[The Winning of the West, Volume Two by Theodore Roosevelt]@TWC D-Link book
The Winning of the West, Volume Two

CHAPTER VI
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There is one striking difference between these petitions and the similar requests and complaints made from time to time by the different groups of American settlers west of the Alleghanies.
Both alike set forth the evils from which the petitioners suffered, and the necessity of governmental remedy.

But whereas the Americans invariably asked that they be allowed to govern themselves, being delighted to undertake the betterment of their condition on their own account, the French, on the contrary, habituated through generations to paternal rule, were more inclined to request that somebody fitted for the task should be sent to govern them.

They humbly asked Congress either to "immediately establish some form of government among them, and appoint officers to execute the same," or else "to nominate commissioners to repair to the Illinois and inquire into the situation." [Footnote: State Department MSS., No.

30, p.453.Memorial of Francois Carbonneaux, agent for the inhabitants of Illinois.] One of the petitions is pathetic in its showing of the bewilderment into which the poor Creoles were thrown as to who their governors really were.

It requests "their Sovereign Lords," [Footnote: "Nos Souverains Seigneurs." The letter is ill-written and worse spelt, in an extraordinary French patois.


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