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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Canada: the Empire of the North, by Agnes C.
-Laut
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-
-
-
-Title: Canada: the Empire of the North
- Being the Romantic Story of the New Dominion's Growth from Colony to Kingdom
-
-
-Author: Agnes C. Laut
-
-
-
-Release Date: December 14, 2006 [eBook #20110]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CANADA: THE EMPIRE OF THE NORTH***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Al Haines
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 20110-h.htm or 20110-h.zip:
- (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/0/1/1/20110/20110-h/20110-h.htm)
- or
- (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/2/0/1/1/20110/20110-h.zip)
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Page numbers in this book are indicated by numbers enclosed
- in curly braces, e.g. {99}. They have been located where page
- breaks occurred in the original book. For its Index, a page
- number has been placed only at the start of that section.
-
-
-
-
-
-CANADA
-
-THE EMPIRE OF THE NORTH
-
-Being the Romantic Story of the
- New Dominion's Growth from
- Colony to Kingdom
-
-by
-
-AGNES C. LAUT
-
-Author of "The Conquest of the Great North-West" "Lords of the North,"
-Etc.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: Map of Western Canada]
-
-
-
-Boston and London
-Ginn and Company, Publishers
-1909
-Copyright, 1909, by Agnes C. Laut
-Entered at Stationers' Hall
-All Rights Reserved
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-To re-create the shadowy figures of the heroic past, to clothe the dead
-once more in flesh and blood, to set the puppets of the play in life's
-great dramas again upon the stage of action,--frankly, this may not be
-formal history, but it is what makes the past most real to the present
-day. Pictures of men and women, of moving throngs and heroic episodes,
-stick faster in the mind than lists of governors and arguments on
-treaties. Such pictures may not be history, but they breathe life into
-the skeletons of the past.
-
-Canada's past is more dramatic than any romance ever penned. The story
-of that past has been told many times and in many volumes, with far
-digressions on Louisiana and New England and the kingcraft of Europe.
-The trouble is, the story has not been told in one volume. Too much
-has been attempted. To include the story of New England wars and
-Louisiana's pioneer days, the story of Canada itself has been either
-cramped or crowded. To the eastern writer, Canada's history has been
-the record of French and English conflict. To him there has been
-practically no Canada west of the Great Lakes; and in order to tell the
-intrigue of European tricksters, very often the writer has been
-compelled to exclude the story of the Canadian people,--meaning by
-people the breadwinners, the toilers, rather than the governing
-classes. Similarly, to the western writer, Canada meant the Hudson's
-Bay Company. As for the Pacific coast, it has been almost ignored in
-any story of Canada.
-
-Needless to say, a complete history of a country as vast as Canada,
-whose past in every section fairly teems with action, could not be
-crowded into one volume. To give even the story {iv} of Canada's most
-prominent episodes and actors is a matter of rigidly excluding the
-extraneous.
-
-All that has been attempted here is such a story--_story, not
-history_--of the romance and adventure in Canada's nation building as
-will give the casual reader knowledge of the country's past, and how
-that past led along a trail of great heroism to the destiny of a
-Northern Empire. This volume is in no sense formal history. There
-will be found in it no such lists of governors with dates appended, of
-treaties with articles running to the fours and eights and tens, of
-battles grouped with dates, as have made Canadian history a nightmare
-to children.
-
-It is only such a story as boys and girls may read, or the hurried
-business man on the train, who wants to know "what was doing" in the
-past; and it is mainly a story of men and women and things doing.
-
-I have not given at the end of each chapter the list of authorities
-customary in formal history. At the same time it is hardly necessary
-to say I have dug most rigorously down to original sources for facts;
-and of secondary authorities, from _Pierre Boucher, his Book_, to
-modern reprints of _Champlain and L'Escarbot_, there are not any I have
-not consulted more or less. Especially am I indebted to the
-_Documentary History of New York_, sixteen volumes, bearing on early
-border wars; to _Documents Relatifs a la Nouvelle France, Quebec_; to
-the _Canadian Archives_ since 1886; to the special historical issues of
-each of the eastern provinces; and to the monumental works of Dr.
-Kingsford. Nearly all the places described are from frequent visits or
-from living on the spot.
-
-
-
-
-{v}
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-"The Twentieth century belongs to Canada."
-
-The prediction of Sir Wilfrid Laurier, Premier of the Dominion, seems
-likely to have bigger fulfillment than Canadians themselves realize.
-What does it mean?
-
-Canada stands at the same place in the world's history as England stood
-in the Golden Age of Queen Elizabeth--on the threshold of her future as
-a great nation. Her population is the same, about seven million. Her
-mental attitude is similar, that of a great awakening, a consciousness
-of new strength, an exuberance of energy biting on the bit to run the
-race; mellowed memory of hard-won battles against tremendous odds in
-the past; for the future, a golden vision opening on vistas too far to
-follow. They dreamed pretty big in the days of Queen Elizabeth, but
-they did n't dream big enough for what was to come; and they are
-dreaming pretty big up in Canada to-day, but it is hard to forecast the
-future when a nation the size of all Europe is setting out on the
-career of her world history.
-
-To put it differently: Canada's position is very much the same to-day
-as the United States' a century ago. Her population is about seven
-million. The population of the United States was seven million in
-1810. One was a strip of isolated settlements north and south along
-the Atlantic seaboard; the other, a string of provinces east and west
-along the waterways that ramify from the St. Lawrence. Both possessed
-and were flanked by vast unexploited territory the size of Russia; the
-United States by a Louisiana, Canada by the Great Northwest. What the
-Civil War did for the United States, Confederation did for the Canadian
-provinces--welded them into a nation. The parallel need not be carried
-farther. If the same development {vi} follows Confederation in Canada
-as followed the Civil War in the United States, the twentieth century
-will witness the birth and growth of a world power.
-
-To no one has the future opening before Canada come as a greater
-surprise than to Canadians themselves. A few years ago such a claim as
-the Premier's would have been regarded as the effusions of the
-after-dinner speaker. While Canadian politicians were hoping for the
-honor of being accorded colonial place in the English Parliament, they
-suddenly awakened to find themselves a nation. They suddenly realized
-that history, and big history, too, was in the making. Instead of
-Canada being dependent on the Empire, the Empire's most far-seeing
-statesmen were looking to Canada for the strength of the British
-Empire. No longer is there a desire among Canadians for place in the
-Parliament at Westminster. With a new empire of their own to develop,
-equal in size to the whole of Europe, Canadian public men realize they
-have enough to do without taking a hand in European affairs.
-
-As the different Canadian provinces came into Confederation they were
-like beads on a string a thousand miles apart. First were the Maritime
-Provinces, with western bounds touching the eastern bounds of Quebec,
-but in reality with the settlements of New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia,
-and Prince Edward Island separated from the settlements of Quebec by a
-thousand miles of untracked forest. Only the Ottawa River separated
-Quebec from Ontario, but one province was French, the other English,
-aliens to each other in religion, language, and customs. A thousand
-miles of rock-bound, winter-bound wastes lay between Ontario and the
-scattered settlement of Red River in Manitoba. Not an interest was in
-common between the little province of the middle west and her sisters
-to the east. Then prairie land came for a thousand miles, and
-mountains for six hundred miles, before reaching the Pacific province
-of British Columbia, more completely cut off from other parts of Canada
-than from Mexico or Panama. In fact, it would have been easier for
-British Columbia to trade with Mexico and Panama than with the rest of
-Canada.
-
-{vii} To bind these far-separated patches of settlement, oases in a
-desert of wilds, into a nation was the object of the union known as
-Confederation. But a nation can live only as it trades what it draws
-from the soil. Naturally, the isolated provinces looked for trade to
-the United States, just across an invisible boundary. It seemed absurd
-that the Canadian provinces should try to trade with each other, a
-thousand miles apart, rather than with the United States, a stone's
-throw from the door of each province. But the United States erected a
-tariff wall that Canada could not climb. The struggling Dominion was
-thrown solely on herself, and set about the giant task of linking the
-provinces together, building railroads from Atlantic to Pacific, canals
-from tide water to the Great Lakes. In actual cash this cost Canada
-four hundred million dollars, not counting land grants and private
-subscriptions for stock, which would bring up the cost of binding the
-provinces together to a billion. This was a staggering burden for a
-country with smaller population than Greater New York--a burden as big
-as Japan and Russia assumed for their war; but, like war, the
-expenditure was a fight for national existence. Without the railroads
-and canals, the provinces could not have been bound together into a
-nation.
-
-These were Canada's pioneer days, when she was spending more than she
-was earning, when she bound herself down to grinding poverty and big
-risks and hard tasks. It was a long pull, and a hard pull; but it was
-a pull altogether. That was Canada's seed time; this is her harvest.
-That was her night work, when she toiled, while other nations slept;
-now is the awakening, when the world sees what she was doing. Railroad
-man, farmer, miner, manufacturer, all had the same struggle, the big
-outlay of labor and money at first, the big risk and no profit, the
-long period of waiting.
-
-Canada was laying her foundations of yesterday for the superstructure
-of prosperity to-day and to-morrow--the New Empire.
-
-When one surveys the country as a whole, the facts are so big they are
-bewildering.
-
-{viii} In the first place, the area of the Dominion is within a few
-thousand miles of as large as all Europe. To be more specific, you
-could spread the surface of Italy and Spain and Turkey and Greece and
-Austria over eastern Canada, and you would still have an area uncovered
-in the east alone bigger than the German Empire. England spread flat
-on the surface of Eastern Canada would just serve to cover the Maritime
-Provinces nicely, leaving uncovered Quebec, which is a third bigger
-than Germany; Ontario, which is bigger than France; and Labrador
-(Ungava), which is about the size of Austria.
-
-In the west you could spread the British Isles out flat, and you would
-not cover Manitoba--with her new boundaries extending to Hudson Bay.
-It would take a country the size of France to cover the province of
-Saskatchewan, a country larger than Germany to cover Alberta, two
-countries the size of Germany to cover British Columbia and the Yukon,
-and there would still be left uncovered the northern half of the
-West--an area the size of European Russia.
-
-No Old World monarch from William the Conqueror to Napoleon could boast
-of such a realm. People are fond of tracing ancestry back to feudal
-barons of the Middle Ages. What feudal baron of the Middle Ages, or
-Lord of the Outer Marches, was heir to such heritage as Canada may
-claim? Think of it! Combine all the feudatory domains of the Rhine
-and the Danube, you have not so vast an estate as a single western
-province. Or gather up all the estates of England's midland counties
-and eastern shires and borderlands, you have not enough land to fill
-one of Canada's inland seas,--Lake Superior.
-
-If there were a population in eastern Canada equal to France,--and
-Quebec alone would support a population equal to France,--and in
-Manitoba equal to the British Isles, and in Saskatchewan equal to
-France, and in Alberta equal to Germany, and in British Columbia equal
-to Germany,--ignoring Yukon, Mackenzie River, Keewatin, and Labrador,
-taking only those parts of Canada where climate has been tested and
-lands surveyed,--Canada would support two hundred million people.
-
-{ix} The figures are staggering, but they are not half so improbable as
-the actual facts of what has taken place in the United States.
-America's population was acquired against hard odds. There were no
-railroads when the movement to America began. The only ocean goers
-were sailboats of slow progress and great discomfort. In Europe was
-profound ignorance regarding America; to-day all is changed. Canada
-begins where the United States left off. The whole world is gridironed
-with railroads. Fast Atlantic liners offer greater comfort to the
-emigrant than he has known at home. Ignorance of America has given
-place to almost romantic glamour. Just when the free lands of the
-United States are exhausted and the government is putting up bars to
-keep out the immigrant, Canada is in a position to open her doors wide.
-Less than a fortieth of the entire West is inhabited. Of the Great
-Clay Belt of North Ontario only a patch on the southern edge is
-populated. The same may be said of the Great Forest Belt of Quebec.
-These facts are the magnet that will attract the immigrant to Canada.
-The United States wants no more immigrants.
-
-And the movement to Canada has begun. To her shores are thronging the
-hosts of the Old World's dispossessed, in multitudes greater than any
-army that ever marched to conquest under Napoleon. When the history of
-America comes to be written in a hundred years, it will not be the
-record of a slaughter field with contending nations battling for the
-mastery, or generals wading to glory knee-deep in blood. It will be an
-account of the most wonderful race movement, the most wonderful
-experiment in democracy the world has known.
-
-The people thronging to Canada for homes, who are to be her nation
-builders, are people crowded out of their home lands, who had n't room
-for the shoulder swing manhood and womanhood need to carve out
-honorable careers. Look at them in the streets of London, or Glasgow,
-or Dublin, or Berlin, these _emigres_, as the French called their
-royalists, whom revolution drove from home, and I think the word
-_emigre_ is a truer description of the newcomer to Canada than the word
-"emigrant." They are {x} poor, they are desperately poor, so poor that
-a month's illness or a shut-down of the factory may push them from
-poverty to the abyss. They are thrifty, but can neither earn nor save
-enough to feel absolutely sure that the hollow-eyed specter of Want may
-not seize them by the throat. They are willing to work, so eager to
-work that at the docks and the factory gates they trample and jostle
-one another for the chance to work. They are the underpinnings, the
-underprops of an old system, these _emigres_, by which the masses were
-expected to toil for the benefit of the classes.
-
-"It's all the average man or woman is good for," says the Old Order,
-"just a day's wage representing bodily needs."
-
-"Wait," says the New Order. "Give him room! Give him an opportunity!
-Give him a full stomach to pump blood to his muscles and life to his
-brain! Wait and see! If he fails _then_, let him drop to the bottom
-of the social pit without stop of poorhouse or help!"
-
-A penniless immigrant boy arrives in New York. First he peddles
-peanuts, then he trades in a half-huckster way whatever comes to hand
-and earns profits. Presently he becomes a fur trader and invests his
-savings in real estate. Before that man dies, he has a monthly income
-equal to the yearly income of European kings. That man's name was John
-Jacob Astor.
-
-Or a young Scotch boy comes out on a sailing vessel to Canada. For a
-score of years he is an obscure clerk at a distant trading post in
-Labrador. He comes out of the wilds to take a higher position as land
-commissioner. Presently he is backing railroad ventures of tremendous
-cost and tremendous risk. Within thirty years from the time he came
-out of the wilds penniless, that man possesses a fortune equal to the
-national income of European kingdoms. The man's name is Lord
-Strathcona.
-
-Or a hard-working coal miner emigrates to Canada. The man has brains
-as well as hands. Other coal miners emigrate at the same time, but
-this man is as keen as a razor in foresight and care. From coal miner
-he becomes coal manager, from manager {xi} operator, from operator
-owner, and dies worth a fortune that the barons of the Middle Ages
-would have drenched their countries in blood to win. The man's name is
-James Dunsmuir.
-
-Or it is a boy clerking in a departmental store. He emigrates. When
-he goes back to England it is to marry a lady in waiting to the Queen.
-He is now known as Lord Mount-Stephen.
-
-What was the secret of the success? Ability in the first place, but in
-the second, opportunity; opportunity and room for shoulder swing to
-show what a man can do when keen ability and tireless energy have
-untrammeled freedom to do their best.
-
-Examples of the _emigres'_ success could be multiplied. It is more
-than a mere material success; it is eternal proof that, given a fair
-chance and a square deal and shoulder swing, the boy born penniless can
-run the race and outstrip the boy born to power.
-
-"Have you, then, no _menial_ classes in Canada?" asked a member of the
-Old Order.
-
-"No, I'm thankful to say," said I.
-
-"Then _who_ does the work?"
-
-"The workers."
-
-"But what's the difference?"
-
-"Just this: your menial of the Old Country is the child of a menial,
-whose father before him was a menial, whose ancestors were in servile
-positions to other people back as far as you like to go,--to the time
-when men were serfs wearing an iron collar with the brand of the lord
-who owned them. With us no stigma is attached to work. _Your_ menial
-expects to be a menial all his life. With our worker, just as sure as
-the sun rises and sets, if he continues to work and is no fool, he will
-rise to earn a competency, to improve himself, to own his own labor, to
-own his own home, to hire the labor of other men who are beginners as
-he once was himself."
-
-"Then you have no social classes?"
-
-"Lots. The _ups_, who have succeeded; and the _half-way ups_, who are
-succeeding; and the _beginners_, who are going to succeed; and the
-_downs_, who never try. And as success doesn't necessarily mean money,
-but doing the best at whatever one tries, {xii} you can see that the
-_ups_ and the _halfway ups_, and the _beginners_ and the _downs_ have
-each their own classes of special workers."
-
-"That," she answered, "is not democracy; it is revolution." She was
-thinking of those Old World hard-and-fast divisions of society into
-royalty, aristocracy, commons, peasantry.
-
-"It is not revolution," I explained. "It is rebirth! When you send
-your _emigre_ out to us, he is a made-over man."
-
-But it is not given to all _emigre's_ to become great capitalists or
-great leaders. Some who have the opportunity have not the ability, and
-the majority would not, for all the rewards that greatness offers,
-choose careers that entail long years of nerve-wracking, unflagging
-labor. But on a minor scale the same process of making over takes
-place. One case will illustrate.
-
-Some years before immigration to Canada had become general, two or
-three hundred Icelanders were landed in Winnipeg destitute. From some
-reason, which I have forgotten,--probably the quarantine of an
-immigrant,--the Icelanders could not be housed in the government
-immigration hall. They were absolutely without money, household goods,
-property of any sort except clothing, and that was scant, the men
-having but one suit of the poorest clothes, the women thin homespun
-dresses so worn one could see many of them had no underwear. The
-people represented the very dregs of poverty. Withdrawing to the
-vacant lots in the west end of Winnipeg,--at that time a mere
-town,--the newcomers slept for the first nights, herded in the rooms of
-an Icelander opulent enough to have rented a house. Those who could
-not gain admittance to this house slept under the high board sidewalks,
-then a feature of the new town. I remember as a child watching them
-sit on the high sidewalk till it was dark, then roll under.
-Fortunately it was summer, but it was useless for people in this
-condition to go bare to the prairie farm. To make land yield, you must
-have house and barns and stock and implements, and I doubt if these
-people had as much as a jackknife. I remember how two or three of the
-older women used to sit crying each night in despair till they
-disappeared in the crowded house, fourteen or {xiii} twenty of them to
-a room. Within a week, the men were all at work sawing wood from door
-to door at a dollar and a half a cord the women out by the day washing
-at a dollar a day. Within a month they had earned enough to buy lumber
-and tar paper. Tar-papered shanties went up like mushrooms on the
-vacant lots. Before winter each family had bought a cow and chickens.
-I shall not betray confidence by telling where the cow and chickens
-slept. Those immigrants were not desirable neighbors. Other people
-moved hastily away from the region. Such a condition would not be
-tolerated now, when there are spacious immigration halls and sanitary
-inspectors to see that cows and people do not house under the same
-roof. What with work and peddling milk, by spring the people were able
-to move out on the free prairie farms. To-day those Icelanders own
-farms clear of debt, own stock that would be considered the possession
-of a capitalist in Iceland, and have money in the savings banks. Their
-sons and daughters have had university educations and have entered
-every avenue of life, farming, trading, practicing medicine, actually
-teaching English in English schools. Some are members of Parliament.
-It was a hard beginning, but it was a rebirth to a new life. They are
-now among the nation builders of the West.
-
-But it would be a mistake to conclude that Canada's nation builders
-consisted entirely of poor people. The race movement has not been a
-leaderless mob. Princes, nobles, adventurers, soldiers of fortune,
-were the pathfinders who blazed the trail to Canada. Glory, pure and
-simple, was the aim that lured the first comers across the trackless
-seas. Adventurous young aristocrats, members of the Old Order, led the
-first nation builders to America, and, all unconscious of destiny, laid
-the foundations of the New Order. The story of their adventures and
-work is the history of Canada.
-
-It is a new experience in the world's history, this race movement that
-has built up the United States and is now building up Canada. Other
-great race movements have been a tearing down of high places, the
-upward scramble of one class on the {xiv} backs of the deposed class.
-Instead of leveling down, Canada's nation building is leveling up.
-
-This, then, is the empire--the size of all the nations in Europe,
-bigger than Napoleon's wildest dreams of conquest--to which Canada has
-awakened.[1]
-
-
- [1]COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF AREAS OF CANADA AND EUROPE
-
- Canada . . 3,750,000 square miles Europe . . 3,797,410 square miles
-
- Maritime Provinces Square Miles Square Miles
- Nova Scotia . . . . . 20,600 England . . . . . 50,867
- Prince Edward Island 2,000 Germany . . . . . 208,830
- New Brunswick . . . . 28,200 France . . . . . 204,000
- ------ Italy . . . . . . 110,000
- 50,800 Spain . . . . . . 197,000
- Quebec . . . . . . . . 347,350 Austria and Hungary 241,000
- Ontario . . . . . . . . 222,000 Russia in Europe 2,000,000
- Manitoba
- Saskatchewan 204,000
- Alberta . . . . . . . . 350,000
- British Columbia . . . 383,000
- Unorganized Territory of
- Keewatin . . . . . . 756,000
- Yukon . . . . . . . . 200,000
- MacKenzie River and
- Ungava . . . . . . 1,000,000
-
-
- COMPARATIVE STATEMENT OF POPULATION IN CANADA AND THE UNITED STATES
-
- United States Canada
- In 1800 . . . 5,000,000 In 1881 . . . 4,300,000
- " 1810 . . . 7,000,000 " 1891 . . . 5,000,000
- " 1820 . . . 9,600,000 " 1901 . . . 5,500,000
- " 1830 . . . 12,800,000 " 1906 . . . 6,500,000
-
-
-It will be noticed that for twenty years Canada's population becomes
-almost stagnant. The reason for this will be found as the story of
-Canada is related. If she keeps up the increase at the pace she has
-now set, or at the rate the United States' population went ahead during
-the same period of industrial development, the results can be forecast
-from the following table:
-
- United States in 1840 . . . . . . 17,000,000
- " " " 1850 . . . . . . 23,000,000
- " " " 1860 . . . . . . 31,000,000
- " " " 1870 . . . . . . 38,000,000
- " " " 1880 . . . . . . 50,000,000
- " " " 1890 . . . . . . 63,000,000
- " " " 1900 . . . . . . 85,000,000
-
-
-{xv} A few years ago, when talking to a leading editor of Canada, I
-chanced to say that I did not think Canadians had at that time awakened
-to their future. The editor answered that he was afraid I had
-contracted the American disease of "bounce" through living in the
-United States; to which I retorted that if Canadians could catch the
-same disease and accomplish as much by it in the twentieth century as
-Americans had in the nineteenth, it would be a good thing for the
-country. It is wonderful to have witnessed the complete face-about of
-Canadian public opinion in the short space of six years, this editor
-shouting as loud as any of his exuberant brethren. Still, as the
-outlook in Canadian affairs may be regarded as flamboyant, it is worth
-while quoting the comment of the most critical and conservative
-newspaper in the world,--the London _Times_. The _Times_ says:
-"Without doubt the expansion of Canada is the greatest political event
-in the British Empire to-day. The empire is face to face with
-development which makes it impossible for indefinite maintenance of the
-present constitutional arrangements."
-
-
-Regarding the Iceland immigrants, to whom reference is made, I recently
-met in London a famed traveler, who was in Iceland when the people were
-setting out for Canada, Mrs. Alec. Tweedie. She explains in her book
-how these people were absolutely poverty-stricken when they left
-Iceland. In fact, the sufferings endured the first year in Winnipeg
-were mild compared to their privations in Iceland before they sailed.
-
-
-The explanations of Canada's hard times from Confederation to 1898--say
-from 1871, when all the provinces had really gone into Confederation,
-to 1897, when the Yukon boom poured gold into the country--can be
-figured out. Of a population of 3,000,000, four fifths need not be
-counted as taxpayers, as they include women, children, clerks, farmers'
-help, domestic help,--classes who pay no taxes but the indirect duty on
-clothes they wear and food they eat. This practically means that the
-billion-dollar burden of making the ideal of Confederation into a
-reality by building railroads and canals was borne by 600,000 people,
-which means again a large quota per man to the public treasury. People
-forget that you can't take more out of the public treasury than you put
-into it, that it is n't like an artesian well, self-supplied, and the
-truth is, at this period Canadians were paying more into the public
-treasury than they could afford,--more than the investment was bringing
-them in.
-
-
-
-
-{xvii}
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. FROM 1000 TO 1600 . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
-
- II. FROM 1600 TO 1607 . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
-
- III. FROM 1607 TO 1635 . . . . . . . . . . . . 41
-
- IV. FROM 1635 TO 1666 . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
-
- V. FROM 1635 TO 1650 . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
-
- VI. FROM 1650 TO 1672 . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
-
- VII. FROM 1672 TO 1688 . . . . . . . . . . . . 117
-
- VIII. FROM 1679 TO 1713 . . . . . . . . . . . . 143
-
- IX. FROM 1686 TO 1698 . . . . . . . . . . . . 161
-
- X. FROM 1698 TO 1713 . . . . . . . . . . . . 189
-
- XI. FROM 1713 TO 1755 . . . . . . . . . . . . 205
-
- XII. FROM 1756 TO 1763 . . . . . . . . . . . . 241
-
- XIII. FROM 1763 TO 1812 . . . . . . . . . . . . 276
-
- XIV. FROM 1812 TO 1820 . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
-
- XV. FROM 1812 TO 1846 . . . . . . . . . . . . 380
-
- XVI. FROM 1820 TO 1867 . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
-
- INDEX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 439
-
-
-
-
-{xix}
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS AND MAPS
-
- PAGE
-
-MAP OF WESTERN CANADA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . _Frontispiece_
-
-VIKING SHIP RECENTLY DISCOVERED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
- After a photograph of the Viking Ship at Sandefjord, Norway.
-
-MAP SHOWING DIVISION OF THE NEW WORLD BETWEEN SPAIN AND
- PORTUGAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
-
-A TYPICAL "HOLE IN THE WALL" AT "KITTY VIDDY," NEAR
- ST. JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
- From a photograph.
-
-SEBASTIAN CABOT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
- After the portrait attributed to Holbein.
-
-JACQUES CARTIER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
- After the portrait at St. Malo, France, with signature.
-
-WHERE THE FISHER HAMLETS NOW NESTLE, NEWFOUNDLAND . . . . . . 9
- From a photograph.
-
-ANCIENT HOCHELAGA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
- After a cut in the third volume of Ramusio's _Raccolta_,
- Venice, 1565.
-
-THE "DAUPHIN MAP" OF CANADA, _CIRCA_ 1543, SHOWING CARTIER'S
- DISCOVERIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
-
-QUEEN ELIZABETH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
- After the ermine portrait in Hatfield House, with signature.
-
-THE BOYHOOD OF GILBERT AND RALEIGH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
- From the painting by Sir John Millais.
-
-SIR HUMPHREY GILBERT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
- After the print in Holland's _Herwologia-Anglica_, 1620.
-
-SIR WALTER RALEIGH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
- After the portrait in the possession of the Duchess of Dorset.
-
-AT EASTERN ENTRANCE TO HUDSON STRAITS . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
- From a photograph by Dominion Geological Survey.
-
-HUDSON COAT OF ARMS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
- From Lenox Collection, New York City.
-
-THE FANTASTIC ROCKS OF GASPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
- From a photograph.
-
-{xx}
-
-SAMUEL DE CHAMPLAIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
- After the Moncornet portrait, with signature.
-
-PORT ROYAL OR ANNAPOLIS BASIN, 1609 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
- From Lescarbot's map.
-
-BUILDINGS ON STE. CROIX ISLAND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
- From _Les Voyages du Sieur de Champlain_, Paris, 1613.
-
-PORT ROYAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43
- From the same.
-
-TADOUSSAC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
- From the same.
-
-DEFEAT OF THE IROQUOIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
- From the same.
-
-THE ONONDAGA FORT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
- From the same.
-
-VIEW OF QUEBEC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
- From the same.
-
-QUEBEC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
- From the same.
-
-SIR WILLIAM ALEXANDER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
- After an engraved portrait by Marshall.
-
-MAP SHOWING LA TOUR'S POSSESSIONS IN ACADIA . . . . . . . . . 64
-
-CARDINAL RICHELIEU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66
- After the portrait by Philippe de Champaigne
-
-MAP OF ANNAPOLIS BASIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69
-
-MADAME DE LA PELTRIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
- After a picture in the Ursuline Convent, Quebec.
-
-PIERRE LE JEUNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
- From an engraving in Winsor's America, after an old print.
-
-GEORGIAN BAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
- From a photograph by A. G. Alexander.
-
-BREBEUF . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
- From a bust in silver at Quebec.
-
-REMNANTS OF WALLS OF FORT ST. MARY ON CHRISTIAN ISLAND
- IN 1891 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
- After a photograph reproduced in _Ontario Historical
- Society Papers and Records_.
-
-MAP OF THE GREAT LAKES, SHOWING THE TERRITORY OF THE
- JESUIT HURON MISSIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
- Bellin's map, 1744.
-
-A CANADIAN ON SNOWSHOES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 96
- From La Potherie's _Histoire de l'Amerique Septentrionale_,
- Paris, 1753.
-
-{xxi}
-
-SAUSON'S MAP, 1656 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99
-
-TITLE-PAGE--JESUIT RELATION OF 1662-1663 . . . . . . . . . 111
-
-THE JESUIT MAP OF LAKE SUPERIOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 112
- From the Relation, of 1670-1671.
-
-CHARLES II . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 114
- After the miniature portrait by Cooper, with signature.
-
-PLAN OF MONTREAL IN 1672 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 119
- From _Quebec Historical Society Papers and Records_.
-
-LA SALLE'S HOUSE NEAR MONTREAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
- From a photograph.
-
-KITCHEN, CHATEAU DE RAMEZAY, MONTREAL . . . . . . . . . . . 120
- From a photograph.
-
-LAVAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122
- After the portrait in Laval University, Quebec.
-
-A MAP IN THE RELATION OF 1662-1663 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 126
-
-GALINEE'S MAP OF THE GREAT LAKES, 1669 . . . . . . . . . . 129
-
-ROBERT DE LA SALLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
- After an engraved portrait said to be preserved
- in the _Bibliotheque de Rouen_, with signature.
-
-OLD PLAN OF FORT FRONTENAC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 136
- From _Memoirs sur le Canada_, Quebec, 1873.
-
-THE BUILDING OF THE _GRIFFON_ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 138
- From Father Hennepin's _Nouvelle Decouverte_, Amsterdam, 1704.
-
-PRINCE RUPERT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
- After the painting by Sir P. Lely.
-
-MAP OF HUDSON BAY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 147
-
-CONTEMPORARY FRENCH MAP OF HUDSON BAY AND VICINITY . . . . 155
- From La Potherie's _Histoire de l'Amerique Septentrionale_.
-
-LE MOYNE D'IBERVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 157
- After a portrait in Margry's _Decouvertes Etablissemens_.
-
-FORT FRONTENAC AND THE ADJACENT COUNTRY . . . . . . . . . . 164
- From _The London Magazine_, 1758.
-
-WILLIAM OF ORANGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 166
- After the portrait by Sir Godfrey Kneller, with signature.
-
-QUEBEC, 1689 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 172
- From La Potherie's _Histoire de l'Amerique Septentrionale_.
-
-FRENCH SOLDIER OF THE PERIOD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 174
- After a cut in Massachusetts Archives, Documents
- collected in France, 111, 3.
-
-SIR WILLIAM PHIPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 176
- After an accepted likeness reproduced
- in Winsor's _America_.
-
-{xxii}
-
-COUNT FRONTENAC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 178
- From the statue by Hebert at Quebec.
-
-CASTLE ST. LOUIS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 180
- After a cut in Hawkins' _Pictures of Quebec_, Quebec, 1834.
-
-ATTACK ON QUEBEC, 1690 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181
- From La Hontan's _Memoires_, 1709.
-
-CASTLE ST. LOUIS, QUEBEC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
- From Sulte's _Canadiens Francais_, viii.
-
-PLAN OF QUEBEC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 184
- From Franquelin, 1683.
-
-LANDING OF IBERVILLE'S MEN AT PORT NELSON . . . . . . . . . 186
- From La Potherie's _Histoire de l'Amerique Septentrionale_.
-
-CAPTURE OF FORT NELSON BY THE FRENCH . . . . . . . . . . . 187
- From the same.
-
-CONTEMPORARY MAP, 1689 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 191
- From La Hontan.
-
-HERTEL DE ROUVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 193
- After a portrait in Daniel's _Nos Gloires Nationales_.
-
-CONTEMPORARY PLAN OF PORT ROYAL BASIN . . . . . . . . . . . 199
- From Bellin's map, 1744.
-
-PAUL MASCARENE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 201
- After a portrait in Savary's edition
- of Calnek's _Annapolis_.
-
-LA VERENDRYE'S FORTS AND THE RIVER OF THE WEST . . . . . . 207
- After Jeffery's map, 1762.
-
-MAP PUBLISHED IN PARIS IN 1752 SHOWING THE SUPPOSED
- SEA OF THE WEST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 209
- From the Memoire presented to the Academy
- of Sciences at Paris by Buache, August, 1752.
-
-MAP SHOWING THE SUPPOSED SEA OF THE WEST, WITH APPROACHES
- TO THE MISSISSIPPI AND GREAT LAKES, PARIS, 1755 . . . . . 211
- From the same.
-
-WILLIAM PEPPERRELL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 217
- After the portrait by Smibert.
-
-RUINS OF THE FORTIFICATIONS AT LOUISBURG . . . . . . . . . . 219
- From a recent photograph.
-
-CONTEMPORARY PLAN OF THE ATTACK ON LOUISBURG . . . . . . . . 221
- After a plan reproduced in Winsor's _America_.
-
-FORT HALIFAX, 1755 (Restoration) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 222
-
-CONTEMPORARY VIEW OF OSWEGO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 223
- From Smith's _History of the Province of New York_.
-
-GOVERNOR DINWIDDIE OF VIRGINIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 225
- After a portrait by Ramsay.
-
-{xxiii}
-
-TITLE-PAGE OF WASHINGTON'S JOURNAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . 227
-
-A SKETCH OF THE FIELD OF BATTLE AT BRADDOCK'S DEFEAT . . . . 229
- From a contemporary manuscript in the Library
- of Harvard University.
-
-PLAN OF FORT BEAUSEJOUR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 230
- From Mante's _History of the Late War in North America_.
-
-GENERAL MONCKTON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 232
- After a mezzotint in the Library of the
- American Antiquarian Society.
-
-GENERAL JOHN WINSLOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 234
- After the portrait in Pilgrim Hall, Plymouth, Massachusetts.
-
-MAP OF ACADIA AND THE ADJACENT ISLANDS, 1755 . . . . . . . . 237
-
-SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 238
- After the portrait by Adams.
-
-MAP OF THE REGION OF LAKE GEORGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 239
- From _Documentary History of New York_.
-
-RUINS OF CHATEAU BIGOT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 245
- From a photograph by Captain Wurtelle.
-
-PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, OTTAWA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 246
- From a photograph.
-
-QUEBEC, CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND THE CITADEL . . . . . . . . . 246
- From a photograph.
-
-THE EARL OF LOUDON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 249
- After the portrait by Ramsay.
-
-BOSCAWEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 253
- After the portrait by Reynolds.
-
-THE SIEGE OF LOUISBURG, 1758 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 255
- From a picture in the Lenox Collection,
- New York Public Library.
-
-AMHERST . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 257
- After the portrait by Reynolds.
-
-THE COUNTRY ROUND TICONDEROGA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 259
- From _Documentary History of New York_.
-
-GENERAL JAMES WOLFE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 261
- After the engraved portrait by Houstin.
-
-BOUGAINVILLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 263
- After a cut in Bounechose's _Montcalm_.
-
-THE SITE OF QUEBEC AND THE GROUND OCCUPIED
- DURING THE SIEGE OF 1759 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 265
- After a plan in _The Universal Magazine_,
- London, December, 1859.
-
-LOUIS JOSEPH, MARQUIS DE MONTCALM . . . . . . . . . . . . . 268
- After the portrait in the possession of his descendants.
-
-DEATH OF WOLFE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
- From the painting by West.
-
-{xxiv}
-
-MAJOR ROBERT ROGERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 277
- After a mezzotint by an unknown engraver.
- Published in London, October 1, 1776
-
-NORTH AMERICA AT THE CLOSE OF THE FRENCH WARS, 1763 . . . . 278
-
-GENERAL MURRAY, FIRST GOVERNOR OF QUEBEC . . . . . . . . . 280
- After the portrait by Ramsay.
-
-SETTLEMENTS ON THE DETROIT RIVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
- From Parkman's _Conspiracy of Pontiac_.
-
-BOUQUET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 289
- After the portrait by West.
-
-RETURN OF THE ENGLISH CAPTIVES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
- After the painting by West.
-
-MONTREAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293
- After a print in the New York Public Library.
-
-SAMUEL HEARNE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 297
- After an engraving published in 1796.
-
-GENERAL RICHARD MONTGOMERY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 301
- After the painting by Chappel.
-
-MAP OF QUEBEC DURING THE SIEGE OF CONGRESS TROOPS . . . . . 303
-
-SIR GUY CARLETON . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 307
- After an engraving in _The Political Magazine_, June, 1782.
-
-BENEDICT ARNOLD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309
- After the portrait by Tate.
-
-GENERAL HALDIMAND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 311
- After the portrait by Reynolds.
-
-JOSEPH BRANT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315
- After the portrait by Ames.
-
-LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR SIMCOE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
- After an engraving in Scadding's _Toronto of Old_.
-
-CAPTAIN COOK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
- After the portrait by Dauce.
-
-FORT CHURCHILL AS IT WAS IN 1777 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
- After a print in the _European Magazine_, June, 1797.
-
-TOTEM POLES, BRITISH COLUMBIA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 320
- From a photograph.
-
-CAPTAIN GEORGE VANCOUVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
- After the portrait by Abbott.
-
-NOOTKA SOUND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
- From an engraving in Vancouver's _Journal_.
-
-FORT CHIPPEWYAN, ATHABASCA LAKE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
- From a recent photograph.
-
-{xxv}
-
-ALEXANDER MACKENZIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 327
- After the portrait by Lawrence.
-
-CAUSE OF A PORTAGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
- From a photograph.
-
-SIMON FRASER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
- From a likeness in Morice's _The History
- of the Northern Interior of British Columbia_.
-
-ASTORIA IN 1813 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332
- From a cut in Franchere's _Narrative of a Voyage_.
-
-MAP OF WEST COAST, SHOWING THE OGDEN AND ROSS
- EXPLORATIONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332
- From Laut's _Conquest of the Great North West_.
-
-GENERAL SIR JAMES HENRY CRAIG, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA,
- 1807-1811 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 336
- After an engraving at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
-
-WILLIAM HULL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
- After the portrait by Stuart, with autograph.
-
-MAP SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE MILITARY OPERATIONS
- ON THE DETROIT RIVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340
-
-MAP SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE MILITARY OPERATIONS ON
- THE NIAGARA FRONTIER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
-
-GENERAL BROCK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
- After a portrait in the possession of
- J. A. Macdonell Esq., Alexandria, Ontario.
-
-BROCK MONUMENT, QUEENSTON HEIGHTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 347
- From a photograph.
-
-YORK (TORONTO) HARBOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
- From Bouchette's _British Dominions in North America_.
-
-FITZGIBBONS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357
- After a photograph reproduced in _Proceedings
- and Transactions of the Royal Society of Canada_, 1900.
-
-LAURA SECORD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361
- From _Ontario Historical Society Papers and Records_.
-
-TWO VIEWS OF THE BATTLE OF LAKE ERIE . . . . . . . . . . . 364
- From prints published in 1815
-
-TECUMSEH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 366
- After the drawing by Pierre Le Drie.
-
-DE SALABERRY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 368
- After a portrait in Fannings Taylor's _Portraits of
- British Americans_.
-
-SIR GORDON DRUMMOND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
- After an engraving at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
-
-MONUMENT AT LUNDY'S LANE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
- From a photograph.
-
-{xxvi}
-
-SELKIRK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 381
- From Ontario Archives Collection.
-
-NELSON AND HAYES RIVERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 384
- From a map in Robson's _Hudson Bay_.
-
-FORT GARRY, RED RIVER SETTLEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
- From Ross' _Red River Settlement_.
-
-FORT DOUGLAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
- After an old engraving.
-
-SKETCH OF THE CITY OF WINNIPEG, SHOWING THE SITES
- OF THE EARLY FORTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
- From Manitoba Historical Society
-
-RED RIVER SETTLEMENT, 1816-1820 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
- After a map in Amos' _Report of the Trials Relative
- to the Destruction of the Earl of Selkirk's Settlement_.
-
-MONUMENT TO COMMEMORATE THE MASSACRE OF SEVEN OAKS . . . . . 397
- After a sketch.
-
-TRACKING ON ATHABASCA RIVER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 401
- From a photograph.
-
-PLANS OF YORK AND PRINCE OF WALES FORTS . . . . . . . . . . 405
- From a plate in Robson's _Hudson Bay_.
-
-SIR GEORGE SIMPSON, GOVERNOR OF HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, 1820 406
-
-JOHN MCLOUGHLIN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 408
- After a likeness in Laut's _Conquest
- of the Great Northwest_.
-
-SIR JOHN SHERBROOKE, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA, 1816-1818 413
- After an engraving at Queen's University,
- Kingston, Ontario.
-
-THE FOURTH DUKE OF RICHMOND, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA,
- 1818-1819 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 419
- After an engraving at Queen's University,
- Kingston, Ontario.
-
-WILLIAM LYON MACKENZIE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 421
- After a likeness in Lindsey's _Life and Times of Mackenzie_.
-
-ALLAN McNAB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 423
- After the portrait in the Speaker's Chambers, Ottawa.
-
-LOUIS J. PAPINEAU . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 428
- After a likeness in Fannings Taylor's _British Americans_.
-
-SIR JOHN COLBORNE, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA, 1838-1841 . . 430
- After an engraving at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
-
-LORD DURHAM, SPECIAL COMMISSIONER TO CANADA, 1838 . . . . . 432
- After an engraving at Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario.
-
-JOHN A. MACDONALD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 435
- From a photograph.
-
-FATHERS OF CONFEDERATION, 1867 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 436
- From the painting by Hariss.
-
-
-
-
-CANADA
-
-THE EMPIRE OF THE NORTH
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-FROM 1000 TO 1600
-
-Early voyages to America--Voyages of the Cabots--The French fisher
-folk--Cartier's first voyage--Cartier's second voyage--Cartier's third
-voyage--Marguerite Roberval
-
-
-Who first found Canada? As many legends surround the beginnings of
-empire in the North as cling to the story of early Rome.
-
-When Leif, son of Earl Eric, the Red, came down from Greenland with his
-Viking crew, which of his bearded seamen in Arctic furs leaned over the
-dragon prow for sight of the lone new land, fresh as if washed by the
-dews of earth's first morning? Was it Thorwald, Leif's brother, or the
-mother of Snorri, first white child born in America, who caught first
-glimpse through the flying spray of Labrador's domed hills,--"Helluland,
-place of slaty rocks"; and of Nova Scotia's wooded meadows,--"Markland";
-and Rhode Island's broken vine-clad shore,--"Vinland"? The question
-cannot be answered. All is as misty concerning that Viking voyage as the
-legends of old Norse gods.
-
-Leif, the Lucky, son of Earl Eric, the outlaw, coasts back to Greenland
-with his bold sea-rovers. This was in the year 1000.
-
-For ten years they came riding southward in their rude-planked ships of
-the dragon prow, those Norse adventurers; and Thorwald, Leif's brother,
-is first of the pathfinders in America to lose his life in battle with
-the "Skraelings" or Indians. Thornstein, another brother, sails south in
-1005 with Gudrid, his wife; but a roaring nor'easter tears the piping {2}
-sails to tatters, and Thornstein dies as his frail craft scuds before the
-blast. Back comes Gudrid the very next year, with a new husband and a
-new ship and two hundred colonists to found a kingdom in the "Land of the
-Vine." At one place they come to rocky islands, where birds flock in
-such myriads it is impossible to land without trampling nests. Were
-these the rocky islands famous for birds in the St. Lawrence? On another
-coast are fields of maize and forests entangled with grapevines. Was
-this part of modern New England? On Vinland--wherever it was--Gudrid,
-the Norse woman, disembarks her colonists. All goes well for three
-years. Fish and fowl are in plenty. Cattle roam knee-deep in pasturage.
-Indians trade furs for scarlet cloth and the Norsemen dole out their
-barter in strips narrow as a little finger; but all beasts that roam the
-wilds are free game to Indian hunters. The cattle begin to disappear,
-the Indians to lurk armed along the paths to the water springs. The
-woods are full of danger. Any bush may conceal painted foe. Men as well
-as cattle lie dead with telltale arrow sticking from a wound. The
-Norsemen begin to hate these shadowy, lonely, mournful forests. They
-long for wild winds and trackless seas and open world. Fur-clad, what do
-they care for the cold? Greenland with its rolling drifts is safer
-hunting than this forest world. What glory, doomed prisoners between the
-woods and the sea within the shadow of the great forests and a great
-fear? The smell of wildwood things, of flower banks, of fern mold, came
-dank and unwholesome to these men. Their {3} nostrils were for the whiff
-of the sea; and every sunset tipped the waves with fire where they longed
-to sail. And the shadow of the fear fell on Gudrid. Ordering the
-vessels loaded with timber good for masts and with wealth of furs, she
-gathered up her people and led them from the "Land of the Vine" back to
-Greenland.
-
-[Illustration: VIKING SHIP RECENTLY DISCOVERED.]
-
-Where was Vinland? Was it Canada? The answer is unknown. It was south
-of Labrador. It is thought to have been Rhode Island; but certainly,
-passing north and south, the Norse were the first white men to see Canada.
-
-
-Did some legend, dim as a forgotten dream, come down to Columbus in 1492
-of the Norsemen's western land? All sailors of Europe yearly fished in
-Iceland. Had one of Columbus's crew heard sailor yarns of the new land?
-If so, Columbus must have thought the new land part of Asia; for ever
-since Marco Polo had come from China, Europe had dreamed of a way to Asia
-by the sea. What with Portugal and Spain dividing the New World, all the
-nations of Europe suddenly awakened to a passion for discovery.
-
-[Illustration: DIVISION OF THE NEW WORLD BETWEEN SPAIN AND PORTUGAL.]
-
-There were still lands to the north, which Portugal and Spain had not
-found,--lands where pearls and gold might abound. At Bristol in England
-dwelt with his sons John Cabot, the Genoese master mariner, well
-acquainted with Eastern-trade. Henry VII commissions him on a voyage of
-discovery--an empty honor, the King to have one fifth of all profit,
-Cabot to bear all expense. The _Matthew_ ships from Bristol with a crew
-of eighteen in May of 1497. North and west sails the tumbling craft two
-thousand miles. Colder grows the air, stiffer the breeze in the bellying
-sails, till the _Matthew's_ crew are shivering on decks amid fleets of
-icebergs that drift from Greenland in May and June. This is no realm of
-spices and gold. Land looms through the mist the last week in June, {4}
-rocky, surf-beaten, lonely as earth's ends, with never a sound but the
-scream of the gulls and the moan of the restless water-fret along endless
-white reefs. Not a living soul did the English sailors see. Weak in
-numbers, disappointed in the rocky land, they did not wait to hunt for
-natives. An English flag was hastily unfurled and possession taken of
-this Empire of the North for England. The woods of America for the first
-time rang to the chopper. Wood and water were taken on, and the
-_Matthew_ had anchored in Bristol by the first week of August. Neither
-gold nor a way to China had Cabot found; but he had accomplished three
-things: he had found that the New World was not a part of Asia, as Spain
-thought; he had found the continent itself; and he had given England the
-right to claim new dominion.
-
-[Illustration: A TYPICAL "HOLE IN THE WALL" AT "KITTY VIDDY," NEAR ST.
-JOHN'S, NEWFOUNDLAND]
-
-England went mad over Cabot. He was granted the title of admiral and
-allowed to dress in silks as a nobleman. King Henry gave him 10 pounds,
-equal to $500 of modern money, and a pension of 20 pounds, equal to $1000
-to-day. It is sometimes said that modern writers attribute an air of
-romance to these old pathfinders, {5} which they would have scorned; but
-"Zuan Cabot," as the people called him, wore the halo of glory with glee.
-To his barber he presented an island kingdom; to a poor monk he gave a
-bishopric. His son, Sebastian, sailed out the next year with a fleet of
-six ships and three hundred men, coasting north as far as Greenland,
-south as far as Carolina, so rendering doubly secure England's title to
-the North, and bringing back news of the great cod banks that were to
-lure French and Spanish and English fishermen to Newfoundland for
-hundreds of years.
-
-[Illustration: SEBASTIAN CABOT]
-
-Where was Cabot's landfall?
-
-I chanced to be in Bonavista Bay, Newfoundland, shortly after the 400th
-anniversary of Cabot's voyage. King's Cove, landlocked as a hole in a
-wall, mountains meeting sky line, presented on one flat rock in letters
-the size of a house claim that it was _here_ John Cabot sent his sailors
-ashore to plant the flag on cairn of bowlders; but when I came back from
-Newfoundland by way of Cape Breton, I found the same claim there. For
-generations the tradition has been handed down from father to son among
-Newfoundland fisher folk that as Cabot's vessel, pitching and rolling to
-the tidal bore, came scudding into King's Cove, rock girt as an inland
-lake, the sailors shouted "Bona Vista--Beautiful View"; but Cape Breton
-has her legend, too. It was Cabot's report of the cod banks that brought
-the Breton fishermen out, whose name Cape Breton bears.
-
-{6} As Christopher Columbus spurred England to action, so Cabot now
-spurred Portugal and Spain and France.
-
-Gaspar Cortereal comes in 1500 from Portugal on Cabot's tracks to that
-land of "slaty rocks" which the Norse saw long ago. The Gulf Stream
-beats the iron coast with a boom of thunder, and the tide swirl meets the
-ice drift; and it isn't a land to make a treasure hunter happy till there
-wander down to the shore Montaignais Indians, strapping fellows, a head
-taller than the tallest Portuguese. Cortereal lands, lures fifty savages
-on board, carries them home as slaves for Portugal's galley ships, and
-names the country--"land of laborers"--Labrador. He sailed again, the
-next year; but never returned to Portugal. The seas swallowed his
-vessel; or the tide beat it to pieces against Labrador's rocks; of those
-Indians slaked their vengeance by cutting the throats of master and crew.
-
-And Spain was not idle. In 1513 Balboa leads his Spanish treasure
-seekers across the Isthmus of Panama, discovers the Pacific, and realizes
-what Cabot has already proved--that the New World is not a part of Asia.
-Thereupon, in swelling words, he takes possession of "earth, air, and
-water from the Pole Arctic to the Pole Antarctic" for Spain. A few years
-later Magellan finds his way to Asia round South America; but this path
-by sea is too long.
-
-From France, Normans and Bretons are following Cabot's tracks to
-Newfoundland, to Labrador, to Cape Breton, "quhar men goeth a-fishing" in
-little cockleshell boats no bigger than three-masted schooner, with
-black-painted dories dragging in tow or roped on the rolling decks.
-Absurd it is, but with no blare of trumpets or royal commissions, with no
-guide but the wander spirit that lured the old Vikings over the rolling
-seas, these grizzled peasants flock from France, cross the Atlantic, and
-scatter over what were then chartless waters from the Gulf of St.
-Lawrence to the Grand Banks.
-
-Just as they may be seen to-day bounding over the waves in their little
-black dories, hauling in . . . hauling in the endless line, or jigging
-for squid, or lying at ease at the noonday hour {7} singing some old land
-ballad while the kettle of cod and pork boils above a chip fire kindled
-on the stones used as ballast in their boats--so came the French fisher
-folk three years after Cabot had discovered the Grand Banks. Denys of
-Honfleur has led his fishing fleet all over the Gulf of St. Lawrence by
-1506. So has Aubert of Dieppe. By 1517, fifty French vessels yearly
-fish off the coast of New-Found-Land. By 1518 one Baron de Lery has
-formed the project of colonizing this new domain; but the baron's ship
-unluckily came from the Grand Banks to port on that circular bank of sand
-known as Sable Island--from twenty to thirty miles as the tide shifts the
-sand, with grass waist high and a swampy lake in the middle. The Baron
-de Lery unloads his stock on Sable island and roves the sea for a better
-port.
-
-The King of France, meanwhile, resents the Pope dividing the New World
-between Spain and Portugal. "I should like to see the clause in Father
-Adam's will that gives the whole earth to you," he sent word to his
-brother kings. Verrazano, sea rover of Florence, is commissioned to
-explore the New World seas; but Verrazano goes no farther north in 1524
-than Newfoundland, and when he comes on a second voyage he is lost--some
-say hanged as a pirate by the Spaniards for intruding on their seas.
-
-In spite of the loss of the King's sea rover, the fisher folk of France
-continue coming in their crazy little schooners, continue fishing in the
-fogs of the Grand Banks from their rocking black-planked dories, continue
-scudding for shelter from storm . . . here, there, everywhere; into the
-south shore of Newfoundland; into the long arms of the sea at Cape
-Breton, dyed at sundawn and sunset by such floods of golden light, these
-arms of the sea become known as Bras d'Or Lakes--Lakes of Gold; into the
-rock-girt lagoons of Gaspe; into the holes in the wall of Labrador . . .;
-till there presently springs up a secret trade in furs between the
-fishing fleet and the Indians. The King of France is not to be balked by
-one failure. "What," he asked, "are my royal brothers to have _all_
-America?" Among the Bank fishermen were many sailors of St. Malo.
-Jacques Cartier, master pilot, {8} now forty years of age, must have
-learned strange yarns of the New World from harbor folk. Indeed, he may
-have served as sailor on the Banks. Him the King chose, with one hundred
-and twenty men and two vessels, in 1534, to go on a voyage of discovery
-to the great sea where men fished. Cartier was to find if the sea led to
-China and to take possession of the countries for France. Captain,
-masters, men, march to the cathedral and swear fidelity to the King. The
-vessels sail on April 20, with the fishing fleet.
-
-[Illustration: Jacques Cartier]
-
-Piping winds carry them forward at a clipper pace. The sails scatter and
-disappear over the watery sky line. In twenty days Cartier is off that
-bold headland with the hole in the wall called Bona Vista. Ice is
-running as it always runs there in spring. What with wind and ice,
-Cartier deems it prudent to look for shelter. Sheering south among the
-scarps at Catalina, where the whales blow and the seals float in
-thousands {9} on the ice pans, Cartier anchors to take on wood and water.
-For ten days he watches the white whirl driving south. Then the water
-clears and his sails swing to the wind, and he is off to the north, along
-that steel-gray shore of rampart rock, between the white-slab islands and
-the reefy coast. Birds are in such flocks off Funk Island that the men
-go ashore to hunt, as the fisher folk anchor for bird shooting to-day.
-
-Higher rises the rocky sky line; barer the shore wall, with never a break
-to the eye till you turn some jagged peak and come on one of those snug
-coves where the white fisher hamlets now nestle. Reefs white as lace
-fret line the coast. Lonely as death, bare as a block of marble, Gull
-Island is passed where another crew in later years perish as castaways.
-Gray finback whales flounder in schools. The lazy humpbacks lounge round
-and round the ships, eyeing the keels curiously. A polar bear is seen on
-an ice pan. Then the ships come to those lonely harbors north of
-Newfoundland--Griguet and Quirpon and Ha-Ha-Bay, rock girt, treeless,
-always windy, desolate, with an eternal moaning of the tide over the
-fretful reefs.
-
-[Illustration: WHERE THE FISHER HAMLETS NOW NESTLE, NEWFOUNDLAND]
-
-{10} To the north, off a little seaward, is Belle Isle. Here, storm or
-calm, the ocean tide beats with fury unceasing and weird reechoing of
-baffled waters like the scream of lost souls. It was sunset when I was
-on a coastal ship once that anchored off Belle Isle, and I realized how
-natural it must have been for Cartier's superstitious sailors to mistake
-the moan of the sea for wild cries of distress, and the smoke of the
-spray for fires of the inferno. To French sailors Belle Isle became Isle
-of Demons. In the half light of fog or night, as the wave wash rises and
-falls, you can almost see white arms clutching the rock.
-
-As usual, bad weather caught the ships in Belle Isle Straits. Till the
-9th of June brown fog held Cartier. When it lifted the tide had borne
-his ships across the straits to Labrador at Castle Island, Chateau Bay.
-Labrador was a ruder region than Newfoundland. Far as eye could scan
-were only domed rocks like petrified billows, dank valleys moss-grown and
-scrubby, hillsides bare as slate; "This land should not be called earth,"
-remarked Cartier. "It is flint! Faith, I think this is the region God
-gave Cain!" If this were Cain's realm, his descendants were "men of
-might"; for when the Montaignais, tall and straight as mast poles, came
-down to the straits, Cartier's little scrub sailors thought them giants.
-Promptly Cartier planted the cross and took possession of Labrador for
-France. As the boats coasted westward the shore rock turned to
-sand,--huge banks and drifts and hillocks of white sand,--so that the
-place where the ships struck across for the south shore became known as
-Blanc Sablon (White Sand). Squalls drove Cartier up the Bay of Islands
-on the west shore of Newfoundland, and he was amazed to find this arm of
-the sea cut the big island almost in two. Wooded mountains flanked each
-shore. A great river, amber with forest mold, came rolling down a deep
-gorge. But it was not Newfoundland Cartier had come to explore; it was
-the great inland sea to the west, and to the west he sailed.
-
-July found him off another kind of coast--New Brunswick--forested and
-rolling with fertile meadows. Down a broad shallow stream--the
-Miramichi--paddled Indians waving furs {11} for trade; but wind
-threatened a stranding in the shallows. Cartier turned to follow the
-coast north. Denser grew the forests, broader the girths of the great
-oaks, heavier the vines, hotter the midsummer weather. This was no land
-of Cain. It was a new realm for France. While Cartier lay at anchor
-north of the Miramichi, Indian canoes swarmed round the boats at such
-close quarters the whites had to discharge a musket to keep the three
-hundred savages from scrambling on decks. Two seamen then landed to
-leave presents of knives and coats. The Indians shrieked delight, and,
-following back to the ships, threw fur garments to the decks till
-literally naked. On the 18th of July the heat was so intense that
-Cartier named the waters Bay of Chaleur. Here were more Indians. At
-first the women dashed to hiding in the woods, while the painted warriors
-paddled out; but when Cartier threw more presents into the canoes, women
-and children swarmed out singing a welcome. The Bay of Chaleur promised
-no passage west, so Cartier again spread his sails to the wind and
-coasted northward. The forests thinned. Towards Gaspe the shore became
-rocky and fantastic. The inland sea led westward, but the season was far
-advanced. It was decided to return and report to the King. Landing at
-Gaspe on July 24, Cartier erected a cross thirty feet high with the words
-emblazoned on a tablet, _Vive le Roi de France_. Standing about him were
-the painted natives of the wilderness, one old chief dressed in black
-bearskin gesticulating protest against the cross till Cartier explained
-by signs that the whites would come again. Two savages were invited on
-board. By accident or design, as they stepped on deck, their skiff was
-upset and set adrift. The astonished natives found themselves in the
-white men's power, but food and gay clothing allayed fear. They
-willingly consented to accompany Cartier to France. Somewhere north of
-Gaspe the smoke of the French fishing fleet was seen ascending from the
-sea, as the fishermen rocked in their dories cooking the midday meal.
-
-August 9 prayers are held for safe return at Blanc Sablon,--port of the
-white, white sand,--and by September 5 Cartier is {12} home in St. Malo,
-a rabble of grizzled sailor folk chattering a welcome from the wharf
-front.
-
-He had not found passage to China, but he had found a kingdom; and the
-two Indians told marvelous tales of the Great River to the West, where
-they lived, of mines, of vast unclaimed lands.
-
-
-Cartier had been home only a month when the Admiral of France ordered him
-to prepare for another voyage. He himself was to command the _Grand
-Hermine_, Captain Jalobert the _Little Hermine_, and Captain Le Breton
-the _Emerillon_. Young gentlemen adventurers were to accompany the
-explorers. The ships were provisioned for two years; and on May 16,
-1535, all hands gathered to the cathedral, where sins were confessed, the
-archbishop's blessing received, and Cartier given a Godspeed to the music
-of full choirs chanting invocation. Three days later anchors were
-hoisted. Cannon boomed. Sails swung out; and the vessels sheered away
-from the roadstead while cheers rent the air.
-
-Head winds held the ship back. Furious tempests scattered the fleet. It
-was July 17 before Cartier sighted the gull islands of Newfoundland and
-swung up north with the tide through the brown fogs of Belle Isle Straits
-to the shining gravel of Blanc Sablon. Here he waited for the other
-vessels, which came on the 26th.
-
-The two Indians taken from Gaspe now began to recognize the headlands of
-their native country, telling Cartier the first kingdom along the Great
-River was Saguenay, the second Canada, the third Hochelaga. Near Mingan,
-Cartier anchored to claim the land for France; and he named the great
-waters St. Lawrence because it was on that saint's day he had gone
-ashore. The north side of Anticosti was passed, and the first of
-September saw the three little ships drawn up within the shadow of that
-somber gorge cut through sheer rock where the Saguenay rolls sullenly out
-to the St. Lawrence. The mountains presented naked rock wall. Beyond,
-rolling back . . . rolling back to an impenetrable wilderness . . . were
-the primeval {13} forests. Through the canyon flowed the river, dark and
-ominous and hushed. The men rowed out in small boats to fish but were
-afraid to land.
-
-As the ships advanced up the St. Lawrence the seamen could scarcely
-believe they were on a river. The current rolled seaward in a silver
-flood. In canoes paddling shyly out from the north shore Cartier's two
-Indians suddenly recognized old friends, and whoops of delight set the
-echoes ringing.
-
-Keeping close to the north coast, russet in the September sun, Cartier
-slipped up that long reach of shallows abreast a low-shored wooded island
-so laden with grapevines he called it Isle Bacchus. It was the Island of
-Orleans.
-
-Then the ships rounded westward, and there burst to view against the high
-rocks of the north shore the white-plumed shimmering cataract of
-Montmorency leaping from precipice to river bed with roar of thunder.
-
-Cartier had anchored near the west end of Orleans Island when there came
-paddling out with twelve canoes, Donnacona, great chief of Stadacona,
-whose friendship was won on the instant by the tales Cartier's Indians
-told of France and all the marvels of the white man's world.
-
-Cartier embarked with several young officers to go back with the chief;
-and the three vessels were cautiously piloted up little St. Charles
-River, which joins the St. Lawrence below the modern city of Quebec.
-Women dashed to their knees in water to welcome ashore these gayly
-dressed newcomers with the gold-braided coats and clanking swords.
-Crossing the low swamp, now Lower Town, Quebec, the adventurers followed
-a path through the forest up a steep declivity of sliding stones to the
-clear high table-land above, and on up the rolling slopes to the airy
-heights of Cape Diamond overlooking the St. Lawrence like the turret of
-some castle above the sea. Did a French soldier, removing his helmet to
-wipe away the sweat of his arduous climb, cry out "Que bec" (What a
-peak!) as he viewed the magnificent panorama of river and valley and
-mountain rolling from his feet; or did their Indian guide point to the
-water of the river narrowing like {14} a strait below the peak, and
-mutter in native tongue, "Quebec" (The strait)? Legend gives both
-explanations of the name. To the east Cartier could see far down the
-silver flood of the St. Lawrence halfway to Saguenay; to the south, far
-as the dim mountains of modern New Hampshire. What would the King of
-France have thought if he could have realized that his adventurers had
-found a province three times the size of England, one third larger than
-France, one third larger than Germany? And they had as yet reached only
-one small edge of Canada, namely Quebec.
-
-Heat haze of Indian summer trembled over the purple hills. Below, the
-river quivered like quicksilver. In the air was the nutty odor of dried
-grasses, the clear tang of coming frosts crystal to the taste as water;
-and if one listened, almost listened to the silence, one could hear above
-the lapping of the tide the far echo of the cataract. To Cartier the
-scene might have been the airy fabric of some dream world; but out of
-dreams of earth's high heroes are empires made.
-
-
-But the Indians had told of that other kingdom, Hochelaga. Hither
-Cartier had determined to go, when three Indians dressed as devils--faces
-black as coals, heads in masks, brows adorned with elk horns--came
-gyrating and howling out of the woods on the mountain side, making wild
-signals to the white men encamped on the St. Charles. Cartier's
-interpreters told him this was warning from the Indian god not to ascend
-the river. The god said Hochelaga was a realm of snow, where all white
-men would perish. It was a trick to keep the white men's trade for
-themselves.
-
-Cartier laughed.
-
-"Tell them their god is an old fool," he said. "Christ is to be our
-guide."
-
-The Indians wanted to know if Cartier had spoken to his God about it.
-
-"No," answered Cartier. Then, not to be floored, he added, "but my
-priest has."
-
-{15} With three cheers, fifty young gentlemen sheered out on September 19
-from the St. Charles on the _Emerillon_ to accompany Cartier to Hochelaga.
-
-[Illustration: ANCIENT HOCHELAGA. (From Ramusio)]
-
-Beyond Quebec the St. Lawrence widened like a lake. September frosts had
-painted the maples in flame. Song birds, the glory of the St. Lawrence
-valley, were no longer to be heard, but the waters literally swarmed with
-duck and the forests were alive with partridge. Where to-day nestle
-church spires and whitewashed hamlets were the birch wigwams and night
-camp fires of Indian hunters. Wherever Cartier went ashore, Indians
-rushed knee-deep to carry him from the river; and one old chief at
-Richelieu signified his pleasure by presenting the whites with two Indian
-children. Zigzagging leisurely, now along the north shore, now along the
-south, pausing to hunt, pausing to explore, pausing to powwow with the
-Indians, the adventurers came, on September 28, to the reedy shallows and
-breeding grounds of wild fowl at Lake St. Peter. Here they were so close
-ashore the _Emerillon_ caught her keel in the weeds, and the explorers
-left her aground under guard and went forward in rowboats.
-
-{16} "Was this the way to Hochelaga?" the rowers asked Indians paddling
-past.
-
-"Yes, three more sleeps," the Indians answered by the sign of putting the
-face with closed eyes three times against their hand; "three more nights
-would bring Cartier to Hochelaga"; and on the night of the 2d of October
-the rowboats, stopped by the rapids, pulled ashore at Hochelaga amid a
-concourse of a thousand amazed savages.
-
-It was too late to follow the trail through the darkening forest to the
-Indian village. Cartier placed the soldiers in their burnished armor on
-guard and spent the night watching the council fires gleam from the
-mountain. And did some soldier standing sentry, watching the dark shadow
-of the hill creep longer as the sun went down, cry out, "Mont Royal," so
-that the place came to be known as Montreal?
-
-At peep of dawn, while the mist is still smoking up from the river,
-Cartier marshals twenty seamen with officers in military line, and, to
-the call of trumpet, marches along the forest trail behind Indian guides
-for the tribal fort. Following the river, knee-deep in grass, the French
-ascend the hill now known as Notre Dame Street, disappear in the hollow
-where flows a stream,--modern Craig Street,--then climb steeply through
-the forests to the plain now known as the great thoroughfare of
-Sherbrooke Street. Halfway up they come on open fields of maize or
-Indian corn. Here messengers welcome them forward, women singing,
-tom-tom beating, urchins stealing fearful glances through the woods. The
-trail ends at a fort with triple palisades of high trees, walls separated
-by ditches and roofed for defense, with one carefully guarded narrow
-gate. Inside are fifty large wigwams, the oblong bark houses of the
-Huron-Iroquois, each fifty feet long, with the public square in the
-center, or what we would call the courtyard.
-
-It needs no trick of fancy to call up the scene--the winding of the
-trumpet through the forest silence, the amazement of the Indian drummers,
-the arrested frenzy of the dancers, the sunrise turning burnished armor
-to fire, the clanking of swords, {17} the wheeling of the soldiers as
-they fall in place, helmets doffed, round the council fire! Women swarm
-from the long houses. Children come running with mats for seats.
-Bedridden, blind, maimed are carried on litters, if only they may touch
-the garments of these wonderful beings. One old chief with skin like
-crinkled leather and body gnarled with woes of a hundred years throws his
-most precious possession, a headdress, at Cartier's feet.
-
-Poor Cartier is perplexed. He can but read aloud from the Gospel of St.
-John and pray Christ heal these supplicants. Then he showers presents on
-the Indians, gleeful as children--knives and hatchets and beads and tin
-mirrors and little images and a crucifix, which he teaches them to kiss.
-Again the silver trumpet peals through the aisled woods. Again the
-swords clank, and the adventurers take their way up the mountain--a Mont
-Royal, says Cartier.
-
-The mountain is higher than the one at Quebec. Vaster the view--vaster
-the purple mountains, the painted forests, the valleys bounded by a sky
-line that recedes before the explorer as the rainbow runs from the grasp
-of a child. This is not Cathay; it is a New France. Before going back
-to Quebec the adventurers follow a trail up the St. Lawrence far enough
-to see that Lachine Rapids bar progress by boat; far enough, too, to see
-that the Gaspe Indians had spoken truth when they told of another grand
-river--the Ottawa--coming in from the north.
-
-
-By the 11th of October Cartier is at Quebec. His men have built a
-palisaded fort on the banks of the St. Charles. The boats are beached.
-Indians scatter to their far hunting grounds. Winter sets in. Canadian
-cold is new to these Frenchmen. They huddle indoors instead of keeping
-vigorous with exercise. Ice hangs from the dismantled masts. Drifts
-heap almost to top of palisades. Fear of the future falls on the crew.
-Will they ever see France again? Then scurvy breaks out. The fort is
-prostrate. Cartier is afraid to ask aid of the wandering Indians lest
-they learn his weakness. To keep up show of strength he has his men fire
-off muskets, batter the fort walls, march and drill and {18} tramp and
-stamp, though twenty-five lie dead and only four are able to keep on
-their feet. The corpses are hidden in snowdrifts or crammed through ice
-holes in the river with shot weighted to their feet.
-
-In desperation Cartier calls on all the saints in the Christian calendar.
-He erects a huge crucifix and orders all, well and ill, out in
-procession. Weak and hopeless, they move across the snows chanting
-psalms. That night one of the young noblemen died. Toward spring an
-Indian was seen apparently recovering from the same disease. Cartier
-asked him what had worked the cure and learned of the simple remedy of
-brewed spruce juice.
-
-By the time the Indians came from the winter hunt Cartier's men were in
-full health. Up at Hochelaga a chief had seized Cartier's gold-handled
-dagger and pointed up the Ottawa whence came ore like the gold handle.
-Failing to carry any minerals home, Cartier felt he must have witnesses
-to his report. The boats are rigged to sail, Chief Donnacona and eleven
-others are lured on board, surrounded, forcibly seized, and treacherously
-carried off to France. May 6, 1536, the boats leave Quebec, stopping
-only for water at St. Pierre, where the Breton fishermen have huts. July
-16 they anchor at St. Malo.
-
-
-Did France realize that Cartier had found a new kingdom? Not in the
-least; but the home land gave heed to that story of minerals, and had the
-kidnapped Indians baptized. Donnacona and all his fellow-captives but
-the little girl of Richelieu die, and Sieur de Roberval is appointed lord
-paramount of Canada to equip Cartier with five vessels and scour the
-jails of France for colonists. Though the colonists are convicts, the
-convicts are not criminals. Some have been convicted for their religion,
-some for their politics. What with politics and war, it is May, 1541,
-before the ships sail, and then Roberval has to wait another year for his
-artillery, while Cartier goes ahead to build the forts.
-
-From the first, things go wrong. Head winds prolong the passage for
-three months. The stock on board is reduced to a diet of cider, and half
-the cattle die. Then the Indians of Quebec {19} ask awkward questions
-about Donnacona. Cartier flounders midway between truth and lie.
-Donnacona had died, he said; as for the others, they have become as white
-men. Agona succeeds Donnacona as chief. Agona is so pleased at the news
-that he gives Cartier a suit of buckskin garnished with wampum, but the
-rest of the Indians draw off in such resentment that Cartier deems it
-wise to build his fort at a distance, and sails nine miles up to Cape
-Rouge, where he constructs Bourg Royal. Noel, his nephew, and Jalobert,
-his brother-in-law, take two ships back to France. While Cartier roams
-exploring, Beaupre commands Bourg Royal.
-
-In his roamings, ever with his eyes to earth for minerals, he finds
-stones specked with mica, and false diamonds, whence the height above
-Quebec is called Cape Diamond. It is enough. The crews spend the year
-loading the ships with cargo of worthless stones, and set sail in May,
-high of hope for wealth great as Spaniard carried from Peru. June 8 the
-ships slip in to St. John's, Newfoundland, for water. Seventeen fishing
-vessels rock to the tide inside the landlocked lagoon, and who comes
-gliding up the Narrows of the harbor neck but Viceroy Roberval, mad with
-envy when he hears of the diamond cargoes! He breaks the head of a
-Portuguese or two among the fishing fleet and forthwith orders Cartier
-back to Quebec.
-
-Cartier shifts anchor from too close range of Roberval's guns and says
-nothing. At dead of night he slips anchor altogether and steals away on
-the tide, with only one little noiseless sail up on each ship through the
-dark Narrows. Once outside, he spreads his wings to the wind and is off
-for France. The diamonds prove worthless, but Cartier receives a title
-and retires to a seigneurial mansion at St. Malo.
-
-The episode did not improve Roberval's temper. The new Viceroy was a
-soldier and a martinet, and his authority had been defied. With his two
-hundred colonists, taken from the prisons of France, commanded by young
-French officers,--a Lament and a La Salle among others,--he proceeded up
-the coast of Newfoundland to enter the St. Lawrence by Belle Isle. {20}
-Among his people were women, and Roberval himself was accompanied by a
-niece, Marguerite, who had the reputation of being a bold horsewoman and
-prime favorite with the grandees who frequented her uncle's castle.
-Perhaps Roberval had brought her to New France to break up her attachment
-for a soldier. Or the Viceroy may have been entirely ignorant of the
-romance, but, anchored off Belle Isle,--Isle of Demons,--the angry
-governor made an astounding discovery. The girl had a lover on board, a
-common soldier, and the two openly defied his interdict. Coming after
-Cartier's defection, the incident was oil to fire with Roberval. Sailors
-were ordered to lower the rowboat. One would fain believe that the
-tyrannical Viceroy offered the high-spirited girl at least the choice of
-giving up her lover. She was thrust into the rowboat with a faithful old
-Norman nurse. Four guns and a small supply of provisions were tossed to
-the boat. The sailors were then commanded to row ashore and abandon her
-on Isle of Demons. The soldier lover leaped over decks and swam through
-the surf to share her fate.
-
-Isle of Demons, with its wailing tides and surf-beaten reefs, is a
-desolate enough spot in modern days when superstitions do not add to its
-terrors. The wind pipes down from The Labrador in fairest weather with
-weird voices as of wailing ghosts, and in winter the shores of Belle Isle
-never cease to echo to the hollow booming of the pounding surf.
-
-Out of driftwood the castaways constructed a hut. Fish were in plenty,
-wild fowl offered easy mark, and in springtime the ice floes brought down
-the seal herds. There was no lack of food, but rescue seemed forever
-impossible; for no fishing craft would approach the demon-haunted isle.
-A year passed, two years,--a child was born. The soldier lover died of
-heartbreak and despondency. The child wasted away. The old nurse, too,
-was buried. Marguerite was left alone to fend for herself and hope
-against hope that some of the passing sails would heed her signals. No
-wonder at the end of the third year she began to hear shrieking laughter
-in the lonely cries of tide and wind, and to imagine that she saw
-fiendish arms snatching through the spume of storm drift.
-
-{21} Towards the fall of 1545, one calm day when spray for the once did
-not hide the island, some fishermen in the straits noticed the smoke of a
-huge bonfire ascending from Isle Demons. Was it a trick of the fiends to
-lure men to wreck, or some sailors like themselves signaling distress?
-
-The boat drew fearfully near and nearer. A creature in the strange
-attire of skins from wild beasts ran down the rocks, signaling
-frantically. It was a woman. Terrified and trembling, the sailors
-plucked up courage to land. Then for the first time Marguerite
-Roberval's spirit gave way. She could not speak; she seemed almost
-bereft of reason. It was only after the fishermen had nourished her back
-to semblance of womanhood that they drew from her the story. On
-returning to France, Marguerite Roberval entered a convent. It was there
-an old court friend of her chateau days sought her out and heard the tale
-from her own lips.
-
-[Illustration: THE "DAUPHIN MAP" OF CANADA, _CIRCA_ 1543, SHOWING
-CARTIER'S DISCOVERIES]
-
-{22} A colony begun under such ill omen was not likely to prosper.
-Roberval had proceeded to Cape Rouge, where he landed in July, and before
-winter had a respectable fort constructed. Fifty of his colonists died
-of scurvy. As many as six were hanged in a single day for
-insubordination, and the whipping post became the emblem of an authority
-that trembled in the balance. Roberval, in troth, was not thinking of
-the colony. He was thinking of those minerals which the Indians said
-were at the head waters of the Saguenay. Leaving thirty women at the
-fort, he ascended the Saguenay with seventy men in spring and explored as
-far as Lake St. John, where the village of Roberval commemorates his
-feat; but he found no minerals and lost eight men running rapids. When
-Cartier came out in 1543, Roberval took the remaining colonists home, a
-profoundly embittered man. Legend has it that he either perished on a
-second voyage in 1549, or was assassinated in Paris.
-
-So falls the curtain on the first attempt to colonize Canada.
-
-
-
-
-{23}
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-FROM 1600 TO 1607
-
-English voyages to North America--Sir Humphrey Gilbert--Henry
-Hudson--Champlain's first voyage--Founding of Ste. Croix--The colonists
-in Acadia
-
-
-The second attempt to plant a French colony in the New World was more
-disastrous than the first.
-
-Though my Lord Roberval fails, the French fishing vessels continue to
-bound over the billows of the Atlantic to the New World. By 1578 there
-are a hundred and fifty French fishing vessels off Newfoundland alone.
-The fishing folk engage in barter. Cartier's heirs ask for a monopoly of
-the fur trade in Canada, but the grant is so furiously opposed by the
-merchants of the coast towns that it is revoked until the Marquis de la
-Roche, who had been a page at the French court, again obtains monopoly,
-with many high-sounding titles as Governor, and the added obligation that
-he must colonize the new land. What with wars and court intrigue, it is
-1598 before the Governor of Canada is ready to sail. Of his two hundred
-people taken from jails, all but sixty have obtained their freedom by
-paying a ransom. With these sixty La Roche follows the fishing fleet out
-to the Grand Banks, then rounds southwestward for milder clime, where he
-may winter his people.
-
-Straight across the ship's course lies the famous sand bank, the
-graveyard of the Atlantic,--what the old navigators called "the dreadful
-isle,"--Sable Island. The sea lies placid as glass between the crescent
-horns of the long, low reefs,--thirty miles from horn to horn, with never
-a tree to break the swale of the grass waist-high.
-
-The marquis lands his sixty colonists to fish for supplies, while he goes
-on with the crew to find place for settlement.
-
-Barely has the topsail dipped over the watery sky before breakers begin
-to thunder on the sand reefs. Air and earth lash to fury. Sails are
-torn from the ship of the marquis. His {24} masts go overboard, and the
-vessel is driven, helpless as a chip in a maelstrom, clear back to the
-ports of France. Here double misfortune awaits La Roche. His old
-patrons of the court are no longer powerful. He is thrown in prison by a
-rival baron.
-
-In vain the colonists strain tired eyes for a sail at sea. Days become
-weeks, weeks months, summer autumn; and no boat came back. As winter
-gales assailed the sea, sending the sand drifting like spray, the
-convicts built themselves huts out of driftwood, and scooped beds for
-themselves in the earth like rabbit burrows. Of food there was plenty.
-The people had their fishing lines; and the stock, left by the Baron de
-Lery long ago, had multiplied and now overran the island. Wild fowl,
-too, teemed on the inland lake; and foxes, which must have drifted ashore
-on the ice float of spring, ran wild through the sedge.
-
-Like Robinson Crusoe cast on a desert isle, the desperate people fought
-their fate. Traps were set for the foxes, snares for the birds, and
-scouts kept tramping from end to end of the island for sight of a sail.
-Racked with despair and anxiety, these outcasts of civilization soon fell
-to bitter quarreling. Traps were found rifled. Dead men lay beside the
-looted traps; and, doubtless, not a few men lost their lives in spring
-when the ice floes drifted down with the seal herds, and the men gave mad
-chase from ice pan to ice pan for seal pelts to make clothing. Spring
-wore to summer. The graves on the sand banks increased. For a second
-winter the dreary snowfall wrapped the island in a mantle white as death
-sheet. Then came the same weary monotony,--the frenzied seal hunt over
-the blood-stained floes; the long summer days with the drone of the tide
-on the sand banks; the men mad with hope at sight of a sail peak over the
-far wave tops, only to be plunged in despair as the fisher boat passed
-too far for signal; the fading of the grasses to russet in the sad autumn
-light; then snowfall again--and despair.
-
-Five years passed before La Roche could aid his people; and the pilot who
-went to their rescue won himself immortal contempt by robbing the
-castaways of their furs. Word of the {25} rescue came to the ears of the
-court. Royalty commanded the refugees brought before the throne. Only
-twelve had survived, and these marched before the royal presence clothed
-in the skins of seals, hair unkempt, beards to mid-waist, "like river
-gods of yore," says the old record. The King was so touched that he
-commanded fifty crowns given to each man and the stolen furs restored.
-La Roche died of chagrin.
-
-
-While France is trying to colonize Canada, England has not forgotten that
-John Cabot first coasted these northern shores and erected the English
-flag.
-
-[Illustration: QUEEN ELIZABETH]
-
-About the time that Marguerite Roberval was left alone on Isle Demons,
-two boys--half-brothers--were playing on the sands of the English
-Channel, sailing toy boats and listening to sailor yarns of loot on the
-Spanish Main. One was Humphrey Gilbert; the other, Walter Raleigh.
-These two were destined to lead England's first colonies to America.
-
-Martin Frobisher had already poked the prows of English ships into the
-icy straits of Greenland waters, seeking way to {26} China. He had come
-out with a fleet of fifteen sails and one hundred mariners in 1578 to
-found colonies, but was led away by the lure of "fool's gold." Loading
-his vessels with worthless rocks which he believed contained gold enough
-"to suffice all the gold gluttons of the world," he sailed back to
-England without leaving the trace of a colony. Francis Drake, the very
-same year, had for the first time plowed an English furrow around the
-seas of the world, chasing Spanish treasure boats up the west coast of
-South America and loading his own vessel with loot to the water line.
-Afraid to go back the way he had come, round South America, where all the
-Spanish frigates lay in wait to catch him, Drake pushed on up the west
-coast as far as California, and landing, took possession of what he
-called "New Albion" for Queen Elizabeth. But still no colony had been
-planted for England.
-
-[Illustration: THE BOYHOOD OF GILBERT AND RALEIGH. (From the painting by
-Sir John Millais)]
-
-Gilbert and Raleigh, the two half-brothers, were both zealous for glory.
-Both stood high in court favor. Both had fought for Queen Elizabeth in
-the wars. Gilbert had fame as seaman and geographer. He asks for the
-privilege of founding England's first colony. The Queen will incur no
-expense. Gilbert and Raleigh and their friends will fit out the vessels.
-Elizabeth deeds to Gilbert all that old domain discovered by John Cabot,
-reserving only one fifth of the minerals he may find; and she sends him a
-present of a golden anchor as a Godspeed. June 11, 1583, Sir Humphrey
-sets sail with a fleet of three splendid merchantmen, fitted out as
-men-of-war, and two heavily armed little frigates. The crews number
-three hundred and sixty men, but they are for the most part impressed
-seamen and riotous. The fleet is only well away when the biggest of the
-merchantmen signals that plague has broken out, and flees back to
-England. Later, as fog hides the boats from one another, the pirate crew
-on board the little frigate _Swallow_ run down an English fisherman on
-the Grand Banks, board her, and at bayonet point loot the schooner from
-stem to stern. When the ships lower sail to come in on the tide through
-the long Narrows, to the rock-girt harbor of St. John's, Newfoundland,
-{27} the hundreds of fishing vessels lying at anchor there object to the
-pirate _Swallow_; but Sir Humphrey reads his commission from the Queen,
-and the fishing fleet roars a welcome that sets the rocks ringing.
-Sunday, August 4, the next day after entering, Biscayans and French and
-Portuguese and English send their new Governor tribute in
-provisions,--fish from the English, marmalade and wines and spices from
-the foreigners. The admiral gives a feast to the master mariners each
-week he is in port, and entertains--as the old record says--"right
-bountifully." Wandering round the rocky harbor, up the high cliff to the
-left where remnants of an old fortress may be seen to-day, along the
-circular hills to the right where the fishing stages cover the water
-front, Gilbert's men find "fool's gold," rock with specks of iron and
-mica. Daniel, the refiner of metals, declares it is a rich specimen of
-silver. The find goes to Sir Humphrey's head. He sees himself a second
-Francis Drake, ships crammed with gold. When the captains of the other
-vessels in his fleet would see the treasure, he answers: "Content
-yourselves! It is enough! I have seen it but I would have no speech
-made of it in harbor; for the Portuguese and {28} Biscayans and French
-might learn of it. We shall soon return hither again."
-
-[Illustration: SIR HUMPHREY GILBERT]
-
-Many of the men are in ill health. Gilbert decides to send the invalids
-home in the _Swallow_; but he transfers the bold pirate crew of that
-frigate to the big ship _Delight_, which carries provisions for the
-colony. While planning to make St. John's the headquarters of his new
-kingdom, Sir Humphrey wishes to explore those regions where Cartier had
-gone and whence the fishing schooners bring such wealth in furs.
-
-August 20 the remainder of his fleet rounds out of St. John's south west
-for the Gulf of St. Lawrence,--the _Delight_ with the provisions, the
-_Golden Hinde_ with the majority of the people, the little frigate
-_Squirrel_ weighted down by artillery stores but under command of Gilbert
-himself, because the smaller ship can run close ashore to explore. To
-keep up the spirits of the men, there is much merrymaking. Becalmed off
-Cape Breton, Sir Humphrey visits the big ship _Delight_, where the
-trumpets and the drums and the pipes and the cornets reel off wild sailor
-jigs. "There was," says the old record, "little watching for danger."
-Wednesday, August 26, the sounding line forewarned the reefs of Sable
-Island. Breakers were sighted. The _Delight_ signaled that her captain
-wanted to shift southwest to deeper water, but Gilbert wanted to enter
-the St. Lawrence and signaled back to go on northwest. That night a
-storm raged. The provision ship ran full tilt into the sand banks of
-Sable Island, and was battered into chips before the other ships could
-come to rescue. All supplies were lost and all the pirate crew perished
-but sixteen, who jumped into the pinnace dragging astern, and, with only
-one oar, half punted, half drifted for seven days till the wave wash
-carried them to the shores of Newfoundland. There they were picked up by
-a fishing vessel.
-
-With provisions gone, Sir Humphrey Gilbert's colony was doomed. He must
-turn back. Saturday, August 31, they reversed the course. When halfway
-across the Atlantic the admiral rowed from the little _Squirrel_ across
-to the _Golden Hinde_ to have a lame foot treated by the surgeon. "Cheer
-{29} up," he urged the men. "Next year her Majesty will loan me 1000
-pounds, and we shall come again."
-
-[Illustration: SIR WALTER RALEIGH]
-
-As storm was gathering, the men begged him to remain on the larger ship,
-but Gilbert refused to leave the sailors of the _Squirrel_. The frigate
-was as safe for him as for them, he said. Some one called his attention
-to the fact that the frigate was overweighted with cannon. Gilbert
-laughed all danger to scorn. Soon afterwards the waves began to break
-short and high--a dangerous sea for a small, overweighted ship. It had
-been arranged that both ships should swing lanterns fore and aft to keep
-each other in sight at night. On the night of September 9 a
-phosphorescent light was seen to gleam above the mainmast of the
-_Squirrel_,--certain sign to the superstitious sailors of dire disaster;
-but when the _Hinde_ slackened speed, and the great waves threw the
-vessels almost together, there was Sir Humphrey sitting aloft, book in
-hand, shouting out, "We are as near Heaven by sea as by land." The
-_Hinde_ fell to the rear. The _Squirrel_ led away, her stern lanterns
-lighting a trail across the shiny dark of the tempestuous billows.
-Suddenly, at midnight, the guiding {30} light was lost. The _Squirrel's_
-stern lanterns were seen to descend the pitching trough of a mountain
-wave, and when the wall of water fell, no light came up. Down into the
-abyss the little craft had plunged, never to rise again, carrying
-explorer, treasure hunters, colonists, to a watery grave.
-
-It may be added that the disaster took place halfway across the ocean,
-and not off Newfoundland, as the ballad relates.
-
-
-But for all this misfortune, England did not desist. The very next year
-Raleigh, who had played on the sands with Humphrey Gilbert, sends out his
-colonists to the Roanoke, and lays the foundations for the beginning of
-empire in the Southern States. English sailors explore Cape Cod. Ten
-years after Frobisher had brought home his cargo of worthless stones from
-Labrador, Davis, the master mariner, is out exploring the waters west of
-Greenland; and Henry Hudson, the English pilot who had discovered Hudson
-River, New York, for the Dutch, is retained by the English in 1610 to
-explore those waters west of Greenland where both Frobisher and Davis
-reported open passage.
-
-It is midsummer of 1610 when Hudson enters Hudson Straits. The ice jam
-of Ungava Bay, Labrador, has almost torn his ships' timbers apart and has
-set fear shivering like an aspen leaf among the crew. Old Juett, the
-mate, rages openly at Hudson for venturing such a frail ship on such a
-sea; but when the ship anchors at the west end of Hudson Straits, five
-hundred miles from the Atlantic, there opens to view another sea,--a sea
-large as the Mediterranean, that, like the Mediterranean, may lead to
-another world. It is as dangerous to go back as forward; and forward
-Hudson sails, southwestward for that sea Drake had cruised off
-California, the old mate's mutiny rumbling beneath decks like a volcano.
-South, southwestward, seven hundred miles sails Hudson, past the high
-rocks and airy cataracts of Richmond Gulf, past silence like the realms
-of death, on down where Hudson Bay rounds into James Bay and the shallows
-plainly show this is no way to a western sea, but a blind inlet,
-bowlder-strewn and muddy as swamps.
-
-{31}
-
-[Illustration: AT EASTERN ENTRANCE TO HUDSON STRAITS]
-
-When the ship runs aground and all hands must out to waist in ice water
-to pull her ashore as the tide comes in, Juett's rage bursts all bounds.
-As they toil, snow begins to fall. They are winter bound and storm bound
-in an unknown land. Half the crew are in open mutiny; the other half
-build winter quarters and range the woods of James Bay for game. Of game
-there is plenty, but the rebels refuse to hunt. A worthless lad named
-Green, whom Hudson had picked off the streets of London, turns traitor
-and talebearer, fomenting open quarrels till the commander threatens he
-will hang to the yardarm the first man guilty of disobedience. So passes
-the sullen winter. Provisions are short when the ship weighs anchor for
-England in June of 1611. With tears in his eyes, Hudson hands out the
-last rations. Ice blocks the way. Delay means starvation. If the crew
-were only half as large, Henry Green whispers to the mutineers, there
-would be food enough for passage home. The ice floes clear, the sails
-swing rattling to the breeze, but as Hudson steps on deck, the mutineers
-leap upon him like wolves. He is bound and thrown into the rowboat.
-With him are thrust his son and {32} eight others of the crew. The rope
-is cut, the rowboat jerks back adrift, and Hudson's vessel, manned by
-mutineers, drives before the wind. A few miles out, the mutineers lower
-sails to rummage for food. The little boat with the castaways is seen
-coming in pursuit. Guilt-haunted, the crew out with all sails and flee
-as from avenging ghosts. So passes Henry Hudson from the ken of all men,
-though Indian legend on the shores of Hudson Bay to this day maintains
-that the castaways landed north of Rupert and lived among the savages.
-
-[Illustration: HUDSON COAT OF ARMS]
-
-Not less disastrous were English efforts than French to colonize the New
-World. Up to 1610 Canada's story is, in the main, a record of blind
-heroism, dogged courage, death that refused to acknowledge defeat.
-
-
-Four hundred French vessels now yearly come to reap the harvest of the
-sea; in and out among the fantastic rocks of Gaspe, pierced and pillared
-and scooped into caves by the wave wash, where fisher boats reap other
-kind of harvest, richer than the silver harvest of the sea,--harvest of
-beaver, and otter, and marten; up the dim amber waters of the Saguenay,
-within the shadow of the somber gorge, trafficking baubles of bead and
-red print for furs, precious furs. Pontgrave, merchant prince, comes out
-with fifty men in 1600, and leaves sixteen at Tadoussac, ostensibly as
-colonists, really as wood lopers to scatter through the forests and learn
-the haunts of the Indians. Pontgrave comes back for men and furs in
-1601, and comes again in 1603 with two vessels, accompanied by a soldier
-of fortune from the French court, who acts as geographer,--Samuel
-Champlain, now in his thirty-sixth year, with service in war to his
-credit and a journey across Spanish America.
-
-{33} The two vessels are barely as large as coastal schooners; but
-shallow draft enables them to essay the Upper St. Lawrence far as Mount
-Royal, where Cartier had voyaged. Of the palisaded Indian fort not a
-vestige remains. War or plague has driven the tribe westward, but it is
-plain to the court geographer that, in spite of former failures, this
-land of rivers like lakes, and valleys large as European kingdoms, is fit
-for French colonists.
-
-[Illustration: THE FANTASTIC ROCKS OF GASPE]
-
-When Champlain returns to France the King readily grants to Sieur de
-Monts a region roughly defined as anywhere between Pennsylvania and
-Labrador, designated Acadia. This region Sieur de Monts is to colonize
-in return for a monopoly of the fur trade. When other traders complain,
-De Monts quiets them by letting them all buy shares in the venture. With
-him are associated as motley a throng of treasure seekers as ever
-stampeded for gold. There is Samuel Champlain, the court geographer;
-there is Pontgrave, the merchant prince, on a separate {34} vessel with
-stores for the colonists. Pontgrave is to attend especially to the fur
-trading. There are the Baron de Poutrincourt and his young son,
-Biencourt, and other noblemen looking for broader domains in the New
-World; and there are the usual riffraff of convicts taken from dungeons.
-Priests go to look after the souls of the Catholics, Huguenot ministers
-to care for the Protestants, and so valiantly do these dispute with
-tongues and fists that the sailors threaten to bury them in the same
-grave to see if they can lie at peace in death.
-
-[Illustration: SAMUEL DE CHAMPLAIN]
-
-Before the boats sight Acadia, it is early summer of 1604. Pontgrave
-leaves stores with De Monts and sails on up to Tadoussac. De Monts
-enters the little bay of St. Mary's, off the northwest corner of Nova
-Scotia, and sends his people ashore to explore.
-
-Signs of minerals they seek, rushing pellmell through the woods, gleeful
-as boys out of school. The forest is pathless and dense with June
-undergrowth, shutting out the sun and all sign of direction. The company
-scatters. Priest Aubry, more used to the cobble pavement of Paris than
-to the tangle of ferns, grows fatigued and drinks at a fresh-water rill.
-Going in the direction of his comrades' voices, he suddenly realizes that
-he has left his sword at the spring. The priest hurries back for the
-sword, loses his companions' voices, and when he would return, finds that
-he is hopelessly lost. The last shafts of {35} sunlight disappear. The
-chill of night settles on the darkening woods. The priest shouts till he
-is hoarse and fires off his pistol; but the woods muffle all sound but
-the scream of the wild cat or the uncanny hoot of the screech owl. Aubry
-wanders desperately on and on in the dark, his cassock torn to tatters by
-the brushwood, his way blocked by the undisturbed windfall of countless
-ages, . . . on and on, . . . till gray dawn steals through the forest and
-midday wears to a second night.
-
-Back at the boat were wild alarm and wilder suspicions. Could the
-Huguenots, with whom Aubry had battled so violently, have murdered him?
-De Monts scouted the notion as unworthy, but the suspicion clung in spite
-of fiercest denials. All night cannon were fired from the vessel and
-bonfires kept blazing on shore; but two or three days passed, and the
-priest did not come.
-
-De Monts then sails on up the Bay of Fundy, which he calls French Bay,
-and by the merest chance sheers through an opening eight hundred feet
-wide to the right and finds himself in the beautiful lakelike Basin of
-Annapolis, broad chough to harbor all the French navy, with a shore line
-of wooded meadows like home-land parks. Poutrincourt is so delighted, he
-at once asks for an estate here and names the domain Port Royal.
-
-On up Fundy Bay sails De Monts, Samuel Champlain ever leaning over decks,
-making those maps and drawings which have come down from that early
-voyage. The tides carry to a broad river on the north side. It is St.
-John's Day. They call the river St. John, and wander ashore, looking
-vainly for more minerals. Westward is another river, known to-day as the
-Ste. Croix, the boundary between Maine and New Brunswick. Dochet Island
-at its mouth seems to offer what to a soldier is an ideal site. A fort
-here could command either Fundy Bay or the upland country, which Indians
-say leads back to the St. Lawrence. Thinking more of fort than farms, De
-Monts plants his colony on Ste. Croix River, on an island composed mainly
-of sand and rock.
-
-While workmen labor to erect a fort on the north side, the pilot is sent
-back to Nova Scotia to prospect for minerals. As {36} the vessel coasts
-near St. Mary's Bay, a black object is seen moving weakly along the
-shore. Sailors and pilot gaze in amazement. A hat on the end of a pole
-is waved weakly from the beach. The men can scarcely believe their
-senses. It must be the priest, though sixteen days have passed since he
-disappeared. For two weeks Aubry had wandered, living on berries and
-roots, before he found his way back to the sea.
-
-[Illustration: PORT ROYAL OR ANNAPOLIS BASIN, 1609 (From Lescarbot's
-map)]
-
-
-Here, then, at last, is founded the first colony in Canada, a little
-palisaded fort of seventy-nine men straining longing eyes at the sails of
-the vessel gliding out to sea; for Pontgrave has taken one vessel up the
-St. Lawrence to trade, and Poutrincourt has gone back to France with the
-other for supplies. A worse beginning could hardly have been made. The
-island was little better than a sand heap. No hills shut out the cold
-winds that swept down the river bed from the north, and the tide carried
-in ice jam from the south. As the snow began to fall, padding the
-stately forests with a silence as of death, whitening the gaunt spruce
-trees somber as funereal mourners, the colonists felt the icy loneliness
-of winter in a forest chill their hearts. {37} Cooped up on the island
-by the ice, they did little hunting. Idleness gives time for repinings.
-Scurvy came, and before spring half the colonists had peopled the little
-cemetery outside the palisades. De Monts has had enough of Ste. Croix.
-When Pontgrave comes out with forty more men in June, De Monts prepares
-to move. Champlain had the preceding autumn sailed south seeking a
-better site; and now with De Monts he sails south again far as Cape Cod,
-looking for a place to plant the capital of New France. It is amusing to
-speculate that Canada might have included as far south as Boston, if they
-had found a harbor to their liking; but they saw nothing to compare with
-Annapolis Basin, narrow of entrance, landlocked, placid as a lake, with
-shores wooded like a park; and back they cruised to Ste. Croix in August,
-to move the colony across to Nova Scotia, to Annapolis Basin of Acadia.
-While Champlain and Pontgrave volunteer to winter in the wilderness, De
-Monts goes home to look after his monopoly in France.
-
-What had De Monts to show for his two years' labor? His company had
-spent what would be $20,000 in modern money, and all returns from fur
-trade had been swallowed up prolonging the colony. While Champlain
-hunted moose in the woods round Port Royal and Pontgrave bartered furs
-during the winter of 1605-1606, De Monts and Poutrincourt and the gay
-lawyer Marc Lescarbot fight for the life of the monopoly in Paris and
-point out to the clamorous merchants that the building of a French empire
-in the New World is of more importance than paltry profits. De Monts
-remains in France to stem the tide rising against him, while Poutrincourt
-and Lescarbot sail on the _Jonas_ with more colonists and supplies for
-Port Royal.
-
-Noon, July 27, 1606, the ship slips into the Basin of Annapolis. To
-Lescarbot, the poet lawyer, the scene is a fairyland--the silver flood of
-the harbor motionless as glass, the wooded meadows dank with bloom, the
-air odorous of woodland smells, the blue hills rimming round the sky, and
-against the woods of the north shore the chapel spire and thatch roofs
-and slab walls of the little fort, the one oasis of life in a wilderness.
-{38} As the sails rattled down and the anchor dropped, not a soul
-appeared from the fort. The gates were bolted fast. The _Jonas_ runs up
-the French ensign. Then a canoe shoots out from the brushwood, paddled
-by the old chief Membertou. He signals back to the watchers behind the
-gates. Musketry shots ring out welcome. The ship's cannon answer,
-setting the waters churning. Trumpets blare. The gates fly wide and out
-marches the garrison--two lone Frenchmen. The rest, despairing of a ship
-that summer, have cruised along to Cape Breton to obtain supplies from
-French fishermen, whence, presently, come Pontgrave and Champlain,
-overjoyed to find the ship from France. Poutrincourt has a hogshead of
-wine rolled to the courtyard and all hands fitly celebrate.
-
-[Illustration: BUILDINGS ON STE. CROIX ISLAND, 1613 (From Champlain's
-diagram)]
-
-When Pontgrave carries the furs to France, Marc Lescarbot, the lawyer
-poet, proves the life of the fort for this, the third winter of the
-colonists in Acadia. Poutrincourt and his son {39} attend to trade.
-Champlain, as usual, commands; and dull care is chased away by a thousand
-pranks of the Paris advocate. First, he sets the whole fort a-gardening,
-and Baron Poutrincourt forgets his _noblesse_ long enough to wield the
-hoe. Then Champlain must dam up the brook for a trout pond. The weather
-is almost mild as summer until January. The woods ring to many a merry
-picnic, fishing excursion, or moose hunt; and when snow comes, the gay
-Lescarbot along with Champlain institutes a New World order of
-nobility--the Order of Good Times. Each day one of the number must cater
-to the messroom table of the fort. This means keen hunting, keen rivalry
-for one to outdo another in the giving of sumptuous feasts. And all is
-done with the pomp and ceremony of a court banquet. When the chapel bell
-rings out noon hour and workers file to the long table, there stands the
-Master of the Revels, napkin on shoulder, chain of honor round his neck,
-truncheon in his hand. The gavel strikes, and there enter the
-Brotherhood, each bearing a steaming dish in his hand,--moose hump,
-beaver tail, bears' paws, wild fowl smelling luscious as food smells only
-to out-of-doors men. Old Chief Membertou dines with the whites.
-Crouching round the wall behind the benches are the squaws and the
-children, to whom are flung many a tasty bit.
-
-At night time, round the hearth fire, when the roaring logs set the
-shadows dancing on the rough-timbered floor, the truncheon and chain of
-command are pompously transferred to the new Grand Master. It is all
-child's play, but it keeps the blood of grown men coursing hopefully.
-
-Or else Lescarbot perpetrates a newspaper,--a handwritten sheet giving
-the doings of the day,--perhaps in doggerel verse of his own composing.
-At other times trumpets and drums and pipes keep time to a dance. As all
-the warring clergymen, both Huguenot and Catholic, have died of scurvy,
-Lescarbot acts as priest on Sundays, and winds up the day with cheerful
-excursions up the river, or supper spread on the green. The lawyer's
-good spirits proved contagious. The French songs that rang through the
-woods of Acadia, keeping time to the chopper's {40} labors, were the best
-antidote to scurvy; but the wildwood happiness was too good to last.
-While L'Escarbot was writing his history of the new colonies a bolt fell
-from the blue. Instead of De Monts' vessel there came in spring a
-fishing smack with word that the grant of Acadia had been rescinded. No
-more money would be advanced. Poutrincourt and his son, Biencourt,
-resolved to come back without the support of a company; but for the
-present all took sad leave of the little settlement--Poutrincourt,
-Champlain, L'Escarbot--and sailed with the Cape Breton fishing fleet for
-France, where they landed in October, 1607.
-
-Cartier, Roberval, La Roche, De Monts--all had failed to establish France
-in Canada; and as for England, Sir Humphrey's colonists lay bleaching
-skeletons at the bottom of the sea.
-
-
-
-
-{41}
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-FROM 1607 TO 1635
-
-Argall of Virginia attacks the French--Champlain on the St.
-Lawrence--Champlain and the Iroquois--Champlain explores the
-Ottawa--Champlain with the Indians--Discovery of the Great Lakes--War
-with the Iroquois--Conflicting interests in New France--The English
-take Quebec
-
-
-Though the monopoly had been rescinded, Poutrincourt set himself to
-interesting merchants in the fur trade of Acadia, and the French king
-confirmed to him the grant of Port Royal. Yet it was 1610 before Baron
-Poutrincourt had gathered supplies to reestablish the colony, and an
-ominous cloud rose on the horizon, threatening his supremacy in the New
-World. Nearly all the merchants supporting him were either Huguenots
-or moderate Catholics. The Jesuits were all powerful at court, and
-were pressing for a part in his scheme. The Jesuit, Father Biard, was
-waiting at Bordeaux to join the ship. Poutrincourt evaded issues with
-such powerful opponents. He took on board Father La Fleche, a
-moderate, and gave the Jesuit the slip by sailing from Dieppe in
-February.
-
-To this quarrel there are two sides, as to all quarrels. The colony
-must now be supported by the fur trade; and fur traders, world over,
-easily add to their profits by deeds which will not bear the censure of
-missionaries. On the other hand, to Poutrincourt, the Jesuits meant
-divided authority; and the most lawless scoundrel that ever perpetrated
-crimes in the fur trade could win over the favor of the priests by a
-hypocritical semblance of contrition at the confessional. Contrition
-never yet undid a crime; and civil courts can take no cognizance of
-repentance.
-
-When the ships sailed in to Port Royal the little fort was found
-precisely as it had been left. Not even the furniture had been
-disturbed, and old Membertou, the Indian chief, welcomed the white men
-back with taciturn joy. Pere La Fleche assembles the savages, tells
-them the story of the Christian faith, then to the beat of drum and
-chant of "Te Deum" receives, one {42} afternoon, twenty naked converts
-into the folds of the church. Membertou is baptized Henry, after the
-King, and all his frowsy squaws renamed after ladies of the most
-dissolute court in Christendom.
-
-Young Biencourt is to convey the ship back to France. He finds that
-the Queen Dowager has taken the Jesuits under her especial protection.
-Money enough to buy out the interests of the Huguenot merchants for the
-Jesuits has been advanced. Fathers Biard and Masse embark on _The
-Grace of God_ with young Biencourt in January, 1611, for Port Royal.
-Almost at once the divided authority results in trouble. Coasting the
-Bay of Fundy, Biencourt discovers that Pontgrave's son has roused the
-hostility of the Indians by some shameless act. Young Biencourt is for
-hanging the miscreant to the yardarm, but the sinner gains the ear of
-the saints by woeful tale of penitence, and Father Biard sides with
-young Pontgrave. Instead of the gayety that reigned at Port Royal in
-L'Escarbot's day, now is sullen mistrust.
-
-The Jesuits threaten young Biencourt with excommunication. Biencourt
-retaliates by threatening _them_ with expulsion. For three months no
-religious services are held. The boat of 1612 brings out another
-Jesuit, Gilbert du Thet; and the _Jonas_, which comes in 1613 with
-fifty more men,--La Saussaye, commander, Fleury, captain,--has been
-entirely outfitted by friends of the Jesuits. By this time Baron de
-Poutrincourt, in France, was involved in debt beyond hope; but his
-right to Port Royal was unshaken, and the Jesuits decided to steer
-south to seek a new site for their colony.
-
-[Illustration: PORT ROYAL (From Champlain's diagram)]
-
-Zigzagging along the coast of Maine, Captain Fleury cast anchor off
-Mount Desert at Frenchman's Bay. A cross was erected, mass celebrated,
-and four white tents pitched to house the people; but the clash between
-civil and religious authority broke out again. The sailors would not
-obey the priests. Fleury feared mutiny. Saussaye, the commander, lost
-his head, and disorder was ripening to disaster when there appeared
-over the sea the peak of a sail,--a sail topped by a little red ensign,
-the {43} flag of the English, who claimed all this coast. And the sail
-was succeeded by decks with sixty mariners, and hulls through whose
-ports bristled fourteen cannon. The newcomer was Samuel Argall of
-Virginia, whom the Indians had told of the French, now bearing down
-full sail, cannon leveled, to expel these aliens from the domain of
-England's King. Drums were beating, trumpets blowing, fifes
-shrieking--there was no mistaking the purpose of the English ship.
-Saussaye, the French commander, dashed for hiding in the woods.
-Captain Fleury screamed for some one, every one, any one, "to
-fire--fire"; but the French sailors had imitated their commander and
-fled to the woods, while the poor Jesuit, Gilbert du Thet, fell
-weltering in blood from an English cannonade that swept the French
-decks bare and set all sails in flame. In the twinkling of an eye,
-Argall had captured men and craft. Fifteen of the French prisoners he
-set adrift in open boat, on the chance of their joining the French
-fishing fleet off Cape Breton. They were ultimately carried to St.
-Malo. {44} The rest of the prisoners, including Father Biard, he took
-back to Virginia, where the commission held from the French King
-assured them honorable treatment in time of peace; but Argall was
-promptly sent north again with his prisoners, and three frigates to lay
-waste every vestige of French settlement from Maine to St. John. Mount
-Desert, the ruins of Ste. Croix, the fortress beloved by Poutrincourt
-at Port Royal, the ripening wheat of Annapolis Basin--all fed the
-flames of Argall's zeal; and young Biencourt's wood runners, watching
-from the forests the destruction of all their hopes, the ruin of all
-their plans, ardently begged their young commander to parley with
-Argall that they might obtain the Jesuit Biard and hang him to the
-highest tree. To _his_ coming they attributed all the woes. It was as
-easy for them to believe that the Jesuit had piloted the English
-destroyer to Port Royal, as it had been ten years before for the
-Catholics to accuse the Huguenots of murdering the lost priest Aubry;
-and there was probably as much truth in one charge as the other.
-
-So fell Port Royal; but out round the ruins of Port Royal, where the
-little river runs down to the sea past Goat Island, young Biencourt and
-his followers took to the woods--the first of that race of bush lopers,
-half savages, half noblemen, to render France such glorious service in
-the New World.
-
-
-When De Monts lost the monopoly of furs in Acadia, Champlain, the court
-geographer, had gone home from Port Royal to France. De Monts now
-succeeds in obtaining a fresh monopoly for one year on the St.
-Lawrence, and sends out two ships in 1608 under his old friends,
-Pontgrave, who is to attend to the bartering, Champlain, who is to
-explore. With them come some of the colonists from Port Royal, among
-others Louis Hebert, the chemist, first colonist to become farmer at
-Quebec, and Abraham Martin, whose name was given to the famous plains
-where Wolfe and Montcalm later fought.
-
-Pontgrave arrived at the rendezvous of Tadoussac early in June. Here
-he found Basque fishermen engaged in the peltry {45} traffic with
-Indians from Labrador. When Pontgrave read his commission interdicting
-all ships but those of De Monts from trade, the Basques poured a
-fusillade of musketry across his decks, killed one man, wounded two,
-then boarded his vessel and trundled his cannon ashore. So much for
-royal commissions and monopoly!
-
-[Illustration: TADOUSSAC (From Champlain's map)]
-
-At this stage came Champlain on the second boat. Two vessels were
-overstrong for the Basques. They quickly came to terms and decamped.
-Champlain steered his tiny craft on up the silver flood of the St.
-Lawrence to that Cape Diamond where Cartier's men had gathered
-worthless stones. Between the high cliff and the river front, not far
-from the market place of Quebec City to-day, workmen began clearing the
-woods for the site of the French habitation. The little fort was
-palisaded, of course, with a moat outside and cannon commanding the
-river. The walls were loopholed for musketry; and inside ran a gallery
-to serve as lookout and defense. Houses, barracks, garden, and
-fresh-water supply completed the fort. One day, as Champlain {46}
-worked in his garden, a colonist begged to speak with him. Champlain
-stepped into the woods. The man then blurted out how a conspiracy was
-on foot, instigated by the Basques, to assassinate Champlain, seize the
-fort, and stab any man who dared to resist. One of Pontgrave's small
-boats lay at anchor. Champlain sent for the pilot, told him the story
-of the plot, gave him two bottles of wine, and bade him invite the
-ringleaders on board that night to drink. The ruse worked. The
-ringleaders were handcuffed, the other colonists awakened in the fort
-and told that the plot had been crushed. The body of Duval, the chief
-plotter, in pay of the Basques, swung as warning from a gibbet; and his
-head was exposed on a pike to the birds of the air. Though Pontgrave
-left a garrison of twenty-eight when he sailed for France, less than a
-dozen men had survived the plague of scurvy when the ships came back to
-Champlain in 1609.
-
-Champlain's part had been to explore. Now that his fort was built, he
-planned to do this by allying himself with the Indians, who came down
-to trade at Quebec. These were the Hurons and Montaignais, the former
-from the Ottawa, the latter from Labrador. Both waged ceaseless war on
-the Iroquois south of the St. Lawrence. After bartering their furs for
-weapons from the traders, the allied tribes would set out on the
-warpath against the Iroquois. In June, Champlain and eleven white men
-accompanied the roving warriors.
-
-The way led from the St. Lawrence south, up the River Richelieu.
-Champlain's boat was a ponderous craft; and when the shiver of the
-sparkling rapids came with a roar through the dank forest, the heavy
-boat had to be sent back to Quebec. Adopting the light birch canoe of
-the Indian, Champlain went on, accompanied by only two white men. Of
-Indians, there were twenty-four canoes with sixty warriors. For the
-first part of the voyage night was made hideous by the grotesque war
-dances of the braves lashing themselves to fury by scalp raids in
-pantomime, or by the medicine men holding solemn converse with the
-demons of earth; the tent poles of the medicine lodge rocked as if by
-wind, while eldritch howls predicted victory. {47} Then the long line
-of silent canoes had spread out on that upland lake named after
-Champlain, the heavily forested Adirondacks breaking the sky line on
-one side, the Green Mountains rolling away on the other. Caution now
-marked all advance. The Indians paddled only at night, withdrawing to
-the wooded shore through the morning mist to hide in the undergrowth
-for the day. This was the land of the Iroquois.
-
-[Illustration: DEFEAT OF THE IROQUOIS (From Champlain's drawing)]
-
-On July 29, as the invaders were stealing silently along the west shore
-near Crown Point at night about ten o'clock, there were seen by the
-starlight, coming over the water with that peculiar galloping motion of
-paddlers dipping together, the Iroquois war canoes. Each side
-recognized the other, and the woods rang with shouts; but gathering
-clouds and the mist rising from the river screened the foes from mutual
-attack, though the night echoed to shout and countershout and challenge
-and abuse. Through the half light Champlain could see that the
-Iroquois were working like beavers erecting a barricade of logs. The
-assailants kept to their canoes under cover of bull-hide shields till
-daylight, when Champlain buckled on his armor--breastplate, helmet,
-thigh pieces--and landing, advanced. There were not less than two
-hundred Iroquois. Outnumbering the Hurons three times over, they
-uttered a jubilant whoop and {48} came on at a rush. Champlain and his
-two white men took aim. The foremost chiefs dropped in their tracks.
-Terrified by "the sticks that thundered and spat fire," the Iroquois
-fell back in amaze, halted, then fled. The victory was complete; but
-it left as a legacy to New France the undying enmity of the Iroquois.
-
-
-When Champlain came out from France in 1610, he would have repeated the
-raid; but a fight with invading Iroquois at the mouth of the Richelieu
-delayed him, and the expiration of De Monts' monopoly took him back to
-France.
-
-In 1611 trade was free to all comers. Fur traders flocked to the St.
-Lawrence like birds of passage. The only way to secure furs for De
-Monts was to go higher up the river beyond Quebec; and ascending to
-Montreal, Champlain built a factory called Place Royale, with a wall of
-bricks to resist the ice jam. This was the third French fort Champlain
-helped to found in Canada.
-
-Presently, on his tracks to Montreal, came a flock of free traders.
-When the Hurons come shooting down the foamy rapids--here, a pole-shove
-to avoid splitting canoes on a rock in mid-rush; there, a dexterous
-whirl from the trough of a back wash--the fur traders fire off their
-guns in welcome. The Hurons are suspicious. What means it, these
-white men, coming in such numbers, firing off their "sticks that
-thunder"? At midnight they come stealthily to Champlain's lodge to
-complain. Peltries and canoes, the Indians transfer themselves above
-the rapids, and later conduct Champlain down those same white
-whirlpools to the uneasy amaze of the explorer.
-
-It is clear to Champlain he must obtain royal patronage to stem the
-boldness of these free traders. In France he obtains the favor of the
-Bourbons; and he obtains it more generously because the world of Paris
-has gone agog about a fabulous tale that sets the court by the ears.
-From the first Champlain has encouraged young Frenchmen to winter with
-the Indian hunters and learn the languages. Brule is with them now.
-Nicholas Vignau has just come back from the Ottawa with a fairy story
-of a marvelous voyage he has made with the Indians through {49} the
-forests to the Sea of the North--the sea where Henry Hudson, the
-Englishman, had perished. As the romance gains the ear of the public,
-the young man waxes eloquent in detail, and tells of the number of
-Englishmen living there. Champlain is ordered to follow this
-exploration up.
-
-May, 1613, he is back at Montreal, opposite that island named St.
-Helen, after the frail girl who became his wife, preparing to ascend
-the Ottawa with four white men--among them Vignau. What Vignau's
-sensations were, one may guess. The vain youth had not meant his love
-of notoriety to carry him so far; and he must have known that every
-foot of the way led him nearer detection; but the liar is always a
-gambler with chance. Mishap, bad weather, Indian war--might drive
-Champlain back. Vignau assumed bold face.
-
-The path followed was that river trail up the Ottawa which was to
-become the highway of empire's westward march for two and a half
-centuries. Mount Royal is left to the rear as the voyageurs traverse
-the Indian trail through the forests along the rapids to that launching
-place named after the patron saint of French voyageur--Ste. Anne's.
-The river widens into the silver expanse of Two Mountains Lake, rimmed
-to the sky line by the vernal hills, with a silence and solitude over
-all, as when sunlight first fell on face of man. Here the eagle utters
-a lonely scream from the top of some blasted pine; there a covey of
-ducks, catching sight of the coming canoes, dive to bottom, only to
-reappear a gunshot away. Where the voyageurs land for their nooning,
-or camp at nightfall, or pause to gum the splits in their birch canoes,
-the forest in the full flush of spring verdure is a fairy woods.
-Against the elms and the maples leafing out in airy tracery that
-reveals the branches bronze among the budding green, stand the silver
-birches, and the somber hemlocks, and the resinous pines. Upbursting
-from the mold below is another miniature forest--a forest of ferns
-putting out the hairy fronds that in another month will be above the
-height of a man. Overhead, like a flame of fire, flashes the scarlet
-tanager with his querulous call; or the oriole flits from branch to
-branch, {50} fluting his springtime notes; or the yellow warbler
-balances on topmost spray to sing his crisp love song on the long
-journey north to nest on Hudson Bay. And over all and in all,
-intangible as light, intoxicating as wine, is the tang of the clear,
-unsullied, crystal air, setting the blood coursing with new life.
-Little wonder that Brule, and Vignau, and other young men whom
-Champlain sent to the woods to learn wood lore, became so enamored of
-the life that they never returned to civilization.
-
-Presently the sibilant rush of waters forewarns rapids. Indians and
-voyageurs debark, invert canoes on their shoulders, packs on back with
-straps across foreheads, and amble away over the portages at that
-voyageurs' dog-trot which is half walk, half run. So the rapids of
-Carillon and Long Sault are ascended. Night time is passed on some
-sandy shore on a bed under the stars, or under the canoes turned upside
-down. Tents are erected only for the commander, Champlain; and at day
-dawn, while the tips of the trees are touched with light and the
-morning mist is smoking up from the river shot with gold, canoes are
-again on the water and paddle blades tossing the waves behind.
-
-The Laurentian Hills now roll from the river in purpling folds like
-fields of heather. The Gatineau is passed, winding in on the right
-through dense forests. On the left, flowing through the rolling sand
-hills, and joining the main river just where the waters fall over a
-precipice in a cataract of spray, is the Rideau River with its famous
-falls resembling the white folds of a wind-blown curtain. Then the
-voyageurs have swept round that wooded cliff known as Parliament Hill,
-jutting out in the river, and there breaks on view a wall of water
-hurtling down in shimmering floods at the Chaudiere Falls. The high
-cliff to the left and countercurrent from the falls swirl the canoes
-over on the right side to the sandy flats where the lumber piles to-day
-defile the river. Here boats are once more hauled up for portage--a
-long portage, nine miles, all the way to the modern town of Aylmer,
-where the river becomes wide as a lake, Lake Du Chene of the oak
-forests. Here camp for the night was made, and leaks in the canoes
-mended with resin, round fires gleaming red as an angry eye across the
-{51} darkening waters, while the prowling wild cats and lynx, which
-later gave such good hunting in these forests that the adjoining rapids
-became known as the Chats, sent their unearthly screams shivering
-through the darkness.
-
-Somewhere near Allumette Isle, Champlain came to an Indian settlement
-of the Ottawa tribe. He camped to ask for guides to go on. Old Chief
-Tessouat holds solemn powwow, passing the peace pipe round from hand to
-hand in silence, before the warriors rise to answer Champlain. Then
-with the pompous gravity of Abraham dickering with the desert tribes,
-they warn Champlain it is unsafe to go farther. Beyond the Ottawa is
-the Nipissing, where dwell the Sorcerer Indians--a treacherous people.
-Beyond the Nipissing is the great Fresh Water Sea of the Hurons. They
-will grant Champlain canoes, but warn him against the trip. Later the
-interpreter comes with word they have changed their minds. Champlain
-must _not_ go on. It is too dangerous. Attack would involve war.
-
-"What," demanded Champlain, rushing into the midst of the council tent,
-"not go? Why, my young man, here"--pointing to Vignau--"has gone to
-that country and found no danger."
-
-What Vignau thought at that stage is not told. The Indians turned on
-him in fury.
-
-"Nicholas, did _you_ say _you_ had visited the Nipissings?"
-
-Vignau hems and haws, and stammers, "Yes."
-
-"Liar," roars the chief. "You slept here every night, and if you went
-to the Nipissings, you went in a dream." Then to Champlain, "Let him
-be tortured."
-
-Champlain took the fellow to his own tent. Vignau reiterated his
-story. Champlain took him back to the council. The Indians jeered his
-answers and tore the story he told to tatters, showing Champlain how
-utterly wrong Vignau's descriptions were.
-
-That night, on promise of forgiveness, Vignau fell on his knees and
-confessed the imposture to Champlain. When the fur canoes came down
-the Ottawa to trade at Montreal, Champlain accompanied them to the St.
-Lawrence, and sailed for France. His exploration had been an
-ignominious failure.
-
-{52} Champlain was ever Knight of the Cross as well as explorer. He
-longed with the zeal of a missionary to reclaim the Indians from
-savagery, and at last raised funds in France to pay the expense of
-bringing four or five Recollets--a branch of the Franciscan Friars--to
-Quebec in May of 1615. With the peaked hood thrown back, the gray garb
-roped in at the waist, the bare feet protected only by heavy sandals,
-the Recollets landed at Quebec, and with cannon booming, white men all
-on bended knee, held service before the amazed savages.
-
-Of the Recollets, it was agreed that Joseph le Caron should go west to
-the Hurons of the Sweet Water Sea. Accompanied by a dozen Frenchmen,
-the friar ascended the Ottawa in July, passed that Allumette Island
-where Vignau's lie had been confessed, and proceeded westward to the
-land of the Hurons. Nine days later Champlain followed with two
-canoes, ten Indians, and Etienne Brule, his interpreter. In order to
-hold the ever-lasting loyalty of the Hurons and Algonquins in Canada,
-Champlain had pledged them that the French would join their twenty-five
-hundred warriors in a great invasion of the Iroquois to the south. It
-was to be a war not of aggression but of defense; for the Five Nations
-of the Iroquois in New York state had harried the Canadian tribes like
-wolves raiding a sheep pen. No Frenchman cultivating his farm patch on
-the St. Lawrence was safe from ambuscade; no hunter afield secure from
-a chance war party.
-
-Any tourist crossing Canada to-day can trace Champlain's voyage. Where
-the rolling tide of the Ottawa forks at Mattawa, there comes in on the
-west side, through dense forests and cedar swamps, a river
-amber-colored with the wood-mold of centuries. This is the Mattawa.
-Up the Mattawa Champlain pushed his canoes westward, up the shining
-flood of the river yellow as gold where the waters shallow above the
-pebble bottom. Then the gravel grated keels. The shallows became
-weed-grown swamps that entangled the paddles and hid voyageur from
-voyageur in reeds the height of a man; and presently a portage over
-rocks slippery as ice leads to a stream flowing westward, opening {53}
-on a low-lying, clay-colored lake--the country of the Nipissings, with
-whom Champlain pauses to feast and hear tales of witchcraft and demon
-lore, that gave them the name of Sorcerers.
-
-In a few sleeps--they tell him--he will reach the Sweet Water Sea. The
-news is welcome; for the voyageurs are down to short rations, and
-launch eagerly westward on the stream draining Nipissing Lake--French
-River. This is a tricky little stream in whose sands lie buried the
-bodies of countless French voyageurs. It is more dangerous going
-_with_ rapids than _against_ them; for the hastening current is
-sometimes an undertow, which sweeps the canoes into the rapids before
-the roar of the waterfall has given warning. And the country is barren
-of game.
-
-As they cross the portages, Champlain's men are glad to snatch at the
-raspberry and cranberry bushes for food; and their night-time meal is
-dependent on chance fishing. Indian hunters are met,--three hundred of
-them,--the Staring Hairs, so named from the upright posture of their
-headdress tipped by an eagle quill; and again Champlain is told he is
-very near the Inland Sea.
-
-It comes as discoveries nearly always come--his finding of the Great
-Lakes; for though Joseph Le Caron, the missionary, had passed this way
-ten days ago, the zealous priest never paused to explore and map the
-region. You are paddling down the brown, forest-shadowed waters--long
-lanes of water like canals through walls of trees silent as sentinels.
-Suddenly a change almost imperceptible comes. Instead of the earthy
-smell of the forest mold in your nostrils is the clear tang of
-sun-bathed, water-washed rocks; and the sky begins to swim, to lose
-itself at the horizon. There is no sudden bursting of a sea on your
-view. The river begins to coil in and out among islands. The amber
-waters have become sheeted silver. You wind from island to island,
-islands of pink granite, islands with no tree but one lone blasted
-pine, islands that are in themselves forests. There is no end to these
-islands. They are not in hundreds; they are in thousands. Then you
-see the spray breaking over the reefs, and there is its sky line. You
-are not on a river at all. You are on an inland sea. You have been on
-the lake for hours. One {54} can guess how Champlain's men scrambled
-from island to island, and fished for the rock bass above the deep
-pools, and ran along the water line of wave-dashed reefs, wondering
-vaguely if the wind wash were the ocean tide of the Western Sea.
-
-But Champlain's Huron guides had not come to find a Western Sea. With
-the quick choppy stroke of the Indian paddler they were conveying him
-down that eastern shore of Lake Huron now known as Georgian Bay, from
-French River to Parry Sound and Midland and Penetang. Where these
-little towns to-day stand on the hillsides was a howling wilderness of
-forest, with never a footprint but the zigzagging trail of the Indians
-back from Georgian Bay to what is now Lake Simcoe.
-
-Between these two shores lay the stamping grounds of the great Huron
-tribe. How numerous were they? Records differ. Certainly at no time
-more numerous than thirty thousand souls all told, including children.
-Though they yearly came to Montreal for trade and war, the Hurons were
-sedentary, living in the long houses of bark inclosed by triple
-palisades, such as Cartier had seen at Hochelaga almost a century
-before.
-
-Champlain followed his supple guides along the wind-fallen forest trail
-to the Huron villages. Here he found the missionary. One can guess
-how the souls of these two heroes burned as the deep solemn chant of
-the _Te Deum_ for the first time rolled through the forests of Lake
-Huron.
-
-
-But now Champlain must to business; and his business is war. Brule and
-twelve Indians are sent like the carriers of the fiery cross in the
-Highlands of Scotland to rally tribes of the Susquehanna to join the
-Hurons against the Iroquois. A wild war dance is held with mystic
-rites in the lodges of the Hurons; and the braves set out with
-Champlain from Lake Simcoe for Lake Ontario by way of Trent River. As
-they near what is now New York state, buckskin is flung aside, the
-naked bodies painted and greased, and the trail shunned for the
-pathless woods off the beaten track where the Indians glide like beasts
-of prey through the frost-tinted forest.
-
-{55}
-
-[Illustration: THE ONONDAGA FORT (From Champlain's diagram)]
-
-October 9 they suddenly come on some Onondagas fishing, and they begin
-torturing their captives by cutting off a girl's finger, when Champlain
-commands them to desist. Presently the forest opens to a farm clearing
-where the Iroquois are harvesting their corn. Spite of all Champlain
-could do, the wild Hurons uttered their war cry and rushed the field,
-but the Iroquois turned on the rabble and drove them back to the woods.
-Champlain was furious. They should have waited for Brule to come with
-their allies; and the foolish attack had only served to forewarn the
-enemy. He frankly told the Hurons if they were going to fight under
-_his_ command, they must fight as white men fight; and he set them to
-building a platform from which marksmen could shoot over the walls of
-the Iroquois town. But the admonitions {56} fell on frenzied ears. No
-sooner was the command to advance given than the Hurons broke from
-cover like maniacs, easy marks for the javelin throwers inside the
-walls, and hurled themselves against the Iroquois palisades in blind
-fury, making more din with yelling than woe with shots. Boiling water
-poured from the galleries inside drove the braves back from the walls,
-and the poisoned barb of the Iroquois arrows pursued their flight. A
-score fell wounded, among them Champlain with an arrow in his knee-cap.
-The flight became panic fast and furious, with the wounded carried on
-wicker stretchers whose every jolt added agony to pain.
-
-[Illustration: VIEW OF QUEBEC (From Champlain's plan)]
-
-As for Brule, he arrived with the allies only to find that the Hurons
-had fled, and here was he, alone in a hostile land, with Iroquois
-warriors rampant as molested wasps. In the swift retreat off the trail
-Brule lost his way. He was without food {57} or powder, and had to
-choose between starvation or surrender to the Iroquois. Throwing down
-his weapons, he gave himself up to what he knew would be certain
-torture. Had he winced or whined as they tore the nails from his
-fingers and the hair from his head, the Iroquois would probably have
-brained him on the spot for a poltroon; but the young man, bound to a
-stake, pointed to a gathering storm as sign of Heaven's displeasure.
-The high spirit pleased the Iroquois. They unbound him and took him
-with them in their wanderings for three years.
-
-The Hurons had promised to convey Champlain back down the St. Lawrence
-to Quebec, but the defeat had caused loss of prestige. The man "with
-the stick that thundered" was no more invulnerable to wounds than they.
-They forgot their promises and invented excuses for not proceeding to
-Quebec. Champlain wintered with the hunters somewhere north of Lake
-Ontario, and came down the Ottawa with the fur canoes the next summer.
-He was received at Quebec as one risen from the dead.
-
-
-While Champlain had been exploring, New France had not prospered as a
-colony. Royal patron after royal patron sold the monopoly to fresh
-hands, and each new master appointed Champlain viceroy. The fur trade
-merchants could pay forty per cent dividends, but could do nothing to
-advance settlement. Less than one hundred people made up the
-population of New France; and these were torn asunder by jealousies.
-Huguenot and Catholic were opposed; and when three Jesuits came to
-Quebec, Jesuits and Recollets distrusted each other.
-
-Madam Champlain joined her husband at Quebec, in 1620, to stay for four
-years, and that same year Champlain built himself a new habitation--the
-famous Castle of St. Louis on the cliff above the first dwelling.
-Louis Hebert, the apothecary of Port Royal, is now a farmer close to
-the Castle of Quebec; and the wife of Abraham Martin has given birth to
-the first white child born in New France.
-
-Now came a revolutionary change. Cardinal Richelieu was virtual ruler
-of France. He quickly realized that the monopolists {58} were sucking
-the lifeblood of the colony in furs and were giving nothing in return
-to the country. In 1627, under the great cardinal's patronage, the
-Company of One Hundred Associates was formed. In this company any of
-the seaport traders could buy shares. Indeed, they were promised
-patent of nobility if they did buy shares. Exclusive monopoly of furs
-was given to the company from Florida to Labrador. In return the
-Associates were to send two ships yearly to Canada. Before 1643 they
-were to bring out four thousand colonists, support them for three
-years, and give them land. In each settlement were to be supported
-three priests; and, to prevent discord, Huguenots were to be banished
-from New France.
-
-To Champlain it must have seemed as if the ambition of his life were to
-be realized. Just when the sky seemed clearest the bolt fell.
-
-
-Early in April, 1628, the Associates had dispatched colonists and
-stores for Quebec; but war had broken out between France and England.
-Gervais Kirke, an English Huguenot of Dieppe, France, who had been put
-under the ban by Cardinal Richelieu, had rallied the merchants of
-London to fit out privateers to wage war on New France. The vessels
-were commanded by the three sons, Thomas, Louis, and David; and to the
-Kirkes rallied many Huguenots banished from France.
-
-Quebec was hourly looking for the annual ships, when one morning in
-July two men rushed breathless through the woods and up the steep rock
-to Castle St. Louis with word that an English fleet of six frigates lay
-in hiding at Tadoussac, ready to pounce on the French! Later came
-other messengers--Indians, fishermen, traders--confirming the terrible
-news. Then a Basque fisherman arrives with a demand, from Kirke for
-the keys to the fort. Though there is no food inside the walls, less
-than fifty pounds of ammunition in the storehouse, and not enough men
-to man the guns, Champlain hopes against hope, and sends the Basque
-fisherman back with suave regrets that he cannot comply with Monsieur
-Kirke's polite request. Quebec's one chance lay in the hope that the
-French vessels might {59} slip past the English frigates by night.
-Days wore on to weeks, weeks to months, and a thousand rumors filled
-the air; but no ships came. The people of Quebec were now reduced to
-diet of nuts and corn. Then came Indian runners with word that the
-French ships had been waylaid, boarded, scuttled, and sunk. Loaded to
-the water line with booty, the English privateers had gone home.
-
-[Illustration: QUEBEC (From Champlain's map)]
-
-For that winter Quebec lived on such food as the Indians brought in
-from the woods. By the summer of 1629 men, women, and children were
-grubbing for roots, fishing for food, ranging the rocks for berries.
-There are times when the only thing to do is--do nothing; and it is
-probably the hardest task a brave man ever has. When the English fleet
-came back in July Champlain had a ragamuffin, half-starved retinue of
-precisely sixteen men. Yet he haggled for such terms that the English
-promised to convey the prisoners to France. On July 20, for the first
-time in history, the red flag of England blew to the winds above the
-heights of Quebec.
-
-
-But New France was only a pawn to the gamesters of French and English
-diplomacy. Peace was proclaimed; and for the {60} sake of receiving
-$200,000 as dowry due his French wife, Charles of England restored to
-France the half continent which the Kirkes had captured, David Kirke
-receiving the paltry honor of a title as compensation for the loss.
-Champlain was back in Quebec by 1633; but his course had run. Between
-Christmas eve and Christmas morning, in 1635, the brave Soldier of the
-Cross, the first knight of the Canadian wildwoods, passed from the
-sphere of earthly life--a life without a stain, whether among the
-intriguing courtiers of Paris or in the midst of naked license in the
-Indian camp.
-
-
-
-
-{61}
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-FROM 1635 TO 1666
-
-Frays between La Tour and Charnisay--Madame La Tour defends the
-fort--Charnisay's treachery
-
-
-When Port Royal fell before Argall, it will be remembered, young
-Biencourt took to the woods with his French bush lopers and Indian
-followers of Nova Scotia. The farms and fort of Annapolis Basin
-granted to his father by special patents lay in ruins. Familiar with
-the woods as the English buccaneer, who had destroyed the fort, was
-with his ship's cabin, Biencourt withdrew to the southwest corner of
-Nova Scotia, where he built a rude stronghold of logs and slabs near
-the modern Cape Sable. Here he could keep in touch with the French
-fishermen off Cape Breton, and also traffic with the Indians of the
-mainland.
-
-With Biencourt was a young man of his own age, boon comrade, kindred
-spirit, who had come to Port Royal a boy of fourteen, in 1606, in the
-gay days of Marc L'Escarbot--Charles de La Tour. Sea rovers, bush
-lopers, these two could bid defiance to English raiders. Whether
-Biencourt died in 1623 or went home to France is unknown; but he deeded
-over to his friend, Charles de La Tour, all possessions in Acadia.
-
-And now England again comes on the scene. By virtue of Cabot's
-discovery and Argall's conquest, the King of England, in 1621, grants
-to Sir William Alexander, the Earl of Stirling, all of Acadia, renamed
-Nova Scotia--New Scotland. By way of encouraging emigration, the order
-of Nova Scotia Baronets is created, a title being granted to those who
-subscribe to the colonization company.
-
-Sir William Alexander's colonists shun the French bush lopers under
-Charles de La Tour down at Fort St. Louis on Cape Sable. The seventy
-Scotch colonists go on up the Annapolis Basin and build their fort four
-miles from old Port Royal. How did they pass the pioneer years--these
-Scotch retainers of the {62} Nova Scotia Baronets? Report among the
-French fishing fleet says thirty died of scurvy; but of definite
-information not a vestige remains. The annals of these colonists are
-as completely lost to history as the annals of the lost Roanoke colony
-in Virginia.
-
-Under the same English patent Lord Ochiltree lands English colonists in
-Cape Breton, the grand summer rendezvous of the French fishermen; but
-two can play at Argall's game of raids. French seamen swoop down on
-Ochiltree's colony, capture fifty, destroy the settlement, and run up
-the white flag of France in place of the red standard of England.
-
-[Illustration: SIR WILLIAM ALEXANDER]
-
-Charles de La Tour with his Huguenots hides safely ensconced behind his
-slab palisades with the swarthy faces of half a hundred Indian
-retainers lighted up by the huge logs at blaze on the hearth. Charles
-de La Tour takes counsel with himself. English at Port Royal, English
-at Cape Breton, English on the mainland at Boston, English ships
-passing and repassing his lone lodge in the wilderness, he will be
-safer, will Charles de La Tour, with wider distance between himself and
-the foe; and he will take more peltries where there are fewer traders.
-Still keeping his fort in Nova Scotia, La Tour goes across Fundy Bay
-and builds him a second, stronger fort on St. John River, New
-Brunswick, near where Carleton town stands to-day.
-
-Then two things happened that upset all plans.
-
-{63} The Hundred Associates are given _all_ Canada--Quebec and Acadia.
-Founded by Cardinal Richelieu, the Hundred Associates are violently
-Catholic, violently anti-Protestant. Charles de La Tour need expect no
-favors, if indeed the grant that he holds from Biencourt be not
-assailed. Double reason for moving the most of his possessions across
-Fundy Bay to St. John River.
-
-Then the Englishmen, under the Kirke brothers, capture Quebec. As luck
-or ill luck will have it, among the French captured from the French
-ships of the Hundred Associates down at Tadoussac, is Claude de La
-Tour, the father of Charles. Claude de La Tour was a Protestant. This
-and his courtly manner and his noble birth commended him to the English
-court. What had France done for Claude de La Tour? Placed him under
-the ban on account of his religion.
-
-Claude de La Tour promptly became a British subject, received the title
-Baronet of Nova Scotia with enormous grants of land on St. John River,
-New Brunswick, married an English lady in waiting to the Queen, and
-sailed with three men-of-war for Nova Scotia to win over his son
-Charles. No writer like Marc Lescarbot was present to describe the
-meeting between father and son; but one can guess the stormy
-scene,--the war between love of country and love of father, the guns of
-the father's vessels pointing at the son's fort, the guns of the son's
-fort pointing at the father's vessels. The father's arguments were
-strong. What had France done for the La Tours? By siding with England
-they would receive safe asylum in case of persecution and enormous
-grants of land on St. John River. But the son's arguments were
-stronger. The father must know from his English bride--maid in waiting
-to the English Queen--that England had no intentions of keeping her
-newly captured possessions in Canada, but had already decided to trade
-them back to France for a dowry to the English Queen. If Canada were
-given back to France, what were English grants in New Brunswick worth?
-"If those who sent you think me capable of betraying my country even at
-the prayer of my father, they are mightily mistaken," thundered the
-young man, ordering his gunners to their places. {64} "I don't
-purchase honors by crime! I don't undervalue the offer of England's
-King; but the King of France is just as able to reward me! The King of
-France has confided the defense of Acadia to me; and I'll defend it to
-my last breath."
-
-Stung by his son's rebuke, the elder La Tour retired to his ship, wrote
-one more unavailing appeal, then landed his mariners to rush the fort.
-But the rough bush lopers inside the palisades were expert marksmen.
-Their raking cross fire kept the English at a distance, and the father
-could neither drive nor coax his men to the sticking point of courage
-to scale palisades in such an unnatural war. Claude de La Tour was now
-in an unenviable plight. He dare not go back to France a traitor. He
-could not go back to England, having failed to win the day. The son
-built him a dwelling outside the fort; and there this famous courtier
-of two great nations, with his noble wife, retired to pass the end of
-his days in a wildwood wilderness far enough from the gaudy tinsel of
-courts. The fate of both husband and wife is unknown.
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHOWING LA TOUR'S POSSESSIONS IN ACADIA]
-
-
-Charles de La Tour's predictions were soon verified. The Treaty of
-St.-Germain-en-Laye, in 1632, gave back all Canada to France; and the
-young man's loyalty was rewarded by the French King confirming the
-father's English patent to the lands of St. John River, New Brunswick.
-Perhaps he expected more. He certainly wanted to be governor of
-Acadia, and may have looked for fresh title to Port Royal, which
-Biencourt had deeded {65} to him. His ambition was embittered.
-Cardinal Richelieu of the Hundred Associates had his own favorites to
-look after. Acadia is divided into three provinces. Over all as
-governor is Isaac Razilli, chief of the Hundred Associates. La Tour
-holds St. John. One St. Denys is given Cape Breton; and Port Royal,
-the best province of all, falls to Sieur d'Aulnay de Charnisay, friend
-and relative of Richelieu; and when Razilli dies in 1635, Charnisay,
-with his strong influence at court, easily secures the dead man's
-patents with all land grants attached. Charnisay becomes governor of
-Acadia.
-
-For a second time La Tour is thwarted. Things are turning out as his
-father had foretold. Who began the border warfare matters little.
-Whether Charnisay as lord of all Acadia first ordered La Tour to
-surrender St. John, or La Tour, holding his grant from Biencourt to
-Port Royal, ordered Charnisay to give up Annapolis Basin, war had
-begun,--such border warfare as has its parallel only in the raids of
-rival barons in the Middle Ages. Did La Tour's vessels laden with furs
-slip out from St. John River across Fundy Bay bound for France? There
-lay at Cape Sable and Sable Island Charnisay's freebooters, Charnisay's
-wreckers, ready to board the ship or lure her a wreck on Sable Island
-reefs by false lights. It is unsafe to accept as facts the charges and
-countercharges made by these two enemies; but from independent sources
-it seems fairly certain that Charnisay, unknown to Cardinal Richelieu,
-was a bit of a freebooter and wrecker; for his men made a regular
-business of waylaying English ships from Boston, Dutch ships from New
-York, as they passed Sable Island; and Charnisay's name became
-cordially hated by the Protestant colonies of New England. La Tour,
-being Huguenot, could count on firm friends in Boston.
-
-Countless legends cling to Fundy Bay of the forays between these two.
-In 1640 La Tour and his wife, cruising past Annapolis Basin in their
-fur ships, rashly entered and attacked Port Royal. Their ship was run
-aground by Charnisay's vessels and captured; but the friars persuaded
-the victor to set La Tour and his wife free, pending an appeal to
-France. France, of {66} course, decided in favor of Charnisay, who was
-of royal blood, a relative of Richelieu's, in high favor with the
-court. La Tour's patent was revoked and he was ordered to surrender
-his fort on the St. John.
-
-[Illustration: CARDINAL RICHELIEU]
-
-In answer, La Tour loaded his cannon, locked the fort gates, and bade
-defiance to Charnisay. Charnisay sails across Fundy Bay in June, 1643,
-with a fleet of four vessels and five hundred men to bombard the fort.
-La Tour was without provisions, though his store ship from France lay
-in hiding outside, blocked from entering by Charnisay's fleet. Days
-passed. Resistance was hopeless. On one side lay the impenetrable
-forest; on the other, Charnisay's fleet. On the night of June 12th, La
-Tour and his wife slipped from a little sally port in the dark, ran
-along the shore, and, evading spies, succeeded in rowing out to the
-store ship. Ebb tide carried them far from the four men-of-war
-anchored fast in front of the abandoned fort. Then sails out, the
-store ship fled for Boston, where La Tour and his wife appealed for aid.
-
-The Puritans of Boston had qualms of conscience about interfering in
-this French quarrel; but they did not forget that Charnisay's wreckers
-had stripped their merchant ships come to grief on the reefs of Sable
-Island. La Tour gave the Boston merchants a mortgage on all his
-belongings at St. John, and in return obtained four vessels, fifty
-mariners, ninety-two soldiers, {67} thirty-eight cannon. With this
-fleet he swooped down on Fundy Bay in July. Charnisay's vessels lay
-before Fort St. John, where the stubborn little garrison still held
-out, when La Tour came down on him like an enraged eagle. Charnisay's
-fur ships were boarded, scuttled, and sunk, while the commander himself
-fled in terror for Port Royal. All sails pressed, La Tour pursued
-right into Annapolis Basin, wounding seven of the enemy, killing three,
-taking one prisoner. Charnisay's one remaining vessel grounded in the
-river. A fight took place near the site of the mill which Poutrincourt
-had built long ago, but Charnisay succeeded in gaining the shelter of
-Port Royal, where his cannon soon compelled La Tour to fly from
-Annapolis Basin. Charnisay found it safer to pass that winter in
-France, and La Tour gathered in all the peltry traffic of the bay.
-
-Early in 1644 Charnisay returned and sent a friar to secure the
-neutrality of the New Englanders. All summer negotiations dragged on
-between Boston and Port Royal, La Tour meanwhile scouring land and sea
-unchecked, packing his fort with peltries. Finally, Charnisay promised
-to desist from all fur trade along the coast if the New England
-colonies would remain neutral; and the colonies promised not to aid La
-Tour. La Tour was now outlawed by the French government, and Charnisay
-had actually induced New England to promise not to convey either La
-Tour or his wife to or from Bay of Fundy in English boats.
-
-La Tour chanced to be absent from his fort in 1645. Like a bird of
-prey Charnisay swooped on St. John River; but he had not reckoned on
-Madame La Tour--Frances Marie Jacqueline. With the courage and agility
-of a trained soldier, she commanded her little garrison of fifty and
-returned the raider's cannonade with a fury that sent Charnisay limping
-back to Port Royal with splintered decks, twenty mangled corpses
-jumbled aft, and a dozen men wounded to the death lying in the hold.
-
-With all the power of France at his back Charnisay had been defeated by
-a woman,--the Huguenot wife of an outlaw! He must reduce La Tour or
-stand discredited before the world. {68} Furious beyond words, he
-hastened to France to prepare an overwhelming armament.
-
-But Madame La Tour was not idle. She, too, hastened across the
-Atlantic to solicit aid in London. One can imagine how Charnisay
-gnashed his teeth. Here, at last, was his chance. The Boston vessels
-were not to convey the La Tours back to Acadia. Like a hawk Charnisay
-cruised the sea for the outcoming ship with its fair passenger; but
-Madame La Tour had made a cast-iron agreement with the master of the
-sailing vessel to bring her direct to Boston. Instead of this, the
-vessel cruised the St. Lawrence, trading with the Indians, and so
-delayed the aid coming to La Tour; but when Charnisay's searchers came
-on board off Sable Island, Madame La Tour was hidden among the freight
-in the hold. For the delay she sued the sailing master in Boston and
-obtained a judgment of 2000 pounds; and when he failed to pay, had his
-cargo seized and sold, and with the proceeds equipped three vessels to
-aid her outlawed husband. So the whole of 1646 passed, each side
-girding itself for the final fray.
-
-April, 1647, spies brought word to Charnisay that La Tour was absent
-from his fort. Waiting not a moment, Charnisay hurried ships,
-soldiers, cannon across the bay. Inside La Tour's fort was no
-confusion. Madame La Tour had ordered every man to his place. Day and
-night for three days the siege lasted, Charnisay's men closing in on
-the palisades so near they could bandy words with the fighters on the
-galleries inside the walls. Among La Tour's fighters were Swiss
-mercenaries--men who fight for the highest pay. Did Charnisay in the
-language of the day "grease the fist" of the Swiss sentry, or was it a
-case of a boorish fellow refusing to fight under a woman's command?
-Legend gives both explanations; but on Easter Sunday morning
-Charnisay's men gained entrance by scaling the walls where the Swiss
-sentry stood. Madame La Tour rushed her men to an inner fort loopholed
-with guns. Afraid of a final defeat that would disgrace him before all
-the world, Charnisay called up generous terms if she would surrender.
-To save the {69} lives of the men Madame La Tour agreed to honorable
-surrender, and the doors were opened. In rushed Charnisay! To his
-amazement the woman had only a handful of men. Disgusted with himself
-and boiling over with revenge for all these years of enmity, Charnisay
-forgot his promise and hanged every soul of the garrison but the
-traitor who acted as executioner, compelling Madame La Tour to watch
-the execution with a halter round her neck amid the jeers of the
-soldiery. Legend says that the experience drove her insane and caused
-her death within three weeks. Charnisay was now lord of all Acadia,
-with 10,000 pounds worth of Madame La Tour's jewelry transferred to
-Port Royal and all La Tour's furs safe in the warehouses of Annapolis
-Basin; but he did not long enjoy his triumph. He had the reputation of
-treating his Indian servants with great brutality. On the 24th of May,
-1650, an Indian was rowing him up the narrows near Port Royal.
-Charnisay could not swim. Without apparent cause the boat upset. The
-Indian swam ashore. The commander perished. Legend again avers that
-the Indian upset the boat to be revenged on Charnisay for some
-brutality.
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF ANNAPOLIS BASIN]
-
-La Tour had been wandering from Newfoundland to Boston and Quebec
-seeking aid, but a lost cause has few friends, and if La Tour turned
-pirate on Boston boats, he probably thought he was justified in paying
-off the score of Boston's bargain with Charnisay. Later he turned
-trader with the Indians from Hudson Bay, and found friends in Quebec.
-Word of his wrongs reached the French court. When Charnisay perished,
-La Tour was at last appointed lieutenant governor of Acadia. Widow
-{70} Charnisay, left with eight children, all minors, made what
-reparation she could to La Tour by giving back the fort on the St.
-John, and La Tour, to wipe out the bitter enmity, married the widow of
-his enemy in February of 1653.
-
-But this was not the seal of peace on his troubled life. Cromwell was
-now ascendant in England, and Major Sedgwick of Boston, in 1654, with a
-powerful fleet, captured Port Royal and St. John. Weary of fighting
-what seemed to be destiny, La Tour became a British subject, and with
-two other Englishmen was granted the whole of Acadia. Ten years later
-his English partners bought out his rights, and La Tour died in the
-land of his many trials about 1666. A year later the Treaty of Breda
-restored Acadia to France.
-
-
-
-
-{71}
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-FROM 1635 TO 1650
-
-Mystics come to Canada--A city built of dreams--First night at
-Montreal--Maisonneuve fights raiders--Le Jeune joins the
-hunters--Brebeuf goes to Lake Huron--Life at the Huron mission--The
-scourge of the Iroquois--The fight at St. Louis--Rageneau's converts
-resist--Flight of the Hurons
-
-
-While Charles de La Tour and Charnisay scoured the Bay of Fundy in
-border warfare like buccaneers of the Spanish Main, what was Quebec
-doing?
-
-The Hundred Associates were to colonize the country; but fur trading
-and farming never go together. One means the end of the other; and the
-Hundred Associates shifted the obligation of settling the country by
-granting vast estates called seigniories along the St. Lawrence and
-leaving to these new lords of the soil the duty of bringing out
-habitants. Later they deeded over for an annual rental of beaver skins
-the entire fur monopoly to the Habitant Company, made up of the leading
-people of New France. So ended all the fine promises of four thousand
-colonists.
-
-Years ago Pontgrave had learned that the Indians of the Up-Country did
-not care to come down the St. Lawrence farther than Lake St. Peter's,
-where Iroquois foe lay in ambush; and the year before Champlain died a
-double expedition had set out from Quebec in July: one to build a fort
-north of Lake St. Peter's at the entrance to the river with three
-mouths,--in other words, to found Three Rivers; the other, under Father
-Brebeuf, the Jesuit, and Jean Nicolet, the wood runner, to establish a
-mission in the country of the Hurons and to explore the Great Lakes.
-
-In fact, it must never be forgotten that Champlain's ambitions in
-laying the foundations of a new nation aimed just as much to establish
-a kingdom of heaven on earth as to win a new kingdom for France.
-Always, in the minds of the fathers of New France, Church was to be
-first; State, second. When Charles de Montmagny, Knight of Malta,
-landed in Quebec one June morning in 1636, to succeed Champlain as
-governor of New France, he noticed a crucifix planted by the path side
-where {72} viceroy and officers clambered up the steep hill to Castle
-St. Louis. Instantly Montmagny fell to his knees before the cross in
-silent adoration, and his example was followed by all the gay train of
-beplumed officers. The Jesuits regarded the episode as a splendid omen
-for New France, and set their chapel organ rolling a _Te Deum_ of
-praise, while Governor and retinue filed before the altars with bared
-heads.
-
-It was in the same spirit that Montreal was founded.
-
-
-The Jesuits' letters on the Canadian missions were now being read in
-France. Religious orders were on fire with missionary ardor. The
-Canadian missions became the fashion of the court. Ladies of noble
-blood asked no greater privilege than to contribute their fortunes for
-missions in Canada. Nuns lay prostrate before altars praying night and
-day for the advancement of the heavenly kingdom on the St. Lawrence.
-The Jesuits had begun their college in Quebec. The very year that
-Champlain had first come to the St. Lawrence there had been born in
-Normandy, of noble parentage, a little girl who became a passionate
-devotee of Canadian missions. To divert her mind from the calling of a
-nun, her father had thrown her into a whirl of gayety from which she
-emerged married; but her husband died in a few years, and Madame de la
-Peltrie, left a widow at twenty-two, turned again heart and soul to the
-scheme of endowing a Canadian mission. Again her father tried to
-divert her mind, threatening to cut off her fortune if she did not
-marry. An engagement to a young noble, who was as keen a devotee as
-herself, quieted her father and averted the loss of her fortune. On
-the death of her father the formal union was dissolved, and Madame de
-la Peltrie proceeded to the Ursuline Convent of Tours, where the
-Jesuits had already chosen a mother superior for the new institution to
-be founded at Quebec--Marie of the Incarnation, a woman of some fifty
-years, a widow like Madame de la Peltrie, and, like Madame de la
-Peltrie, a mystic dreamer of celestial visions and divine communings
-and heroic sacrifices. How much of truth, how much of self-delusion,
-{73} lay in these dreams of heavenly revelation is not for the outsider
-to say. It is as impossible for the practical mind to pronounce
-judgment on the mystic as for the mystic to pronounce sentence on the
-scientist. Both have their truths, both have their errors; and by
-their fruits are they known.
-
-[Illustration: MADAME DE LA PELTRIE (After a picture in the Ursuline
-Convent, Quebec)]
-
-May 4th, 1639, Madame de la Peltrie and Marie of the Incarnation
-embarked from Dieppe for Canada. In the ship were also another
-Ursuline nun, three hospital sisters to found the Hotel Dieu at Quebec,
-Father Vimont, superior of Quebec Jesuits, and two other priests. The
-boat was like a chapel. Ship's bell tolled services. Morning prayer
-and evensong were chanted from the decks, and the pilgrims firmly
-believed that their vows allayed a storm. July 1st they were among the
-rocking dories of the Newfoundland fishermen, and then on the 15th the
-little sailboat washed and rolled to anchor inshore among the fur
-traders under the heights of Tadoussac.
-
-At sight of the somber Saguenay, the silver-flooded St. Lawrence, the
-frowning mountains, the far purple hills, the primeval forests through
-which the wind rushed with the sound of the sea, the fishing craft
-dancing on the tide like cockle boats, the grizzled fur traders bronzed
-as the crinkled oak forests where they passed their lives, the tawny,
-naked savages agape at these white-skinned women come from afar, the
-hearts of the {74} housed-up nuns swelled with emotions strange and
-sweet,--the emotions of a new life in a new world. And when they
-scrambled over the rope coils aboard a fishing schooner to go on up to
-Quebec, and heard the deep-voiced shoutings of the men, and witnessed
-the toilers of the deep fighting wind and wave for the harvest of the
-sea, did it dawn on the fair sisterhood that God must have workers
-_out_ in the strife of the world, as well as workers _shut up_ from the
-world inside convent walls? Who knows? . . . Who knows? At
-Tadoussac, that morning, to both Madame de la Peltrie and Marie of the
-Incarnation it must have seemed as if their visions had become real.
-And then the cannon of Quebec began to thunder till the echoes rolled
-from hill to hill and shook--as the mystics thought--the very
-strongholds of hell. Tears streamed down their cheeks at such welcome.
-The whole Quebec populace had rallied to the water front, and there
-stood Governor Montmagny in velvet cloak with sword at belt waving hat
-in welcome. Soldiers and priests cheered till the ramparts rang. As
-the nuns put foot to earth once more they fell on their knees and
-kissed the soil of Canada. August 1st was fete day in Quebec. The
-chapel chimes rang . . . and rang again their gladness. The organ
-rolled out its floods of soul-shattering music, and deep-throated chant
-of priests invoked God's blessing on the coming of the women to the
-mission. So began the Ursuline Convent of Quebec and the Hotel Dieu of
-the hospital sisters; but Montreal was still a howling wilderness
-untenanted by man save in midsummer, when the fur traders came to
-Champlain's factory and the canoes of the Indians from the Up-Country
-danced down the swirling rapids like sea birds on waves.
-
-
-The letters from the Jesuit missions touched more hearts than those of
-the mystic nuns.
-
-In Anjou dwelt a receiver of taxes--Jerome le Royer de la Dauversiere,
-a stout, practical, God-fearing man with a family, about as far removed
-in temperament from the founders of the Ursulines as a character could
-well be. Yet he, too, had mystic {75} dreams and heard voices bidding
-him found a mission in the tenantless wilderness of Montreal. To the
-practical man the thing seems sheer moon-stark madness. If Dauversiere
-had lived in modern days he would have been committed to an asylum.
-Here was a man with a family, without a fortune, commanded by what he
-thought was the voice of Heaven to found a hospital in a wilderness
-where there were no people. Also in Paris dwelt a young priest, Jean
-Jacques Olier, who heard the self-same voices uttering the self-same
-command. These two men were unknown to each other; yet when they met
-by chance in the picture gallery of an old castle, there fell from
-their eyes, as it were, scales, and they beheld as in a vision each the
-other's soul, and recognized in each fellow-helper and comrade of the
-spirit. To all this the practical man cries out "Bosh"! Yet Montreal
-is no bosh, but a stately city, and it sprang from the dreams--"fool
-dreams," enemies would call them--of these two men, the Sulpician
-priest and the Anjou tax collector.
-
-Hour after hour, arm in arm, they walked and talked, the man of prayers
-and the man of taxes. People or no people at Montreal, money or no
-money, they decided that the inner voice must be obeyed. A Montreal
-Society was formed. Six friends joined. What would be equal to
-$75,000 was collected. There were to be no profits on this capital.
-It was all to be invested to the glory of the Kingdom of Heaven.
-Unselfish if you like, foolish they may have been, but not hypocrites.
-
-First of all, they must become Seigneurs of Montreal; but the island of
-Montreal had already been granted by the Hundred Associates to one
-Lauson. To render the title doubly secure, Dauversiere and Olier
-obtained deeds to the island from Lauson and from the Hundred
-Associates.
-
-Forty-five colonists, part soldiers, part devotees, were then gained as
-volunteers; but a veritable soldier of Heaven was desired as commander.
-Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, was noted for his heroism in
-war and zeal in religion. When other officers returned from battle for
-wild revels, Maisonneuve withdrew to play the flute or pass hours in
-religious {76} contemplation. His name occurred to both Dauversiere
-and Olier as fittest for command; but to make doubly sure, they took
-lodgings near him, studied his disposition, and then casually told him
-of their plans and asked his cooeperation. Maisonneuve was in the prime
-of life, on the way to high service in the army. His zeal took fire at
-thought of founding a Kingdom of God at Montreal; but his father
-furiously opposed what must have seemed a mad scheme. Maisonneuve's
-answer was the famous promise of Christ: "No man hath left house or
-brethren or sister for my sake but he shall receive a hundredfold."
-
-Maisonneuve was warned there would be no earthly reward--no pay--for
-his arduous task; but he answered, "I devote my life and future; and I
-expect no recompense."
-
-Mademoiselle Jeanne Mance, thirty-four years old, who had given herself
-to good works from childhood, though she had not yet joined the
-cloister, now felt the call to labor in the wilderness. Later, in
-1653, came Marguerite Bourgeoys to the little colony beneath the
-mountain. She too, like Jeanne Mance, distrusted dreams and visions
-and mystic communings, cherishing a religion of good works rather than
-introspection of the soul. Dauversiere and Olier remained in France.
-Fortunately for Montreal, practical Christians, fighting soldiers of
-the cross, carried the heavenly standard to the wilderness.
-
-It was too late to ascend the St. Lawrence when the ship brought the
-crusaders to Quebec in August, 1641; and difficulties harried them from
-the outset. Was Montmagny, the Governor, jealous of Maisonneuve; or
-did he simply realize the fearful dangers Maisonneuve's people would
-run going beyond the protection of Quebec? At all events, he
-disapproved this building of a second colony at Montreal, when the
-first colony at Quebec could barely gain subsistence. He offered them
-the Island of Orleans in exchange for the Island of Montreal, and
-warned them of Iroquois raid.
-
-"I have not come to argue," answered Maisonneuve, "but to act. It is
-my duty to found a colony at Montreal, and thither I go though every
-tree be an Iroquois."
-
-{77} Maisonneuve passed the winter building boats to ascend the St.
-Lawrence next spring; and Madame de la Peltrie, having established the
-Ursulines at Quebec, now cast in her lot with the Montrealers for two
-years.
-
-May 8, 1642, the little flotilla set out from Quebec--a pinnace with
-the passengers, a barge with provisions, two long boats propelled by
-oars and a sweep. Montmagny and Father Vimont accompanied the
-crusaders; and as the boats came within sight of the wooded mountain on
-May 17, hymns of praise rose from the pilgrims that must have mingled
-strangely on Indian ears with the roar of the angry rapids. One can
-easily call up the scene--the mountain, misty with the gathering
-shadows of sunset, misty as a veiled bride with the color and bloom of
-spring; the boats, moored for the night below St. Helen's Island, where
-the sun, blazing behind the half-foliaged trees, paints a path of fire
-on the river; the white bark wigwams along shore with the red gleam of
-camp fire here and there through the forest; the wilderness world
-bathed in a peace as of heaven, as the vesper hymn floats over the
-evening air! It is a scene that will never again be enacted in the
-history of the world--dreamers dreaming greatly, building a castle of
-dreams, a fortress of holiness in the very center of wilderness
-barbarity and cruelty unspeakable. The multitudinous voices of traffic
-shriek where the crusaders' hymn rose that May night. A great city has
-risen on the foundations which these dreamers laid. Let us not scoff
-too loudly at their mystic visions and religious rhapsodies! Another
-generation may scoff at our too-much-worldliness, with our dreamless
-grind and visionless toil and harder creeds that reject everything
-which cannot be computed in the terms of traffic's dollar! Well for us
-if the fruit of our creeds remain to attest as much worth as the deeds
-of these crusaders!
-
-
-Early next morning the boats pulled in ashore where Cartier had landed
-one hundred years before and Champlain had built his factory thirty
-years ago. Maisonneuve was first to spring on land. He dropped to his
-knees in prayer. The others as {78} they landed did likewise. Their
-hymns floated out on the forest. Madame de la Peltrie, Jeanne Mance,
-and the servant, Charlotte Barre, quickly decorated a wildwood altar
-with evergreens. Then, with Montmagny the Governor, and Maisonneuve
-the soldier, standing on either side, Madame de la Peltrie and Jeanne
-Mance and Charlotte Barre, bowed in reverence, with soldiers and
-sailors standing at rest unhooded, Father Vimont held the first
-religious services at Mont Royal. "You are a grain of mustard seed,"
-he said, "and you shall grow till your branches overshadow the earth."
-
-Maisonneuve cut the first tree for the fort; and a hundred legends
-might be told of the little colony's pioneer trials. Once a flood
-threatened the existence of the fort. A cross was erected to stay the
-waters and a vow made if Heaven would save the fort a cross should be
-carried and placed on the summit of the mountain. The river abated,
-and Maisonneuve climbed the steep mountain, staggering under the weight
-of an enormous cross, and planted it at the highest point. Here, in
-the presence of all, mass was held, and it became a regular pilgrimage
-from the fort up the mountain to the cross.
-
-In 1743 came Louis d'Ailleboust and his wife, both zealously bound by
-the same vows as devotees, bringing word of more funds for Ville Marie,
-as Montreal was called. Montmagny's warning of Iroquois proved all too
-true. Within a year, in June, 1743, six workmen were beset in the
-fields, only one escaping. Because his mission was to convert the
-Indians, Maisonneuve had been ever reluctant to meet the Iroquois in
-open war, preferring to retreat within the fort when the dog Pilot and
-her litter barked loud warning that Indians were hiding in the woods.
-Any one who knows the Indian character will realize how clemency would
-be mistaken for cowardice. Even Maisonneuve's soldiers began to doubt
-him.
-
-"My lord, my lord," they urged, "are the enemy never to get a sight of
-you? Are we never to face the foe?"
-
-Maisonneuve's answer was in March, 1644, when ambushed hostiles were
-detected stealing on the fort.
-
-{79} "Follow me," he ordered thirty men, leaving D'Ailleboust in
-command of the fort.
-
-Near the place now known as Place d'Armes the little band was greeted
-by the eldritch scream of eighty painted Iroquois. Shots fell thick
-and fast. The Iroquois dashed to rescue their wounded, and a young
-chief, recognizing Maisonneuve as the leader of the white men, made a
-rush for the honor of capturing the French commander alive.
-Maisonneuve had put himself between his retreating men and the
-advancing warriors. Firing, he would retreat a pace, then fire again,
-keeping his face to the foe. His men succeeded in rushing up the
-hillock, then made for the gates in a wild stampede. Maisonneuve was
-backing away, a pistol in each hand. The Iroquois circled from tree to
-tree, near and nearer, and like a wildwood creature of prey was
-watching his chance to spring, when the Frenchman fired. The pistol
-missed. Dodging, the Indian leaped. Maisonneuve discharged the other
-pistol. The Iroquois fell dead, and while warriors rescued the body,
-Maisonneuve gained the fort gates. This was only one of countless
-frays when the dog Pilot with her puppies sounded the alarm of prowlers
-in the woods.
-
-
-What were the letters, what the adventures described by the Jesuits,
-that aroused such zeal and inspired such heroism? It would require
-many volumes to record the adventures of the Jesuits in Canada, and a
-long list to include all their heroes martyred for the faith. Only a
-few of the most prominent episodes in the Jesuits' adventures can be
-given here.
-
-When Pierre le Jeune reached Quebec after the victory of the Kirke
-brothers, he found only the charred remains of a mission on the old
-site of Cartier's winter quarters down on the St. Charles. Of houses,
-only the gray-stone cottage of Madame Hebert had been left standing.
-Here Le Jeune was welcomed and housed till the little mission could be
-rebuilt. At first it consisted of only mud-plastered log cabins,
-thatch-roofed, divided into four rooms, with garret and cellar. One
-room decorated with saints' images and pictures served as chapel;
-another, as {80} kitchen; a third, as lodgings; the fourth, as
-refectory. In this humble abode six Jesuit priests and two lay
-brothers passed the winter after the war. The roof leaked like a
-sieve. The snow piled high almost as the top of the door. Le Jeune's
-first care was to obtain pupils. These consisted of an Indian boy and
-a negro lad left by the English. Meals of porridge given free
-attracted more Indian pupils; but Le Jeune's greatest difficulty was to
-learn the Indian language. Hearing that a renegade Indian named
-Pierre, who had served the French as interpreter, lodged with some
-Algonquins camped below Cape Diamond, Le Jeune tramped up the river
-bank, along what is now the Lower Road, where he found the Indians
-wigwamming, and by the bribe of free food obtained Pierre. Pierre was
-at best a tricky scoundrel, who considered it a joke to give Le Jeune
-the wrong word for some religious precept, gorged himself on the
-missionaries' food, stole their communion wine, and ran off at Lent to
-escape fasting.
-
-[Illustration: PIERRE LE JEUNE]
-
-When Champlain returned to receive Quebec back from the English, more
-priests joined the Jesuits' mission. Among them was the lion-hearted
-giant, Brebeuf.
-
-If Champlain's bush lopers could join bands of wandering Indians for
-the extension of French dominion, surely the Jesuits could dare as
-perilous a life "for the greater glory of God,"--as their vows declared.
-
-{81} Le Jeune joined a band of wandering Montaignais, Pierre, the
-rascal, tapping the keg of sacramental wine the first night out, and
-turning the whole camp into a drunken bedlam, till his own brother
-sobered him with a kettle of hot water flung full in the face. That
-night the priest slept apart from the camp in the woods. By the time
-the hunters reached the forest borderland between Quebec and New
-Brunswick, their number had increased to forty-five. By Christmas time
-game is usually dormant, still living on the stores of the fall and not
-yet driven afield by spring hunger. In camp was no food. The hunters
-halted the march, and came in Christmas Eve of 1633 with not so much as
-a pound of flesh for nearly fifty people. From the first the Indian
-medicine man had heaped ridicule on the white priest, and Pierre had
-refused to interpret as much as a single prayer; but now the whole camp
-was starving. Pierre happened to tell the other Indians that Christmas
-was the day on which the white man's God had come to earth. In vain
-the medicine man had pounded his tom-tom and shouted at the Indian gods
-from the top of the wigwams and offered sacrifice of animals to be
-slain. No game had come as the result of the medicine man's invocation.
-
-Le Jeune gathered the people about him and through Pierre, the
-interpreter, bade them try the white man's God. In the largest of the
-wigwams a little altar was fitted up. Then the Indians repeated this
-prayer after Le Jeune:
-
-Jesus, Son of the Almighty . . . who died for us . . . who promised
-that if we ask anything in Thy name, Thou wilt do it--I pray Thee with
-all my heart, give food to these people . . . this people promises Thee
-faithfully they will trust Thee entirely and obey Thee with all their
-heart! My Lord, hear my prayer! I present Thee my life for this
-people, most willing to die that they may live and know Thee.
-
-
-"Take that back," grunted the chief. "We love you! We don't want you
-to die."
-
-"I only want to show that I am your friend," answered the priest.
-
-Le Jeune then commanded them to go forth to the hunt, full of faith
-that God would give them food.
-
-{82} But alas for the poor father's hopes and the childlike Indian vow!
-True, they found abundance of food,--a beaver dam full of beaver, a
-moose, a porcupine taken by the Indian medicine man. Father Le Jeune,
-with radiant face, met the hunters returning laden with game.
-
-"We must thank your God for this," said the Indian chief, throwing down
-his load.
-
-"Bah," says Pierre, "you 'd have found it anyway."
-
-"This is not the time to talk," sneered the medicine man. "Let the
-hungry people eat."
-
-And by the time the Indians had gorged themselves with ample measure
-for their long fast, they were torpid with sleep. The sad priest was
-fain to wander out under the stars. There, in the snow-padded silences
-of the white-limned forest, far from the joyous peal of Christmas
-bells, he knelt alone and worshiped God.
-
-For five months he wandered with the Montaignais, and now in April the
-hunters turned toward Quebec with their furs. At three in the morning
-Le Jeune knocked on the door of the mission house at Quebec, and was
-welcomed home by the priests. The pilgrimage had taught him what the
-Jesuits have always held--the way to power with a people is through the
-education of the children. "Give me a child for the first seven years
-of its life," said a famous educator, "and I care not what you do with
-him the rest of his years." Missions and schools must be established
-among the tribes of Hurons and Iroquois.
-
-
-Consequently, when Champlain sent his soldiers in 1634 to build a fort
-at Three Rivers, they were accompanied by three Jesuits, chief of whom
-was Jean de Brebeuf, lion-hearted, bound for the land of the Hurons.
-The chapel bells of Quebec rang and rang again in honor of the new
-Jesuit mission--morning, noon, and night they chimed in airy music,
-calling men's thoughts to God, just as you may hear the chimes to-day;
-and the ramparts below Quebec thundered and reechoed with salvos of
-cannon when the missionaries set out for Three Rivers.
-
-{83} At Three Rivers waited the Indians of the Up-Country. The Jesuits
-embarked with them for the land of the Hurons. The priests traveled
-barefoot to avoid injuring the frail bark of the canoes. Barely had
-farewell cheers faded on the river, when the canoes spread apart. With
-pieces of buckskin hoisted on fishing rods for sail, and a flipping of
-paddles as naked, bronzed arms set the pace, the voyage had begun.
-Heroism is easy with chapel bells ringing; it is another matter,
-barefoot and with sleeves rolled up.
-
-It was the same trail that Champlain had followed up the Ottawa. Only
-Champlain was assured of good treatment, for he had promised to fight
-in the Indian wars; but the Jesuits were dependent on the caprice of
-their conductors. Any one, who, from experience in the wilds, has
-learned how the term "tenderfoot" came to be applied, will realize the
-hardships endured--and endured without self-pity--by these scholarly
-men of immured life. The rocks of the portage cut their naked feet.
-The Indians refused to carry their packs overland and flung bundles of
-clothing and food into the water. In fair weather the voyageurs slept
-on the sand under the overturned canoes; in rain a wigwam was raised,
-and into the close confines of this tent crowded men, women, and
-children, for the most part naked, and with less idea of decency than a
-domestic dog. Each night, as the boats were beached, the priests
-wandered off into the woods to hold their prayers in privacy. Soon the
-canoes were so far apart the different boats did not camp together, and
-the white men were scattered alone among the savages. Robberies
-increased till, when Brebeuf reached Georgian Bay, thirty days from
-leaving Three Rivers, he had little left but the bundles he had carried
-for himself.
-
-Brebeuf had been to the Huron country before with Etienne Brule,
-Champlain's pathfinder; but of the first mission no record exists.
-Brebeuf found that Brule had been murdered near the modern Penetang;
-and the Indians had scarcely brought the priest's canoe ashore, when
-they bolted through the woods, leaving him to follow as best he could.
-
-{84} Take a map of modern Ontario. Draw a circle round Georgian Bay,
-running from Muskoka through Lake Simcoe and up into Manitoulin Island.
-Here, on the very stamping ground of the summer tourist, was the scene
-of the Jesuits' Huron mission.
-
-[Illustration: GEORGIAN BAY]
-
-When Brebeuf's tall frame emerged from the woods, the whole village of
-Ihonateria dashed out to welcome him, shouting, "He has come! He has
-come again! Behold, the Black Robe has come again!" Young braves
-willingly ran back through the forest for the baggage, which the
-voyageurs had thrown aside; and at one o'clock in the morning, as the
-messengers came through the moonlit forest, Brebeuf took up his abode
-in the house of the leading chief. Later came Fathers Davost and
-Daniel. By October the Indians had built the missionaries their
-wigwam, a bark-covered house of logs, thirty-six feet long, divided
-into three rooms, reception room, living quarters, church. In the
-entrance hall assembled the Indians, squatting on the floor, gazing in
-astonishment at the religious pictures on the wall, and, above all, at
-the clock.
-
-{85} "What does he say?" they would ask, listening solemnly to the
-ticking.
-
-"He says 'Hang on the kettle,'" Brebeuf would answer as the clock
-struck twelve, and the whole conclave would be given a simple meal of
-corn porridge; but at four the clock sang a different song.
-
-"It says 'Get up and go home,'" Brebeuf would explain, and the Indians
-would file out, knowing well that the Black Robes were to engage in
-prayer.
-
-No holiday in the wildwoods was the Jesuit mission. Chapel bell called
-to service at four in the morning. Eight was the breakfast hour. The
-morning was passed teaching, preaching, visiting. At two o'clock was
-dinner, when a chapter of the Bible was read. After four the Indians
-were dismissed, and the missionaries met to compare notes and plan the
-next day's campaign.
-
-By 1645, five mission houses had been established, with Ste. Marie on
-the Wye, east of Midland, as the central house. Near Lake Simcoe were
-two missions,--St. Jean Ba'tiste and St. Joseph; near Penetang, St.
-Louis, and St. Ignace. Westward of Ste. Marie on the Wye were half a
-dozen irregular missions among the Tobacco Indians. Each of the five
-regular missions boasted palisaded inclosures, a chapel of log slabs
-with bell and spire, though the latter might be only a high wooden
-cross. At Ste. Marie, the central station, were lodgings for sixty
-people, a hospital, kitchen garden, with cattle, pigs, and poultry. At
-various times soldiers had been sent up by the Quebec governors, till
-some thirty or forty were housed at Ste. Marie. In all were eighteen
-priests, four lay brothers, seven white servants, and twenty-three
-volunteers, unpaid helpers--donnes, they were called, young men
-ardently religious, learning woodlore and the Indian language among the
-Jesuits, as well as exploring whenever it was possible for them to
-accompany the Indians. Among the volunteers was one Chouart
-Groseillers, who, if he did not accompany Father Jogues on a preaching
-tour to the tribes of Lake Superior, had at least gone as far as the
-Sault and learned of the vast unexplored world beyond Lake Superior.
-{86} Food, as always, played a large part in winning the soul of the
-redskin. On church fete days as many as three thousand people were fed
-and lodged at Ste. Marie. That the priests suffered many trials among
-the unreasonable savages need not be told. When it rained too heavily
-they were accused of ruining the crops by praying for too much rain;
-when there was drouth they were blamed for not arranging this matter
-with their God; and when the scourge of smallpox raged through the
-Huron villages, devastating the wigwams so that the timber wolves
-wandered unmolested among the dead, it was easy for the humpback
-sorcerer to ascribe the pestilence also to the influence of the Black
-Robes. Once their houses were set on fire. Again and again their
-lives were threatened. Often after tramping twenty miles through the
-sleet-soaked, snow-drifted spring forests, arriving at an Indian
-village foredone and exhausted, the Jesuit was met with no better
-welcome than a wigwam flap closed against his entrance, or a rabble of
-impish children hooting and jeering him as he sought shelter from house
-to house.
-
-But an influence was at work on the borders of the St. Lawrence that
-yearly rendered the Hurons more tractable. From raiding the
-settlements of the St. Lawrence, the Iroquois were sweeping in a
-scourge more deadly than smallpox up the Ottawa to the very forests of
-Georgian Bay. The Hurons no longer dared to go down to Quebec in
-swarming canoes. Only a few picked warriors--perhaps two hundred and
-fifty--would venture so near the Iroquois fighting ground.
-
-One winter night, as the priests sat round their hearth fire watching
-the mournful shadows cast by the blazing logs on the rude walls,
-Brebeuf, the soldier, lion-hearted, the fearless, told in a low, dreamy
-voice of a vision that had come,--the vision of a huge fiery cross
-rising slowly out of the forest and moving across the face of the sky
-towards the Huron country. It seemed to come from the land of the
-Iroquois. Was the priest's vision a dream, or his own intuition deeper
-than reason, assuming dire form, portending a universal fear? Who can
-tell? I can but repeat the story as it is told in their annals.
-
-{87} "How large was the cross?" asked the other priests. Brebeuf gazes
-long in the fire.
-
-"Large enough to crucify us all," he answers.
-
-
-And, as he had dreamed, fell the blow.
-
-St. Joseph, of the Lake Simcoe region, was situated a day's travel from
-the main fortified mission of Ste. Marie. Round it were some two
-thousand Hurons to whom Father Daniel ministered. Father Daniel was
-just closing the morning services on July the 4th, 1648. His tawny
-people were on their knees repeating the responses of the service, when
-from the forest, humming with insect and bird life, arose a sound that
-was neither wind nor running water--confused, increasing, nearing!
-Then a shriek broke within the fort palisades,--"The enemy! the
-Iroquois!" and the courtyard was in an uproar indescribable. Painted
-redskins, naked but for the breech clout, were dashing across the
-cornfields to scale the palisades or force the hastily slammed gates.
-Father Daniel rushed from church to wigwams rallying the Huron
-warriors, while the women and children, the aged and the feeble, ran a
-terrified rabble to the shelter of the chapel. Before the Hurons could
-man the walls, Iroquois hatchets had hacked holes of entrance in the
-palisades. The fort was rushed by a bloodthirsty horde making the air
-hideous with fiendish screams.
-
-"Fly! Save yourselves!" shouted the priest. "I stay here! We shall
-this day meet in Heaven!"
-
-In the volley and counter volley of ball and arrow, Father Daniel
-reeled on his face, shot in the heart. In a trice his body was cut to
-pieces, and the Iroquois were bathing their hands in his warm
-lifeblood. A moment later the village was in roaring flames, and on
-the burning pile were flung the fragments of the priest's body. The
-victors set out on the homeward tramp with a line of more than six
-hundred prisoners, the majority, women and children, to be brained if
-their strength failed on the march, to be tortured in the Iroquois
-towns if they survived the abuse on the way.
-
-{88} Next westward from the Lake Simcoe missions were St. Ignace with
-four hundred people and St. Louis with seven hundred, near the modern
-Penetang and within short distance of the Jesuits' strong headquarters
-on the River Wye. At these two missions labored Brebeuf, the giant,
-and a fragile priest named Lalemant.
-
-Encouraged by the total destruction of St. Joseph, the Iroquois that
-very fall took the warpath with more than one thousand braves.
-Ascending the Ottawa leisurely, they had passed the winter hunting and
-cutting off any stray wanderers found in the forest.
-
-The Hurons knew the doom that was slowly approaching. Yet they
-remained passive, stunned, terrified by the blow at St. Joseph. It was
-spring of 1649 before the warriors reached Georgian Bay. March winds
-had cleared the trail of snowdrifts, but the forests were still
-leafless. St. Ignace mission lay between Lake Simcoe and St. Louis.
-Approaching it one windy March night, the Iroquois had cut holes
-through the palisades before dawn and burst inside the walls with the
-yells and gyrations of some hideous hell dance. Here a warrior
-simulated the howl of the wolf. There another approached in the
-crouching leaps of a panther, all the while uttering the yelps and
-screams of a beast of prey lashed to fury. The poor Hurons were easy
-victims. Nearly all their braves happened to be absent hunting, and
-the four hundred women and children, rushing from the long houses half
-dazed with sleep, fell without realizing their fate, or found
-themselves herded in the chapel like cattle at the shambles, Iroquois
-guards at every window and door.
-
-Luckily three Hurons escaped over the palisades and rushed breathless
-through the forest to forewarn Brebeuf and Lalemant cooped up in St.
-Louis. The Iroquois came on behind like a wolf pack.
-
-"Escape! Escape! Run to the woods, Black Robes! There is yet time,"
-the Indian converts urged Brebeuf; but the lion-hearted stood
-steadfast, though Lalemant, new to scenes of carnage, turned white and
-trembled in spite of his resolution.
-
-{89} "Who would protect the women if the men fled like deer to the
-woods?" demanded Brebeuf, and the tigerish yells of the on-rushing
-horde answered the question.
-
-[Illustration: BREBEUF]
-
-Before day dawn had tipped the branches of the leafless trees with
-shafted sunlight, the enemy were hacking furiously at the palisades.
-Trapped and cornered, the most timid of animals will fight. With such
-fury, reckless from desperation, cherishing no hope, the Hurons now
-fought, but they were handicapped by lack of guns and balls. Thirty
-Iroquois had been slain, a hundred wounded, and the assailants drew off
-for breath. It was only the lull between two thunderclaps. A moment
-later they were on St. Louis' walls and had hacked through a dozen
-places. At these spots the fiercest fighting occurred, and those
-Iroquois who had not already bathed their faces in the gore of victims
-at St. Ignace were soon enough dyed in their own blood. Here, there,
-everywhere, were Brebeuf and Lalemant, fighting, administering last
-rites, exhorting the Hurons to perish valiantly. Then the rolling
-clouds of flame and smoke told the Hurons that their village was on
-fire. Some dashed back to die inside the burning wigwams. Others
-fought desperately to escape through the broken walls. A few, in the
-confusion and smoke, succeeded in reaching the woods, whence they ran
-to warn Ste. Marie on the Wye. Brebeuf and Lalemant had been knocked
-down, stripped, bound, and were now {90} half driven, half dragged,
-with the other captives to be tortured at Ignace. Not a sign of fear
-did either priest betray.
-
-One would fain pass over the next pages of the Jesuit records. It is
-inconceivable how human nature, even savage nature, so often stoops
-beneath the most repellent cruelties of the brute world. It is
-inconceivable unless one acknowledge an influence fiendish; but let us
-not judge the Indians too harshly. When the Iroquois warriors were
-torturing the Hurons and their missionaries, the populace of civilized
-European cities was outdoing the savages on victims whose sins were
-political.
-
-While the Jesuits of Ste. Marie were praying all day and night before
-the lighted altar for heavenly intervention to rescue Brebeuf and
-Lalemant, the two captured priests stood bound to the torture stakes,
-the gapingstock of a thousand fiends. When the Iroquois singed Brebeuf
-from head to foot with burning birch bark, he threatened them in tones
-of thunder with everlasting damnation for persecuting the servants of
-God. The Iroquois shrieked with laughter. Such spirit in a man was to
-their liking. Then, to stop his voice, they cut away his lips and
-rammed a red-hot iron into his mouth. Not once did the giant priest
-flinch or writhe at the torture stake. Then they brought out Lalemant,
-that Brebeuf might suffer the agony of seeing a weaker spirit flinch.
-Poor Lalemant fell at his superior's feet, sobbing out a verse of
-Scripture. Then they wreathed Lalemant in oiled bark and set fire to
-it.
-
-"We baptize you," they yelled, throwing hot water on the dying man.
-Then they railed out blasphemies, obscenities unspeakable, against the
-Jesuits' religion. Brebeuf had not winced, but his frame was relaxing.
-He sank to his knees, a dying man. With the yells of devils jealous of
-losing their prey, they ripped off his scalp while he was still alive,
-tore his heart from his breast, and drank the warm lifeblood of the
-priest. Brebeuf died at four in the afternoon. Strange to relate,
-Lalemant, of the weaker body, survived the tortures till daybreak,
-when, weary of the sport, the Indians desisted from their mad night
-orgies and put an end to his sufferings by braining him.
-
-{91} Over at Ste. Marie, Ragueneau and the other priests momentarily
-awaited the attack; but at Ste. Marie were forty French soldiers and
-ample supply of muskets. The Iroquois was bravest as the wolf is
-bravest--when attacking a lamb. Three hundred Hurons lay in ambush
-along the forest trail. These ran from the Iroquois like sheep; but
-when three hundred more sallied from the fort, led by the French, it
-was the Iroquois' turn to run, and they fled back behind the palisades
-of St. Louis. The Hurons followed, entered by the selfsame breaches
-the Iroquois had made, and drove the invaders out. More Iroquois
-rushed from Ignace to the rescue. A hundred Iroquois fell in the day's
-fight, and when they finally recaptured St. Louis, only twenty Hurons
-remained of the three hundred. The victory had been bought at too
-great cost. Tying their prisoners to stakes at St. Ignace, they heaped
-the courtyard with inflammable wood, set fire to all, and retreated,
-taking only enough prisoners to carry their plunder.
-
-[Illustration: REMNANTS OF WALLS OF FORT ST. MARY ON CHRISTIAN ISLAND
-IN 1891]
-
-Ste. Marie for the time was safe. The invaders had gone; but the blow
-had crushed forever the prowess of the Huron nation. The remaining
-towns had thought for nothing but flight. {92} Town after town was
-forsaken and burned in the summer of 1649, the corn harvest left
-standing in the fields, while the panic-stricken people put out in
-their canoes to take refuge on the islands of Georgian Bay. Ste. Marie
-on the Wye alone remained, and the reason for its existence was
-vanishing like winter snow before summer sun, for its people fled . . .
-fled . . . fled . . . daily fled to the pink granite islands of the
-lake. The Hurons begged the Jesuits to accompany them, and there was
-nothing else for Ragueneau to do. Ste. Marie was stripped, the stock
-slain for food. Then the buildings were set on fire. June 14, just as
-the sunset bathed water and sky in seas of gold, the priest led his
-homeless people down to the lake as Moses of old led the children of
-Israel. Oars and sweeps, Georgian Bay calm as glass, they rafted
-slowly out to the Christian Islands,--Faith, Hope, and Charity,--which
-tourists can still see from passing steamers, a long wooded line beyond
-the white water-fret of the wind-swept reefs. The island known on the
-map as Charity, or St. Joseph, was heavily wooded. Here the refugees
-found their haven, and the French soldiers cleared the ground {93} for
-a stone fort of walled masonry,--the islands offering little else than
-stone and timber, though the fishing has not failed to this day.
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF THE GREAT LAKES Showing the territory of the
-Jesuit Huron missions]
-
-By autumn the walled fort was complete, but some eight thousand
-refugees had gathered to the island. Such numbers could not subsist on
-Georgian Bay in summer. In winter their presence meant starvation, and
-before the spring of 1650 half had perished. Of the survivors, many
-had fed on the bodies of the dead. No help had come from Quebec for
-almost three years. The clothing of the priests had long since worn to
-shreds. Ragueneau and his helpers were now dressed in skins like the
-Indians, and reduced to a diet of nuts and smoked fish.
-
-With warm weather came sickness. And also came bands of raiding
-Iroquois striking terror to the Tobacco Indians. Among them, too,
-perished Jesuit priests, martyrs to the faith. Did some of the Hurons
-venture from the Christian Islands across to the mainland to hunt, they
-were beset by scalping parties and came back to the fort with tales
-that crazed Ragueneau's Indians with terror. The Hurons decided to
-abandon Georgian Bay. Some scattered to Lake Superior, to Green Bay,
-to Detroit. Others found refuge on Manitoulin Island. A remnant of a
-few hundreds followed Ragueneau and the French down the Ottawa to take
-shelter at Quebec. Their descendants may be found to this day at the
-mission of Lorette.
-
-To-day, as tourists drive through Quebec, marveling at the massive
-buildings and power and wealth of Catholic orders, do they pause to
-consider that the foundation stones of that power were dyed in the
-blood of these early martyrs? Or, as the pleasure seekers glide among
-the islands of Georgian Bay, do they ever ponder that this fair world
-of blue waters and pink granite islands once witnessed the most bloody
-tragedy of brute force, triumphant over the blasted hopes of religious
-zeal?
-
-
-
-
-{94}
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-FROM 1650 TO 1672
-
-Radisson captured by Iroquois--Radisson escapes--At Onandaga--How the
-French were saved--Word of the western land--Westward bound--Dollard's
-Heroes--The fight at the Long Sault--To seek the north sea--Discovers
-Hudson Bay--Origin of the great fur company
-
-
-Having destroyed the Hurons, who were under French protection, it is
-not surprising that the Iroquois now set themselves to destroy the
-French. From Montreal to Tadoussac the St. Lawrence swarmed with war
-canoes. No sooner had the river ice broken up and the birds begun
-winging north than the Iroquois flocked down the current of the
-Richelieu, across Lake St. Peter to Three Rivers, down the St. Lawrence
-to Quebec, up the St. Lawrence to Montreal. And the snows of midwinter
-afforded no truce to the raids, for the Iroquois cached their canoes in
-the forest, and roamed the woods on snowshoes. Settlers fled terrified
-from their farms to the towns; farmers dared not work in their fields
-without a sentry standing guard; Montreal became a prison; Three Rivers
-lay blockaded; and at Quebec the war canoes passed defiantly below the
-cannon of Cape Diamond, paddles beating defiance against the gun'els,
-or prows flaunting the scalps of victims within cannon fire of Castle
-St. Louis. Rich and poor, priests and parishioners, governors and
-habitants, all alike trembled before the lurking treachery. Father
-Jogues had been captured on his way from the Huron mission; Pere Poncet
-was likewise kidnapped at Quebec and carried to the tortures of the
-Mohawk towns; and a nephew of the Governor of Quebec was a few years
-later attacked while hunting near Lake Champlain.
-
-The outraged people of New France realized that fear was only
-increasing the boldness of the Iroquois. A Mohawk-chief fell into
-their hands. By way of warning, they bound him to a stake and burned
-him to death. The Indian revenge fell swift and sure. In 1653 the
-Governor of Three Rivers and twelve leading citizens were murdered a
-short distance from the fort gates. {95} One night in May of 1652 a
-tall, slim, swarthy lad about sixteen years of age was seen winding his
-way home to Three Rivers from a day's shooting in the marshes. He had
-set out at day dawn with some friends, but fear of the Iroquois had
-driven his comrades back. Now at nightfall, within sight of Three
-Rivers, when the sunset glittered from the chapel spire, he unslung his
-bag of game and sat down to reload his musket. Then he noticed that
-the pistols in his belt had been water-soaked from the day's wading,
-and he reloaded them too.
-
-Any one who is used to life in the open knows how at sundown wild birds
-foregather for a last conclave. Ducks were winging in myriads and
-settling on the lake with noisy flacker. Unable to resist the
-temptation of one last shot, the boy was gliding noiselessly forward
-through the rushes, when suddenly he stopped as if rooted to the
-ground, with hands thrown up and eyes bulging from his head. At his
-feet lay the corpses of his morning comrades,--scalped, stripped,
-hacked almost piecemeal! Then the instinct of the hunted thing, of
-flight, of self-protection, eclipsed momentary terror, and the boy was
-ducking into the rushes to hide when, with a crash of musketry from the
-woods, the Iroquois were upon him.
-
-When he regained consciousness, he was pegged out on the sand amid a
-flotilla of beached canoes, where Iroquois warriors were having an
-evening meal. So began the captivity, the love of the wilds, the wide
-wanderings of one of the most intrepid explorers in New France,--Pierre
-Esprit Radisson.
-
-His youth and the fact that he would make a good warrior were in his
-favor. When he was carried back to the Mohawk town and with other
-prisoners compelled to run the gauntlet between two lines of
-tormentors, Radisson ran so fast and dodged so dexterously that he was
-not once hit. The feat was greeted with shrieks of delight by the
-Iroquois; and the high-spirited boy was given in adoption to a captive
-Huron woman.
-
-Things would have gone well had he not bungled an attempt to escape;
-but one night, while in camp with three Iroquois hunters, an Algonquin
-captive entered. While the Iroquois {96} slept with guns stacked
-against the trees, the sleepless Algonquin captive rose noiselessly
-where he lay by the fire, seized the Mohawk warriors' guns, threw one
-tomahawk across to Radisson, and with the other brained two of the
-sleepers. The French boy aimed a blow at the third sleeper, and the
-two captives escaped. But they might have saved themselves the
-trouble. They were pursued and overtaken on Lake St. Peter, within
-sight of Three Rivers. This time Radisson had to endure all the
-_diableries_ of Mohawk torture. For two days he was kept bound to the
-torture stake. The nails were torn from his fingers, the flesh burnt
-from the soles of his feet, a hundred other barbarous freaks of impish
-Indian children wreaked on the French boy. Arrows with flaming points
-were shot at his naked body. His mutilated finger ends were ground
-between stones, or thrust into the smoking bowl of a pipe full of
-coals, or bitten by fiendish youngsters being trained up the way a
-Mohawk warrior should go.
-
-[Illustration: A CANADIAN IN SNOWSHOES (After La Potherie)]
-
-Radisson's youth, his courage, his very dare-devil rashness, together
-with presents of wampum belts from his Indian parents, {97} saved his
-life for a second time, and a year of wild wanderings with Mohawk
-warriors finally brought him to Albany on the Hudson, where the Dutch
-would have ransomed him as they had ransomed the two Jesuits, Jogues
-and Poncet; but the boy disliked to break faith a second time with his
-loyal Indian friends. Still, the glimpse of white man's life caused a
-terrible upheaval of revulsion from the barbarities, the filth, the
-vice, of the Mohawk camp. He could endure Indian life no longer. One
-morning, in the fall of 1653, he stole out from the Mohawk lodges,
-while the mist of day dawn still shadowed the forest, and broke at a
-run down the trail of the Mohawk valley for Albany. All day he ran,
-pursued by the phantom fright of his own imagination, fancying
-everything that crunched beneath his moccasined tread some Mohawk
-warrior, seeing in the branches that reeled as he passed the arms of
-pursuers stretched out to stop him;--on . . . and on . . . and on, he
-ran, pausing neither to eat nor rest; here dashing into the bed of a
-stream and running along the pebbled bottom to throw pursuers off the
-trail; there breaking through a thicket of brushwood away from the
-trail, only to come back to it breathless farther on, when some alarm
-of the wind in the trees or deer on the move had proved false. Only
-muscles of iron strength, lithe as elastic, could have endured the
-strain. Nightfall at last came, hiding him from pursuers; but still he
-sped on at a run, following the trail by the light of the stars and the
-rush of the river. By sunrise of the second day he was staggering; for
-the rocks were slippery with frost and his moccasins worn to tatters.
-It was four in the afternoon before he reached the first outlying cabin
-of the Dutch settlers. For three days he lay hidden in Albany behind
-sacks of wheat in a thin-boarded attic, through the cracks of which he
-could see the Mohawks searching everywhere. The Jesuit Poncet gave him
-passage money to take ship to Europe by way of New York. New York was
-then a village of a few hundred houses, thatch-roofed, with stone fort,
-stone church, stone barracks. Central Park was a rocky wilderness.
-What is now Wall Street was the stamping ground of pigs and goats.
-January of 1654 Radisson {98} reached Europe, no longer a boy, but a
-man inured to danger and hardships and daring, though not yet eighteen.
-
-
-When Radisson came back to Three Rivers in May he found changes had
-taken place in New France. Among the men murdered with the Governor of
-Three Rivers by the Mohawks the preceding year had been his sister's
-husband, and the widow had married one Medard Chouart de Groseillers,
-who had served in the Huron country as a lay helper with the martyred
-Jesuits. Also a truce had been patched up between the Iroquois and the
-French. The Iroquois were warring against the Eries and wanted arms
-from the French. A still more treacherous motive underlay the
-Iroquois' peace. They wanted a French settlement in their country as a
-guarantee of non-intervention when they continued to raid the refugee
-Hurons. Such duplicity was unsuspected by New France. The Jesuits
-looked upon the peace as designed by Providence to enable them to
-establish missions among the Iroquois. Father Le Moyne went from
-village to village preaching the gospel and receiving belts of wampum
-as tokens of peace--one belt containing as many as seven thousand
-beads. When the Onondagas asked for a French colony, Lauzon, the
-French Governor, readily consented if the Jesuits would pay the cost,
-estimated at about $10,000; and in 1656 Major Dupuis had led fifty
-Frenchmen and four Jesuits up the St. Lawrence in long boats through
-the wilderness to a little hill on Lake Onondaga, where a palisaded
-fort was built, and the lilies of France, embroidered on a white silk
-flag by the Ursuline nuns, flung from the breeze above the Iroquois
-land. The colony was hardly established before three hundred Mohawks
-fell on the Hurons encamped under shelter of Quebec, butchered without
-mercy, and departed with shouts of laughter that echoed below the guns
-at Cape Diamond, scalps waving from the prow of each Iroquois canoe.
-Quebec was thunderstruck, numb with fright. The French dared not
-retaliate, or the Iroquois would fall on the colony at Onondaga.
-Perhaps people who keep their vision too constantly fixed on heaven
-lose {99} sight of the practical duties of earth; but when eighty
-Onondagas came again in 1657, inviting a hundred Hurons to join the
-Iroquois Confederacy, the Jesuits again suspected no treachery in the
-invitation, but saw only a providential opportunity to spread one
-hundred Huron converts among the Iroquois pagans. Father Ragueneau,
-who had led the poor refugees down from the Christian Islands on
-Georgian Bay, now with another priest offered to accompany the Hurons
-to the Iroquois nation. An interpreter was needed. Young Radisson,
-now twenty-one years of age, offered to go as a lay helper, and the
-party of two hundred and twenty French, eighty Iroquois, one hundred
-Hurons, departed from the gates of Montreal, July 26.
-
-[Illustration: SAUSON'S MAP, 1656]
-
-
-Hardly were they beyond recall, before scouts brought word that twelve
-hundred Iroquois had gone on the warpath against Canada, and three
-Frenchmen of Montreal had been scalped. At last the Governor of Quebec
-bestirred himself: he caused twelve Iroquois to be seized and held as
-hostages for the safety of the French.
-
-The Onondagas had set out from Montreal carrying the Frenchmen's
-baggage. Beyond the first portage they flung the packs on the ground,
-hurried the Hurons into canoes so that no two Hurons were in one boat,
-and paddled over the {100} water with loud laughter, leaving the French
-in the lurch. Father Ragueneau and Radisson quickly read the ominous
-signs. Telling the other French to gather up the baggage, they armed
-themselves and paddled in swift pursuit. That night Ragueneau's party
-and the Onondagas camped together. Nothing was said or done to evince
-treachery. Friends and enemies, Onondagas and Hurons and white men,
-paddled and camped together for another week; but when, on August 3,
-four Huron warriors and two women forcibly seized a canoe and headed
-back for Montreal, the Onondagas would delay no longer. That afternoon
-as the Indians paddled inshore to camp on one of the Thousand Islands,
-some Onondaga braves rushed into the woods as if to hunt. As the
-canoes grated the pebbled shore a secret signal was given. The Huron
-men with their eyes bent on the beach, intent on landing, never knew
-that they had been struck. Onondaga hatchets, clubs, spears, were
-plied from the water side, and from the hunters ambushed on shore
-crashed musketry that mowed down those who would have fled to the woods.
-
-By night time only a few Huron women and the French had survived the
-massacre. Such was the baptism of blood that inaugurated the French
-colony at Onondaga. Luckily the fort built on the crest of the hill
-above Lake Onondaga was large enough to house stock and provisions.
-Outside the palisades there daily gathered more Iroquois warriors, who
-no longer dissembled a hunger for Jesuits' preaching. Among the
-warriors were Radisson's old friends of the Mohawks, and his foster
-father confessed to him frankly that the Confederacy were only delaying
-the massacre of the French till they could somehow obtain the freedom
-of the twelve Iroquois hostages held at Quebec.
-
-Daily more warriors gathered; nightly the war drum pounded; week after
-week the beleaguered and imprisoned French heard their stealthy enemy
-closing nearer and nearer on them, and the painted foliage of autumn
-frosts gave place to the leafless trees and the drifting snows of
-midwinter. The French were hemmed in completely as if on a desert
-isle, and no help could come from Quebec, where New France was
-literally under Iroquois siege.
-
-{101} The question was, what to do? Messengers had been secretly sent
-to Quebec, but the Mohawks had caught the scouts bringing back answers,
-and there was no safe escape from the colony through ambushed woods in
-midwinter. The Iroquois could afford to bide their time for victims
-who could not escape. All winter the whites secretly built boats in
-the lofts of the fort, but when the timbers were put together the boats
-had to be brought downstairs, and a Huron convert spread a terrifying
-report of a second deluge for which the white men were preparing a
-second Noah's Ark. Mohawk warriors at once scented an attempt to
-escape when the ice broke up in spring, and placed their braves in
-ambush along the portages. Also they sent a deputation to see if that
-story of the boats were true. Forewarned by Radisson, the whites built
-a floor over the boats, heaped canoes above the floor, and invited the
-Mohawk spies in. The Mohawks smiled grimly and were reassured. Canoes
-would be ripped into shingles if they ran the ice jam of spring. The
-Iroquois felt doubly certain of their victims; but Radisson, free to go
-among the warriors as one of themselves, learned that they were
-plotting to murder half the colony and hold the other half as hostages
-for the safety of the twelve Indians in the dungeon at Quebec. The
-whites could delay no longer. Something must be done, but what?
-Radisson, knowing the Indian customs, proposed a way out.
-
-No normally built savage could refuse an invitation to a sumptuous
-feast. According to Indian custom, no feaster dare leave uneaten food
-on his plate. Waste to the Indian is crime. In the words of the
-Scotch proverb, "Better burst than waste." And all Indians have
-implicit faith in dreams. Radisson dreamed--so he told the
-Indians--that the white men were to give them a marvelous banquet. No
-sooner dreamed than done! The Iroquois probably thought it a chance to
-obtain possession inside the fort; but the whites had taken good care
-to set the banquet between inner and outer walls.
-
-Such a repast no savage had ever enjoyed in the memory of the race.
-All the ambushed spies flocked in from the portages. {102} The painted
-warriors washed off their grease, donned their best buckskin, and
-rallied to the banquet as to battle. All the stock but one solitary
-pig, a few chickens and dogs, had been slaughtered for the kettle.
-Such an odor of luscious meat steamed up from the fort for days as
-whetted the warriors' hunger to the appetite of ravenous wolves.
-Finally, one night, the trumpets blew a blare that almost burst
-eardrums. Fifes shrilled, and the rub-a-dub-dub of a dozen drums set
-the air in a tremor. A great fire had been kindled between the inner
-and outer walls that set shadows dancing in the forest. Then the gates
-were thrown open, and in trooped the feasters. All the French acting
-as waiters, the whites carried in the kettles--kettles of wild fowl,
-kettles of oxen, kettles of dogs, kettles of porridge and potatoes and
-corn and what not? That is it--what not? Were the kettles drugged?
-Who knows? The feasters ate till their eyes were rolling lugubriously;
-and still the kettles came round. The Indians ate till they were
-torpid as swollen corpses, and still came the white men with more
-kettles, while the mischievous French lad, Radisson, danced a mad jig,
-shouting, yelling, "Eat! eat! Beat the drum! Awake! awake! Cheer up!
-Eat! eat!"
-
-By midnight every soul of the feast had tumbled over sound asleep, and
-at the rear gates were the French, stepping noiselessly, speaking in
-whispers, launching their boats loaded with provisions and ammunition.
-The soldiers were for going back and butchering every warrior, but the
-Jesuits forbade such treachery. Then Radisson, light-spirited as if
-the refugees had been setting out on a holiday, perpetrated yet a last
-trick on the warriors. To the bell rope of the main gate he fastened a
-pig, so when the Indians would pull the rope for admission, they would
-hear the tramp of a sentry inside. Then he stuffed effigies of men on
-guard round the windows of the fort.
-
-It was a pitchy, sleety night, the river roaring with the loose ice of
-spring flood, the forests noisy with the boisterous March wind. Out on
-the maelstrom of ice and flood launched the fifty-three colonists,
-March 20, 1658. By April they were safe {103} inside the walls of
-Quebec, and chance hunters brought word that what with sleep, and the
-measured tramp, tramp of the pig, and the baying of the dogs, and the
-clucking of the chickens inside the fort, the escape of the whites had
-not been discovered for a week. The Indians thought the whites had
-gone into retreat for especially long prayers. Then a warrior climbed
-the inner palisades, and rage knew no bounds. The fort was looted and
-burnt to the ground.
-
-
-Peltry traffic was the life of New France. Without it the colony would
-have perished, and now the rupture of peace with the Iroquois cut off
-that traffic. To the Iroquois land south of the St. Lawrence the
-French dared not go, and the land of the Hurons was a devastated
-wilderness. The boats that came out to New France were compelled to
-return without a single peltry, but there still remained the unknown
-land of the Algonquin northwest and beyond the Great Lakes. Year after
-year young French adventurers essayed the exploration of that land. In
-1634 Jean Nicolet, one of Champlain's wood runners, had gone westward
-as far as Green Bay and coasted the shores of Lake Michigan. Jesuits,
-where they preached on Lake Superior, had been told of a vast land
-beyond the Sweet Water Seas,--Great Lakes,--a land where wandered
-tribes of warriors powerful as the Iroquois.
-
-Yearly, when the Algonquins came down the Ottawa to trade, Jesuits and
-young French adventurers accompanied the canoes back up the Ottawa,
-hoping to reach the Unknown Land, which rumor said was bounded only by
-the Western Sea. However, the priests went no farther than Lake
-Nipissing; but two nameless French wood runners came back from Green
-Bay in August of 1656 with marvelous tales of wandering hunters to the
-north called "Christines" (Crees), who passed the winter hunting
-buffalo on a land bare of trees (the prairie) and the summer fishing on
-the shores of the North Sea (Hudson's Bay). They told also of fierce
-tribes south of the Christines (the Sioux), who traded with the Indians
-of the Spanish settlements in Mexico.
-
-{104} All New France became fired by these reports. When Radisson
-returned from Onondaga in April of 1659, he found his brother-in-law,
-Chouart Groseillers, just back from Nipissing, where he had been
-serving the Jesuits, with more tales of this marvelous undiscovered
-land. The two kinsmen decided to go back with the Algonquins that very
-year; for, confessed Radisson in his journal, "I longed to see myself
-again in a boat."
-
-Thirty other Frenchmen and two Jesuits had assembled in Montreal to
-join the Algonquins. More than sixty canoes set out from Montreal in
-June, the one hundred and forty Algonquins well supplied with firearms
-to defend themselves from marauding Iroquois. Numbers begot courage,
-courage carelessness; and before the fleet had reached the Chaudiere
-Falls, at the modern city of Ottawa, the canoes had spread far apart in
-utter forgetfulness of danger. Not twenty were within calling distance
-when an Indian prophet, or wandering medicine man, ran down to the
-shore, throwing his blanket and hatchet aside as signal of peace, and
-shouting out warning of Iroquois warriors ambushed farther up the river.
-
-Drunk with the new sense of power from the possession of French
-firearms, perhaps drunk too with French brandy obtained at Montreal,
-the Algonquins paused to take the strange captive on board, and
-returned thanks for the friendly warning by calling their benefactor a
-"coward and a dog and a hen." At the same time they took the
-precaution of sleeping in mid-stream with their canoes abreast tied to
-water-logged trees. A dull roar through the night mist foretold they
-were nearing the great Chaudiere Falls; and at first streak of day dawn
-there was a rush to land and cross the long portage before the mist
-lifted and exposed them to the hostiles.
-
-To any one who knows the region of Canada's capital the scene can
-easily be recalled: the long string of canoes gliding through the gray
-morning like phantoms; Rideau Falls shimmering on the left like a snowy
-curtain; the dense green of Gatineau Point as the birch craft swerved
-across the river inshore to the right; the wooded heights, now known as
-Parliament Hill, {105} jutting above the river mist, the new foliage of
-the topmost trees just tipped with the first primrose shafts of
-sunrise; then the vague stir and unrest in the air as the sun came up
-till the gray fog became rose mist shot with gold, and rose like a
-curtain to the upper airs, revealing the angry, tempest-tossed cataract
-straight ahead, hurtling over the rocks of the Chaudiere in walls of
-living waters. Where the lumber piles of Hull on the right to-day jut
-out as if to span Ottawa River to Parliament Hill, the voyageurs would
-land to portage across to Lake Du Chene.
-
-Just as they sheered inshore the morning air was split by a hideous din
-of guns and war whoops. The Iroquois had been lying in ambush at the
-portage. The Algonquins' bravado now became a panic. They abandoned
-canoes and baggage, threw themselves behind a windfall of trees, and
-poured a steady rain of bullets across the portage in order to permit
-the other canoes to come ashore. When the fog lifted, baggage and
-canoes lay scattered on the shore. Behind one barricade of logs lay
-the French and Algonquins; behind another, the Iroquois; and woe betide
-the warrior who showed his head or dared to cross the open. All day
-the warriors kept up their cross fire. Thirteen Algonquins had
-perished, and the French were only waiting a chance to abandon the
-voyage. Luckily, that night was pitch-dark. The Algonquin leader blew
-a long low call through his birch trumpet. All hands rallied and
-rushed for the boats to cross the river. All the Frenchmen's baggage
-had been lost. Of the white adventurers every soul turned back but
-Groseillers and Radisson.
-
-The Algonquins now made up in caution what they had at first lacked.
-They voyaged only by night and hid by day. No camp fires were kindled.
-No muskets were fired even for game; and the paddlers were presently
-reduced to food of _tripe de roche_--green moss scraped from rocks.
-Birch canoes could not cross Lake Huron in storm; so the Indians kept
-close to the south shore of Georgian Bay, winding among the pink
-granite islands, past the ruined Jesuit missions across to the Straits
-of Mackinac and on down Lake Michigan to Green Bay.
-
-{106} "But our mind was not to stay here," relates Radisson, "but to
-know the remotest people." Sometime between April and July of 1659 the
-two white men had followed the Indian hunters across what is now the
-state of Wisconsin to "a mighty river like the St. Lawrence." They had
-found the Mississippi, first of white men to view the waters since the
-treasure-seeking Spaniards of the south crossed the river. They had
-penetrated the Unknown. They had discovered the Great Northwest--a
-world boundlessly vast; so vast no man forever after in the history of
-the human race need be dispossessed of his share of the earth.
-Something of the importance of the discovery seems to have impressed
-Radisson; for he speaks of the folly of the European nations fighting
-for sterile, rocky provinces when here is land enough for all--land
-enough to banish poverty.
-
-The two Frenchmen's wanderings with the tribes of the prairie--whether
-those tribes were Omahas or Iowas or Mandanes or Mascoutins or
-Sioux--cannot be told here. It would fill volumes. I have told the
-story fully elsewhere. By spring of 1660 Radisson and Groseillers are
-back at Sault Ste. Marie, having gathered wealth of beaver peltries
-beyond the dreams of avarice; but scouts have come to the Sault with
-ominous news--news of one thousand Iroquois braves on the warpath to
-destroy every settlement in New France. Hourly, daily, weekly, have
-Quebec and Three Rivers and Montreal been awaiting the blow.
-
-The Algonquins refuse to go down to Quebec with Radisson and
-Groseillers. "Fools," shouts Radisson in full assembly of their chiefs
-squatting round a council fire, "are you going to allow the Iroquois to
-destroy you as they destroyed the Hurons? How are you going to fight
-the Iroquois unless you come down to Quebec for guns? Do you want to
-see your wives and children slaves? For my part, I prefer to die like
-a man rather than live a slave."
-
-The chiefs were shamed out of their cowardice. Five hundred young
-warriors undertook to conduct the two white men down to Quebec. They
-embarked at once, scouts to the fore reconnoitering all portages, and
-guards on duty wherever the {107} boats landed. A few Iroquois braves
-were seen near the Long Sault Rapids, but they took to their heels in
-such evident fright that Radisson was puzzled to know what had become
-of the one thousand braves on the warpath. Carrying the beaver pelts
-along the portage so they could be used as shields in case of attack,
-the Algonquins came to the foot of the Long Sault Rapids near Montreal,
-and saw plainly what had happened to the invading warriors. A
-barricade of logs the shape of a square fort stood on the shore. From
-the pickets hung the scalps of dead Indians and on the sands lay the
-charred remains of white men. Every tree for yards round was peppered
-with bullet holes. Here was a charred stake where some victim had been
-tortured; there the smashed remnants of half-burnt canoes; and at
-another point empty powder barrels. A terrible battle had been waged
-but a week before. Radisson could trace, inside the barricade of logs,
-holes scooped in the sand where the besieged, desperate with thirst,
-had drunk the muddy water. At intervals in the palisades openings had
-been hacked, and these were blood stained, as if the scene of the
-fiercest fighting. Bark had been burnt from the logs in places, where
-the assailants had set fire to the fort.
-
-From Indian refugees at Montreal, Radisson learned details of the
-fight. It was the battle most famous in early Canadian annals--the
-Long Sault. All winter Quebec, Three Rivers, and Montreal had cowered
-in terror of the coming Iroquois. In imagination the beleaguered
-garrisons foresaw themselves martyrs of Mohawk ferocity. It was
-learned that seven hundred of the Iroquois warriors were hovering round
-the Richelieu opposite Three Rivers. The rest of the braves had passed
-the winter man-hunting in the Huron country, and were in spring
-descending the Ottawa to unite with the lower band.
-
-Week after week Quebec awaited the blow; but the blow never fell, for
-at Montreal was a little band of seventeen heroes, led by a youth of
-twenty-five,--Adam Dollard,--who longed to wipe out the stain of a
-misspent boyhood by some glorious exploit in the service of the Holy
-Cross.
-
-{108} When word came that the upper foragers were descending from the
-country of the Hurons to unite with the lower Iroquois against
-Montreal, Dollard proposed to go up the Ottawa with a picked party of
-chosen fighters, waylay the Iroquois at the foot of the Long Sault
-Rapids, and so prevent the attack on Montreal. Sixteen young men
-volunteered to join him. Charles Le Moyne, now acting as interpreter
-at Montreal, begged the young heroes to delay till reenforcements could
-be obtained: seventeen Frenchmen against five hundred Mohawks meant
-certain death; but delay meant risk, and Dollard coveted nothing more
-than a death of glory. At the chapel of the Hotel Dieu the young
-heroes made what they knew would certainly be their last confession,
-bade eternal farewell to friends, and with crushed corn for provisions
-set out in canoes for the upper Ottawa. May 1, they came to the foot
-of the Long Sault. Here a barricade of logs had been erected in some
-skirmish the year before, and here, too, was the usual camping place of
-the Iroquois as their canoes came bounding down the swift waters of the
-Ottawa. Dollard and his brave boys landed, slung their kettles for the
-night meal, and sent scouts upstream to forewarn when the Iroquois
-came. The night was passed in prayer. Next day arrived unexpected
-reenforcements. Two bands of forty Hurons and four Algonquins, under a
-brave Huron convert of the Christian Islands, had asked Maisonneuve's
-permission to join Dollard and wreak their pent vengeance on the
-Mohawks. Early one morning the scouts reported five Iroquois canoes
-coming slowly downstream, and two hundred more warriors behind. There
-was not even care to bring a supply of water inside the barricade or
-remove kettles from the sticks. Posted in ambush, the young soldiers
-fired as soon as the first canoes came within range. This put the rest
-of the Iroquois on guard. The whites rushed for the shelter of their
-barricade. The Indians dashed to erect a fort of their own. Inside
-Dollard's palisades all was activity. Cracks were plastered up with
-mud between logs, four marksmen with double stands of arms posted at
-each loophole, and a big musketoon leveled straight for the {109}
-Iroquois redoubt. The Iroquois rushed out yelling like fiends, and
-jumping sideways as they advanced, to avoid becoming targets; but the
-scattering fire of the musketoon caught them full abreast and a Seneca
-chief fell dead. The Iroquois then broke up Dollard's canoes and tried
-to set fire to the logs; but again the musketoon's scattering bullets
-mowed a swath of death in the advancing ranks, and for a second time
-the red warriors sought shelter behind the logs. Probably to obtain
-truce till they could send word to the other warriors on the Richelieu,
-the Iroquois then hung out a flag of parley; but the Huron chief knew
-what peace with an Iroquois meant. He it was, on the Christian
-Islands, who, when the Iroquois had proposed a similar parley for the
-purpose of massacring the Hurons, invited their chiefs into the Huron
-camp and brained them for their treachery. Dollard's band made answer
-to the flag hoisted above the Iroquois pickets by rushing out, securing
-the head of the Seneca chief, and elevating it on a pike above their
-fort.
-
-But as the fight went on, the whites had to have water, and a few
-rushed for the river to fill kettles. This rejoiced the hearts of the
-Iroquois. They could guess if the whites were short of water, it only
-required more warriors to surround the barricade completely and compel
-surrender. Scouts had meanwhile gone for the Iroquois at Richelieu;
-and on the fifth day of the siege a roar, gathering volume as it
-approached, told Dollard that the seven hundred warriors were coming
-through the forest. Among the newcomers were Huron renegades, who
-approached within speaking distance of the fort and called out for the
-Hurons to save themselves from death by surrender. Death was plainly
-inevitable, and all the Hurons but the chief deserted. This reduced
-Dollard's band, from sixty to twenty. The whites were now weak from
-lack of food and sleep; but for three more days and nights the marksmen
-and musketoon plied such deadly aim at the assailants that the Iroquois
-actually held a council whether they should retire. The Iroquois
-chiefs argued that it would disgrace the nation forever if one thousand
-of their warriors were to retire before a handful of beardless white
-boys. {110} Solemnly the bundle of war sticks was thrown on the
-ground. Then each warrior willing to go on with the siege picked up a
-stick. The chiefs chose first and the rest were shamed into doing
-likewise. Inside the fort, Dollard's men were at the last extremities.
-Blistered and blackened with powder smoke, the fevered men were half
-delirious from lack of sleep and water. Some fell to their knees and
-prayed. Others staggered with sleep where they stood. Others had not
-strength to stand and sank, muttering prayers, to their knees. The
-Iroquois were adopting new tactics. They could not reach the palisades
-in the face of the withering fire from the musketoon, so they
-constructed a movable palisade of trees, behind which marched the
-entire band of warriors. In vain Dollard's marksmen aimed their
-bullets at the front carriers. Where one fell another stepped in his
-place. Desperate, Dollard resolved on a last expedient. Some accounts
-say he took a barrel of powder; others, that he wrapped powder in a
-huge bole of birch bark. Putting a light to this, he threw it with all
-his might; but his strength had failed; the dangerous projectile fell
-back inside the barricade, exploding; marksmen were driven from their
-places. A moment later the Iroquois were inside the barricade
-screeching like demons. They found only three Frenchmen alive; and so
-great was the Mohawk rage to be foiled of victims that they fell on the
-Huron renegades in their own ranks and put them to death on the spot.
-
-Such was the Battle of the Long Sault of which Radisson saw the scars
-on his way down the Ottawa. It saved New France. If seventeen boys
-could fight in this fashion, how--the Iroquois asked--would a fort full
-of men fight? A few days later Radisson was conducted in triumph
-through the streets of Quebec and personally welcomed by the new
-governor, d'Argenson.
-
-It can well be imagined that Radisson's account of the vast new lands
-discovered by him aroused enthusiasm at Quebec. Among the Crees,
-Radisson and Groseillers had heard of that Sea of the North--Hudson
-Bay--to which Champlain had {111} tried to go by way of the Ottawa.
-The Indians had promised to conduct the two Frenchmen overland to the
-North Sea; but Radisson deemed it wise not to reveal this fact lest
-other voyageurs should forestall them. Somehow the secret leaked out.
-Either Groseillers told it or his wife dropped some hint of it to her
-father confessor; but the two explorers were amazed to receive official
-orders to conduct the Jesuits to the North Sea by way of the Saguenay.
-They refused point-blank to go as subordinates on any expedition. The
-fur trade was at this time regulated by license. Any one who proceeded
-to the woods without license was liable to imprisonment, the galleys
-for life, death if the offense were repeated. Radisson and Groseillers
-asked for a license to go north in 1661. D'Avaugour, a bluff soldier
-who had become governor, would grant it only on condition of receiving
-half the profits. Groseillers and Radisson set off by night without a
-license.
-
-[Illustration: TITLE-PAGE--JESUIT RELATION OF 1662-1663]
-
-{112} This time the Indian canoes struck off into Lake Superior instead
-of Lake Michigan, and coasted that billowy inland sea with its iron
-shore and shadowy forests. On the northwest side of the lake,
-somewhere between Duluth and Fort William, the explorers joined the
-Crees, and proceeded northwestward with them, hunting along that Indian
-trail to become famous as the fur traders' highway--from Lake Superior
-to the Lake of the Woods. The first white man's fort built west of the
-Great Lakes, the terrible famine that winter, and the visits of the
-Sioux--are all a story in themselves. Spring found the explorers
-following the Crees over the height of land from Lake Superior to
-Hudson Bay. As soon as the ice loosened, dugouts were launched, and
-the voyageurs began that hardest of all canoe trips in America, through
-the forest hinterland of Ontario. Here the rivers were a stagnant
-marsh, with outlet hidden by dankest forest growth where the light of
-the sun never penetrated. There the waters swollen by spring thaw and
-broken by the ice jam whirled the {113} boats into rapids before the
-paddlers realized. There was wading to mid-waist in ice water. There
-were nights when camp was made on water-soaked moss. There were days
-when the windfall compelled the canoemen to take the canoes out of the
-water and carry them half the time. "At last," writes Radisson, "we
-came to the sea, where we found an old house all demolished and
-battered with bullets. The Crees told us about Europeans being here;
-and we went from isle to isle all that summer." At this time the
-canoes must have been coasting the south shore of James Bay, headed
-east; for Radisson presently explains that they came to a river, which
-rose in a lake near the source of the Saguenay--namely Rupert River.
-What was the old house battered with bullets? Was it Hudson's winter
-fort of 1610-1611? The Indians of Rupert River to this day have
-legends of Hudson having come back to his fort when cast away by the
-mutineers.
-
-[Illustration: THE JESUIT MAP OF LAKE SUPERIOR (From the Relation of
-1670-1671)]
-
-The furs that Radisson and Groseillers brought back from the north this
-time were worth fabulous wealth. The cargo saved New France from
-bankruptcy; but the explorers had defied both Church and Governor, and
-all the greedy monopolists of Quebec fell on Radisson and Groseillers
-with jealous fury. They were fined $20,000 to build a fort at Three
-Rivers, though given permission to inscribe their coats of arms on the
-gate. A $30,000 fine went to the public treasury of New France, and a
-tax of $70,000 was imposed by the Farmers of the Revenue. Of the total
-cargo there was left to Radisson and Groseillers only $20,000.
-
-
-Disgusted, the two explorers personally appealed to the Court of
-France; but there the monopolists were all-powerful, and justice was
-denied. They tried to induce some of the fishing fleet off Cape Breton
-to venture to the North Sea; but there the monopolists' malign
-influence was again felt. They were accused of having broken the laws
-of Quebec. Zechariah Gillam, a sea captain of Boston, who chanced to
-be at Port Royal, offered them his vessel for a voyage to Hudson Bay;
-but when the {114} doughty captain came to the ice-locked straits, his
-courage failed and he refused to enter. Finally, at Port Royal, with
-the last of their meager and dwindling capital, they hired two ships
-for a voyage; but one was wrecked on Sable Island while fishing for
-supplies, and instead of sailing for Hudson Bay in 1665, Radisson and
-Groseillers were summoned to Boston in a lawsuit over the lost vessel.
-
-In Boston they met commissioners of the English government and were
-invited to lay their plans before Charles II, King of England. At last
-the tide of fortune seemed to be turning. Sailing with Sir George
-Carterett, after pirate raid and shipwreck, they reached London to find
-the plague raging, and were ordered to Windsor, where Charles received
-them, recommended their venture to Prince Rupert, and provided 2 pounds
-a week each for their living expenses.
-
-[Illustration: Charles II]
-
-From being penniless outcasts, Radisson and Groseillers suddenly
-wakened to find themselves famous. Groseillers seems to have kept in
-the background, but Radisson, the younger man, enjoyed the full blaze
-of glory, was seen in the King's box at the theater, and was presently
-paying furious court to Mistress Mary Kirke, daughter of Sir John
-Kirke, whose ancestors had captured Quebec. What with war and the
-plague, it was 1668 before the English Admiralty could loan the two
-ships _Eaglet_ and _Nonsuch_ for a voyage to Hudson Bay. The expense
-was to be defrayed by a band of {115} friends known as the "Gentlemen
-Adventurers of England Trading to Hudson Bay," subscribing so much
-stock in cash, provision, and goods for trade. Radisson's ship, the
-_Eaglet_, was driven back, damaged by storm; but the other, under
-Groseillers, went on to Hudson Bay, where the marks set up on the
-overland voyage were found at Rupert River, and a small fort was built
-for trade. During the delay Radisson was not idle in London. He wrote
-the journals of his first four voyages. He married Mary Kirke--some
-accounts say, eloped with her. With the help of King Charles and
-Prince Rupert he organized what is now known as the Hudson's Bay Fur
-Company; for when Groseillers' ship returned in the fall of 1669, its
-success in trade had been so great that the Adventurers at once applied
-for a royal charter of exclusive monopoly in trade to all the regions,
-land and sea, rivers and territories, adjoining Hudson Bay. The
-monopoly of the Hudson's Bay Company to the Great Northwest was granted
-by King Charles in May, 1670.
-
-Here, then, was the situation. England was intrenched south of the St.
-Lawrence. England was taking armed possession of all lands bordering
-on Hudson Bay and such other lands as the Adventurers might find.
-Wedged between was New France with a population of less than six
-thousand. If France could have foreseen what her injustice to two poor
-adventurers would cost the nation in blood and money, it would have
-paid her to pension Radisson like a prince of the blood royal.
-
-
-NOTE TO CHAPTER VI. The viceroys of New France were shifted so
-frequently that little record remains of several but their names. The
-official list of the governors under the French regime stands as
-follows:
-
-Samuel de Champlain, died at Quebec, Christmas, 1635.
-
-Marc Antoine de Chasteaufort, _pro tem_.
-
-Charles Huault de Montmagny, 1636.
-
-Louis d'Ailleboust of the Montreal Crusaders, 1648.
-
-Jean de Lauzon, 1651.
-
-Charles de Lauzon-Charny (son), _pro tem_.
-
-Louis d'Ailleboust, 1657.
-
-Viscount d'Argenson, 1658, a young man who quarreled with Jesuits.
-
-Viscount d'Avagour, 1661, a bluff soldier, who also quarreled with
-Jesuits.
-
-De Mezy, 1663, appointed by Jesuits' influence, but quarreled with them.
-
-{116} Marquis de Tracy, 1663, who was viceroy of all French possessions
-in America, and really sent out to act as general.
-
-De Courcelle, 1665, who acts as governor under De Tracy and succeeds
-him.
-
-Frontenac, 1672, was recalled through influence of Jesuits, whose
-interference he would not tolerate in civil affairs.
-
-De La Barre, 1682, an impotent, dishonest old man, who came to mend his
-fortunes.
-
-De Brisay de Denonville, 1685.
-
-Frontenac, 1689.
-
-De Calliere, 1699.
-
-Marquis de Vaudreuil, 1703.
-
-Charles le Moyne, Baron de Longeuil, 1725, son of Le Moyne, the famous
-fighter and interpreter of Montreal; brother of Le Moyne d'Iberville,
-the commander.
-
-Marquis de Beauharnois, 1726.
-
-Count de la Galissoniere, 1747.
-
-Marquis de la Jonquiere, 1749.
-
-Charles le Moyne, Baron de Longeuil, 1752, son of former Governor.
-
-Duquesne,1752.
-
-Marquis de Vaudreuil, 1755, descendant of first Vaudreuil.
-
-
-
-
-{117}
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-FROM 1672 TO 1688
-
-The fur fairs of Montreal--Customs of people--Shiploads of brides--The
-Iroquois and De Tracy--Who first found Ontario?--Through western
-Ontario--Up the Great Lakes--Marquette and Jolliet--Frontenac and La
-Salle--La Salle rouses enemies--La Salle descends the Mississippi--Death
-of La Salle
-
-
-While Radisson and other coureurs of the woods were ranging the wilds
-from the St. Lawrence to the Mississippi and from the Great Lakes to
-Hudson Bay, changes were almost revolutionizing the little colony of New
-France. No longer was everything subservient to missions. When
-Marguerite Bourgeoys and Jeanne Mance, of Ville-Marie Mission at
-Montreal, went home to France to bring out more colonists in 1659, they
-learned that the founder of their mission--Dauversiere, the tax
-collector--had gone bankrupt. Montreal was penniless, though sixty more
-men and thirty-two girls were accompanying the nuns out this very year.
-The Sulpician priests had from the first been ardent friends of the
-Montrealers. The priests of St. Sulpice now assumed charge of Montreal.
-Though "God's Penny" was still collected at the fairs and market places
-of Old France for the conversion of Indians at Mont Royal, the fur trade
-was rapidly changing the character of the place.
-
-Afraid of the Iroquois raiders, the tribes of the Up-Country now flocked
-to Montreal instead of Quebec, where the traders met them annually at the
-great Fur Fairs.
-
-No more picturesque scene exists in Canada's past than these Fur Fairs.
-Down the rapids of the Ottawa and the St. Lawrence bounded the canoes of
-the Indian hunters, Hurons and Pottawatomies from Lake Michigan, Crees
-and Ojibways from Lake Superior, Iroquois and Eries and Neutrals from
-what is now the Province of Ontario, the northern Indians in long birch
-canoes light as paper, the Indians of Ontario in dugouts of oak and
-walnut. The Fur Fair usually took place between June and August; and the
-Viceroy, magnificent in red cloak faced with velvet and ornamented with
-gold braid, came up from Quebec {118} for the occasion and occupied a
-chair of state under a marquee erected near the Indian tents. Wigwams
-then went up like mushrooms, the Huron and Iroquois tents of sewed bark
-hung in the shape of a square from four poles, the tepees of the Upper
-Indians made of birch and buffalo hides, hung on poles crisscrossed at
-the top to a peak, spreading in wide circle to the ground. Usually the
-Fur Fair occupied a great common between St. Paul Street and the river.
-Furs unpacked, there stalked among the tents great sachems glorious in
-robes of painted buckskin garnished with wampum, Indian children stark
-naked, young braves flaunting and boastful, wearing headdresses with
-strings of eagle quills reaching to the ground, each quill signifying an
-enemy taken. Then came "the peddlers,"--the fur merchants,--unpacking
-their goods to tempt the Indians, men of the colonial noblesse famous in
-history, the Forests and Le Chesnays and Le Bers. Here, too, gorgeous in
-finery, bristling with firearms, were the bushrovers, the interpreters,
-the French voyageurs, who had to come out of the wilds once every two
-years to renew their licenses to trade. There was Charles Le Moyne, son
-of an innkeeper of Dieppe, who had come to Montreal as interpreter and
-won such wealth as trader that his family became members of the French
-aristocracy. Two of his descendants became governors of Canada; and the
-history of his sons is the history of Canada's most heroic age. There
-was Louis Jolliet, who had studied for the Jesuit priesthood but turned
-fur trader among the tribes of Lake Michigan. There was Daniel Greysolon
-Duluth, a man of good birth, ample means, and with the finest house in
-Montreal, who had turned bushrover, gathered round him a band of three or
-four hundred lawless, dare-devil French hunters, and now roamed the woods
-from Detroit halfway to Hudson Bay, swaying the Indians in favor of
-France and ruling the wilds, sole lord of the wilderness. There were
-Groseillers and Radisson and a shy young man of twenty-five who had
-obtained a seigniory from the Sulpicians at Lachine--Robert Cavelier de
-La Salle. Sometimes, too, Father Marquette came down with his Indians
-from the missions on Lake Superior. Maisonneuve, {119} too, was there,
-grieving, no doubt, to see this Kingdom of Heaven, which he had set up on
-earth, becoming more and more a kingdom of this world. Later, when the
-Hundred Associates lost their charter and Canada became a Royal Province
-governed directly by the Crown, Maisonneuve was deprived of the
-government of Montreal and retired to die in obscurity in Paris. Louis
-d'Ailleboust, Governor of Montreal when Maisonneuve is absent, Governor
-at Quebec when state necessities drag him from religious devotion, moves
-also in the gay throng of the Fur Fair. In later days is a famous
-character at the Fur Fairs--La Motte Cadillac of Detroit, bushrover and
-gentleman like Duluth, but prone to break heads when he comes to town
-where the wine is good.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF MONTREAL IN 1672]
-
-Trade was regulated by royal license. Only twenty-five canoes a year
-were allowed to go to the woods with three men in each, and a license was
-good for only two years. Fines, branding, the galleys for life, death,
-were the penalties for those who traded without license; but that did not
-prevent more than one thousand young Frenchmen running off to the woods
-to live like Indians. In fact, there was no other way for the youth of
-New {120} France to earn a living. Penniless young noblemen, criminals
-escaping the law, the sons of the poorest, all were on the same footing
-in the woods. He who could persuade a merchant to outfit him for trade
-disappeared in the wilds; and if he came back at all, came back with
-wealth of furs and bought off punishment, "wearing sword and lace and
-swaggering as if he were a gentleman," the annals of the day complain;
-and a long session in the confessional box relieved the prodigal's
-conscience from the sins of a life in the woods. If my young gentleman
-were rich enough, the past was forgotten, and he was now on the highroad
-to distinguished service and perhaps a title.
-
-[Illustration: LA SALLE'S HOUSE NEAR MONTREAL]
-
-In the early days a beaver skin could be bought for a needle or a bell or
-a tin mirror; and in spite of all the priests could do to prevent it,
-brandy played a shameful part in the trade. In vain the priests preached
-against it, and the bishop thundered anathemas. The evils of the brandy
-traffic were apparent to all--the Fur Fairs became a bedlam of crime; but
-when the Governor called in all the traders to confer on the subject, it
-was plain that if the Indians did _not_ obtain liquor from the French,
-they would go on down with their furs to the English of New York, and the
-French Governor was afraid to forbid the evil.
-
-[Illustration: KITCHEN, CHATEAU DE RAMEZAY, MONTREAL]
-
-The Fur Fair over, the Governor departed for Quebec; the Indians, for
-their own land; the bushrovers, for their far wanderings; and there
-settled over Montreal for another year drowsy quiet but for the chapel
-bells of St. Sulpice and Ville Marie and Bon Secours--the Chapel of Ste.
-Anne's Good Help--built close on the verge of the river, that the
-voyageurs coming and going might cross themselves as they passed her
-spire; drowsy peace but for the chapel chimes ringing . . . ringing . . .
-ringing . . . morning . . . noon . . . and night . . . lilting and
-singing and calling all New France to prayers. As the last canoe glided
-up the river, and sunset silence fell on Montreal, there knelt before the
-dimly lighted altars of the chapels, shadow figures--Maisonneuve praying
-for his mission; D'Ailleboust, asking Heaven's blessing on the new shrine
-down at St. Anne de Beaupre near Quebec, which he had built for the
-miraculous {121} healing of physical ills; Dollier de Casson, priest of
-the wilds, manly and portly and strong, wilderness fighter for the Cross.
-Then the organ swells, and the chant rolls out, and till the next Fur
-Fair Montreal is again a mission.
-
-
-When New France becomes a Crown Colony, the government consists solely
-and only of the Sovereign Council, to whom the King transmits his will.
-This council consists of the Governor, his administrative officer called
-the "Intendant," the bishop, and several of the inhabitants of New France
-nominated by the other members of the council. Of elections there are
-absolutely none. Popular meetings are forbidden. New France is a
-despotism, with the Sovereign Council representing the King. Domestic
-disputes, religious quarrels, civil cases, crimes,--all come before the
-Sovereign Council. Clients could plead their own cases without a fee, or
-hire a notary. Cases are tried by the Sovereign Council. Laws are
-passed by it. Fines are imposed and sentences pronounced; but as the
-Sovereign Council met only once a week, the management of affairs fell
-chiefly to the Intendant, whose palace became known as the Place of
-Justice. Of systematic taxation there was none. One fourth of all
-beaver went for public revenue. Part of Labrador was reserved as the
-King's Domain for trading, and sometimes a duty of ten per cent was
-charged on liquor brought into the colony. The stroke of the Sovereign
-Council's pen could create a law, and the stroke of the King's pen annul
-it. Laws are passed forbidding men, who are not nobles, assuming the
-title of Esquire or Sieur on penalty of what would be a $500 fine. "Wood
-is not to be piled on the streets." "Chimneys are to be built large
-enough to admit a chimney sweep." "Only shingles of oak and walnut may
-be used in towns where there is danger of fire." Swearing is punished by
-fines, by the disgrace of being led through the streets at the end of a
-rope and begging pardon on knees at the church steps, by branding if the
-offense be repeated. Murderers are punished by being shot, or exposed in
-an iron cage on the cliffs above the St. Lawrence till death {122} comes.
-No detail is too small for the Sovereign Council's notice. In fact, a
-case is on record where a Mademoiselle Andre is expelled from the colony
-for flirting so outrageously with young officers that she demoralizes the
-garrison. Mademoiselle avoids the punishment by bribing one of the
-officers on the ship where she is placed, and escaping to land in man's
-clothing.
-
-The people of New France were regulated in every detail of their lives by
-the Church as well as the Sovereign Council. For trading brandy to the
-Indians, Bishop Laval thunders excommunication at delinquents; and Bishop
-St. Valliere, his successor, publicly rebukes the dames of New France for
-wearing low-necked dresses, and curling their hair, and donning gay
-ribbons in place of bonnets. "The vanity of dress among women becomes a
-greater scandal than before," he complains. "They affect immodest
-headdress, with heads uncovered or only concealed under a collection of
-ribbons, laces, curls, and other vanities."
-
-[Illustration: LAVAL (After the portrait in Laval University, Quebec)]
-
-The laws came from the King and Sovereign Council. The enforcement of
-them depended on the Intendant. As long as he was a man of integrity,
-New France might live as happily as a family under a despotic but wise
-father. It was when the Intendant became corrupt that the system fell to
-pieces. {123} Of all the intendants of New France, one name stands
-preeminent, that of Jean Talon, who came to Canada, aged forty, in 1665,
-at the time the country became a Crown Province. One of eleven children
-of Irish origin, Talon had been educated at the Jesuit College of Paris,
-and had served as an intendant in France before coming to Canada.
-Officially he was to stand between the King and the colony, to transmit
-the commands of one and the wants of the other. He was to stand between
-the Governor and the colony, to watch that the Governor did not overstep
-his authority and that the colony obeyed the laws. He was to stand
-between the Church and the colony, to see that the Church did not usurp
-the prerogatives of the Governor and that the people were kept in the
-path of right living without having their natural liberties curtailed.
-He was, in a word, to accept the thankless task of taking all the cuffs
-from the King and the kicks from the colony, all the blame of whatever
-went amiss and no credit for what went well.
-
-When Talon came to Canada there were less than two thousand people in the
-colony. He wrote frantically to His Royal Master for colonists. "We
-cannot depeople France to people Canada," wrote the King; but from his
-royal revenue he set aside money yearly to send men to Canada as
-soldiers, women as wives. In 1671 one hundred and sixty-five girls were
-sent out to be wedded to the French youth. A year later came one hundred
-and fifty more. Licenses would not be given to the wood rovers for the
-fur trade unless they married. Bachelors were fined unless they quickly
-chose a wife from among the King's girls. Promotion was withheld from
-the young ensigns and cadets in the army unless they found brides.
-Yearly the ships brought girls whom the cures of France had carefully
-selected in country parishes. Yearly Talon gave a bounty to the
-middle-aged duenna who had safely chaperoned her charges across seas to
-the convents of Quebec and Montreal, where the bashful suitors came to
-make choice. "We want country girls, who can work," wrote the Intendant;
-and girls who could work the King sent, instructing Talon to mate as many
-as he {124} could to officers of the Carignan Regiment, so that the
-soldiers would be likely to turn settlers. Results: by 1674 Canada had a
-population of six thousand seven hundred; by 1684, of nearly twelve
-thousand, not counting the one thousand bush lopers who roamed the woods
-and married squaws.
-
-Between Acadia and Quebec lay wilderness. Jean Talon opened a road
-connecting the two far-separated provinces. The Sovereign Council had
-practically outlawed the bush lopers. Talon pronounced trade free, and
-formed them into companies of bush fighters--defenders of the colony.
-Instead of being wild-wood bandits, men like Duluth at Lake Superior and
-La Motte Cadillac at Detroit became commanders, holding vast tribes loyal
-to France. For years there had been legends of mines. Talon opened
-mines at Gaspe and Three Rivers and Cape Breton. All clothing had
-formerly been imported from France. Talon had the inhabitants
-taught--and they badly needed it, for many of their children ran naked as
-Indians--to weave their own clothes, make rugs, tan leather, grow straw
-for hats,--all of which they do to this day, so that you may enter a
-habitant house and not find a single article except saints' images, a
-holy book, and perhaps a fiddle, which the habitant has not himself made.
-"The Jesuits assume too much authority," wrote the King. Talon lessened
-their power by inviting the Recollets to come back to Canada and by
-encouraging the Sulpicians. Instead of outlawing young Frenchmen for
-deserting to the English, Talon asked the King to grant titles of
-nobility to those who were loyal, like the Godefrois and the Denis' and
-the Le Moynes and young Chouart Groseillers, son of Radisson's
-brother-in-law, so that there sprang up a Canadian noblesse which was as
-graceful with the frying pan of a night camp fire in the woods as with
-the steps of a stately dance in the governor's ballroom. Above all did
-Talon encourage the bush-rovers in their far wanderings to explore new
-lands for France.
-
-
-New France had not forgotten the Iroquois treachery to the French colony
-at Onondaga. Iroquois raid and ambuscade kept the hostility of these
-sleepless foes fresh in French memory. {125} When Jean Talon came to
-Canada as intendant, there had come as governor Courcelle, with the
-Marquis de Tracy as major general of all the French forces in
-America,--the West Indies as well as Canada. The Carignan Regiment of
-soldiers seasoned in European campaigns had been sent to protect the
-colonists from Indian raid; and it was determined to strike the Iroquois
-Confederacy a blow that would forever put the fear of the French in their
-hearts.
-
-Richelieu River was still the trail of the Mohawk warrior; and De Tracy
-sent his soldiers to build forts on this stream at Sorel and
-Chambly--named after officers of the regiment. January, 1666, Courcelle,
-the Governor, set out on snowshoes to invade the Iroquois Country with
-five hundred men, half Canadian bushrovers, half regular soldiers. By
-some mistake the snow-covered trail to the Mohawks was missed, the wrong
-road followed, and the French Governor found himself among the Dutch at
-Schenectady. March rains had set in. Through the leafless forests in
-driving sleet and rain retreated the French. Sixty had perished from
-exposure and disease before Courcelle led his men back to the Richelieu.
-The Mohawk warriors showed their contempt for this kind of white-man
-warfare by raiding some French hunters on Lake Champlain and killing a
-young nephew of De Tracy.
-
-Nevertheless, on second thought, twenty-four Indian deputies proceeded to
-Quebec with the surviving captives to sue for peace. De Tracy was ready
-for them. Solemnly the peace pipe had been puffed and solemnly the peace
-powwow held. The Mohawk chief was received in pompous state at the
-Governor's table. Heated with wine and mistaking French courtesy for
-fear, the warrior grew boastful at the white chief's table.
-
-"This is the hand," he exclaimed, proudly stretching out his right arm,
-"this is the hand that split the head of your young man, O Onontio!"
-
-"Then by the power of Heaven," thundered the Marquis de Tracy, springing
-to his feet ablaze with indignation, "it is the hand that shall never
-split another head!"
-
-{126} Forthwith the body of the great Mohawk chief dangled a scarecrow to
-the fowls of the air; and the other terrified deputies tore breathlessly
-back for the Iroquois land with such a story as one may guess.
-
-With thirteen hundred men and three hundred boats the Marquis de Tracy
-and Courcelle set out from the St. Lawrence in October for the Iroquois
-cantons. Charles Le Moyne, the Montreal bushrover, led six hundred
-wild-wood followers in their buckskin coats and beaded moccasins, with
-hair flying to the wind like Indians; and one hundred Huron braves were
-also in line with the Canadians. The rest of the forces were of the
-Carignan Regiment. Dollier de Casson, the Sulpician priest, powerful of
-frame as De Tracy himself, marched as chaplain.
-
-[Illustration: A MAP IN THE RELATION OF 1662-1663 (This map includes
-Lake Ontario and the Iroquois Country. It shows the relative positions
-of the Five Nations and Fort d'Orange (Albany). It also gives plans of
-the forts on the Richelieu and shows their location)]
-
-
-Never had such an expedition been seen before on the St. Lawrence. Drums
-beat reveille at peep of dawn. Fifes outshrilled the roar of rapids, and
-stately figures in gold braid {127} and plumed hats glided over the
-waters of the Richelieu among the painted forests of the frost-tinted
-maples. Indians have a way of conveying news that modern trappers
-designate as "the moccasin telegram." "Moccasin telegram" now carried
-news of the coming army to the Iroquois villages, and the alarm ran like
-wildfire from Mohawk to Onondaga and from Onondaga to Seneca. When the
-French army struck up the Mohawk River, and to beat of drum charged in
-full fury out of the rain-dripping forests across the stubble fields to
-attack the first palisaded village, they found it desolate, deserted,
-silent as the dead, though winter stores crammed the abandoned houses and
-wildest confusion showed that the warriors had fled in panic. So it was
-with the next village and the next. The Iroquois had stampeded in blind
-flight, and the only show of opposition was a wild whoop here and there
-from ambush. De Tracy took possession of the land for France, planted a
-cross, and ordered the villages set on fire. For a time, at least, peace
-was assured with the Iroquois.
-
-
-Who first discovered the Province of Ontario? Before Champlain had
-ascended the Ottawa, or the Jesuits established their missions south of
-Lake Huron, young men sent out as wood rovers had canoed up the Ottawa
-and gone westward to the land of the Sweet Water Seas. Was it Vignau,
-the romancer, or Nicolet, the coureur de bois, or the boy Etienne Brule,
-who first saw what has been called the Garden of Canada, the rolling
-meadows and wooded hills that lie wedged in between the Upper and the
-Lower of the Great Lakes? Tradition says it was Brule; but however that
-may be, little was known of what is now Ontario except in the region of
-the old Jesuit missions around Georgian Bay. It was not even known that
-Michigan and Huron were _two_ lakes. The Sulpicians of Montreal had a
-mission at the Bay of Quinte on Lake Ontario, and the south shore of the
-lake, where it touched on Iroquois territory, was known to the Jesuits;
-but from Quinte Bay to Detroit--a distance equal to that from New York to
-Chicago, or London to Italy--was an unknown world.
-
-{128} But to return to the explorations which Jean Talon, the Intendant,
-had set in motion--
-
-When Dollier de Casson, the soldier who had become Sulpician priest,
-returned from the campaign against the Iroquois, he had been sent as a
-missionary to the Nipissing Country. There he heard among the Indians of
-a shorter route to the Great River of the West--the Mississippi--than by
-the Ottawa and Sault Ste. Marie. The Indians told him if he would ascend
-the St. Lawrence to Lake Ontario and Lake Erie, he could portage overland
-to the Beautiful River,--Ohio,--which would carry him down to the
-Mississippi.
-
-The Sulpicians had been encouraged by Talon in order to eclipse and hold
-in check the Jesuits. They were eager to send their missionaries to the
-new realm of this Great River, and hurried Dollier de Casson down to
-Quebec to obtain Intendant Talon's permission.
-
-There, curiously enough, Dollier de Casson met Cavalier de La Salle, the
-shy young seigneur of La Chine, intent on almost the same aim,--to
-explore the Great River. Where the Sulpicians had granted him his
-seigniory above Montreal he had built a fort, which soon won the nickname
-of La Chine,--China,--because its young master was continually
-entertaining Iroquois Indians within the walls, to question them of the
-Great River, which might lead to China.
-
-Governor Courcelle and Intendant Talon ordered the priest and young
-seigneur to set out together on their explorations. The Sulpicians were
-to bear all expenses, buying back La Salle's lands to enable him to
-outfit canoes with the money. Father Galinee, who understood map making,
-accompanied Dollier de Casson, and the expedition of seven birch canoes,
-with three white men in each, and two dugouts with Seneca Indians, who
-had been visiting La Salle, set out from Montreal on July 6, 1669. Not a
-leader in the party was over thirty-five years of age. Dollier de
-Casson, the big priest, was only thirty-three and La Salle barely
-twenty-six. Corn meal was carried as food. For the rest, they were to
-depend on chance shots. With {129} numerous portages, keeping to the
-south shore of the St. Lawrence because that was best known to the Seneca
-guides, the canoes passed up Lake St. Louis and Lake St. Francis and
-glided through the sylvan fairyland of the Thousand Islands, coming out
-in August on Lake Ontario, "which," says Galinee, "appeared to us like a
-great sea." Striking south, they appealed to the Seneca Iroquois for
-guides to the Ohio, but the Senecas were so intent on torturing some
-prisoners recently captured, that they paid no heed to the appeal. A
-month was wasted, and the white men proceeded with Indian slaves for
-guides, still along the south shore of the lake.
-
-[Illustration: GALINEE'S MAP OF THE GREAT LAKES, 1669 (The next oldest
-chart to that of Champlain)]
-
-At the mouth of Niagara River they could hear the far roar of the famous
-falls, which Indian legend said "fell over rocks twice the height of the
-highest pine tree." The turbulent torrent of the river could not be
-breasted, so they did not see the falls, but rounded on up Lake Ontario
-to the region now near the city of Hamilton. Here they had prepared to
-portage overland to some stream that would bring them down to Lake Erie,
-when, to their amazement, they learned from a passing Indian camp that
-two Frenchmen were on their way down this very lake from searching copper
-mines on Lake Superior.
-
-{130} The two Frenchmen were Louis Jolliet, yet in his early twenties, to
-become famous as an explorer of the Mississippi, and one Monsieur Jean
-Pere, soldier of fortune, who was to set France and England by the ears
-on Hudson Bay. September 24, as La Salle and Dollier were dragging their
-canoes through the autumn-colored sumacs of the swamp, there plunged from
-among the russet undergrowth the two wanderers from the north,--Jolliet
-and Pere, dumb with amazement to meet a score of men toiling through this
-tenantless wilderness. The two parties fell on each other's necks with
-delight and camped together. Jolliet told a story that set the
-missionaries' zeal on fire and inflamed La Salle with mad eagerness to
-pass on to the goal of his discoveries. Jolliet and Pere had not found
-the copper mine for Talon on Lake Superior, but they had learned two
-important secrets from the Indians. First, if Iroquois blocked the way
-up the Ottawa, there was clear, easy water way down to Quebec by Lake
-Huron and Lake Ste. Claire and Lake Erie. Jolliet's guide had brought
-them down this way, first of white men to traverse the Great Lakes, only
-leaving them as they reached Lake Erie and advising them to portage
-across up Grand River to avoid Niagara Falls. Second, the Indians told
-him the Ohio could be reached by way of Lake Erie.
-
-Sitting round the camp fires near what is now Port Stanley, La Salle
-secretly resolved to go on down to Quebec with Jolliet and rearrange his
-plans independent of the missionaries. The portaging through swamps had
-affected La Salle's health, and he probably judged he could make quicker
-time unaccompanied by missionaries. As for Galinee and Dollier, when
-they knelt in prayer that night, they fervently besought Heaven to let
-them carry the Gospel of truth to those benighted heathen west of Lake
-Michigan, of whom Jolliet told. Dollier de Casson sent a letter by
-Jolliet to Montreal, begging the Sulpicians to establish a mission near
-what is now Toronto. Early next morning an altar was laid on the propped
-paddles of the canoes and solemn service held. La Salle and his four
-canoes went back to Montreal with Jolliet and Pere; Dollier and Galinee
-coasted along the shores of Lake Erie westward.
-
-{131} It was October. The forests were leafless, the weather damp, the
-lake too stormy for the frail canoes. As game was plentiful, the priests
-decided to winter on a creek near Port Dover. Here log houses were
-knocked up, and the servants dispersed moose hunting for winter supplies.
-Then followed the most beautiful season of the year in the peninsula of
-Ontario, Indian summer, dreamy warm days after the first cold, filling
-the forest with a shimmer of golden light, the hills with heat haze,
-while the air was odorous with smells of nuts and dried leaves and grapes
-hanging thick from wild vines. "It was," writes Galinee, "simply an
-Earthly Paradise, the most beautiful region that ever I have seen in my
-life, with open woods and meadows and rivers and game in plenty." In
-this Earthly Paradise the priests passed the winter, holding services
-three times a week--"a winter that ought to be worth ten years of any
-other kind of life" Dollier calculated, counting up masses and vespers
-and matins. Sometimes when the snow lay deep and the weird voices of the
-wind hallooed with bugle sound through the lonely forest, the priests
-listening inside fancied that they heard "the hunting of
-Arthur,"--unearthly huntsmen coursing the air after unearthly game.
-
-March 23 (Sunday), 1670, the company paraded down to Lake Erie from their
-sheltered quarters, and, erecting a cross, took possession of this land
-for France. Then they launched their boats to ascend the other Sweet
-Water Seas. The preceding autumn the priests had lost some of their
-baggage, and now, in camp near Point Pelee, a sweeping wave carried off
-the packs in which were all the holy vessels and equipments for the
-mission chapel. They decided to go back to Montreal by way of Sault Ste.
-Marie, and ascended to Lake Ste. Claire. Game had been scarce for some
-days, the weather tempestuous, and now the priests thought they had found
-the cause. On one of the rocks of Lake Ste. Claire was a stone, to which
-the Indians offered sacrifices for safe passage on the lakes. To the
-priests the rude drawing of a face seemed graven images of
-paganism,--signs of Satan, who had baffled their hunting and caused loss
-{132} of their packs. "I consecrated one of my axes to break this god of
-stone, and, having yoked our canoes abreast, we carried the largest
-pieces to the middle of the river and cast them in. God immediately
-rewarded us, for we killed a deer." Following the east shore of Lake
-Huron, the priests came, on May 25, to Sault Ste. Marie, where the
-Jesuits Dablon and Marquette had a mission. Three days late, they
-embarked by way of the Ottawa for Montreal, where they arrived on June
-18, 1670.
-
-
-Meanwhile, what had become of Jolliet and Pere and La Salle?
-
-They have no sooner reached Quebec with their report than Talon orders
-St. Lusson to go north and take possession at Sault Ste. Marie of all
-these unknown lands for France. Jolliet accompanies St. Lusson.
-Nicholas Perrot, a famous bushrover, goes along to summon the Indians,
-and the ceremony takes place on June 14, 1671, in the presence of the
-Jesuits at the Sault, by which the King of France is pronounced lord
-paramount of all these regions.
-
-When Jolliet comes down again to Quebec, he finds Count Frontenac has
-come as governor, and Jean Talon, the Intendant, is sailing for France.
-Before leaving, Talon has recommended Jolliet as a fit man to explore the
-Great River of the West. With him is commissioned Jacques Marquette, the
-Jesuit, who has labored among the Indians west of Lake Superior. The two
-men set out in birch canoes, with smoked meat for provisions, from
-Michilimackinac mission, May 17, 1673, for Green Bay, Lake Michigan.
-Ascending Fox River on June 17, they induce the Mascoutin Indians, who
-had years ago conducted Radisson by this same route, to pilot them across
-the portage to the headwaters of the Wisconsin River.
-
-Their way lies directly across that wooded lake region, which has in our
-generation become the resort first of the lumberman, then of the
-tourist,--a rolling, wooded region of rare sylvan beauty, park-like
-forests interspersed with sky-colored lakes. Six weeks from the time
-they had left the Sault, Wisconsin River carried their canoe out on the
-swift eddies of a mighty river {133} flowing south,--the Mississippi.
-For the first time the boat of a Canadian voyageur glided down its waters.
-
-Each night as the explorers landed to sleep under the stars, the tilted
-canoe inverted with end on a log as roof in case of rain, Marquette fell
-to knees and invoked the Virgin's aid on the expedition; and each morning
-as Jolliet launched the boat out on the waters through the early mist, he
-headed closely along shore on the watch for sign or footprint of Indian.
-
-The river gathered volume as it rolled southward, carving the clay cliffs
-of its banks in a thousand fantastic forms. Where the bank was broken,
-the prairies were seen in heaving seas of grass billowing to the wind
-like water, herds of countless buffalo pasturing knee-deep. To Marquette
-and Jolliet, burning with enthusiasm, it seemed as if they were finding a
-new world for France half as large as all Europe. For two weeks not a
-sail, not a canoe, not a soul did they see. Then the river carried them
-into the country of the Illinois, past Illinois Indians who wore French
-clothing, and pictured rocks where the Indians had painted their sign
-language. There was no doubt now in the explorers' minds,--the
-Mississippi did not lead to China but emptied in the Gulf of Mexico. A
-furious torrent of boiling muddy water pouring in on the right forewarned
-the Missouri; and in a few more days they passed on the left the clear
-current of Beautiful River,--the Ohio.
-
-It was now midsummer. The heat was heavy and humid. Marquette's health
-began to suffer, and the two explorers spread an awning of sailcloth
-above the canoe as they glided with the current. Towards the Arkansas,
-Indians appeared on the banks, brandishing weapons of Spanish make.
-Though Jolliet, with a peace pipe from the Illinois Indians, succeeded in
-reassuring the hostiles, it was unsafe to go farther south. They had
-established the fact,--the Mississippi emptied into the Gulf of
-Mexico,--and on July 17 turned back. It was harder going against stream,
-which did not mend Marquette's health; so when the Illinois Indians
-offered to show them a shorter way to Lake Michigan, they followed up
-Illinois River and crossed the Chicago portage {134} to Lake Michigan.
-Jolliet went on down to Quebec with his report. Marquette remained half
-ill to establish missions in Michigan. Here, traveling with his Indians
-in 1675, the priest died of the malady contracted in the Mississippi
-heat, and was buried in a lonely grave of the wildwood wilderness where
-he had wandered. Louis Jolliet married and settled down on his seigniory
-of Anticosti Island.
-
-
-Though he had as yet little to show for the La Chine estate, which he had
-sacrificed, La Salle had not been idle, but was busy pushing French
-dominion by another route to the Mississippi.
-
-Count Frontenac had come to New France as all the viceroys
-came--penniless, to mend his fortunes; and as the salary of the Governor
-did not exceed $3000 a year, the only way to wealth was by the fur trade;
-but which way to look for fur trade! Hudson Bay, thanks to Radisson, was
-in the hands of England. Taudoussac was farmed out to the King. The
-merchants of Quebec and Three Rivers and Montreal absorbed all the furs
-of the tribes from the Ottawa; and New England drained the Iroquois land.
-There remained but one avenue of new trade, and that was west of the
-Lakes, where Jolliet had been.
-
-Taking only La Salle into his confidence, Frontenac issued a royal
-mandate commanding all the officers and people of New France to
-contribute a quota of men for the establishment of a fort on Lake
-Ontario. By June 28, 1673, the same year that Jolliet had been
-dispatched for the Mississippi, there had gathered at La Chine, La
-Salle's old seigniory near Montreal, four hundred armed men and one
-hundred and twenty canoes, which Frontenac ordered painted gaudily in red
-and blue. With these the Governor moved in stately array up the St.
-Lawrence, setting the leafy avenues of the Thousand Islands ringing with
-trumpet and bugle, and sweeping across Lake Ontario in martial lines to
-the measured stroke of a hundred paddles.
-
-Long since, La Salle's scouts had scurried from canton to canton,
-rallying the Iroquois to the council of great "Onontio." At break of
-day, July 13, while the sunrise was just bursting up {135} over the lake,
-Frontenac, with soldiers drawn up under arms, himself in velvet cloak
-laced with gold braid, met the chiefs of the Iroquois Confederacy at the
-place to be known for years as Fort Frontenac, now known as Kingston, a
-quiet little city at the entrance of Lake Ontario on the north shore.
-
-[Illustration: ROBERT DE LA SALLE]
-
-Ostensibly the powwow was to maintain peace. In reality, it was to
-attract the Iroquois, and all the tribes with whom they traded, away from
-the English, down to Frontenac's new fort with their furs. It is a
-question if all the military pomp deceived a living soul. Before the
-Governor had set his sappers to work on the foundations of a fort, the
-merchants of Montreal--the Le Bers and Le Moynes and Le Chesnayes and Le
-Forests--were furious with jealousy. Undoubtedly Fort Frontenac would be
-the most valuable fur post in America.
-
-{136}
-
-[Illustration: OLD PLAN OF FORT FRONTENAC]
-
-Determined to have the support of the Court, where his wife was in high
-favor, Count Frontenac dispatched La Salle to France in 1674 with letters
-of strongest recommendation, which, no doubt, Jean Talon, the former
-Intendant, indorsed on the spot. La Salle's case was a strong one. He
-was to offer to found a line of forts establishing French dominion from
-Lake Ontario to the valley of the Mississippi, which Jolliet had just
-explored. In return, he asked for patent of nobility and the grant of a
-seigniory at Fort Frontenac; in other words, the monopoly of the furs
-there, which would easily clear him $20,000 a year. It has never been
-proved, but one may suspect that his profits were to be divided with
-Count Frontenac. Both requests were at once granted; and La Salle came
-back to a hornet's nest of enmity in Canada. Space forbids to tell of
-the means taken to defeat him; for, by promising to support Recollet
-friars at his fort instead of Jesuits, La Salle had added {137} to the
-enmity of the merchants, the hatred of the Jesuits. Poison was put in
-his food. Iroquois were stirred up to hostility against him.
-
-Meanwhile no enmity checks his ardor. He has replaced the wooden walls
-of Fort Frontenac with stone, mounted ten cannon, manned the fort with
-twenty soldiers, maintained more than forty workmen, cleared one hundred
-acres for crops, and in 1677 is off again for France to ask permission to
-build another fort above Niagara. This time, when La Salle comes out, he
-is accompanied by a man famous in American annals, a soldier of fortune
-from Italy, cousin of Duluth the bushrover, one Henry Tonty, a man with a
-copper hand, his arm having been shattered in war, who presently comes to
-have repute among the Indians as a great "medicine man," because blows
-struck by that metal hand have a way of being effective. By 1678 the
-fort is built above Niagara. By 1679 a vessel of forty-five tons and ten
-cannon is launched on Lake Erie, the _Griffon_, the first vessel to plow
-the waters of the Great Lakes. As she slides off her skids, August 17,
-to go up to Michilimackinac for a cargo of furs, _Te Deum_ is chanted
-from the new fort, and Louis Hennepin, the Dutch friar, standing on deck
-in full vestments, asks Heaven's blessing on the ship's venture.
-
-Scant is the courtesy of the Michilimackinac traders as the _Griffon's_
-guns roar salute to the fort. Cold is the welcome of the Jesuits as La
-Salle enters their chapel dressed in scarlet mantle trimmed with gold.
-And to be frank, though La Salle was backed by the King, he had no right
-to trade at Michilimackinac, for his monopoly explicitly states he shall
-not interfere with the trade of the north, but barter only with the
-tribes towards the Illinois. Never mind! he loads his ships to the water
-line with furs to pay his increasing debts, and sends the ship on down to
-Niagara with the cargo, while he and Tonty, with different parties,
-proceed to the south end of Lake Michigan to cross the Chicago portage
-leading to the Mississippi. Did the jealous traders bribe the pilot to
-sink the ship to bottom? Who knows? Certain it is when Tonty and La
-Salle went down the {138} Illinois early in the new year of 1680, news of
-disasters came thick and fast. The _Griffon_ had sunk with all her
-cargo. The ship from France with the year's supplies for La Salle at
-Fort Frontenac had been wrecked at the mouth of the St. Lawrence; and
-worse than these losses, which meant financial ruin, here among the
-Illinois Indians were Mascoutin Indian spies bribed to stir up trouble
-for La Salle. Small wonder that he named the fort built here Fort
-Crevecoeur,--Fort Broken Heart.
-
-[Illustration: THE BUILDING OF THE _GRIFFON_ (After the engraving in
-Father Hennepin's "Nouvelle Decouverte," Amsterdam, 1704)]
-
-If La Salle had been fur trader only, as his enemies averred, and not
-patriot, one wonders why he did not sit still in his fort at Frontenac
-and draw his profits of $20,000 a year, instead of risking loss and
-poison and ruin and calumny and death by chasing the phantom of his great
-desire to found a New France on the Mississippi.
-
-Never pausing to repine, he orders Hennepin, the friar, to take two
-voyageurs and descend Illinois River as far as the Mississippi. Tonty he
-leaves in charge of the Illinois fort. He {139} himself proceeds
-overland the width of half a continent, to Fort Frontenac and Montreal.
-
-Friar Hennepin's adventures have been told in his own book of marvels,
-half truth, half lies. Jolliet, it will be remembered, had explored the
-Great River south of the Wisconsin. Hennepin struck up from the mouth of
-the Illinois, to explore north, and he found enough adventure to satisfy
-his marvel-loving soul. The Sioux captured him somewhere near the
-Wisconsin. In the wanderings of his captivity he went as far north as
-the Falls of St. Anthony, the site of Minnesota's Twin Cities, and he
-finally fell in with a band of Duluth's bushrovers from Kaministiquia
-(modern Fort William), Lake Superior.
-
-
-The rest of the story of La Salle on the Mississippi is more the history
-of the United States than of Canada, and must be given in few words.
-
-When La Salle returned from interviewing his creditors on the St.
-Lawrence, he found the Illinois Indians dispersed by hostile Iroquois
-whom his enemies had hounded on. Fort Crevecoeur had been destroyed and
-plundered by mutineers among his own men. Only Tonty and two or three
-others had remained faithful, and they had fled for their lives to Lake
-Michigan. Not knowing where Tonty had taken refuge, La Salle pushed on
-down the Illinois River, and for the first time beheld the Mississippi,
-the goal of all his dreams; but anxiety for his lost men robbed the event
-of all jubilation. Once more united with Tonty at Michilimackinac, La
-Salle returned dauntlessly to the Illinois. Late in the fall of 1681 he
-set out with eighteen Indians and twenty Frenchmen from Lake Michigan for
-the Illinois. February of 1682 saw the canoes floating down the
-winter-swollen current of the Illinois River for the Mississippi, which
-was reached on the 6th. A week later the river had cleared of ice, and
-the voyageurs were camped amid the dense forests at the mouth of the
-Missouri. The weather became warmer. Trees were donning their bridal
-attire of spring and the air was heavy with the odor of blossoms.
-Instead of high cliffs, carved fantastic by {140} the waters, came
-low-lying swamps, full of reeds, through which the canoes glided and lost
-themselves. Camp after camp of strange Indian tribes they visited, till
-finally they came to villages where the Indians were worshipers of the
-sun and wore clothing of Spanish make. By these signs La Salle guessed
-he was nearing the Gulf of Mexico. Fog lay longer on the river of
-mornings now. Ground was lower. They were nearing the sea. April 6 the
-river seemed to split into three channels. Different canoes followed
-each channel. The muddy river water became salty. Then the blue sky
-line opened to the fore through the leafy vista of the forest-grown
-banks. Another paddle stroke, and the canoes shot out on the Gulf of
-Mexico,--La Salle erect and silent and stern as was his wont. April 9,
-1682, a cross is planted with claim to this domain for France. To fire
-of musketry and chant of Te Deum a new empire is created for King Louis
-of France. Louisiana is its name.
-
-
-Take a map of North America. Look at it. What had the pathfinders of
-New France accomplished? Draw a line from Cape Breton to James Bay, from
-James Bay down the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico, from the Gulf of
-Mexico across to Cape Breton. Inside the triangle lies the French empire
-of the New World,--in area the size of half Europe. That had the
-pathfinders accomplished for France.
-
-La Salle was too ill to proceed at once from the Mississippi to Quebec.
-As long as Frontenac remained governor, La Salle could rely on his hungry
-creditors and vicious enemies--now eager as wolves, to confiscate his
-furs and seize his seigniory at Fort Frontenac--being restrained by the
-strong hand of the Viceroy; but while La Salle lay ill at the Illinois
-fort, Frontenac was succeeded by La Barre as viceroy; and the new
-Governor was a weak, avaricious old man, ready to believe any evil tale
-carried to his ears. He at once sided with La Salle's enemies, and wrote
-the French King that the explorer's "_head was turned_"; that La Salle
-"_accomplished nothing, but spent his life leading bandits through the
-forests, pillaging Indians; {141} that all the story of discovering the
-Mississippi was a fabrication_." When La Salle came from the wilderness
-he found himself a ruined man. Fort Frontenac had been seized by his
-enemies. Supplies for the Mississippi had been stopped, and officers
-were on their way to seize the forts there.
-
-Leaving Tonty in charge of his interests, La Salle sailed for France
-where he had a strong friend at court in Frontenac. As it happened,
-Spain and France were playing at the game of checkmating each other; and
-it pleased the French King to restore La Salle's forts and to give the
-Canadian explorer four ships to colonize the Mississippi by way of the
-Gulf of Mexico. This was to oust Spain from her ancient claim on the
-gulf; but Beaujeu, the naval commander of the expedition, was not in
-sympathy with La Salle. Beaujeu was a noble by birth; La Salle, only a
-noble of the merchant classes. The two bickered and quarreled from the
-first. By some blunder, when the ships reached the Gulf of Mexico, laden
-with colonists, in December of 1684, they missed the mouth of the
-Mississippi and anchored off Texas. The main ship sailed back to France.
-Two others were wrecked, and La Salle in desperation, after several trips
-seeking the Mississippi, resolved to go overland by way of the
-Mississippi valley and the Illinois to obtain aid in Canada for his
-colonists. All the world knows what happened. Near Trinity River in
-Texas some of his men mutinied. Early in the morning of the 19th of
-March, 1687, La Salle left camp with a friar and Indian to ascertain what
-was delaying the plotters, who had not returned from the hunt. Suddenly
-La Salle seemed overwhelmed by a great sadness. He spoke of death. A
-moment later, catching sight of one of the delinquents, he had called
-out. A shot rang from the underbush; another shot; and La Salle reeled
-forward dead, with a bullet wound gaping in his forehead. The body of
-the man who had won a new empire for France was stripped and left naked,
-a prey to the foxes and carrion birds. So perished Robert Cavelier de La
-Salle, aged forty-four.
-
-Nor need the fate of the mutineers be told here. The fate of mutineers
-is the same the world over. Having slain their {142} commander, they
-fell on one another and perished, either at one another's hands or among
-the Indians. As for the colonists of men, women, and girls left in
-Texas, the few who were not massacred by the Indians fell into the hands
-of the Spaniards. La Salle's debts at the time of his death were what
-would now be half a million dollars. His life had ended in what the
-world calls ruin, but France entered into his heritage.
-
-With the passing of Robert de La Salle passes the heroic age of
-Canada,--its age of youth's dream. Now was to come its manhood,--its
-struggles, its wars, its nation building, working out a greater destiny
-than any dream of youth.
-
-
-
-
-{143}
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-FROM 1679 TO 1713
-
-Radisson quarrels with company--Up Labrador coast--Radisson captures
-his rivals--Radisson ordered back to England--Death of Radisson--Jan
-Pere the spy--The raid on Moose Factory--Sargeant besieged
-
-
-Before leaving for France, Jean Talon, the Intendant, had set another
-exploration in motion. English trade was now in full sway on Hudson
-Bay. In possession of the Mississippi, the Ohio, the Illinois, the
-Great Lakes, France controlled all avenues of approach to the Great
-Northwest except Hudson Bay. This she had lost through injustice to
-Radisson; and already the troublesome question had come up,--What was
-to be the boundary between the fur-trading domain of the French
-northward from the St. Lawrence and the fur-trading domain of the
-English southward from Hudson Bay. Fewer furs came down to Quebec from
-Labrador, the King's Domain, from Kaministiquia (Fort William), the
-stamping ground of Duluth, the forest ranger. The furs of these
-regions were being drained by the English of Hudson Bay.
-
-Talon determined to put a stop to this, and had advised Frontenac
-accordingly. August, 1671, Governor Frontenac dispatched the English
-Jesuit--Father Albanel--with French guides and Indian voyageurs to set
-up French arms on Hudson Bay and to bear letters to Radisson and
-Groseillers. The journey was terrific. I have told the story
-elsewhere. Autumn found the voyageurs beyond the forested shores of
-the Saguenay and Lake St. John, ascending a current full of boiling
-cascades towards Lake Mistassini. Then the frost-painted woods became
-naked as antlers, with wintry winds setting the dead boughs crashing;
-and the ice, thin as mica, forming at the edges of the streams, had
-presently thickened too hard for the voyageurs to break with their
-paddles. Albanel and his comrades wintered in the Montaignais' lodges,
-which were banked so heavily with snow that scarcely a breath of pure
-air could penetrate the {144} stench. By day the priest wandered from
-lodge to lodge, preaching the gospel. At night he was to be found afar
-in the snow-padded solitudes of the forest engaged in prayer. At last,
-in the spring of 1672, thaw set the ice loose and the torrents rushing.
-Downstream on June 10 launched Albanel, running many a wild-rushing
-rapid, taking the leap with the torrential waters over the lesser
-cataracts, and avoiding the larger falls by long detours over rocks
-slippery as ice, through swamps to a man's armpits. The hinterland of
-Hudson Bay, with its swamps and rough portages and dank forests of
-unbroken windfall, was then and is to-day the hardest canoe trip in
-North America; but towards the end of June the French canoes glided out
-on the arm of the sea called James Bay, hoisted the French flag, and in
-solemn council with the Indians presented gifts to induce them to come
-down the Saguenay to Quebec. Fort Rupert, the Hudson's Bay Company's
-post, consisted of two barrack-like log structures. When Albanel came
-to the houses he found not a soul, only boxes of provisions and one
-lonely dog.
-
-A few weeks previously the men of the English company had gone on up
-the west coast of Hudson Bay, prospecting for the site of a new
-settlement. Before Albanel had come at all, there was friction among
-the English. Radisson and Groseillers were Catholics and French, and
-they were supervisors of the entire trade. Bayly, the English
-governor, was subject to them. So was Captain Gillam, with whom they
-had quarreled long ago, when he refused to take his boat into Hudson
-Straits on the voyage from Port Royal. Radisson and Groseillers were
-for establishing more posts up the west coast of Hudson Bay, farther
-from the competition of Duluth's forest rovers on Lake Superior. They
-had examined the great River Nelson and urged Bayly, the English
-governor, to build a fort there. Bayly sulked and blustered by turns.
-In this mood they had come back to Prince Rupert to find the French
-flag flying above their fort and the English Jesuit, Albanel, snugly
-ensconced, with passports from Governor Frontenac and personal letters
-for Radisson and Groseillers.
-
-{145} England and France were at peace. Bayly had to respect Albanel's
-passports, but he wished this English envoy of French rivals far
-enough; and when Captain Gillam came from England the old quarrel
-flamed out in open hostility. Radisson and Groseillers were accused of
-being in league with the French traders. A thousand rumors of what
-next happened have gained currency. One writer says that the English
-and French came to blows; another, that Radisson and Groseillers
-deserted, going back overland with Albanel. In the Archives of
-Hudson's Bay House I found a letter stating that the English captain
-kidnapped the Jesuit Albanel and carried him a captive to England. It
-may as well be frankly stated these rumors are all sheer fiction.
-Albanel went back overland as he came. Radisson and Groseillers did
-not go with him, though there may have been blows. Instead, they went
-to England on Gillam's ship to present their case to the company.
-
-[Illustration: PRINCE RUPERT (After the painting by Sir P. Lely)]
-
-The Hudson's Bay Company was uneasy. Radisson and Groseillers were
-aliens. True, Radisson had married Mary Kirke, the daughter of a
-shareholder, and was bound to the English; but if Radisson and
-Groseillers had forsworn one land, might they not forswear another, and
-go back to the French, as Frontenac's letters no doubt urged? The
-company offered Radisson a salary of 100 pounds a year to stay as clerk
-in England. They did not want him out on the bay again; but {146}
-France had offered Radisson a commission in the French navy. Without
-more ado the two Frenchmen left London for Paris, and Paris for America.
-
-
-The year 1676 finds Radisson back in Quebec engaged in the beaver trade
-with all those friends of his youth whose names have become famous,--La
-Salle of Fort Frontenac, and Charles Le Moyne the interpreter of
-Montreal, and Jolliet of the Mississippi, and La Forest who befriended
-La Salle, Le Chesnaye who opposed him, and Duluth whose forest rangers
-roved from Lake Superior to Hudson Bay. It can be guessed what these
-men talked about over the table of the Sovereign Council at Quebec,
-whither they had been called to discuss the price of beaver and the use
-of brandy.
-
-The fur traders were at that time in two distinct rings,--the ring of
-La Salle and La Forest, supported by Frontenac; the Montreal ring,
-headed by Le Chesnaye, who fought against the opening of the west
-because Lake Ontario trade would divert his trade from the Ottawa.
-Radisson's report of that west coast of Hudson Bay, in area large as
-all New France, interested both factions of the fur trade intensely.
-He was offered two ships for Hudson Bay by the men of both rings.
-Because England and France were at peace, Frontenac dared not recognize
-the expedition officially; but he winked at it,--as he winked at many
-irregularities in the fur trade,--granted the Company of the North
-license to trade on Hudson Bay, and gave Radisson's party passports "to
-fish off Gaspe." In the venture Radisson, Groseillers, and the son
-Chouart Groseillers, invested their all, possibly amounting to $2500
-each. The rest of the money for the expedition came from the Godfreys,
-titled seigneurs of Three Rivers; Dame Sorel, widow of an officer in
-the Carignan Regiment; Le Chesnaye, La Salle's lieutenant, and others.
-
-The boats were rickety little tubs unfit for rough northern seas, and
-the crews sulky, underfed men, who threatened mutiny at every watering
-place and only refrained from cutting Radisson's {147} throat because
-he kept them busy. July 11, 1682, the explorers sheered away from the
-fishing fleet of the St. Lawrence and began coasting up the lonely iron
-shore of Labrador. Ice was met sweeping south in mountainous bergs.
-Over Isle Demons in the Straits of Belle Isle hung storm wrack and
-brown fog as in the days when Marguerite Roberval pined there. Then
-the ships were cutting the tides of Labrador; here through fog; there
-skimming a coast that was sheer masonry to the very sky; again,
-scudding from storm to refuge of some hole in the wall.
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF HUDSON BAY]
-
-{148} Before September the ships rode triumphantly into
-Five-Fathom-Hole off Nelson River, Hudson Bay. Here two great rivers,
-wide as the St. Lawrence, rolled to the sea, separated by a long tongue
-of sandy dunes. The north river was the Nelson; the south, the Hayes.
-Approach to both was dangerous, shallow, sandy, and bowlder strewn; but
-Radisson's vessels were light draught, and he ran them in on the tide
-to Hayes River on the south, where his men took possession for France
-and erected log huts as a fort.
-
-Groseillers remained at the fort to command the twenty-seven men.
-Young Chouart ranged the swamps and woods for Indians, and Radisson had
-paddled down the Hayes from meeting some Assiniboine hunters, when, to
-his amazement, there rolled across the wooded swamps the most
-astonishing report that could be heard in desolate solitudes. It was
-the rolling reverberation, the dull echo of a far-away cannon firing
-signal after signal.
-
-Like a flash Radisson guessed the game. After all, the Hudson's Bay
-Company had taken his advice and were sending ships to trade on the
-west coast. The most of men, supported by only twenty-seven mutineers,
-would have scuttled ships and escaped overland, but the explorers of
-New France, Champlain and Jolliet and La Salle, were not made of the
-stuff that runs from trouble.
-
-Picking out three men, Radisson crossed the marsh northward to
-reconnoiter on Nelson River. Through the brush he espied a white tent
-on what is now known as Gillam's Island, a fortress half built, and a
-ship at anchor. All night he and his spies watched, but none of the
-builders came near enough to be seized, and next day at noon Radisson
-put a bold face on and paddled within cannon shot of the island.
-
-Here was a pretty to-do, indeed! The Frenchman must have laughed till
-he shook with glee! It was not the Hudson's Bay Company ship at all,
-but a poacher, a pirate, an interloper, forbidden by the laws of the
-English Company's monopoly; and who was the poacher but Ben Gillam, of
-Boston, son of Captain Gillam of the Hudson's Bay Company, with whom,
-no doubt, he was in collusion to defraud the English traders! Calling
-for {149} Englishmen to come down to the shore as hostages for fair
-treatment, Radisson went boldly aboard the young man's ship, saw
-everything, counted the men, noted the fact that Gillam's crew were
-mutinous, and half frightened the life out of the young Boston captain
-by telling him of the magnificent fort the French had on the south
-river, of the frigates and cannon and the powder magazines. As a
-friend he advised young Gillam not to permit his men to approach the
-French; otherwise they might be attacked by the Quebec soldiers. Then
-the crafty Radisson paddled off, smiling to himself; but not so fast,
-not so easy! As he drifted down Nelson River, what should he run into
-full tilt but the Hudson's Bay Company ship itself, bristling with
-cannon, manned by his old enemy, Captain Gillam!
-
-If the two English parties came together, Radisson was lost. He must
-beat them singly before they met; and again putting on a bold face, he
-marched out, met his former associates, and as a friend advised them
-not to ascend the river farther. Fortunately for Radisson, both Gillam
-and Bridgar, the Hudson's Bay governor, were drinking heavily and glad
-to take his advice. The winter passed, with Radisson perpetrating such
-tricks on his rivals as a player might with the dummy men on a
-chessboard; but the chessboard, with the English rivals for pawns, was
-suddenly upset by the unexpected. Young Gillam discovered that
-Radisson had no fort at all,--only log cabins with a handful of
-ragamuffin bushrovers; and Captain Gillam senior got word of young
-Gillam's presence. Radisson had to act, act quickly, and on the nail.
-
-Leaving half a dozen men as hostages in young Gillam's fort, Radisson
-invited the youth to visit the French fort for which the young Boston
-fellow had expressed such skeptical scorn. To make a long story short,
-young Gillam was no sooner out of his own fort than the French hostages
-took peaceable possession of it, and Gillam was no sooner in Radisson's
-fort than the French clapped him a prisoner in their guardroom.
-Ignorant that the French had captured young Gillam's fort, the Hudson's
-Bay Company men had marched upstream at dead of night to his {150}
-rescue. The English knocked for admittance. The French guards threw
-open the gates. In marched the English traders. The French clapped
-the gates to. The English were now themselves prisoners. Such a
-double victory would have been impossible to the French if the Hudson's
-Bay Company men had not fuddled themselves with drink and allowed their
-fine ship, the _Prince Rupert_, to be wrecked in the ice drive.
-
-In spring the ice jam wrecked Radisson's vessels, too, so he was
-compelled to send the most of his prisoners in a sloop down Hudson Bay
-to Prince Rupert, while he carried the rest with him on young Gillam's
-ship down to Quebec with an enormous cargo of furs.
-
-By all the laws of navigation Ben Gillam was nothing more or less than
-pirate. The monopoly of the Hudson's Bay Company forbade him trading
-on Hudson Bay. The license of the Company of the North at Quebec also
-excluded him. In later years, indeed, young Gillam turned pirate
-outright, was captured in connection with Captain Kidd at Boston, and
-is supposed to have been executed with the famous pirate. But when
-Radisson left Nelson in charge of young Chouart and came down to Quebec
-with young Gillam's ship as prize, a change had taken place at Quebec.
-Governor Frontenac had been recalled. In his place was La Barre, whose
-favor could be bought by any man who would pay the bribe, and who had
-already ruined La Salle by permitting creditors to seize Fort
-Frontenac. England and France were at peace. Therefore La Barre gave
-Gillam's vessel back to him. The revenue collectors were permitted to
-seize all the furs which La Chesnaye had not already shipped to France.
-Though La Barre was reprimanded by the King for both acts, not a sou
-did Radisson and Groseillers and Chouart ever receive for their
-investment; and Radisson was ordered to report at once to the King in
-France.
-
-
-The next part of Radisson's career has always been the great blot upon
-his memory, a blot that seemed incomprehensible except on the ground
-that his English wife had induced him to {151} return to the Hudson's
-Bay Company; but in the memorials left by Radisson himself, in Hudson's
-Bay House, London, I found the true explanation of his conduct.
-
-France and England were, as yet, at peace; but it was a pact of
-treacherous kind,--secret treaty by which the King of England drew pay
-from the King of France. The King of France dared not offend England
-by giving public approval to Radisson's capture of the Hudson's Bay
-Company's territory; therefore he ordered Radisson to go back to
-Hudson's Bay Company service and restore what he had captured. But the
-King of France had no notion of relinquishing claim to the vast
-territory of Hudson Bay; therefore he commanded Radisson to go
-unofficially. Groseillers, the brother, seems to have dropped from all
-engagements from this time, and to have returned to Three Rivers. A
-copy of the French minister's instructions is to be found in the
-Radisson records of the Hudson's Bay Company to-day. Not a sou of
-compensation was Radisson to receive for the money that he and his
-friends had invested in the venture of 1682-1683. Not a penny of
-reparation was he to obtain for the furs at Nelson, which he was to
-turn over to the Hudson's Bay Company.
-
-In France, preparation went forward as if for a second voyage to
-Nelson; but Radisson secretly left Paris for London, where he was
-welcomed by the courtiers of England in May, 1684, and given presents
-by King Charles and the Duke of York, who were shareholders in the
-Hudson's Bay Company. May 17 he sailed with the Hudson's Bay Company
-vessels for Port Nelson, and there took over from young Chouart the
-French forts with 20,000 pounds worth of furs for the English company.
-
-Young Chouart Groseillers and his five comrades were furious. They had
-borne the brunt of attack from both English and Indian enemies during
-Radisson's absence, and they were to receive not a penny for the furs
-collected. And their fury knew no bounds when they were forcibly
-carried back to England. The English had invited them on board one of
-the vessels for last instructions. Quickly the anchor was slipped,
-sails run {152} out, and the kidnapped Frenchmen carried from the bay.
-In a second, young Chouart's hand was on his sword, and he would have
-fought on the spot, but Radisson begged him to conceal his anger;
-"for," urged Radisson, "some of these English ruffians would like
-nothing better than to stab you in a scuffle."
-
-In London, Radisson was lionized, publicly thanked by the company,
-presented to the court, and given a present of silver plate. As for
-the young French captives, they were treated royally, voted salaries of
-100 pounds a year, and all their expenses of lodgings paid; but when
-they spoke of returning to France, unexpected obstructions were
-created. Their money was held back; they were dogged by spies.
-Finally they took the oath of allegiance to England, and accepted
-engagements to go back as servants of the Hudson's Bay Company to
-Nelson at salaries ranging from 100 pounds to 40 pounds, good pay as
-money was estimated in those days, equal to at least five times as much
-money of the present day. It was even urged on young Chouart that he
-should take an English wife, as Radisson had; but the young Frenchmen
-smiled quietly to themselves. Secret offers of a title had been
-conveyed to Chouart by the French ambassador; and to his mother in
-Three Rivers he wrote:
-
-I could not go to Paris; I was not at liberty; but I shall be at the
-rendezvous or perish trying. I cannot say more in a letter. I would
-have left this kingdom, but they hold back my pay, and orders have been
-given to arrest me if I try to leave. Assure Mr. Duluth of my humble
-services. I shall see him as soon as I can. Pray tell my good friend,
-Jan Pere.
-
-
-Pere, it will be remembered, was a bushranger of Duluth's band, who had
-been with Jolliet on Lake Superior.
-
-As for Radisson, the English kept faith with him as long as the Stuarts
-and his personal friends ruled the English court. He spent the summers
-on Hudson Bay as superintendent of trade, the winters in England
-supervising cargoes and sales. His home was on Seething Lane near the
-great Tower, where one of his friends was commander. Near him dwelt
-the merchant princes of London like the Kirkes and the Robinsons and
-the Youngs. His next-door neighbor was the man of fashion, {153}
-Samuel Pepys, in whose hands Radisson's Journals of his voyages finally
-fell. His income at this time was 100 pounds in dividends, 100 pounds
-in salary, equal to about five times that amount in modern money.
-
-Then came a change in Radisson's fortunes. The Stuarts were dethroned
-and their friends dispersed. The shareholders of the fur company bore
-names of men who knew naught of Radisson's services. War destroyed the
-fur company's dividends. Radisson's income fell off to 50 pounds a
-year. His family had increased; so had his debts; and he had long
-since been compelled to move from fashionable quarters. A petition
-filed in a lawsuit avers that he was in great mental anxiety lest his
-children should come to want; but he won his lawsuits against the
-company for arrears of salary. Peace brought about a resumption of
-dividends, and the old pathfinder seems to have passed his last years
-in comparative comfort. Some time between March and July, 1710,
-Radisson set out on the Last Long Voyage of all men, dying near London.
-His burial place is unknown. As far as Canada is concerned, Radisson
-stands foremost as pathfinder of the Great Northwest.
-
-
-But to return to "good friend, Jan Pere," whom the Frenchmen, forced
-into English service, were to meet somewhere on Hudson Bay. It is like
-a story from borderland forays.
-
-Seven large ships set sail from England for Hudson Bay in 1685,
-carrying Radisson and young Chouart and the five unwilling Frenchmen.
-The company's forts on the bay now numbered four: Nelson, highest up on
-the west; Albany, southward on an island at the mouth of Albany River;
-Moose, just where James Bay turns westward; and Rupert at the southeast
-corner. But French ships under La Martiniere of the Sovereign Council
-had also set sail from Quebec in 1685, commissioned by the indignant
-fur traders to take Radisson dead or alive; for Quebec did not know the
-secret orders of the French court, which had occasioned Radisson's last
-defection.
-
-July saw the seven Hudson's Bay ships worming their way laboriously
-through the ice floes of the straits. Small sails only {154} were
-used. With grappling hooks thrown out on the ice pans and crews
-toiling to their armpits in ice slush, the boats pulled themselves
-forward, resting on the lee side of some ice floe during ebb tide, all
-hands out to fight the roaring ice pans when the tide began to come in.
-At length on the night of July 27, with crews exhausted and the timbers
-badly rammed, the ships steered to rest in a harbor off Digge's Island,
-sheltered from the ice drive. The nights of that northern sea are
-light almost as day; but clouds had shrouded the sky and a white mist
-was rising from the water when there glided like ghosts from gloom two
-strange vessels. Before the exhausted crews of the English ships were
-well awake, the waters were churned to foam by a roar of cannonading.
-The strange ships had bumped keels with the little _Merchant
-Perpetuana_ of the Hudson's Bay. Radisson, on whose head lay a price,
-was first to realize that they were attacked by French raiders; and his
-ship was out with sails and off like a bird, followed by the other
-English vessels, all except the little _Perpetuana_, now in death
-grapple between her foes. Captain Hume, Mates Smithsend and
-Grimmington fought like demons to keep the French from boarding her;
-but they were knocked down, fettered and clapped below hatches while
-the victors plundered the cargo. Fourteen men were put to the sword.
-August witnessed ship, cargo, and captives brought into Quebec amid
-noisy acclaim and roar of cannon. The French had not captured Radisson
-nor ransomed Chouart, but there was booty to the raiders. New France
-had proved her right to trade on Hudson Bay spite of peace between
-France and England, or secret commands to Radisson. Thrown in a
-dungeon below Chateau St. Louis, Quebec, the English captives hear wild
-rumors of another raid on the bay, overland in winter; and Smithsend,
-by secret messenger, sends warning to England, and for his pains is
-sold with his fellow-captives into slavery in Martinique, whence he
-escapes to England before the summer of 1686.
-
-But what is Jan Pere of Duluth's bushrovers doing? All unconscious of
-the raid on the ships, the governors of the four {155} English forts
-awaited the coming of the annual supplies. At Albany was a sort of
-harbor beacon as well as lookout, built high on scaffolding above a
-hill. One morning, in August of 1685, the sentry on the lookout was
-amazed to see three men, white men, in a canoe, steering swiftly down
-the rain-swollen river from the Up-Country. Such a thing was
-impossible. "White men from the interior! Whence did they come?"
-Governor Sargeant came striding to the fort gate, ordering his cannon
-manned. Behold nothing more dangerous than three French forest rangers
-dressed in buckskins, but with manners a trifle too smooth for such
-rough garb, as one doffs his cap to Governor Sargeant and introduces
-himself as Jan Pere, a woodsman out hunting.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY FRENCH MAP OF HUDSON BAY AND VICINITY]
-
-England and France were at peace; so Governor Sargeant invited the
-three mysterious gentlemen inside to a breakfast of sparkling wines and
-good game, hoping no doubt that the wines would unlock the gay fellows'
-tongues to tell what game _they_ were playing. As the wine passed
-freely, there were stories of {156} the hunt and the voyage and the
-annual ships. When might the ships be coming? "Humph," mutters
-Sargeant through his beard; and he does n't urge these knights of the
-wild woods to tarry longer. Their canoe glides gayly down coast to the
-salt marshes, where the shooting is good; but by chance that night,
-_purely by chance_, the French leave their canoe so that the tide will
-carry it away. Then they come back crestfallen to the English fort.
-
-Meanwhile a ship has arrived with the story of the raid on the
-_Perpetuana_. Sargeant is so enraged that he sends two of the French
-spies across to Charlton Island, where they can hunt or die; Monsieur
-Jan Pere he casts into the cellar of Albany with irons on his wrists
-and balls on his feet. When the ships sail for England, Pere is sent
-back as prisoner without having had one word with Chouart Groseillers.
-As for the two Frenchmen placed on Charlton Island, did Sargeant think
-they were bush-rovers and would stay on an island? By October they
-have laid up store of moose meat, built themselves a canoe, paddled
-across to the mainland, and are speeding like wildfire overland to
-Michilimackinac with word that Jan Pere is held prisoner at Albany. As
-Jan Pere drops out of history here, it may be said that he was kept
-prisoner in England as guarantee for the safety of the English crew
-held prisoners at Quebec. When he escaped to France he was given money
-and a minor title for his services.
-
-The news that Pere lay in a dungeon on Hudson Bay supplied the very
-excuse that the Quebec fur traders needed for an overland raid in time
-of peace. These were the wild rumors of which the captive English crew
-sent warning to England; but the northern straits would not be open to
-the company ships before June of 1686, and already a hundred wild
-French bushrovers were rallying to ascend the Ottawa to raid the
-English on Hudson Bay.
-
-And now a change comes in Canadian annals. For half a century its
-story is a record of lawless raids, bloody foray, dare-devil courage
-combined with the most fiendish cruelty and sublime heroism. Only a
-few of these raids can be narrated here. {157} June 18, 1686, when the
-long twilight of the northern night merged with dawn, there came out
-from the thicket of underbrush round Moose Factory, Hudson Bay, one
-hundred bush-rovers, led by Chevalier de Troyes of Niagara, accompanied
-by Le Chesnaye of the fur trade, Quebec, and the Jesuit, Sylvie. Of
-the raiders, sixty-six were Indians under Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville
-and his brothers, Maricourt and Ste. Helene, aged about twenty-four,
-sons of Charles Le Moyne, the Montreal interpreter. Moose Factory at
-this time boasted fourteen cannon, log-slab palisades, commodious
-warehouses, and four stone bastions,--one with three thousand pounds of
-powder, another used as barracks for twelve soldiers, another housing
-beaver pelts, and a fourth serving as kitchen. Iberville and his
-brothers, scouting round on different sides of the fort, soon learned
-that not a sentinel was on duty. The great gate opposite the river,
-studded with brass nails, was securely bolted, but not a cannon {158}
-had been loaded. The bushrangers then cast aside all clothing that
-would hamper, and, pistol in hand, advanced silent and stealthy as
-wild-cats. Not a twig crunched beneath the moccasin tread. The water
-lay like glass, and the fort slept silent as death. Hastily each
-raider had knelt for the blessing of the priest. Pistols had been
-recharged. Iberville bade his wild Indians not to forget that the
-Sovereign Council of Quebec offered ten crowns reward for every enemy
-slain, twenty for every enemy captured. In fact, there could be no
-turning back. Two thousand miles of juniper swamps and forests lay
-between the bush-rovers and home. They must conquer or perish. De
-Troyes led his white soldiers round to make a pretense of attack from
-the water front. Iberville posted his sixty-six Indians along the
-walls with muskets rammed through the loopholes. Then, with an
-unearthly yell, the Le Moyne brothers were over the tops of the
-pickets, swords in hand, before the English soldiers had awakened. The
-English gunner reeled from his cannon at the main gate with head split
-to the collar bone. The gates were thrown wide, trees rammed the doors
-open, and Iberville had dashed halfway up the stairs of the main house
-before the inmates, rushing out in their nightshirts, realized what had
-happened. Two men only were killed, one on each side. The French were
-masters of Moose Fort in less than five minutes, with sixteen captives
-and rich supply of ammunition.
-
-[Illustration: LE MOYNE D'IBERVILLE]
-
-Eastward of Moose was Rupert Fort, where the company's ship anchored.
-Hither the raiders plied their canoes by sea. Look at the map! Across
-the bottom of James Bay projects a long tongue of swamp land. To save
-time, Iberville portaged across this, and by July 1 was opposite Prince
-Rupert's bastions. At the dock lay the English ship. That day
-Iberville's men kept in hiding, but at night he had ambushed his men
-along shore and paddled across to the ship. Just as Iberville stepped
-on the deck a man on guard sprang at his throat. One blow of
-Iberville's sword killed the Englishman on the spot. Stamping to call
-the crew aloft, Iberville sabered the men as they scrambled up the
-hatches, till the Governor himself threw {159} up hands in
-unconditional surrender. The din had alarmed the fort, and hot shot
-snapping fire from the loopholes kept the raiders off till the Le Moyne
-brothers succeeded in scrambling to the roofs of the bastions, hacking
-holes through the rough thatch and firing inside. This drove the
-English gunners from their cannon. A moment later, and the raiders
-were on the walls. It was a repetition of the fight at Moose Factory.
-The English, taken by surprise, surrendered at once; and the French now
-had thirty prisoners, a good ship, two forts, but no provisions.
-
-Northwestward three hundred miles lay Albany Fort. Iberville led off
-in canoes with his bushrovers. De Troyes followed on the English boat
-with French soldiers and English prisoners. To save time, as the bay
-seemed shallow, Iberville struck out from the shore across seas. All
-at once a north wind began whipping the waters, sweeping down a
-maelstrom of churning ice. Worse still, fog fell thick as wool. Any
-one who knows canoe travel knows the danger. Iberville avoided
-swamping by ordering his men to camp for the night on the shifting ice
-pans, canoes held above heads where the ice crush was wildest, the
-voyageurs clinging hand to hand, making a life line if one chanced to
-slither through the ice slush. When daylight came with worse fog,
-Iberville kept his pistol firing to guide his followers, and so pushed
-on. Four days the dangerous traverse lasted, but August 1 the
-bushrovers were in camp below the cliffs of Albany.
-
-Indians had forewarned Governor Sargeant. The loopholes of his
-palisades bristled with muskets and heavy guns that set the bullets
-flying soon as De Troyes arrived and tried to land the cannon captured
-from the other forts for assault on Albany. Drums beating, flags
-flying, soldiers in line, a French messenger goes halfway forward and
-demands of an English messenger come halfway out the surrender of Sieur
-Jan Pere, languishing in the dungeons of Albany. The English Governor
-sends curt word back that Pere has been sent home to France long ago,
-and demands what in thunder the French mean by these raids in time of
-peace. The French retire that night to consider. {160} Cannon they
-have, but they have used up nearly all their ammunition. They have
-thirty prisoners, but they have no provisions. The prisoners have told
-them there are 50,000 pounds worth of furs stored at Albany.
-
-Inside the fort the English were in almost as bad way. The larder was
-lean, powder was scarce, and the men were wildly mutinous, threatening
-to desert _en masse_ for the French on the excuse they had not hired to
-fight, and "_if any of us lost a leg, the company could not make it
-good_."
-
-At the end of two days' desultory firing, the company Governor captured
-down at Rupert came to Sargeant and told him frankly that the
-bloodthirsty bushrovers were desperate; they had either to conquer or
-starve, and if they were compelled to fight, there would be no quarter.
-Men and women alike would be butchered in hand-to-hand fight. Still
-Sargeant hung on, hoping for the annual frigate of the company. Then
-powder failed utterly. Still Sargeant would not show the white flag;
-so an underfactor flourished a white sheet from an upper window.
-Chevalier De Troyes came forward and seated himself on one of the
-cannon. Governor Sargeant went out and seated himself on the same
-cannon with two bottles of wine. The English of Albany were allowed to
-withdraw to Charlton Island to await the company ship. As for the
-other prisoners, those who were not compelled to carry the plundered
-furs back to Quebec, were turned adrift in the woods to find their way
-overland north to Nelson. Iberville's bushrovers were back in Montreal
-by October.
-
-
-
-
-{161}
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-FROM 1686 TO 1698
-
-War with the Iroquois--The year of the massacre--Frontenac returns--The
-heroine of Vercheres--Indian raid and counter-raid--Massacre and
-Schenectady--The massacre at Fort Loyal--Boston roused to
-action--Quebec besieged--Phips and Frontenac--Retreat of the
-English--Iberville's gallant sea fight--Nelson surrenders
-
-
-For ten years Hudson Bay becomes the theater of northern buccaneers and
-bushraiders. A treaty of neutrality in 1686 provides that the bay
-shall be held in common by the fur traders of England and France; but
-the adventurers of England and the bushrovers of Quebec have no notion
-of leaving things so uncertain. Spite of truce, both fit out raiders,
-and the King of France, according to the shifting diplomacy of the day,
-issues secret orders "to permit not a vestige of English possession on
-the northern bay."
-
-Maricourt Le Moyne held the newly captured forts on the south shore of
-James Bay till Iberville came back overland in 1687. The fort at
-Rupert had been completely abandoned after the French victory of the
-previous summer, and the Hudson's Bay Company sloop, the _Young_, had
-just sailed into the port to reestablish the fur post. Iberville
-surrounded the sloop by his bushrovers, captured it with all hands, and
-dispatched four spies across to Charlton Island, where another sloop,
-the _Churchill_, swung at anchor. Here Iberville's run of luck turned.
-Three of his four spies were captured, fettered, and thrown into the
-hold of the vessel for the winter. In the spring of 1688 one was
-brought above decks to help the English sailors. Watching his chance,
-the grizzled bushrover waited till six of the English crew were up the
-ratlines. Quick as flash the Frenchman tiptoed across decks in his
-noiseless moccasins, took one precautionary glance over his shoulder,
-brained two Englishmen with an ax, liberated his comrades, and at
-pistol point kept the other Englishmen up the masts till he and his
-fellows had righted the ship and steered the vessel across to Rupert
-River, where the provisions were just in time to save Iberville's party
-from starvation.
-
-{162} This episode is typical of what went on at the Hudson's Bay forts
-for ten years. Each year, when the English ships came out to Nelson on
-the west coast, armed bands were sent south to wrest the forts on James
-Bay from the French; and each spring, when Iberville's bushrovers came
-gliding down the rivers in their canoes from Canada, there was a fight
-to drive out the English. Then the Indians would scatter to their
-hunting grounds. No more loot of furs for a year! The English would
-sail away in their ships, the French glide away in their canoes; and
-for a winter the uneasy quiet of calm between two thunderclaps would
-rest over the waters of Hudson Bay.
-
-In the spring of 1688, about the time that the brave bush-rovers had
-brought the English ship from Charlton Island across to Rupert River,
-two English frigates under Captain Moon, with twenty-four soldiers over
-and above the crews, had come south from Nelson to attack the French
-fur traders at Albany. As ill luck would have it, the ice floes began
-driving inshore. The English ships found themselves locked in the ice
-before the besieged fort. Across the jam from Rupert River dashed
-Iberville with his Indian bandits, portaging where the ice floes
-covered the water, paddling where lanes of clear way parted the
-floating drift. Iberville hid his men in the tamarack swamps till
-eighty-two Englishmen had landed and all unsuspecting left their ships
-unguarded. Iberville only waited till the furs in the fort had been
-transferred to the holds of the vessels. The ice cleared. The
-Frenchman rushed his bushrovers on board, seized the vessel with the
-most valuable cargo, and sailed gayly out of Albany for Quebec. The
-astounded English set fire to the other ship and retreated overland.
-
-But the dare-devil bushrovers were not yet clear of trouble. As the
-ice drive jammed and held them in Hudson Straits, they were aghast to
-see, sailing full tilt with the roaring tide of the straits, a fleet of
-English frigates, the Hudson's Bay Company's annual ships; but
-Iberville sniffed at danger as a war horse glories in gunpowder. He
-laughed his merriest, and as the ice drive locked all the ships within
-gunshot, ran up an {163} English flag above his French crew and had
-actually signaled the captains of the English frigates to come aboard
-and visit him, when the ice cleared. Hoisting sail, he showed swift
-heels to the foe. Iberville's ambition now was to sweep _all_ the
-English from Hudson Bay, in other words, to capture Nelson on the west
-coast, whence came the finest furs; but other raids called him to
-Canada.
-
-
-It will be recalled that La Salle's enemies had secretly encouraged the
-Iroquois to attack the tribes of the Illinois; and now the fur traders
-of New York were encouraging the Iroquois to pillage the Indians of the
-Mississippi valley, in order to divert peltries from the French on the
-St. Lawrence to the English at New York. Savages of the north, rallied
-by Perrot and Duluth and La Motte Cadillac, came down by the lakes to
-Fort Frontenac to aid the French; but they found that La Barre, the new
-governor, foolish old man, had been frightened into making peace with
-the Iroquois warriors, abandoning the Illinois to Iroquois raid and
-utterly forgetful that _a peace which is not a victory is not worth the
-paper it is written on_.
-
-For the shame of this disgraceful peace La Barre was recalled to France
-and the Marquis de Denonville, a brave soldier, sent out as governor.
-Unfortunately Denonville did not understand conditions in the colony.
-The Jesuit missionaries were commissioned to summon the Iroquois to a
-conference at Fort Frontenac, but when the deputies arrived they were
-seized, tortured, and fifty of them shipped to France by the King's
-order to serve as slaves on the royal galleys. It was an act of
-treachery heinous beyond measure and exposed the Jesuit missionaries
-among the Five Nations to terrible vengeance; but the Iroquois code of
-honor was higher than the white man's. "Go home," they warned the
-Jesuit missionary. "We have now every right to treat thee as our foe;
-but we shall not do so! Thy heart has had no share in the wrong done
-to us. We shall not punish thee for the crimes of another, tho' thou
-didst act as the unconscious tool. But leave us! When our young {164}
-men chant the song of war they may take counsel only of their fury and
-harm thee! Go to thine own people"; and furnishing him with guides,
-they sent him to Quebec.
-
-Though Denonville marched with his soldiers through the Iroquois
-cantons, he did little harm and less good; for the wily warriors had
-simply withdrawn their families into the woods, and the Iroquois were
-only biding their time for fearful vengeance.
-
-This lust of vengeance was now terribly whetted. Dongan, the English
-governor of New York, had been ordered by King James of England to
-observe the treaty of neutrality between England and France; but this
-did not hinder him supplying the Iroquois with arms to raid the French
-and secretly advising them "not to bury the war hatchet,--just to hide
-it in the grass, and stand on their guard to begin the war anew."
-
-[Illustration: FORT FRONTENAC AND THE ADJACENT COUNTRY]
-
-Nor did the treaty of neutrality prevent the French from raiding Hudson
-Bay and ordering shot in cold blood any French bushrover who dared to
-guide the English traders to the country of the Upper Lakes.
-
-In addition to English influence egging on the Iroquois, the treachery
-of the Huron chief, The Rat, lashed the vengeance {165} of the Five
-Nations to a fury. He had come down to Fort Frontenac to aid the
-French. He was told that the French had again arranged peace with the
-Iroquois, and deputies were even now on their way from the Five Nations.
-
-"Peace!" The old Huron chief was dumbfounded. What were these fool
-French doing, trusting to an Iroquois peace? "Ah," he grunted, "that
-may be well"; and he withdrew without revealing a sign of his
-intentions. Then he lay in ambush on the trail of the deputies, fell
-on the Iroquois peace messengers with fury, slaughtered half the band,
-then sent the others back with word that he had done this by order of
-Denonville, the French governor.
-
-"There," grunted The Rat grimly, "I 've killed the peace for them! We
-'ll see how Onontio gets out of this mess."
-
-Meanwhile war had been declared between England and France. The
-Stuarts had been dethroned. France was supporting the exiled monarch,
-and William of Orange had become king of England. Iberville and Duluth
-and La Motte Cadillac, the famous fighters of Canada's wildwood, were
-laying plans before the French Governor for the invasion and conquest
-of New York; and New York was preparing to defend itself by pouring
-ammunition and firearms free of cost into the hands of the Iroquois.
-Then the Iroquois vengeance fell.
-
-Between the night and morning of August 4 and 5, in 1689, a terrific
-thunderstorm had broken over Montreal. Amidst the crack of hail and
-crash of falling trees, with the thunder reverberating from the
-mountain like cannonading, whilst the frightened people stood gazing at
-the play of lightning across their windows, fourteen hundred Iroquois
-warriors landed behind Montreal, beached their canoes, and stole upon
-the settlement. What next followed beggars description. Nothing else
-like it occurs in the history of Canada. For years this summer was to
-be known as "the Year of the Massacre."
-
-Before the storm subsided, the Iroquois had stationed themselves in
-circles round every house outside the walls of Montreal. At the signal
-of a whistle, the warriors fell on the settlement {166} like beasts of
-prey. Neither doors nor windows were fastened in that age, and the
-people, deep in sleep after the vigil of the storm, were dragged from
-their beds before they were well awake. Men, women, and children fell
-victims to such ingenuity of cruelty as only savage vengeance could
-conceive. Children were dashed to pieces before their parents' eyes;
-aged parents tomahawked before struggling sons and daughters; fathers
-held powerless that they might witness the tortures wreaked on wives
-and daughters. Homes which had heard some alarm and were on guard were
-set on fire, and those who perished in the flames {167} died a merciful
-death compared to those who fell in the hands of the victors. By
-daybreak two hundred people had been wantonly butchered. A hundred and
-fifty more had been taken captives. As if their vengeance could not be
-glutted, the Iroquois crossed the river opposite Montreal, and, in full
-sight of the fort, weakly garrisoned and paralyzed with fright, spent
-the rest of the week, day and night, torturing the white captives. By
-night victims could be seen tied to the torture stake amid the
-wreathing flames, with the tormentors dancing round the camp fire in
-maniacal ferocity. Denonville was simply powerless. He lost his head,
-and seemed so panic-stricken that he forbade even volunteer bands from
-rallying to the rescue. For two months the Iroquois overran Canada
-unchecked. Indeed, it was years before the boldness engendered by this
-foray became reduced to respect for French authority. Settlement after
-settlement, the marauders raided. From Montreal to Three Rivers crops
-went up in flame, and the terrified habitants came cowering with their
-families to the shelter of the palisades.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM OF ORANGE]
-
-In the midst of this universal terror came the country's savior.
-Frontenac had been recalled because he quarreled with the intendant and
-he quarreled with the Jesuits and he quarreled with the fur traders;
-but his bitterest enemies did not deny that he could put the fear of
-the Lord and respect for the French into the Iroquois' heart.
-Arbitrary he was as a czar, but just always! To be sure he mended his
-fortunes by personal fur trade, but in doing so he cheated no man; and
-he worked no injustice, and he wrought in all things for the lasting
-good of the country. Homage he demanded as to a king, once going so
-far as to drive the Sovereign Councilors from his presence with the
-flat of a sword; but he firmly believed and he had publicly proved that
-he was worthy of homage, and that the men who are forever shouting
-"liberty--liberty and the people's rights," are frequently wolves in
-sheep's clothing, eating out the vitals of a nation's prosperity.
-
-Here, then, was the haughty, hot-headed, aggressive Frontenac, sent
-back in his old age to restore the prestige of New France, {168} where
-both La Barre the grafter, and Denonville the courteous Christian
-gentleman, had failed.
-
-
-To this period of Iroquois raids belongs one of the most heroic
-episodes in Canadian life. The only settlers who had not fled to the
-protection of the palisaded forts were the grand old seigniors, the new
-nobility of New France, whose mansions were like forts in themselves,
-palisaded, with stone bastions and water supply and yards for stock and
-mills inside the walls. Here the seigniors, wildwood knights of a
-wilderness age, held little courts that were imitations of the
-Governor's pomp at Quebec. Sometimes during war the seignior's wife
-and daughters were reduced to plowing in the fields and laboring with
-the women servants at the harvest; but ordinarily the life at the
-seigniory was a life of petty grandeur, with such style as the
-backwoods afforded. In the hall or great room of the manor house was
-usually an enormous table used both as court of justice by the seignior
-and festive board. On one side was a huge fireplace with its homemade
-benches, on the other a clumsily carved chiffonier loaded with solid
-silver. In the early days the seignior's bedstead might be in the same
-room,--an enormous affair with panoplies of curtains and counterpanes
-of fur rugs and feather mattresses, so high that it almost necessitated
-a ladder. But in the matter of dress the rude life made up in style
-what it lacked in the equipments of a grand mansion.
-
-The bishop's description of the women's dresses I have already given,
-though at this period the women had added to the "sins" of bows and
-furbelows and frills, which the bishop deplored, the yet more heinous
-error of such enormous hoops that it required fine maneuvering on the
-part of a grand dame to negotiate the door of the family coach; and
-however pompous the seignior's air, it must have suffered temporary
-eclipse in that coach from the hoops of his spouse and his spouse's
-daughters. As for the seignior, when he was not dressed in buckskin,
-leading bushrovers on raids, he appeared magnificent in all the
-grandeur that a 20 pounds wig and Spanish laces and French ruffles
-{169} and imported satins could lend his portly person; and if the
-figure were not portly, one may venture to guess, from the pictures of
-stout gentlemen in the quilted brocades of the period, that padding
-made up what nature lacked.
-
-
-Such a seigniory was Vercheres, some twenty miles from Montreal, on the
-south side of the St. Lawrence. M. de Vercheres was an officer in one
-of the regiments, and chanced to be absent from home during October of
-1696, doing duty at Quebec. Madame de Vercheres was visiting in
-Montreal. Strange as it may seem, the fort and the family had been
-left in charge of the daughter, Madeline, at this time only fourteen
-years of age. At eight o'clock on the morning of October 22 she had
-gone four hundred paces outside the fort gates when she heard the
-report of musket firing. The rest of the story may be told in her own
-words:
-
-I at once saw that the Iroquois were firing at our settlers, who lived
-near the fort. One of our servants call out: "Fly, Mademoiselle, fly!
-The Iroquois are upon us!"
-
-Instantly I saw some forty-five Iroquois running towards me, already
-within pistol shot. Determined to die rather than fall in their hands,
-I ran for the fort, praying to the Blessed Virgin, "Holy Mother, save
-me! Let me perish rather than fall in their hands!" Meanwhile my
-pursuers paused to fire their guns. Bullets whistled past my ears.
-Once within hearing of the fort, I shouted, "To arms! To arms!"
-
-There were but two soldiers in the fort, and they were so overcome by
-fear that they ran to hide in the bastion. At the gates I found two
-women wailing for the loss of their husbands. Then I saw several
-stakes had fallen from the palisades where enemies could gain entrance;
-so I seized the fallen planks and urged the women to give a hand
-putting them back in their places. Then I ran to the bastion, where I
-found two of the soldiers lighting a fuse.
-
-"What are you going to do?" I demanded.
-
-"Blow up the fort," answered one cowardly wretch.
-
-"Begone, you rascals," I commanded, putting on a soldier's helmet and
-seizing a musket. Then to my little brothers: "Let us fight to the
-death! Remember what father has always said,--that gentlemen are born
-to shed their blood in the service of God and their King."
-
-My brothers and the two soldiers kept up a steady fire from the
-loopholes. I ordered the cannon fired to call in our soldiers, who
-were hunting; {170} but the grief-stricken women inside kept wailing so
-loud that I had to warn them their shrieks would betray our weakness to
-the enemy. While I was speaking I caught sight of a canoe on the
-river. It was Sieur Pierre Fontaine, with his family, coming to visit
-us. I asked the soldiers to go out and protect their landing, but they
-refused. Then ordering Laviolette, our servant, to stand sentry at the
-gate, I went out myself, wearing a soldier's helmet and carrying a
-musket. I left orders if I were killed the gates were to be kept shut
-and the fort defended. I hoped the Iroquois would think this a ruse on
-my part to draw them within gunshot of our walls. That was just what
-happened, and I got Pierre Fontaine and his family safely inside by
-putting a bold face on. Our whole garrison consisted of my two little
-brothers aged about twelve, one servant, two soldiers, one old habitant
-aged eighty, and a few women servants. Strengthened by the Fontaines,
-we began firing. When the sun went down the night set in with a
-fearful storm of northeast wind and snow. I expected the Iroquois
-under cover of the storm. Gathering our people together, I said: "God
-has saved us during the day. Now we must be careful for the night. To
-show you I am not afraid to take my part, I undertake to defend the
-fort with the old man and a soldier, who has never fired a gun. You,
-Pierre Fontaine and La Bonte and Galet (the two soldiers), go to the
-bastion with the women and children. If I am taken, never surrender
-though I am burnt and cut to pieces before your eyes! You have nothing
-to fear if you will make some show of fight!"
-
-I posted two of my young brothers on one of the bastions, the old man
-of eighty on the third, and myself took the fourth. Despite the
-whistling of the wind we kept the cry "All's well," "All's well"
-echoing and reechoing from corner to corner. One would have imagined
-the fort was crowded with soldiers, and the Iroquois afterwards
-confessed they had been completely deceived; that the vigilance of the
-guard kept them from attempting to scale the walls. About midnight the
-sentinel at the gate bastion called out, "Mademoiselle! I hear
-something!"
-
-I saw it was our cattle.
-
-"Let me open the gates," urged the sentry.
-
-"God forbid," said I; "the savages are likely behind, driving the
-animals in."
-
-Nevertheless I _did_ open the gates and let the cattle in, my brothers
-standing on each side, ready to shoot if an Indian appeared.
-
-At last came daylight; and we were hopeful for aid from Montreal; but
-Marguerite Fontaine, being timorous as all Parisian women are, begged
-her husband to try and escape. The poor husband was almost distracted
-as she insisted, and he told her he would set her out in the canoe with
-her two sons, who could paddle it, but he would not abandon
-Mademoiselle in Vercheres. I had been twenty-four hours without rest
-or food, and had not {171} once gone from the bastion. On the eighth
-day of the siege Lieutenant de La Monnerie reached the fort during the
-night with forty men.
-
-One of our sentries had called out, "Who goes?"
-
-I was dozing with my head on a table and a musket across my arm. The
-sentry said there were voices on the water. I called, "Who are you?"
-
-They answered, "French--come to your aid!"
-
-I went down to the bank, saying: "Sir, but you are welcome! I
-surrender my arms to you!"
-
-"Mademoiselle," he answered, "they are in good hands."
-
-I forgot one incident. On the day of the attack I remembered about one
-in the afternoon that our linen was outside the fort, but the soldiers
-refused to go out for it. Armed with our guns, my brothers made two
-trips outside the walls for our linen. The Iroquois must have thought
-it a trick to lure them closer, for they did not approach.
-
-
-It need scarcely be added that brave mothers make brave sons, and it is
-not surprising that twenty-five years later, when Madeline Vercheres
-had become the wife of M. de La Naudiere, her own life was saved from
-Abenaki Indians by her little son, age twelve.
-
-But to return to Count Frontenac, marching up the steep streets of
-Quebec to Chateau St. Louis that October evening of 1689, amid the
-jubilant shouts of friends and enemies, Jesuit and Recollet, fur trader
-and councilor,--the haughty Governor set himself to the task of not
-only crushing the Iroquois but invading and conquering the land of the
-English, whom he believed had furnished arms to the Iroquois. Now that
-war had been openly declared between England and France, Frontenac was
-determined on a campaign of aggression. He would keep the English so
-busy defending their own borders that they would have no time to tamper
-with the Indian allies of the French on the Mississippi.
-
-
-This is one of the darkest pages of Canada's past. War is not a pretty
-thing at any time, but war that lets loose the bloodhounds of Indian
-ferocity leaves the blackest scar of all.
-
-There were to be three war parties: one from Quebec to attack the
-English settlements around what is now Portland, {172} Maine; a second
-from Three Rivers to lay waste the border lands of New Hampshire; a
-third from Montreal to assault the English and Dutch of the Upper
-Hudson.
-
-The Montrealers set out in midwinter of 1690, a few months after
-Frontenac's arrival, led by the Le Moyne brothers, Ste. Helene and
-Maricourt and Iberville, with one of the Le Bers, and D'Ailleboust,
-nephew of the first D'Ailleboust at Montreal. The raiders consisted of
-some two hundred and fifty men, one hundred Indian converts and one
-hundred and fifty bushrovers, hardy, supple, inured to the wilderness
-as to native air, whites and Indians dressed alike in blanket coat,
-hood hanging down the back, buckskin trousers, beaded moccasins,
-snowshoes of short length for forest travel, cased musket on shoulder,
-knife, hatchet, pistols, bullet pouch hanging from the sashed belt, and
-provisions in a blanket, knapsack fashion, carried on the shoulders.
-
-[Illustration: QUEBEC, 1689]
-
-The woods lay snow padded, silent, somber. Up the river bed of the
-Richelieu, over the rolling drifts, glided the bushrovers. {173}
-Somewhere on the headwaters of the Hudson the Indians demanded what
-place they were to attack. Iberville answered, "Albany." "Humph,"
-grunted the Indians with a dry smile at the camp fire, "since _when_
-have the French become so brave?" A midwinter thaw now turned the
-snowy levels to swimming lagoons, where snowshoes were useless, and the
-men had to wade knee-deep day after day through swamps of ice water.
-Then came one of those sudden changes,--hard frost with a blinding
-snowstorm. Where the trail forked for Albany and Schenectady it was
-decided to follow the latter, and about four o'clock in the afternoon,
-on the 8th of February, the bush-rovers reached a hut where there
-chanced to be several Mohawk squaws. Crowding round the chimney place
-to dry their clothes now stiff with ice, the bushrangers learned from
-the Indian women that Schenectady lay completely unguarded. There had
-been some village festival that day among the Dutch settlers. The
-gates at both ends of the town lay wide open, and as if in derision of
-danger from the far distant French, a snow man had been mockingly
-rolled up to the western gate as sentry, with a sham pipe stuck in his
-mouth. The Indian rangers harangued their braves, urging them to wash
-out all wrongs in the blood of the enemy, and the Le Moyne brothers
-moved from man to man, giving orders for utter silence. At eleven that
-night, shrouded by the snowfall, the bushrovers reached the palisades
-of Schenectady. They had intended to defer the assault till dawn, but
-the cold hastened action, and, uncasing their muskets, they filed
-silently past the snow man in the middle of the open gate and encircled
-the little village of fifty houses. When the lines met at the far
-gate, completely investing the town, a wild yell rent the air! Doors
-were hacked down. Indians with tomahawks stood guard outside the
-windows, and the dastardly work began,--as gratuitous a butchery of
-innocent people as ever the Iroquois perpetrated in their worst raids.
-Two hours the massacre lasted, and when it was over the French had, to
-their everlasting discredit, murdered in cold blood thirty-eight men
-(among them the poor inoffensive dominie), ten women, {174} twelve
-children; and the victors held ninety captives. To the credit of
-Iberville he offered life to one Glenn and his family, who had aided in
-ransoming many French from the Iroquois, and he permitted this man to
-name so many friends that the bloodthirsty Indians wanted to know if
-all Schenectady were related to this white man. One other house in the
-town was spared,--that of a widow with five children, under whose roof
-a wounded Frenchman lay. For the rest, Schenectady was reduced to
-ashes, the victors harnessing the Dutch farmers' horses to carry off
-the plunder. Of the captives, twenty-seven men and boys were carried
-back to Quebec. The other captives, mainly women and children, were
-given to the Indians. Forty livres for every human scalp were paid by
-the Sovereign Council of Quebec to the raiders.
-
-[Illustration: FRENCH SOLDIER OF THE PERIOD]
-
-The record of the raiders led from Three Rivers by Francois Hertel was
-almost the same. Setting out in January, he was followed by
-twenty-five French and twenty-five Indians to the border lands between
-Maine and New Hampshire. The end of March saw the bushrovers outside
-the little village of Salmon Falls. Thirty inhabitants were tomahawked
-on the spot, the houses burned, and one hundred prisoners carried off;
-but news had gone like wildfire to neighboring settlements, and Hertel
-was pursued by two hundred Englishmen. He placed his bushrovers on a
-small bridge across Wooster River and here held the pursuers at bay
-till darkness enabled him to escape.
-
-But the darkest deed of infamy was perpetrated by the third band of
-raiders,--a deed that reveals the glories of war as they {175} exist,
-stripped of pageantry. Portneuf had led the raiders from Quebec, and
-he was joined by that famous leader of the Abenaki Indians, Baron de
-Saint-Castin, from the border lands between Acadia and Maine. Later,
-when Hertel struck through the woods with some of his followers,
-Portneuf's men numbered five hundred. With these he attacked Fort
-Loyal, or what is now Portland, Maine, in the month of June. The fort
-boasted eight great guns and one hundred soldiers. Under cover of the
-guns Lieutenant Clark and thirty men sallied out to reconnoiter the
-attacking forces ambushed in woods round a pasturage. At a musket
-crack the English were literally cut to pieces, four men only escaping
-back to the fort. The French then demanded unconditional surrender.
-The English asked six days to consider. In six days English vessels
-would have come to the rescue. Secure, under a bluff of the ocean
-cliff, from the cannon fire of the fort, the French began to trench an
-approach to the palisades. Combustibles had been placed against the
-walls, when the English again asked a parley, offering to surrender if
-the French would swear by the living God to conduct them in safety to
-the nearest English post. To these conditions the French agreed.
-Whether they could not control their Indian allies or had not intended
-to keep the terms matters little. The English had no sooner marched
-from the fort than, with a wild whoop, the Indians fell on men, women,
-and children. Some were killed by a single blow, others reserved for
-the torture stake. Only four Englishmen survived the onslaught, to be
-carried prisoners to Quebec.
-
-The French had been victorious on all three raids; but they were
-victories over which posterity will never boast, which no writer dare
-describe in all the detail of their horrors, and which leave a black
-blot on the escutcheon of Canada.
-
-
-It was hardly to be expected that the New England colonies would let
-such raids pass unpunished. The destruction of Schenectady had been
-bad enough. The massacre of Salmon Falls caused the New Englanders to
-forget their jealousies for the once and to unite in a common cause.
-All the colonies agreed {176} to contribute men, ships, and money to
-invade New France by land and sea. The land forces were placed under
-Winthrop and Schuyler; but as smallpox disorganized the expedition
-before it reached Lake Champlain, the attack by land had little other
-effect than to draw Frontenac from Quebec down to Montreal, where
-Captain Schuyler, with Dutch bushmen, succeeded in ravaging the
-settlements and killing at least twenty French.
-
-The expedition by sea was placed under Sir William Phips of
-Massachusetts,--a man who was the very antipodes of Frontenac. One of
-a poor family of twenty-six children, Phips had risen from being a
-shepherd boy in Maine to the position of ship's carpenter in Boston.
-Here, among the harbor folk, he got wind of a Spanish treasure ship
-containing a million and a half dollars' worth of gold, which had been
-sunk off the West Indies. Going to England, Phips succeeded in
-interesting that same clique of courtiers who helped Radisson to
-establish the Hudson's Bay Company,--Albemarle and Prince Rupert and
-the King; and when, with the funds which they advanced, Phips succeeded
-in raising the treasure vessel, he received, in addition to his share
-of the booty, a title and the appointment as governor of Massachusetts.
-
-[Illustration: SIR WILLIAM PHIPS]
-
-Here, then, was the daring leader chosen to invade New France. Phips
-sailed first for Port Royal, which had in late years become infested
-with French pirates, preying on Boston commerce. Word had just come of
-the fearful massacres of {177} colonists at Portland. Boston was
-inflamed with a spirit of vengeance. The people had appointed days of
-fasting and prayer to invoke Heaven's blessing on their war. When
-Phips sailed into Annapolis Basin with his vessels and seven hundred
-men in the month of May, he found the French commander, Meneval, ill of
-the gout, with a garrison of about eighty soldiers, but all the cannon
-chanced to be dismounted. The odds against the French did not permit
-resistance. Meneval stipulated for an honorable surrender,--all
-property to be respected and the garrison to be sent to some French
-port; but no sooner were the English in possession than, like the
-French at Portland, they broke the pledge. There was no massacre as in
-Maine, but plunderers ran riot, seizing everything on which hands could
-be laid, ransacking houses and desecrating the churches; and sixty of
-the leading people, including Meneval and the priests, were carried off
-as prisoners. Leaving one English flag flying, Phips sailed home.
-
-Indignation at Boston had been fanned to fury, for now all the details
-of the butchery at Portland were known; and Phips found the colony
-mustering a monster expedition to attack the very stronghold of French
-power,--Quebec itself. England could afford no aid to her colonies,
-but thirty-two merchant vessels and frigates had been impressed into
-the service, some of them carrying as many as forty-four cannon.
-Artisans, sailors, soldiers, clerks, all classes had volunteered as
-fighters, to the number of twenty-five hundred men; but there was one
-thing lacking,--they had no pilot who knew the St. Lawrence. Full of
-confidence born of inexperience, the fleet set sail on the 9th of
-August, commanded again by Phips.
-
-Time was wasted ravaging the coasts of Gaspe, holding long-winded
-councils of war, arguing in the commander's stateroom instead of
-drilling on deck. Three more weeks were wasted poking about the lower
-St. Lawrence, picking up chance vessels off Tadoussac and Anticosti.
-Among the prize vessels taken near Anticosti was one of Jolliet's,
-bearing his wife and mother-in-law. The ladies delighted the hearts of
-the Puritans by the {178} news that not more than one hundred men
-garrisoned Quebec; but Phips was reckoning without his host, and his
-host was Frontenac. Besides, it was late in the season--the middle of
-October--before the English fleet rounded the Island of Orleans and
-faced the Citadel of Quebec.
-
-[Illustration: COUNT FRONTENAC (From a statue at Quebec)]
-
-Indians had carried word to the city that an Englishwoman, taken
-prisoner in their raids, had told them more than thirty vessels had
-sailed from Boston to invade New France. Frontenac was absent in
-Montreal. Quickly the commander at Quebec sent coureurs with warning
-to Frontenac, and then set about casting up barricades in the narrow
-streets that led from Lower to Upper Town.
-
-Frontenac could not credit the news. Had he not heard here in Montreal
-from Indian coureurs how the English overland expedition lay rotting of
-smallpox near Lake Champlain, such pitiable objects that the Iroquois
-refused to join them against the French? New France now numbered a
-population of twelve thousand and could muster three thousand fighting
-men; and though the English colonies numbered twenty {179} thousand
-people, how could they, divided by jealousies, send an invading army of
-twenty-seven hundred, as the rumor stated? Frontenac, grizzled old
-warrior, did not credit the news, but, all the same, he set out amid
-pelting rains by boat for Quebec. Half-way to Three Rivers more
-messengers brought him word that the English fleet were now advancing
-from Tadoussac. He sent back orders for the commander at Montreal to
-rush the bush-rovers down to Quebec, and he himself arrived at the
-Citadel just as the Le Moyne brothers anchored below Cape Diamond from
-a voyage to Hudson Bay. Maricourt Le Moyne reported how he had escaped
-past the English fleet by night, and it would certainly be at Quebec by
-daybreak.
-
-Scouts rallied the bushrangers on both sides of the St. Lawrence to
-Quebec's aid. Frontenac bade them guard the outposts and not desert
-their hamlets, while Ste. Helene and the other Le Moynes took command
-of the sharpshooters in Lower Town, scattering them in hiding along the
-banks of the St. Charles and among the houses facing the St. Lawrence
-below Castle St. Louis.
-
-Sure enough, at daybreak on Monday, October 16, sail after sail,
-thirty-four in all, rounded the end of Orleans Island and took up
-position directly opposite Quebec City. It was a cold, wet autumn
-morning. Fog and rain alternately chased in gray shadows across the
-far hills, and above the mist of the river loomed ominous the red-gray
-fort which the English had come to capture. Castle St. Louis stood
-where Chateau Frontenac stands to-day; and what is now the promenade of
-a magnificent terrace was at that time a breastwork of cannon extending
-on down the sloping hill to the left as far as the ramparts. In fact,
-the cannon of that period were more dangerous than they are to-day, for
-long-range missiles have rendered old-time fortifications adapted for
-close-range fighting almost useless; and the cannon of Upper Town,
-Quebec, that October morning swept the approach to three sides of the
-fort, facing the St. Charles, opposite Point Levis and the St.
-Lawrence, where it curves back on itself; and the fourth side was sheer
-wall--invulnerable.
-
-{180} With a rattling of anchor chains and a creaking of masts the
-great sails of the English fleet were lowered, and a little boat put
-out at ten o'clock under flag of truce to meet a boat half-way from
-Lower Town. Phips' messenger was conducted blindfold up the barricaded
-streets leading to Castle St. Louis; and the gunners had been
-instructed to clang their muskets on the stones to give the impression
-of great numbers. Suddenly the bandage was taken from the man's eyes
-and he found himself in a great hall, standing before the august
-presence of Frontenac, surrounded by a circle of magnificently dressed
-officers. The New Englander delivered his message,--Phips' letter
-demanding surrender: "_Your prisoners, your persons, your estates . . .
-and should you refuse, I am resolved by the help of God, in whom I
-trust, to revenge by force of arms all our wrongs_." . . . As the
-reading of the letter was finished the man looked up to see an insolent
-smile pass round the faces of Frontenac's officers, one of whom
-superciliously advised hanging the bearer of such insolence without
-waste of time. The New Englander pulled out his watch and signaled
-that he must have Frontenac's answer within an hour. The haughty old
-Governor pretended not to see the motion, and then, with a smile like
-ice, made answer in {181} words that have become renowned: "I shall not
-keep you waiting so long! Tell your General I do not recognize King
-William! I know no king of England but King James! Does your General
-suppose that these brave gentlemen"--pointing to his officers--"would
-consent to trust a man who broke his word at Port Royal?"
-
-[Illustration: CASTLE ST. LOUIS]
-
-As the shout of applause died away, the trembling New Englander asked
-Frontenac if he would put his answer in writing.
-
-"No," thundered the old Governor, never happier than when fighting, "I
-will answer your General with my cannon! I shall teach him that a man
-of my rank"--with covert sneer at Phips' origin, "is not to be summoned
-in such rude fashion! Let him do his best! I shall do mine!"
-
-It was now the turn of the English to be amazed. This was not the
-answer they had expected from a fort weakly garrisoned by a hundred
-men. If they had struck and struck quickly, they might yet have won
-the day; but all Monday passed in futile arguments and councils of war,
-and on Tuesday, the 17th, towards night, was heard wild shouting within
-Quebec walls.
-
-[Illustration: ATTACK ON QUEBEC, 1690]
-
-"My faith, Messieurs!" exclaimed one of the French prisoners aboard
-Phips' ship; "now you _have_ lost your chance! Those {182} are the
-coureurs de bois from Montreal and the bushrovers of the Pays d'en
-Haut, eight hundred strong."
-
-The news at last spurred Phips to action. All that night the people of
-Quebec could hear the English drilling, and shouting "_God save King
-William_!" with beat of drum and trumpet calls that set the echoes
-rolling from Cape Diamond; and on the 18th small boats landed fourteen
-hundred men to cross the St. Charles River and assault the Lower Town,
-while the four largest ships took up a position to cannonade the city.
-It was four in the afternoon before the soldiers had been landed amid
-peppering bullets from the Le Moyne bushrovers. Only a few cannon
-shots were fired, and they did no damage but to kill an urchin of the
-Upper Town.
-
-Firing began in earnest on the morning of October 19. The river was
-churned to fury and the reverberating echoes set the rocks crashing
-from Cape Diamond, but it was almost impossible for the English to
-shoot high enough to damage the upper fort. It was easy for the French
-to shoot down, and great wounds gaped from the hull of Phips' ship,
-while his masts went over decks in flame, flag and all. The tide
-drifted the admiral's flag on shore. The French rowed out, secured the
-prize, and a jubilant shout roared from Lower Town, to be taken up and
-echoed and reechoed from the Castle! For two more days bombs roared in
-midair, plunging through the roofs of houses in Lower Town or
-ricochetting back harmless from the rock wall below Castle St. Louis.
-At the St. Charles the land forces were fighting blindly to effect a
-crossing, but the Le Moyne bushrovers lying in ambush repelled every
-advance, though Ste. Helene had fallen mortally wounded. On the
-morning of the 21st the French could hardly believe their senses. The
-land forces had vanished during the darkness of a rainy night, and ship
-after ship, sail after sail, was drifting downstream--was it
-possible?--in retreat. Another week's bombarding would have reduced
-Quebec to flame and starvation; but another week would have exposed
-Phips' fleet to wreckage from winter weather, and he had drifted down
-to Isle Orleans, where the {183} dismantled fleet paused to rig up
-fresh masts. It was Madame Jolliet who suggested to the Puritan
-commander an exchange of the prisoners captured at Port Royal with the
-English from Maine and New Hampshire held in Quebec. She was sent
-ashore by Phips and the exchange was arranged. Winter gales assailed
-the English fleet as it passed Anticosti, and what with the wrecked and
-wounded, Phips' loss totaled not less than a thousand men.
-
-[Illustration: CASTLE ST. LOUIS, QUEBEC]
-
-Frontenac had been back in Canada only a year, and in that time he had
-restored the prestige of French power in America. The Iroquois were
-glad to sue for peace, and his bitterest enemies, the Jesuits, joined
-the merrymakers round the bonfires of acclaim kindled in the old
-Governor's honor as the English retreated, and the joy bells pealed
-out, and processions surged shouting through the streets of Quebec!
-From Hudson Bay to the Mississippi, from the St. Lawrence to Lake
-Superior and the land of the Sioux, French power reigned supreme. Only
-Port Nelson, high up on the west coast of Hudson Bay, remained
-unsubdued, draining the furs of the prairie tribes to England away from
-Quebec. Iberville had captured it in the fall of 1694, at the cost of
-his brother Chateauguay's life; but when Iberville departed from Hudson
-Bay, English men-of-war had come out in 1696 and wrested back this most
-valuable of all the fur posts. It was now determined to drive the
-English forever from Hudson Bay. Le Moyne d'Iberville was chosen for
-the task.
-
-
-April, 1697, Serigny Le Moyne was dispatched from France with five
-men-of-war to be placed under the command of Iberville at Placentia,
-Newfoundland, whence he was "to proceed {184} to Hudson Bay and to
-leave not a vestige of the English in the North." The frigates left
-Newfoundland July 8. Three weeks later they were crushing through the
-ice jam of Hudson Straits. Iberville commanded the _Pelican_ with two
-hundred and fifty men. Bienville, a brother, was on the same ship.
-Serigny commanded the _Palmier_, and there were three other frigates,
-the _Profound_, the _Violent_, the _Wasp_. Ice locked round the fleet
-at the west end of Hudson Straits, and fog lay so thick there was
-nothing visible of any ship but the masthead. For eighteen days they
-lay, crunched and rammed and separated by the ice drive, till on August
-25, early in the morning, the fog suddenly lifted. Iberville saw that
-Serigny's ship had been carried back {185} in the straits. The _Wasp_
-and _Violent_ were not to be seen, but straight ahead, locked in the
-ice, stood the _Profound_, and beside the French vessel three English
-frigates, the _Hampshire_, the _Deering_, the _Hudson's Bay_, on their
-annual voyage to Nelson! A lane of water opened before Iberville.
-Like a bird the _Pelican_ spread her wings to the wind and fled.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF QUEBEC (after Franquelin, 1683)]
-
-September 3 Iberville sighted Port Nelson, and for two days cruised the
-offing, scanning the sea for the rest of his fleet. Early on September
-5 the sails of three vessels heaved and rose above the watery horizon.
-Never doubting these were his own ships, Iberville signaled. There was
-no answer. A sailor scrambled to the masthead and shouted down
-terrified warning. These were not the French ships! They were the
-English frigates bearing straight down on the single French vessel
-commanded by Iberville!
-
-On one side was the enemy's fort, on the other the enemy's fleet coming
-over the waves before a clipping wind, all sails set. Of Iberville's
-crew forty men were ill of scurvy. Twenty-five had gone ashore to
-reconnoiter. He had left one hundred and fifty fighting men. Amid a
-rush of orders, ropes were stretched across decks for handhold, cannon
-were unplugged, and the batterymen below decks stripped themselves for
-the hot work ahead. The soldiers assembled on decks, sword in hand,
-and the Canadian bushrovers stood to the fore, ready to leap across the
-enemy's decks.
-
-By nine in the morning the ships were abreast, and roaring cannonades
-from the English cut the decks of the _Pelican_ to kindling wood and
-set the masts in flame. At the same instant one fell blast of musketry
-mowed down forty French; but Iberville's batterymen below decks had now
-ceased to pour a stream of fire into the English hulls. The odds were
-three to one, and for four hours the battle raged, the English shifting
-and sheering to lock in death grapple, Iberville's sharpshooters
-peppering the decks of the foe.
-
-It had turned bitterly cold. The blood on the decks became ice, and
-each roll of the sea sent wounded and dead weltering {186} from rail to
-rail. Such holes had been torn in the hulls of both English and French
-ships that the gunners below decks were literally looking into each
-other's smoke-grimmed faces. Suddenly all hands paused. A frantic
-scream cleft the air. The vessels were careening in a tempestuous sea,
-for the great ship _Hampshire_ had refused to answer to the wheel, had
-lurched, had sunk,--sunk swift as lead amid hiss of flames into the
-roaring sea! Not a soul of her two hundred and fifty men escaped. The
-frigate _Hudson's Bay_ surrendered and the _Deering_ fled. Iberville
-was victor.
-
-[Illustration: LANDING OF IBERVILLE'S MEN AT PORT NELSON (After La
-Potherie)]
-
-But a storm now broke in hurricane gusts over the sea. Iberville
-steered for land, but waves drenched the wheel at every wash, and,
-driving before the storm, the _Pelican_ floundered in the sands a few
-miles from Nelson. All lifeboats had been shot away. In such a sea
-the Canadian canoes were useless. The shattered masts were tied in
-four-sided racks. To these {187} Iberville had the wounded bound, and
-the crew plunged for the shore. Eighteen men perished going ashore in
-the darkness. On land were two feet of snow. No sooner did the French
-castaways build fires to warm their benumbed limbs than bullets
-whistled into camp. Governor Bayly of Port Nelson had sent out his
-sharpshooters. Luckily Iberville's other ships now joined him, and,
-mustering his forces, the dauntless French leader marched against the
-fort. Storm had permitted the French to land their cannon undetected.
-Trenches were cast up, and three times Serigny Le Moyne was sent to
-demand surrender.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTURE OF FORT NELSON BY THE FRENCH (After La
-Potherie)]
-
-"The French are desperate," he urged. "They must take the fort or
-perish of want, and if you continue the fight there will be no mercy
-given."
-
-The Hudson's Bay people capitulated and were permitted to march out
-with arms, bag and baggage. An English ship carried the refugees home
-to the Thames.
-
-The rest of Iberville's career is the story of colonizing the
-Mississippi. He was granted a vast seigniory on the Bay of {188}
-Chaleur, and in 1699 given a title. On his way from the Louisiana
-colony to France his ship had paused at Havana. Here Iberville
-contracted yellow fever and died while yet in the prime of his manhood,
-July 9, 1706.
-
-After the victory on Hudson Bay the French were supreme in America and
-Frontenac supreme in New France. The old white-haired veteran of a
-hundred wars became the idol of Quebec. Friends and enemies, Jesuits
-and Recollets, paid tribute to his worth. In November of 1698 the
-Governor passed from this life in Castle St. Louis at the good old age
-of seventy-eight. He had demonstrated--demonstrated in action so that
-his enemies acknowledged the fact--that the sterner virtues of the
-military chieftain go farther towards the making of great nationhood
-than soft sentiments and religious emotionalism.
-
-
-
-
-{189}
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-FROM 1698 TO 1713
-
-Petty regulations and blue laws--Massacre of Deerfield--Madame
-Freneuse, the painter lady--"Old Wooden Sword"--Subercase at Port
-Royal--Paul Mascarene's plight--Court dandies cause naval disaster
-
-
-While Frontenac was striking terror into the heart of New England with
-his French Canadian bushrovers, the life of the people went on in the
-same grooves. Spite of a dozen raids on the Iroquois cantons, there
-was still danger from the warriors of the Mohawk, but the Iroquois
-braves had found a new stamping ground. Instead of attacking Canada
-they now crossed westward to war on the allies of the French, the
-tribes of the Illinois and the Mississippi; and with them traveled
-their liege friends, English traders from New York and Pennsylvania and
-Virginia.
-
-The government of Canada continued to be a despotism, pure and simple.
-The Supreme Council, consisting of the governor, the intendant, the
-bishop, and at different times from three to twelve councilors, stood
-between the people and the King of France, transmitting the King's will
-to the people, the people's wants to the King; and the laws enacted by
-the council ranged all the way from criminal decrees to such petty
-regulations as a modern city wardman might pass. Laws enacted to meet
-local needs, but subject to the veto of an absent ruler, who knew
-absolutely nothing of local needs, exhibited all the absurdities to be
-expected. The King of France desires the Sovereign Council to
-discourage the people from using horses, which are supposed to cause
-laziness, as "it is needful the inhabitants keep up their snowshoe
-travel so necessary in their wars." "If in two years the numbers of
-horses do not decrease, they are to be killed for meat." Then comes a
-law that reflects the presence of the bishop at the governing board.
-Horses have become the pride of the country beaux, and the gay
-be-ribboned carrioles are the distraction of the village cure. "Men
-are forbidden to gallop their horses within a third of a mile from the
-church on {190} Sundays." New laws, regulations, arrests, are
-promulgated by the public crier, "crying up and down the highway to
-sound of trumpet and drum," chest puffed out with self-importance, gold
-braid enough on the red-coated regalia to overawe the simple habitants.
-Though the companies holding monopoly over trade yearly change,
-monopoly is still all-powerful in New France,--so all pervasive that in
-1741, in order to prevent smuggling to defraud the Company of the
-Indies, it is enacted that "people using chintz-covered furniture" must
-upholster their chairs so that the stamp "La Cie des Indes" will be
-visible to the inspector. The matter of money is a great trouble to
-New France. Beaver is coin of the realm on the St. Lawrence, and
-though this beaver is paid for in French gold, the precious metal
-almost at once finds its way back to France for goods; so that the
-colony is without coin. Government cards are issued as coin, but as
-Europe will not accept card money, the result is that gold still flows
-from New France, and the colony is flooded with paper money worthless
-away from Quebec.
-
-As of old, the people may still plead their own cases in lawsuits
-before the Sovereign Council, but now the privileges of caste and class
-and feudalism begin to be felt, and it is enacted that gentlemen may
-plead their own cases before the council only "when wearing their
-swords." Young men are urged to qualify as notaries. In addition to
-the title of "Sieur," baronies are created in Canada, foremost among
-them that of the Le Moynes of Montreal. The feudal seignior now has
-his coat of arms emblazoned on the church pew where he worships, on his
-coach door, and on the stone entrance to his mansion. The habitants
-are compelled to grind their wheat at his mill, to use his great bake
-oven, to patronize his tannery. The seigniorial mansion itself is
-taking on more of pomp. Cherry and mahogany furniture have replaced
-homemade, and the rough-cast walls are now covered with imported
-tapestries.
-
-Not gently does the Sovereign Council deal with delinquents. In 1735
-it is enacted of a man who suicided, "that the corpse be tied to a
-cart, dragged on a hurdle, head down, face to ground, {191} through the
-streets of the town, to be hung up by the feet, an object of derision,
-then cast into the river in default of a cesspool." Criminals who
-evade punishment by flight are to be hanged in effigy. Montreal
-citizens are ordered to have their chimneys cleaned every month and
-their houses provided with ladders. Also "the inhabitants of Montreal
-must not allow their pigs to run in the street," and they "are
-forbidden to throw snowballs at each other," and--a regulation which
-people who know Montreal winters will appreciate--"they are ordered to
-make paths through the snow before their houses,"--to all of which
-petty regulations did royalty subscribe sign manual.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY MAP (after La Hontan, 1689) (The line shows
-the French idea of the territory under English control)]
-
-
-The Treaty of Ryswick closed the war between France and England the
-year before Frontenac died, but it was not known in Canada till 1698.
-As far as Canada was concerned it was no peace, barely a truce. Each
-side was to remain in possession of what it held at the time of the
-treaty, which meant that France retained all Hudson Bay but one small
-fort. Though the English of Boston had captured Port Royal, they had
-left {192} no sign of possession but their flag flying over the
-tenantless barracks. The French returned from the woods, tore the flag
-down, and again took possession; so that, by the Treaty of Ryswick,
-Acadia too went back under French rule.
-
-Indeed, matters were worse than before the treaty, for there could be
-no open war; but when English settlers spreading up from Maine met
-French traders wandering down from Acadia, there was the inevitable
-collision, and it was an easy trick for the rivals to stir up the
-Indians to raid and massacre and indiscriminate butchery. For Indian
-raids neither country would be responsible to the other. The story
-belongs to the history of the New England frontier rather than to the
-record of Canada. It is a part of Canada's past which few French
-writers tell and all Canadians would fain blot out, but which the
-government records prove beyond dispute. Indian warfare is not a thing
-of grandeur at its best, but when it degenerates into the braining of
-children, the bayoneting of women, the mutilation of old men, it is a
-horror without parallel; and the amazing thing is that the white men,
-who painted themselves as Indians and helped to wage this war, were so
-sure they were doing God's work that they used to kneel and pray before
-beginning the butchery. To understand it one has to go back to the
-Middle Ages in imagination. New France was violently Catholic, New
-England violently Protestant. Bigotry ever looks out through eyes of
-jaundiced hatred, and in destroying what they thought was a false
-faith, each side thought itself instrument of God. As for the French
-governors behind the scenes, who pulled the strings that let loose the
-helldogs of Indian war, they were but obeying the kingcraft of a royal
-master, who would use Indian warfare to add to his domain.
-
-
-"The English have sent us presents to drive the Black Gowns away,"
-declared the Iroquois in 1702 regarding the French Jesuits. "You did
-well," writes the King of France to his Viceroy in Quebec, "to urge the
-Abenakis of Acadia to raid the English of Boston." The Treaty of
-Ryswick became {193} known at Quebec towards the end of 1698. The
-border warfare of ravage and butchery had begun by 1701, the English
-giving presents to the Iroquois to attack the French of the Illinois,
-the French giving presents to the Abenakis to raid the New England
-borders. Quebec offers a reward of twenty crowns for the scalp of
-every white man brought from the English settlements. New England
-retaliates by offering 20 pounds for every Indian prisoner under ten
-years of age, 40 pounds for every scalp of full-grown Indian.
-Presently the young _noblesse_ of New France are off to the woods,
-painted like Indians, leading crews of wild bushrovers on ambuscade and
-midnight raid and border foray.
-
-[Illustration: HERTEL DE ROUVILLE]
-
-"We must keep things stirring towards Boston," declared Vaudreuil, the
-French governor. Midwinter of 1704 Hertel de Rouville and his four
-brothers set out on snowshoes with fifty-one bushrovers and two hundred
-Indians for Massachusetts. Dressed in buckskin, with musket over
-shoulder and dagger in belt, the forest rangers course up the frozen
-river beds southward of the St. Lawrence, and on over the height of
-land towards the Hudson, two hundred and fifty miles through pine woods
-snow padded and silent as death. Two miles from Deerfield the marchers
-run short of food. It is the last day of February, and the sun goes
-down over rolling snowdrifts high as the slab stockades of the little
-frontier town whose hearth-fire smoke hangs low in the frosty air,
-curling and clouding and lighting to rainbow colors as the ambushed
-{194} raiders watch from their forest lairs. Snowshoes are laid aside,
-packs unstrapped, muskets uncased and primed, belts reefed tighter.
-Twilight gives place to starlight. Candles on the supper tables of the
-settlement send long gleams across the snow. Then the villagers hold
-their family prayers, all unconscious that out there in the woods are
-the bushrovers on bended knees, uttering prayers of another sort.
-Lights are put out. The village lies wrapped in sleep. Still
-Rouville's raiders lie waiting, shivering in the snow, till starlight
-fades to the gray darkness that precedes dawn. Then the bushrovers
-rise, and at moccasin pace, noiseless as tigers, skim across the snow,
-over the drifts, over the tops of the palisades, and have dropped into
-the town before a soul has awakened. There is no need to tell the
-rest. It was not war. It was butchery. Children were torn from their
-mother's breast to be brained on the hearthstone. Women were hacked to
-pieces. Houses were set on fire, and before the sun had risen
-thirty-eight persons had been slaughtered, and the French rovers were
-back on the forest trail, homeward bound with one hundred and six
-prisoners. Old and young, women of frail health and children barely
-able to toddle, were hurried along the trail at bayonet point. Those
-whose strength was unequal to the pace were summarily knocked on the
-head as they fagged, or failed to ford the ice streams. Twenty-four
-perished by the way. Of the one hundred and six prisoners scattered as
-captives among the Indians, not half were ever heard of again. The
-others were either bought from the Indians by Quebec people, whose pity
-was touched, or placed round in the convents to be converted to the
-Catholic faith. These were ultimately redeemed by the government of
-Massachusetts.
-
-New England's fury over such a raid in time of peace knew no bounds.
-Yet how were the English to retaliate? To pursue an ambushed Indian
-along a forest trail was to follow a vanishing phantom.
-
-From earliest times Boston had kept up trade with Port Royal, and of
-late years Port Royal had been infested with French pirates, who raided
-Boston shipping. Colonel Ben {195} Church of Long Island, a noted
-bushfighter, of gunpowder temper and form so stout that his men had
-always to hoist him over logs in their forest marches, went storming
-from New York to Boston with a plan to be revenged by raiding Acadia.
-
-Rouville's bushrovers had burned Deerfield the first of March. By May,
-Church had sailed from Boston with six hundred men on two frigates and
-half a hundred whaleboats, on vengeance bent. First he stopped at
-Baron St. Castin's fort in Maine. St. Castin it was who led the
-Indians against the English of Maine. The baron was absent, but his
-daughter was captured, with all the servants, and the fort was burned
-to the ground. Then up Fundy Bay sailed Church, pausing at
-Passamaquoddy to knock four Frenchmen on the head; pausing at Port
-Royal to take eight men prisoners, kill cattle, ravage fields; pausing
-at Basin of Mines to capture forty habitants, burn the church, and cut
-the dikes, letting the sea in on the crops; pausing at Beaubassin, the
-head of Fundy Bay, in August, to set the yellow wheat fields in flames!
-Then he sailed back to Boston with French prisoners enough to insure an
-exchange for the English held at Quebec.
-
-No sooner had English sails disappeared over the sea than the French
-came out of the woods. St. Castin rebuilt his fort in Maine. The
-local Governor, who had held on with his gates shut and cannon pointed
-while Church ravaged Port Royal village, now strengthened his walls.
-Acadia took a breath and went on as before,--a little world in itself,
-with the pirate ships slipping in and out, loaded to the water line
-with Boston booty; with the buccaneer Basset throwing his gold round
-like dust; with the brave soldier Bonaventure losing his head and
-losing his heart to the painted lady, Widow Freneuse, who came from
-nobody knew where and lived nobody knew how, and plied her mischief of
-winning the hearts of other women's husbands. "She must be sent away,"
-thundered the priest from the pulpit, straight at the garrison officer
-whose heart she dangled as her trophy. "She must be sent away,"
-thundered the King's mandate; but the King was in France, and Madame
-Freneuse {196} wound her charms the tighter round the hearts of the
-garrison officers, and bided her time, to the scandal of the parish and
-impotent rage of the priest. Was she vixen or fool, this fair snake
-woman with the beautiful face, for whose smile the officers risked
-death and disgrace? Was she spy or adventuress? She signed herself as
-"Widow Freneuse," and had applied to the King for a pension as having
-grown sons fighting in the Indian wars. She will come into this story
-again, snakelike and soft-spoken, and appealing for pity, and fair to
-look upon, but leaving a trail of blood and treachery and disgrace
-where she goes.
-
-The fur trade of Port Royal at this time was controlled by a family
-ring of La Tours and Charnisays, descendants of the ancient foes; and
-they lived a life of reckless gayety, spiced with all the excitement of
-war and privateering and matrimonial intrigue. Such was life _inside_
-Port Royal. _Outside_ was the quiet peace of a home-loving,
-home-staying peasantry. Few of the farmers could read or write. The
-houses were little square Norman cottages,--"wooden boxes" the
-commandant called them,--with the inevitable porch shaded by the fruit
-trees now grown into splendid orchards. By diking out the sea the
-peasants farmed the marsh lands and saved themselves the trouble of
-clearing the forests. Trade was carried on with Boston and the West
-Indies. No card money here! The farmers of Acadia demanded coin in
-gold from the privateers who called for cargo, and it is said that in
-time of such raids as Colonel Church's, great quantities of this gold
-were carried out by night and buried in huge pots,--as much as 5000
-louis d'ors (pounds) in one pot,--to be dug up after the raiders had
-departed. Naturally, as raids grew frequent, men sometimes made the
-mistake of digging up other men's pots, and one officer lost his
-reputation over it. All his knowledge of the outside world, of
-politics, of religion, the Acadian farmer obtained from his parish
-priest; and the word of the cure was law.
-
-Encouraged by Church's success and stung by the raids of French
-corsairs from Port Royal, New England set herself seriously to the task
-of conquering Acadia. Colonel March sailed {197} from Boston with one
-thousand men and twenty-three transports, and on June 6, 1707, came
-into Port Royal. Misfortunes began from the first. March's men were
-the rawest of recruits,--fishermen, farmers, carpenters, turned into
-soldiers. Unused to military discipline, they resisted command. A
-French guardhouse stood at the entrance to Port Royal Basin, and
-fifteen men at once fled to the fort with warning of the English
-invasion. Consequently, when Colonel March and Colonel Appleton
-attempted to land their men, they were serenaded by the shots of an
-ambushed foe. Also French soldiers deserted to the English camp with
-fabulous stories about the strength of the French under Subercase.
-These yarns ought to have discredited themselves, but they struck
-terror to the hearts of March's green fighters. Then came St. Castin
-from St. John River with bushrovers to help Subercase. To the
-amazement of the French the English hoisted sail and returned, on June
-16, without having fired more than a round of shot. The truth is,
-March's carpenters and fishermen refused to fight, though
-reenforcements joined them halfway home and they made a second attempt
-on Port Royal in August. March returned to Boston heartbroken, for his
-name had become a byword to the mob, and he was greeted in the streets
-with shouts of "Old Wooden Sword!"
-
-
-While Boston was attempting to wreak vengeance on Acadia for the
-raiders of Quebec, the bushrovers from the St. Lawrence continued to
-scourge the outlying settlements of New England. To post soldiers on
-the frontier was useless. Wherever there were guards the raiders
-simply passed on to some unprotected village, and to have kept soldiers
-along the line of the whole frontier would have required a standing
-army. Massachusetts, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, northern New
-York,--on the frontier of each reigned perpetual terror. And the
-fiendish work was a paying business to the pagan Indian; for the
-Christian white men paid well for all scalps, and ransom money could
-always be extorted for captives. Barely had the Boston raid on Port
-Royal failed, when Governor de Vaudreuil of Quebec {198} retaliated by
-turning his raiders loose on Haverhill. The English fleet failed at
-Port Royal in June. By dawn of Sunday, August 29, Hertel de Rouville
-had swooped on the English village of Haverhill with one hundred
-Canadian bushrovers and one hundred and fifty Indians. The story of
-one raid is the story of all; so this one need not be told. As the
-raiders were discovered at daylight, the people had a chance to defend
-themselves, and some of the villagers escaped, the family of one being
-hidden by a negro nurse under tubs in the cellar. Alarm had been
-carried to the surrounding settlements, and men rode hot haste in
-pursuit of the forty prisoners. Hertel de Rouville coolly sent back
-word, if the pursuers did not desist, all the prisoners would be
-scalped and left on the roadside. Some fifty English had fallen in the
-fight, but the French lost fifteen, among them young Jared of
-Vercheres, brother of the heroine.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY PLAN OF PORT ROYAL BASIN]
-
-The only peace for Massachusetts was the peace that would be a victory,
-and again New England girded herself to the task of capturing Acadia.
-It was open war now, for the crowns of England and France were at odds.
-The troops were commanded by General Francis Nicholson, an English
-officer who brought out four war ships and four hundred trained
-marines. There were, besides, thirty-six transports and three thousand
-provincial troops, clothed and outfitted by Queen Anne of England.
-Sunday, September 24, 1710, the fleet glides majestically into Port
-Royal Basin. That night the wind blew a hurricane and the transport
-_Caesar_ went aground with a crash that smashed her timbers to kindling
-wood and sent twenty-four men to a watery grave; but General Nicholson
-gave the raw provincials no time for panic fright. Day dawn, Monday,
-drums rolling a martial tread, trumpets blowing, bugles setting the
-echoes flying, flags blowing to the wind in the morning sun, he
-commanded Colonel Vetch to lead the men ashore. Inside Port Royal's
-palisades Subercase, the French commander, had less than three hundred
-men, half that number absolutely naked of clothing, and all short of
-powder. There were not provisions to last a month; but, game to his
-soul's marrow, as all the warriors of {199} those early days, Subercase
-put up a brave fight, sending his bombs singing over the heads of the
-English troops in a vain attempt to baffle the landing. Nicholson
-retaliated by moving his bomb ship, light of draught, close to the
-French fort and pouring a shower of bombs through the roofs of the
-French fort. Spite of the wreck the night before, by four o'clock
-Monday afternoon all the English had landed in perfect order and high
-spirits. Slowly the English forces swung in a circle completely round
-the fort. Again and again, by daylight and dark, Subercase's naked
-soldiers rushed, screeching the war whoop, to ambush and stampede the
-English line; but Nicholson's regulars stood the fire like rocks, and
-the desperate sortie of the French ended in fifty of Subercase's
-soldiers deserting en masse to the English. By Friday Nicholson's guns
-were all mounted in place to bombard the little wooden fort. Subercase
-was desperate. Women and children from the settlement had crowded into
-the fort for protection, and were now crazed with fear by the bursting
-bombs, while the naked soldiers could be kept on the walls only at the
-sword point of their commanding officers. {200} For two hundred French
-to have held out longer against three thousand five hundred English
-would have been madness. Subercase made the presence of the women in
-Port Royal an excuse to send a messenger with flag of truce across to
-Nicholson, asking the English to take the women under their protection.
-Nicholson might well have asked what protection the French raiders had
-accorded the women of the New England frontiers; but he sent back
-polite answer that "as he was not warring on women and children" he
-would receive them in the English camp, meanwhile holding Subercase's
-messenger prisoner, as he had entered the English camp without warning,
-eyes unbound. Sunday, October 1, the English bombs again began singing
-overhead. Subercase sends word he will capitulate if given honorable
-terms. For a month the parleying continues. Then November 13 the
-terms are signed on both sides, the English promising to furnish ships
-to carry the garrison to some French port and pledging protection to
-the people of the settlement. November 14 the French officers and
-their ladies come across to the English camp and breakfast in pomp with
-the English commanders. Seventeen New England captives are hailed
-forth from Port Royal dungeons, "all in rags, without shirts, shoes, or
-stockings." On the 16th Nicholson draws his men up in two lines, one
-on each side of Port Royal gates, and the two hundred French soldiers
-marched out, saluting Nicholson as they passed to the transports. On
-the bridge, halfway out, French officers meet the English officers,
-doff helmets, and present the keys to the fort. For the last time Port
-Royal changes hands. Henceforth it is English, and in gratitude for
-the Queen's help Nicholson renamed the place as it is known
-to-day,--Annapolis. Among the raiders capitulating is the famous
-bushrover Baron St. Castin of Maine.
-
-
-When Nicholson returned to Boston all New England went mad with
-delight. Thanksgiving services were held, joy bells rang day and night
-for a week, and bonfires blazed on village commons to the gleeful
-shoutings of rustic soldiers returned to the home settlements glorified
-heroes.
-
-{201}
-
-[Illustration: PAUL MASCARENE]
-
-At Annapolis (Port Royal) Paul Mascarene, a French Huguenot of Boston,
-has mounted guard with two hundred and fifty New England volunteers.
-Colonel Vetch is nominally the English governor; but Vetch is in Boston
-the most of the time, and it is on Mascarene the burden of governing
-falls. His duties are not light. Palisades have been broken down and
-must be repaired. Bombs have torn holes in the fort roofs, and all
-that winter the rain leaks in as through a sieve. The soldier
-volunteers grumble and mope and sicken. And these are not the least of
-Paul Mascarene's troubles. French priests minister to the Acadian
-farmers outside the fort, to the sinister Indians ever lying in ambush,
-to the French bushrovers under young St. Castin across Fundy Bay on St.
-John River. Not for love or money can Mascarene buy provisions from
-the Acadians. Not by threats can he compel them to help mend the
-breaches in the palisades. The young commandant was only twenty-seven
-years of age, but he must have guessed whence came the unspoken
-hostility. The first miserable winter wears slowly past and the winter
-of 1711 is setting in, with the English garrison even more poverty
-stricken than the year before, when there drifts into Annapolis Basin,
-in a birch canoe paddled by a New Brunswick Indian, a white woman with
-her little son. She has come, she says, from the north side of Fundy
-Bay, because the French {202} on St. John River are starving. Whether
-the story be true or false matters little. It was the Widow Freneuse,
-the snake woman of mischief-making witchery, who had woven her spells
-round the officers in the days of the French at Port Royal. True or
-false, her story, added to her smile, excited sympathy, and she was
-welcomed to the shelter of the fort. It had been almost impossible for
-the English to obtain trees to repair the walls of the fort, and
-seventy English soldiers were sent out secretly by night to paddle up
-the river in a whaleboat for timber. Who conveyed secret warning of
-this expedition to the French bushraiders outside? No doubt the fair
-spy, Widow Freneuse, could have told if she would; but five miles from
-Port Royal, where the river narrowed to a place ever since known as
-Bloody Brook, a crash of musket shots flared from the woods on each
-side. Painted Indians, and Frenchmen dressed as Indians, among whom
-was a son of Widow Freneuse, dashed out. Sixteen English were killed,
-nine wounded, the rest to a man captured, to be held for ransoms
-ranging from 10 pounds to 50 pounds. Oddly enough, the very night
-after the attack, before news of it had come to Annapolis, the Widow
-Freneuse disappears from the fort. Henceforth Paul Mascarene's men
-kept guard night and day, and slept in their boots. Ever like a
-sinister shadow of evil moved St. Castin and his raiders through the
-Acadian wildwoods.
-
-Only one thing prevented the French recapturing Port Royal at this
-time. All troops were required to defend Quebec itself from invasion.
-
-
-Nicholson's success at Port Royal spurred England and her American
-colonies to a more ambitious project,--to capture Quebec and subjugate
-Canada. This time Nicholson was to head twenty-five hundred provincial
-troops by way of Lake Champlain to the St. Lawrence, while a British
-army of twelve thousand, half soldiers, half marines, on fifteen
-frigates and forty-six transports, was to sail from Boston for Quebec.
-The navy was under command of Sir Hovender Walker; the army, of General
-Jack Hill, a court favorite of Queen Anne's, more noted for {203} his
-graces than his prowess. The whole expedition is one of the most
-disgraceful in the annals of English war. The fleet left Boston on
-July 30, 1711, Nicholson meanwhile waiting encamped on Lake Champlain.
-Early in August the immense fleet had rounded Sable Island and was off
-the shores of Anticosti. Though there was no good pilot on board, the
-two commanders nightly went to bed and slept the sleep of the just.
-Off Egg Islands, on the night of August 22, there was fog and a strong
-east wind. Walker evidently thought he was near the south shore,
-ignorant of the strong undertow of the tide here, which had carried his
-ships thirty miles off the course. The water was rolling in the lumpy
-masses of a choppy cross sea when a young captain of the regulars
-dashed breathlessly into Walker's stateroom and begged him "for the
-Lord's sake to come on deck, for there are reefs ahead and we shall all
-be lost!"
-
-With a seaman's laugh at a landsman's fears, the Admiral donned
-dressing gown and slippers and shuffled up to the decks. A pale moon
-had broken through the ragged fog wrack, and through the white light
-they plainly saw mountainous breakers straight ahead. Walker shouted
-to let the anchor go and drive to the wind. Above the roar of breakers
-and trample of panic-stricken seamen over decks could be heard the
-minute guns of the other ships firing for help. Then pitch darkness
-fell with slant rains in a deluge. The storm abated, but all night
-long, above the boom of an angry sea, could be heard shrieks and
-shoutings for help; and by the light of the Admiral's ship could be
-seen the faces of the dead cast up by the moil of the sea. Before dawn
-eight transports had suffered shipwreck and one thousand lives were
-lost.
-
-It was a night to put fear in the hearts of all but very brave men, and
-neither Walker nor Hill proved man enough to stand firm to the shock.
-Walker ascribed the loss to the storm and the storm to Providence; and
-when war council was held three days later Jack Hill, the court dandy,
-was only too glad of excuse to turn tail and flee to England without
-firing a gun. Poor old Nicholson, waiting with his provincials up on
-Lake Champlain, {204} goes into apoplexy with tempests of rage and
-chagrin, when he hears the news, stamping the ground, tearing off his
-wig, and shouting, "Rogues! rogues!" He burns his fort and disbands
-his men.
-
-The Peace of Utrecht in 1713 for the time closed the war. France had
-been hopelessly defeated in Europe, and the terms were favorable to
-England.
-
-All of Hudson Bay was to be restored to the English; but--note well--it
-was not specified where the boundaries were to be between Hudson Bay
-and Quebec. That boundary dispute came down as a heritage to modern
-days--thanks to the incompetency and ignorance of the statesmen who
-arranged the treaty.
-
-Acadia was given to England, but Cape Breton was retained by the
-French, and--note well--it was not stated whether Acadia included New
-Brunswick and Maine, as the French formerly contended, or included only
-the peninsula south of the Bay of Fundy. That boundary dispute, too,
-came down.
-
-Newfoundland was acknowledged as an English possession, but the French
-retained the islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, with fishing
-privileges on the shores of Newfoundland. That concession, too, has
-come down to trouble modern days,--thanks to the same defenders of
-colonial interests.
-
-The Iroquois were acknowledged to be subjects of England, but it was
-not stated whether that concession included the lands of the Ohio
-raided and subjugated by the Iroquois; and that vagueness was destined
-to cost both New France and New England some of its best blood.
-
-
-It has been stated, and stated many times without dispute, that when
-England sacrificed the interests of her colonies in boundary
-settlements, she did so because she was in honor bound to observe the
-terms of treaties. One is constrained to ask whose ignorance was
-responsible for the terms of those treaties.
-
-Looking back on the record so far,--both of France and England,--which
-has spent the more both of substance and of life for defense; the
-mother countries or the colonies?
-
-
-
-
-{205}
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-FROM 1713 TO 1755
-
-La Verendrye's adventuring to the West--Adventurers reach Lake
-Winnipeg--From Assiniboine to Missouri--Intrigue with Indians--The
-building of Louisburg--The siege of the great fort--Jokes bandied by
-fighters--Quarrels left unsettled--Beyond the Alleghenies--Washington
-and Jumonville--Braddock's march--Defeat of Braddock--Abbe Le
-Loutre--The Acadians--Deportation of French--At Lake Champlain--Dieskau
-defeated
-
-
-What with clandestine raids and open wars, it might be thought that the
-little nation of New France had vent enough for the buoyant energy of
-its youth. While the population of the English colonies was nearing
-the million mark, New France had not 60,000 inhabitants by 1759. Yet
-what had the little nation, whose mainspring was at Quebec,
-accomplished? Look at the map! Her bushrovers had gone overland to
-Hudson Bay far north as Nelson. Before 1700 Duluth had forts at
-Kaministiquia (near modern Fort Williams) on Lake Superior. Radisson,
-Marquette, Jolliet, and La Salle had blazed a trail to the Mississippi
-from what is now Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico. By 1701 La Motte
-Cadillac had built what is now Detroit in order to stop the progress of
-the English traders up the lakes to Michilimackinac; and by 1727 the
-Company of the Sioux had forts far west as Lake Pepin. With Quebec as
-the hub of the wheel, draw spokes across the map of North America.
-Where do they reach? From Quebec to the Gulf of Mexico, to the
-Missouri, to the Upper Mississippi, to Lake Superior, to Hudson Bay.
-Who blazed the way through these far pathless wilds? Nameless
-wanderers dressed in rags and tatters,--outcasts of society, forest
-rovers lured by the Unknown as by a siren, soldiers of fortune,
-penniless, in debt, heartbroken, slandered, persecuted, driven by the
-demon of their own genius to earth's ends,--and to ruin!
-
-Spite of clandestine raids and open wars, New France was now setting
-herself to stretch the lines of her discoveries farther westward.
-
-
-It will be remembered it was at Three Rivers that the Indians of the Up
-Country paused on their way down the St. Lawrence. {206} From the days
-of Radisson in 1660 the passion for discovery had been in the very air
-of Three Rivers. In this little fort was born in 1686 Pierre Gaultier
-Varennes de La Verendrye, son of a French officer. From childhood the
-boy's ear must have been accustomed to the uncouth babblings of the
-half-naked Indians, whose canoes came swarming down the river soon as
-ice broke up in spring. One can guess that in his play the boy many a
-time simulated Indian voyageur, bushrover, coming home clad in furs,
-the envy of the villagers. At fourteen young Pierre had decided that
-he would be a great explorer, but destiny for the time ruled otherwise.
-At eighteen he was among the bushraiders of New England. Nineteen
-found him fighting the English in Newfoundland. Then came the honor
-coveted by all Canadian boys,--an appointment to the King's army in
-Europe. Young La Verendrye was among the French forces defeated by the
-great Marlborough; but the Peace of Utrecht sent him back to Canada,
-aged twenty-seven, to serve in the far northern fur post of Nepigon,
-eating his heart out with ambition.
-
-It was here the dreams of his childhood emerged like a commanding
-destiny. Old Indian chief Ochagach drew maps on birch bark of a trail
-to the Western Sea. La Verendrye took canoe for Quebec, and, with
-heart beating to the passion of a secret ambition, laid the drawings
-before Governor Beauharnois. He came just in the nick of time.
-English traders were pressing westward. New France lent ready ear for
-schemes of wider empire. The court could grant no money for
-discoveries, but it gave La Verendrye permission for a voyage and
-monopoly in furs over the lands he might discover; but the lands must
-be found before there would be furs, and here began the mundane worries
-of La Verendrye's glory.
-
-Montreal merchants outfitted him, but that meant debt; and his little
-party of fifty grizzled woodrovers set out with their ninety-foot birch
-canoes from Montreal on June 8, 1731. Three sons were in his party and
-a nephew, Jemmeraie, from the Sioux country of the west. Every foot
-westward had been consecrated by heroism to set the pulse of
-red-blooded men jumping. There {207} was the seigniory of La Chine,
-named in derision of La Salle's project to find a path to China. There
-was the Long Sault, where Dollard had fought the Iroquois. There were
-the pink granite islands of Georgian Bay, where the Jesuits had led
-their harried Hurons. There was Michilimackinac, with the brawl of its
-vice and brandy and lawless traders from the woods, where La Motte
-Cadillac ruled before going to found Detroit. Seventy-eight days from
-Montreal, there were the pictured rocks of Lake Superior, purple and
-silent and deep as ocean, which Radisson had coasted on his way to the
-Mississippi. Then La Verendrye came to Duluth's old stamping
-ground--Kaministiquia.
-
-[Illustration: LA VERENDRYE'S FORTS AND THE RIVER OF THE WEST (After
-Jeffery's map, 1762)]
-
-
-The home-bound boats were just leaving the fur posts for the St.
-Lawrence. Frosts had already stripped the trees of foliage, and winter
-would presently lock all avenues of retreat in six months' ice. La
-Verendrye's men began to doubt the wisdom of chasing a will-o'-the-wisp
-to an unknown Western Sea. The explorer sent half the party forward
-with his nephew Jemmeraie and his son Jean, while he himself remained
-at Kaministiquia with the mutineers to forage for provisions. {208}
-Winter found Jemmeraie's men on the Minnesota side of Rainy Lake, where
-they built Fort Pierre and drove a rich trade in furs with the encamped
-Crees. In summer of 1732 came La Verendrye, his men in gayest apparel
-marching before the awe-struck Crees with bugle blowing and flags
-flying. Then white men and Crees advanced in canoes to the Lake of the
-Woods, coasting from island to island through the shadowy defiles of
-the sylvan rocks along the Minnesota shore to the northwest angle.
-Here a second winter witnessed the building of a second post, Fort St.
-Charles, with four rows of fifteen-foot palisades and thatched-roofed
-log cabins. The Western Sea seemed far as ever,--like the rainbow of
-the child, ever fleeing as pursued,--and La Verendrye's merchant
-partners were beginning to curse him for a rainbow chaser. He had been
-away three years, and there were no profits. Suspicious that he might
-be defrauding them by private trade or sacrificing their interests to
-his own ambitions, they failed to send forward provisions for this
-year. La Verendrye was in debt to his men for three years' wages, in
-debt to his partners for three years' provisions. To fail now he dared
-not. Go forward he could not, so he hurried down to Montreal, where he
-prevailed on the merchants to continue supplies by the simple argument
-that, if they stopped now, there would be total loss.
-
-Young Jean La Verendrye and Jemmeraie have meanwhile descended Winnipeg
-River's white fret of waterfalls to Winnipeg Lake, where they build
-Fort Maurepas, near modern Alexander,--and wait. Fishing failed. The
-hunt failed. The winter of 1735-1736 proved of such terrible severity
-that famine stalked through the western woods. La Verendrye's three
-forts were reduced to diet of skins, moccasin soup, and dog meat. In
-desperation Jemmeraie set out with a few voyageurs to meet the
-returning commander, but privation had undermined his strength. He
-died on the way and was buried in his hunter's blanket beside an
-unknown stream between Lake Winnipeg and the Lake of the Woods.
-Accompanied by the priest Aulneau, young Jean de La Verendrye decided
-to rush canoes down from the Lake of the Woods to Michilimackinac for
-food and powder. A furious pace was {209} to be kept all the way to
-Lake Superior. The voyageurs had risen early one morning in June, and
-after paddling some miles through the mist had landed to breakfast when
-a band of marauding Sioux fell on them with a shout. The priest
-Aulneau fell pierced in the head by a stone-pointed arrow. Young Jean
-La Verendrye was literally hacked to pieces. Not a man of the
-seventeen French escaped, and Massacre Island became a place of ill
-omen to the French from that day. At last came the belated supplies,
-and by February of 1737 La Verendrye had moved his main forces west to
-Lake Winnipeg. This was no Western Sea, though the wind whipped the
-lake like a tide,--which explained the Indian legend of an inland
-ocean. Though it was no Western Sea, it was a new empire for France.
-The bourne of the Unknown still fled like the rainbow, and La Verendrye
-still pursued.
-
-[Illustration: MAP PUBLISHED IN PARIS IN 1752 SHOWING THE SUPPOSED SEA
-OF THE WEST]
-
-Down to Quebec for more supplies with tales of a vast Beyond Land!
-Back to Lake Winnipeg by September of 1738 with canoes gliding up the
-muddy current of Red River for the Unknown Land of the Assiniboines;
-past Nettley Creek, then known as Massacre Creek or Murderers' River,
-from the Sioux having slain the encamped wives and children of the Cree
-who had gone to Hudson Bay with their furs; between the wooded banks of
-what are now East and West Selkirk, flat to left, high to right;
-tracking up the Rapids of St. Andrews, thick oak woods to east, {210}
-rippling prairie russet in the autumn rolling to the west,--La
-Verendrye and his voyageurs came to the forks of Red River and the
-Assiniboine, or what is now known as the city of Winnipeg. Where the
-two rivers met on the flats to the west were the high scaffoldings of
-an ancient Cree graveyard, bizarre and eerie and ghostlike between the
-voyageurs and the setting sun. On the high river bank of what is now
-known as Assiniboine Avenue gleamed the white skin of ten Cree tepees,
-where two war chiefs waited to meet La Verendrye. Drawing up their
-canoes near where the bridge now spans between St. Boniface and
-Winnipeg, the voyageurs came ashore.
-
-It was a fair scene that greeted them, such a scene as any westerner
-may witness to-day of a warm September night when the sun hangs low
-like a blood-red shield, and the evening breeze touches the rustling
-grasses of the prairie beyond the city to the waves of an ocean. It
-was not the Western Sea, but it was a Sea of Prairie. It was a New
-World, unbounded by hill or forest, spacious as the very airs of
-heaven, fenced only by the blue dip of a shimmering horizon. It was a
-world, though La Verendrye knew it not, five times larger than New
-France, half as big as all Europe. He had discovered the Canadian
-Northwest.
-
-One can guess how the tired wanderers at rest beneath the uptilted
-canoes that night wondered whither their quest would lead them over the
-fire-dyed horizon where the sun was sinking as over a sea. The Cree
-chiefs told them of other lands and other peoples to the south, "who
-trade with a people who dwelt on the great waters beyond the mountains
-of the setting sun,"--the Spaniards.
-
-Leaving men to knock up a trading post near the suburb now known as
-Fort Rouge, La Verendrye, on September 26, steers his canoes up the
-shallow Assiniboine far as what is now known as Portage La Prairie,
-where a trail leads overland to the Saskatchewan and so down to the
-English traders of Hudson Bay. But this is not the trail to the
-Western Sea; La Verendrye's quest is set towards those people "who live
-on the great waters to the south."
-
-{211}
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHOWING THE SUPPOSED SEA OF THE WEST, WITH
-APPROACHES TO THE MISSISSIPPI AND GREAT LAKES, PARIS, 1755]
-
-Fort de La Reine is built at the Portage of the Prairie, and October
-18, to beat of drum, with flag flying, La Verendrye marches forth with
-fifty-two men towards Souris River for the land of the Mandanes on the
-Missouri. December 3 he is welcomed to the Mandane villages; but here
-is no Western Sea, only the broad current of the Missouri rolling
-turbulent and muddy southward towards the Mississippi; but the Mandanes
-tell of a people to the far west, "who live on the great waters bitter
-for drinking, who dress in armor and dwell in stone houses." These
-must be the Spaniards. La Verendrye's quest has become a receding
-phantom. Leaving men to learn the Missouri dialects, La Verendrye
-marched in the teeth of mid-winter storms back to the Portage of the
-Prairie on the Assiniboine. Of that march, space forbids to tell. A
-blizzard raged, driving the fine snows into eyes and skin like hot
-salt. When the marchers camped at night they had to bury themselves in
-snow to keep from freezing. Drifts covered all landmarks. The men
-lost their bearings, doubled back on their own tracks, were
-frost-bitten, buffeted by the storm, and short of food. Christmas
-{212} was passed in the camps of wandering Assiniboines, and February
-10, 1739, the fifty men staggered, weak and starving, back to the
-Portage of the Prairie.
-
-The wanderings of La Verendrye and his sons for the next few years led
-southwestward far as the Rockies in the region of Montana,
-northwestward far as the Bow River branch of the Saskatchewan.
-Meanwhile, all La Verendrye's property had been seized by his
-creditors. Jealous rivals were clamoring for possession of his fur
-posts. The King had conferred on him the Order of the Cross of St.
-Louis, but eighteen years of exposure and worry had broken the
-explorer's health. On the eve of setting out again for the west he
-died suddenly on the 6th of December, 1749, at Montreal.
-
-Look again at the map! The spokes of the wheel running out from Quebec
-extend to the Gulf of Mexico on the south, to the Rockies on the west,
-to Hudson Bay on the north. And the population of New France does not
-yet number 60,000 people. Is it any wonder French Canadians look back
-on these days as the Golden Age?
-
-
-And while the bushrovers of Canada are pushing their way through the
-wilderness westward, there come slashing, tramping, swearing, stamping
-through the mountainous wilds of West and East Siberia the Cossack
-soldiers of Peter the Great, led by the Dane, Vitus Bering, bound on
-discovery to the west coast of America. La Verendrye's men have
-crossed only half a continent. Bering's Russians cross the width of
-two continents, seven thousand miles, then launch their crazily planked
-ships over unknown northern seas for America. From 1729 to August of
-1742 toil the Russian sea voyagers. Their story is not part of
-Canada's history. Suffice to say, December of 1741 finds the Russian
-crews cast away on two desert islands of Bering Sea west of Alaska, now
-known as the Commander Islands. Half the crew of seventy-seven perish
-of starvation and scurvy. Bering himself lies dying in a sandpit, with
-the earth spread over him for warmth. Outside the sand holes, {213}
-where the Russians crouch, scream hurricane gales and white billows and
-myriad sea birds. The ships have been wrecked. The Russians are on an
-unknown island. Day dawn, December 8, lying half buried in the sand,
-Bering breathes his last. On rafts made of wreckage the remnant of his
-crew find way back to Asia, but they have discovered a trail across the
-sea to a new land. Fur hunters are moving from the east, westward.
-Fur hunters are moving from the west, eastward. These two tides will
-meet and clash at a later era.
-
-
-The Treaty of Utrecht had stopped open war, but that did not prevent
-the bushrovers from raiding the border lands of Maine, of
-Massachusetts, of New York. The story of one raid is the story of all,
-and several have already been related. Now comes a half century of
-petty war that raged on the border lands from Saratoga and Northfield
-to Maine and New Brunswick. The story of these "little wars," as the
-French called them, belongs more to the history of the United States
-than Canada.
-
-Nor did the Peace of Utrecht stop the double dealing and intrigue by
-which European rulers sought to use bigoted missionaries and ignorant
-Indians as pawns in the game of statecraft.
-
-"Sentiments of opposition to the English in Acadia must be secretly
-fostered," commanded the King of France in 1715, two years after Acadia
-had been deeded over to England. "The King is pleased with the efforts
-of Pere Rasle to induce the Indians not to allow the English to settle
-on their lands," runs the royal dispatch of 1721 regarding the border
-massacres of Maine. "Advise the missionaries in Acadia to do nothing
-that may serve as a pretext for sending them out of the country, but
-have them induce the Indians to organize enterprises against the
-English," command the royal instructions of 1744. "The Indians,"
-writes the Canadian Governor, "can be depended on to bring in the
-scalps of the English as long as we furnish ammunition. This is the
-opinion of the missionary, M. Le Loutre." Again, from the Governor of
-New France: "If the settlers of {214} Acadia hesitate to rise against
-their English masters, we can employ threats of the Indians and force.
-It is inconceivable that the English would try to remove these people.
-Letters from M. Le Loutre report that his Indians have intercepted
-dispatches of the English officers. M. Le Loutre will keep us informed
-of everything in Acadia. We have furnished him with secret signals to
-our ships, which will tell us of every movement on the part of the
-enemy."
-
-
-Of all the hotbeds of intrigue, Acadia, from its position, had become
-the worst. Here was a population of French farmers, which in half a
-century had increased to 12,000, held in subjection by an English
-garrison at Annapolis of less than two hundred soldiers so destitute
-they had neither shoes nor stockings, coats nor bedding. The French
-were guaranteed in the Treaty of Utrecht the freedom and privileges of
-their religion by the English; but in matters temporal as well as
-spiritual they were absolutely subject to priests, acting as spies for
-the Quebec plotters.
-
-France, as has been told, retained Cape Breton (Isle Royal) and Prince
-Edward Island (Isle St. Jean), and the Treaty of Utrecht had hardly
-been signed before plans were drawn on a magnificent scale for a French
-fort on Cape Breton to effect a threefold purpose,--to command the sea
-towards Boston, to regain Acadia, to protect the approach to the River
-St. Lawrence.
-
-The Island of Cape Breton is like a hand with its fingers stuck out in
-the sea. The very tip of a long promontory commanding one of the
-southern arms of the sea was chosen for the fort that was to be the
-strongest in all America. On three sides were the sea, with outlying
-islands suitable for powerful batteries and a harbor entrance that was
-both narrow and deep. To the rear was impassable muskeg--quaking moss
-above water-soaked bog. Two weaknesses only had the fort. There were
-hills to right and left from which an enemy might pour destruction
-inside the walls, but the royal engineers of France depended on the
-outlying island batteries preventing any enemy gaining possession of
-these hills. By 1720 walls thirty-six feet thick had encircled {215}
-an area of over one hundred acres. Outside the rear wall had been
-excavated a ditch forty feet deep and eighty wide. Bristling from the
-six bastions of the walls were more than one hundred and eighty heavy
-cannon. Besides the two batteries commanding the entrance to the
-harbor was an outer Royal Battery of forty cannon directly across the
-water from the fort, on the next finger of the island. Twenty years
-was the fort in building, costing what in those days was regarded as an
-enormous sum of money,--equal to $10,000,000. Such was Louisburg,
-impregnable as far as human foresight could judge,--the refuge of
-corsairs that preyed on Boston commerce; the haven of the schemers who
-intrigued to wean away the Acadians from English rule, the guardian
-sentinel of all approach to the St. Lawrence.
-
-"It would be well," wrote the King the very next year after the treaty
-was signed, "to attract the Acadians to Cape Breton, but act with
-caution." And now twenty years had passed. Some Acadians had gone to
-Cape Breton and others to Prince Edward Island; but statecraft judged
-the simple Acadian farmer would be more useful where he was,--on the
-spot in Acadia, ready to rebel when open war would give the French of
-Louisburg a chance to invade.
-
-Late in 1744 Europe breaks into that flame of war known as the Austrian
-Succession. Before either Quebec or Boston knows of open war,
-Louisburg has word of it and sends her rangers burning fishing towns
-and battering at the rotten palisades of Annapolis (Port Royal). Port
-Royal is commanded by that same Paul Mascarene of former wars, grown
-old in service. The French bid him save himself by surrender before
-their fleet comes. Though Mascarene has less than a hundred men, the
-weather is in his favor. It is September. Winter will drive the
-invaders home, so he sends back word that he will bide his time till
-the hostile fleet comes. As for the Abbe Le Loutre, let the
-treacherous priest beware how he brings his murderous Indians within
-range of the fort guns! Meanwhile the Acadian habitants are threatened
-with death if they do not rise to aid the {216} French, but they too
-bide their time, for if they rebel and fail, that too means death; and
-"_the Neutrals_" refuse to stir till the invaders, from lack of
-provisions, are forced to decamp, and the Abbe Le Loutre, with his
-black hat drawn down over his eyes, vanishes into forest with his crew
-of painted warriors.
-
-News of the war and of the ravaging of Acadian fishing towns set
-Massachusetts in flame. To Boston, above all New England towns, was
-Louisburg a constant danger. The thing seemed absolute stark
-madness,--the thoughtless daring of foolhardy enthusiasts,--but it is
-ever enthusiasm which accomplishes the impossible; and April 30, 1745,
-after only seven weeks of preparation, an English fleet of sixty-eight
-ships--some accounts say ninety, including the whalers and transports
-gathered along the coast towns--sails into Gabarus Bay, behind
-Louisburg, where the waters have barely cleared of ice. William
-Pepperrell, a merchant, commands the four thousand raw levies of
-provincial troops, the most of whom have never stepped to martial music
-before in their lives. Admiral Warren has come up from West India
-waters with his men-of-war to command the united fleets. Early Monday
-morning, against a shore wind, the boats are tacking to land, when the
-alarm bells begin ringing and ringing at Louisburg and a force of one
-hundred and fifty men dashes downshore for Flat Cove to prevent the
-landing. Pepperrell out-tricks the enemy by leaving only a few boats
-to make a feint of landing at the Cove, while he swings his main fleet
-inshore round a bend in the coast a mile away. Here, with a prodigious
-rattling of lowered sails and anchor chains, the crews plunge over the
-rolling waves, pontooning a bridge of small boats ashore. By nightfall
-the most of the English have landed, and spies report the harbor of
-Louisburg alive with torches where the French are sinking ships to
-obstruct the entrance and setting fire to fishing stages that might
-interfere with cannon aim. The next night, May 1, Vaughan's New
-Hampshire boys--raw farmers, shambling in their gait, singing as they
-march--swing through the woods along the marsh {217} behind the fort,
-and take up a position on a hill to the far side of Louisburg, creating
-an enormous bonfire with the French tar and ships' tackling stored
-here. The result of this harmless maneuver was simply astounding. It
-will be recalled that Louisburg had an outer battery of forty cannon on
-this side. The French soldiers holding this battery mistook the
-bonfire for the {218} English attacking forces, and under cover of
-darkness abandoned the position,--battery, guns, powder and all,--which
-the English promptly seized. This was the Royal Battery, which
-commanded the harbor and could shell into the very heart of the fort.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM PEPPERRELL]
-
-The next thing for the English was to get their heavy guns ashore
-through a rolling surf of ice-cold water. For two weeks the men stood
-by turns to their necks in the surf, steadying the pontoon gangway as
-the great cannon were trundled ashore; and this was the least of their
-difficulties. The question was how to get their cannon across the
-marsh behind the fort to the hill on the far side. The cannon would
-sink from their own weight in such a bog, and either horses or oxen
-would flounder to death in a few minutes. Again, the fool-hardy
-enthusiasm of the raw levies overcame the difficulty. They built large
-stone boats, raft-shaped, such as are used on farms to haul stones over
-ground too rough for wagons. Hitching to these, teams of two hundred
-men stripped to midwaist, they laboriously hauled the cannon across the
-quaking moss to the hills commanding the rear of the fort, bombs and
-balls whizzing overhead all the while, fired from the fort bastions.
-It was cold, damp spring weather. The men who were not soaked to their
-necks in surf and bog were doing picket duty alongshore, sleeping in
-their boots. Consequently, in three weeks, half Pepperrell's force
-became deadly ill. At this time, within two days, occurred both a
-cheering success and a disheartening rebuff. A French man-of-war with
-seventy cannon and six hundred men was seen entering Louisburg. As if
-in panic fright, one of the small English ships fled. The French ship
-pursued. In a trice she was surrounded by the English fleet and
-captured. The flight of the little vessel had been a trick. A few
-days later four hundred English in whaleboats attempted the mad project
-of attacking the Island Battery at the harbor entrance. The boats set
-out about midnight with muffled oars, but a wind rose, setting a
-tremendous surf lashing the rocks, and yet the invaders might have
-succeeded but for a piece of rashness. A hundred men had gained the
-shore when, with the thoughtlessness of schoolboys, they uttered a
-jubilant yell. {219} Instantly, porthole, platform, gallery, belched
-death through the darkness. The story is told that a raw New England
-lad was in the act of climbing the French flagstaff to hang out his own
-red coat as English flag when a Swiss guard hacked him to pieces. The
-boats not yet ashore were sunk by the blaze of cannon. A few escaped
-back in the darkness, but by daylight over one hundred English had been
-captured. Cannon, mortars, and musketoons were mounted to command the
-fort inside the walls, and a continuous rain of fire began from the
-hills. In vain Duchambon, the French commander, waited for
-reenforcements from Canada. Convent, hospital, barracks, all the
-houses of the town, were peppered by bombs till there was not a roof
-intact in the place. The soldiers, of whom there were barely two
-thousand, were ready to mutiny. The citizens besought Duchambon to
-surrender. Provisions ran out. Looking down from the tops of the
-walls, cracking jokes with the English across the ditch, the French
-soldiers counted more than a thousand scaling ladders ready for
-hand-to-hand assault, and a host of barrels filled with mud behind
-which the English sharpshooters crouched. It had just been arranged
-between Warren and Pepperrell that the {220} former should attack by
-sea while the latter assaulted by land, when on June 16 the French
-capitulated. How the New England enthusiasts ran rampant through the
-abandoned French fort need not be told. How Parson Moody, famous for
-his long prayers, hewed down images in the Catholic chapel till he was
-breathless and then came to the officers' state dinner so exhausted
-that when asked to pronounce blessing he could only mutter, "Good Lord,
-we have so much to thank Thee for, time is too short; we must leave it
-to eternity. Amen"; how the New Englanders, unused to French wines,
-drank themselves torpid on the stores of the fort cellar; how the
-French the next year made superhuman effort to regain Louisburg, only
-to have a magnificent fleet of one hundred and fifty sail wrecked on
-Sable Island, Duke d'Anville, the commander, dying of heartbreak on his
-ship anchored near Halifax, his successor killing himself with his own
-sword,--cannot be told here. Louisburg was the prize of the war, and
-England threw the prize away by giving it back to France in the Treaty
-of Aix-la-Chapelle in 1748. The English government paid back the
-colonies for their outlay, but of all the rich French pirate ships
-loaded with booty, captured at Louisburg by leaving the French flag
-flying, not a penny's worth went to the provincial troops. Warren's
-seamen received all the loot.
-
-[Illustration: RUINS OF THE FORTIFICATIONS AT LOUISBURG]
-
-
-Like all preceding treaties, the Peace of Aix-la-Chapelle left
-unsettled the boundaries between New France and New England. In
-Acadia, in New York, on the Ohio, collisions were bound to come.
-
-In Acadia the English send their officers to the Isthmus of Chignecto
-to establish a fort near the bounds of what are now Nova Scotia and New
-Brunswick. The priestly spy, Louis Joseph Le Loutre, leads his wild
-Micmac savages through the farm settlement round the English fort,
-setting fire to houses putting a torch even to the church, and so
-compelling the habitants of the boundary to come over to the French and
-take sides. The treaty has restored Louisburg to the French, but the
-very {221} next year England sends out Edward Cornwallis with two
-thousand settlers to establish the English fort now known as Halifax.
-By 1752 there are four thousand people at the new fort, though the
-Indian raiders miss no occasion to shoot down wayfarers and farmers;
-and the French Governor at Quebec continues his bribes--as much as
-eight hundred dollars a year to a man--to stir up hostility to the
-English and prevent the Acadian farmers taking the oath of fidelity to
-England. So much for the peace treaty in Acadia. It was not peace; it
-was farce.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY PLAN OF THE ATTACK ON LOUISBURG]
-
-In New York state matters were worse. The Iroquois had been
-acknowledged allies of the English, and before 1730 the English fort at
-Oswego had been built at the southeast corner of Lake Ontario to catch
-the fur trade of the northern tribes coming down the lakes to New
-France, and to hold the Iroquois' friendship. Also, as French traders
-pass up the lake to Fort Frontenac (Kingston) and Niagara with their
-national flag flying from the prow of canoe and flatboat, chance
-bullets from the {222} English fort ricochet across the advancing
-prows, and soldiers on the galleries inside Fort Oswego take bets on
-whether they can hit the French flag. Prompt as a gamester, New France
-checkmates this move. Peter Schuyler has been settling English farmers
-round Lake Champlain. At Crown Point, long known as Scalp Point, where
-the lake narrows and portage runs across to Lake George and the Mohawk
-land, the French in 1731 erect a strong fort. As for the English
-traders at Fort Oswego catching the tribes from the north, New France
-counterchecks that by sending Portneuf in April of 1749, only a year
-after the peace, to the Toronto portage where the Indians come from the
-Upper Lakes by way of Lake Simcoe. What is now known as Toronto is
-named Rouille, after a French minister; and as if this were not
-checkmate enough to the English advancing westward, the Sulpician
-priest from Montreal, Abbe Picquet, zealously builds a fort straight
-north of Oswego, on the south side of the St. Lawrence, to keep the
-Iroquois loyal to France. Picquet calls his fort "Presentation." His
-enemies call it "Picquet's Folly." It is known to-day as Ogdensburg.
-Look at the map. France's frontier line is guarded by forts that stand
-like sentinels at the gateways of all waters leading to the
-interior,--Ogdensburg, Kingston, Toronto, Niagara, Detroit,
-Michilimackinac, and La Verendrye's string of forts far west as the
-Rockies. New York's frontier line is guarded by one fort
-only,--Oswego. Here too, as in Acadia, the peace is a farce.
-
-[Illustration: FORT PRESENTATION]
-
-But it was in the valley of the Ohio where the greatest struggle over
-boundaries took place. One year after the peace, Celoron de Bienville
-is sent in July, 1749, to take possession of the {223} Ohio for France.
-France claims right to this region by virtue of La Salle's explorations
-sixty years previously, and of all those French bushrangers who have
-roved the wilds from the Great Lakes to Louisiana. Small token did
-France take of La Salle's exploits while he lived, but great store do
-her statesmen set by his voyages now that he has been sixty years dead.
-"But pause!" commands the English Governor of Virginia. "Since time
-immemorial have our traders wandered over the Great Smoky Mountains,
-over the Cumberlands, over the Alleghenies, down the Tennessee and the
-Kanawha and the Monongahela and the Ohio to the Mississippi." As a
-matter of fact, one Major General Wood had in 1670 and 1674 sent his
-men overland, if not so far as the Mississippi, then certainly as far
-as the Ohio and the valley of the Mississippi. But Wood was a private
-adventurer. For years his exploit had been forgotten. No record of it
-remained but an account written by his men, Batts and Hallam. The
-French declared the record was a myth, and it has, in fact, been so
-regarded by the most of historians. Yet, curiously enough, ranging
-through some old family papers of the Hudson's Bay Company in the
-Public Records, London, I found with Wood's own signature his record of
-the trip across the mountains to the Indians of the Ohio and the
-Mississippi. It is probable that the {224} English cared quite as much
-for claims founded on La Salle's voyage as the French cared for claims
-founded on the horseback trip of Major General Wood's men. The fact
-remained: here were the English traders from Virginia pressing
-northward by way of the Ohio; here were the French adventurers pressing
-south by way of the Ohio. As in Acadia and New York, peace or no
-peace, a clash was inevitable.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY VIEW OF OSWEGO]
-
-
-Duquesne has come out governor of Canada, and by 1753 has dispatched a
-thousand men into the Ohio valley, who blaze a trail through the
-wilderness and string a line of forts from Presqu' Isle (Erie) on Lake
-Erie southward to Fort Duquesne at the junction of the Allegheny and
-Monongahela, where Pittsburg stands to-day.
-
-One December night at Fort Le Boeuf, on the trail to the Ohio, the
-French commandant was surprised to see a slim youth of twenty years
-ride out of the rain-drenched, leafless woods, followed by four or five
-whites and Indians with a string of belled pack-horses. The young
-gentleman introduces himself with great formality, though he must use
-an interpreter, for he does not speak French. He is Major George
-Washington, sent by Governor Dinwiddie of Virginia to know why the
-French have been seizing the fur posts of English traders in this
-region. The French commander, Saint Pierre, receives the young
-Virginian courteously, plies master and men with such lavish
-hospitality that Washington has much trouble to keep his drunk Indians
-from deserting, and dismisses his visitor with the smooth but bootless
-response that as France and England are at peace he cannot answer
-Governor Dinwiddie's message till he has heard from the Governor of
-Canada, Marquis Duquesne. Not much satisfaction for emissaries who had
-forded ice-rafted rivers and had tramped the drifted forests for three
-hundred miles.
-
-[Illustration: GOVERNOR DINWIDDIE OF VIRGINIA]
-
-By January of 1754 Washington is back in Virginia. By May he is on the
-trail again, blazing a path through the wilderness down the Monongahela
-towards the French fort; for what purpose one may guess, though these
-were times of piping peace. Come {225} an old Indian chief and an
-English bushwhacker one morning with word that fifty French raiders are
-on the trail ten miles away; for what purpose one may guess, spite of
-peace. Instantly Washington sends half a hundred Virginia frontiersmen
-out scouting. They find no trace of raiders, but the old chief picks
-up the trail of the ambushed French. Here they had broken branches
-going through the woods; there a moccasin track punctures the spongy
-mold; here leaves have been scattered to hide camp ashes. At midnight,
-with the rain slashing through the forest black as pitch, Washington
-sets out with forty men, following his Indian guide. Through the dark
-they feel rather than follow the trail, and it is a slow but an easy
-trick to those acquainted with wildwood travel. Leave the path by as
-much as a foot length and the foliage lashes you back, or the windfall
-trips you up, or the punky path becomes punctured beneath moccasin
-tread. By day dawn, misty and gray in the May woods, the English are
-at the Indian camp and march forward escorted by the redskins, single
-file, silent as ghosts, alert as tigers. Raindrip swashes on the
-buckskin coats. Muskets are loaded and carefully cased from the wet.
-The old chief stops suddenly . . . and points! There lie the French in
-a rock ravine sheltered by the woods like a cave. The next instant the
-French had leaped up with a whoop. Washington shouted "Fire!" When
-the smoke of the musket crash cleared, ten French lay dead, among them
-their officer, Jumonville; {226} and twenty-two others surrendered. No
-need to dispute whether Washington was justified in firing on thirty
-bush rovers in time of peace! The bushrovers had already seized
-English forts and were even now scouring the country for English
-traders. For a week their scouts had followed Washington as spies.
-
-Expecting instant retaliation from Fort Duquesne, Washington retreated
-swiftly to his camping place at Great Meadows and cast up a log
-barricade known as Fort Necessity. A few days later comes a company of
-regular troops. By July 1 he has some four hundred men, but at Fort
-Duquesne are fourteen hundred French. The French wait only for orders
-from Quebec, then march nine hundred bushrovers against Washington.
-July 3, towards midday, they burst from the woods whooping and yelling.
-Washington chose to meet them on the open ground, but the French were
-pouring a cross fire over the meadow; and to compel them to attack in
-the open, Washington drew his men behind the barricade. By nightfall
-the Virginians were out of powder. Twelve had been killed and
-forty-three were wounded. Before midnight the French beat a parley.
-All they desired was that the English evacuate the fort. To fight
-longer would have risked the extermination of Washington's troops.
-Terms of honorable surrender were granted, and the next day--the day
-which Washington was to make immortal, July 4--the English retreated
-from Fort Necessity. Such was the peace in the Ohio valley.
-
-Though the peace is still continued, England dispatches in 1755 two
-regiments of the line under Major General Braddock to protect Virginia,
-along with a fleet of twelve men-of-war under Admiral Boscawen. France
-keeps up the farce by sending out Baron Dieskau with three thousand
-soldiers and Admiral La Motte with eighteen ships. Coasting off
-Newfoundland, the English encounter three of the French ships that have
-gone astray in the fog. "Is it peace or war?" shout the French across
-decks. "Peace," answers a voice from the English deck; and
-instantaneously a hurricane cannonade rakes the decks of the French,
-killing eighty. Two of the French ships surrendered. The other
-escaped through the fog. Such was the peace!
-
-{227} So began the famous Seven Years' War; and Major General Braddock,
-in session with the colonial governors, plans the campaign that is to
-crush New France's pretensions south of the Great Lakes. Acadia, Lake
-Champlain, the Ohio,--these are to be the theaters of the contest.
-
-[Illustration: TITLE-PAGE OF WASHINGTON'S JOURNAL]
-
-Braddock himself, accompanied by Washington, marches with twenty-two
-hundred men over the Alleghenies along the old trail of the Monongahela
-against Fort Duquesne. Of Braddock, the least said the better. A
-gambler, full of arrogant contempt towards all people and things that
-were not British, hail-fellow-well-met to his boon companions,
-heartless towards all outside the pale of his own pride, a blustering
-bully yet dogged, and withal a gentleman after the standard of the age,
-he was neither better nor worse than the times in which he lived. Of
-Braddock's men, fifteen hundred were British regulars, the rest
-Virginian bushfighters; and the redcoat troops held such contempt
-towards the buckskin frontiersmen that friction arose from the first
-about the relative rank of regulars and provincials. From the time
-they set out, the troops had been retarded by countless delays. There
-was trouble buying up supplies of beef cattle {228} among the
-frontiersmen. Scouts scoured the country for horses and wagons to haul
-the great guns and heavy artillery. Braddock's high mightiness would
-take no advice from colonials about single-file march on a bush trail
-and swift raids to elude ambushed foes. Everything proceeded slowly,
-ponderously, with the system and routine of an English guardroom.
-Scouts to the fore and on both flanks, three hundred bushwhackers went
-ahead widening the bridle path to a twelve-foot road for the wagons;
-and along this road moved the troops, five and six abreast, the red
-coats agleam through the forest foliage, drums rolling, flags flying,
-steps keeping time as if on parade, Braddock and his officers mounted
-on spirited horses, the heavy artillery and supply wagons lagging far
-behind in a winding line.
-
-[Illustration: A SKETCH OF THE FIELD OF BATTLE AT BRADDOCK'S DEFEAT]
-
-What happened has been told times without number in story and history.
-It was what the despised colonials feared and any bushranger could have
-predicted. July 9, in stifling heat, the marchers had come to a loop
-in the Monongahela River. Braddock thought to avoid the loop by
-fording twice. He was now within eight miles of Fort Duquesne--the
-modern Pittsburg. Though Indian raiders had scalped some wanderers
-from the trail and insolent messages had been occasionally found
-scrawled in French on birch trees, not a Frenchman had been seen on the
-march. The advance guard had crossed the second ford about midday when
-the road makers at a little opening beyond the river saw a white man
-clothed in buckskin, but wearing an officer's badge, dash out of the
-woods to the fore, wave his hat, . . . and disappear. A moment later
-the well-known war whoop of the French bushrovers tore the air to
-tatters; and bullets rained from ambushed foes in a sheet of fire. In
-vain the English drums rolled . . . and rolled . . . and soldiers
-shouted, "The King! God save the King!" One officer tried to rally
-his men to rush the woods, but they were shot down by a torrent of
-bullets from an unseen foe. The Virginian bushfighters alone knew how
-to meet such an emergency. Jumping from tree to tree for shelter like
-Indians dancing sideways to avoid the enemy's aim, they had broken from
-rank to fight in bushman fashion when Braddock {229} came galloping
-furiously from the rear and ordered them back in line. What use was
-military rank with an invisible foe? As well shoot air as an unseen
-Indian! Again the Virginians broke rank, and the regulars, huddled
-together like cattle in the shambles, fired blindly and succeeded only
-in hitting their own provincial troops. Braddock stormed and swore and
-rode like a fury incarnate, roaring orders which no one could hear,
-much less obey. Five horses were shot under him and the dauntless
-commander had mounted a fresh one when the big guns came plunging
-forward; but the artillery on which Braddock had pinned his faith only
-plowed pits in the forest mold. Of eighty officers, sixty had fallen
-and a like proportion of men. Braddock ordered a retreat. The march
-became a panic, the panic frenzied terror, the men who had stood so
-stolidly under withering fire now dashing in headlong flight from the
-second to the first ford and back over the trail, breathless as if
-pursued by demons! Artillery, cattle, supplies, dispatch boxes,--all
-were abandoned. Washington's clothes had been riddled by bullets, but
-he had escaped injury. Braddock reeled from his horse mortally
-wounded, to be carried {230} back on a litter to that scene of
-Washington's surrender the year before. Four days later the English
-general died there. Of the English troops, more than a thousand lay
-dead, blistering in the July sun, maimed and scalped by the Indians.
-Braddock was buried in his soldier's coat beside the trail, all signs
-of the grave effaced to prevent vandalism.
-
-[Illustration: PLAN OF FORT BEAUSEJOUR]
-
-Of all the losses the most serious were the dispatch boxes; for they
-contained the English plans of campaign from Acadia to Niagara, and
-were carried back to Fort Duquesne, where they put the French on guard.
-The jubilant joy at the French fort need not be described. When he
-heard of the English advance, Contrecoeur, the commander, had been
-cooped up with less than one thousand men, half of whom were Indians.
-Had Braddock once reached Fort Duquesne, he could have starved it into
-surrender without firing a gun, or shelled it into kindling wood with
-his heavy artillery. Beaujeu, an officer under Contrecoeur, had
-volunteered to go out and meet the English. "My son, my son, will you
-walk into the arms of death?" demanded the Indian chiefs. "My fathers,
-will you allow me to go alone?" answered Beaujeu; and out he sallied
-with six hundred picked men. It was Beaujeu whom Braddock's men had
-seen dash out and wave his hat. The brave Frenchman fell, shot at the
-first {231} volley from the English, and his Indian friends avenged his
-death by roasting thirty English prisoners alive.
-
-
-The Isthmus of Chignecto, or the boundary between New Brunswick and
-Nova Scotia, was the scene of the border-land fights in Acadia. To
-narrate half the forays, raids, and ambuscades would require a volume.
-Fights as gallant as Dollard's at the Sault waged from Beausejour, the
-French fort north of the boundary, to Grand Pre and Annapolis, where
-the English were stationed. After the founding of Halifax the Abbe Le
-Loutre, whose false, foolish counsels had so often endangered the
-habitant farmer, moved from his mission in the center of Acadia up to
-Beausejour on the New Brunswick side. Here he could be seen with his
-Indians toiling like a demon over the trenches, when Monckton, the
-English general, came on June 1, 1855, with the British fleet, to land
-his forces at Fort Lawrence, the English post on the south side.
-Colonel Lawrence was now English governor of Acadia, and he had decided
-with Monckton that once and for all the French of Acadia must be
-subjugated. The French of Beausejour had in all less than fifteen
-hundred men, half of whom were simple Acadian farmers forced into
-unwilling service by the priest's threats of Indian raid in this world
-and damnation in the next. Day dawn of June 4 the bugles blew to arms
-and the English forces, some four thousand, had marched to the south
-shore of the Missaguash River, when the French on the north side
-uttered a whoop and emitted a clatter of shots. Black-hatted,
-sinister, tireless, the priest could be seen urging his Indians on.
-The English brought up three field cannon and under protection of their
-scattering fire laid a pontoon bridge. Crossing the river, they
-marched within a mile of the fort. That night the sky was alight with
-flame; for Vergor, the French commander, and Abbe Le Loutre set fire to
-all houses outside the fort walls. In a few days the English cannon
-had been placed in a circle round the fort, and set such strange music
-humming in the ears of the besieged that the Acadian farmers deserted
-and the priest nervously thought of flight. Louisburg {232} could send
-no aid, and still the bombs kept bursting through the roofs of the fort
-houses. One morning a bomb crashed through the roof of the breakfast
-room, killing six officers on the spot; and the French at once hung out
-the white flag; but when the English troops marched in on June 16, at
-seven in the evening, Le Loutre had fled overland through the forests
-of New Brunswick for Quebec.
-
-There scant welcome awaited the renegade priest. The French governors
-had been willing to use him as their tool at a price ($800 a year), but
-when the tool failed of its purpose they cast him aside. Le Loutre
-sailed for France, but his ship was captured by an English cruiser and
-he was imprisoned for eight years on the island of Jersey.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL MONCKTON]
-
-Meanwhile, how was fate dealing with the Acadian farmers? Ever since
-the Treaty of Utrecht they had been afraid to take the oath of
-unqualified loyalty to England, lest New France, or rather Abbe Le
-Loutre, let loose the hounds of Indian massacre on their peaceful
-settlements. Besides, had not the priest assured them year in and year
-out that France would recover Acadia and put to the sword those
-habitants who had forsworn France? And they had been equally afraid to
-side with the French, for in case of failure the burden of punishment
-would fall on them alone. For almost half a century they had been
-known as _Neutrals_. Of their population of 12,000, 3000 had been
-lured away to Prince Edward Island and Cape Breton. When Cornwallis
-had founded Halifax he had intended to wait only till the English were
-firmly established, when he would demand an oath of unqualified
-allegiance from {233} the Acadians. They, on their part, were willing
-to take the oath with one proviso,--that they should never be required
-to take up arms against the French; or they would have been willing to
-leave Acadia, as the Treaty of Utrecht had provided, in case they did
-not take the oath of allegiance. But in the early days of English
-possession the English governors were not willing they should leave.
-If the Acadians had migrated, it would simply have strengthened the
-French in Cape Breton and Prince Edward Island and New Brunswick.
-Obstructions had been created that prevented the supply of transports
-to move the Acadians. The years had drifted on, and a new generation
-had grown up, knowing nothing of treaty rights, but only that the
-French were threatening them on one side if they did not rise against
-England, and the English on the other side if they did not take oath of
-unqualified allegiance. Cornwallis had long since left Halifax, and
-Lawrence, the English governor, while loyal to a fault, was, like
-Braddock, that type of English understrapper who has wrought such
-irreparable injury to English prestige purely from lack of sympathetic
-insight with colonial conditions. For years before he had become
-governor, Lawrence's days had been embittered by the intrigues of the
-French with the Acadian farmers. He had been in Halifax when the Abbe
-Le Loutre's Indian brigands had raided and slain as many as thirty
-workmen at a time near the English fort. He had been at the Isthmus of
-Chignecto that fatal morning when some Indians dressed in the suits of
-French officers waved a white flag and lured Captain Howe of the
-English fort across stream, where they shot him under flag of truce in
-cold blood.
-
-These are not excuses for what Lawrence did. Nothing can excuse the
-infamy of his policy toward the Acadians. There are few blacker crimes
-in the history of the world; but these facts explain how a man of
-Lawrence's standing could assume the responsibility he did. In
-addition, Lawrence was a bigoted Protestant. He not only hated the
-Acadians because they were French; he hated them as "a colony of
-rattlesnakes" because they were Catholics; and being an Englishman, he
-despised them {234} because they were colonials. France and England
-were now on the verge of the great struggle for supremacy in America.
-Eighteen French frigates had come to Louisburg and three thousand
-French regulars to Quebec. If Lawrence did not yet know that Braddock
-had been defeated on July 9 at Duquesne,--as his friends declare in his
-defense,--it is a strange thing; for by August the bloody slaughter of
-the Monongahela was known everywhere else in America from Quebec to New
-Spain. With Lawrence and Monckton and Murray and Boscawen and the
-other English generals sent to conduct the campaign in Acadia, the
-question was what to do with the French habitants. Let two facts be
-distinctly stated here and with great emphasis: first, the colonial
-officers, like Winslow from Massachusetts, knew absolutely nothing of
-the English officers' plans; they were not admitted to the conferences
-of the English officers and were simply expected to obey orders;
-second, the English government knew absolutely nothing of the English
-officers' course till it was too late for remedy. In fact, later
-dispatches of that year inquire sharply what Lawrence meant by an
-obscure threat to drive the Acadians out of the country.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL JOHN WINSLOW]
-
-Did a darker and more sinister motive underlie the policy of Lawrence
-and his friends? Poems, novels, histories have waged war of words over
-this. Only the facts can be stated. Land to the extent of twenty
-thousand acres each, which had belonged to {235} the Acadians, was
-ultimately deeded to Lawrence and his friends. Charges of corruption
-against Lawrence himself were lodged with the British government both
-by mail and by personal delegates from Halifax. Unfortunately Lawrence
-died in Halifax in 1760 before the investigation could take place; and
-whether true or false, the odium of the charges rests upon his fame.
-
-What he did with the Acadians is too well known to require telling. In
-secret conclave the infamous edict was pronounced. Quickly messengers
-were sent with secret dispatches to the officers of land forces and
-ships at Annapolis, at Mines, at Chignecto, to repair to the towns of
-the Acadians, where, upon opening their dispatches, they would find
-their orders, which were to be kept a secret among the officers. The
-colonial officers, on reading the orders, were simply astounded. "It
-is the most grievous affair that ever I was in, in my life," declared
-Winslow. The edict was that every man, woman, and child of the
-Acadians should be forcibly deported, in Lawrence's words, "in such a
-way as to prevent the reunion of the colonists." The men of the
-Acadian settlements were summoned to the churches to hear the will of
-the King of England. Once inside, doors were locked, English soldiers
-placed on guard with leveled bayonet, and the edict read by an officer
-standing on the pulpit stairs or on a table. The Acadians were snared
-like rats in a trap. Outside were their families, hostages for the
-peaceable conduct of the men. Inside were the brothers and husbands,
-hostages for the good conduct of the families outside. Only in a few
-places was there any rioting, and this was probably caused by the
-brutality of the officers. Murray and Monckton and Lawrence refer to
-their prisoners as "Popish recusants," "poor wretches," "rascals who
-have been bad subjects." While the Acadians were to be deported so
-they could never reunite as a colony, it was intended to keep the
-families together and allow them to take on board what money and
-household goods they possessed; but there were interminable delays for
-transports and supplies. From September to December the deportation
-dragged on, and when the Acadians, patient as sheep at the shambles,
-became restless, some of the ships were sent off {236} with the men,
-while the families were still on land. In places the men were allowed
-ashore to harvest their crops and care for their stock; but harvest and
-stock fell to the victors as burning hayricks and barns nightly lighted
-to flame the wooded background and placid seas of the fair Acadian
-land. Before winter set in, the Acadians had been scattered from New
-England to Louisiana. A few people in the Chignecto region had escaped
-to the woods of New Brunswick, and one shipload overpowered its
-officers and fled to St. John River; but in all, six thousand six
-hundred people were deported.
-
-It is the blackest crime that ever took place under the British flag,
-and the expulsion was only the beginning of the sufferers' woes. Some
-people found their way to Quebec, but Quebec was destitute and in the
-throes of war. The wanderers came to actual starvation. The others
-wandered homeless in Boston, in New York, in Philadelphia, in
-Louisiana. After the peace of 1763 some eight hundred gathered
-together in Boston and began the long march overland through the
-forests of Maine and New Brunswick, to return to Acadia. Singing
-hymns, dragging their baggage on sleighs, pausing to hunt by the way,
-these sad pilgrims toiled more than one thousand miles through forest
-and swamp, and at the end of two years found themselves back in Acadia.
-But they were like ghosts of the dead revisiting scenes of childhood!
-Their lands were occupied by new owners. Of their herds naught
-remained but the bleaching bone heaps where the lowing cattle had
-huddled in winter storms. New faces filled their old houses. Strange
-children rambled beneath the little dormer windows of the Acadian
-cottages, and the voices of the boys at play in the apple orchards
-shouted in an alien tongue. The very names of the places had vanished.
-Beausejour was now Cumberland. Beaubassin had become Amherst.
-Cobequid was now Truro. Grand Pre was now known as Horton. The
-heart-broken people hurried on like ghosts to the unoccupied lands of
-St. Mary's Bay,--St. Mary's Bay, where long ago Priest Aubry had been
-lost. Here they settled, to hew out for themselves a second home in
-the wilderness.
-
-{237} It will be recalled that Braddock's plans had been captured by
-the French, and those plans told Baron Dieskau, who had come out to
-command the French troops, that the English under William Johnson, a
-great leader of the Iroquois, inured to bush life like an Indian, were
-to attack the French fort at Crown Point on Lake Champlain. Now
-observe: on the Ohio, Braddock the regular had been defeated; in
-Acadia, Lawrence and Monckton and Murray, the English generals, had
-brought infamy across England's renown by their failure to understand
-colonial conditions. At Lake Champlain the conditions are reversed.
-Johnson, the English leader, is, from long residence in America, almost
-a colonial. Dieskau, the commander of the French, is a veteran of
-Saxon wars, but knows nothing of bushfighting. What happens?
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF ACADIA AND THE ADJACENT ISLANDS, 1755]
-
-Dieskau had intended to attack the English at Oswego, but the plans for
-Johnson on Lake Champlain brought the commander of the French rushing
-up the Richelieu River with three thousand soldiers, part regulars,
-part Canadians. Crown Point--called Fort Frederick by the French--was
-reached in August. No English are here, but scouts bring word that
-Johnson has built a fort on the south end of Lake George, and, leaving
-only five hundred men to garrison it, is moving up the lake with his
-main troops.
-
-{238}
-
-[Illustration: SIR WILLIAM JOHNSON]
-
-Fired by the French victories over Braddock, Dieskau planned to capture
-the English fort and ambush Johnson on the march. Look at the map!
-The south end of Lake Champlain lies parallel with the north end of
-Lake George. The French can advance on the English one of two
-ways,--portage over to Lake George and canoe up the lake to Johnson's
-fort, or ascend the marsh to the south of Lake Champlain, then cross
-through the woods to Johnson's fort. Dieskau chose the latter trail.
-Leaving half his men to guard the baggage, Dieskau bade fifteen hundred
-picked men follow him on swiftest march with provisions in haversack
-for only eight days. September 8, 10 A.M., the marchers advance
-through the woods on Johnson's fort, when suddenly they learn that
-their scout has lied,--_Johnson himself is still at the fort_. Instead
-of five hundred are four thousand English. Advancing along the trail
-V-shape, regulars in the middle, Canadians and Indians on each side,
-the French come on a company of five hundred English wagoners. In the
-wild melee of shouts the English retreat in a rabble. "Pursue! March!
-Fire! Force the place!" yells Dieskau, dashing forward sword in hand,
-thinking to follow so closely on the heels of the rabble that he can
-enter the English fort before the enemy know; but his Indians have
-forsaken him, and Johnson's scouts have forewarned the approach of the
-French. Instead of ambushing {239} the English, Dieskau finds his own
-army ambushed. He had sneered at the un-uniformed plowboys of the
-English. "The more there are, the more we shall kill," he had boasted;
-but now he discovers that the rude bushwhackers, "who fought like boys
-in the morning, at noon fought like men, and by afternoon fought like
-devils." Their sharpshooters kept up a crash of fire to the fore, and
-fifteen hundred doubled on the rear of his army, "folding us up," he
-reported, "like a pack of cards." Dieskau fell, shot in the leg and in
-the knee, and a bullet struck the cartridge box of the servant who was
-washing out the wounds.
-
-[Illustration: CONTEMPORARY MAP OF THE REGION OF LAKE GEORGE]
-
-"Lay my telescope and coat by me, and go!" ordered Dieskau. "This is
-as good a deathbed as anyplace. Go!" he thundered, seeing his second
-officer hesitate. "Don't you see you are needed? Go and sound a
-retreat."
-
-A third shot penetrated the wounded commander's bladder. Lying alone,
-propped against a tree, he heard the drums rolling a retreat, when one
-of the enemy jumped from the woods with pointed pistol.
-
-"Scoundrel!" roared the dauntless Dieskau; "dare to shoot a man
-weltering in his blood." The fellow proved to be a Frenchman who had
-long ago deserted to the English, and he muttered {240} out some excuse
-about shooting the devil before the devil shot him; but when he found
-out who Dieskau was, he had him carried carefully to Johnson's tent,
-where every courtesy was bestowed upon the wounded commander. Johnson
-himself lay wounded.
-
-All that night Iroquois kept breaking past the guard into the tent.
-
-"What do they want?" asked Dieskau feebly.
-
-"To skin you and eat you," returned Johnson laconically. Whose was the
-victory? The losses had been about even,--two hundred and fifty on
-each side. Johnson had failed to advance to Crown Point, but Dieskau
-had failed to dislodge Johnson. If Dieskau had not been captured, it
-is a question if either side would have considered the fight a victory.
-As it was, New France was plunged in grief; joy bells rang in New
-England. Johnson was given a baronetcy and 5000 pounds for his
-victory. He had named the lake south of Lake Champlain after the
-English King, Lake George.
-
-So closed the first act in the tragic struggle for supremacy in America.
-
-
-
-
-{241}
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-FROM 1756 TO 1763
-
-Bigot at Quebec--New France on verge of ruin--Bigot's vampires suck
-country's lifeblood--Scene on lake--Massacre at Fort William
-Henry--Louisburg besieged--Surrender of famous fort--The attack at
-Ticonderoga--Abercrombie's forces flee--Wolfe sails for Quebec--Signal
-fires forewarn approach of enemy--Both sides become scalp
-raiders--English fail at Montmorency--Slip silently down the great
-river--The two armies face each other--Death of Montcalm--Why New
-France fell
-
-
-How stand both sides at the opening of the year 1756, on the verge of
-the Seven Years' War,--the struggle for a continent?
-
-There has been open war for more than a year, but war is not formally
-declared till May 18, 1756.
-
-Take Acadia first.
-
-The French have been expelled. The infamous Le Loutre is still in
-prison in England, and when he is released, in 1763, he toils till his
-death, in 1773, trying to settle the Acadian refugees on some of the
-French islands of the English Channel. The smiling farms of Grand Pre
-and Port Royal lie a howling waste. Only a small English garrison
-holds Annapolis, where long ago Marc L'Escarbot and Champlain held
-happy revel; and the seat of government has been transferred to
-Halifax, now a settlement and fort of some five thousand people. So
-much for the English. Across a narrow arm of the sea is Isle Royal or
-Cape Breton, where the French are intrenched as at a second Gibraltar
-in the fortress of Louisburg. Since the Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle
-restored the fort to the French, millions have been spent strengthening
-its walls, adding to the armaments; but Intendant Bigot has had charge
-of the funds, and Intendant Bigot has a sponge-like quality of
-absorbing all funds that flow through his hands. Cannon have been
-added, but there are not enough balls to go round. The walls have been
-repaired, but with false filling (sand in place of mortar), so that the
-first shatter of artillery will send them clattering down in wet
-plaster.
-
-Take the Ohio next.
-
-"Beautiful River" is the highway between New France and Louisiana. By
-Braddock's defeat the English have been driven out to a man. Matters
-are a thousandfold worse than before, for {242} the savage allies of
-the French now swarm down the bush road cut by Braddock's army and
-carry bloody havoc to all the frontier settlements of Pennsylvania and
-Virginia. How many pioneers perished in this border war will never be
-known. It is a tale by itself, and its story is not part of Canada's
-history. George Washington was the officer in charge of a thousand
-bushfighters to guard this frontier.
-
-Take the valley of Lake Champlain.
-
-This is the highway of approach to Montreal north, to Albany south.
-Johnson had defeated Dieskau here, but neither side was strong enough
-to advance from the scene of battle into the territory of the enemy.
-The English take possession of Lake George and intrench themselves at
-the south end in Fort William Henry. Sir William Johnson strings a
-line of forts up the Mohawk River towards Oswego on Lake Ontario, and
-he keeps his forest rangers, under the famous scout Major Robert
-Rogers, scouring the forest and mountain trails of Lake Champlain for
-French marauder and news of what the French are doing. Rogers'
-Rangers, too, are a story by themselves, but a story which does not
-concern Canada. Skating and snowshoeing by winter, canoeing by night
-in summer, Rogers passed and repassed the enemy's lines times without
-number, as if his life were charmed, though once his wrist was shot
-when he had nothing to stanch the blood but the ribbon tying his wig,
-and once he stumbled back exhausted to Fort William Henry, to lie
-raging with smallpox for the winter. Among the forest rangers of New
-Hampshire and New York, Major Robert Rogers was without a peer. No
-danger was too great, no feat too daring, for his band of scouts. The
-English have established Fort William Henry at the south end of Lake
-George. The French checkmate the move by strengthening Crown Point on
-Lake Champlain and moving a pace farther south into English
-territory,--to Carillon, where the waters of Lake George pour into
-Champlain. Here on a high angle between the river and the lake,
-commanding all travel north and south, the French build Carillon or
-Fort Ticonderoga.
-
-{243} As for the Great Northwest, New France with her string of
-posts--Frontenac, Niagara, Detroit, Michilimackinac, Kaministiquia
-(Fort William), Fort Rogue (Winnipeg), Portage la Prairie--stretches
-clear across to the foothills of the Rockies. The English fur traders
-of Hudson Bay have, in 1754, sent Anthony Hendry up the Saskatchewan,
-but when Hendry comes back with word of equestrian Indians--the
-Blackfeet on horseback--and treeless plains, the English set him down
-as a lying impostor. Indians on horseback! They had never seen
-Indians but in canoes and on snowshoes! Hendry was dismissed as
-unreliable, and no Englishman went up the Saskatchewan for another ten
-years.
-
-
-If the disasters of 1755 did nothing more, they at last stirred the
-home governments to action. Earl Loudon is sent out in 1756 to command
-the English, and to New France in May comes Louis Joseph, Marquis de
-Montcalm, age forty-four, soldier, scholar, country gentleman, with a
-staff composed of Chevalier de Levis, Bourlamaque, and one
-Bougainville, to become famous as a navigator.
-
-Though New France consists of a good three quarters of America, things
-are in evil plight that causes Montcalm many sleepless nights.
-Vaudreuil, the French governor, descendant of that Vaudreuil who long
-ago set the curse of Indian warfare on the borders of New England, had
-expected to be appointed chief commander of the troops and jealously
-resents Montcalm's coming. With the Governor is leagued Intendant
-Bigot, come up from Louisburg. Bigot is a man of sixty, of noble
-birth, a favorite of the butterfly woman who rules the King of
-France,--the Pompadour,--and he has come to New France to mend his
-fortunes. How he planned to do it one may guess from his career at
-Louisburg; but Quebec offered better field, and it was to Bigot's
-interest to ply Montcalm and Vaudreuil with such tittle-tattle of
-enmity as would foment jealousy, keep their attention on each other,
-and their eyes off his own doings. As he had done at Louisburg, so he
-now did at Quebec. The King was requisitioned for enormous sums to
-strengthen the fort. Bigot's {244} ring of friends acted as
-contractors. The outlay was enormous, the results trifling. "I
-think," complained the King, "that Quebec must be fortified in gold, it
-has cost so much." It was time of war. Enormous sums were to be
-expended for presents to keep the Indians loyal; and the King complains
-that he cannot understand how baubles of beads and powderhorns cost so
-much, or how the western tribes seem to become more and more numerous,
-or how the French officers, who distribute the presents, become
-millionaires in a few years. A friend of Bigot's handled these funds.
-There are meat contracts for the army. A worthless, lowbred scamp is
-named commissary general. He handles these contracts, and he, too,
-swiftly graduates into the millionaire class, is hail-fellow well met
-with Bigot, drinks deep at the Intendant's table, and gambles away as
-much as $40,000 in a single night. It is time of war, and it is time
-of famine too; for the crops have failed. Every inhabitant between the
-ages of fifteen and fifty has been drafted into the army. Not counting
-Indians, there is an army of fifteen to twenty thousand to be fed; so
-Bigot compels the habitants to sell him provisions at a low price.
-These provisions he resells to the King for the army and to the
-citizens at famine prices. The King's warehouse down by the
-Intendant's palace becomes known as La Friponne,--The Cheat.
-
-And though the country is on verge of ruin, though poor people of the
-three towns are rioting in the streets for food, old women cursing the
-little wizened Intendant with his pimpled face as he rolls past
-resplendent in carriage with horses whose harness is a blaze of silver,
-the troops threatening to mutiny because they are compelled to use
-horse flesh,--though New France is hovering over a volcano of disaster,
-they dance to their death, thoughtless as butterflies, gay as children,
-these manikin imitators of the French court, who are ruining New France
-that they may copy the vices of an Old World playing at kingcraft. The
-regular troops are uniformed in white with facings of blue and red and
-gold and violet, three-cornered hat, and leather leggings to knee.
-What with chapel bells ringing and ringing, and bugle {245} call and
-counter call echoing back from Cape Diamond; what with Monsieur Bigot's
-prancing horses and Madame Pean's flashy carriage,--Madame Pean of whom
-Bigot is so enamored he has sent her husband to some far western post
-and passes each evening at her gay receptions,--what with the grounding
-of the sentry's arms and the parade of troops, Quebec is a gay place
-these years of black ruin, and the gossips have all they can do to keep
-track of the amours and the duels and the high personages cultivating
-Madame Pean; for cultivated she must be by all who covet place or
-power. A word from Madame Pean to Bigot is of more value than a bribe.
-Even Montcalm and De Levis attend her revels.
-
-[Illustration: RUINS OF CHATEAU BIGOT]
-
-Twenty people sup with Monsieur Bigot each night, either at the
-Intendant's palace down by Charles River, or nine miles out towards
-Beauport, where he has built himself the Forest Hermitage, now known as
-Chateau Bigot,--a magnificent country manor house of red brick, hidden
-away among the hills with the gay shrubberies of French gardens set
-down in an American wilderness. Supper over by seven, the guests sit
-down to play, and the amount a man may gamble is his social barometer,
-whether {246} he lose or win, cheat or steal. If dancing follows
-gambling, the rout will not disperse till seven in the morning. What
-time is left of the twenty-four hours in a day will be devoted to
-public affairs.
-
-Montcalm's salary is only 25,000 francs, or $5,000. To maintain the
-dignity of the King, the commander in chief must keep the pace, and he
-too gives weekly suppers, with places set for forty people, "whom I
-don't know," he writes dejectedly to his wife, "and don't want to know;
-and wish that I might spend the evenings quietly in my own chamber."
-To Montcalm, who was of noble birth with no shamming, this lowbred
-pretense and play at courtcraft became a bore; to his staff of
-officers, a source of continual amusement; but De Levis presently falls
-victim to a pair of fine eyes possessed by the wife of another man.
-
-War filled the summers, but the winters were given up to social life;
-and of all midwinter social gayeties the most important was the
-official visit of the Governor and the Intendant to Montreal. By this
-time a good road had been cut from Quebec to Montreal along the north
-shore, and the sleighs usually set out in January or February. Bigot
-added to the occasion all the prestige of a social rout. All the grand
-dames and cavaliers of Quebec were invited. Baggage was sent on ahead
-with servants to break the way, find quarters for the night, and
-prepare meals. After a dinner at the Intendant's palace the sleighs
-set out, two horses to each, driven tandem because the sleigh road was
-too narrow for a team. Each sleigh held only two occupants, and to the
-damage done by fair eyes was added the glow of exhilaration from
-driving behind spirited horses in frosty air with the bells of a
-hundred carryalls ringing across the snow. At seven was pause for
-supper. High play followed till ten. Then early to bed and early to
-rise and on the road again by seven in the morning! In Montreal was
-one continual round of dinners and dances. Between times, appointments
-were made to the military posts and trading stations of the Up-Country.
-He who wanted a good post must pay his court to Madame Pean. No wonder
-Montcalm breathed a sigh of relief when Lent put a stop to the gayeties
-and he could quietly pass his evenings with the Sulpician priests.
-{247} To break from Bigot's ring during the war was impossible.
-Creatures of his choosing filled the army, handled the supplies,
-controlled the Indians; and when the King's reproof became too sharp,
-Bigot simply threatened to resign, which wrought consternation, for no
-man of ability would attempt to unwind the tangle of Bigot's dishonesty
-during a critical war. Montcalm wrote home complaints in cipher. The
-French government bided its time, and Bigot tightened his vampire
-suckers on the lifeblood of the dying nation. The whole era is a theme
-for the allegory of artist or poet.
-
-[Illustration: PARLIAMENT BUILDINGS, OTTAWA]
-
-[Illustration: QUEBEC, CHATEAU FRONTENAC AND THE CITADEL]
-
-
-Montcalm had arrived in May of 1756. By midsummer he was leading three
-thousand French artillerymen across Lake Ontario from Fort Frontenac
-(Kingston), to attack the English post on the south side, Oswego.
-Inside the fort walls were seven hundred raw English provincials, ill
-of scurvy from lack of food. The result need scarcely be told. Seven
-hundred ill men behind wooden walls had no chance against three
-thousand soldiers in health with heavy artillery. To take the English
-by surprise, Montcalm had crossed the lake on August 4 by night. Two
-days later all the transport ships had landed the troops and the cannon
-had actually been mounted before the English knew of the enemy's
-presence. On the east side of the river was Fort Ontario, a barricade
-of logs built in the shape of a star, housing an outguard of three
-hundred and seventy men. On discovering the French, the sentry spiked
-their cannon, threw their powder in the river, and retired at midnight
-inside Oswego's walls. Working like beavers, Montcalm's men dragged
-twenty cannon to a hill commanding the fort, known as "Fort Rascal"
-because the outfort there was useless to the English. Before
-Montcalm's cannonade Oswego's walls, plastered with clay and rubble,
-fell like the staves of a dry barrel. The English sharpshooters then
-hid behind pork barrels placed in three tiers filled with sand; but
-Colonel Mercer, their officer, was literally cut in two by a cannon
-shot, and the women, cooped up inside the barracks, begged the officers
-to avoid Indian massacre by surrender. {248} A white flag was waved.
-Including women, something under a thousand English surrendered
-themselves prisoners to Montcalm. The Indians fell at once to mad
-plunder. Spite of the terms of honorable surrender, the English were
-stripped of everything, and only Montcalm's promise of $10,000 worth of
-presents to the savages prevented butchery. The victors decamped to
-Montreal, well pleased with the campaign of 1756. It need not be told
-that there were constant raids and counter raids along the frontier
-during the entire year.
-
-Loudon, the English commander, did not arrive in New York till well on
-in midsummer of 1756, and he found far different material from the
-trained bushfighters in the hands of Montcalm. The English soldiers
-were raw provincial recruits, dressed, at best, in buckskin, but for
-the most part in the rough homespun which they had worn when they had
-left plow and carpenter's bench and fishing boat. While Montcalm was
-capturing Oswego, Loudon was licking his rough recruits into shape,
-"making men out of mud" for the campaign of 1757. Indeed, it was said
-of Loudon, and the saying stuck to him as characteristic of his
-campaign, that he resembled the wooden horse figure of a tavern
-sign,--always on horseback but never rode forward. Instead of striking
-at Lake Champlain or on the Ohio, where the French were aggressors,
-Loudon planned to repeat the brilliant capture of Louisburg. July of
-1857 found him at Halifax planting vegetable gardens to prevent
-scurvy,--"the cabbage campaign" it was derisively called,--and waiting
-for Gorham's rangers to reconnoiter Louisburg. Gorham's scouts brought
-back word that the French admiral had come in with twenty-four
-men-of-war and seven thousand men. To overpower such strength meant a
-prolonged siege. It was already August. Loudon sailed back to New
-York without firing a gun, while the English fleet, trying to
-reconnoiter Louisburg, suffered terrible shipwreck.
-
-[Illustration: THE EARL OF LOUDON]
-
-Montcalm was not the enemy to let the chance of Loudon's absence from
-the scene of action pass unimproved. While Loudon is pottering at
-Halifax, Montcalm marshals his troops to the {249} number of eight
-thousand, including one thousand Indians at Carillon or Ticonderoga,
-where Lake George empties into Lake Champlain. Portaging two hundred
-and fifty flatboats with as many birch canoes up the river, the French
-invade the mountain wilderness of Lake George. Towards the end of
-July, Levis leads part of the troops by land up the west shore towards
-the English post of Fort William Henry. Montcalm advances on the lake
-with the flatboats and canoes, and the rafts with the heavy artillery.
-Each night Levis' troops kindle their signal fires on the mountain
-slope, and each night Montcalm from the lake signals back with torches.
-It needs artist's brush to paint the picture: the forested mountains
-green and lonely and silent in the shimmering sunlight of the summer
-sky; the lake gold as molten metal in the fire of the setting sun; the
-soldiers in their gay uniforms of white and blue, hoisting tent cloths
-on oar sweeps for sails as a breeze dimples the waters; the French
-voyageurs clad in beaded buckskin chanting some ditty of Old-World fame
-to the rhythmic dip of the Indian paddles; the Indians naked, painted
-for war, with a glitter in their eyes of a sinister intent which they
-have no mind to tell Montcalm; and then, at the south of Lake George,
-nestling between the hills and the water, the little palisaded
-fort,--Fort William Henry,--with gates fast shut and two thousand
-bushfighters behind the walls, weak from an epidemic of smallpox, and,
-as usual, so short of provisions that siege means starvation.
-
-{250} Twenty miles southeastward is another English fort,--Fort
-Edward,--where General Webb with sixteen hundred men is keeping the
-road barred against advance to Albany. Soon as scouts bring word to
-Fort William Henry of the advancing French, Lieutenant Monro sends
-frantic appeal to Webb for more men; but Webb has already sent all the
-men he can spare. If he leaves Fort Edward, the French by a flank
-movement through the woods can march on Albany, so Monro unplugs his
-seventeen cannon, locks his gates, and bides his fate.
-
-Montcalm follows the same tactics as at Oswego,--brings heavy artillery
-against slab walls. For the first week of August, eight hundred of his
-men are digging trenches by night to avoid giving target for the fiery
-bombs whizzing through the dark from Monro's cannon. By day they lie
-hidden in the woods with a cordon of sharpshooters encircling the fort,
-Montcalm encamped on the west to prevent help from Sir William Johnson
-up the Mohawk, Levis on the southeast to cut off aid from Webb. Monro
-sends yet one last appeal for help: two thousand men against eight
-thousand,--the odds are eloquent of his need! Montcalm's scouts let
-the messenger pass through the lines as if unseen, but they make a
-point of catching the return messenger and holding Webb's answer that
-he cannot come, till their cannon have torn great wounds in the fort
-walls. Then Bougainville blindfold carries Webb's answer to Monro and
-demands the surrender of the fort. Monro still has a little
-ammunition, still hopes against hope that Johnson or Webb or Loudon
-will come to the rescue, and he keeps his big guns singing over the
-heads of the French in their trenches till all the cannon have burst
-but seven, and there are not ten rounds of shells left. Then Colonel
-Young, with a foot shot off, rides out on horseback waving a white
-flag. Three hundred English have been killed, as many again are
-wounded or ill of smallpox, and to the remaining garrison of sixteen
-hundred Montcalm promises safe conduct to General Webb at Fort Edward.
-Then the English march out. That night--August 9--the vanquished
-English camp with Montcalm's forces. The Indians, meanwhile, ramping
-through the fort for plunder, {251} have maddened themselves with
-traders' rum! Before daybreak they have butchered all the wounded
-lying in the hospital and cut to pieces the men ill of smallpox,--a
-crime that brought its own punishment in contagion. Next morning, when
-the French guard tried to conduct the disarmed English along the trail
-to Fort Edward, the Indians snatched at the clothing, the haversacks,
-the tent kit of the marchers. With their swords the French beat back
-the drunken horde. In answer, the war hatchets were waved over the
-heads of the cowering women. The march became a panic; the panic, a
-massacre; and for twenty-four hours such bedlam raged as might have put
-fiends to shame. The frenzied Indians would listen to no argument but
-blows; and when the English prisoners appealed to the French for
-protection, the French dared not offend their savage allies by fighting
-to protect the English victims. "Take to the woods," they warned the
-men, and the women were quickly huddled back to shelter of the fort.
-Of the men, sixty were butchered on the spot and some seven hundred
-captured to be held for ransom. The remnant of the English soldiers,
-along with the women, were held till the Indian frenzy had spent
-itself, then sent to Fort Edward. August 16 a torch was put to the
-combustibles of the fort ruins, and as the French boats glided out on
-Lake George for the St. Lawrence, explosion after explosion, flame
-leaping above flame, proclaimed that of Fort William Henry there would
-remain naught but ashes and charred ruins and the skeletons of the
-dead. So closed the campaign of 1857 [Transcriber's note: 1757?]. For
-three years hand running England had suffered defeat.
-
-
-The spring of 1758 witnessed a change. The change was the rise to
-power of a man who mastered circumstances instead of allowing them to
-master him. Such men are the milestones of human progress, whether
-heroes, or quiet toilers unknown to the world. The man was Pitt, the
-English statesman. Instead of a weak ministry fighting the
-machinations of France, it was now Pitt versus Pompadour, the English
-patriot against the light woman who ruled the councils of France.
-
-{252} From fighting weakly on the defensive, England sprang into the
-position of aggressor all along the line. The French were to be
-attacked at all points simultaneously, at Louisburg on the east, at
-Ticonderoga or Carillon on Lake Champlain, at Duquesne on the Ohio, at
-Frontenac on Lake Ontario, and finally at Quebec itself. London is
-recalled as commander in chief. Abercrombie succeeds to the position,
-with the brilliant young soldier, Lord Howe, as right-hand man; but
-Pitt takes good care that there shall be good chiefs and good
-right-hand men at _all_ points. The one mistake is Abercrombie,--"Mrs.
-Nabby Crombie" the soldiers called him. He was an indifferent,
-negative sort of man; and indifferent, negative sorts of people, by
-their dishwater goodness, can sometimes do more harm in critical
-positions than the branded criminal. Red tape had forced him on Pitt,
-but Pitt trusted to the excellence of the subordinate officers,
-especially Lord Howe.
-
-Louisburg first!
-
-No more dillydallying and delay "to plant cabbages!" The thing is to
-reach Louisburg before the French have entered the harbor. Men-of-war
-are stationed to intercept the French vessels coming from the
-Mediterranean, and before winter has passed Admiral Boscawen has sailed
-for America with one hundred and fifty vessels, including forty
-men-of-war, frigates, and transports carrying twelve thousand men.
-General Amherst is to command the land forces, and with Amherst is
-Brigadier James Wolfe, age thirty-one, a tall, slim, fragile man, whose
-delicate frame is tenanted by a lion spirit; or, to change the
-comparison, by a motive power too strong for the weak body that held
-it. By May the fleet is in Halifax. By June Amherst has joined
-Boscawen, and the ships beat out for Louisburg through heavy fog, with
-a sea that boils over the reefs in angry surf.
-
-Louisburg was in worse condition than during the siege of 1745. The
-broken walls have been repaired, but the filling is false,--sand grit.
-Its population is some four thousand, of whom three thousand eight
-hundred are the garrison. On the ships lying in the harbor are three
-thousand marines, a defensive force, in all, {253} of six thousand
-eight hundred. On walls and in bastions are some four hundred and
-fifty heavy guns, cannon, and mortars. Imagine a triangle with the
-base to the west, the two sides running out to sea on the east. The
-fort is at the apex. The wall of the base line is protected by a
-marsh. On the northeast side is the harbor protected by reefs and
-three batteries. Along the south side, Drucourt, the French commander,
-has stationed two thousand men at three different points where landing
-is possible, to construct batteries behind barricades of logs.
-
-[Illustration: BOSCAWEN]
-
-Fog had concealed the approach of the English, but such a ground swell
-was raging over the reefs as threatened any ship with instant
-destruction. For a week Amherst and Wolfe and Lawrence row up and down
-through the roiling mist and raging surf and singing winds to take
-stock of the situation. With those batteries at the landing places
-there is only one thing to do,--cannonade them, hold their attention in
-a life-and-death fight while the English soldiers scramble through the
-surf for the shore. From sunrise to sundown of the 8th furious
-cannonading set the green seas churning and tore up the French
-barricades as by hurricane. At sunset the firing ceased, and three
-detachments of troops launched out in whaleboats at three in the
-morning, two of the detachments to make a feint of landing, while Wolfe
-with the other division was to run through the surf for the shore at
-Freshwater Cove. The French were not deceived. They let Wolfe
-approach within range, when the log barricade flashed to flame with a
-thousand sharpshooters. Wolfe had foreseen the snare and had waved his
-{254} troops off when he noticed that two boat loads were rowing ashore
-through a tremendous surf under shelter of a rocky point. Quickly he
-signaled the other boats to follow. In a trice the boats had smashed
-to kindling on the reefs, but the men were wading ashore, muskets held
-high over head, powder pouches in teeth, and rushed with bayonets
-leveled against the French, who had dashed from cover to prevent the
-landing. This unexpected landing had cut the French off from
-Louisburg. Retreating in panic, they abandoned their batteries and
-fifty dead. The English had lost one hundred and nine in the surf. It
-is said that Wolfe scrambled from the water like a drowned rat and led
-the rush with no other weapon in hand but his cane.
-
-[Illustration: THE SIEGE OF LOUISBURG (From a contemporary print)]
-
-To land the guns through the jostling sea was the next task. It was
-done, as in 1745, by a pontoon bridge of small boats, but the work took
-till the 29th of June. Wolfe, meanwhile, has marched with twelve
-hundred men round to the rear of the marsh and comes so suddenly on the
-Grand and Lighthouse Batteries, which defend the harbor, that the
-French abandon them to retreat within the walls. This gives the
-English such control of the harbor entrance that Drucourt, the French
-commander, sinks six of his ships across the channel to bar out
-Boscawen's fleet, the masts of the sunken, vessels sticking above the
-water. Amherst's men are working like demons, building a road for the
-cannon across the marsh and trenching up to the back wall; but they
-work only at night and are undiscovered by the French till the 9th of
-July. Then the French rush out with a whoop to drive them off, but the
-English already have their guns mounted, and Drucourt's men are glad to
-dash for shelter behind the cracking walls. It now became a game of
-cannon play pure and simple. Boscawen from harbor front hurls his
-whistling bombs overhead, to crash through roofs inside the walls.
-Wolfe from the Lighthouse Battery throws shells and flaming
-combustibles straight into the midst of the remaining French fleet. At
-last, on July 21st, masts, sails, tar ropes, take fire in a terrible
-conflagration, and three of the fleet burn to the water line with
-terrific explosions of their powder magazines; then the flames hiss out
-above {255} the rocking hulls. Only two ships are left to the French,
-and the deep bomb-proof casemates inside the fort between outer and
-inner walls, where the families and the wounded have been sheltered,
-are now in flame. Amherst loads his shells with combustibles and pours
-one continuous rain of fiery death on the doomed fort. The houses,
-which are of logs, flame like kindling wood, and now the timber work of
-the stone bastions is burning from bombs hurtling through the roofs.
-The walls crash down in masses. The scared surgeons, all bloody from
-amputating shattered limbs, no longer stand in safety above their
-operating tables. It is said that Madame Drucourt, the Governor's
-wife, actually stayed on the walls to encourage the soldiers, with her
-own hands fired some of the great guns, and, when the overworked
-surgeons flagged from terror and lack of sleep, it was Madame Drucourt
-who attended to the wounded. Drucourt is for holding out to the death,
-until one dark night the English row into the harbor and capture his
-two last ships. Then Drucourt asks for terms, July 26; but the terms
-are stern,--utter surrender,--and Drucourt would have fought till every
-man fell from the walls, had not one of the civil officers rushed after
-the commander's messenger carrying {256} the refusal, and shouted
-across the ditches to the English: "We accept! We surrender! We
-accept your terms!"
-
-Counting soldiers, marines, and townspeople, in all five thousand
-French pass over to Amherst, to be carried prisoners on Boscawen's
-fleet to England. Wolfe was for proceeding at once to Quebec, but
-Amherst considered the season too late and determined to complete the
-work where he was. One detachment goes to receive the surrender of
-Isle St. John, henceforth known as Prince Edward Island. Another
-division proceeds up St. John River, New Brunswick, burning all
-settlements that refuse unconditional surrender. Wolfe's grenadiers
-are sent to reduce Gaspe and Miramichi and northern New Brunswick. And
-now, lest blundering statecraft for a second time return the captured
-fort to France, Amherst and Boscawen order the complete disarmament and
-destruction of Louisburg. What cannon cannot be removed are tumbled
-into the marsh or upset into the sea. The stones from the walls are
-carried away to Halifax. By 1760, of Louisburg, the glory of New
-France, the pride of America, there remains not a vestige but grassed
-slopes overgrown by nettles, ditches with rank growth of weeds, stone
-piles where the wild vines grow, and an inner yard where the cows of
-the fisher folk pasture.
-
-Not a poor beginning for the campaign of 1758, though bad enough news
-has come from Major General Abercrombie, which was the real explanation
-of Amherst's refusal to push on to Quebec.
-
-Abercrombie, with fifteen thousand men, the pick of the regulars and
-provincials, had launched out on Lake George on the 5th of July with
-over one thousand boats, to descend the lake northward to the French
-fort of Carillon or Ticonderoga. Again, it would require artist's
-brush to paint the scene. Rogers' Rangers, dressed in buckskin, led
-the way in birch canoes. Lord Howe was there, dressed like a
-bushfighter; and with bagpipes setting the echoes ringing amid the
-lonely mountains, were the Highland regiments in their tartan plaids.
-Flags floated from the prow of every boat. Each battalion had its own
-regimental {257} band. Scarcely a breath dimpled the waters of the
-lake, and the sun shone without a cloud. Little wonder those who
-passed through the fiery Aceldama that was to come, afterwards looked
-back on this scene as the fairest in their lives.
-
-[Illustration: AMHERST]
-
-Montcalm had only arrived at Ticonderoga on June 30th. There was no
-doubting the news. His bushrovers brought in word that the English
-were advancing in such multitudes their boats literally covered the
-lake. It looked as if the fate of Fort William Henry were to be
-reversed. Montcalm never dreamed of Abercrombie attacking without
-artillery. To stay cooped up in the fort would invite destruction.
-Therefore Montcalm ordered his men out to construct a circular
-breastwork from the River of the Chutes on the southeast, which empties
-Lake George, round towards Lake Champlain on the northwest. Huge trees
-were felled, pile on pile, top-most branches spiked and pointed
-outwards. Behind these Montcalm intrenched his four thousand men,
-lying in lines three deep, with grenadiers in reserve behind to step up
-as the foremost lines fell. At a cannon signal from the fort the men
-were to rise to their places, but not to fire till the English were
-entangled in the brushwood. It was blisteringly hot weather. It is
-said that the troops took off their heavy three-cornered hats and lay
-in their shirt sleeves, hand on musket, speaking no word, but waiting.
-
-{258} On came the English in martial array, pausing in the Narrows at
-five o'clock for the troops' evening meal, moving on before daylight of
-July 6 to the landing place. The Rangers had brought in word that
-Levis was coming posthaste to Montcalm's aid. Abercrombie thought to
-defeat Montcalm before reenforcements could come; and now he committed
-his cardinal error. He advanced across the portage without his heavy
-artillery. Halfway over, the voice of the French scouts rang out, "Who
-goes there?" "French," answer the English soldiers; but the French
-were not tricked. The ambushed scouts fired. Lord Howe, the very
-spirit of the English army, dropped dead, shot through the breast,
-though the English avenged his loss by cutting the French scouts to
-pieces. On the night of the 7th the English army bivouacked in sight
-of the French barricade. Promptly at twelve o'clock next day a cannon
-shot from Ticonderoga brought every Frenchman behind the tree line to
-his place at a leap. Abercrombie had ordered his men to rush the
-barricade. There was fearful silence till the English were within
-twenty paces of the trees. There they broke from quick march to a run
-with a wild halloo! Death unerring blazed from the French
-barricade,--not bullets only, but broken glass and ragged metal that
-tore hideous wounds in the ranks of the English. Caught in the
-brushwood, unable even to see their foes, the maddened troops wavered
-and fell back. Again Abercrombie roared the order to charge. Six
-times they hurled themselves against the impassable wall, and six times
-the sharpshooters behind the lines met the advance with a rain of fire.
-The Highland troops to the right went almost mad. Lord John Murray,
-their commander, had fallen, and not a tenth of their number remained
-unwounded; but the broadswords wrought small havoc against the spiked
-branches of the log barricade. Obstinate as he was stupid, Abercrombie
-kept his men at the bloody but futile attempt till the sun had set
-behind the mountains, etching the sad scene with the long painted
-shadows. Already almost two thousand English had fallen,--seven
-hundred killed, the rest wounded. The French behind the barricade,
-where Montcalm marched up and down in his shirt {259} sleeves, grimed
-with smoke, encouraging the men, had lost less than four hundred. In a
-spirit of hilarious bravado a young Frenchman sprang to the top of the
-barricade and waved a coat on the end of his bayonet. Mistaking it for
-a flag of surrender, the English ceased firing and dashed up with
-muskets held on the horizontal above heads. They were actually scaling
-the wall when a French officer, realizing the blunder, roared: "Shoot!
-shoot! you fools! Don't you see those men will seize you?"
-
-[Illustration: THE COUNTRY ROUND TICONDEROGA]
-
-Cleaning guns and eating snatches of food, Montcalm's men slept that
-night in their places behind the logs. Montcalm had passed from man to
-man, personally thanking the troops for their valor. When daylight
-came over the hills with wisps of fog like cloud banners from the
-mountain tops, and the sunlight pouring gold mist through the valley,
-the French rose and rubbed their eyes. They could scarcely believe it!
-Surely Abercrombie would come back with his heavy guns. Like the mists
-of the morning the English had vanished. Far down the lake they were
-retreating in such panic terror they had left their baggage. Places
-were found on the portage by French scouts where the English had fled
-in such haste, marchers had lost their boots in the mud and not stopped
-to {260} find them. Such was the battle of Carillon, or
-Ticonderoga,--good reason for Amherst refusing to go on to Quebec.
-
-
-The year closed with two more victories for the English. Brigadier
-John Forbes and Washington succeeded in cutting their way up to Fort
-Duquesne by a new road. They found the fort abandoned, and, taking
-possession in November, renamed it Pittsburg after the great English
-statesman. The other victory was at Frontenac, or Kingston. As the
-French had concentrated at Lake Champlain, leaving Frontenac unguarded,
-Bradstreet gained permission from Abercrombie to lead three thousand
-men across Lake Ontario against La Salle's old fur post. Crossing from
-the ruins of old Oswego, Bradstreet encamped beneath the palisades of
-Frontenac on the evening of August 25. By morning he had his cannon in
-range for the walls. Inside the fort Commandant de Noyan had less than
-one hundred men. At seven in the evening of August 27 he surrendered.
-Bradstreet permitted the prisoners to go down to Montreal on parole, to
-be exchanged for English prisoners held in Quebec. Furs to the value
-of $800,000, twenty cannon, and nine vessels were captured. Bradstreet
-divided the loot among his men, taking for himself not so much as a
-penny's worth. The fort was destroyed. So were the vessels. The guns
-and provisions were carried across the lake and deposited at Fort
-Stanwix, east of old Oswego. The loss of Duquesne on the Ohio and Fort
-Frontenac on Lake Ontario cut French dominion in America in two.
-Henceforth there was no highway from New France to Louisiana. In
-September, Abercrombie was recalled. Amherst became chief commander.
-
-
-Wolfe had gone home to England ill. It was while sojourning at the
-fashion resort, Bath, that he fell desperately in love with a Miss
-Lowther, to whom he became engaged. Then came the summons from Pitt to
-meet the cabinet ministers in the war office of London. Wolfe was
-asked to take command of the campaign in 1759 against Quebec. It had
-been his ambition in Louisburg to proceed at once against Quebec. Here
-was his opportunity. {261} It need not be told, he took it. Amherst
-now, on the field south of Lake Champlain, received 10 pounds a day as
-commander in chief. For the greater task of reducing Quebec, Wolfe was
-to receive 2 pounds a day. Under him were to serve Monckton,
-Townshend, and Murray. Admiral Saunders was to command the fleet.
-Wolfe advised sending a few ships beforehand to guard the entrance to
-the St. Lawrence, and Durell was dispatched for this purpose long
-before the main armaments set out. By April 30 the combined fleet and
-army were at Halifax, Wolfe with a force of some 8500 men. Wolfe, now
-only in his thirty-third year, had been the subject of such jealousy
-that he was actually compelled to sail from Louisburg in June without
-one penny of ready money in his army chest. Underling officers, whose
-duty it was to advance him money on credit, had raised difficulties.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL JAMES WOLFE]
-
-Cheers and cheers yet again rent the air as the fleet at last set out
-for the St. Lawrence, the soldiers on deck shouting themselves hoarse
-as Louisburg faded over the watery horizon, the officers at table the
-first night out at sea drinking toast after toast to _British colors on
-every French fort in America_.
-
-At Quebec was fast and furious preparation for the coming siege.
-Bougainville had been sent to France from Lake Champlain in 1758 with
-report of the victory at Ticonderoga. In vain {262} he appealed for
-more money, more men for the coming conflict! The French government
-sent him back to Quebec with a bundle of advice and platitudes and
-titles and badges and promotions and soft words, but of the sinew which
-makes war, men and money, France had naught to spare. The rumor of the
-English invasion was confirmed by Bougainville. Every man capable of
-bearing arms was called to Quebec except the small forces at the
-outposts, and Bourlamaque at Champlain was instructed if attacked by
-Amherst to blow up Fort Carillon, then Crown Point, and retire. Grain
-was gathered into the state warehouses, and so stripped of able-bodied
-men were the rural districts that the crops of 1759 were planted by the
-women and children. Fire ships and rafts were constructed, the channel
-of St. Charles River closed by sinking vessels, and a bridge built
-higher up to lead from Quebec City across the river eastward to
-Beauport and Montmorency. Along the high cliffs of the St. Lawrence
-from Montmorency Falls to Quebec were constructed earthworks and
-intrenchments to command the approach up the river. What frigates had
-come in with Bougainville were sent higher up the St. Lawrence to be
-out of danger; but the crews, numbering 1400, were posted on the
-ramparts of Upper Town. Counting mere boys, Quebec had a defensive
-force variously given as from 9000 to 14,000; but deducting raw levies,
-who scarcely know the rules of the drill room, it is doubtful if
-Montcalm could boast of more than 5000 able-bodied fighters. Still he
-felt secure in the impregnable strength of Quebec's natural position.
-July 29, when the enemy lay encamped beneath his trenches, he could
-write, "Unless they [the English] have wings, they cannot cross a river
-and effect a landing and scale a precipice." One cruel feature there
-was of Quebec's preparations. To keep the habitants on both sides the
-river loyal, Vaudreuil, the governor, issued a proclamation telling the
-people that the English intended to massacre the inhabitants, men,
-women, and children. Meanwhile, morning, noon, and night, the chapel
-bells are ringing . . . ringing . . . lilting . . . and calling the
-faithful to prayers for the destruction of the heretic invader! Nuns
-lie prostrate day and night in prayer for the {263} country's
-deliverance from the English. Holy processions march through the
-streets, nuns and priests and little children in white, and rough
-soldiery in the uniforms with the blue facings, to pray Heaven's aid
-for victory. And while the poor people starve for bread, poultry is
-daily fattened on precious wheat that it may make tenderest meat for
-Intendant Bigot's table, where the painted women and drunken gamblers
-and gay officers nightly feast!
-
-[Illustration: BOUGAINVILLE]
-
-Signal fires light up the hills with ominous warning as the English
-fleet glides slowly abreast the current of the St. Lawrence, now
-pausing to sound where the yellow riffle of the current shows shallows,
-now following the course staked out by flags, here depending on the
-Frenchman, whom they have compelled to act as pilot! Nightly from hill
-to hill the signal fires leap to the sky, till one flames from Cape
-Tourmente, and Quebec learns that the English are surely very near.
-Among the Englishmen who are out in the advance boats sounding is a
-young man, James Cook, destined to become a great navigator.
-
-June 25, sail after sail, frigate after frigate bristling with cannon,
-literally swarming with soldiers and marines, glide round the end of
-Orleans Island through driving rain and a squall, and to clatter of
-anchor chains and rattle of falling sails, come to rest. "Pray Heaven
-they be wrecked as Sir Hovenden Walker's fleet was wrecked long ago,"
-sigh the nuns of Quebec. If they had {264} prayed half as hard that
-their corrupt rulers, their Bigots and their kings and their painted
-women whose nod could set Europe on fire with war,--if the holy
-sisterhood had prayed for this gang of vampires whose vices had brought
-doom to the land, to be swallowed in some abyss, their prayers might
-have been more effective with Heaven.
-
-Next day a band of rangers lands from Wolfe's ships and finds the
-Island of Orleans deserted. On the church door the cure has pinned a
-note, asking the English not to molest his church; and expressing
-sardonic regret that the invaders have not come soon enough to enjoy
-the fresh vegetables of his garden.
-
-Wolfe for the first time gazes on the prize of his highest
-ambition,--Quebec. He is at Orleans, facing the city. To his right is
-the cataract of Montmorency. From the falls past Beauport to St.
-Charles River, the St. Lawrence banks are high cliffs. Above the
-cliffs are Montcalm's intrenched fighters. Then the north shore of the
-St. Lawrence suddenly sheers up beyond St. Charles River into a lofty,
-steep precipice. The precipice is Quebec City: Upper Town and the
-convents and the ramparts and Castle St. Louis nestling on an upper
-ledge of the rock below Cape Diamond; Lower Town crowding between the
-foot of the precipice and tide water. Look again how the St. Lawrence
-turns in a sharp angle at the precipice. Three sides of the city are
-water,--St. Charles River nearest Wolfe, then the St. Lawrence across
-the steep face of the rock, then the St. Lawrence again along a still
-steeper precipice to the far side. Only the rear of the city is
-vulnerable; but it is walled and inaccessible.
-
-Quebec was a prize for any commander's ambition; but how to win it?
-
-The night of June 28 is calm, warm, pitch-dark, the kind of summer
-night when the velvet heat touches you as with a hand. The English
-soldiers of the crowded transports have gone ashore, when suddenly out
-of the darkness glide fire ships as from an under world, with flaming
-mast poles, and hulls in shadow, roaring with fire, throwing out
-combustibles, drifting straight down on the tide towards the English
-fleet. But the French have managed {265} badly. They have set the
-ships on fire too soon. The air is torn to tatters by terrific
-explosions that light up the outlines of the city spires and churn the
-river to billows. Then the English sailors are out in small boats,
-avoiding the suck of the undertow. Throwing out grappling hooks, they
-tow the flaming fire rafts away from their fleet. It is the first play
-of the game, and the French have lost.
-
-[Illustration: THE SITE OF QUEBEC AND THE GROUND OCCUPIED DURING THE
-SIEGE OF 1759]
-
-
-Monckton goes ashore south on Point Levis side next day. Townshend has
-landed his troops east of the Montmorency on the north shore. It is
-the second play of the game, and Wolfe has violated every rule of war,
-for he has separated his forces in three divisions close to a powerful
-enemy. He is counting on Montcalm's policy, however, and Montcalm's
-play is to lie inactive, sleeping in his boots, refusing to be lured to
-battle till winter drives the English off. It is usual in all accounts
-of the great struggle to find that certain facts have been suppressed.
-Let us frankly confess that when the English rangers went foraging they
-brought back French scalps, and when the French Indians went scouting
-they returned with English scalps. However, manners were improving.
-Strict orders are given: this is not a war on women; neither women nor
-children are to be touched. Wolfe posts proclamations on the parish
-churches, calling on the habitants to stand neutral. In answer, they
-tear the proclamations down. {266} By July 12 Wolfe's batteries on the
-south side of the river are preparing to shell the city. A band of
-five hundred students and habitants rows across from Quebec by night to
-dislodge the English gunners, but mistaking their own shots for the
-shots of the enemy, fall on each other in the dark and retreat in wild
-confusion. Then the English cannon begin to do business. In a single
-day half the houses of Lower Town are battered to bits, and high-tossed
-bombs have plunged through roofs of Upper Town, burning the cathedral
-and setting a multitude of lesser buildings on fire. In the confusion
-of cannonade and counter-cannonade and a city on fire, shrouding the
-ruins in a pall of smoke, some English ships slip up the river beyond
-Quebec, but there the precipice of the river bank is still steeper, and
-Bougainville is on guard with two thousand men. For thirty miles
-around the English rangers have laid the country waste. Still Montcalm
-refuses to come out and fight.
-
-The enforced inaction exasperates Wolfe, whose health is failing him,
-and who sees the season passing, no nearer the object of his ambition
-than when he came. As he had stormed the batteries of Louisburg, so
-now he decides to storm the heights of Montmorency. To any one who has
-stood on the knob of rock above the gorge where the cataract plunges to
-the St. Lawrence, or has scrambled down the bank slippery with spray,
-and watched the black underpool whirl out to the river, Wolfe's venture
-must seem madness; for French troops lined the intrenchments above the
-cliff, and below a redoubt or battery had been built. Below the
-cataract, when the tide ebbed, was a place which might be forded. From
-sunrise to sunset all the last days of July, Wolfe's cannon boomed from
-Levis across the city, from the fleet in mid channel, from the land
-camp on the east side of Montmorency. Montcalm rightly guessed, this
-presaged a night assault. To hide his design, Wolfe kept his
-transports shifting up and down the St. Lawrence, as if to land at
-Beauport halfway to the city. All the same, two armed transports, as
-if by chance, managed to get themselves stranded just opposite the
-redoubt below the cliff, where their cannon would protect a landing.
-Montcalm saw the move and strengthened the troops behind the earthworks
-on the {267} top of the cliff. Toward sunset the tide ebbed, and at
-that time cannon were firing from all points with such fury that the
-St. Lawrence lay hidden in smoke. As the air cleared, two thousand men
-were seen wading and fording below the falls. There was a rush of the
-tall grenadiers for the redoubt. The French retreated firing, and the
-cliff above poured down an avalanche of shots. At that moment Wolfe
-suffered a cruel and unforeseen check. A frightful thunderstorm burst
-on the river, lashing earth and air to darkness. It was impossible to
-see five paces ahead or to aim a shot. The cliff roared down with
-miniature rivulets and the slippery clay bank gave to every step of the
-climbers slithering down waist-deep in mud and weeds. Powder was
-soaked. As the rain ceased, Indians were seen sliding down the cliff
-to scalp the wounded. Wolfe ordered a retreat. The drums rolled the
-recall and the English escaped pellmell, the French hooting with
-derision at the top of the banks, the English yelling back strong oaths
-for the enemy to come out of its rat hole and fight like men. At the
-ford the men, soaked like water rats, and a sorry rabble, got into some
-sort of rank and burned the two stranded vessels as they passed back to
-the east side. In less than an hour four hundred and forty-three men
-had fallen, the most of them killed, many both dead and wounded, into
-the hands of the Indian scalpers.
-
-One can guess Wolfe's fearful despair that night. A month had passed.
-He had accomplished worse than nothing. In another month the fleet
-must leave the St. Lawrence to avoid autumn storms. Fragile at all
-times, Wolfe fell ill, ill of fever and of chagrin, and those officers
-over whose head he had been promoted did not spare their criticisms,
-their malice. It is so easy to win battles of life and war in theory.
-
-As for Quebec, it was felt the siege was over, the contest won. Still
-bad news had come from the west. Niagara had fallen before the
-English, and the forts on Lake Champlain were abandoned to Amherst.
-Nothing now barred the English advance down the Richelieu to Montreal.
-Montcalm dispatches Levis to Montreal with eight hundred men.
-
-{268} Why did Amherst not come to Wolfe's aid? His enemies say because
-the commanding general was so sure the siege of Quebec would fail that
-he did not want any share of the blame. That may be unjust. Amherst
-was of the slow, cautious kind, who marched doggedly to victory. He
-may not have wished to risk a second Ticonderoga. Wolfe's position was
-now desperate. His only alternatives were success or ruin. "You can't
-cure me," he told his surgeon, "but mend me up so I can go on for a few
-days." What he did in those few days left his name immortal. Robert
-Stobo, who had been captured from Washington's battalions on the Ohio,
-and who knew every foot of Quebec from five years of captivity, had
-escaped, joined Wolfe, and drawn plans of all surroundings. From his
-ship above Quebec Wolfe could see there was one path just behind the
-city where men might ascend to the Plains of Abraham outside the rear
-wall, but the path was guarded, and Bougainville's troops patrolled
-westward as far as Cape Rouge.
-
-[Illustration: LOUIS JOSEPH, MARQUIS DE MONTCALM]
-
-It was now September. From their trenches above the river the French
-could see the English evacuating camp at Montmorency. They were
-jubilant. Surely the English were giving up the siege. Night after
-night English transports loaded with soldiers ascended the St. Lawrence
-above Quebec. What did it mean? Was it a feint to draw Montcalm's men
-away from the east side? {269} The French general was sleeplessly
-anxious. He had not passed a night in bed since the end of June. The
-fall rains were beginning, and another month of work in the trenches
-meant half the army invalided.
-
-The most of the English fleet was working up and down with the tide
-between the western limits of Quebec and Cape Rouge, nine miles away.
-Bougainville's force was increased to three thousand men, and he was
-ordered to keep especial watch westward. The steepness of the
-precipice was guard enough near the town. Wednesday, the 12th of
-September, the English troops were ordered to hold themselves in
-readiness. They passed the day cleaning their arms, and were ordered
-not to speak after nightfall or permit a sound to be heard from the
-ranks. Admiral Saunders with the main fleet was to feign attack on the
-east side of the city. Admiral Holmes with Wolfe's army, now numbering
-not four thousand men, was to glide down with the tide from Cape Rouge
-above Quebec. Because the main fleet lay on the east side Montcalm
-felt sure the attack would come from that quarter. Deserters had
-brought word to Wolfe that some flatboats with provisions were coming
-down the river to Quebec that night.
-
-Here, then, the position! Saunders on the east side, opposite
-Beauport, feigning attack; Montcalm watching him from the Beauport
-cliffs; Wolfe nine miles up the river west of the city; Bougainville
-watching him, watching too for those provisions, for Quebec was down to
-empty larder.
-
-It is said that as Wolfe rested in his ship, the _Sutherland_, off Cape
-Rouge, he felt strange premonition of approaching death, and repeated
-the words of Gray's "Elegy,"--"The paths of glory lead but to the
-grave,"--but this has been denied. Certainly he had such strange
-consciousness of impending death that, taking a miniature of his
-fiancee from his breast, he asked a fellow-officer to return it to her.
-About midnight the tide began to ebb, and two lanterns were hung as a
-sign from the masthead of the _Sutherland_. Instantly all the ships
-glided silent as the great river down with the tide. The night was
-moonless. Near the little bridle path now known as Wolfe's Cove the
-ships draw {270} ashore. Sharp as iron on stone a sentry's voice rings
-out, "Who goes?"
-
-"The French," answers an officer, who speaks perfect French.
-
-"What regiment?"
-
-"The Queen's," replies the officer, who chances to know that
-Bougainville has a regiment of that name. Thinking they were the
-provision transports, this sentry was satisfied. Not so another. He
-ran down to the water's edge, and peering through the darkness called,
-"Why can't you speak louder?"
-
-"Hush you! We 'll be overheard," answers the English officer in French.
-
-Thus the English boats glided towards the little bridle path that led
-up to the rear of the city. Wolfe's Cove is not a path steep as a
-stair up the face of a rock, as the most of the schoolbooks teach; it
-is a little weed-grown, stony gully, easy to climb, but slant and
-narrow, where I have walked many a night to drink from the spring near
-the foot of the cliff.
-
-Twenty-four volunteers lead the way up the stony path, silent and agile
-as cats. At the top are the tents of the sentries, who rush from their
-couches to be overpowered by the English. Before daybreak the whole
-army has ascended to the plateau behind the city, known as the Plains
-of Abraham. No use entering here into the dispute whether Wolfe took
-his place where the goal now stands, or farther back from the city
-wall. Roughly speaking, the main line of Wolfe's forces, three deep,
-with himself, Monckton, and Murray in command, faced the rear of Quebec
-about three quarters of a mile from what was then the wall. To his
-left was the wooded road now known as St. Louis. He posts Townshend
-facing this, at right angles to his front line. Another battalion lay
-in the woods to the rear. There were, besides, a reserve regiment, and
-a battalion to guard the landing.
-
-What was Wolfe's position? Behind him lay Bougainville with three
-thousand French soldiers, fresh and in perfect condition. In front lay
-Quebec with three thousand more. To his right was the river; to his
-left, across the St. Charles, Montcalm's main army of five thousand
-men. "When your enemies blunder, {271} don't interrupt them," Napoleon
-is reported to have advised. If some one had not blundered badly now,
-it might have been a second Ticonderoga with Wolfe; but some one did
-blunder most tragically.
-
-Montcalm had come from the trenches above Beauport, where he had been
-guarding against Saunders' landing, and he had ordered hot tea and beer
-served to the troops, when he happened to look across the St. Charles
-River towards Quebec. It had been cloudy, but the sun had just burst
-out; and there, standing in the morning light, were the English in
-battle array, red coat and tartan kilt, grenadier and Highlander, in
-the distance a confused mass of color, which was not the white uniform
-of the French.
-
-"This is a serious business," said Montcalm hurriedly to his aide.
-Then, spurs to his big black horse, he was galloping furiously along
-the Beauport road, over the resounding bridge across the St. Charles,
-up the steep cobblestone streets that lead from Lower to Upper Town,
-and out by the St. Louis road to the Plains of Abraham. In Quebec all
-was confusion. _Who_ had given the order for the troops to move out
-against the English without waiting for Bougainville to come from Cape
-Rouge? But there they were, huddling, disorderly columns that crowded
-on each other, filing out of the St. Louis and St. John Gates, with a
-long string of battalions following Montcalm up from the St. Charles.
-And Ramezay, who was commandant of the city, refused to send out part
-of his troops; and Vaudreuil, who was at Beauport, delayed to come; and
-though Montcalm waited till ten o'clock, Bougainville did not come up
-from Cape Rouge with his three thousand men. Easy to criticise and say
-Montcalm should have waited till Bougainville and Vaudreuil came. He
-could _not_ wait, for Wolfe's position cut his forces in two, and the
-army was without supplies. With his four thousand five hundred men he
-accepted fate's challenge.
-
-Bagpipes shrilling, English flags waving to the wind, the French
-soldiers shouting riotously, the two armies moved towards each other.
-Then the English halted, silent, motionless {272} statues. The men
-were refreshed, for during the four hours' wait from daylight, Wolfe
-had permitted them to rest on the grassed plain. The French came
-bounding forward, firing as they ran, and bending down to reload. The
-English waited till the French were but forty yards away. "They were
-not to throw away their fire," Wolfe had ordered. Now forty yards, if
-you measure it off in your mind's eye, is short space between hostile
-armies. It is not as wide as the average garden front in a suburban
-city. Then suddenly the thin red line of the English spoke in a crash
-of fire. The shots were so simultaneous that they sounded like one
-terrific crash of ear-splitting thunder. The French had no time to
-halt before a second volley rent the air. Then a clattering fire
-rocketed from the British like echoes from a precipice. With wild
-halloo the British were charging, . . . charging, . . . charging, the
-Highlanders leading with their broadswords flashing overhead and their
-mountain blood on fire, Wolfe to the fore of the grenadiers till a shot
-broke his wrist! Wrapping his handkerchief about the wound as he ran,
-the victorious young general was dashing forward when a second shot hit
-him and a third pierced his breast. He staggered a step, reeled, fell
-to the ground. Three soldiers and an officer ran to his aid and
-carried him in their arms to the rear. He would have no surgeon. It
-was useless, he said. "But the day is ours, and see that you keep it,"
-he muttered, sinking back unconscious. A moment later he was roused by
-wild, hilarious, jubilant, heart-shattering shouts.
-
-"Gad! they run! See how they run!" said an English voice.
-
-"_Who_--run?" demanded Wolfe, roused as if from the sleep of death.
-
-"The enemy, sir. They give way . . . everywhere."
-
-"Go, one of you," commanded the dying general; "tell Colonel Burton to
-march Webb's regiment down Charles River to cut off retreat by the
-bridge. Now God be praised!" he added, sinking back; "I die in peace!"
-And the spirit of Wolfe had departed, leaving as a heritage a New
-Empire of the North, and an immortal fame.
-
-[Illustration: DEATH OF WOLFE (From the painting by Benjamin West)]
-
-{273}
-
-Fate had gone hard against the gallant Montcalm. The first volley from
-the English line had mowed his soldiers down like ripe wheat. At the
-second volley the ranks broke and the ground was thick strewn with the
-dead. When the English charged, the French fled in wildest panic
-downhill for the St. Charles. Wounded and faint, Montcalm on his black
-charger was swept swiftly along St. Louis road in the blind stampede of
-retreat. Near the walls a ball passed through his groins. Two
-soldiers caught him from falling, and steadied him on either side of
-his horse through St. Louis gate, where women, waiting in mad anxiety,
-saw the blood dripping over his horse.
-
-"My God! My God! Our marquis is slain!" they screamed.
-
-"It is nothing,--nothing,--good friends; don't trouble about me,"
-answered the wounded general as he passed for the last time under the
-arched gateway of St. Louis road.
-
-"How long have I to live?" he asked the surgeon into whose house he had
-been carried.
-
-"Few hours, my lord."
-
-"So much the better," answered Montcalm. "I shall not live to see
-Quebec surrendered."
-
-Before daylight, he was dead. Wrapped in his soldier's cloak, laid in
-a rough box, the body was carried that night to the Ursuline Convent,
-where a bursting bomb had scooped a great hole in the floor. Sad-eyed
-nuns and priests crowded the chapel. By torchlight, amid tears and
-sobs, the body was laid to rest.
-
-Both generals had died as they had lived,--gallantly. To-day both are
-regarded as heroes and commemorated by monuments; but how did their
-governments treat them? Of course there were wild huzzas in London and
-solemn memorial services over Wolfe; but when his aged mother
-petitioned the government that her dead son's salary might be computed
-at 10 pounds a day,--the salary of a commander in chief,--instead of 2
-pounds a day, she was refused in as curtly uncivil a note as was ever
-penned. Montcalm had died in debt, and when his family petitioned the
-French government to pay these debts, the King thought it should be
-done, but he did not take the trouble to see that his {274} good
-intention was carried out. It was easy and cheaper for orators to talk
-of heroes giving their lives for their country. There are no better
-examples in history of the truth that glory and honor and true service
-must be their own reward, independent of any compensation, any
-suffering, any sacrifice.
-
-
-Though the panic retreat continued for hours and Quebec was not
-surrendered for some days, the battle was practically decided in ten
-minutes. The campaign of the next year was gallant but fruitless. In
-April, before the fleet has come back to the English, De Levis throws
-himself with the remnants of the French army against the rear wall of
-Quebec; and as Montcalm had come out to fight Wolfe, so Murray marches
-out to fight De Levis. Both sides claimed the battle of Ste. Foye as
-victory, but another such victory would have exterminated the English.
-Levis outside the walls, Murray glad to be inside the walls, each side
-waited for the spring fleet. If France had come to Canada's aid, even
-yet the country might have been won, for sickness had reduced Murray's
-army to less than three thousand able men; but the flag that flaunted
-from the ship that sailed into the harbor of Quebec on the 9th of May
-was British. That decided Canada's fate. De Levis retreated swiftly
-for Montreal, but by September the slow-moving General Amherst has
-closed in on Montreal from the west, and up the St. Lawrence from the
-east proceeds General Murray. De Levis and Vaudreuil had less than two
-thousand fighting men at Montreal. September 8th they capitulated, and
-three years later, by the Treaty of Paris, Canada passed under the
-dominion of England. Officers, many of the nobility, Bigot and his
-crew, sailed for France, where the Intendant's ring were put on trial
-and punished for their corruption and misrule. Bigot suffered
-banishment and the confiscation of property. The other members of his
-clique received like sentences.
-
-
-Spite of the hopes of her devoted founders,--like Champlain and
-Maisonneuve,--spite of the blood of her martyrs and the prayers of her
-missionaries, spite of all the pathfinding of her {275} explorers,
-spite of the dauntless warfare of her soldier knights,--like Frontenac
-and Iberville and Montcalm,--New France had fallen.
-
-Why?
-
-For two reasons: because of England's sea power; because of the
-unblushing, shameless, gilded corruption of the French court, which
-cared less for the fate of Canada than the leer of a painted fool
-behind her fan. But be this remembered,--and here was the hand of
-overruling Destiny or Providence,--the fall of New France, like the
-fall of the seed to the ready soil, was the rebirth of a new nation.
-Henceforth it is not New France, the appendage of an Old World nation.
-It is Canada,--a New Dominion.
-
-
-To-day wander round Quebec. Tablets and monuments consecrate many of
-the old hero days. Though the British government rebuilt a line of
-walls in the early eighteen hundreds, you will find it hard to trace
-even a vestige of the old French walls. Mounds tell you where there
-were bastions. A magnificent boulevard tops the most of the old
-ramparts. An imposing hotel stands where Castle St. Louis once frowned
-over the St. Lawrence. Of the palace where the Intendant held his
-revels there are not even ruins. If you drive out past Beauport, you
-will find at the end of a nine-mile forest path the crumbling brick
-walls of Chateau Bigot, the Hermitage, half buried, in the days when I
-visited it, with rose vines and orchard trees gone wild. That is all
-you will find of the court clique whose folly brought Canada's doom;
-but as you drive back from Beauport there towers the city from the
-rocky heights above the St. Lawrence,--chapel spire and cross and domed
-cathedral roofs aglint in the sunlight like a city of gold. The
-church, baptized by the blood of its martyrs, is there in pristine
-power; and the fruitful meadows bear witness to the prosperity of the
-habitant on whom the burden fell in the days of the ancient regime.
-Who shall say that habitant and church do not deserve the place of
-power they hold in the government of the Dominion?
-
-
-
-
-{276}
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-FROM 1763 TO 1812
-
-English law and Quebec--French rights guarded--Pontiac's war--Siege of
-Detroit--Fight at Bloody Run--Michilimackinac falls--How Bouquet wins
-victory--Return of captives--The peddlers--Methods of
-Nor'westers--Traders invade the Up Country--Disaffection in
-Canada--Canada invaded--Quebec invested--Montgomery's fight--"Rats in a
-trap"--Relief at last--Tricks of ringsters--Coming of Loyalists--Life
-in the backwoods
-
-
-Quebec has fallen. As jackals gather to feast on the carcass of the
-dead lion, so rallies a rabble of adventurers on the trail of the
-victorious army. Sutlers, traders, teamsters, riffraff,--soldiers of
-fortune,--stampede to Montreal and Quebec as to a new gold field. When
-Major Robert Rogers, the English forest ranger, proceeds up the lakes
-to take over the western fur posts,--Presqu' Isle, Detroit,
-Michilimackinac,--he is followed by hosts of adventurers looking for
-swift way to fortune by either the fur trade or by picking the bones of
-the dead lion. Major Rogers, beating up Lake Ontario and Lake Erie
-with two hundred bushwhackers, pausing in camp near modern Sandusky,
-meets the renowned Ottawa warrior, Pontiac, who had fought with the
-French against Braddock and now wants to know in voice of thunder what
-all this talk about the French being conquered means; how _dare_ the
-French, because _they_ have proved paltroons, deed away the Indian
-lands of Canada? How dare Rogers, the white chief of the English
-rangers, come here with his pale-faced warriors to Pontiac's land? How
-Rogers answered the veteran red-skinned warrior is not told. All that
-is known is--the French gave up their western furs with bad grace, and
-the English commandants forgot to appease the wound to the Indians'
-pride by the customary gifts over solemn powwow. At Detroit and
-Michilimackinac the French quietly withdraw from the palisades and
-build their white-washed cottages outside the limits of the fort--2500
-French habitants there are at Detroit.
-
-If the four or five hundred English adventurers who swarmed to Canada
-on the heels of the English army thought to batten on the sixty
-thousand defeated French inhabitants, far otherwise thought and decreed
-the English generals, Sir Jeffrey {277} Amherst, and Murray, who
-succeeded him. "You will observe that the French are British subjects
-as much as we are, and treat them accordingly," ruled Amherst; and
-General Murray, who practically became the first governor of Canada on
-Amherst's withdrawal, at once set himself to establish justice.
-
-[Illustration: MAJOR ROBERT ROGERS]
-
-No more forced labor! No more carrion birds of the official classes,
-like Bigot, fattening on the poor habitants! British government in
-Canada for the next few years is known as the period of military rule.
-At Quebec, at Three Rivers, at Montreal, the commanding officers
-established martial law with biweekly courts; and in the parishes the
-local French officers, or seigneurs, are authorized to hear civil
-cases. By the terms of surrender the people have been guaranteed their
-religious liberty; and the Treaty of Paris, which cedes all Canada to
-England in 1763, repeats this guarantee, though it leaves a thorn of
-trouble in the flesh of England by reserving to France for the benefit
-of the Grand Banks fishermen the Islands of St. Pierre and Miquelon, as
-well as shore rights of fishing on the west coast of Newfoundland.
-Also, the proprietary rights of Jesuits, Sulpicians, Franciscans, are
-to remain in abeyance for the pleasure of the English crown. The
-rights of the sisterhoods are at once confirmed.
-
-{278} One of General Murray's first acts as governor is to convey
-gentle hint to the Abbe Le Loutre, now released from prison and come
-back to Canada, that his absence will be appreciated by the government.
-Within a few years there are five hundred English residents in Montreal
-and Quebec; and now trouble begins for the government,--that wrangle
-between English and French, between Protestant and Catholic, which is
-to go on for a hundred years and retard Canada's progress by a century.
-
-[Illustration: NORTH AMERICA AT THE CLOSE OF THE FRENCH WARS, 1763]
-
-Being British-born subjects, the few hundred demand that the Governor
-call an assembly,--an elective assembly; but by the laws of England,
-Roman Catholics must abjure their religion before they can take office,
-and by the Treaty of Paris the Catholics of Canada have been guaranteed
-the freedom of their religion. To grant an elective assembly now would
-mean that the representatives of the five hundred English traders would
-rule over 70,000 French. When accusing the French Catholics of Quebec
-of remaining a solidarity so that they may wield the balance of power,
-it is well to remember how and when the quarrel began. Murray sides
-with the French and stands like a rock for their right. He will have
-no elective assembly under present conditions; and he puts summary stop
-to the business English magistrates and English bailiffs have hatched
-against the rights of the habitant,--of seizing lands for debt at a
-time when money is scarce, summoning the debtor simultaneously to two
-different courts, then charging such outrageous fees that the debtor's
-land is sold for the fees, to be bought in by the rascal ring who have
-arranged the plot. Ordinances are still proclaimed in primitive
-fashion by the crier going through the streets shouting the laws to
-beat of drum; but as the crier {279} shouts in English, the habitants
-know no more of the laws than if he shouted in Greek.
-
-As Murray opposes the clamor of the English minority, the English
-petition the home government for Murray's recall. In the light of the
-fact that there were no schools at all in Canada except the Catholic
-seminaries, and that of the five hundred English residents only two
-hundred had permanent homes in Montreal and Quebec, it is rather
-instructive to read as one of the grievances of the English minority
-"_that the only teachers in Canada were Catholics_."
-
-The governor-generalship is offered to Chatham, the great statesman, at
-5000 pounds a year. Chatham refusing the position, there comes in 1768
-as governor, at 1200 pounds a year, Sir Guy Carleton, fellow-soldier
-and friend of Wolfe in the great war, who follows in Murray's
-footsteps, stands like a rock for the rights of the French, orders
-debtors released from jail, fees reduced, and a stoppage of forced land
-sales. Bitter is the disappointment to the land jobbers, who had
-looked for a partisan in Carleton; doubly bitter, for Carleton goes one
-better than Murray. For years the French government had issued paper
-money in Quebec. After the conquest seventeen millions of these
-worthless government promissory notes were outstanding in the hands of
-the habitants. Knowing that the paper money is to be redeemed by the
-English government, English jobbers are now busy buying up the paper
-among the poor French at fifteen cents on the dollar. Carleton sends
-the town crier from parish to parish, warning the habitants to hold
-their money and register the amounts with the magistrates till the
-whole matter can be arranged between England and France.
-
-The first newspaper is established now in Quebec, _The Quebec Gazette_,
-printed in both English and French. Also the first trouble now arises
-from having ceded France the two tiny islands south of Newfoundland,
-St. Pierre and Miquelon. By English navigation laws, all trade must
-be in English ships. Good! The smugglers slip into St. Pierre with a
-cargo. By night a ship with a white sail slips out of St. Pierre with
-that {280} cargo. At Gaspe the sail of that ship is red; at Saguenay
-it is yellow; at Quebec it is perhaps brown. Ostensibly the ship is a
-fishing smack, but it leaves other cargo than fish at the habitant
-hamlets of the St. Lawrence; and the smuggling from St. Pierre that
-began in Carleton's time is continued to-day in the very same way.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL MURRAY, FIRST GOVERNOR OF QUEBEC]
-
-And Guy Carleton, though he is an Englishman and owes his appointment
-to the complaints of the English minority against Murray, remains
-absolutely impartial. Good reason for the wisdom of his policy. There
-are rumblings from the New England colonies that forewarn the coming
-earthquake. For years friction has been growing between the mother
-country and the colonies. The story of the Revolution does not belong
-to the story of Canada. For years far-sighted statesmen had predicted
-that the minute New England ceased to fear New France, ceased to need
-England's protection, that minute the growing friction would flame in
-open war. Carleton foresaw that to pander to the English minority
-would sacrifice the loyalty of the French. Thus he reported to the
-home government, and the Quebec Act of 1774 came to the relief of the
-French. By it Canada's boundaries were extended across the region of
-the Ohio to the Mississippi. French laws were restored {281} in all
-civil actions. English law was to rule in criminal cases, which meant
-trial by jury. The French are relieved from oaths of office and
-enabled to serve on the jury. Also, the Catholic clergy is entitled to
-collect its usual tithe of one twenty-sixth from the Catholics. An
-elective assembly is refused for reasons that are plain, but a
-legislative council is granted, to be appointed by the crown. For the
-expense of government a slight tax is levied on liquor; but as the St.
-Pierre smuggling is now flourishing, the tax docs not begin to meet the
-cost of government, and the difference is paid from the imperial
-treasury. However badly the imperial government blundered with the New
-England colonies, her treatment of Quebec was an object lesson in
-colonizing to the world. Had she treated her New England colonies half
-as justly as she treated Quebec, British America might to-day extend to
-Mexico. Had she treated Quebec half as unjustly as she treated her own
-offspring of New England, the United States might to-day extend to the
-Arctic Circle. The man who saved Canada to England, in the first place
-by wisdom, in the second place by war, was Sir Guy Carleton.
-
-
-While the English and French, Protestant and Catholic, wrangle for
-power in Quebec there rages on the frontier one of the most devastating
-Indian wars known to American history. Not for nothing had Pontiac
-drawn himself to his full height and defied Major Rogers down on Lake
-Erie. From tribe to tribe the lithe coureurs ran, naked but for the
-breechcloth, painted as for war, carrying in one hand the tomahawk
-dipped in blood, in the other the wampum belt of purple, typifying war.
-The French had deeded away the Indian lands to the English! The news
-ran like wildfire, ran by moccasin telegram from Montreal up Ottawa
-River to Michilimackinac, from Niagara westward to Detroit, and
-southward to Presqu' Isle and all that chain of forts leading
-southwestward to the Mississippi. Was it a "Conspiracy of Pontiac," as
-it has been called? Hardly. It was more one of those general
-movements of unrest, of discontent, of misunderstanding, that but
-awaits the appearance of {282} a brave leader to become a torrent of
-destruction. Pontiac, the Ottawa chief, was such a leader, and to his
-standard rallied Indians from Virginia, from the Mississippi, from Lake
-Superior. Of the universal unrest among the Indians the English were
-not ignorant, but they failed to realize its significance; failed, too,
-to realize that the French fur traders, cast out of the western forts
-and now roaming the wilds, fanned the flame, gave presents of gunpowder
-and firearms to the savages, and egged the hostiles on against the new
-possessors of Canada, in order to divert the fur trade to French
-traders still in Louisiana. Down at Miami, southwest of Lake Erie,
-Ensign Holmes hears in March of 1763 that the war belt has been carried
-to the Illinois. Up at Detroit, in May, Pontiac is camped on the east
-side of the river with eight hundred hunters. Daily the French
-farmers, who supply the fort with provisions, carry word to Major
-Gladwin that the Indians are acting strangely, holding long and secret
-powwow, borrowing files to saw off the barrels of their muskets short.
-A French woman, who has visited the Indians across the river for a
-supply of maple sugar, comes to Gladwin on May 5 with the same story.
-From eight hundred, the Indians increase to two thousand. Old
-Catherine, a toothless squaw, comes shaking as with the palsy to the
-fort, and with mumbling words warns Gladwin to "Beware, beware!" So
-does a young girl whose fine eyes have caught the fancy of Gladwin
-himself. Breaking out with bitter weeping, she covers her head with
-her shawl and bids her white lover have a care how he meets Pontiac in
-council. Gladwin himself was a seasoned campaigner, who had escaped
-the hurricane of death with Braddock and had also served under Amherst
-at Montreal. In his fort are one hundred and twenty soldiers and forty
-traders. At the wharf lie the two armed schooners, _Beaver_ and
-_Gladwin_. When Pontiac comes with his sixty warriors Gladwin is ready
-for him. In the council house the warriors seat themselves, weapons
-concealed under blankets; but when Pontiac raises the wampum belt that
-was to be the signal for the massacre to begin, Major Gladwin, never
-moving his light blue eyes from {283} the snaky gleam of the Indian,
-waves his hand, and at the motion there is a roll of drums, a grounding
-of the sentry's arms, a trampling of soldiers outside, a rush as of
-white men marching. Pontiac is dumfounded and departs without giving
-the signal. Back in his cabin of rushes across the river he rages like
-a maniac and buries a tomahawk in the skull of the old squaw Catherine.
-Monday, May 9, at ten o'clock he comes again, followed by a rabble of
-hunters. The gates are shut in his face. He shouts for admittance.
-The sentry opens the wicket and in traders' vernacular bids him go
-about his business. There is a wild war yell. The siege of Detroit
-begins.
-
-[Illustration: SETTLEMENTS ON THE DETROIT RIVER]
-
-The story of that siege would fill volumes. For fifteen months it
-lasted, the French remaining neutral, selling provisions to both sides,
-Gladwin defiant inside his palisades, the Indians persistent as enraged
-hornets. Two English officers who have been out hunting are waylaid,
-murdered, skinned, the skin sewed into powder pouches, the bloody
-carcasses sent drifting down on the flood of waters past the fort
-walls. Desperately in need of provisions from the French, Gladwin
-consents to temporary truce while Captain Campbell and others go out to
-parley with the Indians. {284} Gladwin obtains cart loads of
-provisions during the parley, but Pontiac violates the honor of war by
-holding the messengers captive. Burning arrows are shot at the fort
-walls. Gladwin's men sally out by night, hack down the orchards that
-conceal the enemy, burn all outbuildings, and come back without losing
-a man. Nightly, too, lapping the canoe noiselessly across water with
-the palm of the hand, one of the French farmers comes with fresh
-provisions. Gladwin has sent a secret messenger, with letter in his
-powder pouch, through the lines of the besiegers to Niagara for aid.
-May 30, moving slowly, all sails out, the English flag flying from the
-prow, comes a convoy of sailboats up the river. Cheer on cheer rent
-the air. The soldiers at watch in the galleries inside the palisades
-tossed their caps overhead, but as the ships came nearer the whites
-were paralyzed with horror. Silence froze the cheer on the parted
-lips. Indian warriors manned the boats. The convoy of ninety-six men
-had been cut to pieces, only a few soldiers escaping back to Niagara, a
-few coming on, compelled by the Indians to act as rowers. As the boats
-passed the fort, whoops of derision, wild war chants, eldritch screams,
-rose from the Indians. One desperate white captive rose like a flash
-from his place at the rowlocks, caught his Indian captor by the scuff
-of the neck and threw him into the river; but the redskin grappled the
-other in a grip of death. Turning over and over, locked in each
-other's arms, the hate of the inferno in their faces, soldier and
-Indian swept down to watery death in the river tide. Taking advantage
-of the confusion, and under protection of the fort guns, one of the
-other captives sprang into the river and succeeded in swimming safely
-to the fort. Terrible was the news he brought. All the other forts
-south of Niagara, with the exception of Fort Pitt,--Miami, St. Joseph,
-Presqu' Isle,--lay in ashes. From some not a man had escaped to tell
-the story.
-
-That night it was pitch-dark,--soft, velvet, warm summer darkness.
-From the fort the soldiers could see the sixty captives from the convoy
-burning outside at the torture stakes. Then as gray morning came
-mangled corpses floated past on the river tide. June 18 another vessel
-glides up the river with help, but {285} the garrison is afraid of a
-second disaster, for eight hundred warriors have lain in ambush along
-the river. Gladwin orders a cannon fired. The boat fires back answer,
-but the wind falls and she is compelled to anchor for the night below
-the fort. Sixty soldiers armed to the teeth are on board; but the
-captain is determined to out-trick the Indians, and he permits only
-twelve of his men at a time on deck. Darkness has barely fallen on the
-river before the waters are alive with canoes, and naked warriors
-clamber to the decks like scrambling monkeys, so sure they have
-outnumbered their prey that they forget all caution. At the signal of
-a hammer knock on deck,--rap--rap--rap,--three times short and sharp,
-up swarm the soldiers from the hatchway. Fourteen Indians dropped on
-the deck in as many seconds. Others were thrown on bayonet points into
-the river. It is said that after the fight of a few seconds on the
-ship the decks looked like a butcher's shambles. Finally the schooner
-anchored at Detroit, to the immense relief of the beleaguered garrison.
-So elated were the English, one soldier dashed from a sally port and
-scalped a dying Indian in full view of both sides. Swift came Indian
-vengeance. Captain Campbell, the truce messenger, was hacked to
-pieces. By July 28, Dalzell has come from Niagara with nearly two
-hundred men, including Rogers, the famous Indian fighter. Both Dalzell
-and Rogers are mad for a rush from the fort to deal one crushing blow
-to the Indians. Here the one mistake of the siege was made. Gladwin
-was against all risk, for the Indians were now dropping off to the
-hunting field, but Dalzell and Rogers were for punishing them before
-they left. In the midst of a dense night fog the English sallied from
-the fort at two o'clock on the 31st of July for Pontiac's main camp,
-about two miles up the river, boats rowing upstream abreast the
-marchers. It was hot and sultry. The two hundred and fifty
-bushrangers marched in shirt sleeves, two abreast. A narrow footbridge
-led across a brook, since known as Bloody Run, to cliffs behind which
-the Indians were intrenched. Along the trail were the whitewashed
-cottages of the French farmers, who stared from their windows in their
-nightcaps, amazed beyond speech at the rashness of the {286} English.
-On a smaller scale it was a repetition of Braddock's defeat on the
-Ohio. Indians lay in ambush behind every house, every shrub, in the
-long grass. They only waited till Dalzell's men had crossed the bridge
-and were charging the hill at a run. Then the war whoop shrilled both
-to fore and to rear. The Indians doubled up on their trapped foe from
-both sides. Rogers' Rangers dashed for hiding in a house. The drum
-beat retreat. Under cover of Rogers' shots from one side, shots from
-the boats on the other, Dalzell's men escaped at a panic run back over
-the trail with a loss of some sixty dead. In September came more ships
-with more men, again to be ambushed at the narrows, and again to reach
-Detroit, as the old record says, "bloody as a butcher's shop." So the
-siege dragged on for more than a year at Detroit. Winter witnessed a
-slight truce to fighting, for starvation drove the Indians to the
-hunting field; but May saw Pontiac again encamped under the walls of
-Detroit till word came from the French on the lower Mississippi in
-October, definitely and for all, they would not join the Indians. Then
-Pontiac knew his cause was lost.
-
-Up at Michilimackinac similar scenes were enacted. Major Etherington
-and Captain Leslie had some thirty-five soldiers. There were also
-hosts of traders outside the walls, among whom was Alexander Henry of
-Montreal. Word had come of Pontiac at Detroit, but Etherington did not
-realize that the uprising was general. June 4 was the King's birthday.
-Shops had been closed. Flags blew above the fort. Gates were wide
-open. Squaws with heads under shawls sat hunched around the house
-steps, with that concealed beneath their shawls which the English did
-not guess. All the men except Henry, who was writing letters, and some
-Frenchmen, who understood the danger signs, had gone outside the gates
-to watch a fast and furious game of lacrosse. Again and again the ball
-came bounding towards the fort gates, only to be whisked to the other
-end of the field by a deft toss, followed by the swift runners. No one
-was louder in applause than Etherington. The officers were completely
-off guard. Suddenly the crowds swayed, gave way, opened; . . . {287}
-and down the field towards the fort gates surged the players. A
-dexterous pitch! The ball was inside the fort. After it dashed the
-Indians. In a flash weapons were grasped from the shawls of the
-squaws. Musket and knife did the rest. When Henry heard the war whoop
-and looked from a window he saw Indian warriors bending to drink the
-blood of hearts that were yet warm. For two days Henry lived in the
-rubbish heap of the attic in the house of Langlade, a pioneer of
-Wisconsin. Of the whites at Michilimackinac only twenty escaped death,
-and they were carried prisoners to the Lower Country for ransom.
-
-From Virginia to Lake Superior such was the Indian war known as
-Pontiac's Campaign. Fort Pitt held out like Detroit. Niagara was too
-strong for assault, but in September twenty-four soldiers, who had been
-protecting _portage_ past the falls, were waylaid and driven over the
-precipice at the place called Devil's Hole. More soldiers sent to the
-rescue met like fate, horses and wagons being stampeded over the rocks,
-seventy men in all being hurled to death in the wild canyon.
-
-Amherst, who was military commander at this time, was driven nearly out
-of his senses. A foe like the French, who would stand and do battle,
-he could fight; but this phantom foe, that vanished like mist through
-the woods, baffled the English soldier. In less than six months two
-thousand whites had been slain; and Amherst could not even find his
-foe, let alone strike him. "_Can we not inoculate them with smallpox,
-or set bloodhounds to track them_?" he writes distractedly.
-
-By the summer of 1764 the English had taken the war path. Bradstreet
-was to go up the lakes with twelve hundred men, Bouquet, with like
-forces, to follow the old Pennsylvania road to the Ohio, both generals
-to unite somewhere south of Lake Erie. Of Bradstreet the least said
-the better. He had done well in the great war when he captured Fort
-Frontenac almost without a blow; but now he strangely played the fool.
-He seemed to think that peace, peace at any price, was the object,
-whereas peace that is not a victory is worthless with the Indian.
-Deputies met him on the 12th of August near Presqu' Isle, Lake Erie.
-{288} They carried no wampum belts and were really spies. Without
-demanding reparation, without a word as to restoring harried captives,
-without hostages for good conduct, Bradstreet entered into a fool's
-peace with his foes, proceeded up to Detroit, and was back at Niagara
-by winter; though he must have realized the worthlessness of the
-campaign when his messengers sent to the Illinois were ambushed.
-
-[Illustration: BOUQUET]
-
-When Bouquet heard of the sham peace he was furious and repudiated
-Bradstreet's treaty in toto. Bouquet was a veteran of the great war,
-and knew bushfighting from seven years' experience on Pennsylvania
-frontiers. Slowly, with his fifteen hundred rangers and five hundred
-Highlanders, express riders keeping the trail open from fort to fort,
-scouts to fore, Bouquet moved along the old army trail used by Forbes
-to reach Fort Pitt. Friendly Indians had been warned to keep green
-branches as signals in the muzzles of their guns. All others were to
-be shot without mercy. Indians vanished before his march like mist
-before the sun. August 5 found Bouquet south of Fort Pitt at a place
-known as Bushy Run. The scouts had gone ahead to prepare nooning for
-the army at the Run. In seven hours the men had marched seventeen
-miles spite of sweltering heat; but at one, just as the thirsty columns
-were nearing the rest place, the crack--crack--crack of rifle shots to
-the fore set every man's blood jumping. From quick march they broke to
-a run, priming guns, ball in mouth as they ran. A moment later the old
-trick of Braddock's ambush was being repeated, but this time the
-Indians were dealing with a seasoned man. Bouquet swung his fighters
-in a circle round the stampeding horses and provision wagons. The heat
-was terrific, the men almost mad with thirst, the horses neighing and
-plunging and breaking away to the woods; and the army stood, a
-red-coated, tartan-plaid target for invisible foes! By this time the
-men were fighting as Indians fight--breaking ranks, jumping from tree
-to tree. It is n't easy to keep men standing as targets when they
-can't get at the foe; but Bouquet, riding from place to place, kept his
-men in hand till darkness screened them. Sixty had fallen. A circular
-barricade {289} was built of flour bags. Inside this the wounded were
-laid, and the army camped without water. The agonies of that night
-need not be told. Here the neighing of horses would bring down a
-clatter of bullets aimed in the dark; and the groans of the wounded,
-trampled by the stampeding cavalcade, would mingle with the screams of
-terror from the horses. The night continued hot almost as day in the
-sultry forest, and the thirst with both man and beast became anguish.
-Another such day and another such night, and Bouquet could foresee his
-fate would be worse than Braddock's. Passing from man to man, he gave
-the army their instructions for the next day. They would form in three
-platoons, with the center battalion advanced to the fore, as if to lead
-attack. Suddenly the center was to feign defeat and turn as if in
-panic flight. It was to be guessed that the Indians would pursue
-headlong. Instantly the flank battalions were to sweep through the
-woods in wide circle and close in on the rear of the savages. Then the
-fleeing center was to turn. The savages would be surrounded. Daybreak
-came with a cracking of shots from ambush. Officers and men carried
-out instructions exactly as Bouquet had planned. At ten o'clock the
-center column broke ranks, wavered, turned, . . . fled in wild panic!
-With the whooping of a wolf pack in full cry, the savages burst from
-ambush in pursuit. The sides deployed. A moment later the center had
-turned to fight the pursuer, {290} and the Highlanders broke from the
-woods, yelling their slogan, with broadswords cutting a terrible
-hand-to-hand swath. Sixty Indians were slashed to death in as many
-seconds. Though the British lost one hundred and fifteen, killed and
-wounded, the Indians were in full flight, blind terror at their heels.
-The way was now open to Port Pitt, but Bouquet did not dally inside the
-palisades. On down the Ohio he pursued the panic-stricken savages,
-pausing neither for deputies nor reenforcements. At Muskingum Creek
-the Indians sent back the old men to sue, sue abjectedly, for peace at
-any cost.
-
-Bouquet met them with the stern front that never fails to win respect.
-They need not palm off their lie that the fault lay with the foolish
-young warriors. If the old chiefs would not control the young braves,
-then the whole tribe, the whole Indian race, must pay the penalty. In
-terror the deputies hung their heads. He would not even discuss the
-terms of peace, Bouquet declared, till the Indians restored every
-captive,--man, woman, and child, even the child of Indian parentage
-born in captivity. The captives must be given suitable clothing,
-horses, and presents. Twelve days only would he permit them to gather
-the captives. If man, woman, or child were lacking on the twelfth day,
-he would pursue them and punish them to the uttermost ends of earth.
-
-The Indians were dumfounded. These were not soft words. Not thus had
-the French spoken, with the giving of manifold presents. But powder
-was exhausted. No more was coming from the French traders of the
-Mississippi. Winter was approaching, and the Indians must hunt or
-starve. Again the coureurs are sent spurring the woods from tribe to
-tribe with wampum belts, but this time the belts are the white bands of
-peace. While Bouquet waits he sends back over the trail for hospital
-nurses to receive the captives, and the army is set knocking up rude
-barracks of log and thatch in the wilderness. Then the captives begin
-to come. It is a scene for the brush of artist, for all frontiersmen
-who have lost friends have rallied to Bouquet's camp, hoping against
-hope and afraid to hope. There is the mother, whose infant child has
-been snatched from her arms in {291} some frontier attack, now scanning
-the lines as they come in, mad with hope and fear. There is the
-husband, whose wife has been torn away to some savage's tepee,
-searching, searching, searching among the sad, wild-eyed, ill-clad
-rabble for one with some resemblance to the wife he loved. There is
-the father seeking lost daughters and afraid of what he may find; and
-there are the captives themselves, some of the women demented from the
-abuse they have received. England may have spent her millions to
-protect her colonies, but she never spent in anguish what these rude
-frontiersmen suffered at Bouquet's camp.
-
-[Illustration: RETURN OF THE ENGLISH CAPTIVES (From a contemporary
-print)]
-
-
-So ended what is known as the Pontiac War. Up at Detroit in 1765
-Pontiac, in council with the whites, explains that he has listened to
-bad advice, but now his heart is right. "Father, you have stopped the
-rum barrel while we talked," he says grimly; "as our business is
-finished, we request that you open the barrel, that we may drink and be
-merry."
-
-Not a very heroic curtain fall to a dramatic life. But pause a bit:
-the Pontiac War was the last united stand of a doomed race against the
-advance of the conquering alien; and the Indian is defeated, and he
-knows it, and he acknowledges it, and he {292} drowns his despair in a
-vice, and so he passes down the Long Trail of time with his face to the
-west, doomed, hopeless, pushed westward and ever west.
-
-Pontiac goes down the Mississippi to his friends, the French fur
-traders of St. Louis. One morning in 1767, after a drinking bout, he
-is found across the river, lying in camp, with his skull split to the
-neck. By the sword he had lived, by the sword he perished. Was the
-murder the result of a drunken quarrel, or did some frenzied
-frontiersman with deathless woes bribe the hand of the assassin? The
-truth of the matter is unknown, and Pontiac's death remains a theme for
-fiction.
-
-
-What with struggles for power and Indian wars, one might think that the
-few hundred English colonists of Quebec and Montreal had all they could
-do. Not so: their quarrels with the French Catholics and fights with
-the Indians are merely incidental to the main aim of their lives, to
-the one object that has brought them stampeding to Canada as to a new
-gold field, namely, quick way to wealth; and the only quick way to
-wealth was by the fur trade. In the wilderness of the Up Country
-wander some two or three thousand cast-off wood rovers of the old
-French fur trade. As the prodigals come down the Ottawa, down the
-Detroit, down the St. Lawrence, the English and Scotch merchants of
-Montreal and Quebec meet them. Mighty names those merchants have in
-history now,--McGillivrays and MacKenzies and McGills and Henrys and
-MacLeods and MacGregors and Ogilvies and MacTavishes and Camerons,--but
-at this period of the game the most of them were what we to-day would
-call petty merchants or peddlers. In their storehouses--small,
-one-story, frame affairs--were packed goods for trade. With these
-goods they quickly outfitted the French bushrover--$3000 worth to a
-canoe--and packed the fellow back to the wilderness to trade on shares
-before any rival firm could hire him. Within five years of Wolfe's
-victory in 1759 all the French bushrovers of the Up Country had been
-reengaged by merchants of Montreal and Quebec.
-
-{293}
-
-[Illustration: MONTREAL (From a contemporary print)]
-
-Then imperceptible changes came,--the changes that work so silently
-they are like destiny. Because it is unsafe to let the rascal
-bushrovers and voyageurs go off by themselves with $3000 worth to the
-canoe load, the merchants began to accompany them westward.
-"Bourgeois," the voyageurs call their outfitters. Then, because
-success in fur trade must be kept secret, the merchants cease to have
-their men come down to Montreal. They meet them with the goods
-halfway, at La Verendrye's old stamping ground on Lake Superior, first
-at the place called Grand Portage, then, when the United States
-boundary is changed in 1783, at Kaministiquia, or modern Fort William,
-named after William McGillivray. Pontiac's War puts a stop to the new
-trade, but by 1766 the merchants are west again. Henry goes up the
-Saskatchewan to the Forks, and comes back with such wealth of furs he
-retires a rich magnate of Montreal. The Frobisher brothers strike for
-new hunting ground. So do Peter Pond and Bostonnais Pangman, and the
-MacKenzies, Alexander {294} and Roderick. Instead of following up the
-Saskatchewan, they strike from Lake Winnipeg northward for Churchill
-River and Athabasca, and they bring out furs that transform those
-peddlers into merchant princes. A little later the chief buyer of the
-Montreal furs is one John Jacob Astor of New York. Then another
-change. Rivalry hurts fur trade. Especially do different prices
-demoralize the Indians. The Montreal merchants pool their capital and
-become known as the Northwest Fur Company. They now hire their
-voyageurs outright on a salary. No man is paid less than what would be
-$500 in modern money, with board; and any man may rise to be clerk,
-trader, wintering partner, with shares worth 800 pounds ($4000), that
-bring dividends of two and three hundred per cent. The petty merchants
-whom Murray and Carleton despised became in twenty years the opulent
-aristocracy of Montreal, holding the most of the public offices,
-dominating the government, filling the judgeships, and entertaining
-with a lavish hospitality that put vice-regal splendor in the shade.
-The Beaver Club is the great rendezvous of the Montreal partners.
-"Fortitude in Distress" is the motto and lords of the ascendant is
-their practice. No man, neither governor nor judge, may ignore these
-Nor'westers, and it may be added they are a law unto themselves. One
-example will suffice. A French merchant of Montreal took it into his
-head to have a share of this wealth-giving trade. He was advised to
-pool his interests with the Nor'westers, and he foolishly ignored the
-advice. In camp at Grand Portage on Lake Superior he is told all the
-country hereabout belongs to the Nor'westers, and _he_ must decamp.
-
-"Show me proofs this country is yours," he answers. "Show me the title
-deed and I shall decamp."
-
-Next night a band of Nor'westers, voyageurs well plied with rum, came
-down the strand to the intruder's tents. They cut his tents to
-ribbons, scatter his goods to the four winds, and beat his voyageurs
-into insensibility.
-
-"Voila! there are our proofs," they say.
-
-The French merchant hastens down to Montreal to bring lawsuit, but the
-judges, you must remember, are shareholders in the {295} Northwest
-Company, and many of the Legislative Council are Nor'westers. What
-with real delays and sham delays and put-offs and legal fees, justice
-is a bit tardy. While the case is pending the French merchant tries
-again. This time he is not molested at Fort William. They let him
-proceed on his way up the old trail to Lake of the Woods, the trail
-found by La Verendrye; and halfway through the wilderness, where the
-cataract offers only one path for portage, the Frenchman finds
-Nor'-westers building a barricade; he tears it down. They build
-another; he tears that down. They build a third; fast as he tears
-down, they build up. He must either go back baffled by these suave,
-smiling, lawless rivals, or fight on the spot to the death; but there
-is neither glory nor wealth being killed in the wilderness, where not
-so much as the sands of the shore will tell the true story of the
-crime. So the French merchant compromises, sells out to the
-Nor'westers at cost plus carriage, and retires to the St. Lawrence
-cursing British justice.
-
-
-It may be guessed that the sudden eruption of "the peddlers," these
-bush banditti, these Scotch soldiers of fortune with French bullies for
-fighters, roused the ancient and honorable Hudson's Bay Company from
-its half-century slumber of peace. Anthony Hendry, who had gone up the
-Saskatchewan far as the Blackfoot country of the foothills, they had
-dismissed as a liar in the fifties because he had reported that he had
-seen _Indians on horseback_, whereas the sleepy factors of the bay
-ports knew very well they never saw any kind of Indians except Indians
-in canoes; but now in the sixties it is noted by the company that not
-so many furs are coming down from the Up Country. It is voted "the
-French Canadian peddlers of Montreal" be notified of the company's
-exclusive monopoly to the trade of these regions. One Findley is sent
-to Quebec to look after the Hudson's Bay Company's rights; but while
-the English company _talks_ about its rights, the Nor'westers go in the
-field and _take_ them.
-
-The English company rubs its eyes and sits up and scratches its heavy
-head, and passes an order that Mr. Moses Norton, chief {296} factor of
-Churchill, send Mr. Samuel Hearne to explore the Up Country. Hearne
-has heard of Far-Away-Metal River, far enough away in all conscience
-from the Canadian peddlers; and thither in December, 1770, he finds his
-way, after two futile attempts to set out. Matonabbee, great chief of
-the Chippewyans, is his guide,--Matonabbee, who brings furs from the
-Athabasca, and is now accompanied by a regiment of wives to act as
-beasts of burden in the sledge traces, camp servants, and cooks.
-Hearne sets out in midwinter in order to reach the Coppermine River in
-summer, by which he can descend to the Arctic in canoes. Storm or
-cold, bog or rock, Matonabbee keeps fast pace, so fast he reaches the
-great caribou traverse before provisions have dwindled and in time for
-the spring hunt. Here all the Indian hunters of the north gather twice
-a year to hunt the vast herds of caribou going to the seashore for
-summer, back to the Up Country for the winter, herds in countless
-thousands upon thousands, such multitudes the clicking of the horns
-sounds like wind in a leafless forest, the tramp of the hoofs like
-galloping cavalry. Store of meat is laid up for Hearne's voyage by
-Matonabbee's Indians; and a band of warriors joins the expedition to go
-down Coppermine River. If Hearne had known Indian customs as well as
-he knew the fur trade, he would have known that it boded no good when
-Matonabbee ordered the women to wait for his return in the Athabasca
-country of the west. Absence of women on the march meant only one of
-two things, a war raid or hunt, and which it was soon enough Hearne
-learned. They had come at last, on July 12, 1771, on Coppermine River,
-a mean little stream flowing over rocky bed in the Barren Lands of the
-Little Sticks (Trees), when Hearne noticed, just above a cataract, the
-domed tepee tops of an Eskimo camp. It was night, but as bright as day
-in the long light of the North. Instantly, before Hearne could stop
-them, his Indians had stripped as for war, and fell upon the sleeping
-Eskimo in ruthless massacre. Men were brained as they dashed from the
-domed tents, women speared as they slept, children dispatched with less
-thought than the white man would give to the killing of a fly. In vain
-Hearne, {297} with tears in his eyes, begged the Indians to stop. They
-laughed him to scorn, and doubtless wondered where he thought they
-yearly got the ten thousand beaver pelts brought to Churchill. A few
-days later, July 17, 1771, Hearne stood on the shores of the Arctic,
-heaving to the tide and afloat with ice; but the horrors of the
-massacre had robbed him of an explorer's exultation, though he was
-first of pathfinders to reach the Arctic overland. Matonabbee led
-Hearne back to Churchill in June of 1772 by a wide westward circle
-through the Athabasca Bear Lake Country, which the Hudson's Bay people
-thus discovered only a few years before the Nor'westers came.
-
-[Illustration: SAMUEL HEARNE]
-
-No longer dare the Hudson's Bay Company ignore the Up Country. Hearne
-is sent to the Saskatchewan to build Fort Cumberland, and Matthew
-Cocking is dispatched to the country of the Blackfeet, modern Alberta,
-to beat up trade, where his French voyageur, Louis Primeau, deserts him
-bag and baggage, to carry the Hudson's Bay furs off to the Nor'westers.
-No longer does the English company slumber on the shores of its frozen
-sea. Yearly are voyageurs sent inland,--"patroons of the woods," given
-bounty to stay in the wilds, luring any trade from the Nor'westers.
-
-
-The Quebec Act, guaranteeing the rights of the French Canadians, had
-barely been put in force before the Congress of the {298} revolting
-English colonies sent up proclamations to be posted on the church doors
-of the parishes, calling on the French to throw off the British yoke,
-to join the American colonies, "to seize the opportunity to be free."
-Unfortunately for this alluring invitation, Congress had but a few
-weeks previously put on record its unsparing condemnation of the Quebec
-Act. Inspired by those New Englanders who, for a century, had suffered
-from French raids, Congress had expressed its verdict on the privileges
-granted to Quebec in these words: "_Nor can we supress our astonishment
-that a British Parliament should establish a religion that has drenched
-your island_ [England] _in blood_." This declaration was the cardinal
-blunder of Congress as far as Canada was concerned. Of the merits of
-the quarrel the simple French habitant knew nothing. He did what his
-cure told him to do; and the Catholic Church would not risk casting in
-its lot with a Congress that declared its religion had drenched England
-in blood. English inhabitants of Montreal and Quebec, who had flocked
-to Canada from the New England colonies, were far readier to listen to
-the invitation of Congress than were the French.
-
-Governor Carleton had fewer than 800 troops, and naturally the French
-did not rally as volunteers in the impending war between England and
-her English colonies. Should the Congress troops invade Canada? The
-question was hanging fire when Ethan Allen, with his two hundred Green
-Mountain boys of Vermont, marched across to Lake Champlain in May of
-1775, hobnobbed with the guards of Ticonderoga, who drank not wisely
-but too well, then rowed by night across the narrows and knocked at the
-wicket beside the main gate. The sleepy guards, not yet sober from the
-night's carouse, admitted the Vermonters as friends. In rushed the
-whole two hundred. In a trice the Canadian garrison of forty-four were
-all captured and Allen was thundering on the chamber door of La Place,
-the commandant. It was five in the morning. La Place sprang up in his
-nightshirt and demanded in whose name he was ordered to surrender.
-Ethan Allen answered in words that have gone {299} down to history,
-"_In the name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress_."
-Later fell Crown Point. So began the war with Canada in the great
-Revolution.
-
-And now, from May to September, Arnold's Green Mountain boys sweep from
-Lake Champlain down the Richelieu to the St. Lawrence, as Iberville's
-bold bushrovers long ago swept through these woods. However, the
-American rovers take no permanent occupation of the different forts on
-the falls of the Richelieu River, preferring rather to overrun the
-parishes, dispatching secret spies and waiting for the habitants to
-rally. And they came once too often, once too far, these bold banditti
-of the wilderness, clad in buckskin, musket over shoulder, coonskin
-cap! Montreal is so full of spies, so full of friendlies, so full of
-Bostonnais in sympathy with the revolutionists, that Allen feels safe
-in paddling across the St. Lawrence one September morning to the
-Montreal side with only one hundred and fifty men. Montreal has grown
-in these ten years to a city of some twelve thousand, but the gates are
-fast shut against the American scouts; and while Allen waits in some
-barns of the suburbs, presto! out sallies Major Garden with twice as
-many men armed to the teeth, who assault the barns at a rush. Five
-Americans drop at the first crack of the rifles. The Canadians are
-preparing to set fire to the barns. Allen's men will be picked off as
-they rush from the smoke. Wisely, he saves his Green Mountain boys by
-surrender. Thirty-five capitulate. The rest have escaped through the
-woods. Carleton refuses to acknowledge the captives as prisoners of
-war. He claps irons on their hands and irons on their feet and places
-them on a vessel bound for England to be treated as rebels to the
-crown. It is said those of Allen's men who deserted were French
-Canadians in disguise--which may explain why Carleton made such severe
-example of his captives and at once purged Montreal of the disaffected
-by compelling all who would not take arms to leave.
-
-Carleton's position was chancy enough in all conscience. The habitants
-were wavering. They refused point-blank to serve as volunteers. They
-supplied the invaders with provisions. Spies were everywhere.
-Practically no help could come from {300} England till spring, and
-scouts brought word that two American armies were now marching in force
-on Canada,--one by way of the Richelieu, twelve hundred strong, led by
-Richard Montgomery of New York, directed against Montreal; the other by
-way of the Kennebec, with fifteen hundred men under Benedict Arnold, to
-attack Quebec. Carleton is at Montreal. He rushes his troops, six
-hundred and ninety out of eight hundred men, up the Richelieu to hold
-the forts at Chambly and St. John's against Montgomery's advance.
-
-Half September and all October Montgomery camps on the plains before
-Fort St. John's, his rough soldiers clad for the most part in their
-shirt sleeves, trousers, and coon cap, with badges of "Liberty or
-Death" worked in the cap bands, or sprigs of green put in their hats,
-in lieu of soldier's uniform. Inside the fort, Major Preston, the
-English commander, has almost seven hundred men, with ample powder. It
-is plain to Montgomery that he can win the fort in only one of two
-ways,--shut off provisions and starve the garrison out, or get
-possession of heavy artillery to batter down the walls. It is said
-that fortune favors the dauntless. So it was with Montgomery, for he
-was enabled to besiege the fort in both ways. Carleton had rushed a
-Colonel McLean to the relief of St. John's with a force of French
-volunteers, but the French deserted en masse. McLean was left without
-any soldiers. This cut off St. John's from supply of provisions. At
-Chambly Fort was a Major Stopford with eighty men and a supply of heavy
-artillery. Montgomery sent a detachment to capture Chambly for the
-sake of its artillery. Stopford surrendered to the Americans without a
-blow, and the heavy cannon were forthwith trundled along the river to
-Montgomery at St. John's. Preston sends frantic appeal to Carleton for
-help. He has reduced his garrison to half rations, to quarter rations,
-to very nearly no rations at all! Carleton sends back secret express.
-He can send no help. He has no more men. Montgomery tactfully lets
-the message pass in. After siege of forty-five days, Preston
-surrenders with all the honors of war, his six hundred and eighty-eight
-men marching {301} out, arms reversed, and going aboard Montgomery's
-ships to proceed as prisoners up Lake Champlain.
-
-The way is now open to Montreal. Benedict Arnold, meanwhile, with the
-army directed against Quebec, has crossed from the Kennebec to the
-Chaudiere, paddled across St. Lawrence River, and on the very day that
-Montgomery's troops take possession of Montreal, November 13, Arnold's
-army has camped on the Plains of Abraham behind Quebec walls, whence he
-scatters his foragers, ravaging the countryside far west as Three
-Rivers for provisions. The trials of his canoe voyage from Maine to
-the St. Lawrence at swift pace have been terrific. More than half his
-men have fallen away either from illness or open desertion. Arnold has
-fewer than seven hundred men as he waits for Montgomery at Quebec.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL RICHARD MONTGOMERY]
-
-What of Guy Carleton, the English governor, now? Canada's case seemed
-hopeless. The flower of her army had been taken prisoners, and no help
-could come before May. Desperate circumstances either make or break a
-man, prove or undo him. As reverses closed in on Carleton, like the
-wrestlers of old he but took tighter grip of his resolutions.
-
-On November 11, two days before Preston's men surrendered, Carleton,
-with two or three military officers disguised as peasants, boarded one
-of three armed vessels to go down from Montreal to Quebec. All the
-cannon at Montreal had been dismounted and spiked. What powder could
-not be carried {302} away was buried or thrown into the river. Amid
-funereal silence, shaking hands sadly with the Montreal friends who had
-gathered at the wharf to say farewell, the English Governor left
-Montreal. That night the wind failed, and the three vessels lay to
-with limp sails. At Sorel, at Three Rivers, at every hamlet on both
-sides of the St. Lawrence, lay American scouts to capture the English
-Governor. All next day the vessels lay wind-bound. Desperate for the
-fate of Quebec, Carleton embarked on a river barge propelled by sweeps.
-Passing Sorel at night Carleton and his disguised officers could see
-the camp fires of the American army. Here oars were laid aside and the
-raft steadied down the tide by the rowers paddling with the palms of
-their hands. Three Rivers was found in possession of the Americans,
-and a story is told of Carleton, foredone from lack of sleep, dozing in
-an eating house or tavern with his head sunk forward upon his hands,
-when two or three American scouts broke into the room. Not a sign did
-the English party in peasant disguise give of alarm or uneasiness,
-which might have betrayed the Governor. "Come, come," said one of the
-English officers in French, slapping Sir Guy Carleton carelessly on the
-back, "we must be going"; and the Governor escaped unsuspected.
-November 19, to the inexpressible relief of Quebec Carleton reached the
-capital city.
-
-Quebec now had a population of some five thousand. All able-bodied men
-who would not fight were expelled from the city. What with the small
-garrison, some marines who happened to be in port, and the citizens
-themselves, eighteen hundred defenders were mustered. On the walls
-were a hundred and fifty heavy cannon, and all the streets leading from
-Lower to Upper Town had been barricaded with cannon mounted above. At
-each of the city gates were posted battalions. Sentries never left the
-walls, and the whole army literally slept in its boots. It will be
-remembered that the natural position of Quebec was worth an army in
-itself. On all sides there was access only by steepest climb. In
-front, where the modern visitor ascends from the wharf to Upper Town by
-Mountain Street {303} steep as a stair, barricades had been built. To
-the right, where flows St. Charles River past Lower Town, platforms
-mounted with cannon guarded approach. To the rear was the wall behind
-which camped Arnold; to the left sheer precipice, above which the
-defenders had suspended swinging lanterns that lighted up every
-movement on the path below along the St. Lawrence.
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF QUEBEC DURING SIEGE OF CONGRESS TROOPS]
-
-Early in December comes Montgomery himself to Quebec, on the very ships
-which Carleton had abandoned. Carleton refuses even the letter
-demanding surrender. Montgomery is {304} warned that forthwith any
-messenger sent to the walls will come at peril of being shot as rebel.
-Henceforth what communication Montgomery has with the inhabitants must
-be by throwing proclamations inside or bribing old habitant women as
-carriers,--for the habitants continue to pass in and out of the city
-with provisions; and a deserter presently brings word that Montgomery
-has declared he will "_eat his Christmas dinner in Quebec or in Hell_!"
-Whereupon Carleton retorts, "He may choose his own place, but he shan't
-eat it in Quebec."
-
-Montgomery was now in the same position as Wolfe at the great siege.
-His troops daily grew more ragged; many were without shoes, and
-smallpox was raging in camp. He could not tempt his foe to come out
-and fight; therefore he must assault the foe in its own stronghold. It
-will be remembered, Wolfe had feigned attack to the fore, and made the
-real attack to the rear. Montgomery reversed the process. He feigned
-attack to the rear gates of St. John and St. Louis, and made the real
-attack to the fore from the St. Charles and the St. Lawrence. While a
-few soldiers were to create noisy hubbub at St. John and St. Louis
-gates from the back of the city, Arnold was to march through Lower Town
-from the Charles River side, Montgomery along the narrow cliff below
-the Citadel, through Lower Town, to that steep Mountain Street which
-tourists to-day ascend directly from the wharves of the St. Lawrence.
-On the squares of Upper Town the two armies were to unite and fight
-Carleton. The plan of attack practically encompassed the city from
-every side. Spies had brought rumors to Carleton that the signal for
-assault for the American troops was to be the first dark stormy night.
-Christmas passed quietly enough without Montgomery carrying out his
-threat, and on the night before New Year's all was quiet. Congress
-soldiers had dispersed among the taverns outside the walls, and
-Carleton felt so secure he had gone comfortably to bed. For a month,
-shells from the American guns had been whizzing over Upper Town, with
-such small damage that citizens had continued to go about as usual. On
-the walls was a constant popping from the sharpshooters of both sides,
-and occasionally {305} an English sentry, parading the walls at
-imminent risk of being a target, would toss down a cheery "Good morrow,
-gentlemen," to a Congress trooper below. Then, quick as a flash, both
-men would lift and fire; but the results were small credit to the aim
-of either shooter, for the sentry would duck off the wall untouched,
-just as the American dashed for hiding behind barricade or house of
-Lower Town. Some of the Americans wanted to know what were the
-lanterns and lookouts which the English had constructed above the
-precipice of Cape Diamond. Some wag of a habitant answered these were
-the sign of a wooden horse with hay in front of it, and that the
-English general, Carleton, had said he would not surrender the town
-till the horse had caught up to the hay. Skulking riflemen of the
-Congress troops had taken refuge in the mansion of Bigot's former
-magnificence, the Intendant's Palace, and Carleton had ordered the
-cannoneers on his walls to knock the house down. So fell the house of
-Bigot's infamy.
-
-Towards 2 A.M. of December 31 the wind began to blow a hurricane. The
-bright moonlight became obscured by flying clouds, and earth and air
-were wrapped in a driving storm of sleet. Instantly the Congress
-troops rallied to their headquarters behind the city. Montgomery at
-quick march swept down the steep cliff of the river to the shore road,
-and in the teeth of a raging wind led his men round under the heights
-of Cape Diamond to the harbor front. Heads lowered against the wind,
-coonskin caps pulled low over eyes, ash-colored flannel shirts buttoned
-tight to necks, gun casings and sacks wrapped loosely round loaded
-muskets to keep out the damp, the marchers tramped silently through the
-storm. Overhead was the obscured glare where the lanterns hung out in
-a blare of snow above Cape Diamond. Here rockets were sent up as a
-signal to Arnold on St. Charles River. Then Montgomery's men were
-among the houses of Lower Town, noting well that every window had been
-barricaded and darkened from cellar to attic. Somewhere along the
-narrow path in front of the town Montgomery knew that barricades had
-been built with cannon behind, but he trusted to the storm concealing
-his approach till his men could capture them at a rush. At Pres {306}
-de Ville, just where the traveler approaching harbor front may to-day
-see a tablet erected in memory of the invasion, was a barricade.
-Montgomery halted his men. Scouts returned with word that all was
-quiet and in darkness--the English evidently asleep; and uncovering
-muskets, the Congress fighters dashed forward at a run. But it was the
-silence that precedes the thunderclap. The English had known that the
-storm was to signal attack, and guessing that the rockets foretokened
-the assailants' approach, they had put out all lights behind the
-barricade. Until Montgomery's men were within a few feet of the log,
-there was utter quiet; then a voice shrieked out, "Fire!--fire!"
-Instantly a flash of flame met the runners like a wall. Groans and
-screams split through the muffling storm. Montgomery and a dozen
-others fell dead. The rest had broken away in retreat,--a rabble
-without a commander,--carrying the wounded. Behind the barricade was
-almost as great confusion among the English, for Quebec's defenders
-were made up of boys of fifteen and old men of seventy, and the first
-crash of battle had been followed by a panic, when half the guards
-would have thrown down their arms if one John Coffin, an expelled
-royalist from Boston, had not shouted out that he would throw the first
-man who attempted to desert into the river.
-
-Meantime, how had it gone with Arnold?
-
-[Illustration: SIR GUY CARLETON]
-
-An English officer was passing near St. Louis Gate when, sometime after
-two o'clock, he noticed rockets go up from the river beyond Cape
-Diamond. He at once sounded the alarm. Bugles called to arms, drums
-rolled, and every bell in the city was set ringing. In less than ten
-minutes every man of Quebec's eighteen hundred was in place. American
-soldiers marching through St. Roch, Lower Town, have described how the
-tolling of the bells rolling through the storm smote cold on their
-hearts, for they knew their designs had been discovered, and they could
-not turn back, for a juncture must be effected with Montgomery. A
-moment later the sham assaults were peppering the rear gates of Quebec,
-but Guy Carleton was too crafty a campaigner to be tricked by any sham.
-He rightly guessed that the real attack {307} would be made on one of
-the two weaker spots leading up from Lower Town. "Now is the time to
-show what stuff you are made of," he called to the soldiers, as he
-ordered more detachments to the place whence came crash of heaviest
-firing. This was at Sault-au-Matelot Street, a narrow, steep
-thoroughfare, barely twenty feet from side to side. Up this little
-tunnel of a street Arnold had rushed his men, surmounting one barricade
-where they exchanged their own wet muskets for the dry guns of the
-English deserters, dashing into houses to get possession of windows as
-vantage points, over, some accounts say, yet another obstruction, till
-his whole army was cooped up in a canyon of a street directly below the
-hill front on which had been erected a platform with heavy guns. It
-was a gallant rush, but it was futile, for now Carleton outgeneraled
-Arnold. Guessing from the distance of the shots that the attack to the
-rear was sheer sham, the English general rushed his fighters downhill
-by another gate to catch Arnold on the rear. Quebec houses are built
-close and cramped. While these troops were stealing in behind Arnold
-to close on him like a trap, it was easy trick for another English
-battalion to scramble over house roofs, over back walls, and up the
-very stairs of houses where Arnold's troops were guarding the windows.
-Then Arnold was carried past his men badly wounded. "We are sold,"
-muttered the Congress troops, "caught like rats in a trap." Still they
-pressed toward in hand to hand scuffle, with shots at such close range
-the Boston soldiers were {308} shouting, "Quebec men, do not fire on
-your true friends!" with absurd pitching of each other by the scruff of
-the neck from the windows. Daylight only served to make plainer the
-desperate plight of the entrapped raiders. At ten o'clock five hundred
-Congress soldiers surrendered. It must not for one moment be forgotten
-that each side was fighting gallantly for what it believed to be right,
-and each bore the other the respect due a good fighter and upright foe.
-In fact, with the exception of two or three episodes mutually
-regretted, it may be said there were fewer bitter thoughts that New
-Year's morning than have arisen since from this war. The captured
-Americans had barely been sent to quarters in convents and hospitals
-before a Quebec merchant sent them a gift of several hogsheads of
-porter. When the bodies of Montgomery and his fellow-comrades in death
-were found under the snowdrifts, they were reverently removed, and
-interred with the honors of war just inside St. Louis Gate.
-
-Though the invaders were defeated, Quebec continued to be invested till
-spring, the thud of exploding bombs doing little harm except in the
-case of one family, during spring, when a shell fell through the roof
-to a dining-room table, killing a son where he sat at dinner. As the
-ice cleared from the river in spring, both sides were on the watch for
-first aid. Would Congress send up more soldiers on transports; or
-would English frigates be rushed to the aid of Quebec? The Americans
-were now having trouble collecting food from the habitants, for the
-French doubted the invaders' success, and Congress paper money would be
-worthless to the holders. One beautiful clear May moonlight night a
-vessel was espied between nine and ten at night coming up the river
-full sail before the wind. Was she friend or foe? Carleton and his
-officers gazed anxiously from the citadel. Guns were fired as signal.
-No answer came from the ship. Again she was hailed, and again; yet she
-failed to hang out English colors. Carleton then signaled he would
-sink her, and set the rampart cannon sweeping her bows. In a second
-she was ablaze, a fire ship sent by the enemy loaded with shells and
-grenades and bombs that shot off like a fusillade of rockets. At the
-same time a boat was seen rowing from the {309} far side of her with
-terrific speed. Carleton's precaution had prevented the destruction of
-the harbor fleet. Three days later, at six in the morning, the firing
-of great guns announced the coming of an English frigate. At once
-every man, woman, and child of Quebec poured down to the harbor front,
-half-dressed, mad with joy. By midday, Guy Carleton had led eight
-hundred soldiers out to the Plains of Abraham to give battle against
-the Americans; but General Thomas of the Congress army did not wait.
-Such swift flight was taken that artillery, stores, tents, uneaten
-dinners cooked and on the table, were abandoned to Carleton's men.
-General Thomas himself died of smallpox at Sorel. At Montreal all was
-confusion. The city had been but marking time, pending the swing of
-victory at Quebec. In the spring of 1776 Congress had sent three
-commissioners to Montreal to win Canada for the new republic. One was
-the famous Benjamin Franklin, another a prominent Catholic; but the
-French Canadian clergy refused to forget the attack of Congress on the
-Quebec Act, and remained loyal to England.
-
-[Illustration: BENEDICT ARNOLD]
-
-For almost a year, in desultory fashion, the campaign against Canada
-dragged on, Carleton reoccupying and fortifying Montreal, Three Rivers,
-St. John's, and Chamby, then pushing up Champlain Lake in October of
-1776, with three large vessels and ninety small ones. Between Valcour
-Island and the mainland he caught Benedict Arnold with the Congress
-boats on October 11, and succeeded in battering them to pieces before
-{310} Arnold could extricate them. As the boats sank, the American
-crews escaped ashore; but the English went no farther south than Crown
-Point this year. If Carleton had failed at Quebec, there can be no
-doubt Canada would have been permanently lost to England; for the
-following year France openly espoused the cause of Congress, and
-proclamations were secretly smuggled all through Canada to be posted on
-church doors, calling on Canadians to remain loyal to France.
-Curiously enough, it was Washington, the leader of the Americans, who
-checkmated this move. With a wisdom almost prophetic, he foresaw that
-if France helped the United States, and then demanded Canada as her
-reward, the old border warfare would be renewed with tenfold more
-terror. No longer would it be bushrover pitted against frontiersmen.
-It would be France against Congress, and Washington refused to give the
-aid of Congress to the scheme of France embroiling America in European
-wars. The story of how Clark, the American, won the Mississippi forts
-for Congress is not part of Canada's history, nor are the terrible
-border raids of Butler and Brant, the Mohawk, who sided with the
-English, and left the Wyoming valley south of the Iroquois Confederacy
-a blackened wilderness, and the homes of a thousand settlers smoking
-ruins. It is this last raid which gave the poet Campbell his theme in
-"Gertrude of Wyoming." By the Treaty of Versailles, in 1783, England
-acknowledged the independence of the United States, and Canada's area
-was shorn of her fairest territory by one fell swath. Instead of the
-Ohio being the southern boundary, the middle line of the Great Lakes
-divided Canada from her southern neighbor. The River Ste. Croix was to
-separate Maine from New Brunswick. The sole explanation of this loss
-to Canada was that the American commissioners knew their business and
-the value of the ceded territory, and the English commissioners did
-not. It is one of the many conspicuous examples of what loyalty has
-cost Canada. England is to give up the western posts to the United
-States, from Miami to Detroit and Michilimackinac and Grand Portage.
-In return the United States federal government is to recommend to the
-States {311} Governments that all property confiscated from Royalists
-during the war be restored.
-
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL HALDIMAND]
-
-General Haldimand, a Swiss who has served in the Seven Years' War,
-succeeds Carleton as governor in 1778. The times are troublous. There
-is still a party in favor of Congress. The great unrest, which ends in
-the French Revolution, disturbs habitants' life. Then that provision
-of the Quebec Act, by which legislative councilors were to be nominated
-by the crown, works badly. Councilors, judges, crown attorneys, even
-bailiffs are appointed by the colonial office of London, and find it
-more to their interests to stay currying favor in London than to attend
-to their duties in Canada. The country is cursed by the evil of absent
-officeholders, who draw salaries and appoint incompetent deputies to do
-the work. As for the social unrest that fills the air, Haldimand claps
-the malcontents in jail till the storm blows over; but the tricks of
-speculators, who have flocked to Canada, give trouble of another sort.
-Naturally the ring of English speculators, rather than the impoverished
-French, became ascendant in foreign trade, and during the American war
-the ring got such complete control of the wheat supply that bread
-jumped to famine price. Just as he had dealt with the malcontents
-soldier fashion, so Haldimand now had a law passed forbidding tricks
-with the price of wheat. Like Carleton, {312} Haldimand too came down
-hard on the land-jobbers, who tried to jockey poor French peasants out
-of their farms for bailiff's fees. It may be guessed that Haldimand
-was not a popular governor with the English clique. Nevertheless, he
-kept sumptuous bachelor quarters at his mansion near Montmorency Falls,
-was a prime favorite with the poor and with the soldiers, and sometimes
-deigned to take lessons in pickle making and home keeping from the
-grand dames of Quebec. In 1786 Carleton comes back as Lord Dorchester.
-
-
-Congress had promised to protect the property of those Royalists who
-had fought on the losing side in the American Revolution, but for
-reasons beyond the control of Congress, that promise could not be
-carried out. It was not Congress but the local governments of each
-individual state that controlled property rights. In vain Congress
-recommended the States Governments to restore the property confiscated
-from the Royalists. The States Governments were in a condition of
-chaos, packed by jobbers and land-grabbers and the riffraff that always
-infest the beginnings of a nation. Instead of protecting the
-Royalists, the States Governments passed laws confiscating more
-property and depriving those who had fought for England of even holding
-office. It was easy for the tricksters who had got possession of the
-loyalists' lands to create a social ostracism that endangered the very
-lives of the beaten Royalists, and there set towards Canada the great
-emigration of the United Empire Loyalists. To Nova Scotia, to New
-Brunswick, to Prince Edward Island, to Ontario, they came from Virginia
-and Pennsylvania and New York and Massachusetts and Vermont, in
-thousands upon thousands. The story of their sufferings and far
-wanderings has never been told and probably never will, for there is
-little official record of it; but it can be likened only to the
-expulsion of the Acadians multiplied a hundredfold. To the Maritime
-Provinces alone came more than thirty thousand people. To the eastern
-townships of Quebec, to the regions of Kingston and Niagara and Toronto
-in Ontario came some twenty thousand more. It needs no {313} trick of
-fancy to call up the scene, and one marvels that neither poet nor
-novelist has yet made use of it. Here were fine old Royalist officers
-of New York reduced from opulence to penury, from wealth to such
-absolute destitution they had neither clothing nor food, nor money to
-pay ship's passage away, now crowded with their families, and such
-wrecks of household goods as had escaped raid and fire, on some cheap
-government transport or fishing schooner bound from New York Harbor to
-Halifax or Fundy Bay. Of the thirteen thousand people bound for
-Halifax there can scarcely be a family that has not lost brothers or
-sons in the war. Family plate, old laces, heirlooms, even the father's
-sword in some cases, have long ago been pawned for food. If one finds,
-as one does find all through Nova Scotia, fine old mahogany and walnut
-furniture brought across by the Loyalists, it is only because walnut
-and mahogany were not valued at the time of the Revolution as they are
-to-day. And instead of welcome at Halifax, the refugees met with
-absolute consternation! What is a town of five thousand people to do
-with so many hungry visitants? They are quartered about in churches,
-in barracks, in halls knocked up, till they can be sent to farms. And
-these are not common immigrants coming fresh from toil in the fields of
-Europe; they are gently nurtured men and women, representing the
-aristocracy and wealth and conservatism of New York. This explains why
-one finds among the prominent families of Nova Scotia the same names as
-among the most prominent families of Massachusetts and New York. To
-the officers and heads of families the English government granted from
-two thousand to five thousand acres each, and to sons and daughters of
-Loyalists two hundred acres each, besides 3,000,000 pounds in cash, as
-necessity for it arose.
-
-On the north side of Fundy Bay hardships were even greater, for the
-Loyalists landed from their ships on the homeless shores of the
-wildwood wilderness. Rude log cabins of thatch roof and plaster walls
-were knocked up, and there began round the log cabin that tiny clearing
-which was to expand into the farm. The coming of the Loyalists really
-peopled both New Brunswick {314} and Prince Edward Island: the former
-becoming a separate province in 1784, named after the ruling house of
-England; the latter named after the Duke of Kent, who was in command of
-the garrison at Charlottetown.
-
-More strenuous still was the migration of the United Empire Loyalists
-from the south. Rich old planters of Virginia and Maryland, who had
-had their colored servants by the score, now came with their families
-in rude tented wagons, fine chippendales jumbled with heavy mahogany
-furnishings, up the old Cumberland army road to the Ohio, and across
-from the Ohio to the southern townships of Quebec, to the backwoods of
-Niagara and Kingston and Toronto and modern Hamilton, and west as far
-as what is now known as London. I have heard descendants of these old
-southern Loyalists tell how hopelessly helpless were these planters'
-families, used to hundreds of negro servants and now bereft of help in
-a backwoods wilderness. It took but a year or so to wear out the fine
-laces and pompous ruffles of their aristocratic clothing, and men and
-women alike were reduced to the backwoods costume of coon cap, homespun
-garments, and Indian moccasins. Often one could witness such anomalies
-in their log cabins as gilt mirrors and spindly glass cabinets ranged
-in the same apartment as stove and cooking utensils. If the health of
-the father failed or the war had left him crippled, there was nothing
-for it but for the mother to take the helm; and many a Canadian can
-trace lineage back to a United Empire Loyalist woman who planted the
-first crop by hand with a hoe and reaped the first crop by hand with a
-sickle. Sometimes the jovial habits of the planter life came with the
-Loyalists to Canada, and winter witnessed a furbishing up of old
-flounces and laces to celebrate all-night dance in log houses where
-partitions were carpets and tapestries hung up as walls. Sometimes,
-too,--at least I have heard descendants of the eastern township people
-tell the story,--the jovial habits kept the father tippling and card
-playing at the village inn while the lonely mother kept watch and ward
-in the cabin of the snow-padded forests. Of necessity the Loyalists
-banded together to {315} help one another. There were "sugarings off"
-in the maple woods every spring for the year's supply of homemade
-sugar,--glorious nights and days in the spring forests with the sap
-trickling from the trees to the scooped-out troughs; with the grown-ups
-working over the huge kettle where the molasses was being boiled to
-sugar; with the young of heart, big and little, gathering round the
-huge bonfires at night in the woods for the sport of a taffy pull, with
-molasses dripping on sticks and huge wooden spoons taken from the pot.
-There were threshings when the neighbors gathered together to help one
-another beat out their grain from the straw with a flail. There were
-"harvest homes" and "quilting bees" and "loggings" and "barn raisings."
-Clothes were homemade. Sugar was homemade. Soap was homemade. And
-for years and years the only tea known was made from steeping dry
-leaves gathered in the woods; the only coffee made from burnt peas
-ground up. Such were the United Empire Loyalists, whose lives some
-unheralded poet will yet sing,--not an unfit stock for a nation's
-empire builders.
-
-
-At the same time that the Loyalists came to Canada, came Joseph
-Brant,--Thayendanegea, the Mohawk,--with the remnant of his tribe, who
-had fought for the English. To them the government granted some
-700,000 acres in Ontario.
-
-[Illustration: JOSEPH BRANT]
-
-{316} It is not surprising that the United Empire Loyalists objected to
-living under the French laws of the Quebec Act. They had fought for
-England against Congress, but they wanted representative government,
-and the Constitutional Act was passed in 1791 dividing the country into
-Upper and Lower Canada, each to have its own parliament consisting of a
-governor, a legislative council appointed by the crown, and an assembly
-elected by the people. There was to be no religious test. Naturally
-old French laws would prevail in Quebec, English laws in Ontario or
-Upper Canada. By this act, too, land known as the Clergy Reserves was
-set apart for the Protestant Church. The first parliament in Quebec
-met in the bishop's palace in December of 1792; the first parliament of
-Ontario in Newark or Niagara in September of the same year, the most of
-the newly elected members coming by canoe and dugout, and, as the
-Indian summer of that autumn proved hot, holding many of the sessions
-in shirt sleeves out under the trees, Lieutenant Governor Simcoe
-reporting that the electors seem to have favored "men of the lower
-order, who kept but one table and ate with their servants." The
-earliest sessions of the Ontario House were marked by acts to remove
-the capital from the boundary across to Toronto, and to legalize
-marriages by Protestant clergymen other than of the English church. It
-is amusing to read how Governor Simcoe regarded the marriage bill as an
-opening of the flood gates to {317} republicanism; but for all their
-shirt sleeves, the legislators enjoyed themselves and danced till
-morning in Navy Hall, the Governor's residence, "Mad Tom Talbot," the
-Governor's aid-de-camp, losing his heart to the fine eyes of Brant's
-Indian niece, daughter of Sir William Johnson of the old Lake George
-battle.
-
-[Illustration: LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR SIMCOE]
-
-Down at Quebec things were managed with more pomp, and no social event
-was complete without the presence of the Duke of Kent, military
-commandant, now living in Haldimand's old house at Montmorency. Nova
-Scotia had held parliaments since 1758, when Halifax elected her first
-members.
-
-Besides the United Empire Loyalists, other settlers were coming to
-Canada. The Earl of Selkirk, a patriotic young Scotch nobleman, had
-arranged for the removal of evicted Highlanders to Prince Edward Island
-in 1803 and to Baldoon on Lake St. Clair. Then "Mad Tom Talbot,"
-Governor Simcoe's aid, descendant of the Talbots of Castle Malahide and
-boon comrade of the young soldier who became the Duke of Wellington,
-becomes so enamored of wilderness life that he gives up his career in
-Europe, gains grant of lands between London and Port Dover, and lays
-foundations of settlements in western Ontario, spite of the fact he
-remains a bachelor. The man who had danced at royalty's balls and
-drunk deep of pleasure at the beck of princes now lived in a log house
-of three rooms, laughed at difficulties, "baked his own bread, milked
-his own cows, made his own butter, washed his own clothes, ironed his
-own linen," and taught colonists who bought his lands "how to do
-without the rotten refuse of Manchester warehouses,"--the term he
-applied to the broadcloth of the newcomer.
-
-
-Under the French regime, Canada had consisted of a string of fur posts
-isolated in a wilderness. It will be noticed that it now consisted of
-five distinct provinces of nation builders.
-
-
-
-
-{318}
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-FROM 1812 TO 1820
-
-Hearne surrenders--Cook on the west coast--Vancouver on
-Pacific--Discovery of Mackenzie River--Across to the Pacific--A smash
-in bad rapids--Down Fraser River--Cause of war--The Chesapeake
-outrage--War declared--Hull surrenders at Detroit--The fight round
-Niagara--Soldiers exchange jokes across gorge--The traverse at
-Queenston--The surrender at Queenston--1813 A dark year--Raid on
-Ogdensburg--Attack on Toronto--Toronto burned--Vincent's soldiers at
-Burlington Bay--Ill hap of all the generals--Laura Secord's
-heroism--Campaign in the west--Moraviantown Disaster--Chrysler's
-farm--De Salaberry's buglers--The charge at Chippewa--Final action at
-Lundy's Lane--Great heroism on both sides--Assault at Fort Erie--End of
-futile war
-
-
-While Canada waged war for her national existence against her border
-neighbors to the south, as in the days of the bushrovers' raids of old,
-afar in the west, in the burnt-wood, iron-rock region of Lake Superior,
-on the lonely wind-swept prairies, at the foothills where each night's
-sunset etched the long shadows of the mountain peaks in somber replica
-across the plains, in the forested solitude of the tumultuous Rockies
-was the ragged vanguard of empire blazing a path through the
-wilderness, voyageur and burnt-wood runner, trapper, and explorer,
-pushing across the hinterlands of earth's ends from prairie to
-mountains, and mountains to sea.
-
-
-It was but as a side clap of the great American Revolution that the
-last French cannon were pointed against the English forts on Hudson
-Bay. When France sided with the American colonies a fleet of French
-frigates was dispatched under the great Admiral La Perouse against the
-fur posts of the English Company. One sleepy August afternoon in 1782,
-when Samuel Hearne, governor of Fort Churchill, was sorting furs in the
-courtyard, gates wide open, cannon unloaded, guards dispersed, the fort
-was electrified by the sudden apparition of three men-of-war, sails
-full blown, sides bristling with cannon, plowing over the waves
-straight for the harbor gate. French colors fluttered from the
-masthead. Sails rattled down. Anchors were cast, and in a few minutes
-small boats were out sounding the channel for position to attack the
-fort. Hearne had barely forty men, and the most of them were
-decrepits, unfit for the hunting field. As sunset merged into the long
-white light of northern midnight, four hundred French mariners landed
-on the sands outside Churchill. {319} Hearne had no alternative. He
-surrendered without a blow. The fort was looted of furs, the Indians
-driven out, and a futile attempt made to blow up the massive walls.
-Hearne and the other officers were carried off captives. Matonabbee,
-the famous Indian guide, came back from the hunt to find the wooden
-structures of Churchill in flame. He had thought the English were
-invulnerable, and his pagan pride could not brook the shame of such
-ignominious defeat. Withdrawing outside the shattered walls,
-Matonabbee blew his brains out. A few days later Port Nelson, to the
-south, had suffered like fate. The English officers were released by
-La Perouse on reaching Europe. As for the fur company servants, they
-waited only till the French sails had disappeared over the sea. Then
-they came from hiding and rebuilt the burnt forts. Such was the last
-act in the great drama of contest between France and England for
-supremacy in the north.
-
-
-For two hundred years explorers had been trying to find a northern
-passage between Europe and Asia by way of America, from east to west.
-Now that Canada has fallen into English hands; now, too, that the
-Russian sea-otter hunters are coasting down the west side of America
-towards that region which Drake discovered long ago in California,
-England suddenly awakens to a passion for discovery of that mythical
-Northwest Passage. Instead of seeking from east to west she sought
-from west to east, and sent her navigator round the world to search for
-opening along the west coast of America. To carry out the exploration
-there was selected as commander that young officer, James Cook, who
-helped to sound the St. Lawrence for Wolfe, and had since been cruising
-the South Seas. On his ships, the _Resolution_ and the _Discovery_,
-was a young man whose name was to become a household word in America,
-Vancouver, a midshipman.
-
-March of 1778 the _Resolution_ and _Discovery_ come rolling over the
-long swell of the sheeny Pacific towards Drake's land of New Albion,
-California. Suddenly, one morning, the dim sky line resolved into the
-clear-cut edges of high land, but by night such a roaring hurricane had
-burst on the ships as drove them {320} far out from land, too far to
-see the opening of Juan de Fuca, leading in from Vancouver Island,
-though Cook called the cape there "Flattery," because he had hoped for
-an opening and been deluded. Clearer weather found Cook abreast a
-coast of sheer mountains with snowy summits jagging through the clouds
-in tent peaks. A narrow entrance opened into a two-horned cove. Small
-boats towed the ships in amid a flotilla of Indian dugouts whose
-occupants chanted weird welcome to the echo of the surrounding hills.
-Women and children were in the canoes. That signified peace. The
-ships were moored to trees, and the white men went ashore in that
-harbor to become famous as the rendezvous of Pacific fur traders,
-Nootka Sound, on the sea side of Vancouver Island.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN COOK]
-
-Presently the waters were literally swarming with Indian canoes, and in
-a few days Cook's crews had received thousands of dollars' worth of
-sea-otter skins for such worthless baubles as tin mirrors and brass
-rings and bits of red calico. This was the beginning of the fur trade
-in sea otter with Americans and English. Some of the naked savages
-were observed wearing metal ornaments of European make. Cook did not
-think of the Russian fur traders to the north, but easily persuaded
-himself these objects had come from the English fur traders of Hudson
-Bay, and so inferred there _must_ be a Northeast Passage. By April,
-Cook's ships were once more afloat, {321} gliding among the sylvan
-channels of countless wooded islands up past Sitka harbor, where the
-Russians later built their fort, round westward beneath the towering
-opal dome of Mount St. Elias, which Bering had named, to the waters
-bordering Alaska; but, as the world knows, though the ships penetrated
-up the channels of many roily waters, they found no open passage. Cook
-comes down to the Sandwich Islands, New Year of 1779. There the vices
-of his white crew arouse the enmity of the pagan savages. In a riot
-over the theft of a rowboat, Cook and a few men are surrounded by an
-enraged mob. By some mistake the white sailors rowing out from shore
-fire on the mob surrounding Cook. Instantly a dagger rips under Cook's
-shoulder blade. In another second Cook and his men are literally
-hacked to pieces. All night the conch shells of the savages blow their
-war challenge through the darkness and the signal fires dance on the
-mountains. By dint of persuasion and threats the white men compel the
-natives to restore the mangled remains of the commander. Sunday,
-February 21, amid a silence as of death over the waters, the body of
-the dead explorer is committed to the deep.
-
-[Illustration: FORT CHURCHILL, AS IT WAS IN 1777]
-
-[Illustration: TOTEM POLES, BRITISH COLUMBIA]
-
-
-The chance discovery of the sea-otter trade by Cook's crew at Nootka
-brings hosts of English and American adventurers to the Pacific Coast
-of Canada. There is Meares, the English officer from China, who builds
-a rabbit hutch of a barracks at Nootka and almost involves England and
-Spain in war because the Spaniards, having discovered this region
-before Cook, knock the log barracks into kindling wood and forcibly
-seize an English trading ship. There is Robert Gray, the Boston
-trader, who pushes the prow of his little ship, _Columbia_, up a
-spacious harbor south of Juan de Fuca in May of 1792 and discovers
-Columbia River, so giving the United States flag prior claim here.
-There is George Vancouver, the English commander, sent out by his
-government in 1791-1793 to receive Nootka formally back from the
-Spaniards of California and to explore every inlet from Vancouver
-Island to Alaska. As luck would have it, Vancouver, the Englishman,
-and Gray, the American, are both hovering off {322} the mouth of the
-Columbia in April of 1792, but a gale drives the ships offshore, though
-turgid water plainly indicates the mouth of a great river somewhere
-near. Vancouver goes on up north. Gray, the American, comes back, and
-so Vancouver misses discovering the one great river that remains
-unmapped in America. Up Puget Sound, named after his lieutenant, up
-Fuca Straits, round Vancouver Island, past all those inlets like seas
-on the mainland of British Columbia, coasts Vancouver, rounding south
-again to Nootka in August. In Nootka lie the Spanish frigates from
-California, bristling with cannon, the red and yellow flag blowing to
-the wind above the palisaded fort. In solemn parade, with Maquinna,
-the Nootka chief, clad in a state of nature, as guest of the festive
-board, Don Quadra, the Spanish officer, dines and wines Vancouver; but
-when it comes to business, that is another matter! Vancouver
-understands that Spain is to surrender _all_ sovereignty north of San
-Francisco. Don Quadra, with pompous bow, maintains that the
-international agreement was to surrender rights only north of Juan de
-Fuca, leaving the rest of the northwest coast free to all nations for
-trade. Incidentally, it may be mentioned, Don Quadra was right, but
-the two commanders agree to send home to their respective governments
-for {323} instructions. Meanwhile Robert Gray, the American, comes
-rolling into port with news he has discovered Columbia River.
-Vancouver is skeptical and chagrined. Having failed to discover the
-river, he goes down coast to explore it. It may be added, he sends his
-men higher up the river than Gray has gone, and has England's flag of
-possession as solemnly planted as though Robert Gray had never entered
-Columbia's waters. The next two years Vancouver spends exploring every
-nook and inlet from Columbia River to Lynn Canal. Once and for all and
-forever he disproves the myth of a Northeast Passage. His work was
-negative, but it established English rights where America's claims
-ceased and Russia's began, namely between Columbia River and Sitka, or
-in what is now known as British Columbia.
-
-[Illustration: CAPTAIN GEORGE VANCOUVER]
-
-[Illustration: NOOTKA SOUND (From an engraving in Vancouver's journal)]
-
-As the beaver had lured French bushrovers from the St. Lawrence to the
-Rockies, so the sea otter led the way to the exploration of the Pacific
-Coast. Artist's brush and novelist's pen have drawn all the romance
-and the glamour and the adventure of the beaver hunter's life, but the
-sea-otter hunter's life is {324} almost an untold tale. Pacific Coast
-Indians were employed by the white traders for this wildest of hunting.
-The sea otter is like neither otter nor beaver, though possessing
-habits akin to both. In size, when full-grown, it is about the length
-of a man. Its pelt has the ebony shimmer of seal tipped with silver.
-Cradled on the waves, sleeping on their backs in the sea, playful as
-kittens, the sea otters only come ashore when driven by fierce gales;
-but they must come above to breathe, for the wave wash of storm would
-smother them. Their favorite sleeping grounds used to be the kelp beds
-of the Alaskan Islands. Storm or calm, to the kelp beds rode the
-Indian hunters in their boats of oiled skin light as paper. If heavy
-surf ran, concealing sight and sound, the hunters stood along shore
-shouting through the surf and waiting for the wave wash to carry in the
-dead body; if the sea were calm, the hunters circled in bands of twenty
-or thirty, spearing the sea otter as it came up to breathe; but the
-best hunting was when hurricane gales churned sea and air to spray.
-Then the sea otter came to the kelp beds in herds, and through the
-storm over the wave-dashed reefs, like very spirits of the storm
-incarnate, rushed the hunters, spear in hand. It is not surprising
-that the sea-otter hunters perished by tens of thousands every year, or
-that the sea otter dwindled from a yield of 100,000 a year to a paltry
-200 of the present day.
-
-
-Meanwhile Nor'west traders from Montreal and Quebec, English traders
-from Hudson Bay, have gone up the Saskatchewan far as the Athabasca and
-the Rockies. What lies beyond? Whither runs this great river from
-Athabasca Lake? Whence comes the great river from the mountains? Will
-the river that flows north or the river that comes from the west,
-either of them lead to the Pacific Coast, where Cook's crews found
-wealth of sea otter? The lure of the Unknown is the lure of the siren.
-First you possess it, then it possesses you! Cooped up in his fort on
-Lake Athabasca, Alexander MacKenzie, the Nor'wester, begins wondering
-about those rivers, but you can't ask business men to bank on the
-Unknown, to write blank checks for profits on what {325} you may not
-find. And the Nor'westers were all stern business men. For every
-penny's outlay they exacted from their wintering partners and clerks
-not ten but a hundredfold. And Alexander MacKenzie received no
-encouragement from his company to explore these unknown rivers. The
-project got possession of his mind. Sometimes he would pace the little
-log barracks of Fort Chippewyan from sunset to day dawn, trying to work
-out a way to explore those rivers; or, sitting before the huge hearth
-place, he would dream and dream till, as he wrote his cousin Roderick,
-"I did not know what I was doing or where I was." Finally he induced
-his cousin to take charge of the fort for a summer. Then, assuming all
-risk and outlay, he set out on his own responsibility June 3, 1789, to
-follow the Great River down to the Arctic Ocean. "English Chief," who
-often went down to Hudson Bay for the rival company, went as
-MacKenzie's guide, and there were also in the canoes two or three white
-men, some Indians as paddlers, and squaws to cook and make moccasins.
-
-[Illustration: FORT CHIPPEWYAN, ATHABASCA LAKE (From a recent
-photograph)]
-
-{326} The canoes passed Peace River pouring down from the mountains;
-then six dangerous rapids, where many a Nor'west voyageur had perished,
-one of MacKenzie's canoes going smash over the falls with a squaw, who
-swam ashore; then rampart shores came, broader and higher than the St.
-Lawrence or the Hudson, the boats skimming ahead with blankets hoisted
-for sails through foggy days and nights of driving rain. Cramped and
-rain-soaked, bailing water from the canoes with huge sponges, the
-Indians began to whine that the way was "hard, white man, hard." Then
-the river lost itself in a huge lagoon, Slave Lake, named after
-defeated Indians who had taken refuge here; and the question was, which
-way to go through the fog across the marshy lake! Poking through
-rushes high as a man, MacKenzie found a current, and, hoisting a sail
-on his fishing pole, raced out to the river again on a hissing tide.
-Here lived the Dog Rib Indians, and they frightened MacKenzie's men
-cold with grewsome tales of horrors ahead, of terrible waterfalls, of a
-land of famine and hostile tribes. The effect was instant. MacKenzie
-could not obtain a guide till "English Chief" hoisted a Slave Lake
-Indian into the canoe on a paddle handle. Though MacKenzie himself
-nightly slept with the vermin-infested guide to prevent desertion, the
-fellow escaped one night during the confusion of a thunder-storm.
-Again a chance hunter was forcibly put into the canoe as guide; and the
-explorer pushed on for another month. North of Bear Lake, Indian
-warriors were seen flourishing weapons along shore, and MacKenzie's men
-began to remark that the land was barren of game. If they became
-winter bound, they would perish. MacKenzie promised his men if he did
-not find the sea within seven days, he would turn back. Suddenly the
-men lost track of day, for they had come to the region of long light.
-The river had widened to swamp lands. Between the 13th and 14th of
-July the men asleep on the sand were awakened by a flood of water
-lapping in on their baggage. What did it mean? For a minute they did
-not realize. Then they knew. It was the tide. They had found the
-sea. Hilarious as boys, they jumped from bed to man their canoes and
-chase whales.
-
-{327} September 12, all sails up before a driving wind, the canoes
-raced across Athabasca Lake to the fort landing, Roderick, his nephew,
-shouting a welcome. MacKenzie had laid one of the two ghosts that
-haunted his peace. Now he must lay the other. Where did Peace River
-come from? His achievement on MacKenzie River had been greeted by the
-other Nor'west partners with a snub. Nevertheless MacKenzie asked for
-leave of absence that he might go to London and study the taking of
-astronomic observations in order to explore that other river flowing
-from the mountains; and in London, though poor and obscure, he heard
-all about Cook's voyages and Meare's brush with the Spaniards at
-Nootka, and plans for Captain Vancouver to make a final exploration of
-the Pacific Coast. Hurrying back to the Nor'wester's fort on Peace
-River, he was beset by the blue devils of despondency. What if Peace
-River did _not_ lead to the Pacific Ocean at all? What if he were
-behind some other discoverer? What if the venture proved a fool's trip
-leading to a blind nowhere? He was only a junior partner and could ill
-afford either money or time for failure.
-
-[Illustration: ALEXANDER MACKENZIE]
-
-Nevertheless, when the furs have been dispatched for Montreal,
-MacKenzie launches out on May 9 of 1793 with a thirty-foot birch canoe,
-six voyageurs, and Alexander Mackay as lieutenant, for the hinterland
-beyond the Rockies. This time the going was _against_ stream,--hard
-paddling, but safer than with a {328} swift current in a river with
-dangerous rapids. Ten days later the river has become a canyon of
-tumbling cascades, the mountains sheer wall on each side, with snowy
-peaks jagging up through the clouds. To portage baggage up such cliffs
-was impossible. Yet it was equally impossible to go on up the canyon,
-and MacKenzie's men became so terrified they refused to land. Jumping
-to foothold on the wall, a towrope in one hand, an ax in the other,
-MacKenzie cut steps in the cliff, then signaled above the roar of the
-rapids for the men to follow. They stripped themselves to swim if they
-missed footing, and obeyed, trembling in every limb. The towrope was
-warped round trees and the loaded canoe tracked up the cascade. At the
-end of that portage the men flatly refused to go on. MacKenzie ignored
-the mutiny and ordered the best of provisions spread for a feast.
-While the crew rested, he climbed the face of a rocky cliff to
-reconnoiter. As far as eye could see were cataracts walled by mighty
-precipices. The canoe could not be tracked up such waters. Mackay,
-who had gone prospecting a portage, reported that it would be nine
-miles over the mountain. MacKenzie did not tell his men what was ahead
-of them, but he led the way up the steep mountain, cutting trees to
-form an outer railing, and up this trail the canoe was hauled, towline
-round trees, the men swearing and sweating and blowing like whales.
-Three miles was the record that day, the voyageurs throwing themselves
-down to sleep at five in the afternoon, wrapped in their blanket coats
-lying close to the glacier edges. Three days it took to cross this
-mountain, and the end of the third day found them at the foot of
-another mountain. Here the river forked. MacKenzie followed the south
-branch, or what is now known as the Parsnip. Often at night the men
-would be startled by rocketing echoes like musketry firing, and they
-would spring to their feet to keep guard with backs to trees till
-morning; but presently they learned the cause of the pistol-shot
-reports. They were now on the Uplands among the eternal snows. The
-sharp splittings, the far boomings, the dull breaking thuds were frost
-cornices of overhanging snow crashing down in avalanches that swept the
-mountain slopes clear of forests.
-
-{329}
-
-[Illustration: CAUSE OF A PORTAGE]
-
-A short portage from the Parsnip over a low ridge to a lake, and the
-canoe is launched on a stream flowing on the far side of the Divide,
-Bad River, a branch of the Fraser, though MacKenzie mistakes it for an
-upper tributary of the great river discovered by Gray, the Columbia.
-Then, before they realize it, comes the danger of going _with_ the
-current on a river with rapids. The stream sweeps to a torrent, mad
-and unbridled. The canoe is as a chip in a maelstrom, the precipices
-racing past in a blur, the Indians hanging frantically to the gunnels,
-bawling aloud in fear, the terrified voyageurs reaching, . . .
-grasping, . . . snatching at trees overhanging from the banks. The
-next instant a rock has banged through bottom, tearing away the stern.
-The canoe reels in a swirl. Bang goes a rock through the bow. The
-birch bark flattens like a shingle. Another swirl, and, to the
-amazement of all, instead of the death that had seemed impending,
-smashed canoe, baggage, and voyageurs are dumped on the shallows of a
-sandy reach. One can guess the gasp of relief that went up. Nobody
-uttered a word for some {330} time. One voyageur, who had grasped at a
-branch and been hoisted bodily from the canoe, now came limping to the
-disconsolate group, and had stumbled with lighted pipe in teeth across
-the powder that had been spread out to dry, when a terrific yell of
-warning brought him to his senses, and relieved the tension. MacKenzie
-spread out a treat for the men and sent them to gather bark for a fresh
-canoe. Other adventures on Bad River need not be given. This one was
-typical. The record was but two miles a day; and now there was no
-turning back. The difficulties behind were as great as any that could
-be before. June 15 Bad River led them westward into the Fraser, but
-somewhere in the canyon between modern Quesnel and Alexandria the way
-became impassable. Besides, the river was leading too far south.
-MacKenzie struck up Blackwater River to the west. _Caching_ canoe and
-provisions on July 4, he marched overland. The Pacific was reached on
-July 22, 1793, near Bella Coola. By September, after perils too
-numerous to be told, MacKenzie was back at his fur post on Peace River.
-As his discoveries on this trip blazed the way to new hunting ground
-for his company, they brought both honor and wealth to MacKenzie. He
-was knighted by the English King for his explorations, and he retired
-to an estate in Scotland, where he died about 1820.
-
-
-Meanwhile, Napoleon has sold Louisiana to the United States. The
-American explorers, Lewis and Clark, have crossed from the Missouri to
-the Columbia; and now John Jacob Astor, the great fur merchant of New
-York, in 1811 sends his fur traders overland to build a fort at the
-mouth of Columbia River. The Northwest Company in frantic haste
-dispatches explorers to follow up MacKenzie's work and take possession
-of the Pacific fur trade before Astor's men can reach the field. It
-becomes a race for the Pacific.
-
-[Illustration: SIMON FRASER]
-
-Simon Fraser is sent in 1806 to build posts west of the Rockies in New
-Caledonia, and to follow that unknown river which MacKenzie mistook for
-the Columbia, on down to the sea. Two years he passed building the
-posts, that exist to this {331} day as Fraser planned them: Fort
-MacLeod at the head of Parsnip River, on a little lake set like an
-emerald among the mountains; Fort St. James on Stuart Lake, a reach of
-sheeny green waters like the Trossachs, dotted with islands and
-ensconced in mountains; Fraser Fort on another lake southward; Fort St.
-George on the main Fraser River. Then, in May of 1808, with four
-canoes Fraser descends the river named after him, accompanied by Stuart
-and Quesnel and nineteen voyageurs. This was the river where the
-rapids had turned MacKenzie back, canyon after canyon tumultuous with
-the black whirlpools and roaring like a tempest. Before essaying the
-worst runs of the cascades Fraser ordered a canoe lightened at the prow
-and manned by the five best voyageurs. It shot down the current like a
-stone from a catapult. "She flew from one danger to another," relates
-Fraser, who was watching the canoe from the bank, "till the current
-drove her on a rock. The men disembarked, and we had to plunge our
-daggers into the bank to keep from sliding into the river as we went
-down to their aid, our lives hanging on a thread." Like MacKenzie,
-Fraser was compelled to abandon canoes. Each with a pack of eighty
-pounds, the voyageurs set out on foot down that steep gorge where the
-traveler to-day can see the trail along the side of the precipice like
-basket work between Lilloet and Thompson River. In Fraser's day was no
-{332} trail, only here and there bridges of trembling twig ladders
-across chasms; and over these swinging footholds the marchers had to
-carry their packs, the river rolling below, deep and ominous and
-treacherous. At Spuzzum the river turned from the south straight west.
-Fraser knew it was not the Columbia. His men named it after himself.
-Forty days was Fraser going from St. George to tide water. Early in
-August he was back at his fur posts of New Caledonia.
-
-[Illustration: ASTORIA IN 1813]
-
-Yet another explorer did the Nor'westers send to take possession of the
-region beyond the mountains. David Thompson had been surveying the
-bounds between the United States and what is now Manitoba, when he was
-ordered to explore the Rockies in the region of the modern Banff. Up
-on Canoe River, Thompson and his men build canoes to descend the
-Columbia. Following the Big Bend, they go down the rolling milky tide
-past Upper and Lower Arrow Lakes, a region of mountains sheer on each
-side as walls, with wisps of mist marking the cloud line. Then a
-circular sweep westward through what is now Washington, pausing at
-Snake River to erect formal claim of possession for England, then a
-riffle on the current, a {333} smell of the sea, and at 1 P.M. on July
-15, 1811, Thompson glides within view of a little raw new fort,
-Astoria. In the race to the Pacific the Americans have gained the
-ground at the mouth of the Columbia just two months before Thompson
-came. In Astor's fort Thompson finds old friends of the Northwest
-Company hired over by Astor.
-
-[Illustration: MAP OF THE WEST COAST, SHOWING THE OGDEN AND ROSS
-EXPLORATIONS]
-
-
-After war has broken out in open flame it is easy to ascribe the cause
-to this, that, or the other act, which put the match to the
-combustibles; but the real reason usually lies far behind the one act
-of explosion, in an accumulation of ill feeling that provided the
-combustibles.
-
-So it was in the fratricidal war of 1812 between Canada and the United
-States. The war was criminal folly, as useless as it was unnecessary.
-What caused it? What accumulated the ill feeling lying ready like
-combustibles for the match? Let us see.
-
-
-The United Empire Loyalists have, by 1812, increased to some 100,000 of
-Canada's population, cherishing bitter memories of ruin and
-confiscation and persecution because Congress failed to carry out the
-pledge guaranteeing protection to the losing side in the Revolution.
-Then, because Congress failed to carry out _her_ guarantee, England
-delayed turning over the western fur posts to the United States for
-almost ten years; and whether true or false, the suspicion became an
-open charge that the hostility of the Indians to American frontiersmen
-was fomented by the British fur trader.
-
-Here, then, was cause for rankling anger on both sides, and the
-bitterness was unwittingly increased by England's policy. It was hard
-for the mother country to realize that the raw new nation of the United
-States, child of her very flesh and blood, kindred in thought and
-speech, was a power to be reckoned with, on even ground, looking on the
-level, eye to eye; and not just a bumptious, underling nation, like a
-boy at the hobbledehoy age, to be hectored and chaffed and bullied and
-badgered and licked into shape, as a sort of protectorate appended to
-English interests.
-
-I once asked an Englishman why the English press was so virulently
-hostile to one of the most brilliant of her rising men.
-
-"Oh," he answered, "you must be English to understand that. We never
-think it hurts a boy to be well ragged when he 's at school."
-
-Something of that spirit was in England's attitude to the new nation of
-the United States. England was hard pressed in life-and-death struggle
-with Napoleon. To recruit both army and navy, conscription was rigidly
-and ruthlessly enforced. Yet more! England claimed the right to
-impress British-born subjects in foreign ports, to seize deserters in
-either foreign ports or on foreign ships, and, most obnoxious of all,
-to search neutral vessels on the ocean highway for deserters from the
-British flag. It was an era of great brutality in military discipline.
-Desertions were frequent. Also thousands of immigrants were flocking
-to the new nation of the United States and taking out naturalization
-papers. England ignored these naturalization papers when taken out by
-deserters.
-
-Let us see how the thing worked out. A passenger vessel is coming up
-New York harbor. An English frigate with cannon pointed swings across
-the course, signals the American vessel on American waters to slow up,
-sends a young lieutenant with some marines across to the American
-vessel, searches her from stem to stern, or compels the American
-captain to read the roster of the crew, forcibly seizes half a dozen of
-the American crew as British deserters, and departs, leaving the
-Americans gasping with wonder whether they are a free nation or a tail
-to the kite of English designs. It need not be explained that the
-offense was often aggravated by the swaggering insolence of the young
-officers. They considered the fury of the unprepared American crew a
-prime joke. In vain the government at Washington complained to the
-government at Westminster. England pigeonholed the complaint and went
-serenely on her way, searching American vessels from Canada to Brazil.
-
-Or an English vessel has come to Hampton Roads to wood and water. An
-English officer thinks he recognizes among the {335} American crews men
-who have deserted from English vessels. Three men defy arrest and show
-their naturalization papers. High words follow, broken heads and
-broken canes, and the English crew are glad to escape the mob by rowing
-out to their own vessel.
-
-Is it surprising that the ill feeling on both sides accumulated till
-there lacked only the match to cause an explosion? The explosion came
-in 1807. H. M. S. _Leopard_, cruising off Norfolk in June, encounters
-the United States ship _Chesapeake_. At 3 P.M. the English ship edges
-down on the American, loaded to the water line with lumber, and signals
-a messenger will be sent across. The young English lieutenant going
-aboard the _Chesapeake_ shows written orders from Admiral Berkeley of
-Halifax, commanding a search of the _Chesapeake_ for six deserters. He
-is very courteous and pleasant about the disagreeable business: the
-orders are explicit; he must obey his admiral. The American commander
-is equally courteous. He regrets that he must refuse to obey an
-English admiral's orders, but his own government has given _most_
-explicit orders that American vessels must _not_ be searched. The
-young Englishman returns with serious face. The ships were within
-pistol shot of each other, the men on the English decks all at their
-guns, the Americans off guard, lounging on the lumber piles. Quick as
-flash a cannon shot rips across the _Chesapeake's_ bows, followed by a
-broadside, and another, and yet another, that riddle the American decks
-to kindling wood before the astonished officers can collect their
-senses. Six seamen are dead and twenty-three wounded when the
-_Chesapeake_ strikes her colors to surrender; but the _Leopard_ does
-not want a captive. She sends her lieutenant back, who musters the
-four hundred American seamen, picks out four men as British deserters,
-learns that another deserter has been killed and a sixth has jumped
-overboard rather than be retaken, takes his prisoners back to the
-_Leopard_, which proceeds to Halifax, where they are tried by
-court-martial and shot.
-
-It isn't exactly surprising that the episode literally set the United
-States on fire with rage, and that the American President {336} at once
-ordered all American ports closed to British war vessels. The quarrel
-dragged on between the two governments for five years. England saw at
-once that she had gone too far and violated international law. She
-repudiated Admiral Berkeley's order, offered to apologize and pension
-the heirs of the victims; but _as she would not repudiate either the
-right of impressment or the right of search_, the American government
-refused to receive the apology.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL SIR JAMES HENRY CRAIG, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF
-CANADA, 1807-1811]
-
-Other causes fanned the flame of war. The United States was now almost
-the only nation neutral in Napoleon's wars. To cripple English
-commerce, Napoleon forbids neutral nations trading at English ports.
-By way of retaliation England forbids neutral nations trading with
-French ports; and the United States strikes back by closing American
-ports to both nations. It means blue ruin to American trade, but the
-United States cannot permit herself to be ground between the upper and
-nether millstones of two hostile European powers. Then, sharp as a
-gamester playing his trump card, Napoleon revokes his embargo in 1810,
-which leaves England the offender against the United States. Then
-Governor Craig of Canada commits an error that must have delighted the
-heart of Napoleon, who always profited by his enemy's blunders. Well
-meaning, but {337} fatally ill and easily alarmed, Craig sends one John
-Henry from Montreal in 1809 as spy to the United States for the double
-purpose of sounding public opinion on the subject of war, and of
-putting any Federalists in favor of withdrawing from the Union in touch
-with British authorities. Craig goes home to England to die. Henry
-fails to collect reward for his ignoble services, turns traitor, and
-sells the entire correspondence to the war party in the United States
-for $10,000. That spy business adds fuel to fire. Then there are
-other quarrels. A deserter from the American army is found teaching
-school near Cornwall in Canada. He is driven out of the little
-backwoods schoolhouse, pricked across the field with bayonets, out of
-the children's view, and shot on Canadian soil by American soldiers, an
-outrage almost the same in spirit as the British crew's outrage on the
-_Chesapeake_. Also, in spite of apologies, the war ships clash again.
-The English sloop _Little Belt_ is cruising off Cape Henry in May of
-1811, looking for a French privateer, when a sail appears over the sea.
-The _Little Belt_ pursues till she sights the commodore's blue flag of
-the United States frigate _President_, then she turns about; but by
-this time the _President_ has turned the tables on the little sloop,
-and is pursuing to find out what the former's conduct meant. Darkness
-settles over the two ships beating about the wind.
-
-"What sloop is that?" shouts an officer through a speaking trumpet from
-the American's decks.
-
-"What ship is _that_?" bawls back a voice through the darkness from the
-little Englander.
-
-Then, before any one can tell who fired first (in fact, each accuses
-the other of firing first), the cannon are pouring hot shot into each
-other's hulls till thirty men have fallen on the decks of the _Little
-Belt_. Apologies follow, of course, and explanations; but that does
-not remedy the ill. In fact, when nations and people want to quarrel,
-they can always find a cause. War is declared in June of 1812 by
-Congress. It is war against England; but that means war against
-Canada, though there are not forty-five hundred soldiers from Halifax
-to Lake Huron. As for {338} the American forces, they muster an army
-of some one hundred and fifty thousand; but their generals complain
-they are "an untrained mob"; and events justified the complaints.
-
-
-There is nothing for Canada to do but stand up to the war of England's
-making and fight for hearth and home. Canada on the defensive, there
-is nothing for the States to do but invade; and the American generals
-don't relish the task with their "untrained mob."
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM HULL]
-
-Upper Canada or Ontario has not four hundred soldiers from Kingston to
-Detroit River; but Major General Isaac Brock calls for volunteers. The
-clang of arms, of drill, of target practice, resounds in every hamlet
-through Canada. At Kingston, at Toronto, at Fort George (Niagara), at
-Erie where Niagara River comes from the lake, at Amherstburg, southeast
-of Detroit, are stationed garrisons to repel invasion, with hastily
-erected cannon and mortar commanding approach from the American side.
-And invasion comes soon enough. The declaration of war became known in
-Canada about the 20th of June. By July 3 General Hull of Michigan is
-at Detroit with two thousand five hundred men preparing to sweep
-western Ontario. July 3 an English schooner captures Hull's provision
-boat coming up Detroit River, but Hull crosses with his army on July 12
-to Sandwich, opposite Detroit, and issues proclamation calling on the
-people to throw off the yoke of English rule. How such an invitation
-fell on United Empire Loyalist ears may be guessed. Meanwhile comes
-word that the Northwest {339} Company's voyageurs, with four hundred
-Indians, have captured Michilimackinac without a blow. The fall of
-Michilimackinac, the failure of the Canadians to rally to his flag, the
-loss of his provision boat, dampen Hull's ardor so that on August 8 he
-moves back with his troops to Detroit. Eight days later comes Brock
-from Niagara with five hundred Loyalists and one thousand Indians under
-the great chief Tecumseh to join Procter's garrison of six hundred at
-Amherstburg. The Canadians have come by open boat up Lake Erie from
-Niagara through furious rains; but they are fighting for their homes,
-and with eager enthusiasm follow Brock on up Detroit River to Sandwich,
-opposite the American fort. Indians come by night and lie in ambush
-south of Detroit to protect the Canadians while they cross the river.
-Then the cannon on the Canadian side begin a humming of bombs overhead.
-While the bombs play over the stream at Sandwich, Brock rushes thirteen
-hundred men across the river south of Detroit, and before midday of
-August 16 is marching his men through the woods to assault the fort,
-when he is met by an officer carrying out the white flag of surrender.
-While Brock was crossing the river, something had happened inside the
-fort at Detroit. It was one of those curious cases of blind panic when
-only the iron grip of a strong man can hold demoralized forces in hand.
-The American officers had sat down to breakfast in the mess room at day
-dawn, when a bomb plunged through the roof killing four on the spot and
-spattering the walls with the blood of the mangled bodies. Disgraceful
-stories are told of Hull's conduct. Ashy with fright and trembling, he
-dashed from the room, and, before the other officers knew what he was
-about, had offered to surrender his army, twenty-five hundred arms,
-thirty-three cannon, an armed brig, and the whole state of Michigan.
-The case is probably more an example of nervous hysterics than treason,
-though the other American officers broke their swords with rage and
-chagrin, declaring they had been sold for a price. It was but the
-first of the many times the lesson was taught in this war, that however
-well intentioned a volunteer's courage may be, it takes a seasoned man
-to make war. {340} Ten minutes later, a boy had climbed the flagstaff
-and hung out the English flag over Detroit. Of the captured American
-army Brock permitted the volunteer privates to go home on parole. The
-regulars, including Hull, were carried back prisoners on the boats to
-Niagara, to be forwarded to Montreal. At Montreal, Hull was given back
-to the Americans in exchange for thirty British prisoners. He was
-sentenced by court-martial to be shot for treason and cowardice, but
-the sentence was commuted.
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE MILITARY OPERATIONS ON
-THE DETROIT RIVER]
-
-
-At Niagara River, where the main troops of Ontario were centered,
-Brock's victory was greeted with simply a madness of joy. From the
-first it had been plain that the principal fighting in Ontario would
-take place at Niagara, and along the river Brock had concentrated some
-sixteen hundred volunteer troops, {341} raw farm hands most of them,
-with a goodly proportion of descendants from the United Empire
-Loyalists, who had furbished out their fathers' swords. But the army
-was in rags and tatters; many men had no shoes; before Brock captured
-the guns at Detroit there had not been muskets to go round the men, and
-there were not cannon enough to mount the batteries cast up along
-Niagara River facing the American defenses. As the boats came down
-Lake Erie and disembarked the American prisoners on August 24, at Fort
-Erie on the Canadian side, opposite Black Rock and Buffalo, wild yells
-of jubilation rent the air. By nightfall every camp on the Canadian
-side for the whole forty miles of Niagara River's course echoed to
-shout and counter shout, and a wild refrain which some poet of the
-haversack had composed on the spot:
-
- We 'll subdue the mighty Democrats and pull their dwellings down,
- And have the States inhabited with subjects of the Crown.
-
-
-Take a survey of the Niagara region. South is Lake Erie, north is Lake
-Ontario, between them Niagara River flowing almost straight north
-through a steep dark gorge hewn out of the solid rock by the living
-waters of all the Upper Lakes, crushed and cramped, carving a turbulent
-way through this narrow canyon. Midway in the river's course the blue
-waters begin to race. The race becomes a dizzy madness of blurred,
-whirling, raging waters. Then there is the leap, the plunge, the
-shattering anger of inland seas hurling their strength over the sheer
-precipice in resistless force. Then the foaming whirlpool below, and
-the shadowy gorge, and the undercurrent eddying away in the
-swift-flowing waters of the river coming out on Lake Ontario. On one
-side are the Canadian forts, on the other the American, slab-walled all
-of them, with scarcely a stone foundation except in bastions used as
-powder magazines. Fort Erie on the Canadian side faces Buffalo and
-Black Rock on the American side. Where the old French voyageurs used
-to portage past the Falls, about halfway on the Canadian side south of
-the precipice, is the village of Chippewa. Here Brock has stationed
-{342} a garrison with cannon. Then halfway between the Falls and Lake
-Ontario are high cliffs known as Queenston Heights, in plain view of
-the American town of Lewiston on the other side. Cannon line the river
-cliffs on both sides here. All about Lewiston the fields are literally
-white with the tents of General Van Rensselaer's army, now grown from
-twenty-five hundred to almost eight thousand. On the Canadian side
-cannon had been mounted on the cliffs known as Queenston Heights.
-Possibly because the two hundred men would make poor showing in
-tents, Brock has his soldiers here take quarters in the farmhouses.
-For the rest it is such a rural scene as one may witness any
-midsummer,--rolling yellow wheat fields surrounded by the zigzag rail
-fences, with square farmhouses of stone and the fields invariably
-backed by the uncleared bush land. Six miles farther down the river,
-where the waters join Lake Ontario, is the English post, Fort George,
-near the old capital, Newark, and just opposite the American fort of
-Niagara. With the exception of the Grand Island region on the river,
-it may be said that both armies are in full view of each other.
-Sometimes, when to the tramp--tramp--tramp of the sentry's {343} tread
-a loud "All's well" echoes across the river from Lewiston to the
-Canadian side, some wag at Queenston will take up the cry through the
-dark and bawl back, "All's well here too"; and all night long the two
-sentries bawl back and forward to each other through the dark.
-Sometimes, too, though strictest orders are issued against such ruffian
-warfare by both Van Rensselaer and Brock, the sentries chance shots at
-each other through the dark. Drums beat reveille at four in the
-morning, and the rub-a-dub-dub of Queenston Heights is echoed by
-rat-tat-too of Lewiston, though river mist hides the armies from each
-other in the morning. Iron baskets filled with oiled bark are used as
-telegraph signals, and one may guess how, when the light flared up of a
-night on the Canadian heights, scouts carried word to the officers on
-the American side. One may guess, too, the effect on Van Rensselaer's
-big untrained army, when, with the sun aglint on scarlet uniform, they
-saw their fellow-countrymen of Detroit marched prisoners between
-British lines along the heights of Queenston opposite Lewiston. Rage,
-depression, shame, knew no bounds; and the army was unable to vent
-anger in heroic attack, for England had repealed her embargo laws, and
-when Brock came back from Detroit he found that an armistice had been
-arranged, and both sides had been ordered to suspend hostilities till
-instructions came from the governments. The truce, it may be added,
-was only an excuse to enable both sides to complete preparations for
-the war. In a few weeks ball and bomb were again singing their shrill
-songs in mid-air.
-
-[Illustration: MAP SHOWING THE LOCATION OF THE MILITARY OPERATIONS ON
-THE NIAGARA FRONTIER]
-
-Brock's victory demoralized the rabble under the American Van
-Rensselaer. Desertions increased daily, and discipline was so
-notoriously bad Van Rensselaer and his staff dared not punish desertion
-for fear of the army--as one of them put it--"falling to pieces." Van
-Rensselaer saw that he must strike, and strike at once, and strike
-successfully, or he would not have any army left at all. Two thousand
-Pennsylvanians had joined him; and on October 9, at one in the morning,
-Lieutenant Elliott led one hundred men with muffled paddles from the
-American side to two Canadian ships lying anchored off Fort Erie. One
-was the {344} brig captured from Hull at Detroit, the other a sloop
-belonging to the Northwest Fur Company, loaded with peltries. Before
-the British were well awake, Elliott had boarded decks, captured the
-fur ship with forty prisoners, and was turning her guns on the other
-ship when Port Erie suddenly awakened with a belch of cannon shot. The
-Americans cut the cables and drifted on the captured ship downstream.
-The fur ship was worked safely over to the American side, where it was
-welcomed with wild cheers. The brig was set on fire and abandoned.
-
-Van Rensselaer decided to take advantage of the elated spirit among the
-troops and invade Canada at once.
-
-Over on the Canadian side, Brock, at Fort George, wanted to offer an
-exchange of Detroit prisoners for the voyageurs on the captured fur
-ship, and Evans was ordered to paddle across to Lewiston with the
-offer, white handkerchief fluttering as a flag of truce. Evans could
-not mistake the signs as he landed on the American shore. Sentries
-dashed down to stop his advance at bayonet point. He was denied speech
-with Van Rensselaer and refused admittance to the American camp; and
-the reason was plain. A score of boats, capable of holding thirty men
-each, lay moored at the Lewiston shore. Along the rain-soaked road
-behind the shore floundered and marched troops, fresh troops joining
-Van Rensselaer's camp. It was dark before Evans returned to Queenston
-Heights and close on midnight when he reached Major General Brock at
-Fort George. Brock thought Evans over anxious, and both went to bed,
-or at least threw themselves down on a mattress to sleep. At two
-o'clock they were awakened by a sound which could not be mistaken,--the
-thunderous booming of a furious cannonade from Queenston Heights.
-Brock realized that the two hundred Canadians on the cliff must be
-repelling an invasion, but he was suspicious that the attack from
-Lewiston was a feint to draw off attention from Fort Niagara opposite
-Fort George, and he did not at once order troops to the aid of
-Queenston Heights.
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL BROCK]
-
-Evans' predictions of invasion were only too true. After one attempt
-to cross the gorge, which was balked by storm, Van {345} Rensselaer
-finally got his troops down to the water's edge about midnight of
-October 12-13. The night was dark, moonless, rainy,--a wind which
-mingled with the roar of the river drowning all sound of marching
-troops. Three hundred men embarked on the first passage of the boats
-across the swift river, the poor old pilot literally groaning aloud in
-terror. Three of the boats were carried beyond the landing on the
-Canadian side, and had to come back through the dark to get their
-bearings; but the rest, led by Van Rensselaer, had safely landed on the
-Canadian side, when the batteries of Queenston Heights flashed to life
-in sheets of fire, lighting up the dark tide of the river gorge and
-sinking half a dozen boat loads of men now coming on a second traverse.
-Instantly Lewiston's cannon pealed furious answer to the Canadian fire,
-and in the sheet-lightning flame of the flaring batteries thousands
-could be seen on the American shore watching the conflict. As the
-Americans landed they hugged the rock cliff for shelter, but the
-mortality on the crossing boats was terrible; and each passage carried
-back quota of wounded. Van Rensselaer was shot in the thigh almost as
-he landed, but still he held his men in hand. A second shot pierced
-the same side. A third struck his knee. Six wounds he received in as
-many seconds; and he was carried back in the boats to the Lewiston
-side. Then began a mad scramble through the darkness {346} up a
-fisherman's path steep as trail of mountain goat, sheer against the
-face of the cliff. When day dawned misty and gray over the black tide
-of the rolling river, the Canadian batterymen of Queenston Heights were
-astounded to see American sharp-shooters mustered on the cliff behind
-and above them. A quick rush, and the Canadian batterymen were driven
-from their ground, the Canadian cannon silenced, and while wild
-shoutings of triumph rose from the spectators at Lewiston, the American
-boats continued to pour soldiers across the river.
-
-It was at this stage Brock came riding from Fort George so spattered
-with mud from head to heel he was not recognized by the soldiers. One
-glance was enough. The Canadians had lost the day. Sending messengers
-to bid General Sheaffe hurry the troops from Fort George, and other
-runners to bring up the troops from Chippewa behind the Americans on
-Queenston Heights, Brock charged up the hill amid shriek of bombs and
-clatter of sharpshooters. He had dismounted and was scrambling over a
-stone wall. "Follow me, boys!" he shouted to the British grenadiers;
-then at the foot of the hill, waving his sword: "Now take a breath; you
-will need it! Come on! come on!" and he led the rush of two hundred
-men in scarlet coats to dislodge the Americans. A shot pierced his
-wrist. "Push on, York volunteers," he shouted. His portly figure in
-scarlet uniform was easy mark for the sharpshooters hidden in the brush
-of Queenston Heights. One stepped deliberately out and took aim.
-Though a dozen Canadian muskets flashed answer, Brock fell, shot
-through the breast, dying with the words on his lips, "My fall must not
-be noticed to stop the victory." Major Macdonnell led in the charge up
-the hill, but the next moment his horse plunged frantically, and he
-reeled from the saddle fatally wounded. For a second time the British
-were repulsed, and the Americans had won the Heights, if not the day.
-
-[Illustration: BROCK MONUMENT, QUEENSTON HEIGHTS]
-
-The invaders were resting on their arms, snatching a breakfast of
-biscuit and cheese about midday, when General Sheaffe arrived from Fort
-George with troops breathless from running. A heart-shattering huzza
-from the village warned the Americans {347} that help had come, and
-they were to arms in a second; but Sheaffe had swept round the Heights,
-Indians on one side of the hill, soldiers on the other, and came on the
-surprised Americans as from the rear. There was a wild whoop, a dash
-up the hill, a pause to fire, when the air was splinted by nine hundred
-instantaneous shots. Then through the smoke the British rushed the
-Heights at bayonet point. For three hours the contest raged in full
-sight of Lewiston, a hand-to-hand butchery between Sheaffe's fresh
-fighters and the Americans, who had been on their feet since midnight.
-Indian tomahawk played its part, but it is a question if the scalping
-knife did as deadly work as the grenadier's long bayonets. Cooped up
-between the enemy and the precipice, the American sharpshooters waited
-for the help that never came. In vain Van Rensselaer's officers prayed
-and swore and pleaded with the volunteer troops on the Lewiston side.
-The men flatly refused to cross; for boat loads of mangled bodies were
-brought back at each passage. Discipline fell to pieces. It was the
-old story of volunteers, brave enough at a spurt, going to pieces in
-panic under hard and continued strain. Driven from Queenston Heights,
-the invaders fought their way down the cliff path by inches to the
-water side, and there . . . there were no boats! Pulling off his white
-necktie, an officer held it up on the point of his sword as signal of
-surrender. It was one of the most {348} gallant fights on both sides
-in Canadian history, though officers over on the Lewiston shore were
-crying like boys at the sight of nine hundred Americans surrendering.
-
-Truce was then arranged for the burial of the dead. The bodies of
-Brock and Macdonnell were laid on a gun wagon and conveyed between
-lines of sorrowing soldiers, with arms reversed, to the burial place
-outside Fort George. As the regimental music rang out the last march
-of the two dead officers, minute guns were fired in sympathy all along
-the American shore. "He would have done as much for us," said the
-American officers of the gallant Brock.
-
-Van Rensselaer at once resigns. "Proclamation" Smyth, whose addresses
-resemble Fourth of July backwoods orations, succeeds as commander of
-the American army; but "Proclamation" Smyth makes such a mess of a raid
-on Fort Erie, retreating with a haste suggestive of Hull at Detroit,
-that he is mobbed when he returns to the United States shore. But what
-the United States lose by land, they retrieve by sea. England's best
-ships are engaged in the great European war. From June to December,
-United States vessels sweep the sea; but this is more a story of the
-English navy than of Canada. The year of 1812 closes with the cruisers
-of Lake Ontario chasing each other through many a wild snowstorm.
-
-
-As the year 1812 proved one of jubilant victory for Canada, so 1813 was
-to be one of black despair. With the exception of four brilliant
-victories wrested in the very teeth of defeat, the year passes down to
-history as one of the darkest in the annals of the country. The
-population of the United States at this time was something over seven
-millions, and it was not to be thought for one moment that a nation of
-this strength would remain beaten off the field by the little province
-of Ontario (Upper Canada), whose population numbered barely ninety
-thousand. General Harrison hurries north from the Wabash with from six
-to eight thousand men to retrieve the defeat of Detroit. At Presqu'
-Isle, on Lake Erie, hammer and mallet and {349} forging iron are heard
-all winter preparing the fleet for Commodore Perry that is to command
-Lake Erie and the Upper Lakes for the Americans. At Sackett's Harbor
-similar preparations are under way on a fleet for Chauncey to sweep the
-English from Lake Ontario; and all along both sides of the St.
-Lawrence, as winter hedged the waters with ice, lurk scouts,--the
-Americans, for the most part, uniformed in blue, the Canadians in
-Lincoln green with gold braid,--watching chance for raid and counter
-raid during the winter nights. The story of these thrilling raids will
-probably pass into the shadowy realm of legend handed down from father
-to son, for few of them have been embodied in the official reports.
-
-From being hard pressed on the defensive, Canada has suddenly sprung
-into the position of jubilant victor, and if Brock had lived, she would
-probably have followed up her victories by aggressive invasion of the
-enemy's territory; but all effort was literally paralyzed by the
-timidity and vacillation of the governor general, Sir George Prevost.
-Prevost's one idea seems to have been that as soon as the obnoxious
-embargo laws were revoked by England, the war would stop. When the
-embargo was revoked and the armistice of midsummer simply terminated in
-a resumption of war, this idea seems to have been succeeded by the
-single aim to hold off conclusions with the United States till England
-could beat Napoleon and come to the rescue. All winter long scouts and
-bold spirits among the volunteers craved the chance to raid the
-anchored fleets of Lake Ontario and Lake Erie, but Prevost not only
-forbade the invasion of the enemy's territory, but before the year was
-out actually advocated the abandonment of Ontario. If his advice had
-been followed, it is no idle supposition to infer that the fate of
-Ontario would have been the same as the destiny of the Ohio and
-Michigan.
-
-
-One night in February the sentry at the village of Brockville, named
-after the dead hero, was surprised by two hundred American raiders
-dashing up from the frozen river bed. Before bugles could sound to
-arms, jails had been opened, stores looted, houses {350} plundered, and
-the raiders were off and well away with fifty-two prisoners and a dozen
-sleigh loads of provisions. Gathering some five hundred men together
-from the Kingston region, M'Donnell and Jenkins of the Glengarrys
-prepared to be revenged. Cannon were hauled out on the river from the
-little village of Prescott to cross the ice to Ogdensburg. The river
-here is almost two miles wide, and as it was the 23d of February, the
-ice had become rotten from the sun glare of the coming spring. As the
-cannon were drawn to mid-river, though it was seven in the morning, the
-ice began to heave and crack with dire warning. To hesitate was death;
-to go back as dangerous as to go forward. With a whoop the men broke
-from quick march to a run, unsheathing musket and fixing bayonet blades
-as they dashed ahead to be met with a withering cross fire as they came
-within range of the American batteries. In places, the suck of the
-water told where the ice had given behind. Then bullets were peppering
-the river bed in a rain of fire, Jenkins and M'Donnell to the fore,
-waving their swords. Then bombs began to ricochet over the ice. If
-the range of the Ogdensburg cannon had been longer, the whole Canadian
-force might have been sunk in mid-river; but the men were already
-dashing up the American shore whooping like fiends incarnate. First a
-grapeshot caught Jenkins' left arm, and it hung in bloody splinters.
-Then a second shot took off his right arm. Still he dashed forward,
-cheering his men, till he dropped in his tracks, faint from loss of
-blood. No answer came back to the summons to surrender, and, taking
-possession of an outer battery, the Canadians turned its cannon full on
-the village. Under cover of the battery fire, and their own cannon now
-in position, the whole force of Canadians immediately rushed the town
-at bayonet point. Now the bayonet in a solid phalanx of five hundred
-men is not a pleasant weapon to stand up against. As the drill
-sergeants order, you not only stick the bayonet _into_ your enemy, but
-you turn it round "to let the air in" so he will die; and before the
-furious onslaught of bayonets, the defenders of Ogdensburg broke, and
-fled for the woods. Within an hour the {351} Canadians had burnt the
-barracks, set fire to two schooners iced up, and come off with loot of
-a dozen cannon, stores of all sorts, and with prisoners to the number
-of seventy-four.
-
-
-[Illustration: YORK (TORONTO) HARBOR]
-
-The ice had left Lake Ontario early this year, and by mid-April
-Commander Chauncey slipped out of Sackett's Harbor with sixteen
-vessels, having on board seventeen hundred troops, besides the crews.
-It will be remembered that the capital of Ontario had been moved from
-Niagara (Newark) to York (Toronto) on the north side of Lake Ontario,
-then a thriving village of one thousand souls on the inner shore of
-Humber Bay. On the sand reef known as the Island, in front of the
-harbor, had been constructed a battery with cannon. The main village
-lay east of the present city hall. Westward less than a mile was
-Government House, on the site of the present residence. Between
-Government House and the village was not a house of any sort, only a
-wood road flanking the lake, and badly cut up by ravines. Just west of
-Government House, and close to the water, was a blockhouse or tower
-used as powder magazine, mounted with cannon to command the landing
-from the lake. Some accounts speak of yet another little outer battery
-or earthwork farther {352} westward. North of the Government House
-road, or what is now King Street, were dense woods. General Sheaffe,
-who had succeeded Brock at Queenston Heights, chanced to be in Toronto
-in April with some six hundred men. Just where the snug quarters of
-the Toronto Hunt Club now stand you may look out through the green
-foliage of the woods fringing the high cliffs of Lake Ontario, and
-there lies before your view the pure sky-blue surface of an inland sea
-washing in waves like a tide to the watery edge of the far sky line.
-Early in the morning of April 27 a forest ranger, dressed in the
-customary Lincoln green, was patrolling the forested edge of
-Scarborough Heights above the lake. The trees had not yet leafed out,
-but were in that vernal state when the branches between earth and sky
-take on the appearance of an aerial network just budding to light and
-color; and in the ravines still lay patches of the winter snow. The
-morning was hazy, warm, odoriferous of coming summer, with not a breath
-of wind stirring the water. As the sun came up over the lake long
-lines of fire shot through the water haze. Suddenly the scout paused
-on his parade. Something was advancing shoreward through the mist,
-advancing in a circling line like the ranks of wild birds flying north,
-with a lap--lap--lap of water drip and a rap--rap--rap of rowlocks from
-a multitude of sweeps. The next instant the forest rang to a musket
-shot, for the scout had discovered Commodore Chauncey's fleet of
-sixteen vessels being towed forward by rowers through a dead calm. The
-musket shot was heard by another scout nearer the fort. The signal was
-repeated by another shot, and another for the whole twelve miles, till
-General Sheaffe, sitting smoking a cigar in Government House, sprang to
-his feet and rushed out, followed by his officers, to scan the harbor
-of Humber Bay from the tops of the fort bastions. Sure enough! there
-was the fleet, led by Chauncey's frigate with twenty-four cannon poking
-from its sides, a string of rowboats in tow behind to land the army,
-coming straight across the harbor over water calm as silk. It has been
-told how the fleet made the mistake of passing beyond the landing, but
-the chances are the mistake was intentional {353} for the purpose of
-avoiding the cannon of the fort bastions. At all events the report may
-be believed that the most of Toronto people forgot to go back to
-breakfast that morning. A moment later officers were on top of the
-bastion towers, directing battery-men to take range for their cannon.
-A battalion variously given as from fifty to one hundred, along with
-some Indians, was at once dispatched westward to ambush the Americans
-landing. Another division was posted at the battery beyond Government
-House. Sheaffe saw plainly from the number of men on deck that he was
-outnumbered four to one, and the flag on the commodore's boat probably
-told him that General Dearborn, the commander in chief, was himself on
-board to direct the land forces. Sheaffe has been bitterly blamed for
-two things,--for not invading Niagara after the victory on Queenston
-Heights, and for his conduct at Toronto. He now withdrew the main
-forces to a ravine east of the fort, plainly preparatory for retreat.
-Not thus would Brock have acted.
-
-Meanwhile time has worn on to nine o'clock. The American ships have
-anchored. The Canadian cannon are sending the bombs skipping across
-the water. The rowboats are transferring the army from the schooners,
-and the ambushed sharpshooters are picking the bluecoats off as they
-step from ships to boats.
-
-"By the powers!" yells Forsyth, an American officer, "I can't stand
-seeing this any longer. Come on, boys! jump into our boats!" and he
-bids the bugles blow till the echoes are dancing over Humber waters.
-Dearborn and Chauncey stay on board. Pike leads the landing, and
-Chauncey's cannon set such grape and canister flying through the woods
-as clear out those ambushed shooters, the Indians flying like scared
-partridges, and the advance is made along Government House road at
-quick march. Just west of the Government House battery the marchers
-halt to send forward demand for surrender. Firing on both sides
-ceases. The smoke clears from the churned-up waters of the bay, and
-Commander Pike has seated himself on an old cannon, when, before answer
-can come back to the demand, a frightful accident occurs that upsets
-all plans. Waiting for the signal {354} to begin firing again, a
-batteryman in the near bastion was holding the lighted fuse in his
-right hand, ready for the cannon, when something distracted his
-attention, and he wheeled with the lighted match behind him. It
-touched a box of explosives. If any proof were needed that the tragedy
-was _not_ designed, it is to be found in the fact that English officers
-were still on the roof of the blockhouse, and the apartment below
-crowded with Canadians. A roar shook the earth. A cloud of black
-flame shot into mid-air, and the next minute the ground for half a mile
-about was strewn with the remains, mangled to a pulp, of more than
-three hundred men, ninety of whom were Canadians, two hundred and sixty
-Americans, including Brigadier Pike fatally wounded by a rock striking
-his head. In the horror of the next few moments, defense was
-forgotten. Wheelbarrows, trucks, gun wagons, were hurried forward to
-carry wounded and dead to the hospital. Leaving his officers to
-arrange the terms of surrender, at 2 P.M. Sheaffe retreated at quick
-march for Kingston, pausing only to set fire to a half-built ship and
-some naval stores. Lying on a stretcher on Chauncey's ship, Pike is
-roused from unconsciousness by loud huzzas.
-
-"What is it?" he asks.
-
-"They are running up the stars and stripes, sir."
-
-A smile passed over Pike's face. When the surgeon looked again, the
-commander was dead. For twenty-four hours the haggle went on as to
-terms of capitulation. Within that time, two or three things occurred
-to inflame the invading troops. They learned that Sheaffe had slipped
-away; as the American general's report put it, "They got the shell, but
-the kernel of the nut got away." They learned that stores had been
-destroyed after the surrender had been granted. Without more
-restraint, and in defiance of orders, the American troops gave
-themselves up to plunder all that night. In their rummaging through
-the Parliament buildings they found hanging above the Speaker's chair
-what Canadian records declare was a _wig_, what American reports say
-was a _human scalp_ sent in by some ranger from the west. From what I
-have read in the private papers of fur traders {355} in that period
-regarding international scalping, I am inclined to think that wig may
-have been an American scalp. Certainly, the fur traders of
-Michilimackinac wrapped no excuses round their savagery when the canoes
-all over the coasts of Lake Superior, in lieu of flags, had American
-scalps flaunting from their prows. At all events, word went out that
-an American scalp had been found above the Speaker's chair. It was
-night. The troops were drunk with success and perhaps with the plunder
-of the wine shops. All that night and all the next day and night the
-skies were alight with the flames of Toronto's public buildings on
-fire. Also, the army chest with ten thousand dollars in gold, which
-Sheaffe had forgotten, was dug up on pain of the whole town being fired
-unless the money were delivered. Private houses were untouched.
-Looted provisions which the fleet cannot carry away, Chauncey orders
-distributed among the poor. Then, leaving some four hundred prisoners
-on parole not to serve again during the war, Chauncey sails away for
-Niagara.
-
-
-It is a month later. Down at Fort George on the Canadian side General
-Vincent knows well what has happened at Toronto and is on the lookout
-for the enemy's fleet. On the American side of the Niagara River, from
-Lake Ontario to Lake Erie, are seven thousand troops eager to wipe out
-the stain of last year's defeat. On the Canadian side, from Fort
-George to Chippewa and Erie, are twenty-three hundred men, mostly
-volunteers from surrounding farms, and powder is scarce and provisions
-are scarce, for Chauncey's fleet has cut off help from St. Lawrence and
-Kingston way. All the last two weeks of May, heavy hot fog lay on the
-lake and on the river between the hostile lines, but there was no
-mistaking what Chauncey's fleet was about. Red-hot shot showers on
-Fort George in a perfect rain. Standing on the other side of the river
-are thousands of spectators, among them one grand old swashbuckler
-fellow in a cocked hat, whose fighting days are past, taking snuff
-after the fashion of a former generation and wearing an air of grand
-patronage to the American troops because _he_ has seen service in
-Europe.
-
-{356} "No, sir," says the grand old fighting cock pompously to his
-auditors, "can't be done! Have seen it tried on the Continent, and you
-can't do it! Lay a wager you can't do it! Can't possibly set fire to
-a fort by red-hot shot!"
-
-Then at night time, when the lurid glare of flame lights up the foggy
-darkness, the old gentleman is put to his trumps. "See!" they say;
-"Fort George _is_ on fire"; and over at Fort George the bucket brigade
-works hard as the cannoneers. But the fog is too good a chance to be
-missed by Chauncey; rowing out with muffled oars all the nights of May
-24 and 25, he has his men sounding . . . sounding . . . sounding in
-silence the channel, right within pistol shot of Fort George. The
-night of the 26th troops and marines are bidden breakfast at two in the
-morning, and be ready for action with a single blanket and rations for
-one day. That is all they are told. They embark at four. The waters
-are dead calm, the morning of the 27th gray as wool with fog. Sweeps
-out Chauncey's fleet, circles up to Fort George with one hundred scows
-in tow, carrying fifty soldiers each. Vincent takes his courage in his
-teeth and gathers his one thousand men inside the walls. Then the
-cannon of the frigates split fog and air and earth, and, under cover of
-the fire, the scows gain the land by 9 A.M. First, Vincent's
-sharpshooters sally from the fort and fire; then they fire from the
-walls; then they overturn guns, retreat from the walls, throw what
-powder they cannot carry into the water, and retreat, fighting, behind
-stone walls and ditches. The contest of one thousand against six
-thousand is hopeless. Vincent sends coureurs riding like the wind to
-Chippewa and Queenston and Erie, ordering the Canadians to retire to
-the Back Country. By four o'clock in the afternoon Americans are in
-possession of the Canadian side from Fort George to Erie. Vincent
-retreats at quick march along the lake shore towards what is now
-Hamilton. June 1 General Dearborn sends his officers, Chandler and
-Winder, in hot pursuit with thirty-five hundred men.
-
-
-Vincent's soldiers have less than ninety rounds of powder to a man. He
-has only one thousand men, for the garrisons of {357} Chippewa and
-Queenston Heights and Erie have fallen back in a circle to the region
-of St. David's. June 5, Vincent's Canadians are in camp at Burlington
-Bay. Only seven miles away, at Stony Creek, lies the American army,
-out sentries posted at a church, artillery on a height commanding a
-field, officers and men asleep in the long grass. Humanly speaking,
-nothing could prevent a decisive battle the next day. The two American
-officers, Chandler and Winder, sit late into the night, candles alight
-over camp stools, mapping out what they think should be the campaign.
-It is a hot night,--muggy, with June showers lighted up by an
-occasional flash of sheet lightning. Then all candles out, and pitch
-darkness, and silence as of a desert! The American army is asleep,--in
-the dead sleep of men exhausted from long, hard, swift marching. The
-artillerymen on the hillocks, the sentries, the outposts at the
-church,--they, too, are sound asleep!
-
-[Illustration: FITZGIBBONS]
-
-But the Canadians, too, know that, humanly speaking, nothing can
-prevent a decisive battle on the morrow. The stories run--I do not
-vouch for their truth, though facts seem to point to some such
-explanation--that Harvey, a Canadian officer, had come back to the
-American army that night disguised as a Quaker peddling potatoes, and
-noted the unguarded condition of the exhausted troops; also that
-Fitzgibbons, the famous scout, came through the American lines dressed
-as a rustic selling butter. Whether these stories are true or not, or
-whether, indeed, the Canadians knew anything about the American camp,
-they plucked resolution from desperation. If they waited for the
-morrow's battle, they would be beaten. Harvey proposed to Vincent that
-seven {358} hundred picked men go back through the dark and raid the
-American camp. Vincent left the entire matter to Harvey. Setting out
-at 11.30 along what is now Main Street, Hamilton, the Canadians marched
-in perfect silence. Harvey had given orders that not a shot should be
-fired, not a word spoken, the bayonet alone to be used. By two in the
-morning of June 6 the marchers came to the church where the sentries
-were posted. Two were stabbed to death before they awakened. The
-third was compelled to give the password, then bayoneted in turn. The
-Canadian raiders might have come to the very midst of the American army
-if it had not been for the jubilant hilarity of some young officers,
-who, capturing a cannon, uttered a wild huzza. On the instant, bugles
-sounded alarm; drums beat a crazy tattoo, and every man leaped from his
-place in the grass, hand on pistol. The next second the blackness of
-the night was ablaze with musketry; the soldiers were firing blindly;
-officers were shouting orders that nobody heard; troops were dashing
-here, there, everywhere, lost in the darkness, the heavy artillery
-horses breaking tether ropes and stampeding over the field. Major
-Plenderleath with a company of young Canadians suddenly found himself
-in the midst of the American camp. One of the young raiders stabbed
-seven Americans to death; a brother bayoneted four, and before daylight
-betrayed the smallness of their forces the raiders came safely off with
-three guns and one hundred prisoners, including the two American
-officers, Winder and Chandler. The loss to the British was one hundred
-and fifteen killed and wounded; but there would be no battle the next
-day. The battle of Stony Creek sent the Americans retreating back down
-the lake front to Fort George, harried by the English fleet under Sir
-James Yeo from Kingston. A hundred episodes might be related of the
-Stony Creek raid. For years it was to be the theme of camp-fire yarns.
-For instance, in the flare of musketry fire a Canadian found himself
-gazing straight along the blade of an American's bayonet. "Sir, the
-password," demanded the American sentry. Luckily the scout, instead of
-wearing an English red coat, had on a blue jacket resembling {359} that
-of the American marines, and he instantly took his cue. "Rascal," he
-thundered back, "what do you mean, off your line? Go back to your
-post!" The sentry's bayonet dropped; there was momentary darkness, and
-the Canadian literally bolted. Then ludicrous ill luck befell all the
-generals. Vincent had accompanied the raiders on horseback. When the
-bugles sounded "retire," he gave his horse the bit, and in the pitch
-darkness the brute carried him pellmell along the wrong road, over
-fences and hayfields, some fifteen miles into the Back Country. Next
-day, when Vincent was missing, under flag of truce messengers went to
-the retreating American army to find if he were among the dead. At
-four in the afternoon his horse came limping into the Canadian camp.
-Chandler, the American officer, on awakening had sprung on horseback
-and spurred over the field shouting commands. In the darkness his
-horse fell and threw him. When Chandler came to himself he was
-prisoner among the Canadians. Winder's ill luck was equally bad. By
-the flare of the firing he saw what he thought was a group of
-artillerymen deserting a gun. Dashing up, he laid about him with his
-pistol, shouting, "Come on! come on!" Another flare of fire, and he
-found himself surrounded by a circle of Canadian bayonets. "Drop your
-pistol, sir, or you are a dead man," ordered a young Canadian, and
-Winder surrendered.
-
-
-It will be recalled that the garrisons of Queenston below the Falls,
-and Chippewa above, and Erie at the head of the river, had retreated
-from the invading Americans to the Back Country now traversed by
-Welland Canal. From different posts beyond what was known as the Black
-Swamp, these bands of the dispersed Canadian army swooped down on the
-American outposts, harrying the whole American line from Lake Ontario
-to Lake Erie. Of all the raiders none was more daring than Lieutenant
-Fitzgibbons, posted beyond the Beaver Dams, at a stone house near De
-Ceu's Falls. Space forbids more than one episode of his raids. Once,
-while riding along Lundy's Lane alone, he was recognized by the wife of
-a Canadian captain, who dashed from {360} the cottage, warning him to
-retreat, as a hundred and fifty Americans had just passed that way.
-Standing in front of the roadside inn was the cavalry horse of an
-American. Fitzgibbons could n't resist the temptation for a bout with
-the foe, and dismounting, was entering the door when a soldier in blue
-dashed at him with leveled musket. Naturally not keen to create alarm,
-Fitzgibbons knocked the weapon from the man's hand, and without a sound
-had thrown him on the ground, when another American rifleman dashed
-from behind. Strong as a lion, Fitzgibbons threw the first man
-violently against the second, and was holding both at bay beneath his
-leveled rifle when one of the downed men snatched the Irishman's sword
-from the scabbard. He was in the very act of thrusting the sword point
-into Fitzgibbons, when the innkeeper's wife, with a dexterous kick,
-sent the weapon whirling out of his hand. Fitzgibbons disarmed the
-men, tied them, threw them across his horse, and himself mounting,
-galloped to the woods with a laugh, though one hundred and fifty
-Americans were within a quarter of a mile.
-
-The American commanders at Niagara determined to clean out this nest of
-raiders from the Back Country, and Lieutenant Boerstler was ordered to
-march from Fort George with some six hundred men. Leaving Fort George
-secretly at night, Boerstler came to Queenston at eleven on the night
-of June 23. Here all Canadian soldiers free on parole were seized, to
-prevent word of the attack reaching the Back Country. The troops were
-not even permitted to light camp fire or candles. The great secrecy of
-the American marchers at once roused suspicion among the Canadians
-between Queenston and the village of St. David's that the expedition
-was directed against Fitzgibbons' scouts. At his home, between
-Queenston and St. David's, dwelt a United Empire Loyalist, James
-Secord, recovering from dangerous wounds received in the battle of
-Queenston Heights. He was too weak himself to go by night and forewarn
-Fitzgibbons, but his wife, Laura Ingersoll, a woman of some thirty
-years, was also of the old United Empire Loyalist stock. She
-immediately set out alone for the Back Country to warn Fitzgibbons.
-{361} Many and contradictory stories are told of her march. Whether
-she tramped two nights and two days, or only one night and one day,
-whether her march led her twenty or only twelve miles, matters little.
-She succeeded in passing the first sentry on the excuse she was going
-out to milk a cow, and she eluded a second by telling him she wished to
-visit a wounded brother, which was true. Then she struck away from the
-beaten path through what was known as the Black Swamp. It had rained
-heavily. The cedar woods were soggy with moisture, the swamp swollen,
-and the streams running a mill race. Through the summer heat, through
-the windfall, over the quaking forest bog, tramped Laura Secord. It
-may be supposed that the most of wild animals had been frightened from
-the woods by the heavy cannonading for almost a year; but the hoot of
-screech owl, the eldritch scream of wild cat, the far howl of the wolf
-pack hanging on the trail of the armies for carrion, were not sounds
-quieting to the nerves of a frightened woman flitting through the
-forest by moonlight. It was clear moonlight when she came within range
-of Beaver Dam and De Ceu's house. She had just emerged in an open
-field when she was assailed with unearthly yells, and a thousand
-ambushed Indians rose from the grass.
-
-[Illustration: LAURA SECORD]
-
-"Woman! A woman! What does a white woman here?" demanded the chief,
-seizing her arm. She answered that she was a friend and it was matter
-of life and death for her to see {362} Fitzgibbons at once. So Laura
-Secord delivered her warning and saved the Canadian army. The episode
-has gone down to history one of the national legends, like the story of
-Madeline Vercheres on the St. Lawrence. Fitzgibbons posts his forty
-men in place, and Ducharme, commander of the Indians, scatters his one
-thousand redskins in ambush along the trail. Also, word is sent for
-two other detachments to come with all speed.
-
-June 24, at seven in the morning, Boerstler is moving along a narrow
-forest trail through the beech woods of Beaver Dams. The men are
-advancing single file, mounted infantrymen first with muskets slouched
-across saddle pommels, then the heavy wagons, then cavalry to rear.
-The timber is heavy, the trail winding. Here the long line deploys out
-from the trail to avoid jumping windfall; there halt is made to cut a
-way for the wagons; then the long line moves sleepily forward, yellow
-sunlight shafted through the green foliage across the riders' blue
-uniforms. Suddenly a shot rings out, and another, and another! The
-forest is full of unseen foes, before, behind, on all sides, the
-cavalry forces breaking rank and dashing forward among the wagons.
-Boerstler sees it will be as unsafe to retreat as to go on. Sending
-messengers back to Fort George for aid, he pushes forward into an open
-wheat field. Fifty-six men have fallen, and the bullets are still
-raining from an invisible foe. Looking back he sees mounted men in
-green coats passing and repassing across his trail, filing and
-refiling. It is a trick of Fitzgibbons to give an impression he has
-ten times forty men, but the Americans do not know. There is no
-retreat, and Indians are to the fore. In the midst of confusion
-Fitzgibbons comes forward with a white handkerchief on his sword point
-and begs Boerstler to prevent bloodshed by instant surrender.
-Boerstler demands to see the number of his enemies. Fitzgibbons says
-he will repeat the request to his commanding officer. Luck is with
-Fitzgibbons, for just as he goes back a small party of reenforcements
-arrives, and one of its captains acts the part of commanding officer,
-telling Boerstler's messenger haughtily that the demand to see the
-enemy is an insult, and answer must be given in five minutes {363} or
-the Canadians will not be responsible for the Indians. The fight has
-lasted three hours. Boerstler surrenders with his entire force. Such
-was the battle of Beaver Dams.
-
-Ever since Brock had captured Detroit in 1812, General Procter, with
-twenty-five hundred Canadians, had been holding the western part of
-Ontario; and the defeat of the English at Fort George had placed him in
-a desperate position. His men had been without pay for months; their
-clothes were in tatters, and now, with the Americans in possession of
-Niagara region, there was danger of Procter's food supply being cut
-off. Procter himself had not been idle these six months. In fact, he
-had been too active for the good of his supplies. Space forbids a
-detailed account of the raids directed by him and carried out with the
-aid of Tecumseh, the great Shawnee chief. January of 1813 saw a
-detachment of Procter's men up Raisin River, west of Detroit, where
-they defeated General Winchester and captured nearly five hundred
-prisoners, to be set free on parole. Harrison, the American general,
-is on his way to Lake Erie to rescue Detroit. Procter hastens in May
-to meet him with one thousand Canadians and fifteen hundred Indians.
-The clash takes place at a barricade known as Fort Meigs on Maumee
-River, south of Lake Erie, when again, by the aid of Tecumseh, Procter
-captures four hundred and fifty prisoners. It was on this occasion
-that the Indians broke from control and tomahawked forty defenseless
-American prisoners. August sees Procter raiding Sandusky; but the
-Americans refuse to come out and battle, and the axes of the Canadians
-are too dull to cut down the ironwood pickets, and when at night
-Procter's bugles sound retreat, he has lost nearly one hundred men. At
-last, in September, the fleets being built for the Canadians at
-Amherstburg and for the Americans at Presqu' Isle are completed.
-Whichever side commands Lake Erie will control supplies; and though
-Captain Barclay, the Canadian, is short of men, Procter cannot afford
-to delay the contest for supremacy any longer. He orders Barclay to
-sail out and seek Commodore Perry, the American, for decisive battle.
-
-{364} On Barclay's boats are only such old land guns as had been
-captured from Detroit. His crews consist of lake sailors and a few
-soldiers, in all some three hundred and eighty-four men on six vessels.
-September 10, at midday, at Put-in-Bay, Barclay finds Perry's fleet of
-seven vessels with six hundred and fifty men. For two hours the
-furious cannonading could be heard all the way up to Amherstburg.
-Space forbids details of the fight so celebrated in the annals of the
-American navy. After broadsides that tore hulls clean of masts and
-decks, setting sails in flame and the waters seething in mountainous
-waves, the two fleets got within pistol shot of each other, and Perry's
-superior numbers won. One third of Barclay's officers were killed and
-one third of his men. The Canadian fleet on Lake Erie was literally
-exterminated before three in the afternoon.
-
-[Illustration: TWO VIEWS OF THE BATTLE ON LAKE ERIE (From prints
-published in 1815)]
-
-Procter's position was now doubly desperate. He was cut off from
-supplies. At a council with the Indians, though Tecumseh, the chief,
-was for fighting to the bitter death, it was decided to retreat up the
-Thames to Vincent's army near modern {365} Hamilton. All the world
-knows the bitter end of that retreat. Procter seems to have been so
-sure that General Harrison would not follow, that the Canadian forces
-did not even pause to destroy bridges behind them; and behind came
-Harrison, hot foot, with four thousand fighters from the Kentucky
-backwoods. October first the Canadians had retreated far as Chatham,
-provisions and baggage coming in boats or sent ahead on wagons.
-Procter's first intimation of the foe's nearness was a breathless
-messenger with word the Americans just a few miles behind had captured
-the provision boats. Sending on his family and the women with a convoy
-of two hundred and fifty soldiers, Procter faced about on the morning
-of October the 5th, to give battle. On the left was the river Thames,
-on the right a cedar swamp, to rear on the east the Indian mission of
-Moraviantown. The troops formed in line across a forest road. Procter
-seems to have lost both his heart and his head, for he permitted his
-fatigued troops to go into the fight without breakfast. Not a
-barricade, not a hurdle, not a log was placed to break the advance of
-Harrison's cavalry. The American riders came on like a whirlwind.
-Crack went the line of Procter's men in a musketry volley! The horses
-plunged, checked up, reared, and were spurred forward. Another volley
-from the Canadians! But it was too late. Harrison's fifteen hundred
-riders had galloped clean through the Canadian lines, slashing swords
-as they dashed past. Now they wheeled and came on the Canadians' rear.
-Indians and Canadians scattered to the woods before such fury, like
-harried rabbits, poor Tecumseh in the very act of tomahawking an
-American colonel when a pistol shot brought him down. The brave Indian
-chief was scalped by the white backwoodsmen and skinned and the body
-thrown into the woods a prey to wolves. Flushed with victory and
-without Harrison's permission, the Kentucky men dashed in and set fire
-to Moraviantown, the Indian mission. As for Procter, he had mounted
-the fleetest horse to be found, and was riding in mad flight for
-Burlington Heights. It is almost a pity he had not fallen in some of
-his former heroic raids, for he now became a sorry figure in history,
-reprimanded {366} and suspended from the ranks of the army. The only
-explanation of Procter's conduct at Moraviantown is that he was anxious
-for the safety of his wife and daughters, perhaps needlessly fearing
-that the rough backwoodsmen would retaliate on them for the treachery
-of the Indians tomahawking American prisoners of war.
-
-[Illustration: TECUMSEH]
-
-And it had fared almost as badly with the Canadian fleet on Lake
-Ontario. The boats under Sir James Yeo, the young English commander,
-were good only for close-range fighting, the boats under Commodore
-Chauncey best for long-range firing. All July and August the fleets
-maneuvered to catch each other off guard. Between times each raided
-the coast of the other for provisions, Chauncey paying a second visit
-to Toronto, Yeo swooping down on Sodus Bay. All September the game of
-hide and seek went on between the two Ontario squadrons. Sunday night,
-the 8th of September, in a gale, two of Chauncey's ships sank, with all
-hands but sixteen. Two nights later in a squally wind, by the light of
-the moon, two more of his slow sailers, unable to keep up with the rest
-of the fleet, were snapped up by the English off Niagara with one
-hundred captives. Again, on September 27, at eight in the evening, six
-miles off Toronto harbor, Chauncey came up with the English, and the
-two fleets poured broadsides into each other. Then Yeo's crippled
-brigs limped into Toronto harbor, while Chauncey sailed gayly off to
-block all connection with Montreal and help to convoy troops {367} from
-Niagara down the St. Lawrence for the master stroke of the year. The
-way was now clear for the twofold aim of the American staff,--to starve
-out Ontario and concentrate all strength in a signal attack on Montreal.
-
-
-The autumn campaign was without doubt marked by the most comical and
-heroic episodes of the war. Wilkinson was to go down the St. Lawrence
-from Lake Ontario with eight thousand men to join General Hampton
-coming by the way of Lake Champlain with another five thousand men in
-united attack against Montreal. November 5 Wilkinson's troops
-descended in three hundred flat-boats through the Thousand Islands, now
-bleak and leafless and somber in the gray autumn light. It seemed
-hardly possible that the few Canadian troops cooped up in Kingston
-would dare to pursue such a strong American force, but history is made
-up of impossibles. Feeling perfectly secure, Wilkinson's troops
-scattered on the river. By November 10, at nine in the morning, half
-the Americans had run down the rapids of the Long Sault, and were in
-the region of Cornwall, pressing forward to unite with Hampton, where
-Chateauguay River came into Lake St. Louis, just above Montreal. The
-other half of Wilkinson's army was above the Long Sault, near
-Chrysler's Farm. From the outset the rear guard of the advancing
-invaders had been harried by Canadian sharpshooters. November 11,
-about midday, it was learned that a Canadian battalion of eight hundred
-was pressing eagerly on the rear. Chance shots became a rattling
-fusillade. Quick as flash the Americans land and wheel face about to
-fight, posted behind a stone wall and along a dried gully with
-sheltering cliffs at Chrysler's Farm. By 2.30 the foes are shooting at
-almost hand-to-hand range. Then, through the powder smoke, the
-Canadians break from a march to a run, and charge with all the
-dauntless fury of men fighting for hearth and home. Before the line of
-flashing bayonets the invaders break and run. Two hundred have fallen
-on each side in an action of less than two hours. Then the boats go on
-down to the other half of the army at Cornwall, and here is worse
-news,--news that sends {368} Wilkinson's army back to the American side
-of the St. Lawrence without attempting attack on Montreal. General
-Hampton on his way from Lake Champlain has been totally discomfited.
-
-Finding the way to the St. Lawrence barred by the old raiders' trail of
-Richelieu River, Hampton had struck across westward from Lake Champlain
-to join Wilkinson on the St. Lawrence, west of Montreal, somewhere near
-the road of Chateauguay River. With five thousand infantry and one
-hundred and eighty cavalry he has advanced to a ford beyond the fork of
-Chateauguay. Uncertain where the blow would be struck, Canada's
-governor had necessarily scattered his meager forces.
-
-[Illustration: DE SALABERRY]
-
-To oppose advance by the Chateauguay he has sent a young Canadian
-officer, De Salaberry, with one hundred and fifty French Canadian
-sharp-shooters and one hundred Indians. De Salaberry does not court
-defeat by neglecting precautions because he is weak. Windfall is
-hurriedly thrown up as barricade along the trail. Where the path
-narrows between the river and the bleak forest, De Salaberry has tree
-trunks laid spike end towards the foe. At the last moment comes
-McDonnell of Brockville with six hundred men, but De Salaberry's three
-hundred occupy the front line facing the ford. McDonnell is farther
-along the river. By the night of October 25 the American army is close
-on the dauntless little band hidden in the forest. On the morning of
-the 26th three thousand Americans {369} cross the south bank of the
-river, with the design of crossing north again farther down and
-swinging round on De Salaberry's rear. At the first shot of the
-bluecoats poor De Salaberry's forlorn little band broke in panic fright
-and fled, but De Salaberry on the river bank had grabbed his bugle boy
-by the scruff of the neck with a grip of iron, and in terms more
-forcible than polite bade him "sound--sound--sound _the advance_," till
-the forest was filled with flying echoes of bugle calls. McDonnell
-behind hears the challenge, and mistaking the cheering call for note of
-victory, bids his buglers blow, blow advance, blow and cheer like
-devils! The Americans pour shot into the forest. The bugle calls
-multiply till the woods seem filled with an advancing army and the
-yells split the sky. Also McDonnell has ordered his men to fire
-kneeling, so that few of the American shots take effect. The advancing
-host became demoralized. At 2.30 they sounded retreat, and it may
-truly be said that the battle of Chateauguay was won by De Salaberry's
-bugle boy, held to the sticking point, not because he was brave, but
-because he could not run away. It is said that Hampton simply would
-not believe the truth when told of the numbers by whom he had been
-defeated. It is also said that immediately after the victory De
-Salaberry fell ill from a bad attack of nerves, brought on by lack of
-sleep. However that may be, the Canadian governor, Prevost, did not
-suffer from an attack of conscience, for in his report to the English
-government he ascribed the victory to his own management and presence
-on the field.
-
-
-The year of 1813 closes darkly for both sides. Before withdrawing from
-Niagara region the invaders ravage the country and set fire to the
-village of Newark, driving four hundred women and children roofless to
-December snows. Sir Gordon Drummond, who has just come to command in
-Ontario, retaliates swiftly and without mercy. He crosses the Niagara
-by night; the fort is carried at bayonet point, three hundred men
-captured and three thousand arms taken. Next, Lewiston is burned, then
-Black Rock, and on the last day of the year, Buffalo. Down {370} on
-the Atlantic Coast both fleets win victories, but the English work the
-greater hurt, for they blockade the entire coast south of New York. On
-the English squadron are European mercenaries who have been given the
-name of Canadian battalions, because their work is to harry the
-American coast in order to draw off the American army from Canada.
-European mercenaries have been the same the world over,--riffraff
-blackguards, guilty of infamous outrages the moment they are out from
-under the officers' eye. These were the troops misnamed "Canadians,"
-whose infamous conduct left a heritage of hate long after the war; but
-this is a story of the navy rather than of Canada.
-
-
-The contest has now lasted for almost two years, and both sides are as
-far from decisive victory as when war was declared in June of 1812.
-Long since the embargo laws of France and England against neutral
-nations have been rescinded, and the American coast has suffered more
-from the blockade of this war than it ever did from the wars between
-France and England. The year 1814 opens with Napoleon defeated and
-England pouring aid across the Atlantic into Canada. Wilkinson's big
-army hovers inactive round Lake Champlain, and Prevost is afraid to
-weaken Montreal by forwarding aid to Drummond at Niagara. The British
-fleet blockades Sackett's Harbor, and the American fleet blockades
-Kingston. The Canadians raid Oswego on Lake Ontario for provisions.
-The Americans raid Port Dover on Lake Erie, leaving the country a
-blackened waste and Tom Talbot's Castle Malahide of logs a smoking
-ruin, with the determined aim of cutting off all supplies in Ontario.
-Drummond sends his troops scouring the country inland from Niagara for
-provisions. Military law is established for the seizure of cattle and
-grain, but for the latter as high a price is paid as $2.50 a bushel,
-and many a pioneer farmer back from York (Toronto) and Burlington
-(Hamilton) dates the foundation of his fortune from the famine prices
-paid for bread during the War of 1812.
-
-[Illustration: SIR GORDON DRUMMOND]
-
-Of course the United States did not purpose leaving the frontier of
-Niagara because Drummond had burnt the forts. By {371} May, Major
-General Brown had taken command of the United States troops at Buffalo.
-The next two months pass, drilling and training, and bringing forward
-provisions. July 3, at day dawn, during fog thick as wool on the lake,
-five thousand American troops cross to the Canadian side. Fort Erie's
-English garrison capitulates on the spot, and the English retreat down
-Niagara River towards Chippewa by the Falls. At Chippewa, at
-Queenston, at Fort George, in all to guard the Canadian frontier are
-only some twenty-eight hundred men. Three fourths of these are kept
-doing garrison duty, leaving only seven hundred men free afield. Just
-beside Chippewa, a creek some twenty feet wide comes into Niagara
-River. The Canadians have destroyed the bridge as they retreat, but
-the Americans pursue, and at midnight of the 4th the two armies are
-facing each other across the brook, ominous dreadful silence through
-the darkness but for the sentry's arms or the lumbering advance of
-artillery wagons dragged cautiously near the Canadians. The bridge is
-repaired under peppering shot from the British. By four on the
-afternoon of the 5th, the Americans have crossed the stream. Their
-artillery is in place, and another battalion has forded higher up and
-swept round to take the Canadians on the flank. The Canadians must
-either flee in such blind panic as Procter displayed at Moraviantown,
-or turn and fight. Indians in ambush, reenforcements from Fort George
-and Queenston formed in three solid columns, the English wheel to face
-the foe. First there is the rattling clatter of musketry fire from
-shooters behind in the {372} grass. Then the solid columns break from
-a march to a run, and charge with their bayonets. The artillery fire
-of the Americans meets the runners in a terrible death blast; but as
-the front lines drop, the men behind step in their places till the
-armies are not one hundred yards apart. Then another blast from the
-heavy guns of the Americans literally tears the Canadian columns to
-tatters. As the smoke lifts there are no columns left, only scattered
-groups of men retreating across a field strewn thick with the mangled
-dead. Out of twelve hundred men, the Canadians have lost five hundred.
-The charge of the forlorn twelve hundred at Chippewa against the
-artillery of four thousand Americans has been likened to the charge of
-the Light Brigade in the Russian War. Though the Canadians were
-defeated, their heroic defense had for a few days at least checked the
-advance of the invaders. And now the position of the beleaguered
-became desperate. At Fort George, at Queenston, and at Burlington
-Heights, the men were put on half rations.
-
-Why did the Americans not advance at once against Queenston and Fort
-George? For three weeks they awaited Chauncey's fleet to attack from
-the water side, so the army could rush the fort from the land side; but
-Chauncey was ill and could not come, and the interval gave the
-hard-pressed Canadians their chance. Drummond comes from Kingston with
-four hundred fresh men; also he calls on the people to leave their
-farms and rally as volunteers to the last desperate fight. This
-increased his troops by another thousand, though many of the volunteers
-were mere boys, who scarcely knew how to hold a gun. Then, from a
-dozen signs, Drummond's practiced eye foresaw that a forward movement
-was being planned by the enemy without Chauncey's cooeperation. All the
-American baggage was being ordered to rear. False attacks to draw off
-observation are made on Fort George outposts. American scouts are seen
-reconnoitering the Back Country. Drummond rightly guessed that the
-attack was being planned in one of two directions,--by rounding through
-the Back Country, either to fall in great numbers on Fort George, or to
-cut between the {373} Canadian army of Hamilton region and of Niagara
-region, taking both battalions in the rear. From Fort George to
-Queenston Canadian troops are posted by Drummond, and where the road
-called Lundy's Lane runs from the Falls at right angles to the Back
-Country more battalions are ordered on guard against the advance of the
-invaders. Fitzgibbons, the famous scout, climbing to a tree on top of
-a high hill, sees the Americans, five thousand of them, gray coats,
-blue coats, white trousers, moving up from Chippewa towards Lundy's
-Lane. Quickly sixteen hundred Canadian troops under General Riall take
-possession of a hill fronting Lundy's Lane and the Falls. On the hill
-is a little brown church and an old-fashioned graveyard. In the midst
-of the graves the Canadian cannon are posted. Round the cemetery runs
-a stone wall screened by shrubbery, and on both sides of Lundy's Lane
-are endless orchards of cherry and peach and apples, the fruit just
-beginning to redden in the summer sun. Whether the enemy aim at Fort
-George or Hamilton, the Canadian position on Lundy's Lane must be
-passed and captured. As soon as Drummond had Fitzgibbons' report, he
-sent messengers galloping for Hercules Scott, who had been ordered to
-retreat to the lake, to come back to Lundy's Lane with his twelve
-hundred men. It may be imagined that the Americans guessed what
-message the horseman, in the slather of foam was bearing back to
-Hercules Scott; for they at once attacked the Canadians in Lundy's Lane
-with fury, to capture the guns on the hill before Hercules Scott's
-reenforcements could come.
-
-It was now six o'clock in the evening of July 25, a sweltering hot
-night, and the troops on both sides were parched for water, though the
-roar of whole inland oceans of water could be heard pouring over the
-Falls of Niagara. As the Canadians had charged against the American
-guns at Chippewa, so now the Americans charged uphill against the guns
-of the Canadians, hurling their full strength against the enemy's
-center. Creeping under shelter of the cemetery stone walls, the
-bluecoats would fire a volley of musketry, jump over the fence, dash
-through the smoke, {374} bayonet in hand, to capture the Canadian guns.
-Time, time again, the rush was dauntlessly made, and time, time again
-met by the withering blast. Before nine o'clock the attacking lines
-had lost more than five hundred men, and as many Canadians had fallen
-on the hill. The dead and mangled lay literally in heaps. As darkness
-deepened, lit only by the wan light of a fitful moon and the awesome
-flare of volley after volley, the fearful screams of the dying could be
-heard above the roar of the Falls and the whistle of cannon ball.
-Riall, the commander of the Canadians, had been wounded and captured.
-Of his sixteen hundred Canadians, Drummond had now left only one
-thousand, and he was himself bleeding from a deep wound in the neck.
-Half the American officers had been carried from the field injured, and
-still the command was repeated to rush the hill before Scott's
-reenforcements came, and each time the advancing line was driven back
-shattered and thinned, Canadians dashing in pursuit, cheering and
-whooping, till both armies were so inextricably mixed it was impossible
-to hear or heed commands. It was in one of these melees that Riall,
-the Canadian, found himself among the American lines and was captured
-to the wild and jubilant shouting of the boys in blue and gray. Pause
-fell at nine o'clock. The Americans were mustering for the final
-terrible rush. The moon had gone behind a cloud, and the darkness was
-inky. Then a shout from the Canadian side split the very welkin.
-Hercules Scott had arrived with his twelve hundred men on a run,
-breathless and tired from a march and countermarch of twenty miles.
-The Americans took up the yell; for fresh reserves had joined them,
-too, and Lundy's Lane became a bedlam of ear-shattering sounds,--heavy
-artillery wagons forcing up the hill at a gallop over dead and dying,
-bombs from the Canadian guns exploding in the darkness, horses taking
-fright and bolting from their riders, carrying American guns clear
-across the lines among the Canadians. A wild yell of triumph told that
-the Americans had captured the hill. For the next two hours it was a
-hand-to-hand fight in pitchy darkness. Drummond, the Englishman, could
-be heard right in the midst of the {375} American lines, shouting,
-"Stick to them, men! stick to them! Don't give up! Don't turn! Stick
-to them! You 'll have it!" And American officers were found amidst
-Canadian battalions, shouting stentorian command: "Level low! Fire at
-their flashes! Watch the flash, and fire at their flashes!"
-
-[Illustration: MONUMENT AT LUNDY'S LANE]
-
-The Americans have captured the Canadian guns, but in the darkness they
-cannot carry them off. Each side thinks the other beaten, and neither
-will retreat. In the confusion it is impossible to rally the
-battalions, and men are attacking their own side by mistake. Both
-sides claim victory, and each is afraid to await what daylight may
-reveal; for it is no exaggeration to say that at the battle of Lundy's
-Lane the blood of one third of each side dyed the field. The Canadians
-as defenders of their own homes, fighting in the last ditch, dare not
-retire. The Americans, having more to risk in numbers, withdraw their
-troops at two in the morning. Of her twenty-eight hundred men Canada
-had lost nine hundred; and the American loss is as great. Too
-exhausted to retire, Drummond's men flung themselves on the ground and
-slept lying among the dead, heedless alike of the drenching rain that
-follows artillery fire, of the roaring cataract, of the groans from the
-wounded. Men awakened in the gray dawn to find themselves
-unrecognizable from blood and powder smoke, to find, {376} in some
-cases, that the comrade whose coat they had shared as pillow lay cold
-in death by morning. While Drummond's men bury the dead in heaps and
-carry the wounded to Toronto, the invaders have retreated with their
-wounded to Fort Erie.
-
-
-It now became the dauntless Drummond's aim to expel the enemy from Fort
-Erie. Five days after the battle of Lundy's Lane he had moved his camp
-halfway between Chippewa and Fort Erie; but in addition to its garrison
-of two thousand, Fort Erie is guarded by three armed schooners lying at
-anchor on the lake front. Captain Dobbs of Drummond's forces makes the
-first move. At the head of seventy-five men, he deploys far to the
-rear of the fort through the woods, carrying five flatboats over the
-forest trail eight miles, and on the night of the 12th of August slips
-out through the water mist towards the American schooners.
-
-"Who goes?" challenges the ships' watchman.
-
-"Provision boats from Buffalo," calls back the Canadian oarsman; and
-the rowboats pass round within the shadow of the schooner. A moment
-later the American ships are boarded. A trampling on deck calls the
-sailors aloft; but Dobbs has mastered two vessels before the fort wakes
-to life with a rush to the rescue.
-
-Delay means almost inevitable loss to Drummond; for Prevost will send
-no more reenforcements, and the Americans are daily strengthening Fort
-Erie. Bastions of stone have been built. Outer batteries command
-approach to the walls, and along the narrow margin between the fort and
-the lake earthworks have been thrown up, mounted with cannon elbowing
-to the water's edge. Taking advantage of the elation over Dobbs' raid
-on the schooners, Drummond plans a night assault on the 15th of August.
-Rain had been falling in splashes all day. The fort trenches were
-swimming like rivers, and it may be mentioned that Drummond's camp was
-swimming too, boding ill for his men's health. One of the foreign
-regiments was to lead {377} the assault round by the lake side, while
-Drummond and his nephew rushed the bastions. It will be remembered
-these foreign regiments of Napoleonic wars were composed of the
-offscourings of Europe. The fighters were to depend "on bayonet alone,
-giving no quarter." Splashing along the rain-soaked road in silence
-and darkness, scaling ladders over shoulders, bayonets in hand, the
-foreign troops came to the earthwork elbowing out into the lake. This
-was passed by the men wading out in the lake to their chins; but the
-noise was overheard by the fort sentry, and a perfect blaze of musketry
-shattered the darkness and drove the mercenaries back pellmell,
-bellowing with terror. A few of the English and Canadian troops
-pressed forward, only to find that they could not reach within ladder
-distance of the walls at all, for spiked trees had been placed above
-the trenches in a perfect crisscross hurdle of sharpened ends. In old
-letters of the period one reads how the trenches were literally heaped
-with a jumbled mass of the dead. The other attacking columns fared
-almost as badly. One of the bastions had been entered by the cannon
-embrasures, Drummond, Junior, shouting to "give no quarter--give no
-quarter," when, from the cross firing in the courtyards, the powder
-magazine below this bastion was set on fire, and exploded with a
-terrific crash, killing the assailants almost to a man. In
-all,--killed, wounded, missing,--the assault cost Drummond's army nine
-hundred men. September proved a rainy month. Drummond's camp became
-almost a marsh, and the health of the troops compelled a move to higher
-ground. It was then the Americans sallied out in assault. Neither
-side could claim victory, but the skirmish cost each army more than
-five hundred men. Sir James Yeo now comes sailing up Lake Ontario with
-some of the sixteen thousand troops sent from England. The weather
-became unfavorable to movement on either side,--rain and sleet
-continuously. Drummond foresaw that the season would compel the
-abandonment of Fort Erie, and on November 5, a scout came in with word
-that the invaders had crossed to the American side and Fort Erie had
-been blown up.
-
-{378} While Drummond is fighting for the very life of Canada along the
-Niagara frontier, the war continues in desultory fashion elsewhere.
-Kentucky riflemen raid western Ontario from Detroit to Port Dover. Up
-on the lakes is a story of the war that reads like a page from border
-raiders. American fur traders destroy Sault Ste. Marie. Canadian fur
-traders retaliate by swooping on Mississippi fur posts. Out on the
-Pacific Coast an English gunboat has captured John Jacob Astor's fur
-post on the Columbia; and now in the fall of 1814 the Northwest Fur
-Company of Montreal are conveying from Astor's fort the furs, worth
-millions of dollars, in canoes across the Upper Lakes to Ottawa River.
-Two armed American schooners, hiding on the north shore of Lake Huron,
-lie in wait for the gay raiders of the Northwest Company; but at the
-Sault the Nor'west voyageurs get wind of the danger. They, in turn,
-hide their canoes in some of the blue coves of the north shore. Then,
-stealing out at night, in canoes with muffled paddles, the Nor'westers
-come on one schooner while the watch is asleep. They board her,
-bayonet the crew, "pinion some of the wounded to the decks," and with
-the captured vessel sidle up to the other vessel, and, before she is
-aware of the new masters on board, have captured her too. Then, scalps
-flaunting at the prows of their canoes, the Nor'west fur traders gayly
-go their way. Down at Lake Champlain occurs the great fiasco of the
-war,--the blot on Canada's escutcheon. Prevost with ten thousand
-reenforcements has been ordered by the English Governor to proceed from
-Montreal against the Americans by both water and land. While an
-English fleet attacks the Americans, Prevost is to lead the troops
-against Plattsburg. But the Canadian fleet meets terrible disaster.
-The commander is killed by a rebounding cannon ball just as the action
-begins; and twelve of the gunboats manned by the hired foreigners
-desert _en masse_. The rest of the fleet is literally destroyed.
-Instead of seconding attack by a battle on land, Prevost sits behind
-his trenches waiting for the little fleet to win the battle for him;
-and when the fleet is defeated, Prevost's courage sinks with the {379}
-sinking ships. He gathers up his troops and retreats in a scare of
-haste,--such a fright of unseemly, unsoldierly haste that nearly one
-thousand of his soldiers desert in sheer disgust. Down at Nova Scotia
-are raid and counter-raid too. The British and American fleets wage
-fierce war that is not part of Canada's story; but in the contest the
-public buildings of Washington are burned in retaliation for the
-burning of Newark; and down at New Orleans the English suffer a
-crushing defeat.
-
-Meanwhile the peace commissioners have been at work; and the war that
-ought never to have taken place, that settled not one jot of the
-dispute which caused it, was closed by the Treaty of Ghent, Christmas
-Eve of 1814. All captured forts, all plunder, all prisoners, are to be
-restored. Michilimackinac and Fort Niagara and Astoria on the Columbia
-go back to the United States; but of "impressment" and "right of
-search" and "embargo of neutrals" not a word. The waste of life and
-happiness accomplished not a feather's weight unless it were the lesson
-of the criminal folly of a war between nations akin in aim and speech
-and blood.
-
-
-
-
-{380}
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-FROM 1812 TO 1846
-
-Selkirk's colony--Troubles on passage--Winter on the bay--First winter on
-Red River--First conflict--Nor'westers rally to defense--The storm
-gathers--The Nor'westers victorious--Selkirk to the rescue--Banditti
-warfare in Athabasca--In Athabasca--Robertson escapes--Frobisher's
-death--The Pacific empire--Secede from Oregon
-
-
-When Sir Alexander MacKenzie, the discoverer, went home to retire on an
-estate in Scotland, he found the young nobleman and philanthropist, Lord
-Selkirk, keenly interested in accounts of vast, new, unpeopled lands,
-which lay beyond the Great Lakes. A change in the system of farming,
-which dispossessed small farmers to turn the tenantries into sheep runs,
-had caused terrible poverty in Scotland at this period. Here in Scotland
-were people starving for want of land. There in America were lands idle
-for lack of people. Selkirk had already sent out some colonists to the
-Lake St. Clair region of Ontario and to Prince Edward Island, but what he
-heard from MacKenzie turned his attention to the new empire of the
-prairie. Then in Montreal, where he had been dined and wined by the
-Northwest Company's "Beaver Club," he had heard still more of this vast
-new land, of its wealth of furs, of its untimbered fields, where man had
-but to put in the plowshare to sow his crop. The one great obstruction
-to settlement there would be the claims of the Hudson's Bay Company to
-exclusive monopoly of the country; but as Selkirk listened to the
-descriptions of the Red River Valley given by Colin Robertson, who had
-been dismissed by the Nor'westers, he thought he saw a way of overcoming
-all difficulties which the fur traders could put in the way of settlement.
-
-Owing to competition Hudson's Bay stock had fallen from two hundred and
-fifty to fifty pounds sterling a share. On returning to Scotland Lord
-Selkirk had begun buying up Hudson's Bay stock in the market, along with
-Sir Alexander MacKenzie; but when MacKenzie learned that Selkirk's object
-was colonization first, profits second, he broke in violent anger from
-the partnership in speculation, and besought William MacGillivray to go
-on {381} the open market and buy against Selkirk to defeat the plans for
-settlement. What with shares owned by his wife's family of
-Colville-Wedderburns, and those he had himself purchased, Selkirk now
-owned a controlling interest in the Hudson's Bay Company.
-
-Early in 1811 the Company deeds to Lord Selkirk the country of Red River
-Valley, exceeding in area the British Isles and extending, through the
-ignorance of its donors, far south into American territory. Colin
-Robertson, the former Nor'wester, who first interested Selkirk in Red
-River, has meanwhile been gathering together a party of colonists. Miles
-MacDonell, retired from the Glengarry Regiment, has been appointed by
-Selkirk governor of the new colony.
-
-[Illustration: SELKIRK]
-
-What of the Nor'westers while these projects went forward? Writes
-MacGillivray from London, where he has been stirring up enmity to
-Selkirk's project, "_Selkirk must be driven to abandon his project at any
-cost, for his colony would prove utterly destructive of our fur trade_."
-How he purposed doing this will be seen. Writes Selkirk to the governor
-of his colony, Miles MacDonell: "_The Northwest Company must be compelled
-to quit my lands. If they refuse, they must be treated as poachers_."
-Selkirk believed that the Hudson's Bay Company charter to the Great
-Northwest was legal and valid. He believed that the vast territory
-granted to him was legally his own as much as his parks in Scotland. He
-believed that he possessed the same right to expel intruders on this
-territory as to drive poachers from his own Scotch parks. It was the
-spirit of feudalism. As for the Nor'westers, let us look at their
-rights. They disputed that the charter of the Hudson's Bay Company
-applied beyond the bounds {382} of Hudson Bay. Even if it did so apply,
-they pointed out that by the terms of the charter it applied only to
-lands not possessed by any other Christian power; and who would dispute
-that French fur traders and Nor'westers, as their successors, had
-ascended the streams of the interior long before the Hudson's Bay men?
-It was the spirit of democracy. It needed no prophet to foresee when
-these two sets of claims came together there would be a violent clash.
-
-It is evening in the little harbor of Stornoway, off the Hebrides, north
-of Scotland, July 25, 1811. Waning midsummer has begun to shorten the
-long days; and lying at anchor in the twilight a few yards offshore are
-the three Hudson's Bay Company boats, outward bound. For a week the
-quiet little fishing hamlet has been in a turmoil, for Governor Miles
-MacDonell and Colin Robertson have ordered the Selkirk settlers here--129
-of them, 70 farmers, 59 clerks--to join the Hudson's Bay boats as they
-swing out westward on their far cruise to the north, and the atmosphere
-has literally been on fire with vexations created by spies of the
-Northwest Company. In the first place, as the settlers wait for the
-ships coming up from London, trouble makers pass from group to group
-scattering a miserable little sheet called "The Highlander," warning "the
-deluded people" against going to "a polar land of Indian hostiles."
-Besides, dark hints are uttered that the settlers are not wanted for
-colonists at all, but for armed battalions to fight the Nor'westers for
-the Hudson's Bay Company, in proof whereof the prophets of evil point
-ominously to the cannon and munitions of war on board the three old fur
-boats. Then there is too much whisky afloat in Stornoway that week.
-Settlers are taken ashore and farewelled and farewelled and farewelled
-till unable to find their way down to the rowboats, and then they are
-easily frightened into abandoning the risky venture altogether. On the
-settlers who have come as clerks to the Company Governor MacDonell can
-keep a strong hand, for they have been paid their wages in advance and
-are seized if they attempt to desert. Then the excise officer here is a
-friend of the Nor'westers, and he creates {383} endless trouble rowing
-round and round the boats, bawling . . . bawling out . . . to know "if
-all who are embarking are going of their own free will," till the ship's
-hands, looking over decks, become so exasperated they heave a cannon ball
-over rails, which goes splash through the bottom of the harbor officer's
-rowboat and sends him cursing ashore to dispatch a challenge for a duel
-to Governor MacDonell. MacDonell sees plainly that if he is to have any
-colonists left, he must sail at once. Anchors up and sails out at eleven
-that night, the ships glide from shore so unexpectedly that one
-faint-heart, desperately resolved on flight, has to jump overboard and
-swim ashore, while two other settlers, who have been lingering over
-farewells, must be rowed across harbor by Colin Robertson to catch the
-departing ships. Then Robertson is back on the wharf trumpeting a last
-cheer through his funneled hands. The Highlanders on decks lean over the
-vessel railings waving their bonnets. The Glasgow and Dublin lads
-indentured as clerks give a last huzza, and the Selkirk settlers are off
-for their Promised Land.
-
-As long ago Cartier's first colonists to the St. Lawrence had their
-mettle tested by tempestuous weather and pioneer hardships, so now the
-first colonists to the Great Northwest must meet the challenge that fate
-throws down to all who leave the beaten path. Though the season was
-late, the weather was extraordinarily stormy. Sixty-one days the passage
-lasted, the tubby old fur ships lying water-logged, rolling to the angry
-sea. MacDonell was furious that colonists had been risked on such
-unseaworthy craft, but those old fur-ship captains, with fifty years ice
-battling to their credit, probably knew their business better than
-MacDonell. The fur ships had not been built for speed and comfort, but
-for cargoes and safety, and when storms came they simply lowered sails,
-turned tails to the wind, and rolled till the gale had passed, to the
-prolonged woe of the Highland landsmen, who for the first time suffered
-seasick pangs. Then, when Governor MacDonell attempted drills to pass
-the time, he made the discovery that seditious talk had gone the rounds
-of the deck. "The Hudson's Bay had no right to this {384} country."
-"The Nor'westers owned that country." "The Hudson's Bay could n't compel
-any man to drill and fight." Selkirk could not give clear deed to their
-"lands," and much more to the same effect, all of which proved that some
-Nor'wester agent in disguise had been busy on board.
-
-September 24, amid falling snow and biting frost, the ships anchored at
-Five Fathom Hole off York Factory, Port Nelson.
-
-[Illustration: NELSON AND HAYES RIVERS (From Robson)]
-
-The Selkirk settlers had been sixty-one days on board, and they were
-still a year away from their Promised Land. Champlain's colonists of
-Acadia and Quebec had come to anchorage on a land set like a jewel amid
-silver waters and green hills, but the Selkirk settlers have as yet seen
-only rocks barren of verdure as a billiard ball, vales amidst the domed
-hills of Hudson Straits, dank with muskeg, and silent as the very realms
-of death itself, but for the flacker of wild fowl, the roaring of the
-floundering {385} walrus herds, or the lonely tinkling of mountain
-streams running from the ice fields to the mossy valleys bordering the
-northern sea. It needed a robust hope, or the blind faith of an almost
-religious zeal, to penetrate the future and see beyond these sterile
-shores the Promised Land, where homes were to be built, and plenty to
-abound. If pioneer struggles leave a something in the blood of the race
-that makes for national strength and permanency, the difference between
-the home finding of the West and the home finding of the East is worth
-noting.
-
-There were, of course, no preparations for the colonists at York Fort,
-for the factor could not know they were coming, or anything of Selkirk's
-plans, till the annual ships arrived. On the chance of finding better
-hunting farther from the fort, MacDonell withdrew his people from Hayes
-River, north across the marsh to a sheltered bank of the River Nelson.
-Winter had set in early. A whooping blizzard met the pilgrims as they
-marched along an Indian trail through the brushwood. There is a legend
-of Miles MacDonell, the governor, becoming benighted between York Fort
-and Nelson River, and losing his way in the storm. According to the
-story, he beat about the brushwood for twenty-four hours before he
-regained his bearings. Rude huts of rough timber and thatch roof with
-logs extemporized for berths and benches were knocked up for wintering
-quarters on Nelson River, and the next nine months were passed hunting
-deer for store of provisions, and building flatboats to ascend the
-interior. All winter a mutinous spirit was at work among the young
-clerks, which MacDonell, no doubt, ascribed to the machinations of
-Nor'westers; but the chief factor quickly quelled mutiny by cutting off
-supplies, and all hands were ready to proceed when the fur brigades set
-out for the interior on the 21st of June, 1812.
-
-Up Hayes River, up the whole length of Winnipeg Lake, then in August the
-flatboats are ascending the muddy current of Red River, through what is
-now Manitoba, and for the first time the people see their Promised Land.
-High banks fringed with maple and oak line the river at what is now
-Selkirk. Then the cliffs lower, and through the woods are broken gleams
-{386} of the rolling prairie intersected by ravines, stretching far as
-eye can see, where sky and earth meet. From the lateness of the season
-one can guess that the river was low at the bowlder reach known as St.
-Andrew's Rapids, and that while the boats were tracked upstream the
-people would disembark and walk along the Indian trails of the west bank.
-There was no Fort Garry near the rapids, as a few years later.
-Buffalo-skin tepees alone broke the endless sweep of russet prairie and
-sky, clear swimming blue as the purest lake. Then the people are back
-aboard, laboring hard at the oar now, for they know they are nearing the
-end of their long pilgrimage. The river banks rise higher. Then they
-drop gradually to the flats now known as Point Douglas. Another bend in
-the sinuous red current, looping and curving and circling fantastically
-through the prairie, and the Selkirk settlers are in full view of the old
-Cree graveyard,--bodies swathed in skins on scaffolding,--down at the
-junction of the Assiniboine. Hard by they see the towered bastions of
-the Northwest Company's post, Fort Gibraltar. Somewhere between what are
-known to-day as Broadway Bridge and Point Douglas, the Selkirk settlers
-land on the west side. Chief Peguis and his Cree warriors ride
-wonderingly among the white-faced newcomers, marveling at men who have
-crossed the Great Waters "to dig gardens and work land." The barracks
-knocked up hastily is known after Selkirk's family name as Fort Douglas;
-but the store of deer meat has been exhausted, and the colonists are on
-the verge of a second winter. They at once join the Plain Rangers, or
-Bois Brules (Burnt Wood Runners), half-breed descendants of French and
-Nor'west fur traders, who have become retainers of the Montreal Company.
-With them the Selkirk settlers proceed south to Pembina and the Boundary
-to hunt buffalo. No instructions had yet come to Red River of the
-Northwest Company's hostility to the colony, and the lonely Scotch clerks
-of Fort Gibraltar were glad to welcome men who spoke their own Highland
-tongue. Volumes might be written of this, the colonists' first year in
-their Promised Land: how the rude Plain Rangers conveyed them to the
-buffalo hunt in their {387} creaking Red River carts,--carts made
-entirely of wood, hub, tire, axle, and all, or else on loaned ponies; how
-when storm came the white settlers were welcomed to the huts and skin
-tents of the French half-breeds, given food and buffalo blankets; how
-many a young Highlander came to grief in the wild stampede of his first
-buffalo hunt; how when the hunters returned to Fort Gibraltar (Winnipeg),
-on Red River, with store enough of pemmican for all the fur posts of the
-Nor'westers, many a wild happy winter night was passed dancing mad Indian
-jigs to the piping of the Highland piper and the crazy scraping of some
-Frenchman's fiddle; how when morning came, in a gray dawn of smoking
-frost mist, a long line of the colonists could be seen winding along the
-ice of Red River home to Fort Douglas, Piper Green or Hector McLean
-leading the way, still prancing and blowing a proud national air; how
-when spring opened, ten-acre plots were assigned to each settler, close
-to the fort at what were known as the Colony Buildings, and one
-hundred-acre farms farther down the river. All this and more are part of
-the story of the coming of the first colonists to the Great Northwest.
-The very autumn that the first settlers had reached Red River in 1812
-more colonists had arrived on the boats at {388} Hudson Bay. These did
-not reach Red River till October of 1812 and the spring of 1813. By
-1813, and on till 1817, more colonists yearly came. The story of each
-year, with its plot and counterplot, I have told elsewhere. Spite of
-Nor'westers' threats, spite of the fact there would be no market for the
-colonists when they had succeeded in transforming wilderness prairie into
-farms, Selkirk's mad dream of empire seemed to be succeeding.
-
-[Illustration: FORT GARRY, RED RIVER SETTLEMENT]
-
-
-The cardinal mistake in the contest between Hudson's Bay Company and
-Nor'westers, between feudalism and democracy, was now committed by the
-governor of the colony, Miles MacDonell. The year 1813 had proved poor
-for the buffalo hunters. Large numbers of colonists were coming, and
-provisions were likely to be scarce. Also, note it well, while the War
-of 1812 did not cut off supplies through Hudson Bay to the English
-Company, it did threaten access to the West by the Great Lakes, and cut
-off all supplies by way of Detroit and Lake Huron for the Nor'westers.
-Was MacDonell scoring a point against the Nor'westers, when they were at
-a disadvantage? Who can answer? Selkirk had ordered him to expel the
-{389} Nor'westers from his lands, and if the violent contest had not
-begun in this way, it was bound to come in another. What MacDonell did
-was issue a proclamation in January of 1814, forbidding taking provisions
-from Selkirk's territory of Assiniboia. It practically meant that the
-Plain Rangers must not hunt buffalo in the limits of modern Manitoba, and
-must not sell supplies to the Nor'westers. It also meant that all the
-upper posts of the Nor'westers--the fur posts of Athabasca and British
-Columbia, which depended on pemmican for food--would be without adequate
-provisions. The Plain Rangers were enraged beyond words, and doubly
-outraged when some Hudson's Bay men began seizing buffalo meat at Pembina
-River, which was beyond the limits of Selkirk's territory. Writes Peter
-Fidler, one of the Hudson's Bay factors, "_If MacDonell only perseveres,
-he will starve the Nor westers out_."
-
-[Illustration: FORT DOUGLAS]
-
-One can guess the anger in the annual meeting of the Nor'westers at Fort
-William in July of 1814. Like generals on field of war they laid out
-their campaign. Duncan Cameron, a United Empire Loyalist officer of the
-1812 War, is to don his red regimentals and proceed to Red River, where
-his knowledge of the Gaelic tongue may be trusted to win over Selkirk
-settlers. "_Nothing but the complete downfall of the colony will satisfy
-some_," wrote one of the fiery Nor'westers to a brother officer. Such
-was the mood of the Nor'westers when they came back from their annual
-meeting on Lake Superior to Red River, and MacDonell fanned this mood to
-dangerous fury by threatening to burn the Nor'westers' forts to the
-ground unless they moved from Selkirk's territory. For the present
-Duncan Cameron contents himself with striking up a warm friendship with
-the Highlanders of the settlement and offering to transport two hundred
-of them free of cost to Eastern Canada. MacDonell seizes still more
-provisions from northwest forts. Cameron, the Nor'wester, comes back
-from the annual meeting of 1815 still more bellicose. He carries the
-warrant to arrest Governor Miles MacDonell for the seizure of those
-provisions. MacDonell, safe behind the palisades of Fort Douglas, laughs
-{390} the warrant to scorn; but it is another matter when the Plain
-Rangers ride across the prairie from Fort Gibraltar armed, and pour such
-hot shot into Fort Douglas that the colonists, frenzied with fear, huddle
-to the fort for shelter. To insure the safety of his colonists,
-MacDonell surrenders to the Nor'westers and is sent to Eastern Canada for
-a trial which never takes place. No sooner has Governor MacDonell been
-expelled than Cuthbert Grant, warden of the Plain Rangers, rides over to
-the colony and warns the colonists to flee for their lives, from Indians
-enraged at "these land workers spoiling the hunting fields." What the
-Indians thought of this defense of their rights is not stated. They were
-silent and unacting witnesses of the unedifying spectacle of white men
-ready to fly at each other's throats. It was too late for the colonists
-to reach Hudson Bay in time for the annual ships of 1815, so the
-houseless people dispersed amid the forests of Lake Winnipeg, where they
-could be certain of at least fish for food.
-
-Word of the two hundred settlers having been moved from Red River by the
-Nor'westers, of MacDonell's forcible expulsion, and of the dispersion of
-the rest of the colony had, of course, been sent to Selkirk and his
-agents in both Montreal and London. Swift retaliation is prepared.
-Colin Robertson, who speaks French like a Canadian and knows all the
-Nor'west voyageurs of the St. Lawrence, is sent to gather up two hundred
-French boatmen under the very noses of the Nor'westers at Montreal. With
-these Robertson is to invade the far-famed Athabasca, whence come the
-best furs, the very heart of the Nor'westers' stamping ground. Robert
-Semple is appointed governor of the colony on Red River, with
-instructions to resist the aggressions of the Nor'westers even to the
-point of "_a shock that may be felt from Montreal to Athabasca_."
-Selkirk himself comes to Canada to interview the Governor General about
-military forces to protect his colony.
-
-Robertson, with his two hundred voyageurs for Athabasca, follows the old
-Ottawa trail of the French explorers, from the St. Lawrence to the Great
-Lakes, and from the Great Lakes to {391} Red River by way of Winnipeg
-Lake. Whom does he find on the shores of the lake but Selkirk's
-dispersed colonists! Ordering John Clarke, an old campaigner of Astor's
-company on the Columbia, to lead the two hundred French voyageurs on up
-to Athabasca, Colin Robertson rallies the colonists together and leads
-them back to Red River for the winter of 1815-1816. Feeling sure that he
-had destroyed Selkirk's scheme root and branch, Cameron has remained at
-Fort Gibraltar with only a few men, when back to the field comes
-Robertson, stormy, capable, robust, red-blooded, fearless, breathing
-vengeance on Selkirk's foes.
-
-[Illustration: SKETCH OF THE CITY OF WINNIPEG, SHOWING THE SITES OF THE
-EARLY FORTS]
-
-By the spring of 1816 the tables have been turned with a vengeance.
-Cameron, the Nor'wester, has been seized and sent to Hudson Bay to be
-expelled from the country. Fort Gibraltar has been pulled down and the
-timbers used to strengthen Fort Douglas, whose pointed cannon command all
-passage up and down Red River. It was hardly to be supposed that the
-haughty Nor'westers would submit to expulsion without a blow. From
-Athabasca, from New Caledonia, from Qu'Appelle . . . they rally their
-doughtiest fighters under Cuthbert Grant, the {392} half-breed Plain
-Ranger. From Montreal and Fort William come spurring the leading
-partners, with one hundred and seventy French-Canadian bullies, and a
-brass cannon concealed under oilcloth in a long boat. The object of the
-Plain Rangers is to meet the up-coming partners with supplies for the
-year; but is that any reason for the riders who are striking eastward
-from Assiniboine to Red River, decking themselves out in war paint and
-stripping like savages before battle? The object of the partners is to
-meet the Plain Rangers on Red River; but is that any reason for bringing
-a cannon concealed under oilcloth all the way from Lake Superior? Or do
-men fighting a life-and-death struggle for the thing the world calls
-success ever acknowledge plain motives within themselves at all? Is it
-not rather the blind brute instinct of self-protection, forfend what may?
-
-[Illustration: RED RIVER SETTLEMENT, 1816-1820]
-
-"Listen, white men! Beware! Beware!" the Cree chief Peguis warns
-Governor Semple. What means the spectacle of white brothers, who preach
-peace, preparing for war over a few beaver pelts? Chief Peguis cannot
-understand, except this is the way of white men.
-
-{393} And now, unluckily for Governor Semple, he quarrels with his
-adviser, Colin Robertson. Robertson, from his early training in
-Northwest ranks, reads the signs, and is for striking a blow before the
-enemy can strike him. Semple is still talking peace. Robertson leaves
-Red River in disgust, and departs for Hudson Bay to take ship for
-England. The Plain Rangers, it may be explained, have uttered the wild
-threat that if they "can catch Robertson," they will avenge the
-destruction of Fort Gibraltar "by skinning him alive and feeding him to
-the dogs." Also it is well known, Nor'westers of Qu'Appelle have
-muttered angry prophecies about "the ground being drenched with the blood
-of the colonists."
-
-Still Semple talks peace, which is a good thing in its place; but this is
-n't the place.
-
-"My Governor! My Governor!" pleads an old hunter of the Hudson's Bay
-with Semple; "are you not afraid? The half-breeds are gathering to kill
-you!"
-
-Semple laughs. Pshaw! _He_ has law on _his_ side. Law! What is law?
-The old hunter of the lawless wilds does n't know that word. That word
-does n't come as far west as the _Pays d'en Haut_.
-
-It is sunset of June 18, 1816. Old chief Peguis comes again to the
-Hudson's Bay fort on Red River.
-
-"Governor of the gard'ners!" he solemnly warns; "governor of the land
-workers and gard'ners, listen! . . ." Not much does he add, after the
-fashion of his race. Only this, "_Let me bring my warriors to protect
-you_!"
-
-Semple laughs at such fears.
-
-It is sunset of June 19. A soft west wind has set the prairie grass
-rippling like a green sea between the fort and the sun hanging low at the
-western sky line. A boy on the lookout above one of the bastion towers
-of Fort Douglas suddenly shouts, "The half-breeds are coming!"
-
-Semple ascends the tower and looks through a field glass. There is a
-line of sixty or seventy horsemen, all armed, not coming to the fort, but
-moving diagonally across from the Assiniboine to the Red towards the
-colony. And then, north {394} towards the colony, is wildest
-clamor,--people in ox carts, people on horseback, people on foot,
-stampeding for the shelter of the fort. And up to this moment absolutely
-nothing has occurred to create this terror.
-
-"Let twenty men follow me," orders Semple; and he marches out, followed
-by twenty-seven armed men.
-
-As they wade through the waist-high hay fields they meet the fleeing
-colonists.
-
-"Keep your back to the river!" shouts one colonist, convoying his family.
-"They are painted, Governor! Don't let them surround you."
-
-Semple sends back to the fort for a cannon to be trundled out.
-
-Young Lieutenant Holte's gun goes off by mistake. Semple turns on him
-with fury and bids him have a care: there is to be no firing.
-
-The half-breeds have turned from their trail and are coming forward at a
-gallop.
-
-"There 's Grant, the Plain Ranger, Governor! Let me shoot him," pleads
-one Hudson's Bay man.
-
-"God have mercy on our souls!" mutters one of the colonists, counting the
-foe; "but we are all dead men."
-
-All the world knows the rest. At a knoll where grew some trees, a spot
-now known in Winnipeg on North Main Street as Seven Oaks, Grant, the
-Ranger, sent a half-breed, Boucher, forward to parley.
-
-"What do you want?" demands Semple.
-
-"We want our fort!"
-
-"Go to your fort, then!"
-
-"Rascal! You have destroyed our fort!"
-
-"Dare you to speak so to me? Arrest him!"
-
-Boucher slips from his saddle. The Plain Rangers think he has been shot.
-Instantaneously from both sides crashes musketry fire. Semple falls with
-a broken thigh. Before Grant can control his murderous crew or obtain
-aid for the wounded governor, a scamp of a half-breed has slashed the
-fallen man to death. Two or three Hudson's Bay men escape through the
-long grass {395} and swim across Red River. Two or three more save
-themselves by instant surrender. For the rest of the twenty-seven, they
-lie where they have fallen. They are stripped, mutilated, cut to pieces.
-Only one Nor'wester is killed, only one wounded.
-
-Later, in order to save the lives of the settlers, Fort Douglas is
-surrendered. For a second time the colonists are dispersed. Before
-going down Red River in flatboats two of the Hudson's Bay people go out
-with Chief Peguis by night and bury the dead; but they have no time to
-dig deep graves, and a few days later the wolves have ripped up the
-bodies.
-
-Near Lake Winnipeg the fleeing colonists meet the Northwest partners with
-their one hundred and seventy men. No need to announce what the
-spectacle of the terrified colonists means. A wild whoop rends the air.
-"Thank Providence it was all over before we came," writes one devout
-Nor'wester; "for we intended to storm the fort." Both crews pause. The
-Nor'westers interrogate the settlers. Semple's private papers are
-seized. Also, two Hudson's Bay men who took part in the Seven Oaks fight
-are arrested, to be carried on down to Northwest headquarters on Lake
-Superior. Then the settlers go on to Lake Winnipeg.
-
-At the various camping places on the way down to Fort William, those two
-Hudson's Bay prisoners overhear strange threats. It is night on the Lake
-of the Woods. Voices of Northwest partners sound through the dark. They
-are talking of Selkirk coming to the rescue of his people with an armed
-force. Says the wild voice of a Nor'wester whose brother had been killed
-by a Hudson's Bay man some years before, "There are fine quiet places
-along Winnipeg River if he comes this way." . . . Then scraps of
-conversation. . . . Then, "The half-breeds could capture him when he is
-asleep." . . . Then words too low to be heard. . . . Then, "They could
-have the Indians shoot him." . . . Then in voice of authority
-restraining the wild folly of a bloodthirst for vengeance, "Things have
-gone too far, but we can throw the blame on the Indians."
-
-The wild words of a man gone mad for revenge must not be taken as the
-policy of a great commercial company.
-
-{396} Meantime, where was Selkirk? He had arrived in Montreal. Secret
-coureur, whose adventures I have told elsewhere, had carried him word of
-the dangers impending over his colony. He at once appealed to the
-Governor General for a military force to protect the settlers, but it
-must be recalled how Upper and Lower Canada were to be governed under the
-Act of 1791. There were to be the governor, the legislative council
-appointed by the crown, and the representative assembly. The legislative
-council was entirely dominated by the Northwest Company. Of the
-different Quebec courts, there was scarcely a judge who was not
-interested directly or indirectly in the Northwest Company. Lord Selkirk
-could obtain no aid which would conflict with that company's policy.
-Then Selkirk petitioned the Governor that, in view of the threats against
-himself, he might be granted the commission of a justice of the peace and
-permission to take a personal bodyguard at his own cost to the west.
-These requests the Governor granted.
-
-Thereupon, Selkirk gathers up some two hundred of the De Meuron and De
-Watteville regiments, mercenaries disbanded after the War of 1812, and
-sets out for the west. Not aware that Robertson has left Red River, he
-sends him word to keep the colonists together and to expect help by way
-of the states from the Sault in order to avoid touching at the
-Nor'westers' post at Fort William. The coureur with this message is
-waylaid by the Nor'westers, but Selkirk himself, preceded by his former
-governor, Miles MacDonell, has gone only as far as the Sault when word
-comes back of the Seven Oaks massacre. What to do now? He can obtain no
-justice in Eastern Canada. Two justices of the peace at the Sault refuse
-to be involved in the quarrel by accompanying him. Selkirk goes on
-without them, accompanied by the two hundred hired soldiers; but instead
-of proceeding to Red River by Minnesota, as he had first planned, he
-strikes straight for Fort William, the headquarters of the Nor'westers.
-
-He arrives at the fort August 12, only a few days after the Northwest
-partners had come down from the scene of the {397} massacre at Red River.
-Cannon are planted opposite Fort William. Things have "gone too far."
-The Nor'westers capitulate without a stroke. Then as justice of the
-peace, my Lord Selkirk arrests all the partners but one and sends them
-east to stand trial for the massacre of Seven Oaks. The one partner not
-sent east was a fuddled old drunkard long since retired from active work.
-This man now executes a deed of sale to my Lord Selkirk for Fort William
-and its furs. The man was so intoxicated that he could not write, so the
-afore-time governor, Miles MacDonell, writes out the bargain, which one
-could wish so great a philanthropist as Selkirk had not touched with
-tongs. Before midwinter of 1817 has passed, the De Meuron soldiers have
-crossed Minnesota and gone down Red River to Fort Douglas. One stormy
-night they scale the wall and bundle the Northwest usurpers out, bag and
-baggage.
-
-[Illustration: MONUMENT TO COMMEMORATE THE MASSACRE OF SEVEN OAKS]
-
-July of 1817 comes Selkirk himself to the Promised Land. There is no
-record that I have been able to find of his thoughts on first nearing the
-ground for which so much blood had been shed, and for which he himself
-was yet to suffer much; but {398} one can venture to say that his most
-daring hope did not grasp the empire that was to grow from the seed he
-had planted. He meets the Indians in treaty for their lands. He greets
-his colonists in the open one sunny August day, speaking personally to
-each and deeding over to them land free of all charge. "This land I give
-for your church," he said, standing on the ground which the cathedral now
-occupies. "That plot shall be for your school," pointing across the
-gully; "and in memory of your native land, let the parish be called
-Kildonan."
-
-
-Of the trials and counter trials between the two companies, there is not
-space to tell here. Selkirk was forced to pay heavy damages for his
-course at Fort William, but the courts of Eastern Canada record not a
-single conviction against the Nor'westers for the massacre of Seven Oaks.
-Selkirk retired shattered in health to Europe, where he died in 1820.
-The same year passed away Alexander MacKenzie, his old-time rival.
-
-The truth is, each company had gone too far and was on the verge of ruin.
-From Athabasca came the furs that prevented bankruptcy, and whichever
-company could drive the other from Athabasca could practically force its
-rival to ruin or union. When Colin Robertson had rallied the dispersed
-colonists from Lake Winnipeg, he had left John Clarke to conduct the two
-hundred Canadian voyageurs to Athabasca for the Hudson's Bay Company.
-Clarke had been a Nor'wester before he joined Astor, and was a born
-fighter, idolized by the Indians. So confident was he of success now
-that he galloped his canoes up the Saskatchewan without pause to gather
-provisions. Once on the ground on Athabasca Lake, he divided his party
-into two or three bands and sent them foraging to the Nor'westers' forts
-and hunting grounds up Peace River, down Slave Lake, at Athabasca itself.
-Weakened by division and without food to keep together, his men fell easy
-prey to the wily Nor'westers. Of those on Slave Lake eighteen died from
-starvation. Those on Peace River were captured and literally whipped out
-of the country, signing oaths never to return. Those at {399} Athabasca
-being leading officers were held prisoners. Meanwhile the Hudson's Bay
-Company is defeated at Seven Oaks and victorious at Fort William. The
-Nor'westers at Athabasca were keen to keep the frightened Indians of the
-north ignorant that Selkirk had triumphed at Fort William, but the news
-traveled over the two thousand miles of prairie in that strange hunter
-fashion known as "moccasin telegram," and the story is told how the
-captured Hudson's Bay officers let the secret out for the benefit of the
-Indians now afraid to carry their hunt to a Hudson's Bay man.
-
-Revels and all-night carousals marked the winter with the triumphant
-Nor'westers of Athabasca Lake. Often, when wild drinking songs were
-ringing in the Nor'westers' dining hall, the Hudson's Bay men would be
-brought in to furnish a butt for their merciless victors. One night,
-when the hall was full of Indians, one of the Northwest bullies began to
-brawl out a song in celebration of the Seven Oaks affair.
-
- "The H.B.C. came up a hill, and _up_ a hill they came,
- The H.B.C. came up the hill, but _down_ they went again."
-
-
-Tired of their rude horseplay, one of the Hudson's Bay officers spoke up:
-"Y' hae niver asked me for a song. I hae a varse o' me ain compaesin."
-
-Then to the utter amaze of the drunken listeners and astonishment of the
-Indians, the game old officer trolled off this stave:
-
- "But Selkirk brave went _up_ a hill, and to Fort William came!
- When in he popped and out from thence could not be driven again."
-
-
-The thunderstruck Nor'wester leaped to his feet with a yell: "A hundred
-guineas for the name of the men who brought that news here."
-
-"A hundred guineas for twa lines of me ain compaesin! Extravagant, sir,"
-returns the canny Scot.
-
-
-From accounts held by the Hudson's Bay Company's Montreal lawyers it is
-seen that Clarke's expedition cost the Company 20,000 pounds.
-
-{400} Before the massacre of Seven Oaks Colin Robertson had gone down to
-Hudson Bay in high dudgeon with Semple, intending to take ship for
-England; but that fall the ice drive prevented one ship from leaving the
-bay, and Robertson was stranded at Moose Factory for the winter, whither
-coureurs brought him word of the Seven Oaks tragedy and Selkirk's victory
-at Fort William. Taking an Indian for guide, Robertson set out on
-snowshoes for Montreal, following the old Ottawa trail traversed by
-Radisson and Iberville long ago. Montreal he found in a state of turmoil
-almost verging on riot over the imprisonment of the Northwest partners,
-whom Selkirk had sent east. Nightly the goals [Transcriber's note:
-gaols?] were illuminated as for festivals. Nightly sound of wandering
-musicians came from the cell windows, where loyal friends were serenading
-the imprisoned partners. They were released, of course, and acquitted
-from the charge of responsibility for the massacre of Seven Oaks.
-
-Presently Robertson finds himself behind the bars for his part in
-destroying Fort Gibraltar and arresting Duncan Cameron. He too is
-acquitted, and he tells us frankly that a private arrangement had been
-made beforehand with the presiding judge. Probably if the Nor'westers
-had been as frank, the same influence would explain their acquittal.
-
-Robertson found himself free just about the time Lord Selkirk came back
-from Red River by way of the Mississippi in order to avoid those careful
-plans for his welfare on the part of the Nor'westers at "the quiet places
-along Winnipeg River." The Governor of Canada had notified members of
-both companies unofficially that the English government advised the
-rivals to find some basis of union, which practically meant that if the
-investigations under way were pushed to extremes, both sides might find
-themselves in awkward plight; but the fight had gone beyond the period of
-pure commercialism. It was now a matter of deadly personal hate between
-man and man, which, I am sorry to say, has been carried down by the
-descendants of the old fighters almost to the present day. Each side
-hoped to drive the other to bankruptcy; and the last throes of the {401}
-deadly struggle were to be in Athabasca, the richest fur field. While
-Selkirk is fighting his cause in the courts, he gives Robertson carte
-blanche to gather two hundred more French voyageurs and proceed to the
-Athabasca.
-
-[Illustration: TRACKING ON ATHABASCA RIVER]
-
-Midsummer of 1819 finds the stalwart Robertson crossing Lake Winnipeg to
-ascend the Saskatchewan. At the mouth of the Saskatchewan a miserable
-remnant of terrified men from the last Athabasca expedition is added to
-Robertson's party; and John Clarke, breathing death and destruction
-against the Nor'westers, goes along as lieutenant to Robertson.
-Everywhere are signs of the lawless conditions of the fur trade. Not an
-Indian dare speak to a Hudson's Bay man on pain of horsewhipping.
-Instead of canoes gliding up and down the Saskatchewan like birds of
-passage, reign a silence and solitude as of the dead. Though Robertson
-bids his voyageurs sing and fire off muskets as signals for trade, not a
-soul comes down to the river banks till the fleet of advancing traders is
-well away from the Saskatchewan and halfway across the height of land
-towards the Athabasca.
-
-{402} The amazement of the Nor'westers at Fort Chippewyan in Athabasca
-when Robertson pulled ashore at the conglomeration of huts known as Fort
-Wedderburn, may be guessed. Two or three of the partners ran down to the
-shore and called out that they would like to parley; but John Clarke,
-filled with memory of former outrages and rocking the canoe in his fury
-so that it almost upset, met the overtures with a volley of stentorian
-abuse that sent the Nor'westers scampering and set Robertson laughing
-till the tears ran down his cheeks.
-
-The change of spirit on the part of the Nor'westers was easily explained.
-The most of their men were absent on the hunting field. In a few weeks
-Robertson had his huts in order and had dispatched his trappers down to
-Slave Lake and westward up Peace River. Then, in October, came more
-Nor'west partners from Montreal. The Nor'westers were stronger now and
-not so peacefully inclined. Nightly the French bullies, well plied with
-whisky, would come across to the Hudson's Bay fort, bawling out challenge
-to fight; but Robertson held his men in hand and kept his powder dry.
-
-Early on the morning of October the 11th, Robertson's valet roused him
-from bed with word that a man had been accidentally shot. Slipping a
-pistol in his pocket and all unsuspicious of trickery, Robertson dashed
-out. It happened that the most of his men were at a slight distance from
-his fort. Before they could rally to his rescue he was knocked down,
-disarmed, surrounded by the Nor'westers, thrown into a boat, and carried
-back to their fort a captive. In vain he stormed almost apoplectic with
-rage, and tried to send back Indian messengers to his men. The
-Nor'westers laughed at him good-naturedly and relegated him to quarters
-in one room of a log hut, where sole furnishings were a berth bed and a
-fireplace without a floor. Robertson's only possessions in captivity
-were the clothes on his back, a jackknife, a small pencil, and a
-notebook; but he probably consoled himself that his men were now on
-guard, and, outnumbering the Nor'westers two to one, could hold the
-ground for the Hudson's Bay that winter. As {403} time passed the
-captive Robertson began to wrack his brains how to communicate with his
-men. It was a drinking age; and the fur traders had the reputation of
-capacity to drink any other class of men off their legs. Robertson
-feigned an unholy thirst. Rapping for his guard, he requested that
-messengers might be sent across to the Hudson's Bay fort for a keg of
-liquor. It can be guessed how readily the Nor'westers complied; but
-Robertson took good care, when the guard was absent and the door locked,
-to pour out most of the whisky on the earth floor. Then taking slips of
-paper from his notebook, he cut them in strips the width of a spool. On
-these he wrote cipher and mysterious instructions, which only his men
-could understand, giving full information of the Nor'westers' movements,
-bidding his people hold their own, and ordering them to send messages
-down to the new Hudson's Bay governor at Red River,--William
-Williams,--to place his De Meuron soldiers in ambush along the Grand
-Rapids of the Saskatchewan to catch the Northwest partners on their way
-to Montreal the next spring. These slips of paper he rolled up tight as
-a spool and hammered into the bunghole of the barrel. Then he plastered
-clay over all to hide the paper, and bade the guard carry this keg of
-whisky back to the H.B.C. fort; it was musty, Robertson complained; let
-the men rinse out the keg and put in a fresh supply!
-
-All that winter Robertson, the Hudson's Bay man, captive in the
-Nor'westers' fort, sent weekly commands to his men by means of the whisky
-kegs; but in the spring his trick was discovered, and the angry
-Nor'westers decided he was too clever a man to be kept on the field.
-They would ship him out of the country when their furs were sent east.
-
-On the way east he succeeded in escaping at Cumberland House. Waiting
-only a few hours, he launched out in his canoe and followed on the trail
-of the Northwest partners, on down to see what would happen at Grand
-Rapids, where the Saskatchewan flows into Lake Winnipeg. A jubilant
-shout from a canoe turning a bend in the river presently announced the
-news: "All the Northwest partners captured!" When Robertson {404} came
-to Grand Rapids he found Governor Williams and the De Meurons in
-possession. Cannon pointed across the river below the rapids. The
-Northwest partners were prisoners in a hut. The voyageurs were allowed
-to go on down to Montreal with the furs. This last act in the great
-struggle ended tragically enough. What was to be done with the captured
-partners? They could not be sent to Eastern Canada. Pending
-investigations for the union of the companies, Governor Williams sent
-them to York Factory, Hudson Bay, whence some took ship to England,
-others set out overland on snowshoes for Canada; but in the scuffle at
-Grand Rapids, Frobisher, one of the oldest partners, with a reputation of
-great cruelty in his treatment of Hudson's Bay men, had been violently
-clubbed on the head with a gun. From that moment he became a raving
-maniac, and the Hudson's Bay people did not know what to do with such a
-captive. He must not be permitted to go home to England. His condition
-was too terrible evidence against them; so they kept him prisoner in the
-outhouses of York Factory, with two faithful Nor'wester half-breeds as
-personal attendants.
-
-One dark cold night towards the first of October Frobisher succeeded in
-escaping through the broken bars of his cell window. A leap took him
-over the pickets. By chance an old canoe lay on Hayes River. With this
-he began to ascend stream for the interior, paddling wildly, laughing
-wildly, raving and singing. The two half-breeds knew that a voyage to
-the interior at this season without snowshoes, food, or heavy clothing,
-meant certain death; but they followed their master faithfully as black
-slaves. Wherever night found them they turned the canoe upside down and
-slept under it. Fish lines supplied food, and the deserted hut of some
-hunter occasionally gave them shelter for the night. Winter set in
-early. The ice edging of the river cut the birch canoe. Abandoning it,
-they went forward on foot. From York Fort, Hudson Bay, the nearest
-Northwest post was seven hundred miles. By the end of October they had
-not gone half the distance. Then came one of those changes so frequent
-in northern climes,--a sunburst of warm {405} weather following the first
-early winter, turning all the frozen fields to swimming marshes, and the
-travelers had no canoe. By this time Frobisher was too weak to walk. As
-his body failed his mind rallied, and he begged the two half-breeds to go
-on without him, as delay meant the death of all three; but the faithful
-fellows carried him by turns on their backs. They themselves were now so
-emaciated they were making but a few miles a day. Their moccasins had
-been worn to tatters, and all three looked more like skeletons than
-living men. Then, the third week of November, Frobisher could go no
-farther, and the servants' strength failed. Building a fire in a
-sheltered place for their master, the two faithful fellows left Frobisher
-somewhere west of Lake Winnipeg. Two days later they crept into a
-Northwest post too weak to speak, and handed the Northwesters a note
-scrawled by Frobisher, asking them to send a rescue party. Frobisher was
-found lying across the ashes of the fire. Life was extinct.
-
-[Illustration: PLANS OF YORK AND PRINCE OF WALES FORTS]
-
-
-In 1820 the union of the companies put an end to the ruinous and criminal
-struggle. George Simpson, afterwards knighted, {406} who has been sent
-to look over matters in Athabasca, is appointed governor, and Nicholas
-Garry, one of the London directors, comes out to appoint the officers of
-the united companies to their new districts. The scene is one for artist
-brush,--the last meeting of the partners at Fort William, Hudson's Bay
-men and Nor'westers, such deadly enemies they would not speak, sitting in
-the great dining hall, glowering at each other across tables: George
-Simpson at one end of the tables, pompously dressed in ruffles and satin
-coat and silk breeches, vainly endeavoring to keep up suave conversation;
-Nicholas Garry at the other end of the table, also very pompous and
-smooth, but with a look on his face as if he were sitting above a powder
-mine, the Highland pipers dressed in tartans, standing at each end of the
-hall, filling the room with the drone and the skurl of the bagpipes.
-
-[Illustration: SIR GEORGE SIMPSON, GOVERNOR OF HUDSON'S BAY COMPANY, 1820]
-
-By the union of the companies both sides avoided proving their rights in
-the law courts. Most important of all, the Hudson's Bay Company escaped
-proving its charter valid; for the charter applied only to Hudson Bay and
-adjacent lands "not occupied by other Christian powers"; but on the union
-taking place, the British government granted to the new Hudson's Bay
-Company license of exclusive monopoly to _all_ the Indian territory,
-meaning (1) Hudson Bay Country, (2) the interior, (3) New Caledonia as
-well as Oregon. In fact, the union left the fur traders ten times more
-strongly intrenched than before. {407} By the new arrangement Dr. John
-McLoughlin was appointed chief factor of the western territories known as
-Oregon and New Caledonia. When the War of 1812 closed, treaty provided
-that Oregon should be open to the joint occupancy of English and American
-traders till the matter of the western boundary could be finally settled.
-Oregon roughly included all territory between the Columbia and the
-Spanish fort at San Francisco, namely, Washington, Oregon, Northern
-California, Idaho, Utah, Nevada, parts of Montana and Wyoming. It was
-cheaper to send provisions round by sea to the fur posts of New
-Caledonia, in modern British Columbia, than across the continent by way
-of the Saskatchewan; so McLoughlin's district also included all the
-territory far as the Russian possessions in Alaska.
-
-This part of the Hudson's Bay Company's history belongs to the United
-States rather than Canada, but it is interesting to remember that just as
-the French fur traders explored the Mississippi far south as the Gulf of
-Mexico, so English fur traders first explored the western states far
-south as New Spain. This western field was perhaps the most picturesque
-of all the Hudson's Bay Company's possessions.
-
-Fort Vancouver, ninety miles inland from the sea on the Columbia, was the
-capital of this transmontane kingdom, and yearly till 1846 the fur
-brigades set out from Fort Vancouver two or three hundred strong by pack
-horse and canoe. Well-known officers became regular leaders of the
-different brigades. There was Ross, who led the Rocky Mountain Brigade
-inland across the Divide to the buffalo ranges of Montana. There was
-Ogden, son of the Chief Justice in Montreal, who led the Southern Brigade
-up Snake River to Salt Lake and the Nevada desert and Humboldt River and
-Mt. Shasta, all of which regions except Salt Lake he was first to
-discover. There was Tom McKay, son of the McKay who had crossed to the
-Pacific with MacKenzie, who, dressed as a Spanish cavalier, led the
-pack-horse brigades down the coast past the Rogue River Indians and the
-Klamath Lakes to San Francisco, where Dr. Glen Rae had opened a fort for
-the Hudson's Bay Company. {408} Then there was the New Caledonia
-Brigade, two hundred strong, which set out from Fort Vancouver up the
-Columbia in canoes to the scream of the bagpipes through the rocky
-canyons of the river. Close to the boundary, shift was made from canoe
-to pack horse, and, leaving the Columbia, the brigade struck up the
-Okanogan Valley to Kamloops, bound for the bridle trail up Fraser River.
-This brigade, in later days, was under Douglas, who became the knighted
-governor of British Columbia. Tricked out in gay ribbons, the long file
-of pack ponies, two hundred with riders, two hundred more with packs,
-moved slowly along the forest trail with a drone as of bees humming in
-midsummer. So well did ponies know the way that riders often fell
-asleep, to be suddenly jarred awake by the horses jamming against a tree,
-or running under a low branch to brush riders off, or hurdle-jumping over
-windfall. Each of these brigades has its own story, and each story would
-fill a book. For instance, Glen Rae at San Francisco has a difficult
-mission. The company has a plan to take over the debts of Mexico to
-British capitalists and exchange them for California. Glen Rae is sent
-to watch matters, but he commits the blunder of furnishing arms to the
-losing side of a revolution. The debt for the arms remains unpaid. Glen
-Rae suicides, and the company withdraws from California.
-
-[Illustration: JOHN MCLOUGHLIN]
-
-{409} Presently come American settlers and missionaries over the
-mountains. The American government delays settling that treaty of joint
-occupancy, for the more American settlers that come, the stronger will be
-the American claim to the territory. McLoughlin helps the settlers who
-would have starved without his aid, and McLoughlin receives such sharp
-censure from his company for this that he resigns. When the American
-settlers set up a provisional government, the foolish cry is raised, "54,
-40 or fight," which means the Americans claim all the way up to Alaska,
-and for this there is no warrant either through their own occupation or
-discovery. The boundary is compromised by the Treaty of Oregon in 1846
-at the 49th parallel.
-
-When settlers come, fur-bearing animals leave. Long ago the Hudson's Bay
-Company had foreseen the end and moved the capital of its Pacific Empire
-up to Victoria. A string of fur posts extends up Fraser River to New
-Caledonia.
-
-
-
-
-{410}
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-FROM 1820 TO 1867
-
-How the Family Compact worked--The old order changeth--"Loyalty
-cry"--Gourley driven mad--Richmond's tragic death--Patriots of the
-plow--Defeat of patriots--Duncombe's escape--Execution of
-patriots--Bloodshed in Quebec--Chenier's tragic death--Durham gives
-Canada a Magna Charta--Confederation--What of the future
-
-
-It will be recalled that on the coming of the United Empire Loyalists
-to Canada, the form of government was changed by the Constitutional Act
-of 1791, dividing the country into Upper and Lower Canada, the
-government of each province to consist of a governor, the legislative
-council, and the assembly. Unfortunately, self-government for the
-colonies was not yet a recognized principle of English rule. While the
-assemblies of the two provinces were elected by the people, the power
-of the assemblies was practically a blank, for the governor and council
-were the real rulers, and they were appointed by the Crown, which meant
-Downing Street, which meant in turn that the two Canadas were regarded
-as the happy hunting ground for incompetent office seekers of the great
-English parties. From the governor general to the most insignificant
-postal clerk, all were appointed from Downing Street. Influence, not
-merit, counted, which perhaps explains why one can count on the fingers
-of one hand the number of governors and lieutenants from 1791 to 1841
-who were worthy of their trust and did not disgrace their position by
-blunders that were simply notorious. Prevost's disgraceful retreat
-from Lake Champlain in the War of 1812 is a typical example of the
-mischief a political jobber can work when placed in position of trust;
-but the life-and-death struggle of the war prevented the people turning
-their attention to questions of misgovernment, and it is hardly an
-exaggeration to say that the Act of 1791 reduced Canadian affairs to
-the chaos of a second Ireland and retarded the progress of the country
-for a century.
-
-It has become customary for English writers to slur over the disorders
-of 1837 as the results of the ignorant rabble following {411} the bad
-advice of the hot-heads, MacKenzie and Papineau; but it is worth
-remembering that everything the rabble fought for, and hanged for, has
-since been incorporated in Canada's constitution as the very woof and
-warp of responsible government.
-
-Let us see how the system worked out in detail.
-
-After the War of 1812 Prevost dies before court-martial can pronounce
-on his misconduct at Plattsburg, and Sir Gorden Drummond, the hero of
-Fort Erie's siege, is sworn in.
-
-Canada is governed from Downing Street, and it is my Lord Bathurst's
-brilliant idea that forever after the war there shall be a belt of
-twenty miles left waste forest and prairie between Canada and the
-United States, presumably to prevent democracy rolling across the
-northern boundary. Fortunately the rough horse sense of the
-frontiersman is wiser than the wisdom of the British statesman, and
-settlement continues along the boundary in spite of Bathurst's
-brilliant idea.
-
-Those who fought in the War of 1812 are to be rewarded by grants of
-land,--rewarded, of course, by the Crown, which means the Governor; but
-the Governor must listen to the advice of his councilors, who are
-appointed for life; and to the heroes of 1812 the councilors grant
-fifty acres apiece, while to themselves the said councilors vote grants
-of land running from twenty thousand to eighty thousand acres apiece.
-
-After the war it is agreed that neither Canada nor the United States
-shall keep war vessels on the lakes, except such cruisers as shall be
-necessary to maintain order among the fisheries; but the credit for
-this wise arrangement does not belong to the councils at Toronto or
-Quebec, for the suggestions came from Washington.
-
-As the legislative councilors are appointed for life, they control
-enormous patronage, recommending all appointments to government
-positions and meeting any applicants for office, who are outside the
-"_family_" ring, with the curt refusal that has become famous for its
-insolence, "_no one but a gentleman_."
-
-Judges are appointed by favor. So are local magistrates. So are
-collectors at the different ports of entry. Smaller cities like {412}
-Kingston are year after year refused incorporation, because
-incorporation would confer self-government, and that would oust members
-of the "_family compact_" who held positions in these places.
-
-Officeholders are responsible to the Crown only, not to the people.
-Therefore when Receiver General Caldwell of Quebec does away with
-96,000 pounds, or two years' revenue of Lower Canada, he accounts for
-the defalcation to his friends with the explanation of unlucky
-investments, and goes scot free.
-
-Quebec is a French province, but appointments are made in England; so
-that out of 71,000 pounds paid to its civil servants 58,000 pounds go
-to the English officeholders, 13,000 pounds to French; out of 36,000
-pounds paid to judges only 8,000 pounds go to the French.
-
-And in Upper Canada, Ontario, it was even worse. In Quebec there was
-always the division of French against English, and Catholic against
-Protestant; but in Upper Canada "_the family compact_" of councilors
-against commoners was a solid and unbroken ring. When the assembly
-raises objections to some items of expense sent down by the council,
-writes Lieutenant Governor Simcoe in high dudgeon, "I will send the
-rascals," meaning the commoners, "packing about their business," and he
-prorogues the House.
-
-Not all the governors and their lieutenants are as foolishly blind to
-the faults of the system as Simcoe of Ontario. Sir John Sherbrooke of
-Quebec, who succeeds Drummond in Lower Canada, knows very well he is
-surrounded by a pack of thieves; but they are his councilors, appointed
-for life, and there he is, bound to abide by their advice.
-Nevertheless, he kicks over traces vigorously now and then, like the
-old war horse that he is. The commissary general comes to him with
-word that 600 pounds is missing from the military chest, and he needs a
-warrant for search.
-
-"Search, indeed!" roars Sir John. "There's not the slightest need!
-Whenever there is a robbery in _your_ department, it is among
-yourselves! Go and find it!"
-
-{413}
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN SHERBROOKE, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA,
-1816-1818]
-
-Curious it is how good men reared in the old school, where the masses
-exist for the benefit of the classes and the governed are to be allowed
-to exist only by favor of those who govern--curious how good men fail
-to read the sign of the times. Colonel Tom Talbot's settlement in West
-Ontario has, by 1832, increased to 50,000 people, and the mad
-harum-scarum of court days is becoming an old man. Talbot has been a
-legislative councilor for life, but it is not on record that he ever
-attended the council in Toronto. Still he views with high disfavor
-this universal discontent with "being governed." The secret meetings
-held to agitate for responsible government, Tom Talbot regards as "a
-pestilence" leading on to the worst disease from which humanity can
-suffer, namely, democracy. The old bear stirs uneasily in his lair, as
-reports come in of louder and louder demands that the colony shall be
-_permitted to govern itself_. What would become of kings and colonels
-and land grants by special favor, if colonies governed themselves?
-Colonel Tom Talbot doffs his homespun and his coon cap, and he dons the
-satin ruffles of twenty-five years ago, and he mounts his steed and he
-rides pompously forth to the market place of St. Thomas Town on St.
-George's Day of 1832. Bands play; flags wave; the country people from
-twenty miles round come riding to town. Banners {414} inscribed with
-"Loyalty to the Constitution" are carried at the head of parades. The
-venerable old colonel is greeted with burst after burst of shouting as
-he comes prancing on horseback up the hill. The band plays "the
-British Grenadiers." The Highland bagpipes skurl a welcome. Then the
-old man mounts the rostrum and delivers a speech that ought to be
-famous as an exposition of good old Tory doctrine:
-
-Some black sheep have slipped into my flock, and very black they are,
-and what is worse, they have got the rot, a distemper not known in this
-settlement till some I shall call for short "rebels" began their work
-of darkness under cover of organizing Blanked Cold Water Drinking
-Societies, where they meet at night to communicate their poisonous
-schemes and circulate the infection and delude the unwary! Then they
-assumed a more daring aspect under mask of a grievance petition, which,
-when it was placed before me, I would not take the trouble to read,
-being aware it was trash founded on falsehood, fabricated to create
-discontent.
-
-At the end of a half hour's tirade, of which these lines are a sample,
-the good old Tory raised his hands, and in the words of the Church's
-benediction blessed his people and prayed Heaven to keep their minds
-untainted by sedition.
-
-Looking back less than a century, it is almost impossible to believe
-that the colonel's speech--it cannot be called reasoning--was applauded
-to the echo and regarded as a masterly justification of people "being
-governed" rather than governing themselves.
-
-Perhaps, after all, it was not so much the Constitution of Canada that
-caused the conflict as the clash between the old-time feudalism and the
-spirit of modern, aggressive democracy. The United States _fought_
-this question out in 1776. Canada _wrestled_, it cannot be called a
-_fight_, the same question out in 1837.
-
-
-It is necessary to give one or two cases of individual persecution to
-understand how the disorders flamed to open rebellion.
-
-One Matthews, an officer of the 1812 War, living on a pension, had
-incurred the distrust of the governing ring by expressing sympathy with
-the agitators. Now to be an agitator was bad enough in the eyes of
-"_the family compact_," but for one of their {415} own social circle to
-sympathize with the outsiders was, to the snobocracy clique of the
-little city of ten thousand at Toronto, almost an unpardonable sin.
-Such sins were punished by social ostracism, by the grand dames of
-Toronto not inviting the officer's wife to social functions, by the
-families of the upper clique literally freezing the sinner's children
-out of the foremost circles of social life. Many a Canadian family is
-proud to trace lineage back to some old lady of this tempestuous
-period, whose only claim to recognition is that she waged petty
-persecution against the heroes of Canadian progress. Now the annals of
-the times do not record that this special sinner's wife and children so
-suffered. At all events Matthews' spirits were not cast down by social
-snobbery. He continued to sympathize with the agitators. The "_family
-compact_" bided their time, and their time came a few months later,
-when a company of American actors came to Toronto. A band concert had
-been given. When the British national air struck up, all hats were
-off. Then some one called for "Yankee Doodle," and in compliment to
-the visitors, when the American air struck up, Matthews shouted out for
-"hats off." For this sin the legislative council ordered the
-lieutenant governor to cut off Matthews' pension, and, to the
-everlasting shame of Sir Peregrine Maitland, the advice was taken,
-though Matthews had twenty-seven years of service to his credit.
-Matthews appealed to England, and his pension was restored, so that in
-this case "_the family compact_" for political reasons was pretending
-to be more British than Great Britain. It was not to be the last
-occasion on which "the loyalty cry" was to be used as a political dodge.
-
-The persecution of Robert Gourlay was yet more outrageous.
-
-He had come to Canada soon after the War of 1812, and in the course of
-collecting statistics for a book on the colony was quick to realize how
-Canada's progress was being literally gagged by the policy of the
-ruling clique. Gourlay attacked the local magistrates in the press.
-He pointed out that the land grants were notorious. He advocated
-bombarding the evils from two sides at once, by appealing to the home
-government and by {416} holding local conventions of protest. The pass
-to which things had come may be realized by the attitude of the
-council. It held that the colony must hold no communications with the
-imperial government except through the Governor General; in other
-words, individual appeals not passing through the hands of the
-legislative council were to be regarded as illegal. It is sad to have
-to acknowledge that such a palpably dishonest measure was ever
-countenanced by people in their right minds. But "_the family
-compact_" went a step farther. It passed an order forbidding meetings
-to discuss public grievances. This part of Canada's story reads more
-like Russia than America, and shows to what length men will go when
-special privileges rather than equal rights prevail in a country.
-Gourlay met these infamous measures by penning some witty doggerel,
-headed "Gagged, gagged, by Jingo!" The editor in whose paper Gourlay's
-writings had appeared, was arrested, and the offending sheet was
-compelled to suspend. Gourlay himself is arrested for sedition and
-libel at least four times, but each time the jury acquits him. At any
-cost the governing clique must get rid of this scribbling fellow, whose
-pen voices the rising discontent. An alien act, passed before the War
-of 1812, compelling the deportation of seditious persons, is revived.
-Under the terms of the act Gourlay is arrested, tried, and sentenced to
-be exiled, but Gourlay declares he is not an alien. He is a British
-subject, and he refuses to leave the country. He is thrown in jail at
-Niagara, and for a year and a half left in a moldy, close cell. One
-dislikes to write that this outrage on British justice was perpetrated
-under Chief Justice Powell, whose failure to obtain decisions from the
-jury in the Red River trials brought down such harsh criticism on the
-bench. At the end of twenty months Gourlay is again hauled before the
-jury and sentenced to deportation on pain of death if he refuses. He
-was calmly asked if he had anything to say, if there were any reason
-why sentence should not be pronounced.
-
-"Anything . . . to . . . say? Any reason . . . why . . .
-sentence . . . should not be pronounced?" From 1818 to 1820 {417}
-Gourlay had been having things "to say," had been giving good and
-sufficient reasons why sentence should not be pronounced! The question
-is repeated: "Robert Gourlay stand up! Have you anything to say?" The
-court waits, Chief Justice Powell, bewigged and wearing his grandest
-manner, all unconscious that the scene is to go down to history with
-blot of ignominy against _his_ name, not Gourlay's.
-
-Gourlay's face twitches, and he breaks into shrieks of maniacal
-laughter. The petty persecutions of a provincial tyranny have driven a
-man, who is true patriot, out of his mind. As Gourlay drops out of
-Canada's story here, it may be added that the English government later
-pronounced the whole trial an outrage, and Gourlay was invited back to
-Canada.
-
-
-If at this stage a man had come to Canada as governor, big enough and
-just enough to realize that colonies had some rights, there might have
-been remedy; for the imperial government, eager to right the wrong, was
-misled by the legislative councilors, and all at sea as to the source
-of the trouble. While men were being actually driven out of Canada by
-the governing ring on the charge of disloyalty, the colonial minister
-of England was sending secret dispatches to the Governor General,
-instructing him plainly that if independence was what Canada wanted,
-then the mother country, rather than risk a second war with the United
-States, or press conclusions with the Canadas themselves, would
-willingly cede independence. It is as well to be emphatic and clear on
-this point. _It was not the tyranny of England that caused the
-troubles of 1837_. It was the dishonesty of the ruling rings at Quebec
-and Toronto, and this dishonesty was possible because of the
-Constitutional Act of 1791.
-
-Unfortunately, just when imperial statesmen of the modern school were
-needed, governors of the old school were appointed to Canada. After
-Sir John Sherbrooke came the Duke of Richmond to Quebec, and his
-son-in-law, Sir Peregrine Maitland, as lieutenant governor to Ontario.
-Men of more courtly manners never graced the vice-regal chairs of
-Quebec and Toronto. {418} Richmond, who was some fifty years of age,
-had won notoriety in his early days by a duel with a prince of the
-blood royal, honor on both sides being satisfied by Richmond shooting
-away a curl from the royal brow; but presto, an Irish barrister takes
-up the quarrel by challenging Richmond to a second duel for having
-dared to fight a prince; and here Richmond satisfies claims of honor by
-a well-directed ball aimed to wound, not kill. Long years after, when
-the duke became viceroy of Ireland, the Irishman appeared at one of
-Richmond's state balls.
-
-"Hah," laughed the barrister, "the last time we met, your Grace gave
-_me_ a ball."
-
-"Best give you a brace of 'em now," retorted the witty Richmond; and he
-sent his quondam foe invitation to two more balls.
-
-Richmond it was who gave the famous ball before the defeat of Napoleon
-at Waterloo. The story of his daughter's love match with Sir Peregrine
-Maitland is of a piece with the rest of the romance in Richmond's life.
-Richmond and Maitland had been friends in the army, but when the duke
-began to observe that his daughter, Lady Sarah, and the younger man
-were falling in love, he thought to discourage the union with a poor
-man by omitting Maitland's name from invitation lists. When Lady Sarah
-came downstairs to a ball she surmised that Maitland had not been
-invited, and, withdrawing from the assembled guests, drove to her
-lover's apartments. She married Maitland without her father's consent,
-but a reconciliation had been patched up. Father and son-in-law now
-came to Canada as governor and lieutenant governor.
-
-The military and social life of both unfitted them to appreciate the
-conditions in Canada. Socially both were the lions of the hour. As a
-man and gentleman Richmond was simply adored, and Quebec's love of all
-the pomp of monarchy was glutted to the full. No more distinguished
-governor ever played host in the old Chateau St. Louis; but as rulers,
-as pacifiers, as guides of the ship of state, Richmond and Maitland
-were dismal failures. To them Canada's demand for responsible {419}
-government seemed the rallying cry of an impending republic. "We must
-overcome democracy or it will overcome us," pronounced Richmond. He
-failed to see that resistance to the demand for self-government would
-bring about the same results in Canada as resistance had brought about
-in the United States, and he could not guess--for the thing was new in
-the world's history--that the grant of self-government would but bind
-the colony the closer to the mother land.
-
-[Illustration: THE FOURTH DUKE OF RICHMOND, GOVERNOR GENERAL OF CANADA,
-1818-1819]
-
-It is sad to write of two such high-minded, well-intentioned rulers,
-that the worst acts of misgovernment in Canada took place in their
-regime.
-
-Richmond's death was as unusual as his life. Two accounts are given of
-the cause. One states that he permitted a pet dog to touch a cut in
-his face. The other account has it that he was bitten by a tame fox at
-a fair in Sorel, and the date of Richmond's death, late in August of
-1819, exactly two months from the time he was bitten at Sorel,--which
-is the length of time that hydrophobia takes to develop in a grown
-person,--would seem to substantiate the latter story. He was traveling
-on horseback from Perth to Richmond, on the Ottawa, and had complained
-of feeling poorly. A small stream had to be crossed. The sight of the
-stream brought the strange water delirium to Richmond, when he begged
-his attendants to take him quickly to Montreal. It need scarcely be
-explained here that hydrophobia {420} is not caused by lack of water,
-but by contagious transmission. The feeling passed, as the first
-terrors of the disease are usually spasmodic, and the Governor was
-proceeding through the woods with his attendants, when he suddenly
-broke away deliriously, leading them a wild race to a farm shed. There
-he died during the night, crying out as the lucid intervals broke the
-delirium of his agonies: "For shame! for shame Lenox! Richmond, be a
-man! Can you not bear it?"
-
-
-Public affairs are meanwhile passing from bad to worse. William Lyon
-MacKenzie has become leader of the agitators in his newspaper, _The
-Advocate_, of Toronto. A band of young vandals, sons of the ruling
-clique, wreck his newspaper office and throw the type into Toronto Bay,
-but MacKenzie recovers $3000 damages and goes on agitating. Four times
-he is publicly expelled from the House, and four times he is returned
-by the electors. What are they asking, these agitators, branded as
-rebels, expelled from the assembly, in some cases cast in prison by the
-councilors, in others threatened with death?
-
- Control of public revenues.
- Reform in the land system.
- Municipal rights for towns and cities.
- The exclusion of judges from Parliament.
- That the council be directly responsible to the people
- rather than the Crown.
-
-
-Since 1818 the reformers have been agitating to have wrongs righted,
-and for nineteen years the clique has prevented official inquiry,
-gagged the press, bludgeoned conventions out of existence, and thrown
-leaders of opposition in prison.
-
-MacKenzie now makes the mistake of publishing in his papers a letter
-from the English radical Hume, advocating the freedom of Canada "from
-the baneful domination of the mother country." At once, with a jingo
-whoop, the loyalty cry is emitted by "_the family compact_." Is not
-this what they have been telling the Governor from the first,--these
-reformers are republicans in {421} disguise? By trickery and
-manipulation they swing the next election so that MacKenzie is
-defeated. From that moment MacKenzie's tone changed. It may be that,
-losing all hope of reform, he became a republican. If this were
-treason, then the English ministers, who were advocating the same
-remedy, were guilty of the same treason. With MacKenzie, secretly and
-openly, are a host of sympathizers,--Dr. Rolph, Tom Talbot's old
-friend, come up from the London district to practice medicine in
-Toronto, and Van Egmond, who has helped to settle the Huron Tract of
-the Canada Company, founded by John Galt, the novelist, and some four
-thousand others whose names MacKenzie has on a list in his carpet bag.
-
-[Illustration: WILLIAM LYON MACKENZIE]
-
-All the autumn of 1837 Fitzgibbons, now commander of the troops in
-Toronto, hears vague rumors of farmers secretly drilling, of workmen
-extemporizing swords out of scythes, of old soldiers furbishing up
-their arms of the 1812 War. What does it mean? Sir Francis Bond Head,
-the new governor of Ontario, refuses to believe his own ears. Neither
-does _the family compact_ realize that there is any danger to their
-long tenure of power. They affect to sneer at these poor patriots of
-the plow, little dreaming that the rights which these poor patriots of
-the scythe swords are burning to defend, will, by and by, be the pride
-of England's colonial system. The story of plot and counter plot
-cannot be told in detail here; it is too {422} long. But on the night
-of Monday, December 4, Toronto wakes up to a wild ringing of college
-bells. The rebel patriots have collected at Montgomery's Tavern
-outside Toronto, and are advancing on the city.
-
-Poor MacKenzie's plans have gone all awry. Four thousand patriots had
-pledged themselves to assemble at the tavern on December 7, but Dr.
-Rolph, or some other friend in the city, sends word that the date has
-been discovered. The only hope of seizing the city is for them to come
-sooner; and MacKenzie arrives at the tavern on December 3, with only a
-few hundred followers, who have neither food nor firearms; and I doubt
-much if they had even definite plans; of such there are no records.
-Before Van Egmond comes from Seaforth, doubt and dissension and
-distrust of success depress the insurgents; and it does n't help their
-spirits any to have four Toronto scouts break through their lines in
-the dark and back again with word of their weakness, though they plant
-a fatal bullet neatly in the back of one poor loyalist. If they had
-advanced promptly on the 4th, as planned, they might have given Sir
-Francis Bond Head and Fitzgibbons a stiff tussle for possession of the
-city, for Toronto's defenders at this time numbered scarcely three
-hundred; but during the days MacKenzie's followers delayed north of
-Yonge Street, Allan McNab came up from Hamilton with more troops. By
-Wednesday, the 6th, there were twelve hundred loyalist troops in
-Toronto; and noon of the 7th, out marches the loyalist army by way of
-Yonge Street, bands playing, flags flying, horses prancing under
-Fitzgibbons and McNab. It was a warm, sunny day. From the windows of
-Yonge Street women waved handkerchiefs and cheered. At street corners
-the rabble shouted itself hoarse, just as it would have cheered
-MacKenzie had he come down Yonge Street victorious.
-
-MacKenzie's sentries had warned the insurgents of the loyalists'
-coming. MacKenzie was for immediate advance. Van Egmond thought it
-stark madness for five hundred poorly armed men to meet twelve hundred
-troopers in pitched battle; but it was too late now for stark madness
-to retreat. The loyalist {423} bands could be heard from Rosedale; the
-loyalists' bayonets could be seen glittering in the sun. MacKenzie
-posted his men a short distance south of the tavern in some woods; one
-hundred and fifty on one side of the road west of Yonge Street, one
-hundred on the other side. The rest of the insurgents, being without
-arms, did not leave the rendezvous. In the confusion and haste the
-tragic mistake was made of leaving MacKenzie's carpet bag with the list
-of patriots at the tavern. This gave the loyalists a complete roster
-of the agitators' names.
-
-[Illustration: ALLAN McNAB]
-
-Fifteen minutes later it was all over with MacKenzie. The big guns of
-the Toronto troops shelled the woods, killing one patriot rebel and
-wounding eleven, four fatally. In answer, only a clattering spatter of
-shots came from the rebel side. The patriots were in headlong flight
-with the mounted men of Toronto in pursuit.
-
-It was over with MacKenzie, but, as the sequence of events will show,
-it was not all over with the cause. A book of soldiers' yarns might be
-told of hairbreadth escapes, the aftermath of the rebellion. Knowing
-his side was doomed to defeat, Dr. Rolph tried to escape from Toronto.
-He was stopped by a loyalist sentry, but explained he was leaving the
-city to visit a patient. Farther on he had been arrested by a loyalist
-picket, when luckily a young doctor who had attended Rolph's medical
-lectures, all unconscious of MacKenzie's plot, vouched for his {424}
-loyalty. Riding like a madman all that night, Rolph reached Niagara
-and escaped to the American frontier. A reward of 1000 pounds had been
-offered for MacKenzie dead or alive. He had waited only till his
-followers fled, when he mounted his big bay horse and galloped for the
-woods, pursued by Fitzgibbons' men. The big bay carried him safely to
-the country, where he wandered openly for four days. It speaks volumes
-for the stanch fidelity of the country people to the cause which
-MacKenzie represented, that during these wanderings he was unbetrayed,
-spite of the 1000 pounds reward. Finally he too succeeded in crossing
-Niagara. Van Egmond was captured north of Yonge Street, but died from
-disease contracted in his prison cell before he could be tried. Lount,
-another of the leaders, had succeeded in reaching Long Point, Lake
-Erie. With a fellow patriot, a French voyageur, and a boy, he started
-to cross Lake Erie in an open boat. It was wintry, stormy weather.
-For two days and two nights the boat tossed, a plaything of the waves,
-the drenching spray freezing as it fell, till the craft was almost
-ice-logged. For food they had brought only a small piece of meat, and
-this had frozen so hard that their numbed hands could not break it.
-Weakening at each oar stroke, they at last saw the south shore of Lake
-Erie rise on the sky line; but before the close-muffled refugees had
-dared to hope for safety on the American side, a strong south wind had
-sprung up that drove the boat back across the lake towards Grand River.
-To remain exposed longer meant certain death. They landed, were
-mistaken for smugglers, and thrown into jail, where Lount was at once
-recognized.
-
-In West Ontario one Dr. Duncombe had acted as MacKenzie's lieutenant.
-Allan McNab had come west with six hundred men to suppress the
-rebellion. Realizing the hopelessness of further resistance, Duncombe
-had tried to save his men by ordering them to disperse to their homes.
-He himself, with his white horse, took to the woods, where he lay in
-hiding all day--and it was a Canadian December--and foraged at night
-for berries and roots. Judge Ermatinger gives the graphic story of
-{425} Duncombe's escape. Starvation drove him to the house of a
-friend. The friend was out, and when the wife asked who he was,
-Duncombe laid his revolver on the table and made answer, "I am
-Duncombe; and I must have food." Here he lay disguised so completely
-with nightcap, nightdress, and all, as the visiting grandmother of the
-family, that loyalists who saw his white horse and came in to search
-the house, looked squarely at the recumbent figure beneath the
-bedclothes and did not recognize him. Duncombe at last reached his
-sister's home near London.
-
-"Don't you know me?" he asked, standing in the open door, waiting for
-her recognition. In the few weeks of exposure and pursuit his hair had
-turned snow-white.
-
-His friends suggested that he cross to the American frontier dressed as
-a woman, and the disguise was so perfect, curls of his sister's hair
-bobbing from beneath his bonnet, that two loyalist soldiers gallantly
-escorted the lady's sleigh across unsafe places in the ice. Duncombe
-waited till he was well on the American side, and his escorts on the
-way back to Sarnia. Then he emitted a yell over the back of the
-cutter, "Go tell your officers you have just helped Dr. Duncombe
-across!"
-
-Having lost the fight for a cause which events have since justified, it
-is not surprising that the patriots on the American frontier now lost
-their heads. They formed organizations from Detroit to Vermont for the
-invasion of Canada and the establishment of a republic. These bands
-were known as "Hunter's Lodges." Rolph and Duncombe repudiated
-connection with them, but MacKenzie was head and heart for armed
-invasion from Buffalo. Space forbids the story of these raids. They
-would fill a book with such thrilling tales as make up the border wars
-of Scotland.
-
-The tumultuous year of 1837 closed with the burning of the _Caroline_.
-MacKenzie had taken up quarters on Navy Island in Niagara River. The
-_Caroline_, an American ship, was being employed to convey guns and
-provisions to the insurgents' camp. On the Canadian side of the river
-camped Allan McNab with {426} twenty-five hundred loyalist troops.
-Looking across the river with field glasses, McNab sees the boat
-landing field guns on Navy Island for MacKenzie.
-
-"I say," exclaims the future Sir Allan, "this won't do! Can't you cut
-that vessel out, Drew?" addressing a young officer.
-
-"Nothing easier," answers Drew.
-
-"Do it, then," orders McNab.
-
-In spite of the fact "nothing was easier," Drew's men came near
-disaster on their midnight escapade. The river below Navy Island was
-three miles wide, and only a mile and a half from the rapids above the
-Falls, with a current like a mill race. Secretly seven boats, with
-four men in each, set out at half past eleven, a few friends on the
-river bank wishing Drew Godspeed. Out from shore Drew draws his boats
-together, and tells the men the perilous task they have to do: if any
-one wishes to go back let him do so now. Not a man speaks. Halfway
-across, firing from the island drives two of the boats back. The rest
-get under shadow from the bright moonlight and go on. The roar of the
-Falls now became deafening, and some of the rowers called out they were
-being drawn down the center of the river astern. Drew fastens his eyes
-on a light against the American shore to judge of their progress. For
-a moment, though the men were rowing with all their might, the light
-ashore and the boats in mid-river seemed to remain absolutely still.
-Finally the boats gained an oar's length. Then a mighty pull, and all
-forge ahead. A strip of land hides approach to the _Caroline_. The
-Canadian boatmen lie in hiding till the moon goes down, then glide in
-on the _Caroline_, when Drew mounts the decks. Three unarmed men are
-found on the shore side. Drew orders them to land. One fires
-point-blank; Drew slashes him down with a single saber cut. The rest
-of the crew are roused from sleep and sent ashore. The _Caroline_ is
-set on fire in four places. She is moored to the shore ice; axes chop
-her free. She is adrift; Drew the last to jump from her flaming decks
-to his place in the small boats. The flames are seen from the Canadian
-side, and huge bonfires light up the Canadian shore; by their gleam
-{427} Drew steers back for McNab's army, and is welcomed with cheers
-that split the welkin. Slowly the flaming vessel drifted down the
-channel to the Falls. Suddenly the lights went out; the _Caroline_ had
-either sunk on a reef or gone over the Falls. One man had been killed
-on the decks. As the vessel was American, and had been raided in
-American ports, the episode raised an international dispute that might
-in another mood have caused war.
-
-Lount and Matthews pay for the rebellion on the gallows, upon which the
-imperial government expressed regret that the Toronto Executive "found
-such severity necessary." Later, when "the Hunters' Lodges" raid
-Prescott, and Van Shoultz, the Polish leader, with nine others, is
-executed at Kingston, a great revulsion of feeling takes place against
-_the family compact_. The execution of the patriots did more for their
-cause than all their efforts of twenty years. The Canadian people had
-supported the agitators up to the point of armed rebellion. That gave
-British blood pause, for the Britisher reveres the law next to God; but
-when the governing ring began to glut its vengeance under cloak of
-loyalty that was another matter. After the execution of Lount and
-Matthews _the family compact_ could scarcely count a friend outside its
-own circle in Upper Canada. It is worth remembering that the young
-lawyer who defended Van Shoultz in the trial at Kingston was a John A.
-Macdonald, who later took foremost part in framing a new constitution
-for Canada.
-
-
-Affairs had gone faster in Quebec. There the rebellion almost became
-war. Papineau was leader of the agitators,--Papineau, fiery,
-impetuous, eloquent, followed by the bold boys in the bonnets blue,
-marching the streets of Montreal singing revolutionary songs and
-planting liberty trees. In Lower Canada, too, things have come to the
-pass where the agitators advocate armed resistance. From the first, in
-Quebec, the struggle has waged round two questions,--the exclusion of
-the French from the council, and the right of the colony to spend its
-own revenues; but boil down the ninety-two resolutions of 1834, and the
-demands {428} of the agitators in Lower Canada are the same as in Upper
-Canada, for complete self-government. A dozen clashes of authority
-lead up to the final outbreak. For instance, the House elects
-Papineau, the agitator, speaker. The Governor General refuses to
-recognize him, and Parliament is dissolved.
-
-Failing to obtain redress by constitutional methods, the agitators now
-advocate the right of a colony to abolish government unsuited to it.
-The constitutional party takes alarm and organizes volunteers.
-Papineau's party, early in 1837, begin violently advocating that all
-French magistrates resign their commissions from the English
-government. On Richelieu River and up in Two Mountains, north of
-Montreal, are the strongholds of the agitators, where men have been
-drilling, and the boys in the bonnets blue rioting through the villages
-to the great scandal of parish priests.
-
-[Illustration: LOUIS J. PAPINEAU]
-
-There are riots in Montreal early in November of 1837, and "the Sons of
-Liberty" are chased through the town. Then in the third week of
-November a troop of Montreal cavalry is sent to St. John's to arrest
-three agitators, who have been threatening a magistrate for refusing to
-resign his commission. The agitators are arrested and handcuffed, and
-at three in the morning the troops are moving along across country
-towards Longueuil with the prisoners in a wagon, when suddenly three
-hundred armed men rise on either side of the road to the fore. Shots
-are exchanged. In the confusion the prisoners jump from the wagon.
-This is not resistance to authority. It is open rebellion. Papineau
-intrusts the management of affairs in St. Eustache, north of Montreal,
-to Girod, a Swiss, and to {429} Dr. Chenier, a local patriot. Papineau
-himself and Dr. Nelson and O'Callaghan are down on the Richelieu at St.
-Denis.
-
-Take the Richelieu region first. Colonel Gore is to strike up the
-river southward to St. Denis. Colonel Wetherell is to cross country
-from Montreal and strike down the river north to St. Charles, thus
-hemming in the insurgents between Gore on the north and himself on the
-south. There are eight hundred rebels at St. Denis, one hundred and
-fifty armed, and twelve hundred at St. Charles. Papineau and
-O'Callaghan for safety's sake slip across the line to Swanton in
-Vermont. One could wish that, having led their faithful followers up
-to the sticking point of stark madness, the agitators had remained
-shoulder to shoulder with the brave fellows on the field.
-
-Colonel Gore came from Montreal by boat to the mouth of the Richelieu.
-At seven-thirty on the night of November 22 two hundred and fifty
-troopers landed to march up the Richelieu road to St. Denis. Rain
-turning to sleet was falling in a deluge. The roads were swimming
-knee-deep in slush. Bridges had been cut, and in the darkness the
-loyalists had to diverge to fording places, which lengthened out the
-march twenty-four miles. At St. Denis was Dr. Nelson with the
-agitators in a three-story stone house, windows bristling with muskets.
-By dawn Papineau and O'Callaghan had fled, and at nine o'clock came
-Colonel Gore's loyalist troopers, exhausted from the march, soaked to
-the skin, their water-sagged clothes freezing in the cold wind. The
-loyalists went into the fight unfed, and with a whoop; but it is not
-surprising that the peppering of bullets from the windows drove the
-troopers back, and Gore's bugles sounded retreat. Unaware of Gore's
-defeat, one Lieutenant Weir has been sent across country with
-dispatches. He is captured and bound, and, in a futile attempt to
-escape, shot and stabbed to death.
-
-Wetherell comes down the river from Chambly with three hundred men. He
-finds St. Charles village protected by outworks of felled trees, and
-the houses are literally loopholed with muskets; but Wetherell has
-brought cannon along, and the cannon begin to sing on November 25.
-Then Wetherell's {430} men charge through the village with leveled
-bayonets. The poor habitants scatter like frightened sheep; they
-surrender; one hundred perish. It is estimated that on both sides
-three hundred are wounded, though some English writers give the list of
-wounded as low as forty. Messengers galloped with news of the
-patriots' defeat at St. Charles to Dr. Nelson at St. Denis. The
-habitants fled to their homes. Nelson was left without a follower. He
-escaped to the woods, and for two weeks wandered in the forests of the
-boundary, exposed to cold and hunger, not daring to kindle a fire that
-would betray him, afraid to let himself sleep for fear of freezing to
-death. He was captured near the Vermont line and carried prisoner to
-Montreal.
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN COLBORNE, GOVERNOR OF CANADA, 1838-1841]
-
-And still worse fared the fortunes of war with the patriots north of
-Montreal. Their defense and defeat were almost pitiable in childish
-ignorance of what war might mean. Boys' marbles had been gathered
-together for bullets. Scythes were carried as swords, and old
-flintlocks that had not seen service for twenty years were taken down
-from the chimney places. With their bonnets blue hanging down their
-backs, rusty firearms over their shoulders, and the village fiddler
-leading the march, one thousand "Sons of Liberty" had paraded the
-streets of St. Eustache, singing, rollicking, speechifying, unconscious
-as {431} children playing war that they were dancing to ruin above a
-volcano. Chenier, the beloved country doctor, is their leader. Girod,
-the Swiss, has come up to show them how to drill. They take possession
-of a newly built convent. Then on Sunday, the 3d of December, comes
-word of the defeat down on the Richelieu. The moderate men plead with
-Chenier to stop now before it is too late; but Chenier will not listen.
-He knows the cause is right, and with the credulity or faith of a
-simple child hopes some mad miracle will win the day. Still he is much
-moved; tears stream down his face. Then on December 14 the church
-bells ring a crazy alarm. The troops are coming, two thousand of them
-from Montreal under Sir John Colborne, the governor. The insurgent
-army melts like frost before the sun. Less than one hundred men stand
-by poor Chenier. At eleven-thirty the troops sweep in at both ends of
-the village at once, Girod, the Swiss commander, suicides in panic
-flight. Cooped up in the church steeple with the flames mounting
-closer round them and the troopers whooping jubilantly outside, Chenier
-and his eighty followers call out: "We are done! We are sold! Let us
-jump!" Chenier jumps from the steeple, is hit by the flying bullets,
-and perishes as he falls. His men cower back in the flaming steeple
-till it falls with a crash into the burning ruins. Amid the ash heap
-are afterwards found the corpses of seventy-two patriots. The troopers
-take one hundred prisoners in the region, then set fire to all houses
-where loyalist flags are not waved from the windows.
-
-
-Matters have now come to such an outrageous pass that the British
-government can no longer ignore the fact that the colony has been
-goaded to desperation by the misgovernment of the ruling clique. Lord
-Durham is appointed special commissioner with extraordinary powers to
-proceed to Canada and investigate the whole subject of colonial
-government. One may guess that the ruling clique were prepared to take
-possession of the new commissioner and prime him with facts favorable
-to their side; but Durham was not a man to be monopolized by any
-faction. {432} When he arrived, in May of 1838, he quickly gave proof
-that he would follow his own counsels and choose his own councilors.
-His first official declaration was practically an act of amnesty to the
-rebels, eight only of the leading prisoners, among them Dr. Nelson,
-being punished by banishment to Bermuda, the rest being simply expelled
-from Canada.
-
-This act was tantamount to a declaration that the rebels possessed some
-rights and had suffered real grievances, and the governing rings in
-both Toronto and Quebec took furious offense. Complaints against
-Durham poured into the English colonial office,--complaints, oddly
-enough, that he had violated the spirit of the English Constitution by
-sentencing subjects of the Crown without trial. Though every one knew
-that in Canada's turbulent condition trial by jury was impossible,
-Durham's political foes in England took up the cry. In addition to
-political complaints were grudges against Durham for personal slight;
-and it must be confessed the haughty earl had ridden roughshod over all
-the petty prejudices and little dignities of the colonial magnates.
-The upshot was, Durham resigned in high dudgeon and sailed for England
-in November of 1838.
-
-[Illustration: LORD DURHAM, SPECIAL COMMISSIONER TO CANADA, 1838]
-
-On his way home he dictated to his secretary, Charles Buller, the
-famous report which is to Canada what the Magna Charta is to England or
-the Declaration of Independence to the United States. Without going
-into detail, it may be said that it {433} recommended complete
-self-government for the colonies. As disorders had again broken out in
-Canada, the English government hastened to embody the main
-recommendations of Durham's report in the Union Act of 1840, which came
-into force a year later. By it Upper and Lower Canada were united on a
-basis of equal representation each, though Quebec's population was six
-hundred thousand to Ontario's five hundred thousand. The colonies were
-to have the entire management of their revenues and civil lists. The
-government was to consist of an Upper Chamber appointed by the Crown
-for life, a representative assembly, and the governor with a cabinet of
-advisers responsible to the assembly.
-
-In all, more than seven hundred arrests had been made in Quebec
-Province. Of these all were released but some one hundred and thirty,
-and the state trials resulted in sentence of banishment against fifty,
-death to twelve. In modern days it is almost impossible to realize the
-degree of fanatical hatred generated by this half century of
-misgovernment. Declared one of the governing clique's official
-newspapers in Montreal: "Peace must be maintained, even if we make the
-country a solitude. French Canadians must be swept from the face of
-the earth. . . . The empire must be respected, even at the cost of the
-entire French Canadian people." With such sentiments openly uttered,
-one may surely say that the Constitutional Act of 1791 turned back the
-pendulum of Canada's progress fifty years, and it certainly took fifty
-more years to eradicate the bitterness generated by the era of
-misgovernment.
-
-
-With the Upper and Lower Canadas united in a federation of two
-provinces, it was a foregone conclusion that all parts of British North
-America must sooner or later come into the fold. It would be hard to
-say from whom the idea of confederation of all the provinces first
-sprang. Purely as a theory the idea may be traced back as early as
-1791. The truth is, Destiny, Providence, or whatever we like to call
-that great stream of concurrent events which carries men and nations
-out to the ocean {434} highway of a larger life, forced British North
-America into the Confederation of 1867.
-
-In the first place, while the Union worked well in theory, it was
-exceedingly difficult in practice. Ontario and Quebec had equal
-representation. One was Protestant, the other Catholic; one French,
-the other English. Deadlocks, or, to use the slang of the street, even
-tugs of war, were inevitable and continual. All Ontario had to do to
-thwart Quebec, or Quebec had to do to thwart Ontario, was to stand
-together and keep the votes solid. Coalition ministries proved a
-failure.
-
-In the second place, Ontario was practically dependent on the customs
-duties collected at Quebec ports of entry for a provincial revenue.
-The goods might be billed for Ontario; Quebec collected the tax.
-
-Ontario was also dependent on Quebec for access to the sea. Which
-province was to pay for the system of canals being developed, and the
-deepening of the St. Lawrence?
-
-Then the Oregon Treaty of 1846 had actually brought a cloud of war on
-the horizon. In case of war, there was the question of defense.
-
-Then railways had become a very live question. Quebec wanted
-connection with New Brunswick and Nova Scotia. How was the cost of a
-railroad to be apportioned? Red River was agitating for freedom from
-fur-trade monopoly. How were railways to be built to Red River?
-
-Ontario's population in twenty years jumped past the million mark. Was
-it fair that her million people should have only the same number of
-representatives as Quebec with her half million? Reformers of Ontario,
-voiced by George Brown of _The Globe_, called for "Rep. by
-Pop.,"--representation by population.
-
-Civil war was raging in the United States, threatening to tear the
-Union to tatters. Why? Because the balance of power had been left
-with the states governments, and not enough authority centralized in
-the federal government. The lesson was not lost on struggling Canada.
-
-{435} England's declaration of free trade brought the colonies face to
-face with the need of some united action to raise revenue by tariff.
-
-Then the Hudson's Bay Company's license of monopoly over the fur trade
-of the west was nearing expiration. Should the license be renewed for
-another twenty years, or should Canada take over Red River as a new
-province, which was the wish of the people both east and west? And if
-Canada did buy out the Hudson's Bay Company's vested rights, who was to
-pay down the cost?
-
-[Illustration: JOHN A. MACDONALD]
-
-Lastly, was John A. Macdonald, the young lawyer who had pleaded the
-defense of the patriot trials at Kingston in 1838, now a leading
-politician of the United Canadas, weary of the hopeless deadlocks
-between Ontario and Quebec. With almost a sixth sense of divination in
-reading the signs of the times in the trend of events, John A.
-Macdonald saw that Canada's one hope of becoming a national power lay
-in union,--confederation. The same thing was seen by other leaders of
-the day, by all that grand old guard known as the Fathers of
-Confederation, sent from the different provinces to the conference at
-Quebec in October of 1864. There the outline of what is known as the
-British North America Act was drafted,--in the main but an
-amplification of Durham's scheme, made broad enough to receive all
-{436} the provinces whenever they might decide to come into
-Confederation. The delegates then go back to be indorsed by their
-provinces. By some provinces the scheme is rejected. Newfoundland is
-not yet part of Canada, but by 1867 Confederation is an accomplished
-fact. By 1871 the new Dominion has bought out the rights of the
-Hudson's Bay Company in the West and Manitoba joins the Eastern
-Provinces. By 1885 a railway links British Columbia with Nova Scotia.
-By 1905 the great hunting field of the Saskatchewan prairies has been
-divided into two new provinces, Saskatchewan and Alberta, each larger
-than France.
-
-
-Such is barest outline of Canada's past. What of the future for this
-Empire of the North? That future is now in the making. It lies in the
-hands of the men and women who are living to-day. In the past Canada's
-makers dreamed greatly, and they dared greatly, and they took no heed
-of impossibles, and they spent without stint of blood and happiness for
-high aim. When Canada lost ground in the progress of the nations, as
-in the corrupt days of Bigot's rule during the French regime, or the
-equally corrupt days of _the family compact_ after the Conquest, it was
-because the altar fires of her ideals were allowed to burn low.
-
-It has been said that the past is but a rear light marking the back
-trail of the ship's passage. Say rather it is the search light on the
-ship's prow, pointing the way over the waters.
-
-[Illustration: FATHERS OF CONFEDERATION, 1867. (From the painting by
-Robert Hariss)]
-
-To-day Canada is in the very vanguard of the nations. Her wheat fields
-fill the granaries of the world; and to her ample borders come the
-peoples of earth's ends, bringing tribute not of incense and
-frankincense as of old, but of manhood and strength, of push and lift,
-of fire and hope and enthusiasm and the daring that conquers all the
-difficulties of life; bringing too, all the outworn vices of an Old
-World, all the vicious instincts of the powers that prey in the Under
-World. Canada's prosperity is literally overflowing from a cornucopia
-of super-abundant plenty. Will her constitution, wrested from
-political and civil strife; will her moral stamina, bred from the
-heroism of an heroic past, stand the strain, the tremendous strain of
-the {437} new conditions? Will she assimilate the strange new
-peoples--strange in thought and life and morals--coming to her borders?
-Will she eradicate their vices like the strong body of a healthy
-constitution throwing off disease; or will she be poisoned by the
-toxins of vicious traits inherited from centuries of vicious living?
-Will she remake the men, regenerate the aliens, coming to her hearth
-fire; or will they drag her down to their degeneracy? Above all, will
-she stand the strain, the tremendous strain, of prosperity, and the
-corruption that is attendant on prosperity? _Quien sabe_? Let him
-answer who can; and the question is best answered by watching the
-criminal calendar. (Is the percentage of convictions as certain and
-relentless as under the old regime? What manner of crimes is growing
-up in the land?) And the question may be answered, too, by watching
-whether the press and platform and pulpit stand as everlastingly and
-relentlessly for sharp demarkation between right and wrong, for the
-sharp demarkation between truth, plain truth, and intentional
-mendacity, as under the regime of the old hard days. When political
-life grows corrupt, is it now cleansed, or condoned? Let each Canadian
-answer for himself. If the altar fires of Canada's ideals again burn
-low, again she will lag in the progress of the world's great builders.
-
-
-
-
-{439}
-
-INDEX
-
-NOTE. In all names of persons, names have been spelled as signed by
-the person; in names of places, as written in early state documents.
-In all other cases the rulings of the Canadian Geographic Board have
-been followed, with the exception of _Montagnais_, which is given
-_Montaignais_, _Tadousac_ as _Tadoussac_, _Saut_ as _Sault_,
-_Louisbourg_ as _Louisburg_, _Denys_ as _Denis_.
-
-
-Abenaki Indians, 171, 192, 193
-
-Abercrombie, 252, 256, 258, 259
-
-Acadia, 40, 41, 61, 64, 65, 69, 70, 192, 196, 197, 204, 214, 216, 220,
-231, 233, 235, 236, 241
-
-Agona, 19
-
-Alaska, 321, 324
-
-Albanel, Father, 143, 144
-
-Albany, 97, 153, 159, 160, 162
-
-Alberta, 297, 436
-
-Alexander, 208
-
-Alexander, Sir William, 61
-
-Algonquin Indians, 52, 103, 104, 105, 106, 108
-
-Allen, Ethan, 298
-
-Allumette Island, 51, 52
-
-Alymer, 50
-
-Amherst, 236
-
-Amherst, Sir Jeffrey, 252, 253, 256, 261, 268, 274, 277
-
-Andre, Mademoiselle, 122
-
-Annapolis, 200, 201, 215, 231
-
-Annapolis Basin, 35, 37, 44, 61, 65, 67, 69, 177
-
-Anticosti Island, 12, 134, 177
-
-Appleton, Colonel, 197
-
-Argall, Samuel, 43, 44, 61
-
-Arnold, Benedict, 300-309
-
-Astor, John Jacob, 294, 330, 333
-
-Astoria, 333, 379
-
-Athabasca, 324, 327, 390, 391, 398, 399, 401, 402
-
-Aubert, 7
-
-Aubry, 34, 35, 36, 44, 236
-
-Aulneau, 208, 209
-
-
-
-Bad River, 329, 330
-
-Balboa, 6
-
-Barclay, Captain, 363, 364
-
-Barre, Charlotte, 78
-
-Basin of Mines, 195
-
-Basques, 44, 45, 46, 58
-
-Basset, 195
-
-Bathurst, Lord, 411
-
-Bay of Islands, 10
-
-Bayly, Governor, 144, 187
-
-Beaubassin, 195, 236
-
-Beauharnois, Governor, 206
-
-Beaujeu, 141
-
-Beauport, 269, 275
-
-Beaupre, 19
-
-Beausejour, 231, 236
-
-Beaver Dams, 362
-
-Bella Coola, 330
-
-Belle Isle, 10, 19, 20
-
-Belle Isle Straits, 10, 12
-
-Bering, Vitus, 212
-
-Berkeley, Admiral, 335, 336
-
-Biard, Father, 41, 42, 44
-
-Biencourt, 34, 40, 42, 61
-
-Bigot, Intendant, 241-247, 274
-
-Black Rock, 369
-
-Blackwater River, 330
-
-Blanc Sablon, 10, 11, 12
-
-Bloody Brook, 202
-
-Boerstler, Lieutenant, 360, 362
-
-Bona Vista, 5, 8
-
-Bonaventure, 195
-
-Boscawen, 226, 234, 252, 256
-
-Boston, 66, 194, 195, 203, 216
-
-Boucher, 394
-
-Bougainville, 243, 261, 270
-
-Bouquet, 287, 288, 289, 290
-
-Bourgeoys, Marguerite, 117
-
-Bourlamaque, 243, 262
-
-Braddock, General, 226-230
-
-Bradstreet, General, 260, 287, 288
-
-Brant, Joseph, 310, 315
-
-Bras d'Or Lakes, 7
-
-Brebeuf, Jean de, 71, 80, 82-90
-
-Bridgar, 149
-
-British Columbia, 323, 436
-
-Brock, Isaac, 338-348, 363
-
-Brockville, 349
-
-Brown, George, 371, 434
-
-Brule, Etienne, 48, 50, 52-57, 83, 127
-
-Buffalo, 369, 371
-
-Buller, Charles, 432
-
-Burlington Heights, 365, 372
-
-Burton, Colonel, 272
-
-
-
-Cabot, John, 3-7, 26, 61
-
-Cabot, Sebastian, 5
-
-Cadillac, La Motte, 119, 124, 163, 165, 205
-
-Caldwell, General, 412
-
-California, 319, 408
-
-Cameron, Duncan, 389, 391
-
-Campbell, Captain, 285
-
-Cape Breton, 5, 6, 7, 38, 43, 61, 62, 65, 124, 204, 214, 215
-
-Cape Cod, 30, 37
-
-Cape Diamond, 13, 19, 45, 80
-
-Cape Rouge, 19, 22
-
-Cape Sable, 61, 65
-
-Garden, Major, 299
-
-Carillon, 50
-
-Carleton, 62
-
-Carleton, Sir Guy, 279, 280, 281, 298-312
-
-Carterett, George, 114
-
-Cartier, Jacques, 7-22, 33, 40, 45, 77, 79
-
-Casson, Dollier de, 121, 126, 128, 130
-
-Castle Island, 10
-
-Catalina, 8
-
-Chaleur, Bay of, 11, 188
-
-Chambly, Fort, 125
-
-Champlain, Lake, 47, 203, 237, 242, 298, 299, 378
-
-Champlain, Madame, 57
-
-Champlain, Samuel, 32, 33, 35, 37, 38, 39, 40, 44, 45, 46, 48-60, 77,
-80, 82, 83, 115
-
-Chandler, 356, 357, 359
-
-Charity Island, 92
-
-Charles II, 114, 115
-
-Charlottetown, 314
-
-Charlton Island, 156, 160, 161
-
-Charnisay, Sieur d'Aulnay de, 65-69
-
-Chasteaufort, Marc Antoine de, 115
-
-Chateau Bay, 10
-
-Chateauguay River, 368, 369
-
-Chatham, 279
-
-Chats Rapids, 51
-
-Chaudiere Falls, 50, 104
-
-Chauncey, 349, 351-356, 366
-
-Chenier, Dr., 429, 431
-
-Chicago Portage, 133
-
-Chignecto, 231
-
-Chippewa, 371, 372, 373
-
-Chippewyan, Fort, 325, 402
-
-Chomedey, Paul de, 75
-
-Christian Islands, 92, 99
-
-Chrysler's Farm, 367
-
-Church, Ben, 195
-
-Churchill, Fort, 297, 318, 319
-
-Clark, Lieutenant, 175
-
-Clark, William, 310, 330
-
-Clarke, John, 391, 398, 401, 402
-
-Cobequid, 236
-
-Cocking, Matthew, 297
-
-Coffin, John, 306
-
-Colborne, Sir John, 431
-
-Columbia River, 321-323
-
-Columbus, 3, 6
-
-Contrecoeur, 230
-
-Cook, James, 263, 319-321
-
-Coppermine River, 296
-
-Cornwallis, Edward, 221, 232
-
-Cortereal, Caspar, 6
-
-Courcelle, Governor, 125, 126
-
-Craig, Governor, 336, 337
-
-Cree Indians, 103, 110, 112, 208, 210, 386
-
-Crevecoeur, Fort, 138, 139
-
-Cumberland, 236
-
-
-
-Dablon, 132
-
-D'Ailleboust, Louis, 78, 79, 115, 119, 120, 172
-
-Dalzell, 285
-
-Daniel, Father, 27, 84, 87
-
-D'Anville, Duke, 220
-
-D'Argenson, 110, 115
-
-Dauversiere, Jerome le Royer de la, 74, 117
-
-D'Avaugour, 111, 115
-
-Davis, 30
-
-Davost, Father, 84
-
-Dearborn, General, 353, 356
-
-Deerfield, 193, 195
-
-De Mezy, 115
-
-De Monts, Sieur, 33-37, 40, 44, 45, 48
-
-Denis, 7
-
-Denonville, Marquis de, 163, 164, 167, 168
-
-De Salaberry, 368, 369
-
-Detroit, 93, 205, 276, 286, 291, 310, 338, 339, 340, 363
-
-De Troyes, Chevalier, 157, 158, 159, 160
-
-Dieskau, Baron, 226, 237, 240
-
-Digge's Island, 154
-
-Dinwiddie, Governor, 224
-
-Dobbs, Captain, 376
-
-Dochet Island, 35
-
-Dog Rib Indians, 326
-
-Dollard, Adam, 107, 108, 109, 110
-
-Don Quadra, 322
-
-Donnacona, 13, 18, 19
-
-Douglas, Fort, 386, 387, 390, 391, 393, 395-397
-
-Douglas, Governor, 408
-
-Drake, Sir Francis, 26, 27
-
-Drew, 426
-
-Drucourt, 253
-
-Drummond, Sir Gordon, 369, 370, 372, 374, 376, 377, 378
-
-Du Chene, Lake, 50, 105
-
-Duchambon, 219
-
-Ducharme, 362
-
-Duluth, 112, 146, 163, 165
-
-Duluth, Daniel G., 118, 124, 205
-
-Duncombe, Dr., 424, 425
-
-Dupuis, Major, 98
-
-Duquesne, Fort, 224, 226, 227, 228, 252, 260
-
-Duquesne, Marquis, 224
-
-Durell, 261
-
-Durham, Lord, 431, 432
-
-Duval, 46
-
-
-
-Egg Islands, 203
-
-Elizabeth, Queen, 26
-
-Elliott, Lieutenant, 343, 344
-
-Eric, Earl, 1
-
-Erie, Fort, 344, 376, 377
-
-Erie, Lake, 129, 130, 131, 137, 341, 349
-
-Ermatinger, Judge, 424
-
-Etherington, Major, 286
-
-Evans, 344
-
-
-
-Fidler, Peter, 389
-
-Findley, 295
-
-Fitzgibbons, 357, 359, 360, 362, 373, 421, 422
-
-Fleury, 42, 43
-
-Fontaine, Marguerite, 170
-
-Fontaine, Sieur Pierre, 170
-
-Forbes, John, 260
-
-Forsyth, 353
-
-Franklin, Benjamin, 309
-
-Fraser, Simon, 330, 331, 332
-
-Fraser River, 330, 331, 332
-
-French Bay, 35
-
-French River, 53, 54
-
-Frenchman's Bay, 42
-
-Freneuse, Madame, 195, 196, 202
-
-Frobisher, Martin, 25, 30
-
-Frontenac, Count, 132, 134, 135, 136, 140, 150, 167, 171, 176-188
-
-Frontenac, Fort, 135, 136, 137, 141, 163, 178, 179, 180, 181, 183, 252,
-260
-
-Fundy, Bay of, 35, 42, 62, 63, 66
-
-Funk Island, 9
-
-
-
-Galet, 170
-
-Galinee, 129, 130, 131
-
-Garry, Nicholas, 406
-
-Gaspe, 11, 12, 32, 124, 177, 256
-
-Gatineau, 50, 104
-
-George, Fort, 342, 344, 348, 355, 356, 360, 372
-
-George, Lake, 240, 242
-
-Georgian Bay, 54, 83, 84, 92
-
-Gibraltar, Fort, 386, 387
-
-Gilbert, Sir Humphrey, 25-29
-
-Gilbert du Thet, 42, 43
-
-Gillam, Ben, 148, 149, 150
-
-Gillam, Captain, 144, 145, 149
-
-Gillam, Zechariah, 113
-
-Gillam's Island, 148
-
-Girod, 428, 431
-
-Gladwin, 284
-
-Glen Rae, Dr., 407, 408
-
-Glenn, 174
-
-Goat Island, 44
-
-Gore, Colonel, 429
-
-Gorham, 248
-
-Gourlay, Robert, 415, 416, 417
-
-Grand Pre, 231, 236, 241
-
-Grant, Cuthbert, 390, 391, 394
-
-Gray, Robert, 321-323
-
-Great Lakes, 53, 71
-
-Green, Henry, 31
-
-Green, Piper, 387
-
-Green Bay, 93, 103, 105, 132
-
-Greenland, 1, 2, 5
-
-Griguet, 9
-
-Grimmington, 154
-
-Groseillers, Chouart, 150, 151, 152, 153, 156
-
-Groseillers, Medard Chouart de, 85, 98-115, 118, 144-153
-
-Gudrid, 1, 2, 3
-
-Gulf of Mexico, 140, 141
-
-Gulf Stream, 6
-
-Gull Island, 9
-
-
-
-Ha-Ha Bay, 9
-
-Haldimand, General, 311, 312
-
-Halifax, 231, 232, 233, 248, 317
-
-Hamilton, 129
-
-Hampton, General, 367, 368
-
-Harrison, General, 363
-
-Harvey, 357, 358
-
-Haverhill, 198
-
-Hayes River, 148, 385
-
-Head, Sir Francis, 421
-
-Hearne, Samuel, 296, 297, 318, 319
-
-Hebert, Louis, 44, 57
-
-Hebert, Madame, 79
-
-Hendry, Anthony, 243, 295
-
-Hennepin, Louis, 137, 138, 139
-
-Henry, Alexander, 286, 287
-
-Henry, John, 337
-
-Henry VII, 3, 4
-
-Hertel, Francois, 174, 175
-
-Hill, Jack, 202, 203
-
-Hochelaga, 12, 14, 15, 16, 18
-
-Holmes, Admiral, 269
-
-Horton, 236
-
-Hudson, Henry, 30, 31, 32, 49
-
-Hudson Bay, 30, 32, 103, 110, 113, 115, 134, 143, 144, 146, 148, 161,
-162, 164, 191, 204, 318, 406
-
-Hudson River, 30
-
-Hudson Straits, 30
-
-Hull, 338-340
-
-Hume, 420
-
-Hume, Captain, 154
-
-Huron, Lake, 54
-
-Huron Indians, 46, 48, 52-57, 82-93, 98, 108-110, 126
-
-
-
-Iberville, 157-163, 165, 172, 174, 183, 184, 185, 186, 188
-
-Iberville, Chateauguay, 183
-
-Iceland, 3
-
-Ihonateria, 84
-
-Illinois Indians, 133, 138, 163, 189
-
-Illinois River, 133, 139
-
-Iroquois Indians, 46-48, 52-57, 78, 79, 86, 87-102, 103, 105, 106, 108,
-110, 125, 128-130, 135, 162-171, 183, 204
-
-Island of Orleans, 13
-
-Isle of Demons, 10, 20, 21
-
-
-
-Jacqueline, Frances Marie, 67
-
-Jalobert, Captain, 12, 19
-
-James Bay, 30, 31, 113, 144, 158
-
-Jogues, Father, 85, 94, 97
-
-Johnson, William, 237, 240
-
-Jolliet, Louis, 118, 130, 132-134, 139, 146, 152, 177, 205
-
-Jolliet, Madame, 183
-
-Joseph, Louis, 243
-
-Juett, 30
-
-Jumonville, 225
-
-
-
-Kaministiquia, 139, 143, 205, 207
-
-Kidd, Captain, 150
-
-King's Cove, 5
-
-Kingston, 135, 260, 354, 370, 427
-
-Kirke, David, 58, 60, 63
-
-Kirke, Gervaise, 58, 63
-
-Kirke, Louis, 58, 63
-
-Kirke, Mary, 114, 115, 145
-
-Kirke, Thomas, 58, 63
-
-
-
-La Barre, 140, 150, 163, 168
-
-La Bonte, 170
-
-Labrador, 1, 6, 7, 10, 30, 46, 121, 143, 147
-
-Lachine Rapids, 17
-
-La Fleche, Father, 41
-
-La Forest, 146
-
-Lake of the Woods, 112
-
-Lalemant, 88, 89, 90
-
-La Martiniere, 153
-
-La Monnerie, Lieutenant de, 171
-
-Lamont, 19
-
-La Motte, Admiral, 226
-
-La Naudiere, M. de, 171
-
-Langdale, 287
-
-La Peltrie, Madame de, 72, 73, 74, 77, 78
-
-La Perouse, Admiral, 318, 319
-
-La Place, 298
-
-La Reine, Fort de, 211
-
-La Roche, Marquis de, 23-25, 40
-
-La Salle, Robert Cavalier de, 19, 118, 128-142, 146, 205
-
-La Saussaye, 42
-
-La Tour, Charles de, 61-69
-
-La Tour, Claude de, 63, 64
-
-La Tour, Madame Charles de, 67-69
-
-Laurentian Hills, 50
-
-Lauson, 75
-
-Lauzon, Jean de, 98, 115
-
-Lauzon-Charny, Charles de, 115
-
-Laval, Bishop, 122
-
-La Verendrye, Jean, 207-209
-
-La Verendrye, Jemmeraie, 206-208
-
-La Verendrye, Pierre Gauthier, 206-212
-
-Lawrence, Colonel, 231, 233, 234, 235, 253
-
-Le Bers, 172
-
-Le Breton, Captain, 12
-
-Le Caron, Joseph, 52, 53
-
-Le Chesnaye, 146, 150, 157
-
-Leif, 1
-
-Le Jeune, Pierre, 79, 80, 81, 82
-
-Le Loutre, Louis Joseph, 213-216, 220, 231, 232, 241, 278
-
-Le Moyne, Charles, 108, 118, 126, 146, 157
-
-Le Moyne, Father, 98
-
-Le Moyne, Maricourt, 157-161, 172, 173, 179, 182
-
-Le Moyne, Ste. Helene, 157-159, 172, 173, 179, 182
-
-Le Moyne, Serigny, 183, 184, 187
-
-Lery, Baron de, 7, 24
-
-Lescarbot, Marc, 37-40, 63
-
-Leslie, Captain, 286
-
-Levis, Chevalier de, 243, 245, 246, 249, 250, 267, 274
-
-Lewis, 330
-
-Lewiston, 342-348, 369
-
-Long Sault Rapids, 108
-
-Long Saut, 50
-
-Lorette mission, 93
-
-Loudon, Earl, 243, 248, 252
-
-Louisburg, 215, 216, 218, 220, 234, 241, 248, 252
-
-Louisiana, 140
-
-Lount, 424, 427
-
-Lundy's Lane, 373-375
-
-
-
-Macdonald, John A., 427, 435
-
-MacDonell, Miles, 381, 385, 388-390, 396, 397
-
-McDonnell, 368, 369
-
-M'Donnell, 350
-
-Macdonnell, Major, 346, 348
-
-Macdillivray, William, 380, 381
-
-Mackay, Alexander, 327, 328
-
-McKay, Tom, 407
-
-MacKenzie, Alexander, 324-331, 380, 398
-
-Mackenzie, Roderick, 325, 327
-
-MacKenzie, William Lyon, 420-426
-
-MacKenzie River, 327
-
-Mackinac, Straits of, 105
-
-McLean, Hector, 300, 387
-
-McLoughlin, Dr. John, 407, 409
-
-McNab, Allan, 422, 424-426
-
-Magellan, 6
-
-Maine, 42, 192, 204, 310
-
-Maisonneuve, Sieur de, 75-79, 108, 118, 119, 120
-
-Maitland, Sir Peregrine, 415, 417, 418
-
-Mance, Jeanne, 76, 78, 117
-
-Mandanes, 211
-
-Manitoba, 436
-
-Manitoulin Island, 84, 93
-
-Maquinna, 322
-
-March, Colonel, 196, 197
-
-Marco Polo, 3
-
-Marie of the Incarnation, 72-74
-
-Marquette, Father, 118, 132, 133, 134, 205
-
-Martin, Abraham, 44, 57
-
-Mascarene, Paul, 201, 202, 215
-
-Mascoutin Indians, 132, 138
-
-Massacre Island, 209
-
-Masse, Father, 42
-
-Matonabbee, 296, 297, 319
-
-Mattawa, 52
-
-Matthews, 414, 415, 427
-
-Meares, 321
-
-Meigs, Fort, 363
-
-Membertou, Henry, 38, 39, 41, 42
-
-Meneval, 177
-
-Mercer, Colonel, 247
-
-Miami, Fort, 284
-
-Michigan, 339
-
-Michigan, Lake, 103, 133
-
-Michilimackinac, 137, 276, 286, 310, 339, 379
-
-Micmac Indians, 220
-
-Midland, 54
-
-Mingan, 12
-
-Minnesota, 205, 208
-
-Miquelon, 204, 277
-
-Miramichi Indians, 10, 11, 256
-
-Mississippi River, 106, 128, 133, 139, 141
-
-Missouri River, 133, 139, 211
-
-Mohawk River, 127
-
-Monckton, 231, 234-235, 261, 265, 270
-
-Monro, Lieutenant, 250
-
-Montaignais Indians, 6, 10, 46, 81, 82
-
-Montana, 212
-
-Montcalm, Marquis de, 44, 243-250, 257, 265-269, 271, 273
-
-Montgomery, Richard, 300-308
-
-Montmagny, Charles de, 71, 72, 74, 76-78, 115
-
-Montmorency, 13
-
-Montreal, 16, 48-51, 72-78, 94, 107, 108, 117, 120, 165, 191, 267,
-274-302, 340, 367, 400, 427, 428
-
-Moon, Captain, 162
-
-Moose Factory, 153, 157, 158
-
-Moraviantown, 365, 366
-
-Mount Desert, 42, 44
-
-Mount Royal, 49, 78
-
-Murray, Lord John, 234, 235, 258, 261, 270, 274, 277-280
-
-Muskoka, 84
-
-
-
-Nelson, Dr., 429, 430, 432
-
-Nelson, Port, 152, 153, 183, 185, 384
-
-Nelson River, 148, 385
-
-Nepigon, 206
-
-New Brunswick, 10, 62-65, 204, 220, 312, 313, 434
-
-New Caledonia, 406, 407
-
-New Hampshire, 172
-
-New York, 97, 165, 221
-
-Newfoundland, 5-7, 9, 10, 12, 19, 23, 30, 183, 184, 204
-
-Niagara, 129, 267, 316, 340, 351, 369, 370, 379
-
-Nicholson, Francis, 198-203
-
-Nicolet, Jean, 71, 103, 127
-
-Nipissing Indians, 51, 53
-
-Nipissing Lake, 51, 53, 103
-
-Noel, 19
-
-Nootka, 320-322
-
-Norsemen, 2
-
-Nova Scotia, 1, 34, 35, 61, 220, 312, 317, 379, 434, 436
-
-
-
-O'Callaghan, 429
-
-Ochagach, Chief, 206
-
-Ochiltree, Lord, 62
-
-Ogden, 407
-
-Ogdensburg, 350
-
-Ohio River, 128, 130, 133, 224, 226, 241
-
-Olier, Jean Jacques, 75, 76
-
-Onondaga, Lake,98
-
-Onondagas, 55, 98, 99, 100
-
-Ontario, 84, 127, 312, 315, 316, 338, 349
-
-Ontario, Lake, 54, 57, 127, 129, 134, 349
-
-Oregon, 406, 407
-
-Orleans Island, 13, 76
-
-Oswego, 247, 250
-
-Ottawa, 46
-
-Ottawa Indians, 51
-
-Ottawa River, 17, 49, 51, 52, 57, 86
-
-
-
-Papineau, 427-429
-
-Parliament Hill, 50, 104
-
-Parry Sound, 54
-
-Parsnip River, 328
-
-Passamaquoddy, 195
-
-Pays d'en Haut, 182
-
-Peace River, 326, 327
-
-Pean, Madame, 245
-
-Peguis, Chief, 392, 393, 395
-
-Penetang, 54, 83, 85
-
-Pepperrell, William, 216, 219
-
-Pepys, Samuel, 153
-
-Pere, Jan, 130, 132, 152-159
-
-Perrot, Nicholas, 132, 163
-
-Perry, 349
-
-Phips, Sir William, 176-178, 182
-
-Pierre, 80, 81, 82
-
-Pierre, Fort, 208
-
-Pike, 353, 354
-
-Pitt, Fort, 290
-
-Pittsburg, 224, 228, 260
-
-Place d'Armes, 79
-
-Place Royale, 48
-
-Placentia, 183
-
-Plenderleath, Major, 358
-
-Poncet, Pere, 94, 97
-
-Pontgrave, 32-38, 42, 45, 71
-
-Pontiac, 276, 281, 286, 291, 292
-
-Port Dover, 131
-
-Port Royal, 35-44, 57, 61, 64-70, 114, 191, 194, 202
-
-Port Royal Basin, 198
-
-Port Stanley, 130
-
-Portland, Me., 171, 175
-
-Portneuf, 175
-
-Poutrincourt, Baron de, 34-42
-
-Powell, 416, 417
-
-Presqu' Isle, 276, 284, 348, 363
-
-Preston, Major, 300
-
-Prevost, Sir George, 349, 370, 376, 378, 410, 411
-
-Primeau, Louis, 297
-
-Prince Edward Island, 214, 215, 232, 256, 312, 314
-
-Procter, 363, 365, 366
-
-Puget Sound, 322
-
-
-
-Quebec, 13, 17, 44, 45, 52, 57, 59, 60, 63, 71-82, 94, 107, 117, 156,
-168, 171, 178-188, 202, 232, 252, 260-275, 276-309, 316, 317, 412, 432,
-434, 435
-
-Queenston Heights, 342-347, 352, 360, 372
-
-Quesnel, 331
-
-Quinte, Bay of, 127
-
-Quirpon, 9
-
-
-
-Radisson, Pierre Esprit, 95, 96, 98-115, 118, 144-154, 205
-
-Ragueneau, Father, 91-93, 99, 100
-
-Raleigh, Sir Walter, 25, 26, 30
-
-Ramezay, 271
-
-Rasle, Pere, 213
-
-Rat, 164, 165
-
-Razilli, Isaac, 65
-
-Red River, 381, 388-392
-
-Riall, 374
-
-Richelieu, Cardinal, 57, 58, 65
-
-Richelieu River, 46, 48, 125, 429
-
-Richmond, Duke of, 417, 418, 419
-
-Richmond Gulf, 30
-
-Rideau River, 50, 104
-
-Robertson, Colin, 380-383, 390, 391, 393, 396, 400-403
-
-Roberval, Marguerite, 20, 21
-
-Roberval, Sieur de, 18-23, 40
-
-Rogers, Robert, 242, 276, 281, 285
-
-Rolph, Dr., 421-425
-
-Ross, 407
-
-Rouville, Hertel de, 193, 194, 198
-
-Rupert, 32, 153
-
-Rupert River, 113, 115, 161
-
-Rupert's Fort, 158, 161
-
-
-
-Sable Island, 7, 23, 65, 114, 220
-
-Sackett's Harbor, 370
-
-Saguenay, 12, 22, 32, 73, 113
-
-St. Anne de Beaupre, 120
-
-St. Anthony, Falls of, 139
-
-St. Charles, Fort, 208
-
-St. Charles River, 13, 14, 15, 17, 429, 430
-
-St. Denys, 65, 71
-
-St. Eustache, 430
-
-St. Francis, Lake, 129
-
-St. Helen's Island, 49, 77
-
-St. Ignace, 85, 88, 89, 91
-
-St. Jean Ba'tiste, 85
-
-St. John, Fort, 65, 67, 70
-
-St. John River, 35, 62, 63, 64, 65, 67
-
-St. John's, 19, 26, 28, 300
-
-St. Joseph, 85, 87, 88, 284
-
-St. Joseph Island, 92
-
-St. Lawrence River, 12, 13, 15, 17, 19, 46, 71, 73, 126
-
-St. Louis, 61, 85, 88, 89, 91, 292
-
-St. Louis, Lake, 129
-
-St. Lusson, 132
-
-St. Malo, 43
-
-St. Mary's Bay, 34, 36, 236
-
-St. Peter, Lake, 15, 71
-
-St. Pierre, 204, 224, 277, 279, 280, 281
-
-St. Thomas Town, 413
-
-St. Valliere, Bishop, 122
-
-Ste. Anne's, 49
-
-Ste. Croix River, 35, 37, 44, 310
-
-Ste. Marie Mission, 85-92
-
-Saint-Castin, Baron de, 175, 195, 197, 200, 201, 202
-
-Salmon Falls, 174, 175
-
-San Francisco, 407, 408
-
-Sandusky, 276, 313
-
-Sandwich Islands, 321
-
-Sargeant, Governor, 155, 156, 159, 160
-
-Saskatchewan, 212, 243, 297, 401, 403, 436
-
-Sault Ste. Marie, 106, 132, 378
-
-Saunders, 261, 269
-
-Schenectady, 173, 174
-
-Schuyler, Captain, 176
-
-Scott, Hercules, 373, 374
-
-Secord, James, 360
-
-Secord, Laura, 360-362
-
-Sedgwick, Major, 70
-
-Selkirk, 385
-
-Selkirk, Lord, 317, 380, 381, 384, 388, 390, 396, 397, 398, 400
-
-Semple, Robert, 390, 392, 393, 394
-
-Seven Oaks, 394, 399
-
-Sheaffe, General, 346, 347, 354
-
-Sherbrooke, Sir John, 412, 417
-
-Simcoe, Lake, 54, 84, 85
-
-Simcoe, Lieutenant Governor, 316, 412
-
-Simpson, Sir George, 406
-
-Sioux Indians, 103
-
-Skraelings, 1
-
-Smithsend, 154
-
-Smyth, 348
-
-Sorcerer Indians, 51
-
-Sorel, Dame, 146
-
-Sorel, Fort, 125
-
-Stadacona, 13
-
-Staring Hairs, 53
-
-Stobo, Robert, 268
-
-Stony Creek, 357, 358
-
-Stopford, Major, 300
-
-Stuart, 331
-
-Subercase, 197-200
-
-Superior, Lake, 85, 112
-
-Susquehanna Indians, 54
-
-Swanton, Vt., 429
-
-Sylvie, 157
-
-
-
-Tadoussac, 32, 34, 44, 58, 63, 73, 74, 94, 134, 177
-
-Talbot, Tom, 413
-
-Talon, Jean, 123-125, 128, 132, 136, 143
-
-Tecumseh, 339, 363
-
-Tessouat, Chief, 51
-
-Texas, 141
-
-Thomas, General, 309
-
-Thompson, David, 332, 333
-
-Thornstein, 1, 2
-
-Thorwald, 1
-
-Three Rivers, 71, 82, 83, 94, 95, 98, 107, 113, 124, 206, 277
-
-Ticonderoga, Fort, 242, 249, 252, 256, 260, 298
-
-Tobacco Indians, 85, 93
-
-Tonty, Henry, 137-141
-
-Toronto, 351, 353, 355, 415, 420, 422, 423, 432
-
-Townshend, 261, 265, 270
-
-Tracy, Marquis de, 125, 126
-
-Trent River, 54
-
-Trinity River, 141
-
-Truro, 236
-
-Twin Cities, 139
-
-Twin Mountains Lake, 49
-
-Ungava Bay, 30
-
-
-
-Van Egmond, 421, 422, 424
-
-Van Rensselaer, 342-348
-
-Van Shoultz, 427
-
-Vancouver, George, 319, 321-323
-
-Vancouver Island, 320-322
-
-Vaudreuil, Governor de, 193, 197, 243, 262, 274
-
-Vaughan, 216
-
-Vercheres, Jared of, 198
-
-Vercheres, M. de, 169
-
-Vercheres, Madame de, 169
-
-Vergor, 231
-
-Vermont, 429, 430
-
-Verrazano, 7
-
-Vetch, Colonel, 198, 201
-
-Victoria, 409
-
-Vignau, Nicholas, 49-51, 127
-
-Vikings, 1
-
-Ville Marie, 78
-
-Vimont, Father, 73, 77, 78
-
-Vincent, General, 355, 356, 358, 359
-
-Vinland, 1, 2, 3
-
-
-
-Walker, Sir Hovender, 202, 203
-
-Warren, 219
-
-Washington, George, 224, 229, 260, 310
-
-Webb, General, 250
-
-Weir, Lieutenant, 429
-
-Wetherell, Colonel, 429
-
-Wilkinson, 367, 368
-
-William, Fort, 112, 397, 398, 399
-
-William of Orange, 165, 166
-
-Williams, William, 403
-
-Winchester, General, 363
-
-Winder, 356, 357, 358
-
-Winnipeg, 210, 387, 394
-
-Winnipeg Lake, 208
-
-Winthrop, 176
-
-Wisconsin, 106
-
-Wisconsin River, 132
-
-Wolfe, James, 44, 252-257
-
-Wye River, 85, 88, 89, 92
-
-
-
-Yeo, Sir James, 358, 366, 377
-
-York Fort, 384, 385
-
-
-
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