Jacque Marquette Essay, Research Paper
Jacques Marquette
February 25,1997
Jacques Marquette was a great French Jesuit Missionary and explorer. He was also known as Pere Marquette. He was born at Laon in Northern France on June 1, 1637. He was one of the first white men to explore the upper Mississippi River region. He entered the Jesuit College at Nancy about 1654. He later studied and taught in Reims as well as other French Towns.
In 1666 he was sent to New France (Canada), as a missionary priest, arriving at Quebec in September of 1666. To prepare himself for his assignment he studied Indian ways of life and Indian languages. He knew six different languages. He lived in the wilderness and sometimes slept in freezing temperatures with little or nothing to eat.
Jacques established a mission on Mackinac Island in 1671, which was named St. Ignace. This is where, on May 17, 1673 he met Louis Jolliet and set out with five other Frenchmen in two birch canoes across Lake Michigan. Their plan
Jacques Marquette suffering from dysentery started back to St. Ignace where he died May 18, 1675, on the banks of the now Pere Marquette River, near the present city of Ludington, Michigan.
Marquette was buried in St. Ignace. A monument was erected over his grave in 1882.