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Home Illinois St. Clair County Cahokie Historical Markers Cahokia, Illinois (2)

Cahokia, Illinois (2)

Cahokie, IL , USA

Latitude & Longitude: 38° 34' 14.580012", -90° 11' 18.179988"
  Illinois IL State Historical Marker
Illinois State
Historical Marker

 
Cahokia, the first permanent European settlement in Illinois, was established in 1669 by priests from the French Seminary of Foreign Missions in Quebec. In 1698, a mission party -- guided here by the famous explorer Henri DeTonti -- selected a site for the Mission of the Holy Family that was adjacent to a village of Tamaroa and Cahokia Indians.
 
A typical French village gradually grew up around the mission. Its population, always small, was affected by the establishment of Kaskaskia and Fort DeChartres and by the cession of the land to the British in 1765 after the French and Indian War. In 1790, Cahokia became the seat of St. Clair County, a huge territory which then included the eighty northernmost counties of Illinois. Cahokia did not long retain her important position, however, because of recurring floods of the Mississippi and the growing importance of St. Louis and East St. Louis. The county seat was removed to Belleville in 1814. Both the village and the Cahokia Mounds, several miles to the northeast, were named for a subgroup of the Illinois Indian Tribe.
 
The famous Chief Pontiac was assassinated near the village of Cahokia in 1769. George Rogers Clark negotiated here for Indian neutrality during the American Revolution . Landmarks such as the old Church of the Holy Family, the Old Cahokia Cemetery, the Cahokia Courthouse and the Jerrot Mansion represent Cahokia's proud past. Erected by the Department of Transportation and the Illinois State Historical Society, 1978.

Last updated: 2/14/2015 15:17:00
 
    Related Themes: American Revolution, the Revolutionary War.
 
See more historic sites related to Illinois in the Revolution.
 
 
 
Cahokia, Illinois (2) Historical Marker Location Map, Cahokie, Illinois Map