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De Smet, Pierre Jean

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De Smet, Pierre Jean (pyĕr zhäN də smĕt`), 1801–73, Jesuit missionary in the U.S. Pacific Northwest, b. Belgium. He emigrated to the United States in 1821, served his novitiate in Florissant, Mo., and was ordained in 1827. He began (1838) his long missionary career at a mission on the site of Council Bluffs, Iowa. In 1840 he went to Montana with two Salish who had come to St. Louis in search of a "black robe" (Jesuit), and he established missions in Montana and Idaho. Traveling widely across the Northwest from 1840 to 1846, he won the friendship of various tribes. Later he acted often as mediator between Native Americans and whites—notably in the council at Fort Laramie in 1851 and in the Yakima War of 1858–59. He is said to have advised Brigham Young as to a place for the Mormons to settle, and he was a pacifier in the Utah War Utah War, in U.S. history, conflict between Mormons and the U.S. government. In the spring of 1857, President James Buchanan appointed a non-Mormon, Alfred Cumming, as governor of the Utah Territory, replacing Brigham Young , and dispatched troops to enforce the
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. He undertook several peace missions to the Sioux. His books are excellent source material in Western history—Letters and Sketches (1843), Oregon Missions and Travels (1847), Western Missions and Missionaries (1859), and New Indian Sketches (1863).

Bibliography

See biography by J. U. Terrell (1964).


De Smet, Pierre Jean (1801–70) Jesuit missionary; born in Termonde, Belgium. He came to the U.S.A. in 1821 and in 1838 began his career as a missionary to the Indians of the Plains and the Northwest. He founded mission stations, helped to negotiate peace after the Mormon War (1857–58) and effected a truce with Sitting Bull (1868). The Indians trusted him and called him "Blackrobe."


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