South Platte Valley Historical Society`````````````````````````````South Platte Valley Historical Society
Rebuilding the Past -
Last Update
July 5, 2010
Early History of the South Platte River Valley,
Part 1
by Maynard Cornett Adams
The first expedition to visit the South Platte Valley
Jean L'Archeveque was born in Bayonne, France, in 1671. In 1684, at the age of 13, L’Archeveque, along with Pierre Meusnier from Paris and Jacques Grollet, born in La Rochelle, France, joined Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, on his expedition in search of the Mississippi Delta. The party became lost, and the ships landed at Lavaca Bay, Texas. A mutiny occurred on March 18, 1687, and L’Archeveque and Grollet were used by assassins to lure Sieur de La Salle into an ambush, where he was murdered. Knowing they were in danger, L'Archeveque, Grollet, and Meusnier slipped away. Later, they went to live with the Teyas Indians. Two young boys and a girl accompanied then 1689, they were ransomed from the Indians by the Spanish, when a Spanish expedition was sent into Texas by Gov. Alonzo de Leon. Expedition Commandant Monclova found six survivors of the La Salle Expedition living with the Indians. He ransomed five young men and one girl, taking them to Coahuila, Mexico. L’Archeveque, then 19 years old, and Grollet, 24 years old, were then taken to Spain, where they were cleared of taking part in La Salle's death. They returned to Paso del Norte (El Paso, Texas) in 1692, where L'Archeveque and Meusnier joined General Vagas's army and helped reconquer the province. L'Archeveque, who was then known as Captain Juan de Archibeque, was then living in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and still in the military.
In August 1720, Captain Archibeque accompanied Commandant Don Pedro de Villazur on
an expedition to the Arkansas River. Governor Valverde had sent Villazur to investigate
rumors that the French were settling in today's eastern Colorado and Nebraska. Their
destination was El Cuartelejo. El Cuartelejo was a pueblo or fort, built by Kiowa
and Jicarilla Apache with the aid of Pueblo Indians on the Arkansas River. Escaped
Indian slaves and others trying to disappear or evade justice used it as a sanctuary.
This fort was located approximately sixty-
Villazur's expedition of fifty men followed the trail into today's South Platte Valley,
near present-
At dawn on August 16, 1720, all but twelve or thirteen members of the expedition were killed in a surprise attack. Villazur and Archibeque were among the dead. A sergeant, Felipe de Tamaris, who escaped, gave an account of the fatal expedition. Sanchez, Archibeque's personal servant, although bleeding from six wounds, stayed with his master until he ceased to breathe. Then Sanchez saved himself, by catching the horse of Archibeque and riding away.
Ironically, according to Tamaris and Sanchez’s report, Jean L'Archeveque, alias Juan
de Archibeque, was killed by Frenchmen who were wanted for questioning by French
and Spanish officials concerning their involvement in La Salle's death. On the day
before the attack, Archibeque told Sanchez that one of them was a loyal survivor
of the La Salle Expedition thirty-
First French expedition to the South Platte Valley
During the expansion of French exploration and trade in western regions of the Mississippi and Missouri river tributaries, stories circulated about deposits of gold and silver in the territory of Western Louisiana. When these stories were printed in Paris newspapers, French politicians decided this was a good time to take action. They were glad to use this as a means of getting appropriations for expeditions to Western Louisiana. At that time, the French government was being ridiculed because Louisiana was considered a millstone around France's neck; millions of francs had been lost in efforts to develop the territory.
In 1716, after conferring with Sieur Hubert, an official in Louisiana, the French
government sent Sr. Bernard de La Harpe on an expedition to explore present-
Upon reaching the headwaters of the stream (today's Arikaree River), La Harpe tells
of how they continued westward, crossing several dry streambeds and then followed
another Indian trail, Deer Trail Creek or Bijou Creek, into a valley where a river
flowed northward. This was the South Platte River near Log Lane Village, or present-
While trading with the Indians, La Harpe was told that the party they had seen leaving were Espagnol (Spanish) traders from Taos. The Padoucas (Cheyenne or Arapaho Indians) explained that they traded furs, meat, and vegetables for gold and silver earrings, bracelets, and medallions made by the Espagnols. La Harpe learned that the Espagnols mined great quantities of gold and silver in the mountains to the west. The party was also told of Indians being enslaved to work these mines.
Traveling up the Platte River to the location of present-
French-
1739-
After traveling through Illinois country, and up the Missouri River past the Kancis
(Kansas) River to the mouth of the Panimahas River (today's Niobrara River in Nebraska),
the Mallet Expedition was told by Indians that they were going the wrong way to reach
New Mexico. On May 27, 1739, they left the mouth of the Panimahas River, traveling
southward parallel to the Missouri River. "On June 12, they came upon a river which
they named the Platte River -
At this point the Mallet Expedition left the Platte River Valley, traveling in a southern direction until reaching the Arkansas River. In the document, they call all the Indians of the Plains "Laitanes." There is one reference to an Indian being a Ricaras (Arikara) slave from the Laitanes Nation. They refer to the Spanish as "Espagnols."
Acknowledgments
Juan Archibeque's Family Will and History 1720-
Spanish Exploration in the Southwest, 1542-
Journal de Voyage de la Louisiana. fait parle Sr. Bernard de LaHarpe. 1716-
Pierre & Paul Mallet Expedition, 1739-
Foundation. Copyright 1952.
Captain Louis Villemont (Vilemont). Ref. Surrey, op. Cit.,II 14-
Before Louis and Clark, 1785-
The Life and Adventures of James P. Beckwourth, Harper & Brothers 1856, N.Y., 1972 reprint.
Captain J. C. Fremont, Narration of the Rocky Mountains-
Westward Expansion, 3rd ed., William Y. Chalfant, The MacMillan Co. N.Y.
Cheyennes and Horse Soldiers, David J. Weber, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman, Okla. 1982.
The Mexican Frontier 1821-
Sacajawea, Anna Lee Waldo, First ed. Pub. 1978, Sec. Ed. 1980.
Atlas of the North American Indian, Carl Waldman, 1947, Facts on File, N.Y..
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