- François Picquet
François Picquet, (
4 December 1708 –15 July 1781 ), was aSulpician priest who came toMontreal from France in 1734. He spent the next few years studying Indian languages and customs and serving the local parish. From 1739 to 1749 he served atLac des Deux Montagnes , where there was a Sulpician mission. It was during that period that Picquet made the decision to work with the Indians south of the Great Lakes for conversion and to ensure their loyalty to France. In 1748 a commitment was made byRoland-Michel Barrin de La Galissonière , theGovernor General of New France , to send Abbé Picquet to the Thousand Islands area for the above purpose.In 1749, Abbé Picquet built a mission fort named
Fort de La Présentation near the junction of theOswegatchie River and theSt Lawrence River . By 1755 it had a large population of Iroqois loyal to France. In 1758, with theSeven Years' War intensifying, a military commander was put in charge of that new aspect of the fort. The Abbé was displeased with this dilution of his authority and left the fort for a period. He was back in July, 1758, to lead his Indian troops in thebattle of Carillon . He also was part of Louis de la Corne's excursion to the Oswego area the following year.In 1759, the mission fort was abandoned in favour of
Fort Lévis and Picquet fled toMontreal with his Indian troops. He left there for New Orleans where he stayed for a time, returning to France in 1772. He took up a ministry atVerjon and then as a chaplain to the nuns of the Visitation. A private audience with PopePius VI occurred in 1777 and he retired in 1779.External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=2120 Biography at "the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12075d.htm the "Catholic Encyclopedia"]
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