The French explorer Étienne de Veniard, Sieur…
July 1724 CE
From Fort Orleans, near the mouth of the Grand River, he planned to visit the Padouca on the Great Plains and open a trade route to reach the Spanish colony in New Mexico (larger than the current state).
Bourgmont seeks aid from the Kaw to facilitate his expedition.
He sends twenty-two Frenchmen and Canadians by boat from Fort Orleans to the Kaw village on the Missouri with supplies and gifts.
Accompanied by ten French colonists, one hundred Missouri and sixty-four Osage, he travels by land.
is the first European known to visit the Kaws in 1724.
He finds them living in a single large village near the future site of the town of Doniphan, Kansas, on a bluff overlooking the Missouri River.
Bourgmont's visit to the Kaw is the first official French visit, although many French traders, including he, had visited them during the previous twenty years.
Some of the Kaw had also likely journeyed to trade in Kaskaskia, a French colonial village then on the east side of the Mississippi in present-day Illinois.
Bourgmont's party reaches the Kaw village on July 8, 1724.
It is large, with at least fifteen hundred persons.
The Kaw greet him as an old colleague, honoring him with innumerable speeches and feasts.
When the talk turns to trade, the Kaw are hard bargainers.
Bourgmont wants to buy horses from them.
With only five horses to trade, they extract a high price.
This indicates that horses are still rare on the eastern border of the Plains.
The Kaw also trade six slaves (likely members of other tribes captured in battle), food, furs, and skins.
On July 24, Bourgmont, his party of French, Missouri, and Osage, and most of the Kaw leave on their expedition to visit the Padouca.
Due to the heat, Bourgmont becomes ill, and the entire party of over a thousand people returns to the Kaw village.
Bourgmont sends an emissary ahead to contact the Padouca and tell them he will soon be coming, and that he will bring two Padouca slaves to be returned to the tribe as an expression of good will.
Bourgmont's emissary finds the Padouca in western Kansas, most likely in the region of the Quartelejo in Scott Countym which has become a refuge for native fleeing the Spanish in New Mexico.
Eight villages with about six hundred men in total live in the area.
They agree to relocate closer to the Kaw village in order to meet Bourgmont when he is able to resume his journey.
Five Padouca return to the Kaw village as guides.
Groups
French people (Latins)
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Osage Nation (Amerind tribe)
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Kaw, or Kanza, people (Amerind tribe)
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Missouria or Missouri (Amerind tribe)
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Apache (Na-Dené tribe)
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New France (French Colony)
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New Spain, Viceroyalty of
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France, (Bourbon) Kingdom of
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Santa Fe de Nuevo México (Spanish Colony)
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French Canadians
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Spain, Bourbon Kingdom of
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Louisiana (New France)
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