Page:Historic highways of America (Volume 7).djvu/41

This page has been validated.
NATURE AND USE
37

Valley was laid open to the eyes of the world by a voyageur who came overland from Canada, and not by a voyageur who ploughed through the Atlantic and the Gulf of Mexico from Spain, is a fact of far-reaching import. The first Louisiana was the whole valley; this and the Lake–St. Lawrence Basin made up the second New France . . the two blended and supplemented each other geographically. . ."[1] The second New France was united to Louisiana by hinges; these hinges were the portage paths which joined them.


The importance of these routes of travel did not by any means pass when once the explorers and missionaries had hurried over them and brought back news of the lands to which they led. The economic history of these routes is both interesting and important, and should be considered, perhaps, before reviewing their military significance.

As we have had occasion to notice, straits and portages were famous meeting places. La Salle and Joliet met between Lake Erie

  1. Id., p. 36.