Canaqueese was both a war leader and a diplomat during the
Beaver Wars, a complex series of 17th century conflicts between New France, the Iroquois Confederacy (also known as the Five Nations), and other Indigenous nations over control of the fur trade in the
Great Lakes region. In July 1654, Canaqueese led a delegation that escorted two French captives to Quebec. Annoyed that the French had sent an envoy to the
Onondoga rather than the Mohawk, and concerned that the Mohawk might lose their status as the only Iroquois nation with direct access to European trade goods, Canaqueese warned the governor that the French should deal with the Mohawk instead of the Onondaga. In August 1656, Canaqueese led an ambush of a group of
Odawa and
Wendat at
Lac des Deux Montagnes on the
Ottawa River near Montreal.
Jesuit Father Leonard Garreau, who was travelling with the Odawa and Wendat, was shot in the spine. Canaqueese brought the mortally wounded Garreau to
Montreal where he died shortly afterwards. In August 1666, a retaliatory expedition against the Mohawk, led by Captain
Pierre de Saurel of the
Carignan-Salières Regiment met a peace delegation headed by Canaqueese that was returning the four captives to New France. Saurel ordered his expedition to turn back and he escorted the delegation to Quebec. Although he was not permitted to leave Quebec, Canaqueese was given preferential treatment because one of the returned captives was a relative of the lieutenant-général. Cananqueese was gifted "a fine suit of clothing" by Tracy and was allowed some freedom of movement within the town.
Marie de l'Incarnation, an Ursuline nun, wrote that the
intendant,
Jean Talon, treated the "Bâtard Flamand ... like a great lord." Tracy, however, was tired of Iroquois prevarication and in September 1666 launched a large scale invasion of Mohawk territory. According to Marie de l"Incarnation the Iroquois captives at Quebec wept "like children" and that "tears fell from the Bâtard Flamand's eyes at seeing such fine troops in good array." Canaqueese warned Tracy that many French soldiers would perish since the Mohawk would "fight to the end," but he also asked the lieutenant-général to "preserve" his wife and children. Although the expedition failed to engage the Mohawk in battle, the French torched all four of the abandoned Mohawk towns and the fields of
maize that surrounded them. When Tracy returned to Quebec in early November, he had one of the Mohawk captives hanged. He released Canaqueese, who "feared it [hanging] more than the others," and ordered him to present Tracy's conditions to the Mohawk. The Mohawk were given "four moons" to respond or Tracy would hang the remaining Iroquois detainees. The conditions included providing hostage families and the repatriation of Wendat and Algonquin adoptees. Canaqueese returned to Quebec the following April but without any adoptees or hostage families. Tracy threatened to invade again if his terms were not met, and sent Canaqueese back with all but two of the male Iroquois prisoners held at Quebec. A peace settlement was reached in July 1667 when a Mohawk and Oneida delegation brought several families to Quebec, and invited Jesuit missionaries to their homelands. Canaqueese may have been one of several Mohawk who were baptized at Quebec in 1667. Because of increasing conflict between traditionalist Mohawk and those willing to convert to
Catholicism, a number of Mohawk families including Canaqueese migrated to the
St. Lawrence River valley and established a settlement on the south shore of the river near Montreal. ==1687 Denonville Expedition==