(Redirected from Pierre Gaultier de Varennes et de la Vérendrye)'Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye' (
November 17,
1685 –
December 5,
1749) was a
French Canadian military officer,
fur trader and
explorer.
Born in
Trois-Rivières, Quebec, this son of
René Gaultier de Varennes was part of the
Ancien Régime whose family of aristocrats came from the
Anjou area of
France. At 22 years of age, he enlisted in the French Army, fought in
Flanders and was seriously wounded. After recovering from his injuries and being released as a
prisoner of war, he returned to Canada and married in 1712. He farmed and fur traded to support his family until 1727 when he moved to
Nipigon to command that fort. In 1728 he was appointed commandant of the French posts, including
Fort Kaministiquia, on the north shore of
Lake Superior. It was during this time as commandant that La Vérendrye came to know
Cree guide Auchagah, who produced a map of canoe routes between Lake Superior and
Lake Winnipeg based on his own experience as well as that of several other Crees.
[1]
In
1731 he began his explorations in earnest. One of the main objectives was to find a route to the Western Sea. Between 1731 and
1737 he built several trading posts between Lake Superior and
Lake Winnipeg, assisted by his four sons and a nephew. In 1732
Fort St. Charles was constructed near
Angle Inlet on Lake of the Woods. This fort was an important base of operations until at least 1760 because of the fur trade and its location between
Montreal and forts farther west. These were the first European establishments west of Lake Superior since
Jacques de Noyon wintered over at
Rainy Lake in
1688.
In
1738 he travelled southwest to the area of the
Missouri River in what is now
North Dakota. In conjunction with that trip he established two forts,
Fort Rouge and
Fort La Reine, in what is now
Manitoba. Other forts built to the north and west by people under his command created a large area in the west for French traders. Also on this trip he found an
engraved stone near modern
Minot, North Dakota, which was written in what
Jesuits in
Quebec later identified as "Tatar writing", and is believed by some to be a
runestone left by the
Norse.
He resigned as commander of the Western Posts in 1744 after being unable to convince his superiors that further exploration of rivers like the Saskatchewan would lead them to rivers flowing west into the Western Sea. In 1746 he again became the western commander. In this capacity, he returned to the east in
1747. While planning further exploration of the
Saskatchewan River and points west, he died at Montreal, Quebec on
December 5,
1749.
La Verendrye Provincial Park in Ontario and
La Vérendrye Wildlife Reserve in Quebec are named after him, as well as
Verendrye Electric Cooperative in North Dakota.
See also
★
French colonization of the Americas
★
History of North Dakota
★
Christopher Dufrost de La Jemeraye
★
François de La Vérendrye
★
Jean Baptiste de La Vérendrye
★
Louis-Joseph Gaultier de La Vérendrye
★
Pierre Gaultier de La Vérendrye
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
Manitoba Historical Society - Various writings by Father Antoine Champagne
★ The
Newberry Library Maps and Nations Exhibit, 1999
★
The La Vérendryes: Family of Explorers, Library and Archives Canada