The
colony of Louisiana was founded in 1699 by two brothers, Pierre
Le Moyne d'Iberville and Jean Baptiste Le Moyne de Bienville.
Its boundaries stretched as far east as the Perdido River, about
halfway between present-day Mobile, Alabama, and Pensacola, Florida.
It stretched westward to the Red and Calcasieu rivers, next door
to Spanish territory, and it extended north all the way to Canadawhich
was a French possession. The vast boundaries of colonial Louisiana
included part or all of at least ten states: Alabama (western
part), Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky, Louisiana (eastern part),
Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Tennessee.
France reigned over the Louisiana colony from 1699 until she lost
all her North America holdings in 1763, at the end of the Seven
Years' War. Great Britain claimed all French territory east of
the Mississippi River, and all French territory west of the Mississippi
went to Spain.
There is one quirk in this division important to the genealogist:
New Orleans, built on the east bank of the Mississippi River,
should have gone to Great Britain but went to Spain instead. In
1763 the kings of France and Spain were cousins. They connived
together to keep New Orleans out of the hands of Great Britain,
their common enemy. They obtained their victory by convincing
the British negotiators that New Orleans was actually on the west
bank and not the east.
The Spanish ruled Louisiana from 1763 until they gave it back
to France in 1800. It is important to note that although Louisiana
was once again a French possession, there was no change of affairs.
Spanish officials continued to govern the colony while Napoleon
secretly negotiated with Thomas Jefferson to sell Louisiana to
the United States. Therefore, if an ancestor lived in colonial
Louisiana between 1800 and 1803 search for him or her in the Spanish
records, not the French.
For nearly 300 years Louisiana was one of the areas in the world
most sought after by the three major powers of Europe: Spain,
France, and Great Britain. Spain explored it first but withdrew
in favor of richer lands farther south. Then France settled the
land, but its decaying monarchy had little regard for the colony,
while it was obvious that the French statesmen who were interested
had never dealt with the vast fields upon which their policies
were to operate. They did not comprehend the great extent of the
country, and were entirely ignorant of the means necessary for
the successful cultivation of their lower Mississippi colony.
Once the Spanish secured the colony they were doing a magnificent
job of building it when they were forced by Napoleon to relinquish
control.
The struggle for Louisiana was finally won, not by one of the
European nations which had plotted and fought for its permanent
control for so long, but by the infant nation which had arisen
on the eastern shores of North America. The United States took
possession of Louisiana in December 1803 and began preparing the
colony, which had never known a working democracy, for statehood.
War broke out between England and the United States in 1812, and
Great Britain began to plan the conquest of Louisiana, which failed
when the Battle of New Orleans was lost. Less than four months
later Louisiana celebrated its third anniversary as an American
state
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