Respuesta :
Answer:
rn in the port of Rouen, France, to wealthy family of merchants.
1658
Becomes a novice in the Society of Jesus (Jesuits) at age of 15 and gives up his share of family’s fortune.
1667
Leaves the Jesuits to go to “New France” (Canada), where he establishes a trading post and village at today's Lachine, a few miles above Montreal.
1669
Sells his concession at Lachine and launches his first exploratory expedition in company with a Sulpician group, hoping to discover the Ohio River. He returns alone without a clear accounting of where he had been.
1675
Returns to France to obtain royal concession to Fort Frontenac and a patent of untitled nobility.permission from King Louis XIV to explore the new land, western “New France.”
1678
Again in France, he obtains the right to discover at his own expense the western parts of New France, a vague region that had been given the name La Louisiane in honor of the king. Over the next three years, he builds ships to navigate the upper Great Lakes and establishes trading posts from Niagra to Illinois.
1682
With 23 Frenchmen in four canoes and 28 Mohegan and Abnaki Indians, La Salle reaches the Mississippi, explores it to its mouth, and claims for France all the lands drained by it.
1683
Returns to France to seek the king's backing for a voyage to the Gulf of Mexico to establish a settlement near the mouth of the Mississippi from which to invade the region of northern Mexico known as Nueva Vizcaya.
1684
August:
Leaves France with approximately 300 people—settlers, soldiers, and priests—aboard four ships, La Belle, Le Joly, L'Aimable, and Saint-Francois.
September:
Spanish pirates seize the Saint-Francois. The remainder of the fleet arrives at Saint- Domingue (Haiti).
November:
The remaining ships set sail from Saint-Domingue for the mouth of the Mississippi.
1685
January:
La Salle arrives off Texas coast. He has missed the Mississippi River and lands instead in Matagorda Bay.
February:
La Belle enters Matagorda Bay through what is now known as Pass Cavallo.
L'Aimable runs aground trying to enter a narrow channel and breaks apart. Most of the supplies for the colony are lost.
March:
The ship, Le Joly, carrying 120 passengers, returns to France. Approximately 180 people remain behind. La Salle sets out with a group of men in canoes to explore “Baye St. Louis" and to look for a suitable location for the settlement. The others establish a temporary camp—the Grand Camp—on Matagorda Island under the leadership of La Salle’s trusted officer, Joutel.
April:
La Salle selects a permanent location for the colony on the banks of a stream he calls the River of the Bison. He lays out the settlement that, through historical error, has come to be known as Fort St. Louis.
June:
Seventy colonists leave the island camp and head for the area of the new settlement.
July:
Joutel and his men, who had stayed at the island camp, travel up the bay aboard The Belle and join the other colonists.
October:
Traveling in canoes, La Salle and 50 men leave to search for the mouth of the Mississippi. The Belle follows with 37 men. There is no contact between the two groups for a month.
1686
January:
La Salle leaves again to explore another route.
February:
A storm drives La Belle, La Salle's only remaining ship, aground on a sandbar off Matagorda Island. La Salle party returns to the settlement after being gone two months.
May:
Six survivors from the Belle reach the settlement in a canoe after having camped on Matagorda Island near the shipwreck for three months.
1687
January:
La Salle and 16 men leave for Canada to obtain supplies for the colony. At Fort St. Louis, only 20 colonists now remain. Disease and attacks by the local Indians, the Karankawa, have taken a toll on the settlement.
March:
La Salle is ambushed and killed in east Texas by two of his men: Pierre Duhaut and L’Archeveque. Five of his men continue on to Canada, while others stay in Texas.
April:
Spanish expedition of Rivas and Iriarte finds the wreck of La Belle in Matagorda Bay.
1689
January:
Karankawa attack the French settlement (Fort St. Louis). The colonists, weakened by smallpox and other maladies, cannot defend themselves. The Indians kill all but five children, who are taken captive.
April:
A Spanish expedition led by Gen. Alonso de Léon, intent on destroying the French settlement, finds the remains of the colony. The Spaniards bury the bones of three settlers lying scattered on the ground, bury eight cannons, and map the fort.
1722
Spanish expedition led by the Marqués de Aguayo returns to Garcitas Creek and begins construction of Presdio La Bahía on top of the ruins of Fort St. Louis. Presidio moved in 1726.
Explanation:
LA SALLE'S TEXAS SETTLEMENT.René Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, established a French settlement on the Texas coast in summer 1685, the result of faulty geography that caused him to believe the Mississippi River emptied into the Gulf of Mexico in the Texas coastal bend. The settlement on the right bank of Garcitas Creek in southern Victoria County has been called Fort St. Louis, but in fact it had no name, only a description. La Salle himself referred to it as "the habitation on the riviére aux Boeufs [Buffalo River] near the baye Saint-Louis."
The precise location, about five miles above the Garcitas creek mouth in Lavaca Bay, has long been in dispute, despite a preponderance of evidence favoring the actual site, presented by Eugene Herbert Bolton as early as 1908. The site was confirmed in June 1996 with the excavation of eight French cannons. Buried there more than three hundred years previously by Spanish general Alonso De León, the cannons provided the impetus for excavation of the Keeran Ranch site (1996–2002) by archeologists of the Texas Historical Commission. This project confirmed that the Spanish Nuestra Señora de Loreto de la Bahía Presidio was built on the La Salle settlement site early in 1722. Spanish soldiers led by Domingo Ramón had occupied the site the previous year. Of an astonishing total of 157,726 artifacts recovered from the site, approximately 10 percent are of French provenance, the remainder being of Spanish and Indian origins.
The precise location, about five miles above the Garcitas creek mouth in Lavaca Bay, has long been in dispute, despite a preponderance of evidence favoring the actual site, presented by Eugene Herbert Bolton as early as 1908. The site was confirmed in June 1996 with the excavation of eight French cannons. Buried there more than three hundred years previously by Spanish general Alonso De León, the cannons provided the impetus for excavation of the Keeran Ranch site (1996–2002) by archeologists of the Texas Historical Commission. This project confirmed that the Spanish Nuestra Señora de Loreto de la Bahía Presidio was built on the La Salle settlement site early in 1722. Spanish soldiers led by Domingo Ramón had occupied the site the previous year. Of an astonishing total of 157,726 artifacts recovered from the site, approximately 10 percent are of French provenance, the remainder being of Spanish and Indian origins.