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Robert Groston de Saint-Ange
8th Commandant of the Illinois Country
In office
1730–1734
MonarchLouis XV
Preceded byPierre Dugué de Boisbriand
Succeeded byPierre D'Artaguiette
Personal details
BornChâtillon-sur-Seine, Champagne, France
Spouses
  • Marguerite Crevier
    (m. 1692; died 1707)
  • Élisabeth Chorel de Saint Romain
    (m. 1718)
Children6 sons; 3 daughters
Military service
AllegianceFrance
Years of service1686–1738
RankCaptain
Battles/warsSecond Fox War

Robert Groston de Saint-Ange (fl. 1686–1738) was a French military officer and commandant in the Illinois Country of New France.

Biography[edit]

Robert Groston, born in France,[1] came to Canada sometime around 1686, although little is recorded about his service at that time. By 1721, Groston was in Illinois Country where he met the Jesuit explorer Charlevoix, accompanying the priest on his journey down the Mississippi River to New Orleans. In May 1722, Groston was commissioned as an ensign and in December was promoted to lieutenant. In 1733, he joined Veniard de Bourgmont's expidention up the Missouri River to establish Fort Orleans.[2]

In 1724, Groston joined the initial expedition from Fort Orleans to meet with the Kaw and Comanche, which was aborted after most of the French grew ill. He remained as commander of Fort Orleans during Bourgmont's second expedition.[3] By 1729, Groston and his family had moved to Fort de Chartres and he was put in command of the fort in 1730.[4]

In August 1730, during the Second Fox War, Groston led an attack on a Meskwaki stronghold along a creek in what is now east-central Illinois. He marched from Fort de Chartres With some 100 French soldiers and militia men, picking up some 400 Native American allies on the way. Locating the Meskawaki stronghold, Groston was joined by de Villiers from Fort St. Joseph and de Noyelles from Miami outpost. The French and their allies besieged the stronghold for 23 days before the Meskwaki tried to break out during a violent thunderstorm. More than 300 Meskwaki warriors were killed or captured in the failed escape attempt, along with an unrecorded number of women and children.[5][6]

For the next four years, Groston served as governor of the Illinois Country, retiring in 1734. In 1738, he was commissioned as a captain. Although a specific date is not recorded, he died at some point before November 1743.[7]

Personal life[edit]

Groston married the widow Marguerite Crevier in 1692 and they had six sons and two daughters by the time she died in 1707 and was buried in Montreal. Their sixth son, Louis, followed his father into military service. In 1718, he married Élisabeth Chorel de Saint Romain, and they had one daughter.[3]

Name[edit]

Groston's name is rendered in some sources as 'Grotton'. In contemporary records, he is sometimes referred to as dit Saint-Ange instead of de Saint-Ange, implying that the use of the nobility particle de was self-applied and not an indication of elevated or noble status.[8] The Saint-Ange of his name refers to the Côte Saint-Ange near Chicoutimi, Saguenay, Quebec.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Prévost, Roert (April 25, 1992). "Dans le pays de Marguerite Bourgeoys et de Jeanne Mance" [In the land of Marguerite Bourgeoys and Jeanne Mance]. La Presse (in Canadian French). Vol. 108, no. 182. Montréal, Québec. p. I-8 – via BAnQ.
  2. ^ Douglas, Walter B. (1909). "The Sieurs de St. Ange". Papers in Illinois History and Transactions. Illinois State Historical Society. pp. 137–138 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ a b McDermott, John Francis (1979) [1969]. "Groston (Grotton) de Saint-Ange, Robert". In Hayne, David (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. II (1701–1740) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  4. ^ Douglas (1909), p. 139.
  5. ^ Douglas (1909), pp. 139–141.
  6. ^ Peyser, Joseph L. (1980). "The 1730 Fox Fort: A Recently Discovered Map Throws New Light on Its Siege and Location". Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 73 (3): 207. JSTOR 40191453.
  7. ^ Douglas (1909), p. 141.
  8. ^ White, Sophie (2004). "'This Gown ... Was Much Admired and Made Many Ladies Jealous': Fashion and the Forging of Elite Identities in French Colonial New Orleans". In Harvey, Tamara; O'Brien, Greg (eds.). George Washington's South. Gainesville, Florida: University Press of Florida. p. 109fn. ISBN 0813029171.
  9. ^ Douglas (1909), p. 135.