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George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 5, 13th edition. 4 2 Browse Search
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Browsing named entities in George Bancroft, History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent, Vol. 5, 13th edition.. You can also browse the collection for M. Kerlerec or search for M. Kerlerec in all documents.

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ife; it is I who made all men; I wake for their safety. Therefore, I give you warning, that if you suffer the Englishmen to dwell among you, their diseases and their poisons shall destroy you utterly, and you shall all die. M. de Neyon à M. de Kerlerec, au Fort de Chartres, le ler Decembre, 1763. The Master of chap. VII.} 1763. May. Life himself, said the Pottawatamies, has stirred us, up to this war. The plot was discovered in March by the officer in command at Miami; Ensign Holmestowards a general pacification proceeded from the French in Illinois. De Neyon, the French officer at Fort Chartres, sent belts and messages, and peace-pipes to all parts of the continent, exhorting the many nations of savages to bury the hatchet, and take the English by the hand, for they would never see him more. Neyon et Bobe à Kerlerec, Dec. 1763. Neyon a Kerlerec, 1 Dec. 1763. Return of the killed, wounded and missing in the action on the carrying-place, at Niagara, 14 Sept. 1763
e. The Indians were assured Neyon de Villiere à toutes les nations de la Belle Riviere, et du lac, et notamment à ceux de Detroit, à Pondiac, chef des Couata souas au Detroit. that their old allies would depart; the garrison in the Peorias was withdrawn; the fort Massiac was dismantled; its cannon sent to St. Genevieve, the oldest settlement of Europeans in Missouri. The missionary, Forget, retired. At Vincennes Letter of M. de St. Ange, of 24 Octobre, in Lettre de M. de Neyon à M. de Kerlerec, ler, Xbre. 1763. the message to all the nations on the Ohio was explained to the Piankishaws, who accepted the belts and the calumets. The courier who took the belt to the north, offered peace to all the tribes wherever he passed; De Neyon a Kerlereo, 1 Dec. 1763. and to Detroit, where he arrived on the last day of October, he bore a letter of the nature of a proclamation, informing the inhabitants of the cession of Canada to England; another, addressed to twenty-five nations by