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Jacques Largillier:
Merchant, Then Missionary
William Barnaby Faherty, S.J., Ph.D.
Director, Museum of the Western Jesuit Missions,
St. Louis
Please do
not quote or cite without permission
In 1985, the editor of the
American Heritage Magazine asked a group of prominent writers to
describe the point in history they would most like to have witnessed.
Novelist Walter D. Edmonds, author of Drums Along the Mohawk chose
May 18, 1675, the day that Father Marquette, the missionary-explorer,
died before his 38th birthday. Here's what Edmonds wrote:
"When he died, one of
the men whispered the names of Jesus and Mary in his ear, as he
had asked. The other rang a bell. I wish I had been there to hear
those small and lonely notes. They marked the end of the most
spiritual and down-to-earth of all Jesuits missionaries, and also
the end of simplicity and faith that were not to be reborn in
America..."-1-
It was a momentous event for novelist Walter D. Edmonds. It was
an even greater memory for a companion of Father Marquette, Jacques
Largillier. The illness of Father Marquette was typhoid, according
to the testimony of Dr. Maximillian Fox of Milwaukee, an expert
whom historian Father Joseph Donnelly consulted while researching
the life of the great Blackrobe. One of Marquette's two French companions,
Jacques Largillier, was ill too. But he helped his comrade Pierre
Porteret dig a grave for the priest and cover the remains. By the
time they finished the grave, Jacques himself grew worse. He sat
beside the grave and, in a stupor, reached over and grabbed a pinch
of the dirt from the mound, swallowed it, and stood up cured.-2-
That "miracle" changed the direction of his life.
Who was this Jacques Largillier,
and what did he do with the years left to him?
Historians Father Joseph Donnelly and Dr. Charles Balesi mention
him. The Jesuit Relations recall his work. His listing appears in
The Genealogical Dictionary of the Families of Quebec, from its
Origin to 1730. It reads: "Largillier, Jacques, perhaps from
Qwierzy, in the Department of Laon, Picardy, the modern department
of the Aisne. He was born around 1634."-3-
Largillier followed an uncle, Raymond Page, to New France before
1664 and became a merchant. On April 20, 1666, he is cited in a
contract with Adrien Jolliet and Denis Guyon to "take a journey
to the Ottawa." In 1669 he again set out for the "Upper
Country," probably with Jean Peré and Adrien Jolliet,
who were sent by the Intendant Jean Talon, a man of great vision,
to search for copper. Father Claude Allouez in the Great Lakes country
had brought to the attention of the authorities the fact that copper
abounded in the west. When St. Lusson took formal possession of
the midcontinent at Sault Ste. Marie in 1671, in the name of Louis
XIV, Largillier was there with his fellow merchant-trader Louis
Jolliet and twelve laymen, as well as two Jesuits, Claude Dablon
and Claude Allouez.
In the meantime, Count Frontenac
had come to New France as Governor. Talon urged the new governor
to send an expedition in search of the great river of the midcontinent,
to see if it flowed to the Pacific. He chose Louis Jolliet as leader.
Always in the back of the minds of explorers lay the vision of the
rich trade with China. Father Claude Dablon, the Jesuit superior,
designated as chaplain to travel with the merchant-explorers a young
Jesuit missionary, Jacques Marquette, son of a lawyer in Laon, a
priest of virtue and zeal. The team of merchants gathered at the
Strait in 1763.
Of the seven members of the
partnership whom Jolliet recruited for the expedition, four among
them, including Jacques Largillier, had already been with either
Adrien or Louis Jolliet in other ventures. Jolliet considered Largillier
"an excellent canoeman." His associates called him "The
Beaver."
In the canoes were seven men:
three partners of Jolliet, two hired men, Father Marquette, and
Louis Jolliet. They paddled down the west shore of Lake Michigan
in two canoes. They went up to Green Bay and the Fox River, to Lake
Winnebago and the portage to the Wisconsin. On June 17, one month
after leaving Mackinac, they reached the Mississippi.
The explorers paddled downstream to the mouth of the Arkansas River,
then turned back. They went up the Illinois River, through the lands
of the Illinois Confederation. They counted more than forty villages,
the majority consisting of sixty to eighty cabins, some of as many
as three hundred. This was a village of the Peoria where Marquette
founded the first parish in Illinois. He called it the Mission of
the Immaculate Conception, as he had called the Mississippi the
"River of the Immaculate Conception." Before the Frenchmen
left, the missionary promised to return and teach the people about
the Great Spirit.
From the headwaters of the Illinois
River, the travelers portaged to the Chicago River. Going up the
west shore of Lake Michigan, they reached the mission of St. Francis
Xavier on Green Bay in the fall.
Father Marquette spent the next
year at this mission. Presumably Largillier settled the accounts
of the expedition; Jolliet wrote two copies of his journal: one,
sadly, was burnt in a cabin fire provoked by Sioux Indians at Sault
Ste. Marie; the other, unfortunately, was lost in the Racine rapids,
above Montreal. That left Father Marquette's journal the only surviving
account of the trip.
The journal of Father Marquette
was not a day-by-day diary of the discovery and exploration of the
Mississippi. Rather, it was a narrative of the voyage put together
after the event by the Jesuit Superior, Father Claude Dablon, from
the interviews, dedication, Jolliet's map, and Father Marquette's
maps and notes. Jesuit historian Jean De Langlez drew this conclusion
from the facts at hand.
The travelers presumably met
a group of Illini on the west bank of the river in present-day Iowa.
Father Marquette accepted their invitation to return and teach them
about the Great Spirit. After a year, Father Marquette planned to
return to the people of Illinois. In 1674, Jacques Largillier, now
a Jesuit volunteer, or donné, and Pierre Porteret accompanied
the priest. They left the mission of St. Ignace during the last
days of October, late in the year, for a long canoe trip on the
waters of Lake Michigan. They traveled in the company of 50 Illinois
and Pottawatomi Indians, manning a flotilla of nine canoes. The
weather was poor; stormy conditions on the lake most of November
often limited their daily progress to no more than five miles. On
December 4, forty days after they left, they reached the mouth of
the Chicago River. Marquette had maintained a positive outlook all
along, as he showed in his journal. After several days in waiting
at the Chicago portage for an improvement of the weather, it became
clear that Father Marquette's failing health would prevent them
from traveling the remaining 60 miles to the Illinois town.
On December 14, they moved to
a spot between the Chicago and the Des Plaines Rivers, four miles
inland from the lake, and decided to winter there. It was a hard
winter. Father Marquette was in poor health, and often he could
not say daily Mass. They remained close to the hut they built for
shelter. During one of the short shooting trips around the area,
however, Largillier learned about another Frenchman wintering in
the area. A message was relayed to him, and soon Pierre Moreau,
known as "The Mole," accompanied by his partner, remembered
only by his nickname of La Barbière, appeared at the hut.
They had traveled some 50 miles to bring blueberries and corn to
Father Marquette.
In March, Father Marquette,
Pierre Porteret, and Jacques Largillier resumed their trip down
the Des Plaines River, and on down the Illinois. On April 10, 1765,
they arrived at a village of the Illinois and were welcomed warmly.
The Illini, a vigorous, populous Algonquin people, formed a loose
confederation of Cahokia, Peoria, Tamaroa, Michigamea, Moingwena,
and Kaskaskia. They lived in an amazingly fertile land, with game
plentiful and crops fruitful. The weather was mild, without the
cold of northern Wisconsin or the humidity of places along the Gulf.
They crossed the Mississippi in pirogues of hollowed logs, not birch-bark
canoes, to hunt buffalo in what is now Iowa. They harvested corn
in August or early September.
Powerful and hostile neighbors harassed them: Iroquois from the
east, Shawnee and Chickasaw from the South, Osage from the West,
Fox and Kickapoo on the north, and Sioux to the northwest. Not for
military glory, but to protect their village and families, they
tightened their bowstrings. Marquette counted 500 to 600 families
living in the village, including about 1,500 men, whom he began
to evangelize immediately. On April 14, Marquette celebrated Easter
Mass with all of the solemnity he could muster. Soon he again fell
ill and felt that he had to return home to his mission in the north.
Once again, a large group of Illinois warriors accompanied the Frenchmen
part of the way. They took a different route, using the portage
between the Kankakee and the St. Joseph Rivers, a carrying place
of between four and five miles, near what is now South Bend, Indiana.
La Salle would use this same portage seven years later. By mid-May,
Father Marquette was so ill that he was unable to go much farther.
As we understood at the beginning
of this account, before they reached St. Ignace, Marquette died
and Jacques Largillier was cured dramatically. Largillier then returned
to the Straits and visited Father Henri Nouvel, who had succeeded
Father Claude Dablon as superior of the Western Jesuit Missions.
Jacques asked for acceptance into the Jesuits as a coadjutor brother.
He did not wish to wear the Black Robe, but to keep his voyager's
clothes and return to the Illinois mission. He had previously been
a donné, or Jesuit Volunteer as we call them today. Now,
at the age of forty, he took his vows as a member of the Order.
He was destined to work for forty more years in Christianizing the
Indians.
What was the work that Brother
Largillier did on the missions? We would presume that he was competent
to put his hand to everything of an outdoor nature. The fact that
he was called "The Beaver" would indicate activity along
practical lines. While he could not say Mass or distribute the sacraments,
except Baptism in time of emergency, he could instruct the Indians,
young and old, care for the sick, build living quarters, take care
of the church and missionaries' cabins, cultivate the soil, and
hunt and fish to provide food for the mission. In general, a Jesuit
brother was a jack-of-all-trades.
In October of 1676, Father Claude
Allouez, who had been in the Illinois country before Father Marquette
came through, returned to the Kaskaskia mission. Presumably, Brother
Largillier went with him. Father Allouez remained active among the
Kaskaskias, the Peorias, and the Miamis for the next twelve years,
until his death.
An equally zealous and energetic
missionary, Father Jacques Gravier, succeeded Father Allouez in
1689. The Kaskaskia Indians moved father south about 50 miles down
the Illinois River to Lake Pimitoui, later also known as Lake Peoria.
When Father Gravier was wounded in the wrist by an arrow from a
disgruntled Peoria chief, his helpers were kind but limited in their
skill of medicine. The swelling grew more painful. Brother Jacques
and other Frenchmen urged him to go to Mobile, as Father Jean Mermet
stated in his circular letter to the Jesuits in Canada.-4-
Father Gravier went to Mobile, and on to France. He never fully
recovered the full use of his arm, but returned to New France.
In the meantime, the Le Moyne
brothers, Iberville and Bienville, were laying the foundation for
the French Empire in the Gulf area. The Kaskaskia planned to abandon
their village and move to Louisiana to escape the warlike Fox. From
the east, the Iroquois, too, were a constant threat. In September
1700, under Chief Rouensa, the Kaskaskia left. Father Gravier, Father
Gabriel Marest, and Brother Largillier went along. Father Gravier
recommended a halt when they reached the Tamaroa village directly
across from the future site of St. Louis.
The Kaskaskias found three different
tribes of the Illinois confederacy there - the Tamaroas, the Cahokias,
and the Michigameas. The latter tribe located principally 50 miles
further south on the Michigamea, later to be known as the Kaskaskia
River. Rouensa moved his tribe across the river, five miles farther
south on the bank of the River Des Peres, near where it empties
into the Mississippi River. In this move, Jacques Largillier became
one of the earliest Caucasian residents of the St. Louis area, 64
years before Pierre Laclede set up his trading post and Margaret
Blondeau Guion moved across the river to be with her husband and
became the first woman to settle in St. Louis, in the spring of
1764.
The Tamaroas crossed the river
to join the Kaskaskias, and they remained there for two and a half
years. Another Jesuit, Father Frangois Pinet, joined them. Several
times they thought of missionizing tribes up the Missouri River
toward the land of the Sioux. In April of 1703, the Kaskaskias moved
south, where they established their village on the west bank of
the Michigamea, at a point where the smaller river approached within
two miles of the Mississippi. This event is duly recorded in the
baptismal record. "On April 25, 1703, we arrived on the bank
of the river called Michigamea."-5-
In a letter dated March 6, 1707,
Father Gravier testified that, of the total population of 2,200,
only 40 or 50 were not Christian. Many of the Frenchmen who had
settled in Kaskaskia had married Indian women, as is evident from
entries in the baptismal record of the time. Of the infants that
were baptized between the years 1701 and 1713, eighty percent are
reported as having a French father and an Indian mother. Most of
the Indians gathered three times a day in the large church - for
Holy Mass in the morning - In the afternoon for catechetical instruction;
and in the evening for prayers and hymns. The program seemed patterned
after that of the villages surrounding medieval monasteries, followed
by the great Southwestern missionary, Padre Eusebio Francisco Kino
in Sonora, and also southern Arizona at the same time. The missionaries
made their daily rounds of the village, visiting the sick and consoling
the sorrowful.-6-
On February 23, 1708 Father
Gravier reported in his letter on Affairs in Louisiana, that the
mission needed someone to take the place of Brother Jacques, who
had served so well but was ill and had received Viaticum. Apparently,
Jacques abstained from meat during the entire Lenten season. Father
Gravier urged him to eat more substantial meals. Whether he indulged
in more buffalo or elk steaks we cannot say, but he did live six
more years.-7-
Largillier was still active
until the great epidemic of the summer of 1714, that carried off
several hundred persons, including both the missionary in charge,
Gabriel Marest, who died on September 14, 1714, and Brother Largillier,
who died on November 4, 1714. A letter of another missionary, Father
Jean Mermet, tells of these sad events. He described Largillier
as a "virtuous man" who had spent nearly 50 years in the
western missions, and who had asked to live in secular garb for
greater service to the missions.-8-
In identifying him as a "virtuous"
man, Father Mermet said much. A virtuous man practices great qualities
- faith, honesty, integrity, patience, tolerance, prudence, and
charity. Largillier showed concern for Father Gravier's serious
wound in the wrist. He went, of his own free will, to the Illinois
village with Father Marquette, even before his miraculous cure.
Then he dedicated the remainder of his life to bringing the light
and hope of the Christian message to the early people of Illinois.
He had lived to see Marquette's
dream come true, that Christianity had come to the people of Illinois,
and that the people of Illinois showed themselves as good as the
saintly Father Marquette had said they were. He deserves a place
in our memory.
Footnotes
-1- American Heritage,
Vol. 36, No. 1, Dec. 1974, p. 27.
-2- Rochemonteix Camile de
les Jesuites et La Nouvelle France au XVIII Siecle, 3 vols., Vol.
3, p. 612.
-3- Rene Jette, The Genealogical
Dictionary of the Families of Quebec from its Origin to 1730.
Charles J. Balesi, in The Time of the French in the Heart of
North America, 1673-1818, Chicago, 1992, page 14 and 27; and
Joseph Donnelly, Jacques Marquette: 1637-1675, Chicago, 1968,
pp. 201, 326, 246, 253-54, spell the name "Largillier."
-4- Jesuit Relations,
Vol. 66, p. 63. The Relations spells his name "L'Argilier."
We prefer the more ordinary spelling, as used by Balesi and Donnelly.
-5- Record of Kaskaskia
Baptisms, 25 April 1703.
-6- Jesuit Relations,
Vol. 66, p. 128.
-7- Ibid., Vol. 66, p. 125.
-8- Ibid., Vol. 71, p. 231,
letter of Jean Mermet.
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