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Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri
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==History== {{unreferenced section|date=January 2015}} Ste. Genevieve County is located on the west bank of the [[Mississippi River]] approximately {{convert|60|mi|km}} south of [[St. Louis]]. Ste. Genevieve is the principal town and the county seat of Ste. Genevieve County with a population of around 5,000 people. Ste. Genevieve was the first permanent civilized settlement in Missouri. The actual date of establishment is, like many other dates, connected to genealogy. Sources do not agree on the year of founding. According to [[Goodspeed Publishing|Goodspeed]]'s ''History of Southeast Missouri'', and most of the descendants of the early settlers, 1735 is the most generally accepted date. Dr. Carl J. Ekberg, in his book, ''Colonial Ste. Genevieve'', suggests that Ste. Genevieve was founded closer to 1750, based on interpretations of early letters, maps, and Catholic Church documents. Ste. Genevieve is about 250 years old. The village of Ste. Genevieve was originally included in what was known as the Illinois Country. This was generally accepted to be all the land claimed by the French from the mouth of the [[Ohio River]], north to the [[Great Lakes]], and including the valleys of the Mississippi, Missouri, and Ohio rivers. The French established their seat of government for this territory in [[New Orleans]]. What is now Missouri became part of Upper Louisiana Territory. Early French explorers and settlers were known to have been in the Ste. Genevieve area in the very early 18th century. [[Salt]] was a very important commodity at the time, used in the preservation of foods and curing of animal hides. The early French settlers were quick to exploit the salt springs on Saline Creek just south of Ste. Genevieve. Mineral explorations attracted [[Philip François Renault|Renault]] and [[Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac|La Motte]] to the area. Some of the [[Mine La Motte, Missouri|earliest lead mines]] were named for La Motte in nearby [[Madison County, Missouri|Madison County]]. Probably the biggest factor in the establishment of Ste. Genevieve was agriculture. Across the Mississippi River in [[Fort de Chartres]] and [[Kaskaskia, Illinois|Kaskaskia]], there was a growing need for agricultural land for the colonists. Across the Mississippi from [[Fort Kaskaskia]] was a large fertile section of river bottom, called the "[[Le Grand Champ Bottom|Grand Champ]]" or Big Field. The "Old Town" of Ste. Genevieve was originally located here. It was approximately three miles south of the present site of Ste. Genevieve. The village of Ste. Genevieve was originally an offshoot of the older French communities on the east bank of the Mississippi River—[[Cahokia, Illinois|Cahokia]], Kaskaskia, village of Chartres, [[Prairie du Rocher, Illinois|Prairie du Rocher]], and [[St. Philippe, Illinois|St. Philippe]]. The rich agricultural lands of the river bottoms were main attractions that lured most all of the early French pioneers to Ste. Genevieve. All the civil and legal business of Ste. Genevieve was transacted at Kaskaskia until about 1766 when the first commandant, Philippe de Rocheblave, was installed at Ste. Genevieve. By that time, more French migrants moved to the village from east of the river to escape British rule after France's defeat in the Seven Years' War. Townspeople relocated Ste. Genevieve to its present higher location from the river bottoms after the devastating floods of 1785. According to a sworn statement by Julien Labriere, in October 1825, "there were about fifty or sixty cabins in the old village. The old village was overflowed so as to be on the tops of houses. The water in many places was twelve or fifteen feet deep." The Mississippi River was the main travel route in the early decades, when it served as a means of transportation for travelers both across, and up and down the river. The first commercial ferry between Ste. Genevieve and the Illinois side was established about 1800. When Missouri was first being settled, the [[Osage Nation|Osage]] [[Indigenous peoples of the Americas|Native Americans]] were the only tribe between the [[Osage River]] and the Mississippi. They were of the same stock as the [[Sioux]] and were hostile to the whites. Around 1787, the Spanish government, which had acquired the territory from France in 1762, brought in a band of [[Shawnee]] and [[Lenape|Delaware]] Native Americans, who had been friendly to the French, to help protect the settlers from the Osage. After the French had established and settled Ste. Genevieve, the first English-speaking American settlers started showing up in about 1788, and trickled upriver from [[Cape Girardeau, Missouri|Cape Girardeau]] and [[New Madrid, Missouri|New Madrid]]. Starting about 1794, after the American Revolutionary War, newly independent Americans began migrating into the Ste. Genevieve District from [[Pennsylvania]], [[Virginia]], [[Kentucky]], and [[Tennessee]]. The flow increased in the early nineteenth century. In 1800, France reacquired Louisiana from Spain, and in 1803, [[Napoleon I|Napoleon Bonaparte I]] sold it to the United States as the [[Louisiana Purchase]]. U.S. officials took over in 1804. They formed Ste. Genevieve County in 1812 as an original county of the Louisiana Territory, from the old Ste. Genevieve District. It is bordered on the east by the Mississippi River, on the north by [[Jefferson County, Missouri|Jefferson County]], on the west by [[St. Francois County, Missouri|St. Francois County]], and on the south by Perry County. Starting around 1840, German Catholics began settling around [[New Offenburg, Missouri|New Offenburg]] and [[Zell, Missouri|Zell]]. Shortly afterward German Lutherans began spreading into Ste. Genevieve from [[Perry County, Missouri|Perry County]]. But as late as 1930, most residents of Ste Genevieve were Catholic.
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