Early Europeans in Louisiana

A black and white drawing of La Salle's expedition along the Mississippi River. There are two big ships on the water with people standing on the shore.
This drawing by Utrecht depicts Robert Cavelier de La Salle's expedition along the Mississippi River.

Library of Congress

The land now called Louisiana, and its Native Tribes, met Europeans for the first time in 1519. Europeans did not start colonizing the lands of Louisiana until the 1700s.

The earliest known Europeans in the region were Alonso Alverez de Piñeda and Alvar Nuñez Cabeza de Vaca. Piñeda (1519) and de Vaca (1528) may have traveled through Louisiana or sailed by its coastline.

Moscoso de Alverdo was originally a member of Hernando de Soto's crew. Alverdo sailed by the future site of New Orleans on his way to Mexico. De Soto himself had died earlier in the expedition.

It would be a Frenchman, Robert Cavelier de La Salle, who would lay the first European claim to the land.

  • 1682: In April, La Salle called the territory "Louisiana" after the king of France, Louis XIV. This territory stretched up through the continent, reaching beyond modern Canadian boarders. This declaration claimed land on either side of the Mississippi River for France.
  • 1699: Pierre Le Moyne d'Iberville established Fort Maurepas near modern-day Biloxi, Mississippi. He left from there and went up the river as far as future Baton Rouge, where there was a red stick marking the boundary between different indigenous nations. (And what is the French word for red stick? That's right, "baton rouge.")
  • 1714: Louis Juchereau de St. Denis established the settlement of Natchitoches.
  • 1718: La Nouvelle-Orleans (New Orleans) was founded by Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville and his expedition. Bienville had been assigned to build a city near the mouth of the Mississippi that could prevent the British or Spanish from going up the river. He decided to build the city at the site of the present-day French Quarter because because of an experience he'd had on his older brother Iberville's trip in 1699. The indigenous people there had told the brothers that there was this ridge of land, now known as Esplanade Ridge, which leads from the Mississippi to a waterway, now called Bayou St. John, and that bayou empties into Lake Pontchartrain. This made the site a strategic location.
  • 1722: France made New Orleans the capitol of French Louisiana.
  • 1723: The French had begun to create the city that we know today as New Orleans. Second Royal Engineer Adrien de Pauger drew up a plan for what is now the French Quarter and insisted that any buildings already built be relocated to fit into his newly planned lots. De Pauger kept a prime lot for himself: it was larger and more elevated than average. De Pauger's lot is now the home of the park's headquarters and French Quarter Visitor Center.

Last updated: March 12, 2025

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