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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
October
Remains of St. Louis founder's
home believed to have been located
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
10/2/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| 18th
century French coins found the New Chartres, in
southern Illinois, compared to a contemporary nickel. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. —
Archaeologists believe they have found the Illinois home of the founder
of St. Louis.
What had been thought to be a priest’s residence near the French
colonial village of New Chartres, in present-day southern Illinois,
“appears instead to have been owned by a series of merchants during
the mid-1700s, before it was sold to a young merchant from New Orleans
– Pierre Laclede, the founder of the city of St. Louis.”
So says Robert Mazrim, an archaeologist at the University of Illinois
at Urbana-Champaign and director of the French Colonial Heritage Project.
The project is sponsored by the Illinois
Transportation Archaeological Research Program and the Sangamo
Archaeological Center. ITARP is a joint program of the university
and the Illinois Department of Transportation.
Initially, the archaeological remains of a large 18th-century structure
on the heritage project’s Ghost Horse Site were thought to have
possibly been those of a residence of a priest affiliated with Ste.
Anne’s Church.
“But several artifacts found in the cellar may have been part
of Laclede’s property and supplies, including Spanish majolica
brought upriver from New Orleans, and a lead seal from a bale of men’s
stockings – perhaps destined for a store in St. Louis.”
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Excavation pit at the French
Colonial Heritage Project, sponsored by the Illinois
Transportation Archaeological Research Program
and the Sangamo Archaeological Center. |
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Mazrim’s recent examination of the features and artifacts from
the site, which ITARP excavated on a small scale in 1998, “resulted
in a reconsideration of Ghost Horse,” Mazrim said.
According to the archaeologist, Laclede lived in the now defunct village
of New Chartres, near Fort de Chartres, during the winter of 1763-1764,
while preparing to establish a town on the opposite side of the Mississippi
River.
Upon
Laclede’s departure, a British officer purchased the house.
The building probably was abandoned before the American Revolution.
Fort de Chartres, in the Mississippi River floodplain near modern Prairie
du Rocher, Ill., was “the primary French outpost in the mid-18th-century
‘Illinois Country,’ ” said Thomas Emerson, the director
of ITARP.
The military garrison and the residents in the village of New Chartres
were “a key to France’s struggle to hold the Mississippi
River valley against British encroachments.”
“Locating Laclede’s house puts a face on an individual who
was critical to the formation of St. Louis,” Emerson said.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Lead
bale seal for stockings, from the Ghost Horse site. |
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“This is a unique opportunity because St. Louis’ French
Colonial archaeology has been destroyed by the downtown development,
unfortunately, with little attempt to preserve or recover these important
archaeological remains.”
Little of Laclede’s personal life is known. He was born in France
and was a partner in a New Orleans commercial house before venturing
to “Upper Louisiana” in the early 1760s. He was thought
to have lived in St. Louis for 14 years, and died in 1778 on his boat
near the mouth of the Arkansas River, en route for home after a trip
to New Orleans.
Mazrim said that “comparatively little” modern archaeological
study has been conducted at French colonial domestic sites in Illinois.
“While major excavations have been conducted at Fort Massac and
Fort de Chartres, fewer than 10 domestic sites have been examined.”
In 1998, ITARP crews conducted small-scale excavations within the eastern
limits of the Fort de Chartres State Historic Site in Randolph County,
Ill., as part of an IDOT bridge replacement project, Mazrim said.
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Fragments
of majolica drug jar, from the Ghost Horse site. |
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At
that time, the excavations at the Ghost Horse Site encountered remains
of an 18th-century structure associated with the French colonial village
of New Chartres. The structural remains at the site consisted of a
large complex of wall trenches and a sub-floor cellar once associated
with a vertical log structure,” said Mazrim, who is writing a
book about French archaeology in Illinois, which will include a chapter
on the Laclede excavation.
“It is little surprise,” Emerson said, “that when
Pierre Laclede came to the area in 1763, seeking to establish a trading
post and a new town, that he first set himself up at Chartres while
he surveyed the area, finally settling on the present-day location of St. Louis
to build what would become a trading empire.”
Actively involved in the archaeology of Illinois, ITARP conducts hundreds
of archaeological surveys and dozens of excavations every year, Emerson
said.
Its mission is to assist IDOT in the preservation and protection of
Illinois’ historic and archaeological resources, to carry out
research activities that enhance the educational and public service
mission of the U. of I., and to promote and ensure the professional
and public dissemination of information about the prehistory and history
of Illinois.
ITARP is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year by hosting the 52nd
Midwest Archaeological Conference Oct. 12-15. A symposium Oct. 13 will
be devoted to archaeology in Illinois. Details can be found at the conference
Web site: http://www.midwestarchaeology.org/.
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