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He filled the waters with abundant fish and the forests with plenteous game. In all probability, Robert Cavalier de la Salle was the first white man to explore this part of the coast. According to Jacques de la Metairie, the official historian of this expedition, La Salle descended to the mouth of the Mississippi River; and on April 7, 1682, he went to reconnoiter the shores of the Gulf of Mexico. (1) In 1868, Tonti the Faithful friend of LaSalle came as far as the Gulf to seek tidings of his lost leader. On this trip Tonti examined the coast 30 leagues towards Mexico and 25 leagues to wards Florida. (2) When Pierre le Moyne d’Iberville came to plant the Fleur de Lis of France on the Gulf Coast, the historian tells us: “On the 12th of April, 1699, d’Iberville set out to visit a bay about nine leaguts from Ship Island, to which he gave the ~Uixy, awwv by four in circumference, which was named Bay of St. Louis, because it was on the day of St. Louis we arrived there. “We hunted there three days and killed 50 deer.”... “The writer describes a trip up the Mississippi River, and on returning he writes: “Next day we camped at the entrance of Bay St. Louis near a fountain of water that flows down from the hills, which Moyne Bienville named Belle Fontaine. (1). We hunted several days around this bay and filled our boats with venison, buffalo and other game. (2) According to this evidence it is safe to say that Bay St. Louis was discovered and named by Bienville on the Feast of St. Louis, Aug. 25, 1699. 1. Belle Fontaine is now called Pine Hills. 2. Mississippi, Claiborne, p. 20. These first visits of d’Iberville and Bienville estab- Cellular South announces 1999 Conerly Trophy developments Carroll Avenue and DeMontluzin Street, Where Dr. C. L. Horton now resides). On Jan. 3,1721, two ships. La Gironde and La Volage arrived with about 300 persons for concessions of M. LeBlanc and Court Bellville on the Yazoo River, and Madame Mezieres of the Bay of St. Louis, and Madame Chaumont on Pascagoula Bay. From the record of land grants it would appear that the colony of Madame Mezieres settled on a 17,084 acre grant north of Felicity Street. The colonists sent over by d’lberville and Madame Mezieres were the pioneer settlers of Bay St. Louis. During this period the “filles a la cassette” or Casket Girls, arrived from France. These women were imported to furnish brides for the colonists. Some were sent by force, others came willingly; some were of questionable morals, others were of irreproachable character. Each young lady, carrying a trousseau packed in a little chest, anxiously waited as the representative of the Ursulines arranged a suitable marriage. The descendants of the Casket Girls are still found on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi. The treaty of Paris, Feb. 10, 1763, brought to an end the long fight between France and eng-land for supremacy in North America. The Most Christian King of France ceded to His Brittanic Majesty, the Mississippi River, the Port of Mobile and all the possessions on the left side of the Mississippi, with the exception of New Orleans, which he ceded to Spain. The lilies of France over Fort Conde at Mobile were lowered and the British flag was raised to the music of bagpipes. The British were now in possession of.the Coast; but their rule was destined to be of short duration. On May 8, 1779, His Catholic Majesty of Spain declared war against England; and Galvez, the Provincial Governor of Louisiana, quickly commenced hostilities with his traditional enemy. Within a space of two years Galvez forced the capitulation of every English stronghold on the River and along the Gulf Coast. Spain again came into possession of the territory of West Florida. In the fall of 1800, Spain secretly ceded Louisiana to Napoleon, by the Treaty of San Ilde-phonso, Spain, however, remained in actual possession of this territory. A diplomatic triple play was executed at New Orleans in the fall of 1803, when Louisiana went from Spain to France to the United States within the space of 20 days. When the war of 1812 was on the horizon, Governor Claiborne sent Dr. William Flood to organize the parishes of Biloxi and Pascagoula. On the banks of the Pearl River, Flood chose Simon Favre, an educated and prosperous farmer to serve as justice of the peace. He then moved to Bay St. Louis where he commissioned Philip Saucier, a venerable gentleman of prepossessing manners with a patriarchal influence. The flag of the United States was raised over the Bay on the 9th of January, 1811. Similar appointments were made at Biloxi and Pascagoula; but it was impossible to find any inhabitant of these places who could read or write. Flood’s report shows that he was a keen observer with a judgment bordering on the prophetic. Let us quote part of his report: “They are, all along this. III me 9UUU1C1 ll—pan teemed as one of the most healthy places in that latitude; and is the retreat for many of the citizens of New Orleans during the sickly season. (American Atlas, 1823, No. 29.) Hancock County of which Bay St. Louis is the county seat, was established Dec. 14, 1812,. during the territorial era. On Feb. 5,1841, this county was divided and a portion of it was embodied in the newly formed County of Harrison. Another division rook place Fe. 22, 1890, when Pearl River county was established. This settlement was originally known as Bay St. Louis. Subsequently it was called Shieldsboro, after Thomas Shields one of the early settlers. For many years both names were used. The Mayor and Board of Aldermen, at their first meeting Jan. 4, 1858, attempted to clarify the matter by incorporating the city under the name of the City of Shieldsborough. This evidently did not meet with general approbation; so on March 2, 1875, the first name was restored, and the city incorporated as the City of Bay St. Louis.
BSL Centennial 1958 一Document (007)