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Jacques Marquette Edit Profile

also known as Père Marquette, James Marquette

Jesuit missionary

was a French-Canadian Jesuit missionary who founded Michigan's first European settlement, Sault Ste. Marie, and later founded St. Ignace, Michigan. In 1673, Marquette, with Louis Jolliet, an explorer, was the first European to explore and map the northern portion of the Mississippi River Valley.

Background

Jacques Marquette was born on June 1, 1637, in Laon, France. He was the son of Nicolas and Rose (de la Salle) Marquette. His father, Nicolas Marquette, was a wealthy government official, and his mother, Rose de la Salle Marquette, was a homemaker.

Education

After a rudimentary education at home, Jacques Marquette began a Jesuit course of study in 1646. He entered the Society of Jesus on October 7, 1654. Studied for the novitiate, Nancy, France, circa 1655. Studied philosophy, Pont-a-Mousson, 1656-1657.

Career

From 1658 to 1664 Jacques Marquette taught in a number of Jesuit schools across France. By 1665 he was an instructor at his alma mater. Yet Jacques Marquette had little interest in a career as a teacher. As a Jesuit novice, he had expressed his desire to do missionary work, and he never abandoned his quest. He finally got his call to the missions in New France in 1665 and was ordained a Catholic priest on March 7, 1666.

Jacques Marquette arrived in Quebec on September 20 and within a month was sent to the mission at Three Rivers. There he became a student of Indian languages and was assigned to work among the Ottawa. He continued among that tribe for the next two years and was then ordered to the mission at Sault St. Marie, in what is now Michigan. After about 18 months working among the Chippewa, Jacques Marquette moved again, this time to the Holy Spirit of La Pointe mission near what is now Ashland, Wisconsin. At La Point, he first heard of a mighty river that flowed south. He felt called to explore that river. His opportunity came in the summer of 1673 when his superiors permitted Jacques Marquette to join Louis Jolliet on a quest to find the Mississippi River. The journey began on May 17 at what is now St. Ignace, Michigan, and proceeded along the northern and western shoreline of Lake Michigan to Green Bay. At the mouth of the bay, the explorers traveled up the Fox River and down Wisconsin until they reached the juncture with the Mississippi River on June 17.

Jacques Marquette devoted considerable time to record all of the details of the river in his journal. He was the first European, for example, to describe catfish and buffalo, among other wildlife. Both Marquette and Jolliet were eager to find evidence of human life. Paddling along the western edge of the river, now Iowa’s eastern border, the party discovered human footprints. The two men left their canoes and moved inland, where they came upon several Peoria villages, a part of the Illinois nation. The Frenchmen were welcomed by the Peoria leaders. After sharing a meal and exchanging gifts, Marquette and Jolliet returned to their canoes and continued their journey. The journey of discovery continued south until the men reached the mouth of the Arkansas River on July 17. They had traveled more than 1,700 miles. Assured by friendly Indians that the Mississippi continued to flow south to the Gulf of Mexico, and apprehensive about capture by Spanish explorers, Jacques Marquette and Jolliet turned their canoes back north. The explorers followed the Mississippi to the Illinois River and then continued up Illinois to the Indian community of Kaskaskia. From there, they continued north and east to what is now the city of Chicago and into Lake Michigan. By September 30 they had arrived at the Jesuit mission in Green Bay.

Jacques Marquette had promised the Indians at Kaskaskia that he would return to minister to them, and he made good on his pledge in April 1675. But his health was fragile, and by the end of April, he was traveling north to recuperate at St. Ignace. He never made it but died on May 18 at the present site of Luding- ton, Michigan.

Achievements

  • Jacques Marquette founded Michigan's first European settlement, Sault Ste. Marie, and later founded St. Ignace, Michigan.

Membership

  • Society of Jesus

    October 7, 1654

Connections

Father:
Nicolas Marquette

Mother:
Rose de la Salle Marquette

colleague:
Louis Jolliet
Louis Jolliet - colleague of Jacques Marquette

References

  • Hudson, D., Bergman, M., & Horton, L. (Eds.) The biographical dictionary of Iowa
    2009