The village of
Kaskaskia, Illinois, was founded at the mouth of the
Kaskaskia River in the
Illinois Country as a missionary post by the
Jesuits in 1703, on lands which were hunted and farmed by the tribal members of the
Illinois Confederation. Soon afterwards, settlers from the
Quebec and
Louisiana regions began to trickle towards the rich, alluvial farmland of the central Mississippi Valley. They built a village and agricultural settlement around the location of the Jesuit mission, a half-circle of bottomland cradled by the Kaskaskia River and by an
oxbow of the Mississippi.
French-speaking pioneers were noted throughout North America for their comparative fairness towards
Native Americans. Furthermore, some French settlers and soldiers married and had children with Illini women, under the benediction of the priests of the Jesuit mission. However, as the Kaskaskia settlement grew throughout the 18th century, the local Indians may have realized that there might not be enough space for everybody. The French settlers raised
Fort Kaskaskia around 1759; the fort stood atop the bluff that looked down upon the frontier village. "Fort Kaskaskia" is not technically a "
fort", but an earthen
redoubt. Frontier settlers throughout Woodland North America often built such redoubts as defensive moves during times of threat from Native Americans. In 1763, the French ceded the eastern Illinois Country, including Kaskaskia and the abandoned fort, to Great Britain. The British did not use the fort and left Kaskaskia almost defenseless. Kaskaskia continued to exist as a French-speaking village on the Mississippi River frontier. ==A key strategic location==