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Louisiana (New Spain) Totally Explained
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Everything about Louisiana New Spain totally explainedLouisiana was the name of an administrative district of New Spain from 1764 to 1803 that represented territory west of the Mississippi River basin, plus New Orleans, Louisiana.
The area, comprising what is now known as the Louisiana Purchase, was turned over to the French for a few days in 1803 before it, in turn, was turned over to the United States.
Spain was to be largely a benign absentee landlord administering it from Havana, Cuba and contracting out governing to people from many nationalities as long as they swore allegiance to Spain.
Although only maintaining it for 36 years, the Spanish were the ones who in fact were responsible for establishing much of New Orleans and Louisiana character that are normally associated with the French. Further, the Spanish control was to continue Catholic influence in the region.
Timeline
Spanish Exploration
French Control
1673 - French begin exploration of the Mississippi descending from modern day Canada and exert influence and claims over the territory.
1699 - Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville starts first French settlement, at Fort Maurepas (now Ocean Springs, Mississippi).
1702 - Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville moves French settlements to Dauphin Island and also in January, establishes Mobile colony, with Fort Louis at Twenty-Seven Mile Bluff (up Mobile River).
1718 - Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville starts construction of New Orleans, to move the capital of French Louisiana from Mobile and Biloxi to the Mississippi River crescent, considered safer during hurricane tides.
1720 - Spanish Villasur expedition coming from Mexico is slaughtered near Columbus, Nebraska by Pawnees friendly to the French.
1723 - New Orleans becomes the 3rd capital of French Louisiana.
1724 - Étienne de Veniard, Sieur de Bourgmont council with the Commanche to resist Spanish expeditions coming from Mexico.
1754 - France and Great Britain begin the French and Indian War.
1760 - Britain effectively controls all of French colonies in Quebec.
1761 - Spain sides with France in the now expanded Seven Years War.
Spanish Control
1762 - As negotiations begin to settle the war Louis XV of France secretly proposes to his cousin Charles III of Spain that France give Louisiana to Spain in the Treaty of Fontainebleau (1762)
1763 - Treaty of Paris (1763) ends the war with a provision in which France cedes all territory east of the Mississippi (including French Canada) to Britain. Spain cedes Florida and land east of the Mississippi (including Baton Rouge, Louisiana to Britain.
1763 - George III of the United Kingdom in the Royal Proclamation of 1763 proclaims that all land east of the Mississippi acquired in the war with the exception of East Florida, West Florida and Quebec will become Indian Reserve (Great Britain).
1763 - The Cajun migration begins with French settlers from Quebec and settlers on the east side of the Mississippi who had been ordered to leave from the new Native American migrating to Louisiana which they believe is still French controlled land west of the Mississippi as well as New Orleans
1763 - Pierre Laclede establishes the Maxent and Laclede Company trading post at St. Louis, Missouri
1764 - Formal announcement that Spain has acquired Louisiana
1768 - Antonio de Ulloa becomes the first Spanish governor of Louisiana. He doesn't fly the Spanish flag and is run off by a pro-French mob in the Rebellion of 1768
1769 - Alejandro O'Reilly suppresses the rebellion, executes its leaders and sends other plotters to prison in Morro Castle (fortress) in Havana. He establishes Spanish law and the Cabildo. However he's otherwise benign and forgives other plotters as long as they swear allegiance to Spain.
1770 - Luis de Unzaga starts the era of benign Spanish rule and frees the imprisoned plotters
1770 - Spain begins an administrative of process of governing Upper Louisiana with lieutenant governors
1779 - Spain declares war on Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War and begins the West Indies and Gulf Coast campaigns
1780 - Battle of Saint Louis is the only battle west of the Mississippi in the war
1781 - Spanish completes reconquest of Florida in Battle of Pensacola (1781)
1783 - Treaty of Paris (1783) gives back Spanish control of Florida
1788 - Great New Orleans Fire (1788) destroys virtually all of New Orleans. Governor Esteban Rodríguez Miró is a hero for his relief efforts.
1789 - Work on rebuilding New Orleans including what is now the French Quarter begins. The new structures have courtyards and stone walls. The cornersone for the new St. Louis Cathedral, New Orleans laid.
1795 - Pinckney's Treaty settles boundary disputes with the United States and recognizes rights to navigate through New Orleans
1795 - Spain begins a series of "scientific" explorations of the Missouri River including the MacKay and Evans Expedition
1798 - Spain revokes United States rights to travel through New Orleans
1799 - The newly rebuilt Cabildo opens.
French Control
1800 - In Third Treaty of San Ildefonso Napoleon secretly acquires the territory but Spain continues to administer it
1801 - United States permitted to use New Orleans
1803 - Announcement of Louisiana Purchase by United States
1803 - Spain refuses Lewis and Clark permission to travel up Missouri River since the transfer from France has never been made official. They spend winter in Illinois at Camp Dubois
1804 - France officially takes control in December 1803 but word isn't conveyed to St. Louis until 1804 at Three Flags DayFurther Information
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