his own work pass into
other hands. While he was thus checked in his operations, the reward
of a plentiful harvest of beaver skins [which he had made possible]
went
to another rather than himself. Yet [in spite of this
profitable trade the good work slackened]; the posts, instead of
multiplying, fell into decay, and no progress was made in exploration;
it was this, indeed, which grieved him the most.</p>
<p class="block">
Meanwhile the Marquis de la Galissoni�re arrived in the country [to act
as governor]. In the hubbub of contradictory opinions that prevailed,
he came to the conclusion that the man who had pursued such discoveries
at his own charge and expense, without any cost to the king, and who
had gone into debt to establish useful posts, merited better fortune.
Apart from advancing the project of discovery, practical services had
been rendered. There was [the marquis reported] a large increase of
beaver in the colony, and four or five posts had been well-established,
and defended by forts as good as could be made in countries so distant;
a multitude of savages had been turned into subjects of the king; some
of them, in a party which I commanded, showed an example to our own
domiciled savages by striking at the Anniers Indians, who are devoted
to England. Progress [the marquis concluded] could be hastened and
rendered
more efficacious only by allowing the work to remain in
the same hands.</p>
<p class="block">
Thus it was that the Marquis de la Galissoni�re was good enough to
explain his position. No doubt he expressed himself to the court to a
similar effect, for in the following year, that is to say last year, my
father was honoured with the Cross of St Louis, and was invited to
continue with his sons the work which he had begun. He made
arrangements with great earnestness for starting on his expedition; he
spared nothing that might make for success; he had already bought and
prepared all the goods to be used in trade; he inspired me and my
brothers with his own ardour. Then in the month of December last death
carried him off.</p>
<p class="block">
Great as was my grief at the time, I could never have imagined or
foreseen all that I lost in losing him. When I succeeded to his
engagements and his responsibilities, I ventured to hope that I should
succeed to the same advantages. I had the honour to write on the
subject to the Marquis de la Jonquiere [then governor], informing him
that I had recovered from an indisposition from which I had been
suffering, and which might
serve as a pretext to some one seeking
to supplant me. His reply was that he had chosen Monsieur de
Saint-Pierre to go to the Western Sea.</p>
<p class="block">
I started at once for Quebec from Montreal, where I then was; I
represented the situation in which I was left by my father; I declared
that there was more than one post in the direction of the Western Sea
and that I and my brothers would be delighted to be under the orders of
Monsieur de Saint-Pierre, and that we could content ourselves, if
necessary, with a single post, and that the most distant one; I stated
that we even asked no more than leave to go on in advance [of the new
leader], so that while we were pushing the work of exploration, we
might be able to help ourselves by disposing of my father's latest
purchases and of what remained to us in the posts. We should in this
have the consolation of making our utmost efforts to meet the wishes of
the court.</p>
<p class="block">
The Marquis de la Jonquiere, though he felt the force of my
representations, and, as it seemed to me, was touched by them, told me
at last that Monsieur de Saint-Pierre did not wish for either me or my
brothers. I asked what would become of the debts we
had
incurred. Monsieur de Saint-Pierre, however, had spoken, and I could
not obtain anything. I returned to Montreal with this not too
consoling information. There I offered for sale a small piece of
property, all that I had inherited from my father. The proceeds of
this sale served to satisfy my most urgent creditors.</p>
<p class="block">
Meanwhile the season was advancing. There was now the question of my
going as usual to the rendezvous arranged with my hired men, so as to
save their lives [by bringing provisions], and to secure the stores
which, without this precaution, would probably be pillaged and
abandoned. In spite of Monsieur de Saint-Pierre, I obtained permission
to make this trip, and I was subject to conditions and restrictions
such as might be imposed on the commonest voyageur. Nevertheless,
scarcely had I left when Monsieur de Saint-Pierre complained of my
action and alleged that this start of mine before him injured him to
the amount of more than ten thousand francs. He also accused me,
without the slightest reserve, of having loaded my canoe beyond the
permission accorded me.</p>
<p>The accusation was considered and my canoe was pursued; had I been
overtaken
at once, Monsieur de Saint-Pierre would have been
promptly reassured. He overtook me at Michilimackinac, and if I can
believe what he said, he now saw that he had been in the wrong in
acting as he did, and was vexed with himself for not having taken me
and my brothers with him. He expressed much regret to me and paid me
many compliments. It may be that this is his usual mode of acting; but
it is difficult for me to recognize in it either good faith or humanity.</p>
<p class="block">
Monsieur de Saint-Pierre might have obtained all that he has obtained;
he might have made sure of his interests and have gained surprising
advantages; and have taken [as he desired] some relative with him while
not shutting us out entirely. Monsieur de Saint-Pierre is an officer
of merit, and I am only the more to be pitied to find him thus turned
against me. Yet in spite of the favourable impressions he has created
on different occasions, he will find it difficult to show that in this
matter he kept the main interest [that of discovery] in view, and that
he conformed to the intentions of the court and respected the kindly
disposition with which the Marquis de la Galissoni�re honours us.
Before
such a wrong could be done to us, he must have injured us
seriously in the opinion of Monsieur de la Jonquiere, who himself is
always disposed to be kind.</p>
<p class="block">
None the less am I ruined. My returns for this year were only half
collected, and a thousand subsequent difficulties make the disaster
complete; with credit gone in relation both to my father and to myself,
I am in debt for over twenty thousand francs; I remain without funds
and without patrimony. Moreover, I am a simple ensign of the second
grade; my elder brother has only the same rank as myself, while my
younger brother is only a junior cadet.</p>
<p class="block">
Such is the net result of all that my father, my brothers, and I have
done. The one who was murdered some years ago was not the most
unfortunate of us. His blood does not count in our behalf. Unless
Monsieur de Saint-Pierre becomes imbued with better sentiments and
communicates them to the Marquis de la Jonquiere, all my father's toils
and ours fail to serve us, and we must abandon what has cost us so
much. We certainly should not have been and should not be useless to
Monsieur de Saint-Pierre. I explained to him fully how I believed I
could serve him; clever as he
may be, and inspired with the best
intentions, I venture to say that by keeping us away he is in danger of
making many mistakes and of getting often on the wrong track. It is
something gained to have gone astray, but to have found out your error;
we think that now we should be sure of the right road to reach the
goal, whatever it may be. It is our greatest cause of distress to find
ourselves thus snatched away from a sphere of action in which we were
proposing to use every effort to reach a definite result.</p>
<p class="block">
Deign therefore, Monseigneur, to judge the cause of three orphans. Our
misfortune is great, but is it without remedy? There are in the hands
of your Lordship resources of compensation and of consolation, and I
venture to hope for some benefit from them. To find ourselves thus
excluded from the West would be to find ourselves robbed in the most
cruel manner of our heritage. We should have had all that was bitter
and others all that was sweet.</p>
<br/>
<p>This eloquent appeal of Fran�ois fell upon unheeding ears; the
appointment of his rival was confirmed. The only grace he could obtain
was leave to take to the West a small portion of the supplies for which
he and his
brothers had already paid, and to return with the furs
his men had collected and brought down to Michilimackinac. Thus ended,
sadly enough, the devoted efforts of this remarkable family of
explorers to complete the long search for a route overland to the
Pacific ocean. The brothers La Verendrye, ruined in purse and denied
opportunity, fell into obscurity and were forgotten.</p>
<p>It remains only to tell briefly of the attempts of Saint-Pierre and his
men to carry out the same great project. In obedience to the
governor's instructions, Saint-Pierre left Montreal in the spring of
1750. He paddled up the Ottawa, and then through Lake Nipissing, and
down the French river to Georgian Bay. He crossed Lake Huron to
Michilimackinac, where he remained for a short time to give his men a
rest. Then he pushed on to Grand Portage, where he spent some time in
talking to the Indians. In spite of his ungenerous treatment of the
sons of La Verendrye, Saint-Pierre was a brave and capable soldier; but
he knew very little of the hardships of western exploration, or of the
patience needed in dealing with Indians. He grumbled bitterly about
the difficulties and hardships of the portages, which La Verendrye
had taken as a matter of course; and, instead of treating the
Indians with patience and forbearance, he lost no opportunity to
harangue and scold them. We need not wonder, therefore, that the
natives, who had looked up to La Verendrye as a superior being, soon
learned to dislike the overbearing Saint-Pierre, and would do nothing
to help him in his attempts at exploration.</p>
<p>Saint-Pierre visited Fort St Charles; he spent the winter at Fort
Maurepas; in the spring of 1751 he went on to Fort La Reine. Meanwhile
he had sent Niverville, a young officer of his party, to the
Saskatchewan river, with instructions to push his discoveries westward
beyond the farthest point reached by La Verendrye. Winter had set in
before Niverville set out on his long journey, and he travelled over
the snow and ice with snowshoes, dragging his provisions on toboggans.
He knew nothing of the Indian method of harnessing dogs to their
toboggans, and he and his men dragged the toboggans themselves. He
travelled slowly across Lake Winnipeg, over rough ice and through deep
snowdrifts, with no protection from the bitter winds. So great were
the hardships that, in the end, he was compelled to abandon some of the
heavier
supplies and provisions. Before he and his men reached
Fort Paskoyac they were at the point of starvation. During the last
few days they had nothing to eat but a few small fish caught through
holes in the ice.</p>
<p>Niverville was taken seriously ill, and had to remain at Fort Paskoyac,
while some of his men in the spring of 1751 ascended the Saskatchewan
in canoes. These men, we are told, paddled up the river to the foot of
the Rocky Mountains, where they built a fort, named Fort La Jonquiere,
in honour of the governor. Later in the year Niverville followed his
men up the river. At Fort La Jonquiere he met a party of Western
Indians, who told him that in the course of a war expedition they had
encountered a number of Indians of a strange tribe carrying loads of
beaver skins. These strange Indians told the Frenchmen that they were
on their way over the Rocky Mountains to trade their furs with white
men on the sea-coast. For some reason, either through lack of supplies
or because he did not possess the courage and enthusiasm which had
carried the La Verendryes through so many difficulties, Niverville made
no effort to cross the mountains. This attempt to reach the Western
Sea ended, so far as French
explorers were concerned, at Fort La
Jonquiere. All the toils and hardships of the French explorers ended
in failure to achieve the great end at which they aimed. Members of
another race reaped the coveted reward. Many years later a
Scottish-Canadian explorer, Alexander Mackenzie, realized La
Verendrye's dream by successfully crossing the Rocky Mountains and
forcing his way through the difficult country that lay beyond, until at
last he stood upon the shores of the Pacific ocean.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Saint-Pierre had remained at Fort La Reine, leaving the work
of exploration to his young lieutenant, Niverville. One incident of
his life there remains to be described before we close this story of
the search for the Western Sea. It cannot be better told than in
Saint-Pierre's own narrative:</p>
<br/>
<p class="block">
On February 22, 1752 [he says], about nine o'clock in the morning, I
was at this post with five Frenchmen. I had sent the rest of my
people, consisting of fourteen persons, to look for provisions, of
which I had been in need for several days. I was sitting quietly in my
room, when two hundred Assiniboines entered the fort, all of them
armed. These Indians scattered immediately all through the place;
several
of them even entered my room, but unarmed; others
remained in adjacent parts of the fort. My people came to warn me of
the behaviour of these Indians. I ran to them and told them sharply
that they were very impudent to come in a crowd to my house, and armed.
One of them answered in the Cree language that they came to smoke. I
told them that they were not behaving properly, and that they must
leave the fort at once. I believe that the firmness with which I spoke
somewhat frightened them, especially as I put four of the most resolute
out of the door, without their saying a word.</p>
<p class="block">
I went at once to my room. At that very moment, however, a soldier
came to tell me that the guard-house was full of Indians, who had taken
possession of the arms. I ran to the guard-house and demanded, through
a Cree interpreter, what they meant by such behaviour. During all this
time I was preparing to fight them with my weak force. My interpreter,
who proved a traitor, said that these Indians had no bad intentions.
Yet, a moment before, an Assiniboine orator, who had been constantly
making fine speeches to me, had told the interpreter that, in spite of
him, the Indians would kill and rob me.</p>
<p class="block">
When I had barely made out their intentions I failed to realize that I
ought to have taken their arms from them. [To frighten them] I seized
hold of a blazing brand, broke in the door of the powder magazine, and
knocked down a barrel of gunpowder. Over this I held the brand, and I
told the Indians in an assured tone [through the interpreter] that I
expected nothing at their hands, and that even if I was killed I should
have the glory of subjecting them to the same fate. No sooner had the
Indians seen the lighted brand, and the barrel of gunpowder with its
head staved in, and heard my interpreter, than they all fled out of the
gate of the fort. They damaged the gate considerably in their hurried
flight. I soon laid down my brand, and then I had nothing more
exciting to do than to close the gate of the fort.</p>
<br/>
<p>Soon after this incident with the Assiniboines, Saint-Pierre gave up
his half-hearted attempt to find a route to the Western Sea, and
returned to Montreal. He had proved himself a brave man enough. He
did not, however, understand, and made no attempt to understand, the
character of the Indians, and, as an explorer, he was a complete
failure. In
a couple of years he managed to undo all the work
which La Verendrye had accomplished. After he abandoned the West, the
forts which had been built there with such difficulty and at such great
expense soon fell into decay. The only men who had the knowledge and
the enthusiasm to make real La Verendrye's dream of exploration, his
own sons, were denied the privilege of doing so; and no one else seemed
anxious even to attempt such a difficult task.</p>
<p>The period of French rule in Canada was now rapidly drawing to a close.
Instead of adding to the territories of France in North America, her
sons were preparing to make their last stand in defence of what they
already possessed. Half a dozen years later their dream of western
exploration, and of a great North American empire reaching from the
Atlantic to the Pacific, came to an end on the Plains of Abraham. It
was left for those of another race who came after them to turn the
dream of their rivals into tangible achievements. It must never be
forgotten, however, that, although Pierre de La Verendrye failed to
complete the great object of his ambition, we owe to him and his
gallant sons the discovery of a large part of what is to-day Western
Canada.</p>
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