fbpx
Wikipedia

Fort Rouillé

Fort Rouillé was a French trading post located in what is now Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Fort Rouillé was constructed by the French in 1751, building upon the success of a trading post they established in the area a year earlier, known as Fort Toronto.[1][2] Fort Rouillé was named for Antoine Louis Rouillé, who at the time of its establishment was Secretary of State for the Navy in the administration of King Louis XV of France. It served as a trading post with the local indigenous peoples from the region.

Fort Rouillé
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Artistic depiction of Fort Rouillé, c. 1750s
Fort Rouillé
Coordinates43°37′50.23″N 79°25′24.80″W / 43.6306194°N 79.4235556°W / 43.6306194; -79.4235556
TypeTrading post
Site history
Built1750–51
In use1751–59
MaterialsWood
FateDestroyed in 1759

Fort Rouillé was evacuated and burnt down by its French garrison after the French defeat at Fort Niagara in July 1759, during the French and Indian War.[3] The remains of the fort were demolished in the 19th century. The fort site is now part of the public lands of Exhibition Place. The location is marked by an obelisk monument, with the outline of the fort marked in concrete.

History edit

 
Diagram of French trading posts near the Humber River
 
Map of the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail, with Fort Rouillé shown as "Fort Toronto" at the bottom

During the late 17th and 18th centuries, the area surrounding Toronto was frequently used by French fur traders as a shortcut to the upper Great Lakes and the area north of Toronto.[4] In an attempt to secure the trade route from the British, the French established Magasin Royal (Fort Douville), a trading post along the Humber River near Baby Point. Completed in 1720, the trading post was abandoned shortly after the British Fort Oswego was completed in 1727, which had diverted trade away from Magasin Royal.[5]

Fort Toronto (Fort Portneuf) edit

In 1750, the French built another trading post named Fort Toronto near the mouth of the Humber River, with the intention of diverting aboriginals using the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail from proceeding to the British fort in Oswego, New York. Known as Fort Toronto (or Fort Portneuf), the trading post saw immediate success, with demand outstripping the supply of goods that the post was able to provide.[5] Fort Toronto was built by Pierre Robineau de Portneuf and was located west of Grenadier Pond, next to Jean-Baptiste Rousseau's home at the start of the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail. This encampment was typical of other New France installations in that it commanded an old riverine trade route.

Fort Rouillé edit

The success of Fort Toronto persuaded the Governor General of New France, the Marquis de la Jonquière, to order the construction of a larger fort, with more trading capacity and military potential, in an effort to consolidate France's hold of the region and its trade routes. Fort Rouillé, located on the site of present-day Exhibition Place, was completed in the spring of 1751.[5] The new fort was named for Antoine Louis Rouillé, Comte de Jouy and French Minister of Marine and Colonies from 1749 to 1753.[3] It was also known as Fort Toronto since it replaced the small trading post that was built in 1750.[6]

The fort's construction had been ordered to further establish a French presence in the area, and to intercept the trade of indigenous people travelling towards a British fur-trading post in present-day Oswego. According to a report of the Abbé Picquet, the indigenous people received a larger amount of silver for their beavers at Oswego. Although they preferred French brandy, this was not enough to dissuade the natives from going to Oswego.[7] "To destroy the trade there, the King's posts ought to have been supplied with the same goods as Chouegen (Oswego) and at the same price."[8] Learning that the indigenous people travelled south along the Toronto Carrying-Place Trail, the decision was made to locate the fort at Toronto.[8]

Abbé Picquet visited Rouillé in 1752. He found good bread and wine there and it was better equipped than other outposts. The Mississaugas there expressed a wish for Picquet to build a church there; they had only built a canteen. Picquet had worked among the Iroquois south of the lake and the Mississaugas felt that the Iroquois had been better treated.[9]

In 1756, war was declared between Britain and France. In 1757, with the garrison elsewhere, the Mississaugas looted the fort. A message was sent to Fort Niagara and the French returned the next day to take back the fort. The Mississaugas confessed to the plot, saying that they thought the French had been driven out and they were taking items away from the British. According to a report of a Captain Pierre Pouchot, he believed that they had only wanted the French brandy.[10]

In 1758, the order was given to reinforce Fort Niagara and all men and loyal natives were called to defend it. The fort continued to operate until 1759, during the Seven Years' War. The fort's garrison was instructed to evacuate and burn Fort Rouillé should Fort Niagara be captured. Following the French defeat at Fort Niagara in July 1759, the garrison at Fort Rouillé burnt down the fort and withdrew to Montreal.[5] After the fall of Fort Niagara in July 1759, the British under Lieutenant Francis came to Rouillé and found only burnt timbers.[10]

After the destruction of Fort Rouillé, no attempt was made to re-establish a settlement in the vicinity until more than thirty years later, when Governor Simcoe laid down the foundations of York in 1793, four miles east of the French stockade.[11]

Design edit

A first-hand account of the fort describes it. "The fort of Toronto was at the end of the bay, on the side which is quite elevated and covered by flat rock so that vessels cannot approach within cannon shot. This fort or post was a square about 180 feet on a side externally with flanks of fifteen feet. The curtains formed the buildings of the fort. It was very well built, piece upon piece, but was only useful for trade. A league west of the fort is the mouth of the Toronto river, which is of considerable size. The river communicates with Lake Huron by a portage of 15 leagues, and is frequented by the Indians, who come from the north."[3]

It was a small, palisaded fort with a bastion at each of its four corners. The 180 by 180 feet (55 m × 55 m) fort consisted of five buildings: a corps de garde, storeroom, barracks, blacksmithy, and a building for the officers. A drawing purported to date from 1749 shows the fort adjacent to Lake Ontario.[12] Today the location is a hundred metres or so from the lake's current shoreline, which has been infilled.

A wall surrounded the fort with an entrance to the south-facing Lake Ontario and a small road (chemin). Captain Gother Mann showed the layout in his map, "Plan of the Proposed Toronto Harbour," dated December 6, 1788. The map shows five buildings in the stockade as well as the bounds of the quadrangle enclosed by the palisades.[3]

Monument edit

 
View of cairn marking location of fort near York Pioneer cabins in 1880
 
The Fort Rouillé monument at Exhibition Place marks the location of Fort Rouillé

Vestiges of the fort remained for many years afterwards. When Toronto secured part of the garrison common for the Toronto Industrial Exhibition, the fort site's mounds were levelled and some depressions filled in. To mark the spot, a large granite boulder was dredged up from the bay, inscribed "This cairn marks the exact spot of Fort Rouille, commonly known as Fort Toronto, an Indian Trading Post and Stockade. Established 1749 AD, by the order of the government of Louis XV in accordance with the recommendations of the Count de la Galissonniere, Administrator of New France 1717–1749. Erected by the Corporation of the City of Toronto, 1878."[13] In the summer of 1887, a large obelisk was unveiled to mark the spot where the original French-built Fort Rouillé was erected. The site is now part of Exhibition Place.

The grounds were excavated in 1979 and 1980 by the Toronto Historical Board, and again in 1982 by the Youth Committee of the Toronto Sesquicentennial Board. Two commemorative plaques – one in English, and one in French – are attached to the base of the obelisk, placed there by the Ontario Heritage Foundation. To the north, a third plaque commemorates the excavation done on the site, and to the west, a fourth plaque commemorates a visit to the site by Bertrand Delanoë, mayor of Paris, on September 6, 2003. A concrete outline of the original fort is marked on the ground.[14]

The obelisk is flanked by a cannon and a mortar, dating from the 1850s; they are all British. A second cannon, present on the west side of the obelisk as recently as 2005, has since been removed.

There is a short street, Fort Rouille Street, located approximately 1 km (0.62 mi) north of the fort site accessible from Springhurst Avenue. The street at one time extended south to the fort site.

Plaque edit

The English-language plaque erected by the Ontario Heritage Foundation in 1957 at the Fort Rouillé monument reads:

The last French post built in present-day southern Ontario, Fort Rouillé, more commonly known as Fort Toronto, was erected on this site in 1750–51. It was established by order of the Marquis de La Jonquière, Governor of New France, to help strengthen French control of the Great Lakes and was located here near an important portage to capture the trade of Indians travelling southeast toward the British fur-trading centre at Oswego. A small frontier post, Fort Rouillé was a palisaded fortification with four bastions and five main buildings. It apparently prospered until hostilities between the French and British increased in the mid-1750s. After the evacuation of other French posts on Lake Ontario, Fort Rouillé was destroyed by its garrison in July 1759.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2009-06-03. Retrieved 2009-07-22.
  2. ^ Ron Brown (2010). From Queenston to Kingston: The Hidden Heritage of Lake Ontario's Shoreline. Dundurn Press. pp. 93–94. ISBN 9781770705326. Retrieved 2020-05-17. Constructed by Chevalier de Portneuf between 1830 and 1740, Fort Toronto was in turn replaced by an even larger fort, Fort Rouille, located on what are today's CNE grounds, a site marked by an historic monument and plaque.
  3. ^ a b c d Peppiatt, Liam. . Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto Revisited. Archived from the original on 2015-09-25. Retrieved 2015-07-29.
  4. ^ Seputis, Jasmine (14 October 2015). "'Tarontos Lac': Geographer finds oldest known reference to Toronto on 340-year-old French map". CBC News. Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 15 October 2018.
  5. ^ a b c d Levine, Adam (2015). The Carry Place. Douglas & McIntyre. pp. 11–12. ISBN 978-1-7710-0022-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  6. ^ "The Beginnings of French Toronto Historical Plaque". Toronto's Historical Plaques. Retrieved 2020-01-10.
  7. ^ Scadding 1873, p. 5.
  8. ^ a b Scadding 1873, p. 6.
  9. ^ Scadding 1873, p. 8.
  10. ^ a b Robertson 1894, p. 70.
  11. ^ Peppiatt, Liam. "Chapter 31B: Fort York". Robertson's Landmarks of Toronto Revisited.
  12. ^ . Canadian Heritage Gallery. Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved October 4, 2017.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  13. ^ Robertson 1894, p. 72.
  14. ^ google maps view

Bibliography edit

  • Robertson, J. Ross (1894). Landmarks of Toronto; a collection of historical sketches of the old town of York from 1792 until 1833, and of Toronto from 1834 to 1893, vol.1.
  • Scadding, Henry (1873). Toronto of old: collections and recollections illustrative of the early settlement and social life of the capital of Ontario. Toronto, Ontario: Adam, Stevenson & Co.

External links edit

  • Fort Toronto (Rouillé) Monument
  • City of Toronto: Exploring Toronto's past – Natives and Newcomers, 1600–1793 – includes information on Fort Rouillé

fort, rouillé, french, trading, post, located, what, toronto, ontario, canada, constructed, french, 1751, building, upon, success, trading, post, they, established, area, year, earlier, known, fort, toronto, named, antoine, louis, rouillé, time, establishment,. Fort Rouille was a French trading post located in what is now Toronto Ontario Canada Fort Rouille was constructed by the French in 1751 building upon the success of a trading post they established in the area a year earlier known as Fort Toronto 1 2 Fort Rouille was named for Antoine Louis Rouille who at the time of its establishment was Secretary of State for the Navy in the administration of King Louis XV of France It served as a trading post with the local indigenous peoples from the region Fort RouilleToronto Ontario CanadaArtistic depiction of Fort Rouille c 1750sFort RouilleCoordinates43 37 50 23 N 79 25 24 80 W 43 6306194 N 79 4235556 W 43 6306194 79 4235556TypeTrading postSite historyBuilt1750 51In use1751 59MaterialsWoodFateDestroyed in 1759 Fort Rouille was evacuated and burnt down by its French garrison after the French defeat at Fort Niagara in July 1759 during the French and Indian War 3 The remains of the fort were demolished in the 19th century The fort site is now part of the public lands of Exhibition Place The location is marked by an obelisk monument with the outline of the fort marked in concrete Contents 1 History 1 1 Fort Toronto Fort Portneuf 1 2 Fort Rouille 2 Design 3 Monument 3 1 Plaque 4 See also 5 Notes 6 Bibliography 7 External linksHistory edit nbsp Diagram of French trading posts near the Humber River nbsp Map of the Toronto Carrying Place Trail with Fort Rouille shown as Fort Toronto at the bottom During the late 17th and 18th centuries the area surrounding Toronto was frequently used by French fur traders as a shortcut to the upper Great Lakes and the area north of Toronto 4 In an attempt to secure the trade route from the British the French established Magasin Royal Fort Douville a trading post along the Humber River near Baby Point Completed in 1720 the trading post was abandoned shortly after the British Fort Oswego was completed in 1727 which had diverted trade away from Magasin Royal 5 Fort Toronto Fort Portneuf edit In 1750 the French built another trading post named Fort Toronto near the mouth of the Humber River with the intention of diverting aboriginals using the Toronto Carrying Place Trail from proceeding to the British fort in Oswego New York Known as Fort Toronto or Fort Portneuf the trading post saw immediate success with demand outstripping the supply of goods that the post was able to provide 5 Fort Toronto was built by Pierre Robineau de Portneuf and was located west of Grenadier Pond next to Jean Baptiste Rousseau s home at the start of the Toronto Carrying Place Trail This encampment was typical of other New France installations in that it commanded an old riverine trade route Fort Rouille edit The success of Fort Toronto persuaded the Governor General of New France the Marquis de la Jonquiere to order the construction of a larger fort with more trading capacity and military potential in an effort to consolidate France s hold of the region and its trade routes Fort Rouille located on the site of present day Exhibition Place was completed in the spring of 1751 5 The new fort was named for Antoine Louis Rouille Comte de Jouy and French Minister of Marine and Colonies from 1749 to 1753 3 It was also known as Fort Toronto since it replaced the small trading post that was built in 1750 6 The fort s construction had been ordered to further establish a French presence in the area and to intercept the trade of indigenous people travelling towards a British fur trading post in present day Oswego According to a report of the Abbe Picquet the indigenous people received a larger amount of silver for their beavers at Oswego Although they preferred French brandy this was not enough to dissuade the natives from going to Oswego 7 To destroy the trade there the King s posts ought to have been supplied with the same goods as Chouegen Oswego and at the same price 8 Learning that the indigenous people travelled south along the Toronto Carrying Place Trail the decision was made to locate the fort at Toronto 8 Abbe Picquet visited Rouille in 1752 He found good bread and wine there and it was better equipped than other outposts The Mississaugas there expressed a wish for Picquet to build a church there they had only built a canteen Picquet had worked among the Iroquois south of the lake and the Mississaugas felt that the Iroquois had been better treated 9 In 1756 war was declared between Britain and France In 1757 with the garrison elsewhere the Mississaugas looted the fort A message was sent to Fort Niagara and the French returned the next day to take back the fort The Mississaugas confessed to the plot saying that they thought the French had been driven out and they were taking items away from the British According to a report of a Captain Pierre Pouchot he believed that they had only wanted the French brandy 10 In 1758 the order was given to reinforce Fort Niagara and all men and loyal natives were called to defend it The fort continued to operate until 1759 during the Seven Years War The fort s garrison was instructed to evacuate and burn Fort Rouille should Fort Niagara be captured Following the French defeat at Fort Niagara in July 1759 the garrison at Fort Rouille burnt down the fort and withdrew to Montreal 5 After the fall of Fort Niagara in July 1759 the British under Lieutenant Francis came to Rouille and found only burnt timbers 10 After the destruction of Fort Rouille no attempt was made to re establish a settlement in the vicinity until more than thirty years later when Governor Simcoe laid down the foundations of York in 1793 four miles east of the French stockade 11 Design editA first hand account of the fort describes it The fort of Toronto was at the end of the bay on the side which is quite elevated and covered by flat rock so that vessels cannot approach within cannon shot This fort or post was a square about 180 feet on a side externally with flanks of fifteen feet The curtains formed the buildings of the fort It was very well built piece upon piece but was only useful for trade A league west of the fort is the mouth of the Toronto river which is of considerable size The river communicates with Lake Huron by a portage of 15 leagues and is frequented by the Indians who come from the north 3 It was a small palisaded fort with a bastion at each of its four corners The 180 by 180 feet 55 m 55 m fort consisted of five buildings a corps de garde storeroom barracks blacksmithy and a building for the officers A drawing purported to date from 1749 shows the fort adjacent to Lake Ontario 12 Today the location is a hundred metres or so from the lake s current shoreline which has been infilled A wall surrounded the fort with an entrance to the south facing Lake Ontario and a small road chemin Captain Gother Mann showed the layout in his map Plan of the Proposed Toronto Harbour dated December 6 1788 The map shows five buildings in the stockade as well as the bounds of the quadrangle enclosed by the palisades 3 Monument edit nbsp View of cairn marking location of fort near York Pioneer cabins in 1880 nbsp The Fort Rouille monument at Exhibition Place marks the location of Fort Rouille Vestiges of the fort remained for many years afterwards When Toronto secured part of the garrison common for the Toronto Industrial Exhibition the fort site s mounds were levelled and some depressions filled in To mark the spot a large granite boulder was dredged up from the bay inscribed This cairn marks the exact spot of Fort Rouille commonly known as Fort Toronto an Indian Trading Post and Stockade Established 1749 AD by the order of the government of Louis XV in accordance with the recommendations of the Count de la Galissonniere Administrator of New France 1717 1749 Erected by the Corporation of the City of Toronto 1878 13 In the summer of 1887 a large obelisk was unveiled to mark the spot where the original French built Fort Rouille was erected The site is now part of Exhibition Place The grounds were excavated in 1979 and 1980 by the Toronto Historical Board and again in 1982 by the Youth Committee of the Toronto Sesquicentennial Board Two commemorative plaques one in English and one in French are attached to the base of the obelisk placed there by the Ontario Heritage Foundation To the north a third plaque commemorates the excavation done on the site and to the west a fourth plaque commemorates a visit to the site by Bertrand Delanoe mayor of Paris on September 6 2003 A concrete outline of the original fort is marked on the ground 14 The obelisk is flanked by a cannon and a mortar dating from the 1850s they are all British A second cannon present on the west side of the obelisk as recently as 2005 has since been removed There is a short street Fort Rouille Street located approximately 1 km 0 62 mi north of the fort site accessible from Springhurst Avenue The street at one time extended south to the fort site Plaque edit The English language plaque erected by the Ontario Heritage Foundation in 1957 at the Fort Rouille monument reads The last French post built in present day southern Ontario Fort Rouille more commonly known as Fort Toronto was erected on this site in 1750 51 It was established by order of the Marquis de La Jonquiere Governor of New France to help strengthen French control of the Great Lakes and was located here near an important portage to capture the trade of Indians travelling southeast toward the British fur trading centre at Oswego A small frontier post Fort Rouille was a palisaded fortification with four bastions and five main buildings It apparently prospered until hostilities between the French and British increased in the mid 1750s After the evacuation of other French posts on Lake Ontario Fort Rouille was destroyed by its garrison in July 1759 See also editHistory of Toronto List of French forts in North America List of lost buildings and structures in Toronto North American fur trade Toronto Carrying Place TrailNotes edit Urban Change in Toronto A Timeline Archived from the original on 2009 06 03 Retrieved 2009 07 22 Ron Brown 2010 From Queenston to Kingston The Hidden Heritage of Lake Ontario s Shoreline Dundurn Press pp 93 94 ISBN 9781770705326 Retrieved 2020 05 17 Constructed by Chevalier de Portneuf between 1830 and 1740 Fort Toronto was in turn replaced by an even larger fort Fort Rouille located on what are today s CNE grounds a site marked by an historic monument and plaque a b c d Peppiatt Liam Chapter 31A Fort Rouille Robertson s Landmarks of Toronto Revisited Archived from the original on 2015 09 25 Retrieved 2015 07 29 Seputis Jasmine 14 October 2015 Tarontos Lac Geographer finds oldest known reference to Toronto on 340 year old French map CBC News Canadian Broadcasting Corporation Retrieved 15 October 2018 a b c d Levine Adam 2015 The Carry Place Douglas amp McIntyre pp 11 12 ISBN 978 1 7710 0022 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help The Beginnings of French Toronto Historical Plaque Toronto s Historical Plaques Retrieved 2020 01 10 Scadding 1873 p 5 a b Scadding 1873 p 6 Scadding 1873 p 8 a b Robertson 1894 p 70 Peppiatt Liam Chapter 31B Fort York Robertson s Landmarks of Toronto Revisited Fort Toronto Canadian Heritage Gallery Canadian Heritage Gallery Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved October 4 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Robertson 1894 p 72 google maps viewBibliography editRobertson J Ross 1894 Landmarks of Toronto a collection of historical sketches of the old town of York from 1792 until 1833 and of Toronto from 1834 to 1893 vol 1 Scadding Henry 1873 Toronto of old collections and recollections illustrative of the early settlement and social life of the capital of Ontario Toronto Ontario Adam Stevenson amp Co External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fort Rouille Fort Toronto Rouille Monument City of Toronto Exploring Toronto s past Natives and Newcomers 1600 1793 includes information on Fort Rouille Portals nbsp France nbsp North America nbsp History nbsp Canada Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fort Rouille amp oldid 1220833424, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.