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Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville

Pierre-Joseph Céloron de Blainville (29 December 1693, Montreal—14 April 1759, Montreal) — also known as Celeron de Bienville (or Céleron, or Céloron, etc.) — was a French Canadian Officer of Marine. In 1739 and '40 he led a detachment to Louisiana to fight the Chickasaw in the abortive Chickasaw Campaign of 1739. In 1749 he led the 'Lead Plate Expedition' to advance France's territorial claim on the Ohio Valley.

Biography edit

Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville was born at Montreal on 29 December 1693. He was the son of Jean-Baptiste Céloron de Blainville and Hélène Picoté de Belestre.

Céloron entered military service in 1713. At this time the French collaborated with the Indians in pressuring the New England colonies, but his first firm record is an appointment as lieutenant commandant to the post at Michilimackinac in 1734 (Burton, 328). He seems to have been appointed to a second term in 1737, but before the expiration of that term he was called to Louisiana.

The British-allied Chickasaw nation, in present-day northern Mississippi, blocked communication between Upper and Lower Louisiana. Bienville, Governor of Louisiana, assembled a second grand campaign against them in 1739. In response to a call to the Canadian government for assistance, Céloron was dispatched to Fort de l'Assumption near present-day Memphis, Tennessee, with a 'considerable number of Northern Indians' and a company of cadets. The assembled forces remained in place through the winter without striking the fortified villages of the Chickasaw, 120 miles to the east. But finally in March, 1740, Céloron with his corps of cadets, one hundred regulars, and four or five hundred Indians set forth. After some skirmishing the Chickasaw were found quite willing to make peace (Atkinson, 70).

After his return to Michilimackinac, Céloron was appointed to command of Detroit, at which time he was referred to as a Chevalier of the Military Order of Saint Louis and a Captain in the Department of Marine. In 1744, he was appointed to command at Fort Niagara, and in 1746, Fort St. Frédéric on Lake Champlain (Burton, 327).

The 'Lead Plate' Expedition edit

 
In 1749 French explorer Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville asserts sovereignty of France over the Ohio valley by burying a lead plaque called "of Point Pleasant".[1] See picture.
 
Map of the route followed by Pierre Joseph Céloron de Blainville along the Ohio River in 1749, drawn by Joseph Pierre de Bonnecamps.

From 1743 to 1748, Britain and France fought King George's War. During this war, England blockaded New France, breaking down the French fur trade. The British became the major trading partners with Native Americans in the Ohio valley.

France claimed the Ohio Valley (and indeed the entire Mississippi basin) on the basis of the explorations made by La Salle in 1669 and 1682. Great Britain claimed the Ohio Valley on the basis of purchases from Native Americans in 1744. In fact, both the colonies of Virginia and Pennsylvania had claims on the Ohio valley, although in the 1740s and 1750s, Virginia was more active in pressing her claim.

According to R. E. Banta, author of The Ohio [Rivers of America series], in March of 1749, the Ohio Company of Virginia received a grant from King George, which included 200,000 acres on the south bank of the Ohio between the Monongahela and the Great Kanawha Rivers. One goal of establishing this grant was to test the French's willingness to defend the Ohio. The grant in turn provoked the immediate dispatch of Céloron's expedition from Montreal (page 65).

In 1748, Comte de la Galissoniere, the governor of Canada, ordered Céloron to strengthen the French claim on the Ohio Valley. Céloron carried out this mission in the summer of 1749 by means of an expedition through the contested territory. He set out from Montreal on June 15, 1749, in a flotilla consisting of large boats and canoes. The expedition included 216 French Canadians and 55 Native Americans. On the shore of Lake Erie, at the mouth of Chautauqua Creek in present-day Westfield, New York, the expedition cut a road over the French Portage Road, and carried their boats and equipment overland to Chautauqua Lake, then followed the Chadakoin River and Conewango Creek to the Allegheny River, reaching it on July 29, 1749.

As it progressed, the expedition sought to strengthen France's claim to the territory by marking it at the mouths of several principal tributaries. At each point, a tin or copper plate bearing the French royal arms was nailed to a tree. Below, an inscribed leaden plate was buried, declaring the claims of France. This was a traditional European mode of marking territory, but it might have contributed to Native American anxieties about the intentions of the French, and thus ultimately had a counterproductive effect.

Reaching the Monongahela River, the party boated past Shannopin's Town at the current site of Pittsburgh, and down the Ohio River. They paused at Kittanning, but found the village abandoned except for a Lenape chief, whom they invited to attend a council meeting with Céloron at Logstown. At Logstown, in present-day western Pennsylvania, Céloron discovered English traders. Incensed, he evicted the traders and wrote a scolding note to the governor of Pennsylvania. He then hectored the Native Americans about French dominance of the region. This overbearing behavior offended the Iroquois in his party, some of whom returned to their homeland in present-day New York, tearing down copper plates as they went.

A plate was buried at the mouth of the Muskingum River on August 15, 1749 and the mouth of the Kanawha River on August 18, 1749. Arriving at Lower Shawneetown at the Scioto River's mouth on August 21, he again encountered English traders. Céloron summoned them to his camp on August 25 and demanded that they leave, stating that "they had no right to trade or aught else on the [Ohio] River," but most refused.

The expedition then traveled up the Great Miami River to Pickawillany, arriving there on 13 September. They spent a week camped outside the village and met briefly with the chief Memeskia, who promised to consider returning to live near Detroit as a French ally. Céloron later remarked, speaking in general about his journey, that "the nations of these localities are very badly disposed towards the French, and are entirely devoted to the English."

Five months after the expedition began, it returned to Montreal, arriving November 10, 1749. Céloron's journal is archived at Archives of the Department de la Marine, Paris, France (Galbreath, 12).

In total, Céloron buried at least six lead plates. One was stolen by curious Indians almost immediately, possibly before it was even buried, and placed in British hands. Two more were found in the early 19th Century. Measuring about eleven inches long and seven and one-half inches wide, each lead plate was marked with an inscription as follows (Galbreath, 110-111):

The French continued to press their claim to the Ohio Valley, and colonial friction with the British finally contributed to outbreak of the Seven Years' War.

 
The French monument in Marietta, Ohio.

Last years and death edit

Upon his return, Céloron was reappointed to the important post at Detroit, and in 1753, was promoted to Major and appointed to Montreal. He died at Montreal on April 14, 1759 (Burton, 332).

Family edit

Céloron had three children by his first wife, Marie Madeline Blondeau, married December 30. 1724. His second wife was Catherine Eury de la Parelle, married in Montreal on October 13, 1743, and with whom he enjoyed nine children (Burton, 327).

See also edit

Sources edit

  • Atkinson, James R. (2004). Splendid Land, Splendid People. University of Alabama Press. OCLC 0817350330. pp. 62–73
  • Burton, C. M. (1905). Detroit's Rulers, in Historical Collections of the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society, Vol. XXXIV. Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co. OCLC 8069520. Chapter on Céloron, pp. 327–333
  • Galbreath, Charles (1921). Expedition of Céloron to the Ohio country in 1749. F.J. Heer Printing Co. OCLC 1898004. Céloron's Ohio Expedition journal and other accounts
  • Crumrine, Boyd (1999) [1882]. History of Washington County, Pennsylvania. L.H. Everts and Co. ISBN 1-58103-594-2. Account of Céloron at Logstown, pg. 26
  • Hildreth, S. P.: Pioneer History: Being an Account of the First Examinations of the Ohio Valley, and the Early Settlement of the Northwest Territory, H. W. Derby and Co., Cincinnati, Ohio (1848) pp. 18–24.
  • Andrew Arnold Lambing, translator. "Celeron's Journal." In Expedition of Céloron to the Ohio Country in 1749. Edited by Charles B. Galbreath. Columbus, Ohio: F.J. Heer Printing Company, 1921. Pages 12 to 77.
  • Marshall, O.H. "De Céloron's Expedition to the Ohio in 1749." Magazine of American History II (3) (1878): 127-150. [ Marshall, who in 1878 wrote the first complete account of Céloron's journey, is credited with discovering the explorer's journals in the 1850s in the archives of the Department de la Marine and Grandes Archives of the Depot de la Marine in Paris.]

References edit

  1. ^ "Céloron Plate Virginia Museum of History & Culture". virginiahistory.org. Retrieved 27 October 2019.

External links edit

  • Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online

pierre, joseph, céloron, blainville, pierre, joseph, céloron, blainville, december, 1693, montreal, april, 1759, montreal, also, known, celeron, bienville, céleron, céloron, french, canadian, officer, marine, 1739, detachment, louisiana, fight, chickasaw, abor. Pierre Joseph Celoron de Blainville 29 December 1693 Montreal 14 April 1759 Montreal also known as Celeron de Bienville or Celeron or Celoron etc was a French Canadian Officer of Marine In 1739 and 40 he led a detachment to Louisiana to fight the Chickasaw in the abortive Chickasaw Campaign of 1739 In 1749 he led the Lead Plate Expedition to advance France s territorial claim on the Ohio Valley Contents 1 Biography 1 1 The Lead Plate Expedition 1 2 Last years and death 2 Family 3 See also 4 Sources 5 References 6 External linksBiography editPierre Joseph Celoron de Blainville was born at Montreal on 29 December 1693 He was the son of Jean Baptiste Celoron de Blainville and Helene Picote de Belestre Celoron entered military service in 1713 At this time the French collaborated with the Indians in pressuring the New England colonies but his first firm record is an appointment as lieutenant commandant to the post at Michilimackinac in 1734 Burton 328 He seems to have been appointed to a second term in 1737 but before the expiration of that term he was called to Louisiana The British allied Chickasaw nation in present day northern Mississippi blocked communication between Upper and Lower Louisiana Bienville Governor of Louisiana assembled a second grand campaign against them in 1739 In response to a call to the Canadian government for assistance Celoron was dispatched to Fort de l Assumption near present day Memphis Tennessee with a considerable number of Northern Indians and a company of cadets The assembled forces remained in place through the winter without striking the fortified villages of the Chickasaw 120 miles to the east But finally in March 1740 Celoron with his corps of cadets one hundred regulars and four or five hundred Indians set forth After some skirmishing the Chickasaw were found quite willing to make peace Atkinson 70 After his return to Michilimackinac Celoron was appointed to command of Detroit at which time he was referred to as a Chevalier of the Military Order of Saint Louis and a Captain in the Department of Marine In 1744 he was appointed to command at Fort Niagara and in 1746 Fort St Frederic on Lake Champlain Burton 327 The Lead Plate Expedition edit nbsp In 1749 French explorer Pierre Joseph Celoron de Blainville asserts sovereignty of France over the Ohio valley by burying a lead plaque called of Point Pleasant 1 See picture nbsp Map of the route followed by Pierre Joseph Celoron de Blainville along the Ohio River in 1749 drawn by Joseph Pierre de Bonnecamps From 1743 to 1748 Britain and France fought King George s War During this war England blockaded New France breaking down the French fur trade The British became the major trading partners with Native Americans in the Ohio valley France claimed the Ohio Valley and indeed the entire Mississippi basin on the basis of the explorations made by La Salle in 1669 and 1682 Great Britain claimed the Ohio Valley on the basis of purchases from Native Americans in 1744 In fact both the colonies of Virginia and Pennsylvania had claims on the Ohio valley although in the 1740s and 1750s Virginia was more active in pressing her claim According to R E Banta author of The Ohio Rivers of America series in March of 1749 the Ohio Company of Virginia received a grant from King George which included 200 000 acres on the south bank of the Ohio between the Monongahela and the Great Kanawha Rivers One goal of establishing this grant was to test the French s willingness to defend the Ohio The grant in turn provoked the immediate dispatch of Celoron s expedition from Montreal page 65 In 1748 Comte de la Galissoniere the governor of Canada ordered Celoron to strengthen the French claim on the Ohio Valley Celoron carried out this mission in the summer of 1749 by means of an expedition through the contested territory He set out from Montreal on June 15 1749 in a flotilla consisting of large boats and canoes The expedition included 216 French Canadians and 55 Native Americans On the shore of Lake Erie at the mouth of Chautauqua Creek in present day Westfield New York the expedition cut a road over the French Portage Road and carried their boats and equipment overland to Chautauqua Lake then followed the Chadakoin River and Conewango Creek to the Allegheny River reaching it on July 29 1749 As it progressed the expedition sought to strengthen France s claim to the territory by marking it at the mouths of several principal tributaries At each point a tin or copper plate bearing the French royal arms was nailed to a tree Below an inscribed leaden plate was buried declaring the claims of France This was a traditional European mode of marking territory but it might have contributed to Native American anxieties about the intentions of the French and thus ultimately had a counterproductive effect Reaching the Monongahela River the party boated past Shannopin s Town at the current site of Pittsburgh and down the Ohio River They paused at Kittanning but found the village abandoned except for a Lenape chief whom they invited to attend a council meeting with Celoron at Logstown At Logstown in present day western Pennsylvania Celoron discovered English traders Incensed he evicted the traders and wrote a scolding note to the governor of Pennsylvania He then hectored the Native Americans about French dominance of the region This overbearing behavior offended the Iroquois in his party some of whom returned to their homeland in present day New York tearing down copper plates as they went A plate was buried at the mouth of the Muskingum River on August 15 1749 and the mouth of the Kanawha River on August 18 1749 Arriving at Lower Shawneetown at the Scioto River s mouth on August 21 he again encountered English traders Celoron summoned them to his camp on August 25 and demanded that they leave stating that they had no right to trade or aught else on the Ohio River but most refused The expedition then traveled up the Great Miami River to Pickawillany arriving there on 13 September They spent a week camped outside the village and met briefly with the chief Memeskia who promised to consider returning to live near Detroit as a French ally Celoron later remarked speaking in general about his journey that the nations of these localities are very badly disposed towards the French and are entirely devoted to the English Five months after the expedition began it returned to Montreal arriving November 10 1749 Celoron s journal is archived at Archives of the Department de la Marine Paris France Galbreath 12 In total Celoron buried at least six lead plates One was stolen by curious Indians almost immediately possibly before it was even buried and placed in British hands Two more were found in the early 19th Century Measuring about eleven inches long and seven and one half inches wide each lead plate was marked with an inscription as follows Galbreath 110 111 L AN 1749 DV REGNE DE LOVIS XV ROY DE FRANCE NOVS CELORON COMMANDANT D VN DETACHEMENT ENVOIE PAR MONSIEVR LE MIS DE LA GALISSONIERE COMMANDANT GENERAL DE LA NOUVELLE FRANCE POVR RETABLIR LA TRANQUILLITE DANS QUELQUES VILLAGES SAUVAGES DE CES CANTONS AVONS ENTERRE CETTE PLAQUE AU CONFLUENT DE L OHIO ET DE TCHADAKOIN CE 29 JVILLET PRES DE LA RIVIERE OYO AUTREMENT BELLE RIVIERE POUR MONUMENT DU RENOUVELLEMENT DE POSSESSION QUE NOUS AVONS PRIS DE LA DITTE RIVIERE OYO ET DE TOUTES CELLES QUI Y TOMBENT et de TOUTES LES TERRES DES DEUX COTES JVSQVE AVX SOURCES DES DITTES RIVIERES AINSI QV EN ONT JOVY OU DU JOVIR LES PRECEDENTS ROIS DE FRANCE ET QU ILS S Y SONT MAINTENVS PAR LES ARMES ET PAR LES TRAITTES SPECIALEMENT PAR CEVX DE RISWICK D VTRECHT ET D AIX LA CHAPELLE In the year 1749 of the reign of Louis the 15th King of France we Celoron commander of a detachment sent by Monsieur the Marquis de la Galissoniere Governor General of New France to reestablish tranquility in some Indian villages of these cantons have buried this Plate of Lead at the confluence of the Ohio and the Chadakoin this 29th day of July near the river Ohio otherwise Belle Riviere as a monument of the renewal of the possession we have taken of the said river Ohio and of all those which empty into it and of all the lands on both sides as far as the sources of the said rivers as enjoyed or ought to have been enjoyed by the kings of France preceding and as they have there maintained themselves by arms and by treaties especially those of Ryswick Utrecht and Aix la Chapelle CELORON Plaque de Renouvellement de possessionThe French continued to press their claim to the Ohio Valley and colonial friction with the British finally contributed to outbreak of the Seven Years War nbsp The French monument in Marietta Ohio Last years and death edit Upon his return Celoron was reappointed to the important post at Detroit and in 1753 was promoted to Major and appointed to Montreal He died at Montreal on April 14 1759 Burton 332 Family editCeloron had three children by his first wife Marie Madeline Blondeau married December 30 1724 His second wife was Catherine Eury de la Parelle married in Montreal on October 13 1743 and with whom he enjoyed nine children Burton 327 See also editCeloron de Blainville Celoron New York Shannopin s Town Kuskusky Logstown Kittanning village Lower Shawneetown Pickawillany Joseph Pierre de BonnecampsSources editAtkinson James R 2004 Splendid Land Splendid People University of Alabama Press OCLC 0817350330 pp 62 73 Burton C M 1905 Detroit s Rulers in Historical Collections of the Michigan Pioneer and Historical Society Vol XXXIV Wynkoop Hallenbeck Crawford Co OCLC 8069520 Chapter on Celoron pp 327 333 Galbreath Charles 1921 Expedition of Celoron to the Ohio country in 1749 F J Heer Printing Co OCLC 1898004 Celoron s Ohio Expedition journal and other accounts Crumrine Boyd 1999 1882 History of Washington County Pennsylvania L H Everts and Co ISBN 1 58103 594 2 Account of Celoron at Logstown pg 26 Hildreth S P Pioneer History Being an Account of the First Examinations of the Ohio Valley and the Early Settlement of the Northwest Territory H W Derby and Co Cincinnati Ohio 1848 pp 18 24 Andrew Arnold Lambing translator Celeron s Journal In Expedition of Celoron to the Ohio Country in 1749 Edited by Charles B Galbreath Columbus Ohio F J Heer Printing Company 1921 Pages 12 to 77 Marshall O H De Celoron s Expedition to the Ohio in 1749 Magazine of American History II 3 1878 127 150 Marshall who in 1878 wrote the first complete account of Celoron s journey is credited with discovering the explorer s journals in the 1850s in the archives of the Department de la Marine and Grandes Archives of the Depot de la Marine in Paris References edit Celoron Plate Virginia Museum of History amp Culture virginiahistory org Retrieved 27 October 2019 External links editBiography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pierre Joseph Celoron de Blainville amp oldid 1197783805, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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