For many years the small French settlements on the north shore of the
St. Lawrence River had been the subject of attacks by the Iroquois. By the early 1660s, the colony was on the verge of collapse. After receiving numerous pleas for help,
Louis XIV took several steps to ensure the survival of New France, including sending professional soldiers. Tracy sailed from
La Rochelle in February 1664 accompanied by
Antoine Lefèbvre de La Barre, four companies of infantry from the Broglie, Chambellé, Orléans and Poitou regiments, and 650 settlers for the French colonies in the West Indies. He also installed a new governor to the island of
Grenada called
Monsieur de Vincent. In April 1665, Tracy left
Guadeloupe for the
Gulf of St. Lawrence. After anchoring off
Percé, Tracy and the soldiers that had accompanied him to the West Indies transferred to smaller ships and disembarked at Quebec on 30 June, 11 days after the first four companies of the Carignan-Salières had arrived from France. To avoid overcrowding in Quebec, Tracy sent the Carignan-Salières companies to build three forts along the
Richelieu River, the main route used by the Mohawk in their raids on French settlements.
Fort Richelieu was restored and
Fort Sainte Anne was erected the following spring on
Isle La Motte at the northern end of
Lake Champlain. Salières and eight more companies of the Carignan-Salières landed at Quebec in mid-August. The newly appointed
Governor General of New France,
Daniel de Rémy de Courcelle, and the newly appointed
intendant,
Jean Talon, arrived with the final contingent of eight companies in mid-September. Tracy quickly recognized that of the five Iroquois nations, the Mohawk were the most aggressive towards the French. For many years the Mohawk had raided French settlements, and had disrupted the flow of beaver pelts to Montreal by blockading the
Ottawa and St. Lawrence Rivers. While the
Onondaga,
Oneida,
Seneca, and
Cayuga appeared willing to discuss peace, the Mohawk did not. In December 1665 an Onondaga and Oneida delegation arrived at Quebec to begin negotiations on behalf of themselves and the Seneca and Cayuga. ==Return to France==