Skip to main content

La Salle's Lost Chapter

Mysteries at the Museum covers a broad range of subjects from a plaster cast of a foot apparently belonging to the Honey Island Swamp Monster to a small water barrel used to help find the La Belle shipwreck,  La Salle's ill-fated voyage to discover the mouth of the Mississippi River.  There was even a segment on a silver cigar box (located in the Washington DC Spy Museum), which Sidney Reilly had given to Bruce Lockhart after WWI to commemorate their escapades in Russia during the Bolshevik Revolution.  The cigar box gained poignancy when Reilly returned to Russia only to get shot in the head.  Thanks to Lockhart's memoirs, Reilly served as one of the inspirations for Ian Fleming's James Bond, presumably To Russia with Love.

Don Wildman leads viewers on some pretty wild rides.  He has become one of the constant faces on Travel Channel, having started out with a far more interesting program called Off Limits, where he took viewers into places you wouldn't normally be able to see, like an abandoned sanatorium in upstate New York and Pittsburgh's sewer system.  However, with Mysteries he can blend the macabre with the surreal with some of history's lost chapters like that of Rene Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, who was determined to find the outlet of the Mississippi and establish a port in the name of France.



La Salle doesn't get much attention, even if he had a car named after him.  Surprisingly very little has been written on him, so it probably would have been more interesting to explore the automotive connection, but Don uses a water barrel as his object to tell us the tale of the flamboyant explorer.  La Salle previously had better luck in the Great Lakes region, carving up land grants and opening up the area for fur trade with the Mohawks.  This helps explain why Cadillac chose to name a car after him.

The water barrel was found on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico and helped lead underwater archaeologists to the remains of the La Belle in Matagorda Bay.  It is now part of the Bullock Museum.  Wildman gives these historic vignettes in five minutes or less, so if a viewer does display some curiosity he can always hunt up the website.



It was an ignominious end for the French explorer, who had wandered around for two months looking for the mouth of the Mississippi only to return to find the ship gone.  Not surprising since he had said he would only be gone 10 days.  The crew had made an effort to stay longer, but when provisions ran out they set sail, only to be struck by Hurricane-force winds and the ship to lie hidden for centuries.  You never know where these wrecks will turn up, and since manifests showed little of value on board, there really wasn't much interest beyond historical curiosity.

Probably the best book available on La Salle was that written by Francis Parkman, which takes in his time in the Great Lakes region.  There are others noting his singular obsession with the Mississippi River, which formed the backbone of the Louisiana Purchase.  However, the Spanish controlled the Gulf of Mexico at the time, and the failure to establish this final link is what cost the French to control this valuable piece of frontier.  Had he been able to do so, he probably would have been more greatly memorialized than in a water barrel or 1927 luxury touring car.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire

  Welcome to this month's reading group selection.  David Von Drehle mentions The Melting Pot , a play by Israel Zangwill, that premiered on Broadway in 1908.  At that time theater was accessible to a broad section of the public, not the exclusive domain it has become over the decades.  Zangwill carried a hopeful message that America was a place where old hatreds and prejudices were pointless, and that in this new country immigrants would find a more open society.  I suppose the reference was more an ironic one for Von Drehle, as he notes the racial and ethnic hatreds were on display everywhere, and at best Zangwill's play helped persons forget for a moment how deep these divides ran.  Nevertheless, "the melting pot" made its way into the American lexicon, even if New York could best be describing as a boiling cauldron in the early twentieth century. Triangle: The Fire That Changed America takes a broad view of events that led up the notorious fire, not...

Team of Rivals Reading Group

''Team of Rivals" is also an America ''coming-of-age" saga. Lincoln, Seward, Chase et al. are sketched as being part of a ''restless generation," born when Founding Fathers occupied the White House and the Louisiana Purchase netted nearly 530 million new acres to be explored. The Western Expansion motto of this burgeoning generation, in fact, was cleverly captured in two lines of Stephen Vincent Benet's verse: ''The stream uncrossed, the promise still untried / The metal sleeping in the mountainside." None of the protagonists in ''Team of Rivals" hailed from the Deep South or Great Plains. _______________________________ From a review by Douglas Brinkley, 2005

The Searchers

You are invited to join us in a discussion of  The Searchers , a new book on John Ford's boldest Western, which cast John Wayne against type as the vengeful Ethan Edwards who spends eight years tracking down a notorious Comanche warrior, who had killed his cousins and abducted a 9 year old girl.  The film has had its fair share of detractors as well as fans over the years, but is consistently ranked in most critics'  Top Ten Greatest Films . Glenn Frankel examines the origins of the story as well as the film itself, breaking his book down into four parts.  The first two parts deal with Cynthia Ann Parker and her son Quanah, perhaps the most famous of the 19th century abduction stories.  The short third part focuses on the author of the novel, Alan Le May, and how he came to write The Searchers. The final part is about Pappy and the Duke and the making of the film. Frankel noted that Le May researched 60+ abduction stories, fusing them together into a nar...