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1 | HOUSE RESOLUTION
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2 | WHEREAS, For almost a century, beginning in 1673 when Louis | ||||||
3 | Joliet and Jacques Marquette explored the Mississippi River, | ||||||
4 | France claimed the Illinois Country; and
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5 | WHEREAS, In 1718 the French reorganized the administration | ||||||
6 | of their American possessions and removed the Illinois Country | ||||||
7 | from Canadian jurisdiction and made it part of Louisiana; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, In December of 1718 a contingent of soldiers, | ||||||
9 | officials, and workmen were sent to establish a civil | ||||||
10 | government in the region; a wooden fort was constructed | ||||||
11 | eighteen miles north of the village of Kaskaskia from which the | ||||||
12 | civil authority would operate and whose military presence it | ||||||
13 | was hoped would mollify the Fox Tribe; and | ||||||
14 | WHEREAS, The stockade, named Fort de Chartres in honor of | ||||||
15 | Louis duc de Chartres, son of the regent of France, quickly | ||||||
16 | deteriorated due to frequent flooding; work on a larger fort, | ||||||
17 | located farther inland, began around 1725; and | ||||||
18 | WHEREAS, During the 1730s the French leaders began | ||||||
19 | discussing building a stone fort to protect their interests in | ||||||
20 | the region; profitable lead deposits had been found on the west | ||||||
21 | bank of the Mississippi near Ste. Genevieve and the rich bottom |
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1 | lands yielded substantial crops which fed New Orleans, St. | ||||||
2 | Louis, and the rest of the territory; and | ||||||
3 | WHEREAS, In 1747, with the second fort in considerable | ||||||
4 | disrepair, the garrison relocated to nearby Kaskaskia; and | ||||||
5 | WHEREAS, Construction of the new fort began in the 1750s; | ||||||
6 | the fort was operational by 1754, and additions and | ||||||
7 | improvements continued until 1760; and | ||||||
8 | WHEREAS, The continued erosion caused by the Mississippi | ||||||
9 | River eventually caused the fort to be abandoned in 1771; and | ||||||
10 | only a year later the south wall and bastions collapsed into | ||||||
11 | the River; and
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12 | WHEREAS, Continued flooding, erosion and decay caused the | ||||||
13 | fort to slowly disappear, and by 1900 the only remnant of the | ||||||
14 | fort that existed above ground was the powder magazine, | ||||||
15 | considered by many historians to be the oldest building in | ||||||
16 | Illinois; and | ||||||
17 | WHEREAS, The site was declared a National Historic Landmark | ||||||
18 | in 1960 and was added to the National Register of Historic | ||||||
19 | Places in 1976; and
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20 | WHEREAS, There exists in the area surrounding Fort de |
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1 | Chartres in southern Illinois, the historic resources of three | ||||||
2 | French forts, a French colonial village (St. Anne), two known | ||||||
3 | historic Indian occupational sites (Michigamea), a Jesuit | ||||||
4 | plantation with 2 windmills, a British trading post, the first | ||||||
5 | paved road in the Midwestern United States, the location of the | ||||||
6 | first mining operations (St. Philippe), the 10,000 year old | ||||||
7 | Modoc Rock Shelter, the quarry site for the limestone used to | ||||||
8 | construct the third Fort de Chartres, the first established | ||||||
9 | French Indian reservation (1721), and the colonial village of | ||||||
10 | Prairie du Rocher (1722); therefore, be it
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11 | RESOLVED, BY THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE | ||||||
12 | NINETY-FIFTH GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF THE STATE OF ILLINOIS, that we | ||||||
13 | declare our support for the creation of a historical center | ||||||
14 | dedicated to the interpretation and understanding of French | ||||||
15 | colonial life in the United States, to be sited at Fort de | ||||||
16 | Chartres State Park, in Illinois.
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