Cavelier de la salle

Robert De La Salle

By 717760
  • La Salle was born

    La Salle was born
    La Salle was born in 1643, possibly on November 22, in Rouen, France. As a young man La Salle attended Jesuit schools to study to become a priest. He soon grew tired of this and went into the fur trading business instead.
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    La Salles timespan

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    this started

  • La Salle travels to canada

    La Salle travels to canada
    At the age of 23, in 1666 La Salle travels to Canada with plans to be a farmer. His intrests changed again and instead he set up a fur trading post.
  • La Salle asks king louis XlV

    La Salle asks king louis XlV
    After La Salle had sold his land in 1669, he decided to ask King Louis XIV (shown in picture) for permission to explore western parts of New France. He later in 1679 La Salle led a group that set up forts for France in the Great Lakes area,
  • La Griffin

    La Griffin
    La Salles first voyage left port on his only ship the Griffin in the year 1679. This is when he explored Ohio and the Mississippi River.
  • La Salle clamis the mississippi river

    La Salle clamis the mississippi river
    La Salle claimes the entire Mississippi Basin for France and names it Louisiana.
  • La Salle returned to france

    La Salle returned to france
    La Salle returned to France.
  • La Salle leaves with his crew to mississippi river

    La Salle leaves with his crew to mississippi river
    La Salle and his crew were trying to go to the Mississippi, but they missed it by 300 miles, and stumbled upon Matagorda Bay. They began a colony with over 200 people, and four ships. The name of the colony was Fort St. Louis.
  • La Salle leaves his settlement to explore.

    La Salle leaves his settlement to explore.
    La Salle leaves his settlement to explore west in search of the Mississippi. He comes back in 1686 and concludes that the Mississippi River can only lie East of the bay he landed on
  • La Salle dies..

    La Salle dies..
    La Salle suffered a tragic death with a shot to the head by one of his very own men, Pierre Duhat and two accomplices, because they believed La Salle was taking their food. Afterwards the Karankawa Massacre occurs.