(Redirected from Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac)
Statue of Cadillac commemorating his landing, in Detroit's
Hart Plaza
'Antoine Laumet', ''dit'' 'de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac' (
March 5 1658 –
October 15 1730), a
French explorer, was a colourful figure in the history of
New France. The self-styled Lamothe-Cadillac was the son of one Jean Laumet, an assistant magistrate in the local court. His mother, a modest home-maker, was born Jeanne Pechagut.
Born at Les Laumets in the hamlet of
Saint-Nicolas-de-la-Grave, in
Gascony, he was educated in a military school. He joined the army where he was a cadet in the regiment of Dampierre-Lorraine, and in 1677 became a lieutenant in the regiment of Clairembault. He arrived in
1683 at
Port-Royal,
Acadia, where Governor
Frontenac made him a lieutenant and later a captain.
Hardly had he disembarked than he changed his name and began calling himself "Lamothe", which was the name of a nobleman of his home region (de Lamothe-Bardigues) who was a counselor to the parliament in
Toulouse. He also borrowed the latter's coat of arms that he had seen on the gates of the Bardigues estate near St. Nicolas. It is a variation on that coat of arms that has graced the Cadillac automobile for close to 100 years.
On
June 25,
1687, in the French colony of
Canada, he married Marie-Thérèse Guyon, niece of French-Canadian privateer, Denis Guyon. It is rumored that they met at the Governor's ball at Quebec's
Château St. Louis and that Cadillac worked for her uncle as a navigator. He signed the marriage license ''de La Mothe, sieur de Cadillac''. The style "sieur" is derived from the French formal address "monsieur," and equates to the English title "sir"; it is roughly equivalent to a title between "gentleman" and "lord." It is believed that the name Cadillac is a reference to a
hamlet near the town of
Montech, not far from Laumet's birthplace, or perhaps the wine-producing
Cadillac, seat of the Ducs d'Épernon, which is also close to Gascony. The couple had between 7 and 13 children.
In 1688, Cadillac requested and received from the Governor of New France a parcel of land in an area known as Donaquec which included part of the Donaquec River (now the
Union River) and the island of
Mount Desert in the present-day U.S. state of
Maine. Cadillac then referred to himself as Antoine de la Mothe, Sieur de Cadillac, Donaquec and Mount Desert. In 1689, he went to France to consult on the war effort against New England.
He moved with his family to
Quebec City in
1691 and was commissioned in the
Troupes de la Marine. In
1694 he was named commander of
Fort Michilimackinac in
Michigan, where he stayed until 1697. After troops were withdrawn from Michilimackinac, he convinced the
comte de Pontchartrain to found a colony at
Detroit, which he commanded 1701-1710 (see
History of Detroit, Michigan).
He arrived at
Detroit on
July 24,
1701 with his group in 75 canoes. He immediately ordered a fort to be constructed, enclosing an area of about an acre behind a 12 foot high
palisade. The first building completed was the
Catholic church,
Ste. Anne. Originally, the settlement was called "les Etroits" (the narrows) and ''
Fort Pontchartrain du Détroit''. Cadillac's wife along with the wife of his lieutenant,
Alphonse de Tonty arrived in spring the next year. Cadillac's tenure at Detroit was marked with conflict with officials in Paris and Quebec, struggles for control of trading rights and property and even one conflict with a local Native tribe. He even found himself in conflict with the Jesuits who were sent to set up an Indian mission at Detroit in 1701. Cadillac's hostility forced Father
François Vaillant de Gueslis to abandon his mission after a few months and return to Montreal.
Cadillac was frequently absent from the fort to defend his rights back east. He was finally removed from that post when it became apparent he was using it for his own gain. Charles Regnault, Sieur du Buisson became the new fort commandant.
[1]
By official dispatch dated May 13, 1710, Cadillac was informed that the King had appointed him Governor of
Louisiana where he was to report immediately. In a letter from the Governor to the Minister, in 1711, Cadillac refused to obey, alleging that winter had set in. In fact he wanted to "settle his affairs". He made an inventory of his Detroit possessions before going to
Quebec in August and boarding a ship bound for France with his family.
After a difficult crossing, begun in January, Cadillac finally came to Isle Dauphine (now
Dauphin Island) on June 5, 1713 to serve as Governor General of Louisiana. Cadillac built a large palisaded home in the area of present day "Cadillac Square".
[2] Cadillac was recalled to France in June,
1717, where he was briefly imprisoned in the
Bastille for speaking against
John Law who represented French investors in a scheme to settle the
Mississippi River valley, but was released without a trial. In August 1722, Cadillac was granted the position of governor of
Castelsarrasin. He died there in 1730. His former house is in
Montréal; it is now converted into a
McDonald's restaurant. In 1972, the city of Detroit gave money to the city of Saint-Nicolas-de-la-Grave to purchase and preserve his birthplace.
Cadillac's name lives on in
General Motors' luxury
Cadillac automotive line, the town of
Cadillac, Michigan, and in
Cadillac Mountain on
Mount Desert Island in
Maine.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
A detailed history of Antoine Laumet
★
Catholic Encyclopedia article