<h3> CHAPTER III </h3>
<h4>
ACROSS THE PLAINS
</h4>
<p>For several years La Verendrye had been hearing wonderful accounts of a
tribe of Indians in the West who were known as the Mandans. Wherever
he went, among the Chippewas, the Crees, or the Assiniboines, some one
was sure to speak of the Mandans, and the stories grew more and more
marvellous. La Verendrye knew that Indians were very much inclined to
exaggerate. They would never spoil a good story by limiting it to what
they knew to be true. They liked a joke as well as other people; and,
when they found that the white men who visited them were eager to know
all about the country and the tribes of the far interior, they invented
all sorts of impossible stories, in which truth and fiction were so
mingled that at length the explorers did not know what to believe.</p>
<p>Much that was told him by the Indians concerning the Mandans La
Verendrye knew
could not possibly be true; he thought that some of
their stories were probably correct. The Indians said that the Mandans
were white like himself, that they dressed like Europeans, wore armour,
had horses and cattle, cultivated the ground, and lived in fortified
towns. Their home was described as being far towards the setting sun,
on a great river that flowed into the ocean. La Verendrye knew that
the Spaniards had made settlements on the western coast of America, and
he thought that the mysterious strangers might perhaps be Spaniards.
At any rate, they seemed to be white men, and, if the Indian stories
were even partially true, they would be able to show him that way to
the great water which it was the ambition of his life to find. His
resolve, therefore, was inevitable. He would visit these white
strangers, whoever they might be; and he had great hopes that they
would be able to guide him to the object of his quest.</p>
<p>For some time, however, he was not able to carry out this intended
visit to the Mandans. The death of his nephew La Jemeraye, followed
soon after by the murder of his son Jean, upset all his plans for a
time. Further, he had great difficulty in keeping peace among the
Indian
tribes. The Chippewas and the Crees, who had always been
friendly to the French, were indignant at the treacherous massacre of
the white men by the Sioux, and urged La Verendrye to lead a war party
against this enemy. La Verendrye not only refused to do this himself,
but he told them that they must on no account go to war with the Sioux.
He warned them that their Great Father, the king of France, would be
very angry with them if they disobeyed his commands. Had they not
known him so well, the Indians would have despised La Verendrye as a
coward for refusing to revenge himself upon the Sioux for the death of
his son; but they knew that, whatever his reason might be, it was not
due to any fear of the Sioux. As time went on, they thought that he
would perhaps change his mind, and again and again they came to him
begging for leave to take the war-path. 'The blood of your son,' they
said, 'cries for revenge. We have not ceased to weep for him and for
the other Frenchmen who were slain. Give us permission and we will
avenge their death upon the Sioux.'</p>
<p>La Verendrye, however, disregarding his personal feelings, knew that it
would be fatal to all his plans to let the friendly Indians have
their way. An attack on the Sioux would be the signal for a general
war among all the neighbouring tribes. In that case his forts would be
destroyed and the fur trade would be broken up. In the end, he and his
men would probably be driven out of the western country, and all his
schemes for the discovery of the Western Sea would come to nothing. It
was therefore of the utmost importance that he should remain where he
was, in the country about the Lake of the Woods, until the excitement
among the Indians had quieted down and there was no longer any
immediate danger of war.</p>
<p>At length, in the summer of 1738, La Verendrye felt that he could carry
out his plan of visiting the Mandans. He left one of his sons, Pierre,
in charge of Fort St Charles, and with the other two, Fran�ois and
Louis, set forth on his journey to the West. Travelling down the
Winnipeg river in canoes, they stopped for a few hours at Fort
Maurepas, then crossed Lake Winnipeg and paddled up the muddy waters of
Red River to the mouth of the Assiniboine, the site of the present city
of Winnipeg, then seen by white men for the first time. La Verendrye
found it occupied by a band of Crees under two war chiefs. He landed,
pitched his tent on the banks of the Assiniboine, and sent for the
two chiefs and reproached them with what he had heard—that they had
abandoned the French posts and had taken their furs to the English on
Hudson Bay. They replied that the accusation was false; that they had
gone to the English during only one season, the season in which the
French had abandoned Fort Maurepas after the death of La Jemeraye, and
had thus left the Crees with no other means of getting the goods they
required. 'As long as the French remain on our lands,' they said, 'we
promise you not to go elsewhere with our furs.' One of the chiefs then
asked him where he was now going. La Verendrye replied that it was his
purpose to ascend the Assiniboine river in order to see the country.
'You will find yourself among the Assiniboines,' said the chief; 'and
they are a useless people, without intelligence, who do not hunt the
beaver, and clothe themselves only in the skins of buffalo. They are a
good-for-nothing lot of rascals and might do you harm.' But La
Verendrye had heard such tales before and was not to be frightened from
his purpose. He took leave of the Crees, turned his canoes up the
shallow waters of the Assiniboine river, and ascended
it to where
now stands the city of Portage la Prairie. Here he built a fort, which
he named Fort La Reine, in honour of the queen of France.</p>
<SPAN name="img-048"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-048.jpg" ALT="An Indian encampment. From a painting by Paul Kane." BORDER="2" WIDTH="633" HEIGHT="494">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 633px">
An Indian encampment. <br/>
From a painting by Paul Kane.
</h4>
</center>
<p>While this was being done, a party of Assiniboines arrived. La
Verendrye soon found, as he had expected, that the Crees through
jealousy had given the Assiniboines a character which they did not
deserve. With all friendliness they welcomed the strangers and were
overjoyed at the presents which the French gave them. The most valued
presents consisted of knives, chisels, awls, and other small tools. Up
to this time these people had been dependent upon implements made of
stone and of bone roughly fashioned to serve their purposes, and these
implements were very crude and inferior compared with the sharp steel
tools of the white men.</p>
<p>While La Verendrye had been occupied in building Fort La Reine, one of
his men, Louvi�re, had been sent to the mouth of the Assiniboine to put
up a small post for the Crees. He found a suitable place on the south
bank of the Assiniboine, near the point where it enters the Red, and
here he built his trading post and named it Fort Rouge. This fort was
abandoned in a year or two, as it was
soon found more convenient
to trade with the Indians either at Fort Maurepas near the mouth of the
Winnipeg, or at Fort La Reine on the Assiniboine. The memory of the
fort is, however, preserved to this day. The quarter of Winnipeg in
the vicinity of the old fort is still known as Fort Rouge. The memory
of La Verendrye is also preserved, for a large school built near the
site of the old fort bears the name of the great explorer.</p>
<p>The completion of Fort La Reine freed La Verendrye to make preparations
for his journey to the Mandans. He left some of his men at the fort
and selected twenty to accompany him on his expedition. To each of
these followers he gave a supply of powder and bullets, an ax, a
kettle, and other things needful by the way. In later years horses
were abundant on the western prairie, but at that time neither the
French nor the Indians had horses, and everything needed for the
journey was carried on men's backs.</p>
<p>Three days after leaving Fort La Reine, La Verendrye met a party of
Assiniboines travelling over the prairie. He gave them some small
presents, and told them that he had built in their country a fort where
they could get all kinds of useful articles in
exchange for their
furs and provisions. They seemed delighted at having white men so
near, and promised to keep the fort supplied with everything that the
traders required.</p>
<p>A day or two afterwards several other Indians appeared, from an
Assiniboine village. They bore hospitable messages from the chiefs,
who begged the white travellers to come to visit them. This it was
difficult to do. The village was some miles distant from the road on
which they were travelling and already they had lost much time because
their guide was either too lazy or too stupid to take them by the most
direct way to the Mandan villages on the banks of the Missouri. Still,
La Verendrye did not think it wise to disappoint the Assiniboines, or
to offend them, since he might have to depend upon their support in
making his plans for further discoveries. Accordingly, although it was
now nearly the middle of November, the very best time of the year for
travelling across the plains, he made up his mind to go to the
Assiniboine village.</p>
<p>As the party drew near the village, a number of young warriors came to
meet them, and to tell them that the Assiniboines were greatly pleased
to have them as guests. It is
possible that the Assiniboines had
heard of the presents which the French had given to some of their
countrymen, and that they too hoped to receive knives, powder and
bullets, things which they prized very highly. At any rate, the
explorer and his men received vociferous welcome when they entered the
village. 'Our arrival,' says La Verendrye, 'was hailed with great joy,
and we were taken into the dwelling of a young chief, where everything
had been made ready for our reception. They gave us and all our men
very good cheer, and none of us lacked appetite.'</p>
<SPAN name="img-052"></SPAN>
<center>
<ANTIMG CLASS="imgcenter" SRC="images/img-052.jpg" ALT="An Assiniboine Indian. From a pastel by Edmund Morris." BORDER="2" WIDTH="459" HEIGHT="651">
<H4 CLASS="h4center" STYLE="width: 459px">
An Assiniboine Indian. <br/>
From a pastel by Edmund Morris.
</h4>
</center>
<p>The following day La Verendrye sent for the principal chiefs of the
tribe, and gave to each of them a present of powder and ball, or knives
and tobacco. He told them that if the Assiniboines would hunt beaver
diligently and would bring the skins to Fort La Reine, they should
receive in return everything that they needed. One of the chiefs made
a speech in reply. 'We thank you,' he said, 'for the trouble you have
taken to come to visit us. We are going to accompany you to the
Mandans, and then to see you safely back to your fort. We have already
sent word to the Mandans that you are on your way to visit them, and
the Mandans are delighted. We shall travel
by easy marches, so
that we may hunt by the way and have plenty of provisions.' The
explorer was not wholly pleased to find that the entire village was to
accompany him, for this involved still further delays on the journey.
It was necessary, however, to give no cause of offence; so he thanked
them for their good-will, and merely urged that they should be ready to
leave as soon as possible and travel with all speed by the shortest
road, as the season was growing late.</p>
<p>On the next morning they all set out together, a motley company, the
French with their Indian guides and hunters accompanied by the entire
village of Assiniboines. La Verendrye was astonished at the orderly
way in which these savages, about six hundred in number, travelled
across the prairies. Everything was done in perfect order, as if they
were a regiment of trained soldiers. The warriors divided themselves
into parties; they sent out scouts in advance to both the right and the
left, in order to keep watch for enemies and also to look out for
buffalo and other game; the old men marched in the centre with the
women and the children; and in the rear was a strong guard of warriors.
If the scouts saw buffalo ahead, they signalled to the rear-guard,
who crept round the herd on both sides until it was surrounded. They
killed as many buffaloes as were needed to provision the camp, and this
completed the men's part of the work. It was the women who cut up the
meat and carried it to the place where the company encamped for the
night. The women, indeed, were the burden-bearers and had to carry
most of the baggage. There were, of course, dogs in great numbers on
such excursions, and these bore a part of the load. The men burdened
themselves with nothing but their arms.</p>
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