- Jean-Pierre Aulneau
Father Jean-Pierre Aulneau de la Touche, S.J. (
21 April 1705 –8 June 1736 ) was aJesuit missionarypriest active inCanada and the American Upper Midwest. He is referred to as "Minnesota 's ForgottenMartyr ."Early life
Jean-Pierre Aulneau was born at his father's chateau at
Moûtiers-sur-le-Hay ,Vendée ,France . He studied at theminor seminary ofLuçon prior to entering theJesuit novitiate at Pau in 1720. He spent a number of years as an intructor inLa Rochelle andPoitiers . After hisOrdination to thepriesthood , he sailed for CanadaNew France in 1734.After a stormy and disease-ridden crossing on Le Ruby, he landed at
Quebec City in Canada onAugust 12 ,1734 . After recovering his health, he lodged at the Jesuit College in Quebec, preparing for his final examination, which he passed duringLent of 1735.Black Robe in the Northwest
After receiving an assignment as
chaplain , he set out forFort St. Charles in June, 1735. He sailed through theGreat Lakes toFort St. Charles with Canadian explorerLa Vérendrye (Pierre). At the time, Father Aulneau was posted farther west than any other missionary inNorth America . His letters to his mother in France reveal that he was deathly afraid of being assigned so far away from his Confessor.The following year Father Aulneau,
Jean Baptiste de La Vérendrye and 19French-Canadian voyageurs were sent from Fort St. Charles toFort Michilimackinac . The purpose of the mission was to pick up supplies for an expedition to the Mandans in what is today the North andSouth Dakota . In addition, the trip would also allow Father Aulneau a last visit to theConfessional before accompanying the explorers. Despite his fears of being so far from any other priest, his letters show a man filled with excitement and zealous to evangelize the Indians.Martyrdom
However, on their first night out they were all massacred by "Prairie Sioux" warriors on a nearby island in
Lake of the Woods . The date wasJune 8 ,1736 . The massacre was allegedly in retaliation for La Verendrye's practice of supplying guns to Sioux enemies, especially theAssiniboine and theCree .Aftermath
When members of the friendly Cree tribe reported the massacre to La Verendrye, he gave orders for the heads of the 19 voyageurs and the decapitated bodies of Father Aulneau and young La Verendrye to be returned to Fort St. Charles. The bodies of Father Aulneau and young La Verendrye were encased in a rough hewn
coffin and buried beneath thealtar of the fortesschapel . The 19 heads were deposited in a nearby trench.The massacre ended, for a time, the project of a mission to the
Mandan s as there was no other priest further west than Fort Michilimackinac. In 1741, FatherClaude-Godefroy Coquart , a replacement for Father Aulneau, began his journey west. He would have spent some time at Fort St. Charles and is known to have joined the La Vérendryes atFort La Reine (presentlyPortage la Prairie, Manitoba ) in 1743. In doing so, Coquart was the first recorded missionary in present-day Manitoba and the first to travel beyondLake of the Woods , a role which was to have been the task of Father Aulneau.Legacy
The letters of Father Aulneau were discovered in his family's possession in 1889 and published in an English translation in 1893. In 1908, a party of
Canadian Jesuit s fromSaint Boniface, Manitoba , located the site ofFort St. Charles , just inside theterritorial waters of theUnited States , using the letters of La Verendrye and theoral tradition of theOjibwe Indians. The bodies of the martyred priest and his companions were reexumed and examined. The remains of Father Aulneau was recognized by the hook from the top of hiscassock and the remnants of hisrosary , which had been placed at his feet. All human remains and artifacts found at Fort St. Charles, were transferred across the Canadian Border toSaint Boniface, Manitoba , where they remain to this day.The site of
Fort St. Charles is currently owned by theRoman Catholic Diocese ofCrookston, Minnesota and remains a site ofpilgrimage . The precise location of "Massacre Island," where Father Aulneau and his companions were murdered by the Sioux, continues to be debated.See also
*
Canadian Martyrs References
*Lund, Duane R. "Lake of the Woods: Earliest Accounts". Nordell Graphic Communications, Staples, Minn.1984
*"The Encyclopedia of Canada", Vol. IV, Toronto, University Associates of Canada, 1948
*"The Aulneau Collection", Edited by Father Arthur Jones, S.J. Published by Saint Mary's College, Montreal, 1893.External links
* [http://www.archive.org/details/rareaulneaucollect00aulnuoft The Aulneau Collection, Available for Download on "The Internet Archive"]
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=619 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.mhs.mb.ca/docs/transactions/3/verendryes.shtml Manitoba Histoical Society]
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