ig leh rine 47 dőlt, d 37 Le Se ee ld Ba me
 HISTORY OF LEEDS AND GRENVILLE. 7
  
Translated, this reads as follows : " Francis Pic¬
  
. guet laid the foundation of this habitation, in the
 name of the Almighty God, in 1749. — These build¬
 ings were subsequently occupied by a British
 garrison, and also as court-house, gaol, and barracks.
 The first French Governor of the fort was the great¬
 grandfather of James Keeler, Esq., of Edwardsburg.
 The fort was named La Presentation, and subse¬
  
quently played an important part in keeping up |
 communication by land between the St. Lawrence
 and Lake Champlain. The French spared no efforts
 in attempting to withdraw the Iroquois from inter¬
 course with the English, sending Father Ragueneau
 to Onondaga in 1657-8; Isaac Joques, to the
 Mohawks, in 1646; Frs. Jos. Lemercier to Onon¬
 daga, in 1656-8; Frs. Duperon to Onondaga, in
 1657-8; Simon Le Moine to Onondaga, in 1654,
 and subsequently to the Mohawks and Senecas ;
 and many more, whose efforts were crowned with
 partial success.
  
As a result of the efforts put forth by the
 missionaries, a part of the Mohawk tribe, in 1675-6,
 emigrated to the Saut St. Louis, in the vicinity of
 Montreal. The room in which Charlevoix dwelt
 while at this mission of the Saut St. Louis is still
 pointed out to visitors; and the table on which he
 wrote, forms a part of the furniture of the priest’s
 house at that mission.
  
The establishment of the missionary station and
 fort at the mouth of the River La Presentation
 (Soegatzy) (Oswegatchie), is described as follows, in
 the Documentary History of New York, the trans¬
 lation having been made at Paris by a special agent
 of that State:
 
“A large number of Iroquois savages having
 
declared their willingness to embrace Christianity,
 it has been proposed to establish a mission in the
 vicinity of Fort Frontenac. Abbe Picquet,a zealous
 
 
confidence, is especially fitted for the task.”
 
. Nevertheless, Ogdensburg was subsequently se¬
 lected,
 
‘The account says : “ Father Picquet arrived at the
 . River de la Presentation (1749), called Soegatzy,
 with twenty-five Frenchmen and four Iroquois
 L ns. He set about building a stone house to
 ecure his effects. He next had erected a small
 
 
ve as a bastion.
 
In due time, five cannon, of two-pound calibre,
 ie > sent to the Abbe for his little fort, so as to |
 : ion to his Indians, and persuade them
 ts 1 ey would be in security.”
 
meeecancions were well taken, for on the 26th
 
 
i 1749s a band of savages, believed to have
  
been Mohawks, attacked the mission, which was
  
Fort Frontenac. The French believed that the
 attack was instigated by the English, who beheld
 with alarm the erection of a post, by a hostile
 nation, within the borders of the lroquois country.
 
In 1751, Father Picquet, having strongly fortified
 his position, commenced the erection of a saw-mill
 —the first one built upon the shores of the St.
 Lawrence.
 
On the roth of June, 1754, there assembled at
 Albany, a congress of representatives from the
 several English colonies, to devise a plan of union,
 for common defence against the encroachments of
 the French. The following is one of the statements
 agreed upon by the council :
 
“That they (the French) are continually drawing
 off the Indians from the British interest, and have
 lately persuaded one-half of the Onondaga tribe,
 with many from the other nations along with them,
 to remove to a place called Oswegatchie, where they
 have built them a church and fort; and many of
 the Senecas, the most numerous nation, appear
 wavering, and rather inclined to the French ; and it
 is a melancholy consideration, that not more than
 150 men of all the several nations have attended this
 treaty, though they had notice that all the Govern¬
 ments would be here by Commissioners, and that a
 large present would be given.”
 
In July, 1755, a French regiment, under De
 Bearre, ascended the St. Lawrence for the purpose
 of operating against the British. The Abbe Picquet
 joined this expedition, with twenty-eight warriors,
 proceeding to the Island of Tonti. Several prisoners
 were taken, and with them Picquet proceeded to
 Montreal.
 
 
In several other engagements the name of this
 indefatigable missionary is mentioned, the French
 authorities heaping upon him the highest enco¬
 niums; the English uniting in declaring that he
 was all that was vile, because he employed the
 Indians in making attacks upon defenceless settle¬
 That he was actuated by - patriotic
 sentiments, no one can doubt. With zeal unabated,
 and energy untiring, he labored in behalf of his
 religion and the cause of his King. The conversion
 of the savages was the ruling passion cf his life ; and
 to secure that end, he no doubt resorted to means
 which disregarded the common claims of humanity.
  
La Presentation was the centre from which were
 sent out scalping parties, that harrassed the English
 settlements on the Mohawk, during the years 1758-9,
  
under General Gage, to crush the fortress, and