Joseph A. Grande By the mid1670s, rene robert Cavalier Sieur de La Salle had designed a scheme for he journeyed back to the new world with a license to explore, http://ah.phpwebhosting.com/h/lasalle/grande.html
Extractions: By Dr. Joseph A. Grande B y the mid-1670s, Rene Robert Cavalier Sieur de La Salle had designed a scheme for building a fleet of ships to operate between trading posts on the Great Lakes, carrying goods east to Montreal. One would sail between Fort Frontenac, where Lake Ontario empties into the St. Lawrence, and the Niagara wilderness. Others would navigate the upper lakes, bringing goods to Niagara for transshipment to Montreal. The young explorer returned to France in 1677 to obtain royal permission and recruit followers to assist him. Accompanied by a group of capable lieutenants, he journeyed back to the New World with a license to explore, trade and erect forts in the interior of New France. Among La Salle's chief lieutenants was Father Louis Hennepin , a zealous Franciscan missionary who did not hesitate to engage in secular as well as spiritual activities when circumstances demanded. Also included was Dominque de La Motte-Lussiere lured by tales of great wealth waiting to be extracted from the American wilderness.
Unit Plan For Exploration rene robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle Explorer of the Mississippi River. Ventura, Piero. 1492 The Year of the new world. new York Putnam, 1992. http://www.michigan.gov/scope/0,1607,7-155-13481_13492_13493-39217--,00.html
Extractions: English Language Arts ... [Text Version] Unit Plan for Exploration Curriculum Unit Plan English Language Arts Fifth Grade Continued Development of English Language Arts Unit 1: Exploration Abstract In this unit students investigate the European exploration of the Americas. Through reading, writing, and research, students examine how European explorers extended what was known about their world. Using a journal, students put themselves in the role of a fifteenth or sixteenth century explorer, examining daily life at that period and forces that motivated these men. Students make oral presentations about individual explorers after researching their lives and daily life at that time. The unit culminates with students preparing and delivering a persuasive speech expressing a position regarding who discovered America. Unit Title : Exploration Grade Level/Course Title : Fifth Grade/Continued Development of English Language Arts Focus Questions Why do people explore?
Museum Of The Coastal Bend explorers in Texas, captained by renerobert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, Texas Maritime Museum, Rockport, Texas Sailing to the new world in the http://www.museumofthecoastalbend.org/lasalle.html
Extractions: Museum of the Coastal Bend La Salle Odyssey The Museum is proud to be a member of the La Salle Odyssey Project, a cooperative venture of seven Texas Gulf Coast museums. Each museum tells a segment of the story of French explorers in Texas, captained by Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, in their own unique way. Corpus Christi Museum of Science and History, Corpus Christi, Texas : Presents both the beginning and end of the La Salle Story Texana Museum, Edna, Texas : Meet the native Texans who watched the French come ashore Matagorda County Museum, Bay City, Texas : Discover the events the led up to the La Belle's, La Salle's ill fated ship, recovery. La Petite Belle, Palacios, Texas : The homeport of La Petite Belle. Built at half-scale, she is a fully functional seagoing vessel. Calhoun County Museum, Port Lavaca, Texas : Odyssey travellers will learn about French colonial Texas. Texas Maritime Museum, Rockport, Texas
The LaSalle Murder Case. The Texas saga of rene robert, Seiur de la Salle began near Matagorda Bay and Whether this reflected poor navigation or simple ignorance of new world http://www.texasescapes.com/DEPARTMENTS/Guest_Columnists/East_Texas_all_things_h
Extractions: The Texas saga of Rene Robert, Seiur de la Salle began near Matagorda Bay and ended much closer to East Texas. LaSalle led the first French exploration through the interior of the continent all the way to the mouth of the Mississippi River in 1682, then won approval to plant a permanent colony there. A colony would tie down both ends of the continent's eastern waterways for France. When LaSalle returned in 1684 with his colonists, he landed about 400 miles west of the Mississippi. Whether this reflected poor navigation or simple ignorance of New World topography is debated yet. From his previous exploration of the Mississippi River, he knew that the river divided into many streams near the Gulf of Mexico. Extant records indicate that at first he regarded Matagorda Bay as the western mouth of the "Colbert" River, the original French name for the Mississippi. Explorations convinced LaSalle that his assumption was false and that his plantation, known as Fort St. Louis, lay far to the west of his intended destination. LaSalle also made mistakes in recruiting for the adventure. Too many "gentlemen," or those unaccustomed to work, composed the colony. Faced with failure, LaSalle left most of his colonists ensconced in the palisaded Fort St. Louis and traveled eastward with just a few men to try to reach other French outposts. Along the way, LaSalle was ambushed and killed by Pierre Duhaut, one of his countrymen, near a Hasinai village on March 19, 1687. So the mystery is not "who dun it" but "where did he do it?"
Uranus@astrologicallyspeaking.com 1670 s French explorer rene robert Cavelier (lasalle), Sieur de La Salle,explored the Great Lakes region of the new world. Source www.decades.com http://www.astrologicallyspeaking.com/UranusNotes.htm
Extractions: · Mason Weems, preacher (Episcopalian clergyman), was born. He was a noted seller of books where he would fictionalize history in stories, like the one he wrote of George Washington in the book, "Life of Washington". People loved his fictionalized stories and often believed that they were true. One famous story, which is not true, is the story of Washington chopping down the cherry tree and the famous quote on not telling a lie. 1666 - Newton formulated his law of universal gravitation.
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE AGE OF DISCOVERY Compiled By TC Tirado, Ph.D The new Land; Discovery , exploration, and Early Settlement of North EasternUnited States, The Journeys of rene robert Cavelier, Sieur de lasalle. new http://muweb.millersville.edu/~columbus/data/bib/AODTIR01.BIB
News Story the journey of French explorer renerobert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle.The purpose of lasalle s expedition to the new world was to find the Mississippi http://www.uhv.edu/flame/Sept 2003/Museum Coastal Bend.HTM
Extractions: They came in search of a new empire. Along their journey they confronted pirates, shipwrecks, betrayal and massacre. And their story, the story of the first French settlers in Texas, arrives in Victoria at the Museum of the Coastal Bend. The museum opens Oct. 11 and is located on The Victoria College campus. The purpose of the museum is to showcase the local history and heritage of the Coastal Bend. Museum director Annette Musgrave said this addition would give the public an opportunity to experience the beginnings of Texas history. The museum also is one of seven participating in the La Salle Odyssey Project. Each museum in the project presents one part in the journey of French explorer Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle. The purpose of LaSalle's expedition to the New World was to find the Mississippi River. He took a wrong turn and arrived at Matagorda Bay. Recent discoveries by archeologists have determined La Salle established Fort St. Louis in Victoria County around 1685.
Texas Culture - Western European The first Frenchman in Texas was renerobert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, who drove much of the exploration of the new world, was a Belgian. http://www.traveltex.com/tx_cul_we.asp?SN=1118472&LS=0
Vignette: The Louisiana Purchase started with renerobert Cavelier, Sieur de lasalle, who canoed down the The force that Napoleon dispatched to the new world in december 1801 was http://faculty.washington.edu/qtaylor/aa_Vignettes/place_louisiana_purchase.htm
Extractions: African American History Vignette: The Louisiana Purchase The Deal of the Centuries: Louisiana Purchase Doubled U.S. By Ken Ringle The Washington Post 200 years ago this month, Napoleon sold to the United States what would become all or part of more than a dozen states for about 3 cents an acre. The fledgling nation would use the momentum of the purchase to grow from sea to shining sea, to capture Texas and the Southwest from Mexico, and to secure the Pacific Northwest from European rivals. In the process, America would become a true melting pot. The Louisiana Purchase, of course, was the world's biggest land deal, whereby 200 years ago this month, Thomas Jefferson's special envoy, James Monroe, got Napoleon Bonaparte to sell to the United States what would become all or part of 13 to 17 states (depending on whom you ask) for something like 3 or 4 cents an acre. Consider, too, how profoundly it changed the United States' destiny. No longer limited to its original borders or the land between the Alleghenies and the Mississippi, the United States would use the momentum of the Louisiana Purchase to grow from sea to shining sea, to capture Texas and the Southwest from Mexico, and to secure the Pacific Northwest from European rivals.
HistoryMole: Exploration Of Land & Sea (0150-1986) He spent 9 years there and returned to the new world as the interpreter for 9 Mar 1682, The French explorer rene robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, http://www.historymole.com/cgi-bin/main/results.pl?type=theme&theme=Exploration
Timeline 1661-1699 1670s French explorer rene robert Cavelier (lasalle), Sieur de La Salle, exploredthe Great Lakes region of the new world. (SFC, 11/30/96, pA7) http://timelines.ws/1661_1699.HTML
Decades History Search 1670/1679, French explorer rene robert Cavelier (lasalle), Sieur de La Salle,explored the Great Lakes region of the new world. ref 4475 http://www.decades.com/ByDecade/1670-1679/1.htm
History And Distribution Of Feral Hogs In Texas Hogs are old world species and are not indigenous to the new world. The firstwild hogs in Texas probably resulted from rene robert, Sieur de lasalle s http://texnat.tamu.edu/symposia/feral/feral-6.htm
Extractions: P. O. Box 5207, Uvalde, Texas 78802 Abstract: Feral hogs are old world members of the swine family whose ancestors date back to the ice age. Early explorers and missionaries brought the first swine into Texas, but the feral populations originated during colonization. In the twentieth century, introductions of domestic hogs and European boars into the wild by landowners and sportsman further enhanced the population. Changing land use practices, improved animal husbandry, and eradication of diseases have enabled the feral hog to adapt and disperse throughout most of Texas. With an estimated population of one million animals, feral hog numbers rank second behind the white-tailed deer as a large mammal population and are an intregal part of Texas fauna. Feral hogs belong to the family Suidae which is the same family of the domestic breeds. There are approximately 23 normally recognized subspecies of wild hogs in the world; however, some discrepancies do occur between professionals (Mayer and Brisbin,1991). Feral hogs include domestic hogs gone wild, European boars, and crosses between the two. The history of feral hogs in Texas must be traced back to the original domestic breeds first brought to the state. Hogs are old world species and are not indigenous to the New World. The predecessors to the modern swine family date back prior to the ice age. Although the ice age was extremely hard on them, they managed to survive between major glaciations. Their adaptability is still evident in the modern wild pigs which currently inhabit Texas. As the world was shifting and continents being formed, the swine family was excluded from the new world. Because of the extreme cold and ice, they were unable to cross the Bering land bridge between Alaska and Russia, the only possible entrance to the New World prior to separation. On the European and Asian continents of the Old World, wild hogs thrived through the stone ages. Bones have been found in caves that indicates early man hunted and ate swine (Towne and Wentworth, 1950).
Explorer's Shipwreck Discovered The ship, one of three that rene robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle, goods andother supplies the French planned to use in colonizing the new world. http://www.chron.com/cgi-bin/auth/story.mpl/content/chronicle/metropolitan/98/03
Extractions: PORT O'CONNOR More than 300 years after the supply ship of French explorer La Salle ran aground near Cavallo Pass and 30 years since a local shrimper snagged an iron cannon in his net divers and archaeologists announced Monday that the Amiable has been found. The ship, one of three that Rene Robert Cavalier, Sieur de La Salle, sailed to North America in hopes of setting up a French colony, broke up on a reef in 1685 after La Salle and about 300 soldiers, explorers and colonists overshot the mouth of the Mississippi River and entered Matagorda Bay on Texas' Gulf Coast. "It's fitting that we make this announcement on Texas' Independence Day because we have a gift for Texas: The Amiable has been found," said Austin attorney Wayne Gronquist, a member of the National Underwater and Marine Agency, which located the vessel Feb. 23 and retrieved an encrusted flintlock musket and pistol used to identify the ship as the Amiable. The third ship, the Joly, returned to France.
European Explorers - Age Of Exploration European Explorers of the new world in the Age of exploration rene RobertCavalier Sieur de La Salle from the Texas State Historical Commission http://www.chenowith.k12.or.us/tech/subject/social/explore.html
Extractions: General Links The Age of Exploration from the Mariner's Museum in Newport News, Virginia. Includes a timeline and curriculum guide. Discoverer's Web by a Netherlands University faculty member. Explorers of the Millennium from the ThinkQuest Jr. project. Who Goes There: European Exploration of the New World a Thinkquest project Discovery School's Exploration Station - learn about some of the most famous European explorers who sailed the high seas. Empire of the Bay from the PBS series. Includes Hudson, Champlain, Cartier, and others. Florida of the Conquistador facts about Ponce deLeon, Panfilo de Narvaez, Hernando deSoto, and Tristan deLuna. PBS: Conquistadors - learn all about Cortes, Pizarro, Orellana, and Cabeza De Vaca- four men who helped explore the new world. Enchanted Learning Explorers Room 30's Explorer Page reports by a San Jose 5th Grade class. Bartholemew Dias, Vasco da Gama, Christopher Columbus, Amerigo Vespucci, and Ferdinand Magellan are covered.
Explorers In Texas And Mexico rene robert Cavalier, Sieur de la Salle new world Explored, The Prime timenews in Europe during the year 1520 was the existence of a new world across http://www.mckinneyisd.net/Campuses/school_websites/walker/TeacherCreated/Fourth
Extractions: Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... CICDC - Home of the Catholic Lifetime Reading Plan Explorer, born at Rouen, 1643; died in Texas, 1687. In his youth he displayed an unusual precocity in mathematics and a predilection for natural science; his outlook upon life was somewhat puritanical. Whether or not he was educated with a view to entering the Society of Jesus is a matter of doubt, though some religious order he must have subsequently joined, for to this fact is assigned the forfeiture of his estates. The career of a churchman was definitely abandoned, however, when, after receiving the feudal grant of a tract of land at La Chine on the St. Lawrence from the Sulpicians, seigneurs of Montrealperhaps through the influence of a elder brother who was a member of the order at that placehe came to Canada as an adventurer and trader in 1666. For three years La Salle remained quietly upon his little estate, mastering Indian dialects and meditating on a southwest passage. Upon the latter quest he set out in 1669 with a party of Sulpicians, who, deeming that there was greater missionary work among the north-western tribes, soon abandoned the expedition. La salle's subsequent travels on this occasion are shrouded in an obscurity that will perhaps never be dispelled. Whether he was the first white man to gaze upon Niagara, whether he explored the Allegheny valley or the Ohio river, he seems not to have reached the Mississippi, Joliet's undisputed claim to that distinction during La Salle's residence in Canada being regarded, at present, as finally established. Indeed Joliet's announcement, some few years later, that the
Sieur De La Salle Columbus and other new world explorers empire in the new world. Early lifeLa Salle was born in Rouen, France. His real name was renerobert Cavelier. http://www2.worldbook.com/features/explorers/html/newworld_french_lasalle.html
Extractions: Other French explorers Other explorers of the Great Age Charting the explorers of the Great Age of European Exploration ... Related Web sites Sieur de La Salle (luh SAL) (1643-1687), was a French explorer. He led the first European expedition to track the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Mexico. La Salle claimed the entire Mississippi Valley for France. His many explorations strengthened France's hopes for a great empire in the New World. La Salle was born in Rouen, France. His real name was Rene-Robert Cavelier. He took the name La Salle from the name of his family's estate. As a youth, La Salle went to schools run by Jesuit priests and studied to be a Jesuit. However, he left the religious training in 1665 to seek adventure. The next year, La Salle sailed to Canada, where France had established a colony. La Salle obtained some land near Montreal and became a prosperous fur trader. He did much of his trading with Indians, who told him of two great rivers to the southwest, the Mississippi and the Ohio. The Indians believed these rivers flowed into the sea. La Salle thought one or both of the rivers might be a route through North America to the Pacific Ocean. In 1669, he sold his land and set out in search of the rivers.
Extractions: Home Browse Newsletters Store ... Subscribe Already a member? Log in Content Related to this Topic This Article's Table of Contents Introduction Early life. Attempts to expand New France. Last expedition. Additional Reading ... Print this Table of Contents Shopping Price: USD $1495 Revised, updated, and still unrivaled. The Official Scrabble Players Dictionary (Hardcover) Price: USD $15.95 The Scrabble player's bible on sale! Save 30%. Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary Price: USD $19.95 Save big on America's best-selling dictionary. Discounted 38%! More Britannica products (75 of 1385 words) var mm = [["Jan.","January"],["Feb.","February"],["Mar.","March"],["Apr.","April"],["May","May"],["June","June"],["July","July"],["Aug.","August"],["Sept.","September"],["Oct.","October"],["Nov.","November"],["Dec.","December"]]; To cite this page: MLA style: http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9046674
Explorer Study renerobert Cavelier, Sieur de la Salle Explorer of the Mississippi River. Hernando Cortes and the Conquest of Mexico (Explorers of the new world). http://curry.edschool.virginia.edu/go/tempo/VCCB/TextSets2/Textsets10.html
Extractions: Explorer Study Fifth Grade SOLs By Robin Bost England John Cabot Duvoisin, Roger (1938). And There Was America. New York: Knopf. Fritz, Jean and Venti, Anthony Bacon (1994) Around the World In a Hundred Years: From Henry the Navigator to Magellan. New York: Putnam's. Goodnough, David and Eitzen, Allan (1979). Malwah, N.J.: Troll Associates. Fardy, Bernard D. (Ed.) (1994). John Cabot: The Discovery of Newfoundland . Creative Book Publishing Pub. Pope, Peter Edward (1997). The Many Landfalls of John Cabot . University of Toronto Press. Coulter, Tony and Goetzmann, William H. (Ed.) (1991). LaSalle and the Explorers of the Mississippi , Chelsea House Publishers. Sir Francis Drake Gerrard, Roy (1989). Sir Francis Drake: His Daring Deeds. Goodnough, David and Dodson, Bert (1979). Francis Drake. Troll Communications L.L.C. Age Range: 9 to 12 Kelsey, Harry (2000). Sir Francis Drake: The Queen's Pirate . New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. Marrin, Albert (1995). The Sea King: Sir Francis Drake and His Times Sanderlin, George (1969).