Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Jean Talon

 
Biography: Jean Talon

Jean Talon (1626-1694), a French intendant of New France, was responsible for implementing his country's policy of colonial development in Canada.

Born at Châlons-sur-Marne in Champagne and baptized on Jan. 8, 1626, Jean Talon entered the royal service in his late 20s, serving as army commissary in Flanders and as intendant of Turenne's army. In 1655 he was appointed intendant of Hainaut.

When, in 1663, Louis XIV placed his American colonies under royal government, the minister in charge of colonial affairs, Jean Baptiste Colbert, persuaded Talon to accept the intendancy of New France for a 2-year term. He arrived in September 1665 at Quebec, where he was responsible for civil administration, finance, and justice.

Colbert had grandiose plans for the development of Canada. He established a new administrative system, sent a regiment of regular troops which quelled the lroquois, and then invested vast sums in economic development, establishing new industries such as lumbering and shipbuilding and subsidizing the immigration of skilled and unskilled labor, and marriageable girls for the superfluity of bachelors.

Talon's task was to superintend this economic expansion, and he set about it with considerable energy. Under his supervision several ships were constructed, a brewery was built, much virgin land was brought into production, crops were diversified, and surplus foodstuffs and timber were exported to the West Indies. In fact, he was perhaps too active, for some of the colony's leading merchants complained that he was concentrating all these activities under his own control for his private profit and putting them out of business.

To make the best use of the available manpower, Colbert demanded that the Canadian proclivity to voyage to the distant Indian villages to obtain furs at firsthand had to be curbed. He wanted the colonists concentrated in the central colony, working on the land or in industry. Talon, however, favored expansion into the west, and he sent out fur-trading expeditions under the guise of exploration parties. In this fashion the entire basin of the Great Lakes was claimed for France, although only a handful of itinerant French traders were in the area. The merchants in the colony, seeing Talon's exploration parties return with canoes laden with furs, were quick to follow suit. Within a very few years several hundred coureurs de bois were operating out of the colony. In 1672 Talon sent Louis Jolliet to discover the outlet of a river called the Mississippi, in the hope that it would provide an easy route to the Pacific.

In 1668 Talon returned to France but was persuaded by Colbert and Louis XIV to go back to the colony for a second term. While in France, he acquired the posts of first valet of the king's wardrobe and secretary in his privy chamber. En route to Quebec in 1669, he was shipwrecked and did not reach the colony until 1670.

During his first term Talon's relations with the governor general, Rémy de Courcelle, had not been good. Courcelle resented what he regarded as Talon's usurping of the governor's powers. Unfortunately, only Talon's correspondence has survived. He contrived always to exalt his own activities and to belittle his critics. He over-stepped the bounds, however, when he proposed that he should combine in his own person the powers of both intendant and governor-general. He also requested blank letters de cachet to send malcontents back to France.

In 1672 Talon was recalled. He subsequently sought to return to Canada as the director of an almshouse which he proposed to establish. He certainly accumulated a fortune while in Canada and likely wished to add to it. Two years before his death he sold for 253, 000 livres the posts acquired in 1670. He died on Nov. 24, 1694, in Paris.

There can be no doubt that Talon was an efficient administrator, but his contribution to the colony's development has been exaggerated by historians who have accepted his accounts at face value.

Further Reading

There is no good biography of Talon in English. The general background for the period is given in W. J. Eccles, Canada under Louis XIV, 1663-1701 (1964).

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Jean Baptiste Talon
Top
Talon, Jean Baptiste (zhäN bätēst' tälôN'), 1625?-1694, intendant of New France, b. France. He entered French administrative service c.1653. In his short tenure (1665-68, 1670-72) as intendant of New France he accomplished much. He encouraged agriculture, sent prospectors to hunt for minerals and to explore little-known territory, made energetic efforts to introduce brewing, lumbering, and shipbuilding industries, planned for trade with the West Indies and France, and encouraged immigration so vigorously that the population almost doubled during his tenure. After his return to France in 1672, he became a royal secretary.

Bibliography

See T. Chapais, The Great Intendant (1914).

Wikipedia: Jean Talon
Top
Jean Talon
Born January 8, 1626(1626-01-08)
Châlons-en-Champagne
Died November 23, 1694 (aged 68)
Resting place Châlons-en-Champagne
Occupation Intendant of New France
Parents Philippe Talon
Anne de Bury

Jean Talon, Comte d'Orsainville (8 January 1626 - 23 November 1694) was a French colonial administrator who was the first and most highly regarded Intendant of New France under King Louis XIV.

Contents

Life

Jean Talon was born in Châlons-en-Champagne, to Philippe Talon and Anne de Bury in 1626, and was baptised on 8 January 1626. He was very entrepreneurial as Intendant during 1665–1672, he attempted to diversify the colony's economy by encouraging agriculture, fishing, lumbering, and industry as well as the traditional fur trade. He approved Robert La Salle's plan to mount expeditions to seek a western passage to China[1]. As the first intendant to arrive in New France, his mission was to boost the growth and prosperity of the remote colony by making it self-sufficient. The most innovative idea instituted by Talon was bringing around 700-900 filles du roi to New France. The filles du roi would emigrate to New France between 1663 and 1673, marry quickly, and bear children. Agents were hired to find ideal young women. Thirty livres was given for a wardrobe of two sets of clothes and 60 livres for their transport. Jean Talon's plan, with les filles du roi, tripled the population of New France within 15 years. In 1666, he conducted the first census in North America, counting 3,215 of its residents. While he succeeded in settling some 2,000 people in the colony, many of the industries that he had initiated failed when he returned to France.

Talon worked closely with lieutenant-general Prouville de Trace to achieve the surrender of the Iroquois in 1667, thereby ending the threat that had hung over the colony for 20 years. Although Talon did not join the troops in the field, at Tracy's request, he had a very large share in the success of the French arms through his constant and meticulous care in placing at the disposition of the army everything that was necessary for the war, despite the poverty of the colony, the lack of roads, and the distances.

He died in France in 1694. It is believed that he died from a heartattack or stroke at age 68. He was a highly respected man and loved by many[citation needed], yet he was never married. Jean studied at the Jesuit college of Clermont in Paris,[2] so his knowledge was much appreciated by King Louis XIV and Jean-Baptiste Colbert, who were to help in the colonization of New France.

He is interred at the chapel of Sainte-Catherine in the church of Notre-Dame-en-Vaux, in Châlons-en-Champagne.

Honours

Several sites and landmarks were named to honour Jean Talon. They include:

References

  1. ^ Francis Parkman, La Salle and the Discovery of the Great West, France and England in North America 3 Williamstown, MA: Corner House Publishers, 1980), 15.
  2. ^ Jean Talon - Catholic Encyclopedia article

External links


 
 
Learn More
Sir Thomas Chapais (Canadian statesman & historian)
sieur de Daniel Rémy Courcelle (Canadian statesman)
Tallon (family name)

Was jean talon a good government? Read answer...
How did Jean Talon die? Read answer...
Who is jean talon's wife? Read answer...

Help us answer these
What were jean talon goals and dreams?
What were jean talon's dislikes?
Tell me about jean talon?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jean Talon" Read more