Get this book
Amazon
Books & Kindle
Audible
Audiobook
Bookshop.org
Support indie stores
Affiliate links — I earn a small commission if you buy, at no extra cost to you. Learn more
Data via openlibrary
Discovery of the Great West
No ratings yet
René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle (1643-1687) was a French explorer in the Great Lakes region who traveled the Mississippi River, claiming the territory for France. Born and raised in France and educated in the Jesuit religious order, he went to Montreal in New France in 1666. On one of his expeditions in the subsequent years he built the first sailing ship on the Great Lakes, Le Griffon. Part of his legacy was a chain of forts from Ontario into present-day Ohio and Illinois that extended French control and the French fur trade into the region of the present Great Lakes states. Author Francis Parkman was one of America’s best-known and most respected historians in the late nineteenth century. He drew on a great depth of expertise about the history of the French in North America for this book, which was long considered a standard history on the topic.
Creators
More by Francis Parkman
Full filmography →
The Oregon Trail
1978
Understanding fiction -- Second Edition
1959
A Half-Century of Conflict
1892
Montcalm and Wolfe
1884
Count Frontenac and New France under Louis XIV
1877
The old régime in Canada
1874
California and Oregon trail
1872
The conspiracy of Pontiac and the Indian war after the conquest of Canada
1870