François Gesseau Chouteau (February 7, 1797 – April 18, 1838) was an American pioneer fur trader, entrepreneur, and community leader known as the "Father of Kansas City". He was born in St. Louis, established the first fur trading post in the wild frontier of western Missouri, and settled the area that became Kansas City, Missouri. His first wife was of the Osage Nation and bore a son, and his second wife, Bérénice, birthed nine children.

François Chouteau
Sculpture at the Chouteau Heritage Fountain
Born(1797-02-07)February 7, 1797
DiedApril 18, 1838(1838-04-18) (aged 41)
Burial placeOld Cathedral of St. Louis
MonumentsChouteau Heritage Fountain
OccupationEntrepreneur
Known forSettling Kansas City, Missouri
SpouseBérénice Thérèse Ménard Chouteau
Children10
Parents
RelativesAuguste Chouteau, uncle
Notes

Early life

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François Gesseau Chouteau was born in 1797 in St. Louis, Missouri. The city had been founded 33 years prior by his uncle Auguste Chouteau, and was still under the authority of New Spain. His French-born parents were prominent fur trader Jean Pierre Chouteau and his second wife Brigitte Saucier. In his youth, François learned his father's trade, which was the basis of the early wealth of the city.[citation needed] The Chouteau family company was considered "King of the Fur Trade".[1]

On July 12, 1819, Francois Chouteau (22) and Bérénice Thérèse Ménard (18) married in St. Louis. She was originally from Cahokia (Kaskaskia, Illinois), and also of French descent. Her father was the first Lieutenant Governor of Missouri's neighboring state of Illinois, so this marriage united two powerful families. They honeymooned by floating a keelboat up the Missouri River from St. Louis to the frontier trading post of the Black Snake hills (what became St. Joseph, Missouri) while prospecting for land to build their own trading post.[1][2]

Career

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Fur trading

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The Osage Nation trades with François Chouteau at the Chouteau Heritage Fountain.

Chouteau soon started fur trading expeditions into the western frontier via the Missouri River.[1] In 1819, Chouteau and his cousin Gabriel S. Sères built a temporary trading post for John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company on the Randolph Bluffs along the Missouri River in Clay County, western Missouri.[3]: 87–88  Seeking an ideal place for a permanent post, they investigated several other locations as far north as Council Bluffs, Iowa.

Chouteau, with his wife Bérénice and his brother Cyprien, finally chose a site on the Missouri River, west of the Randolph Bluffs post and a few miles east of the mouth of the River Canses (now called the Kaw or Kansas River). They called it Chouteau's Landing, located near the north end of what became Grand Avenue in Kansas City, Missouri. In 1821, it became the area's first permanent European-American settlement.

Several trappers joined them in 1825, including Gabriel Prud'homme and his family, who were returning from an expedition in the Snake River region. Chouteau partnered with Prud'homme and his brother Cyprien, to create a fur company, with a warehouse as headquarters. The company concentrated on western trading routes and engaged other members of the family.[4] Due to a flood in 1826, Chouteau moved his trading post to higher ground near what is now Troost Avenue's proximity to the river.[5] Chouteau traveled widely throughout the new Kansas Territory, trading manufactured goods for animal pelts from the Shawnee, Kickapoo, and other tribes, with whom he had established long-standing good relations.

His American Fur Company warehouse supplied the intense demand for furs and beaver hats in the eastern US and in Europe. Its inventory came from his licensed trade with the tribes, and from his employees trapping and hunting in the Rocky Mountains.[1]

The settlement was called Chez les Cansès (lit. "Town of Kansas").[6] Chouteau, his wife, and their family continued to expand. They established a home on the bluffs above the Missouri River and were active in the early French community. In 1835, Pierre La Liberté built a log cabin church dedicated to St. Francis Regis. French missionary Father Bénédict Roux became its first parish priest. So many members of Chouteau's extended family were congregants that it became known as Chouteau's Church, and Bérénice became its most important patron. Kansas City's Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception was built on the same site.[7]

Death

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On April 18, 1838, François Chouteau died at age 41, variously accounted as either a heart attack or a stampeding horse,[2] in West Port (later annexed by Kansas City, Missouri). His funeral was held at the Old Cathedral of St. Louis one week later, on April 25.[8][9] His body is interred at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis. His plot is marked by a tall obelisk, and includes his grave and those of his mother, Brigitte (Saucier) Chouteau, and three children who died young: Louis-Amédée, Louis-Sylvestre, and Benedict Chouteau.[10] François Chouteau is called the "Founder of Kansas City". During his lifetime, only the city of West Port, now part of Kansas City, had been developed. The Town of Kansas was chartered in 1850, and became part of Kansas City.

Family

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Bérénice Chouteau

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Bérénice Chouteau

After his death, his widow Bérénice Chouteau supported her family in merchandising the Chouteau family trade business, later running a retail store. She remained active in the church and community, and was called the "Mother of Kansas City"[citation needed] and the "Grande Dame of Kansas City". John Calvin McCoy, founder of West Port, called her "the soul of the colony".[1]

Due to the Civil War's areawide violence culminating in the Battle of Westport, she moved for safety back to eastern Missouri, first to Ste. Genevieve, Missouri, and then across the river to Kaskaskia, Illinois. In 1867, two years after the end of the war, she returned to Kansas City with her son Pierre Chouteau and his wife. Bérénice outlived all her children, dying in 1888 at age 87.[11]

She died on the early morning of November 20, 1888. The New York Times eulogized her as "perhaps the most noted historic character of Western Missouri—the link connecting the past with the present".[12]

Children

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François and Bérénice Chouteau had nine children, and he had one with a member of the Osage Nation.[13][14][15]

Married in 1819 to Bérénice Thérèse Ménard (b. 1801-d. 1888):

  • Edmond François Chouteau, b. 1821 in St. Louis–d. 1853 in Jackson County, Missouri
  • Pierre Menard Chouteau, b. 1822 in St. Louis–d. 1885 in Jackson County, Missouri; married Marie Anne Polk
  • Louis Amédée Chouteau, b. 1825 in St. Louis–d. 1827 in St. Louis
  • Louis Sylvestre Chouteau, b. 1827 in St. Louis–d. 1829 in St. Louis
  • Benjamin Chouteau, b. 1828 in St. Louis–d. 1871 in St. Louis; married Anne E. Toler
  • Frederick D. Chouteau, b. 1831 in Independence, Missouri–d. after 1870; married Adèle Gregoire
  • Benedict Pharamond Chouteau, b. 1833 in Jackson County, Missouri–d. 1834 in St. Louis
  • Mary Brigite Chouteau, b. 1835 in Jackson County, Missouri–d. 1864 in St. Louis; married Ashley C. Hopkins
  • Thérèse Odile Chouteau, b. 1837 in Jackson County, Missouri–d. 1837 in Jackson County

Osage offspring:

  • James G. Chouteau, b. before 1825; He was identified by name to receive 640 acres (260 ha) (one section) of land reserved for "half-breeds" according to a provision in Article 5 of the 1825 Osage Treaty.[16]

Legacy

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François and Bérénice Chouteau are the first permanent pioneers of the wild frontier that became Kansas City, Missouri. He became regarded as "the Father of Kansas City". The Martin City Telegraph said: "This early commerce on the western side of Missouri was launched when a newly-married couple took a risk by settling on the edge of the frontier. The future of fur trading in western Missouri would be directly connected to them, and Kansas City likely wouldn't have developed without the Chouteau’s enterprising spirit."[2]

In 2021, the Osage Nation committed US$50,000 toward creating the Chouteau Heritage Fountain with the Kansas City Parks Department, to commemorate the pioneering history of trade between Europeans and the tribes, most recently with François Chouteau. It is located near his former trading post sites, and near his modern namesake Chouteau Bridge and Chouteau Trafficway.[17]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f "Biography of Bérénice Chouteau (1808-1888) and François Chouteau (1797-1838), Founding Residents of Kansas City". kchistory.org. Retrieved January 22, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c Euston, Diane (July 8, 2019). "Chez les Canses -- Chouteau's Town Before Kansas City". Martin City Telegraph. Retrieved October 13, 2023.
  3. ^ Barry, Louise (1972). The Beginning of the West: Annals of the Kansas Gateway to the American West, 1540-1854. Topeka, Kansas: Kansas Historical Society.
  4. ^ "The River Market for History!". Archived from the original on March 15, 2008. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  5. ^ "City of Kansas City, Missouri (KCMO.org), A History of Kansas City". Archived from the original on November 4, 2006. Retrieved August 13, 2006.
  6. ^ "Chez les Cansès, Kansas City's original name". La Grande Louisiane Francaise. October 29, 2018. Retrieved March 20, 2023.
  7. ^ "Chouteau's Church (St. Francis Regis) Historical Marker". hmdb.org. Retrieved July 14, 2023.
  8. ^ Christensen, Lawrence O.; Foley, William E.; Kremer, Gary R. & Winn, Kenneth H., Eds., Dictionary of Missouri Biography, Chouteau, François (1797–1838), Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
  9. ^ Drouin, Gabriel, comp., St. Louis, Missouri, Old Cathedral, Burials 1832–1847, "Drouin Collection," (images of manuscript parish register), Montreal, Québec, Canada: Institut Généalogique Drouin. p. 55, Fr[ançois] G. Chouteau, April 25, 1838.
  10. ^ "Calvary Cemetery and Mausoleum, Saucier-Chouteau Headstone photos". Archived from the original on October 9, 2012. Retrieved December 15, 2010.
  11. ^ Christensen, Lawrence O.; Foley, William E.; Kremer, Gary R. & Winn, Kenneth H., Eds., Dictionary of Missouri Biography, "Chouteau, Berenice (1801–1888)", Columbia: University of Missouri Press.
  12. ^ "Mrs. Chouteau's Life Story.; The First White Woman who Lived in Kansas City Dead". The New York Times. November 21, 1888. p. 3. Retrieved October 13, 2023.
  13. ^ Hoig, Stan (2008). The Chouteaus: the first family of the fur trade. Albuquerque, New Mexico: University of New Mexico Press. p. 253.
  14. ^ "Western Historical Manuscript Collection-Columbia: Genealogy Collection Descriptions, "Chouteau Family Bible Excerpt, (C3137)."". Archived from the original on April 12, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2010.
  15. ^ "François Gesseau Chouteau". Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  16. ^ Wikisource, Treaty With The Osage, 1825 (full text).
  17. ^ Polacca, Benny (July 6, 2021). "Osage Congress approves $50K contribution for Chouteau fountain project in Kansas City". Osage News. Retrieved March 20, 2023.

Further reading

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  • Hoffhaus, Charles E. (1984). Chez Lez Canses: Three Centuries at Kawsmouth. Kansas City, Missouri: The Lowell Press.
  • Shirley, Christian (2004). Before Lewis and Clark: The Story of the Chouteaus the French Dynasty That Ruled America's Frontier (1st ed.). New York City: Farrar Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374110055. OCLC 53434709.