An Easy Communication Betwixt the River Meschacebe and the South Sea
Overview
The French followed the Portuguese, Spanish, and English
to the New World. Contact with the Indians of the region
led to a lucrative fur trade and a keener sense of American
geography. By the early 1600s, the fur trade expanded westward,
moving inland up the St. Lawrence River. Reports from western
Indians of Great Waters even further to the
west raised hopes of finding a water route to the Orient.
French coureurs de bois, or trappers, were undoubtedly
the first Europeans to reach the northern Mississippi. In
1682, René Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, descended
the Mississippi River, proving the river emptied into the
Gulf of Mexico. La Salle claimed the Mississippi and all
lands drained by the river and its tributaries for France,
naming the territory Louisiane in honor of Louis
XIV.
Over the next eighty years, the Frenchadventurers,
traders, miners, missionariesexplored most of the
territory that lay between the Appalachian Mountains and
the Rocky Mountains in present-day Canada and the United
States. The era of French explorations in the New World
came to a close with the fall of Quebec in 1763 and the
cession of Louisiana to the Spanish in 1764.
In addition to their legacy of extensive explorations, the
French developed two geographical theories that played an
important role in cartographic representations of western
North America. The pyramidal height-of-land theory postulated
that Americas great rivers all originated from centralized
mountain heights before they dispersed to outlets in the
Mississippi River, Hudson Bay, or Pacific Ocean. The French
believed the sources of the rivers to be so close together
that a short portage between them might be possible.
The second geographical theory, known as symmetrical geography,
held that the topography of the western half of the continent
was a mirror image of the continents eastern landforms
and waterways. Thus the drainage patterns of the rivers
on the Pacific slopes of the western mountains would resemble
those of the rivers on the eastern side of the Appalachian
Mountains. Further, once the construction of an eastern
canal from the Potomac River to a tributary of the Ohio
River appeared feasible, proponents of symmetrical geography
believed that a similar internal improvement linking the
rivers on the Pacific side of the continent might also be
possible. A half-century later, one of the principal objectives
of the Lewis and Clark Expedition was to resolve these geographical
conjectures.
Knowledge of the French explorations spread among those
most interested in American geography. Cartographers produced
maps based on information gleaned from the field journals
and letters of adventurers and explorers. Immensely popular
pulp journals rapidly disseminated information
about the French discoveries. Sensationalized accounts by
Hennepin, Baron de Lahontan, Daniel Coxe, Pierre de Charlevoix,
and Jonathan Carver contained a mix of firsthand investigations,
information borrowed from other legitimate sources, and
outright fictions. These journals touted the ease of reaching
the Pacific Ocean.
Thomas Jefferson was well aware of the French adventures
in the West. Both the legitimate and the exaggerated accounts
helped form Jeffersons image of the West and spurred
his romantic hope of finding a water route to the Pacific
Ocean.


