Auguste Chouteau
1750 - 1829
Auguste Chouteau (1750-1829) helped choose
the site and found the city of St. Louis
in 1763, when he was just 13 years old. Chouteau served as a clerk
for his "stepfather," Pierre Laclede,
before their journey northward from his birthplace, New Orleans.
The men wintered downriver from St. Louis at Fort de Chartres. On
February 14, 1764 Chouteau returned to the site, leading a party
which felled the first timber, cleared the first land and built
the first structures in St. Louis. Pierre Laclede made Auguste Chouteau
a full business partner in the 1770s.
Chouteau came to be respected by Indian leaders
as a truthful and fair negotiator. The fur trade remained his major
business but he also branched out into retail merchandising, real
estate and banking. Generally, Auguste was the businessman who managed
the family finances in St. Louis, while his half-brother Pierre
Chouteau, Sr. negotiated directly with the Indians and served
in the field.
Marie Therese Cerre
Chouteau
1769 - 1842
Marie Therese Cerre married
Auguste Chouteau in 1786 when she was seventeen years old and he
was thirty-seven.
On September 21, 1786 Auguste
Chouteau married Marie Therese Cerre (1769-1842); she was 17, he
was 37 (see Block 13). The couple had nine children (the first two
died in infancy). In 1794 Chouteau convinced the Spanish governor,
the Baron de Carondelet, to grant his family a six year monopoly
of the fur trade with the powerful Osage Indians of western Missouri.
Chouteau avoided involvement with Jacques Clamorgan (see Block 26)
in the Upper Missouri trade and business entanglements with the
American, John Jacob Astor. When the Americans assumed control of
St. Louis in 1804, Chouteau did all he could to assist them, allowing
his family to come through the transition virtually unscathed. They
remained the most powerful family in St. Louis after the transfer
of power. Chouteau and his family assisted Lewis and Clark to prepare
for their expedition in the winter of 1803-1804. In 1816 Chouteau
announced his retirement, although it took him many years to settle
his accounts. Auguste Chouteau had one of the most extensive libraries
in colonial St. Louis (over 600 books), including the works of Bacon,
Descartes, Locke, Frederick the Great, Montesquieu, Rousseau and
Voltaire. He amassed 50,000 acres of land. By and large, Auguste's
sons had been a disappointment to him, and none carried the torch
of the family's fur trade business. Two daughters married well,
into the Paul family.
Auguste Chouteau died on February
24, 1829, and was mourned as the leading citizen of St. Louis. He
was originally buried in the churchyard of the Old Cathedral, and
his grave was later moved to Calvary Cemetery on St. Louis' north
side, where it can be seen today.
More Information on Auguste
Chouteau's Personal Property:
Second day wedding suit
of Auguste Chouteau and the second-day dress of his seventeen-year-old
bride, Marie Cerre, who were married on September 21, 1786 (A second-day
dress was for the religious ceremony and wedding festivities which
were on the day following the civil marriage service.) The goblet
and china plate likewise belonged to them.
When Auguste Chouteau died in
1829, he left an enormous estate, including many slaves. The marriage
contract between Auguste and Therese Chouteau, dated September 21,
1786, entitled Therese to $6,000 upon the death of her husband.
Thirty six slaves were sold at public auction by the probate court.
The following is a transcription from the St. Louis Civil Court's
Probate Records. The sale was held on the steps of the St. Louis
Courthouse on September 15, 1830, and recorded in Book D, p. 19:
Order for the sale of slaves belonging to
the Auguste Chouteau estate at the Courthouse door on September
15, 1830.
| Name |
Age
|
| Peter |
102
|
| Louis |
74
|
| Michel Ceres |
60
|
| Louis |
58
|
| Titia |
53
|
| Antoine Catiche |
33
|
| Toussaint Rose |
33
|
| Michel Rose |
31
|
| Pierre Rose |
29
|
| Jacques Catiche |
26
|
| Philip Zabette |
26
|
| Louis Rose |
18
|
| Joseph Clarice |
18
|
| Ciprien Marguerite |
16
|
| Pierre Catherine |
14
|
| Sylvestre Zabette |
14
|
| Francois Catherine |
12
|
| Felix Clarice |
11
|
| Adrien Odille |
9
|
| Benoit Victoire |
12
|
| Antoine Charlotte |
4 years, 6 months
|
| Theodore Marie |
2 years, 9 months
|
| Charles Odille |
2 years, 8 months
|
| Zabette |
53
|
| Catherine |
48
|
| Odille |
31
|
| Apauline |
30
|
| Marguerite Esther |
23
|
| Marie Zabette |
19
|
| Amaranthe Pelagie |
14
|
| Caroline Zabette |
13
|
| Marie-Louise Catherine |
10
|
| Catherine Marianne |
10
|
| Adel Pelagie |
9
|
| Victorine Marquerite |
8
|
| Justine Pelagie |
2 years, 9 months
|
There were a total of 36 slaves; 12 other
slaves were given directly to Therese Cerre Chouteau (the widow).
Two died after Auguste Chouteau passed away. On November 16, 1830,
a report of the sale of these slaves was given to the court [Book
D, pp. 53-54]; individual prices for each slave were not recorded.
However, the total for the sale was $10,838.88, half of which went
to the widow and half was split between the seven children of Auguste
Chouteau. A receipt for the sale of the slaves was given to the
court on May 13, 1831 [Book D, page 112].
Illustrations: Auguste Chouteau. Oil on canvas.
Acc. #1869.1.1.1: Marie Therese Cerre Chouteau. Oil on canvas,
ca. 1810. Acc. #1869.1.2: Armoire made by Jean Baptiste Ortes.
1784 for Auguste Chouteau Acc. #1920.53.2. Photograph by Paul
Plaget, ca. 1955: Second day wedding suit of Auguste Chouteau
and second day dress or Marie Cerre (Chouteau), 1786. Acc. #s
1926.20.1-2;1926.3a-c. Photograph by Paul Piaget, ca. 1955.
Courtesy of Missouri Historical Society |
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