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Shirley Christian - Before Lewis and Clark: The Story of the Chouteaus, the French Dynasty That Ruled Americas Frontier

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Shirley Christian Before Lewis and Clark: The Story of the Chouteaus, the French Dynasty That Ruled Americas Frontier
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Shortly after Meriweather Lewis reached St. Louis in 1803 to plan for his voyage to the Pacific with William Clark, he prepared his first packet of flora and fauna from west of the Mississippi and dispatched it to President Jefferson. The cuttings, which were later planted in Philadelphia and Virginia, were supplied by Lewiss new French friend, Pierre Chouteau, who took them from a tree growing in the garden of his mansion.
One of the best-known families in French America, the Chouteaus had guarded the gates to the West for generations and had built fortunes from fur trading, land speculation, finance, and railroads, and by supplying anything needed to survive in the region between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains. Patrician in their origins, they nevertheless won the respect and allegiance of dozens of Indian tribes. From their St. Louis base, the Chouteaus conquered the more-than-two-thousand-mile length of the Missouri River, put down the first European roots at the future site of Kansas City and in present-day Oklahoma, and left their names and imprints on lands stretching to the Canadian border.
Before Lewis and Clark: The French Dynasty that Ruled Americas Frontier is the extraordinary story of a wealthy, powerful, charming, and manipulative family, who dominated business and politics in the Louisiana Purchase territory before the famous Lewis and Clark expedition, and for decades afterward.
A fine history of a French family that enjoyed great influenceand deservedly soin the early trans-Mississippian West. - Kirkus Reviews

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Table of Contents Without the Missouri Historical Society this - photo 1
Table of Contents



Without the Missouri Historical Society this book could not have been written. Not only did my research make ample use of the sixty-plus boxes of Chouteau family papers, portraits, and photographs in the MHS collections, but collections of many related families and other contemporaries of the Chouteaus provided additional information. These included the papers of the Papin, Gratiot, Lucas, Clark, and Bates families, plus those of Meriwether Lewis, Amos Stoddard, Hamilton R. Gamble, and, of course, Pierre Laclde.
The Missouri Historical Societys carefully assembled and maintained remnants of a time when St. Louis and the lands to the west of it were a distant and exotic place to most Americans are a priceless treasure. It is remarkable that the founders of the society had the foresight to begin to assemble these thingsand recognized their importanceat a time when almost no one else in the raw and rambunctious American West was giving much thought to preserving history.
The weeks and months I spent in the beautiful converted synagogue facing Forest Park in St. Louis that serves as the MHS research library were truly a labor of love. I count it a great privilege to have been able to use it.
Also of great use to me were the first-person accounts of life west of the Mississippi River in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries provided by many Europeans and by Americans from the eastern states. These adventurous people included naturalists and botanists,writers and artists, military officers, titled Europeans, scholars, and plain opportunists. A surprising number of themlike Lewis and Clarkkept diaries and wrote letters as they battled the currents and submerged trees on the Missouri River and its tributaries, and as they rested after buffalo hunts and shared the spartan diets of Indians and French boatmen. When they returned home to Boston and Philadelphia, London and the Continent, their diaries and letters were often turned into published books. Many such books and journals, ranging from Charles Claude du Tisns account of his 1719 travels among the Osages to Louis Cortamberts 1835 visits with the same tribe, were first published in France. Possibly the earliest in English was Captain Philip Pittmans book on his tour of the mid-Mississippi Valley in 176566. These stories represent a window on life in the Louisiana Purchase lands when white penetration was at a minimum, a century or more before the surge of pioneers from east of the Mississippi.
Like Lewis and Clark, many of these early travelers turned to the Chouteaus and their kin for help in making their way around the West. From their writings, I extracted bits and pieces of the lives of the Chouteaus as well as a broader account of the world around them.
Although the men of the fur trade themselves were not notable for literary efforts, a few of them did leave journals and other accounts that were invaluable to me. They included Francis Chardon, who recorded the number of rats he killed each month at Fort Clark with the same diligence he applied to recording the rampage of smallpox. Charles Larpenteur provided forty years worth of detail on his life in the isolated splendor of the Upper Missouri River. And Jules de Mun, born to the genteel existence of white plantation society in the French Caribbean, left a vivid account of the harrowing trade expedition across the High Plains and Rocky Mountains that he undertook with A. P. Chouteau just three years after marrying into the Chouteau clan.
My research also benefited from the work of American historians going back a century or more who pioneered in publishing the early histories of the vast area. At the forefront of these was the Wisconsin historian Reuben Gold Thwaites. He not only edited the complete compilation of the Lewis and Clark journals in 19047, but duringthe same time period he brought out the thirty-two-volume Early Western Travels, 17481846, which gathered the writings of the earliest white travelers into the region. I am also indebted to Hiram M. Chittenden for first putting into print the incredible story of the fur trade; to Louise Barry for her huge effort to document the early history of the area that became Kansas; to Donald Jackson for compiling the letters related to the Lewis and Clark expedition and Zebulon M. Pikes letters and journals; to John Francis McDermott, a Chouteau descendant who was expert on anything having to do with the Mississippi Valley French; and to Abraham P. Nasatir for the years he spent in the Spanish and French archives to produce an English-language record of official policies and correspondence during the rule of Spain and France in the Louisiana Purchase region.
The works of many of these people were made available to me from the magnificent collection of rare Western Americana belonging to the Special Collections Department of the Miller Nichols Library at the University of MissouriKansas City. It was a source of continuing delight and amazement to discover that many books I expected to have difficulty in locating were easily available a fifteen-minute drive from my house. Aside from instant help in locating materials, the Special Collections research room provided a quiet place for uninterrupted reading.
The fact that this story had to be researched in three languages, French, Spanish, and English, probably helps to explain why it has previously been told only in limited form. While I was prepared to work in all three languages, I was soon pleased to learn that the Missouri Historical Society had provided for the translation, during the 1960s, of the bulk of the original French letters in the Chouteau Collection. Very recently, another breakthrough was accomplished by the Western Historical Manuscript Collection of the University of MissouriKansas City, which arranged for the translation of about seventy letters exchanged between Franois and Brnice Chouteau, living at the future site of Kansas City, and her father, Pierre Menard, from his home in Illinois. These letters were uncovered in the Pierre Mnard Collection of the Illinois State Historical Library.
One more work of research and translation merits special mention.Louis F. Burns, a Chouteau descendant, dedicated years to culling from the handwritten archives kept by priests nearly two centuries ago the baptismal records of children born to Osage mothers and French fathers, principally along the western edge of Missouri, the eastern part of the future Kansas, and the northeast corner of the future Oklahoma. Among other things, Burnss Osage Missions: Baptisms, Marriages and Interments, 18201886 , establishes the link between the part-Osage Oklahoma line of the Chouteaus and its French ancestors in St. Louis. Burns and his wife, Ruth, were also the donors of most of the large collection of books related to the history of the Osages, which was available at the White Hair Memorial in Osage County, Oklahoma, another quiet place of research where I found insight and inspiration.
As important as all of these people and institutions were to this book, however, none surpasses the contribution of Minnie Acker Christian, my mother, who near the end of her ninth decade still puts dinner on the table every night.

Shirley Christian
Overland Park, Kansas
August 14, 2003
ALSO BY SHIRLEY CHRISTIAN

Nicaragua: Revolution in the Family


By the time Pierre Chouteau Jr. died, in 1865, nearly all the members of the cousins generation had passed from the scene. Still living were two of the Gratiot siblings; Augustes son Gabriel Sylvestre (Cerr) Chouteau; Cadets sister, Plagie Berthold; and three of his younger half brothers, Cyprien, Frederick, and Charles.
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