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Auguste Chouteau

René-Auguste Chouteau, Jr. (September 7, 1749, or September 26, 1750[1] – February 24, 1829[2]), also known as Auguste Chouteau, was the founder of St. Louis, Missouri, a successful fur trader and a politician. He and his partner had a monopoly for many years of fur trade with the large Osage tribe on the Missouri River. In addition, he had numerous business interests in St. Louis and was well-connected with the various rulers: French, Spanish and American.

Auguste Chouteau
Born(1749-09-07)September 7, 1749
DiedFebruary 24, 1829(1829-02-24) (aged 79)
St. Louis, Missouri, United States
Signature

Early life and education

On September 20, 1748, Marie-Thérèse Bourgeois married René Auguste Chouteau, who had recently immigrated from France to Louisiana.[3] René Chouteau was described as an innkeeper, liquor dealer, and pastry chef.[3][4] He was born in the village of L'Hermenault in September 1723, and was nearly ten years older than Bourgeois.[5] Auguste Chouteau was the only child of Marie-Thérèse and René, born in either September 1749 or September 1750.[3][6] The elder Chouteau purportedly abused Marie Thérèse, and the abandonment of her and their son, led Marie Thérèse to return to her pre-matrimonial home. Some scholars say that she returned to the convent. Others believe that she returned to her step-father's and mother's house. In either case, a child named "René" was baptized on that date[when?] to René Chouteau and Marie-Thérèse. However, the Auguste Chouteau who founded St. Louis, Missouri, often was referred to as René-Auguste, but his birth date was listed in family records as September 26, 1750. Family members in the 19th century used the traditional date (September 26, 1750) for Chouteau's grave marker in Calvary Cemetery. In René Chouteau's will, he referred to two living sons in 1776. Thus, it is possible a second son existed. In that case, it is likely that the second son died after René Chouteau left Louisiana.

By 1758, Marie-Thérèse (known as Madame Chouteau or Widow Chouteau[7]) had met and began living with Pierre de Laclède Liguest (commonly known as Laclède) in a common-law marriage.[8] Kieran Doherty suggests that Laclède informally adopted Auguste Chouteau, providing him with an education in one of the Catholic schools of New Orleans.[9] Regardless of whether formal education was provided Chouteau, it was clear that by his early teens, he had a respect for learning and some form of education (possibly under the direct tutelage of Laclède).[10] By the early 1760s, Chouteau worked as an assistant in obtaining supplies for Laclède's partnership business with Gilbert Antoine de St. Maxent, and served as a clerk in Laclède's journey up the Mississippi River to establish another fur-trading post.[9]

Though highly influenced by Laclède, many historians have also commented on his mother's character and intelligence that proved to be exceptionally important throughout his entire life. With a strong business sense and acumen, she would have helped developed his senses that later proved to be very effective and helpful in later years.

Settlement of St. Louis

 
Pierre Laclède, stepfather of Auguste Chouteau and co-founder of St. Louis

Maxent and Laclède formed a partnership in the early 1760s to build a French trading post on the west bank of the Mississippi River north of the village of Ste. Genevieve, Missouri. They began buying supplies in early 1763, and on July 6, 1763, they obtained the necessary license from the French territorial government to trade with the Native Americans (primarily those living near the Missouri River).[11] Starting in August 1763, Chouteau, Laclède and some 30 other men traveled upriver from New Orleans to Sainte Geneviève with trade goods.[12] By November, the group arrived at Sainte Geneviève, but Laclède found that the village did not have adequate storage for his goods.[13] As it had been settled near the riverbank on bottomland, Laclède "deemed the location insalubrious" for his business.[14] (After repeated flooding, in the 1780s the residents relocated Sainte Geneviève upriver and inland to higher ground.)

The French garrison just across the river at Fort de Chartres agreed to store the goods until the British arrived. (Following the Seven Years' War, the French conceded their territory and installations to the victorious British. The fort was to be turned over to the British according to the Treaty of Paris (1763).[15] The commandant of Illinois, Pierre-Joseph Neyon de Villiers, suggested French settlers should relocate from the Illinois Country to New Orleans. (He thought it would be under French control, as he did not know of the Treaty of Fontainebleau (1762) to give control of the area west of the Mississippi to the Spanish).[16] Because of the postwar upheaval, "instead of just establishing a trading post at the mouth of the Missouri, [Laclède] would create an entire community."[17] Laclède believed he could convince many French to move to the west bank of the Mississippi at his new settlement.[18] He planned to store the goods until spring, and then have Chouteau and his team build the trading post at the site they selected in December 1763.[17] As Chouteau wrote, Laclède said, "You will come here as soon as navigation opens, and will cause this place to be cleared, in order to form our settlement after the plan that I shall give you."[19]

In the late winter, Chouteau fitted out a boat and led a party of 30 men across the river, where they landed on February 14, 1764.[20] The next day, February 15, Chouteau directed the men to start clearing and founded the European city of St. Louis.[21] (It was on a site long occupied by indigenous tribes, as demonstrated by the numerous massive earthwork mounds left from the Mississippian culture of the 9th-12th century.)[22]

Laclède was at Fort de Chartres until early April, recruiting French settlers from the east side villages. Because of a large migrating band of Osage, Laclède went to St. Louis to negotiate their departure from the fledgling post.[23][24] Within months, Laclède had built a home for his common-law wife Marie-Thérèse, who traveled to the outpost from New Orleans, arriving in September 1764.[23] Auguste Chouteau lived here until his death.[25] In addition to Auguste, Marie-Thérèse had an additional four children (by Pierre Laclède, but under the surname of Chouteau).[23] Among these four were three girls and a boy, Jean Pierre Chouteau, who later became a partner with Auguste in business and politics.[26]

 
The first Catholic church in St. Louis, where Auguste Chouteau married Marie-Thérèse Cerre in 1786

After Laclède's death in 1778, Chouteau took over the business of trading, adding greatly to the family fortunes.[27] He quickly expanded the business to include agricultural properties, and banking, and owned an early grist mill in St. Louis. He built the mill along Mill Creek in what became the Mill Creek Valley.[28][29] Chouteau's Pond was a local attraction until 1852.[30] Chouteau played a significant role in the growth of other, outlying towns, such as St. Charles, Missouri.[31]

Chouteau also remained on good terms with the Spanish government in Saint Louis. In 1780, Chouteau played a small role in the Battle of St. Louis, in which the village was defended against a British-led Native American attack.[32] Chouteau negotiated with the Spanish government for greater defense of the city, and for his efforts was commissioned a captain and later a colonel.[32]

Expansion of trade operations

In the early 1780s, Auguste Chouteau played a pivotal role in trade between the village and Native American tribes. His efforts to maintain peace and promote trade led him to establish (along with his brother, Pierre) numerous trading forts along the Missouri River.[33]

His relationship with the Osage Nation became particularly important when, in 1787, the Spanish governor Esteban Miro ordered an end to trade with the Osage and began to prepare for war against them as a result of fighting between Osage and European settlers.[34] Although the government continued its ban on trade with the Osage, Chouteau was able to defuse a conflict between Osage and Spanish-armed settlers through his intervention with Miro.[34] In spite of continuing problems between the Osage and the Spanish government, Chouteau maintained good relations with the tribe.[34] Although the trade ban was lifted in 1791, problems continued among Mississippi tribes and the settlers, including horse theft and threatened attack on an Osage delegation in St. Louis by rival tribes of Sac, Fox, Kickapoo, Mascouten and Winnebago warriors.[34]

In 1793, these problems culminated in an order from the Spanish Governor General Francisco Luis Héctor de Carondelet, in which all trade between settlers and tribes was to cease. Hector also ordered a military expedition against the Osage and other tribes.[34] However, Hector was persuaded toward peace by an Osage delegation led by Chouteau to New Orleans in the spring of 1794.[34] To convince Hector of peace, Chouteau promised a military fort built among the Osage at his own expense. In return, Chouteau was given a six-year monopoly on trade along the Osage River.[35] After its construction in 1795, Fort Carondelet, although acting as a military base, was in practice a trading post for the Chouteau family.[36][37] The fort also served as home to Chouteau's nephews, who gained valuable experience as traders.[38] Through contacts at this post, Chouteau also negotiated construction of a second trading post among the Osage, located on the Verdigris River in eastern Kansas from 1795 to 1797.[39]

 
The home of Auguste Chouteau in St. Louis, where Lewis and Clark stayed and purchased supplies for their 1803 expedition

However, in 1799, new Spanish Governor General Manuel María de Salcedo began favoring a Spanish businessman instead of the Chouteau fur operation. Fort Carondelet was sold to the Spanish firm, but Chouteau continued trade with the Osage on the Verdigris.[40] Yet the Spanish competition was short-lived, as the Louisiana Territory was transferred first to France in 1800, then the United States in 1803. Late that year, Chouteau provided valuable information to the Lewis and Clark Expedition about the population of the Louisiana territory, along with observations of wildlife and local villages.[41] In early 1804, Lewis and Clark purchased materials from Chouteau's trading house in St. Louis, and on March 9, 1804, Chouteau hosted the new American commander of the Upper Louisiana during the transfer ceremonies for the Louisiana Purchase.[41] For this, Chouteau was rewarded with a return to his monopoly on trade with the tribes by the United States.[41] From 1806 to 1815, Chouteau continued leading family fur trade business, eventually negotiating part of the Treaties of Portage des Sioux in 1815 after the War of 1812. In 1816, Auguste Chouteau retired from his trading businesses.[42] Still active in Indian issues in 1817, Chouteau served as a U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs with William Clark in the first U.S. treaty with the Ponca tribe.[43]

Family and death

For more information on the Chouteau family and places named for the Chouteau family, see Chouteau.

Auguste Chouteau kept his residence in St. Louis area, although he had numerous lengthy trading journeys up the Missouri to his outer posts and to trade with Native Americans, mostly Osage. In the 1760s and early 1770s, Chouteau likely fathered two enslaved Native American children, whose mothers were owned by his mother. The enslaved Native American mothers, Therese and Manon, gave birth to sons Jean-Baptiste and Alexis. In the 1760s and 1770s, he took at least one wife among the Osage, a standard practice among furtraders. In the 1780s, Chouteau also had some type of long-term affair with enslaved Native American woman, Marie. Marie was the enslaved women of Lieutenant Governor Francisco Cruzat. The relationship between Marie and Chouteau bore two children, a son Auguste and a daughter Victoire. Chouteau's children by Native American women were likely emancipated and worked in their father's extended fur-trade enterprise. [2] [44] Chouteau married Marie Therese, the daughter of Jean-Gabriel Cerré, on September 21, 1786, at the Basilica of St. Louis, King of France (then a vertical-log church, not the current church on the site).[45] The marriage united members of the two leading St. Louis families; it also appears to have been a happy one.[46] They were renowned for their hospitality, which helped strengthen his political position in the city and region.

Chouteau died February 24, 1829.[45] His remains were interred first at the burial grounds near the Basilica of St. Louis, but were reinterred at Calvary Cemetery. After his death, 22 of his 36 slaves were sold at probate, providing $10,838.88 in proceeds, half of which was provided to his wife, with the other half being divided equally among their seven children.[42]

Children of Auguste Chouteau and Marie Therese Cerre:

  • Auguste Aristide Chouteau (1792–1833), fur trader
  • Gabriel Chouteau (1794–1887), served in War of 1812
  • Marie Thérèse Eulalie Chouteau (1799–1835), married René Paul, first surveyor of St. Louis
  • Henry Chouteau (1805–55), railroad executive, killed in Gasconade Bridge train disaster
  • Edward Chouteau (1807–46), trader
  • Louise Chouteau, married Gabriel Paul, brother of René and French chevalier
  • Emilie Chouteau, married Thomas Floyd, officer in the Black Hawk War

References

  1. ^ Christian, 30. According to Shirley Christian, Chouteau's parents "baptized a son, whose name was listed only as René, on September 9, 1749. There is confusion as to whether this son was Auguste Chouteau or whether the first son died and a second son, Auguste, was born a year later. ... Auguste Chouteau's birth date is listed in family records as September 26, 1750, but no baptismal record has been uncovered."
  2. ^ a b Beckwith, 8.
  3. ^ a b c Christian, 30.
  4. ^ Doherty, 34.
  5. ^ Foley, 1.
  6. ^ Hoig, 2.
  7. ^ Foley, 2.
  8. ^ Hoig, 3.
  9. ^ a b Doherty, 35.
  10. ^ Foley, 3.
  11. ^ Christian, 33.
  12. ^ Christian, 34.
  13. ^ Hoig, 5.
  14. ^ Stevens, 19.
  15. ^ Christian, 34
  16. ^ Stevens, 20.
  17. ^ a b Christian, 36.
  18. ^ Christian, 38.
  19. ^ Chouteau, 4.
  20. ^ Christian, 37. Some dispute exists as to whether the party landed on February 14 or March 14, based on a discrepancy in Chouteau's narrative. Most historians ascribe Chouteau's date as an error.
  21. ^ Christian, 36-7.
  22. ^ Stevens, 23.
  23. ^ a b c Hoig, 7.
  24. ^ Christian, 41
  25. ^ Stevens, 57.
  26. ^ Hoig, 12.
  27. ^ Hoig, 13.
  28. ^ Hoig, 14.
  29. ^ Naffziger, Chris (November 30, 2020). "The historic bridges over the Mill Creek railroad tracks, part 1". Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  30. ^ O'Neil, Tim (August 7, 2021). "Aug. 7, 1954: Decision to clear Mill Creek Valley changed the face of the city". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Retrieved February 5, 2022.
  31. ^ Hoig, 17.
  32. ^ a b Hoig, 15.
  33. ^ Hoig, 69.
  34. ^ a b c d e f Hoig, 19.
  35. ^ Hoig, 20.
  36. ^ Hoig, 21-23.
  37. ^ Fort Carondelet, although no longer extant, stood on Halley's Bluff in Vernon County, Missouri, a site now occupied by the Church of Christ at Halley's Bluff.
  38. ^ Hoig, 21.
  39. ^ Hoig, 24.
  40. ^ Hoig, 25.
  41. ^ a b c Hoig, 26.
  42. ^ a b National Park Service April 22, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  43. ^ 1817 U.S.-Ponca treaty November 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ Ekberg, Stealing Indian Women, 81-88"
  45. ^ a b Beckwith, 9.
  46. ^ Foley, 45.

Bibliography

  • Ames, Gregory P. ed. & trans. Auguste Chouteau's Journal: Memory, Mythmaking & History in the Heritage of New France. St. Louis: St. Louis Mercantile Library, 2010.
  • Beckwith, Paul Edmond. Creoles of St. Louis. St. Louis: Nixon-Jones, 1893.
  • Chouteau, Auguste. A Fragment of Col. Auguste Chouteau's Narrative of the Settlement of St. Louis. St. Louis: Knapp and Co., 1858.
  • Christian, Shirley. Before Lewis and Clark: The Story of the Chouteaus, the French Dynasty That Ruled America's Frontier. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004.
  • Doherty, Kieran. Ranchers, Homesteaders and Traders: Frontiersmen of the South-Central States.
  • Ekberg, Carl J. Stealing Indian Women: Native Slavery in the Illinois Country. Urbana, University of Illinois Press, 2007.
  • Foley, William E. The First Chouteaus: River Barons of St. Louis. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983.
  • Hoig, Stan. The Chouteaus, First Family of the Fur Trade. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2008.
  • Stevens, Walter Barlow. St. Louis: The Fourth City, 1764-1911. St. Louis: S.J. Clarke Co., 1911.

External links

  • , Common-Place, Vol. 3, No. 4
  • Auguste Chouteau Collection, Mercantile Library, University of Missouri at St. Louis, <--Broken link, February 2017.
  • in the Dictionary of Louisiana Biography of the Louisiana Historical Association (scroll down)

auguste, chouteau, rené, september, 1749, september, 1750, february, 1829, also, known, founder, louis, missouri, successful, trader, politician, partner, monopoly, many, years, trade, with, large, osage, tribe, missouri, river, addition, numerous, business, i. Rene Auguste Chouteau Jr September 7 1749 or September 26 1750 1 February 24 1829 2 also known as Auguste Chouteau was the founder of St Louis Missouri a successful fur trader and a politician He and his partner had a monopoly for many years of fur trade with the large Osage tribe on the Missouri River In addition he had numerous business interests in St Louis and was well connected with the various rulers French Spanish and American Auguste ChouteauBorn 1749 09 07 September 7 1749New Orleans Louisiana New France DiedFebruary 24 1829 1829 02 24 aged 79 St Louis Missouri United StatesSignature Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Settlement of St Louis 3 Expansion of trade operations 4 Family and death 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life and education EditOn September 20 1748 Marie Therese Bourgeois married Rene Auguste Chouteau who had recently immigrated from France to Louisiana 3 Rene Chouteau was described as an innkeeper liquor dealer and pastry chef 3 4 He was born in the village of L Hermenault in September 1723 and was nearly ten years older than Bourgeois 5 Auguste Chouteau was the only child of Marie Therese and Rene born in either September 1749 or September 1750 3 6 The elder Chouteau purportedly abused Marie Therese and the abandonment of her and their son led Marie Therese to return to her pre matrimonial home Some scholars say that she returned to the convent Others believe that she returned to her step father s and mother s house In either case a child named Rene was baptized on that date when to Rene Chouteau and Marie Therese However the Auguste Chouteau who founded St Louis Missouri often was referred to as Rene Auguste but his birth date was listed in family records as September 26 1750 Family members in the 19th century used the traditional date September 26 1750 for Chouteau s grave marker in Calvary Cemetery In Rene Chouteau s will he referred to two living sons in 1776 Thus it is possible a second son existed In that case it is likely that the second son died after Rene Chouteau left Louisiana By 1758 Marie Therese known as Madame Chouteau or Widow Chouteau 7 had met and began living with Pierre de Laclede Liguest commonly known as Laclede in a common law marriage 8 Kieran Doherty suggests that Laclede informally adopted Auguste Chouteau providing him with an education in one of the Catholic schools of New Orleans 9 Regardless of whether formal education was provided Chouteau it was clear that by his early teens he had a respect for learning and some form of education possibly under the direct tutelage of Laclede 10 By the early 1760s Chouteau worked as an assistant in obtaining supplies for Laclede s partnership business with Gilbert Antoine de St Maxent and served as a clerk in Laclede s journey up the Mississippi River to establish another fur trading post 9 Though highly influenced by Laclede many historians have also commented on his mother s character and intelligence that proved to be exceptionally important throughout his entire life With a strong business sense and acumen she would have helped developed his senses that later proved to be very effective and helpful in later years Settlement of St Louis Edit Pierre Laclede stepfather of Auguste Chouteau and co founder of St LouisMaxent and Laclede formed a partnership in the early 1760s to build a French trading post on the west bank of the Mississippi River north of the village of Ste Genevieve Missouri They began buying supplies in early 1763 and on July 6 1763 they obtained the necessary license from the French territorial government to trade with the Native Americans primarily those living near the Missouri River 11 Starting in August 1763 Chouteau Laclede and some 30 other men traveled upriver from New Orleans to Sainte Genevieve with trade goods 12 By November the group arrived at Sainte Genevieve but Laclede found that the village did not have adequate storage for his goods 13 As it had been settled near the riverbank on bottomland Laclede deemed the location insalubrious for his business 14 After repeated flooding in the 1780s the residents relocated Sainte Genevieve upriver and inland to higher ground The French garrison just across the river at Fort de Chartres agreed to store the goods until the British arrived Following the Seven Years War the French conceded their territory and installations to the victorious British The fort was to be turned over to the British according to the Treaty of Paris 1763 15 The commandant of Illinois Pierre Joseph Neyon de Villiers suggested French settlers should relocate from the Illinois Country to New Orleans He thought it would be under French control as he did not know of the Treaty of Fontainebleau 1762 to give control of the area west of the Mississippi to the Spanish 16 Because of the postwar upheaval instead of just establishing a trading post at the mouth of the Missouri Laclede would create an entire community 17 Laclede believed he could convince many French to move to the west bank of the Mississippi at his new settlement 18 He planned to store the goods until spring and then have Chouteau and his team build the trading post at the site they selected in December 1763 17 As Chouteau wrote Laclede said You will come here as soon as navigation opens and will cause this place to be cleared in order to form our settlement after the plan that I shall give you 19 In the late winter Chouteau fitted out a boat and led a party of 30 men across the river where they landed on February 14 1764 20 The next day February 15 Chouteau directed the men to start clearing and founded the European city of St Louis 21 It was on a site long occupied by indigenous tribes as demonstrated by the numerous massive earthwork mounds left from the Mississippian culture of the 9th 12th century 22 Laclede was at Fort de Chartres until early April recruiting French settlers from the east side villages Because of a large migrating band of Osage Laclede went to St Louis to negotiate their departure from the fledgling post 23 24 Within months Laclede had built a home for his common law wife Marie Therese who traveled to the outpost from New Orleans arriving in September 1764 23 Auguste Chouteau lived here until his death 25 In addition to Auguste Marie Therese had an additional four children by Pierre Laclede but under the surname of Chouteau 23 Among these four were three girls and a boy Jean Pierre Chouteau who later became a partner with Auguste in business and politics 26 The first Catholic church in St Louis where Auguste Chouteau married Marie Therese Cerre in 1786 After Laclede s death in 1778 Chouteau took over the business of trading adding greatly to the family fortunes 27 He quickly expanded the business to include agricultural properties and banking and owned an early grist mill in St Louis He built the mill along Mill Creek in what became the Mill Creek Valley 28 29 Chouteau s Pond was a local attraction until 1852 30 Chouteau played a significant role in the growth of other outlying towns such as St Charles Missouri 31 Chouteau also remained on good terms with the Spanish government in Saint Louis In 1780 Chouteau played a small role in the Battle of St Louis in which the village was defended against a British led Native American attack 32 Chouteau negotiated with the Spanish government for greater defense of the city and for his efforts was commissioned a captain and later a colonel 32 Expansion of trade operations EditIn the early 1780s Auguste Chouteau played a pivotal role in trade between the village and Native American tribes His efforts to maintain peace and promote trade led him to establish along with his brother Pierre numerous trading forts along the Missouri River 33 His relationship with the Osage Nation became particularly important when in 1787 the Spanish governor Esteban Miro ordered an end to trade with the Osage and began to prepare for war against them as a result of fighting between Osage and European settlers 34 Although the government continued its ban on trade with the Osage Chouteau was able to defuse a conflict between Osage and Spanish armed settlers through his intervention with Miro 34 In spite of continuing problems between the Osage and the Spanish government Chouteau maintained good relations with the tribe 34 Although the trade ban was lifted in 1791 problems continued among Mississippi tribes and the settlers including horse theft and threatened attack on an Osage delegation in St Louis by rival tribes of Sac Fox Kickapoo Mascouten and Winnebago warriors 34 In 1793 these problems culminated in an order from the Spanish Governor General Francisco Luis Hector de Carondelet in which all trade between settlers and tribes was to cease Hector also ordered a military expedition against the Osage and other tribes 34 However Hector was persuaded toward peace by an Osage delegation led by Chouteau to New Orleans in the spring of 1794 34 To convince Hector of peace Chouteau promised a military fort built among the Osage at his own expense In return Chouteau was given a six year monopoly on trade along the Osage River 35 After its construction in 1795 Fort Carondelet although acting as a military base was in practice a trading post for the Chouteau family 36 37 The fort also served as home to Chouteau s nephews who gained valuable experience as traders 38 Through contacts at this post Chouteau also negotiated construction of a second trading post among the Osage located on the Verdigris River in eastern Kansas from 1795 to 1797 39 The home of Auguste Chouteau in St Louis where Lewis and Clark stayed and purchased supplies for their 1803 expedition However in 1799 new Spanish Governor General Manuel Maria de Salcedo began favoring a Spanish businessman instead of the Chouteau fur operation Fort Carondelet was sold to the Spanish firm but Chouteau continued trade with the Osage on the Verdigris 40 Yet the Spanish competition was short lived as the Louisiana Territory was transferred first to France in 1800 then the United States in 1803 Late that year Chouteau provided valuable information to the Lewis and Clark Expedition about the population of the Louisiana territory along with observations of wildlife and local villages 41 In early 1804 Lewis and Clark purchased materials from Chouteau s trading house in St Louis and on March 9 1804 Chouteau hosted the new American commander of the Upper Louisiana during the transfer ceremonies for the Louisiana Purchase 41 For this Chouteau was rewarded with a return to his monopoly on trade with the tribes by the United States 41 From 1806 to 1815 Chouteau continued leading family fur trade business eventually negotiating part of the Treaties of Portage des Sioux in 1815 after the War of 1812 In 1816 Auguste Chouteau retired from his trading businesses 42 Still active in Indian issues in 1817 Chouteau served as a U S Commissioner of Indian Affairs with William Clark in the first U S treaty with the Ponca tribe 43 Family and death EditFor more information on the Chouteau family and places named for the Chouteau family see Chouteau Auguste Chouteau kept his residence in St Louis area although he had numerous lengthy trading journeys up the Missouri to his outer posts and to trade with Native Americans mostly Osage In the 1760s and early 1770s Chouteau likely fathered two enslaved Native American children whose mothers were owned by his mother The enslaved Native American mothers Therese and Manon gave birth to sons Jean Baptiste and Alexis In the 1760s and 1770s he took at least one wife among the Osage a standard practice among furtraders In the 1780s Chouteau also had some type of long term affair with enslaved Native American woman Marie Marie was the enslaved women of Lieutenant Governor Francisco Cruzat The relationship between Marie and Chouteau bore two children a son Auguste and a daughter Victoire Chouteau s children by Native American women were likely emancipated and worked in their father s extended fur trade enterprise 2 44 Chouteau married Marie Therese the daughter of Jean Gabriel Cerre on September 21 1786 at the Basilica of St Louis King of France then a vertical log church not the current church on the site 45 The marriage united members of the two leading St Louis families it also appears to have been a happy one 46 They were renowned for their hospitality which helped strengthen his political position in the city and region Chouteau died February 24 1829 45 His remains were interred first at the burial grounds near the Basilica of St Louis but were reinterred at Calvary Cemetery After his death 22 of his 36 slaves were sold at probate providing 10 838 88 in proceeds half of which was provided to his wife with the other half being divided equally among their seven children 42 Children of Auguste Chouteau and Marie Therese Cerre Auguste Aristide Chouteau 1792 1833 fur trader Gabriel Chouteau 1794 1887 served in War of 1812 Marie Therese Eulalie Chouteau 1799 1835 married Rene Paul first surveyor of St Louis Henry Chouteau 1805 55 railroad executive killed in Gasconade Bridge train disaster Edward Chouteau 1807 46 trader Louise Chouteau married Gabriel Paul brother of Rene and French chevalier Emilie Chouteau married Thomas Floyd officer in the Black Hawk WarReferences Edit Christian 30 According to Shirley Christian Chouteau s parents baptized a son whose name was listed only as Rene on September 9 1749 There is confusion as to whether this son was Auguste Chouteau or whether the first son died and a second son Auguste was born a year later Auguste Chouteau s birth date is listed in family records as September 26 1750 but no baptismal record has been uncovered a b Beckwith 8 a b c Christian 30 Doherty 34 Foley 1 Hoig 2 Foley 2 Hoig 3 a b Doherty 35 Foley 3 Christian 33 Christian 34 Hoig 5 Stevens 19 Christian 34 Stevens 20 a b Christian 36 Christian 38 Chouteau 4 Christian 37 Some dispute exists as to whether the party landed on February 14 or March 14 based on a discrepancy in Chouteau s narrative Most historians ascribe Chouteau s date as an error Christian 36 7 Stevens 23 a b c Hoig 7 Christian 41 Stevens 57 Hoig 12 Hoig 13 Hoig 14 Naffziger Chris November 30 2020 The historic bridges over the Mill Creek railroad tracks part 1 Retrieved February 5 2022 O Neil Tim August 7 2021 Aug 7 1954 Decision to clear Mill Creek Valley changed the face of the city St Louis Post Dispatch Retrieved February 5 2022 Hoig 17 a b Hoig 15 Hoig 69 a b c d e f Hoig 19 Hoig 20 Hoig 21 23 Fort Carondelet although no longer extant stood on Halley s Bluff in Vernon County Missouri a site now occupied by the Church of Christ at Halley s Bluff Hoig 21 Hoig 24 Hoig 25 a b c Hoig 26 a b National Park Service Archived April 22 2010 at the Wayback Machine 1817 U S Ponca treaty Archived November 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine Ekberg Stealing Indian Women 81 88 a b Beckwith 9 Foley 45 Bibliography EditAmes Gregory P ed amp trans Auguste Chouteau s Journal Memory Mythmaking amp History in the Heritage of New France St Louis St Louis Mercantile Library 2010 Beckwith Paul Edmond Creoles of St Louis St Louis Nixon Jones 1893 Chouteau Auguste A Fragment of Col Auguste Chouteau s Narrative of the Settlement of St Louis St Louis Knapp and Co 1858 Christian Shirley Before Lewis and Clark The Story of the Chouteaus the French Dynasty That Ruled America s Frontier New York Farrar Straus and Giroux 2004 Doherty Kieran Ranchers Homesteaders and Traders Frontiersmen of the South Central States Ekberg Carl J Stealing Indian Women Native Slavery in the Illinois Country Urbana University of Illinois Press 2007 Foley William E The First Chouteaus River Barons of St Louis Urbana University of Illinois Press 1983 Hoig Stan The Chouteaus First Family of the Fur Trade Albuquerque University of New Mexico Press 2008 Stevens Walter Barlow St Louis The Fourth City 1764 1911 St Louis S J Clarke Co 1911 External links Edit French Wikisource has original text related to this article Account of the Founding of St Louis French Jay Gitlin Constructing the House of Chouteau Saint Louis Common Place Vol 3 No 4 Auguste Chouteau Collection Mercantile Library University of Missouri at St Louis lt Broken link February 2017 Auguste Chouteau in the Dictionary of Louisiana Biography of the Louisiana Historical Association scroll down Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Auguste Chouteau amp oldid 1137677461, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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