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====== Louis Jolliet ======
{{:people:louis_jolliet.jpg?300|Louis Jolliet}}
^ Louis Jolliet ^
| **Full Name** | Louis Jolliet |
| **Born** | c. September 1645 |
| **Died** | After May 1700 |
| **Birthplace** | Beaupré, New France (present-day Quebec) |
| **Nationality** | French Canadian |
| **Occupation** | Explorer, Cartographer, Fur Trader |
| **Known For** | Exploration of the Mississippi River |
| **Associated With** | St. Ignace, Great Lakes Region |
| **Expedition Partner** | Jacques Marquette |
**Louis Jolliet** (c. 1645 – after May 1700) was a French Canadian explorer, cartographer, fur trader, and entrepreneur best known for his 1673 expedition with Jesuit missionary **Jacques Marquette** into the Mississippi River Valley. Their journey produced some of the earliest reliable European observations of the upper Mississippi River and helped expand French geographic knowledge of the North American interior. Jolliet's explorations played an important role in the growth of New France and the development of French influence throughout the Great Lakes region. [(britannica>Louis Jolliet | Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/biography/Louis-Jolliet)] [(britannicastudents>Louis Jolliet – Britannica Students. https://kids.britannica.com/students/article/Louis-Jolliet/275175)]
===== Early Life =====
Jolliet was born near Quebec in New France, probably at Beaupré, sometime before September 1645. He received a formal education and studied subjects that included science and navigation. Although he initially considered a religious vocation, he ultimately entered the fur trade and exploration, fields that offered opportunities throughout the expanding French territories of North America. [(>britannica)] [(britannicakids>Louis Jolliet – Britannica Kids. https://kids.britannica.com/kids/article/Louis-Jolliet/353325)]
As a trader, Jolliet traveled extensively throughout the Great Lakes and became familiar with Indigenous trade routes, regional geography, and several Native languages. These skills later proved invaluable during his explorations. [(>britannicastudents)]
===== Mission to Explore the West =====
In 1672, officials of New France sought to determine the location and course of a great river reported by Indigenous nations west of the Great Lakes. Governor **Louis de Buade, Comte de Frontenac**, selected Jolliet to lead an expedition to investigate these reports. [(frontenac>Louis de Buade, Count of Frontenac – Encyclopaedia Britannica. https://www.britannica.com/summary/Louis-de-Buade-comte-de-Frontenac-et-de-Palluau)] [(>britannica)]
To assist in the journey, Jolliet partnered with Jesuit missionary Jacques Marquette, who possessed extensive knowledge of Indigenous languages and communities throughout the region. [(>britannicastudents)] [(>britannicakids)]
===== The Mississippi Expedition =====
On May 17, 1673, Jolliet, Marquette, and five voyageurs departed from **St. Ignace**, Michigan, in two birchbark canoes. Their route carried them through Green Bay, up the Fox River, across a short portage to the Wisconsin River, and eventually into the Mississippi River. [(>britannicastudents)] [(>britannicakids)] [(>turn0search2)]
The expedition traveled south along the Mississippi as far as present-day Arkansas. Along the way, the explorers encountered numerous Indigenous communities and gathered valuable information concerning geography, trade routes, and regional cultures. After learning that the river continued toward the Gulf of Mexico rather than the Pacific Ocean, they chose to return rather than risk encounters with Spanish authorities farther south. [(>britannica)] [(>turn0search14)]
Their return journey followed the Illinois River and eventually led back to Lake Michigan, making them among the first Europeans to document portions of what would later become Illinois and the upper Mississippi Valley. [(>turn0search7)] [(>turn0search23)]
===== Cartography and Geographic Contributions =====
Although many of Jolliet's original notes were reportedly lost in a canoe accident near Montreal upon his return, he reconstructed much of the expedition's findings from memory. Combined with Marquette's journals, these accounts significantly improved European understanding of North American geography. [(>britannica)] [(>britannicastudents)]
His maps and reports helped establish more accurate knowledge of the Mississippi River system and contributed to future French exploration and settlement throughout the continent's interior. [(>britannica)]
===== Later Explorations =====
Following the Mississippi expedition, Jolliet continued exploring and mapping portions of New France. He later conducted surveys of the Labrador coast and other regions important to French trade and navigation. His work as a cartographer and explorer remained valuable to colonial administrators seeking a better understanding of France's North American territories. [(>britannica)]
===== Connection to Michigan =====
Michigan played a central role in Jolliet's most famous achievements. The 1673 expedition began at St. Ignace, one of the earliest French settlements in the Great Lakes. The Straits of Mackinac served as an important crossroads connecting the interior of North America with the St. Lawrence River system and the broader French colonial network. [(>britannicastudents)] [(>turn0search2)]
As a result, Jolliet's legacy remains closely linked to Michigan history and the era of French exploration in the Great Lakes region.
===== Legacy =====
Louis Jolliet ranks among the most important explorers of seventeenth-century North America. His expedition with Jacques Marquette expanded European knowledge of the Mississippi River Valley and helped shape future exploration, trade, and settlement across the continent. [(>britannica)] [(>britannicastudents)]
Today, Jolliet is remembered as a skilled explorer, mapmaker, and interpreter of the North American interior. His work contributed to the geographic understanding of a vast region and remains an important chapter in the history of Michigan, New France, and the exploration of the Great Lakes. [(>britannica)] [(>turn0search16)]
===== See Also =====
* Jacques Marquette
* St. Ignace, Michigan
* Mississippi River
* New France
* Great Lakes
* French Exploration of North America
~~REFNOTES~~
{{tag>people louis_jolliet explorer cartographer new_france great_lakes michigan}}