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THE
LEGACY OF JEAN
LAFITTE IN
SOUTHWEST
LOUISIANA
By
W. T. Block
Reprinted
from TRUE
WEST, Dec.,
1979, p. 26ff;
Beaumont
ENTERPRISE,
Feb. 5, 1984.
Source: New
York HERALD,
as reprinted
in Galveston
DAILY NEWS,
"Story of
Lafitte,"
April 28,
1895.
Deep
in the
southwest
corner of
Louisiana lies
a region once
famed in
American
history as the
"Neutral
Strip." This
forty-mile-wide
stretch of
wilderness and
marsh land,
principally in
present-day
Calcasieu and
Cameron
parishes,
become a
geographic
entity in 1806
when the
boundary
between
Spanish Texas
and the United
States was in
dispute. In
that year
Spanish
General Simon
Herrerra and
the American
General James
Wilkinson of
Louisiana
concluded the
"Neutral
Ground
Agreement,"
whereby the
Strip was left
unoccupied by
troops and law
enforcement
officials of
either nation,
and the
agreement
remained in
effect until
1821.
Although
a few
legitimate
land hunters
settled there,
the Strip soon
became
notorious for
harboring the
lawless
elements and
social
outcasts of
two nations,
that ilk of
humanity to
whom piracy
appealed and
who became
indispensable
to the
slave-trading
and
buccaneering
activities of
Jean Lafitte.
It was also
destined to
retain its
share of
Lafitte
legendry and
folklore for
most of a
century.
Bounded
on the west by
the Sabine
River and on
the east by
the Calcasieu
(the Arroyo
Hondo, or
"Deep River"
of the
Spanish), the
region is
noted for its
many deep,
cypress-lined
and
moss-draped
bayous, its
marshy
lowlands, and
live
oak-studded
"cheniers," or
marsh ridges,
in the coastal
or southern
sector, and
for its pine
forests and
hardwood
bottomlands in
the northern
sector. Only a
sprinkling of
white settlers
and slaves
were living
there by 1820.
Elsewhere
small bands of
the
fast-vanishing
Attakapas
tribe, led by
Chief
Calcasieu (or
Crying Eagle),
roamed the
coastal
confines,
along with
countless
alligators,
deer, bears,
and black
panthers.
By
1817 the
privateers of
Jean Lafitte
and his
predecessor,
Luis de Aury,
were capturing
numerous
Spanish
slavers off
the coast of
Cuba. The
pirate's
barracoons, or
slave pens, on
Galveston
Island were
often swelled
beyond
capacity,
containing a
thousand or
more African
chattels. Many
buyers came to
the island to
buy slaves at
$1.00 per
pound, and
three
brothers,
John, Rezin,
and James
Bowie, were
among the
pirate's best
customers. In
1853 John
Bowie recorded
in "DeBow's
Magazine" that
the brothers,
who channeled
their illicit
slave trade
via Black
Bayou on Lake
Sabine or via
the Calcasieu
to Lake
Charles,
realized a net
profit of
$65,000 in two
years time
from the sale
of 1,500
Africans in
Louisiana.
Then
Lafitte
learned that
he could
multiply his
profits by
marketing
slaves direct
to the
Louisiana
cotton and
sugar cane
planters. By
December 1817,
he had built
two slave
barracks, or
camps in the
Neutral Strip,
one on
Contraband
Bayou, a
tributary of
the Calcasieu,
and another at
Ballew's
Ferry, ten
miles north of
Orange, Texas,
on the Sabine
River. The
latter site
was later
occupied by
one of
Lafitte's
shipmates,
Richard
Ballew, who
obtained a
one-league
land grant
from the
Mexican
government and
operated a
Sabine River
ferry
crossing.
There
were numerous
early settlers
of the Strip
who sailed on
Lafitte's
ships,
including
Henry Perry,
Pierre
Guilotte,
Henri Nunez,
Jean Baptiste
Callistre,
Charles
Cronea,
Captain James
Campbell, and
Capt. Arsene
LeBleu de
Comarsac. By
1815 the
latter had
built his
cabin at a
point where
the Calcasieu
River
intersected
the Old
Spanish Trail.
After
Lafitte was
driven from
the Island,
LeBleu became
a rancher and
cattle buyer.
He drove his
herds from
Texas to New
Orleans via
the Old
Spanish Trail,
and his home
became a
well-known way
station, or
"stand," for
the Texas
cattle drivers
along the
Opelousas
Trail. There
were other
Calcasieu
residents,
such as
Charles
Sallier,
Michel Pithon,
or Michel
Trahan of Lake
Charles, who
were
intimately
acquainted
with the old
pirate and
furnished his
crews with
beef and
vegetables
when their
ships were in
the Calcasieu
River. It was
their
descendants
who have
perpetuated
the legendry
of Jean
Lafitte in
Calcasieu
Parish (then
St. Landry)
almost to the
present day.
In
Lafitte's era,
there were
four tidal
lagoons (two
have since
succumbed to
natural and
man-made
channel
routing) on
the lower
Calcasieu
River, and the
buccaneer
could navigate
the stream
with the skill
of a bar
pilot. The
largest,
Calcasieu
Lake, some
fifteen miles
in diameter,
is encountered
shortly after
entering the
Calcasieu
Pass. The next
two, Trahan's
Lake and
Indian Lake,
have since
disappeared,
being little
more than wide
places in the
stream; and
the fourth and
most
beautiful,
Lake Charles,
was a
two-mile,
oval-shaped
tidal lagoon,
lined with
moss-draped
cypresses and
willows, and a
few log cabins
dotted its
banks. In
Lafitte's day
there were
still a few
Attakapas
warriors
living along
the river.
Today Lake
Charles, La.,
is a thriving
university,
manufacturing,
and seaport
city of about
125,000
population.
In
1866 a
traveler
described the
legacy that
the sea rover
had bequeathed
to the
Calcasieu
region in a
long article
in the
Galveston
"Weekly News,"
as follows:
"This
river was at
one time the
nest of the
celebrated
Lafitte and
his band of
pirates.
Hackberry
Island, in
Calcasieu
Lake, is
pointed out as
their naval
depot, though
it must have
been deeper
than now. An
elevation on
the river is
to this day
called Money
Hill, and is
pointed out as
the spot where
Lafitte buried
his money. For
fifty years
the people of
the country
have
occasionally
been digging
for it, but
the proprietor
has stopped
it. Contraband
Bayou is also
pointed out as
having had a
depot at its
head for the
stowing of the
goods these
pirates
smuggled into
the country
and also as a
depot for the
African slaves
they
imported."
Money
Hill was also
known as
Barb's
Shellbank, the
site where the
old Sallier
house
originally
stood until
1841, when it
was moved on
rollers to the
outskirts of
Lake Charles.
Around the
turn of the
century, this
Acadian home,
later
remodeled, was
believed to be
the oldest
residence
still standing
in Calcasieu
Parish.
If
the early
inhabitants of
the Strip held
Jean Lafitte
in high
esteem, he
reciprocated
by showering
them with
luxuries of a
type rarely
seen on the
frontier. In
his journal,
Lafitte made
many
references to
the Neutral
Strip and its
residents,
noting that
"the Sabine
and two other
small rivers,
the Calcasieu
and the
Mermentau,
also served
for
transporting
goods as far
as Alexandria
(La.)."
Lafitte
confessed that
"many Negro
slaves, gold,
and jewels
which I have
given to my
friends living
near the
Calcasieu . .
. were stolen
by some of my
men who had
revolted."
His
journal also
confirms that
some of the
Strip's
residents who
served Lafitte
may have kept
their families
with them on
Galveston
Island.
Certainly
Capt. Jim
Campbell's
family lived
there during
the pirate
era. Upon
abandoning the
island commune
and dividing
the property
in February
1821, Lafitte
wrote that
"most of the
families went
north near the
banks of the
Sabine River."
Probably
the oldest
legend along
the Calcasieu
River was
perpetuated by
the
descendants of
Charles
Sallier. A
minor French
aristocrat
once living in
the shadow of
the
guillotine, he
and others
reputedly
escaped to
Spain, and
about 1811
engaged Jean
Lafitte for a
princely sum
to resettle
them in
Louisiana.
Months later,
as the
Barataria Bay
pirate cast
anchor in Lake
Charles, the
refugees
watched in awe
as dozens of
Attakapas
warriors
scampered into
dugouts,
paddled out to
the warship,
and began
scaling the
gunwales. When
the frightened
Sallier dashed
below decks to
apprise
Lafitte of the
hostile
intent, the
buccaneer
replied:
"Calm
yourself, my
dear sir, for
they are my
friends and
will do my
slightest
bidding. The
last time I
was here a
party of them
undertook a
trip for me on
a mission of
great
importance to
a settlement
of Acadians in
the (Bayou)
Teche
country."
Sallier
borrowed a
Creole pony
from the
Indians and
scoured the
countryside,
but he found
no site that
appealed to
him as much as
the Barb
Shellbank,
later to be
called Money
Hill. He
bartered
trinkets to
the Indians
for the land
and built his
home there, of
solid cypress,
where it
remained until
the house was
jacked up on
log rollers
and moved to
Lake Charles.
It would be
four long
years before
Sallier would
see the
Barataria
corsair again.
According
to Sallier, a
French agent
contracted
with Lafitte,
following the
Battle of New
Orleans, to
hurry to
Bordeaux,
France, on a
top secret
mission.
During June,
1815, at the
end of the
famed "One
Hundred Days,"
Lafitte one
night loaded
aboard a score
of sea chests
which
contained the
Emperor
Napoleon's
personal
fortune. In
the aftermath
of the Battle
of Waterloo,
the emperor
had hoped to
avoid
retribution by
escaping to
Louisiana, but
when he failed
to arrive at
an appointed
hour, Lafitte
sailed away
from Bordeaux
without him.
One
old Napoleonic
warrior who
reputedly also
escaped on
that voyage
was Michel
Pithon, who
had fought for
France in
every battle
from
Austerlitz in
1805, Moscow
in 1812, to
the Battle of
Paris in 1814.
Again in 1836,
Pithon fought
in the Texas
Army for some
months, later
rearing a
large family
at Lake
Charles during
his old age,
where he also
died at age
ninety-seven
in 1871.
Having been a
personal
friend of the
Galveston
buccaneer,
Pithon was a
walking
history book
about
Lafitte's
voyages to
Calcasieu
Parish.
Early
in September,
1815, Sallier
was startled
one morning to
see a
"strange,
clipper-built
schooner,"
bearing a
massive spread
of canvas,
glide up the
river to the
Barb shellbank
and cast
anchors
overboard. He
was
apprehensive
at first, for
a large
complement of
men scurried
about the
decks, where
the muzzles of
twelve brass
ship cannons
frowned their
metallic
belligerence.
Soon two men
came ashore,
one a
heavy-set man
with a brace
of musket
pistols in his
belt, and the
other "a tall,
dark man with
a black
mustache" and
carrying a
sword in hilt.
The former was
Lafitte's
half-brother
Alexandre,
commonly known
by the alias
of Dominique
You. It was a
happy reunion
for Sallier
and a few of
the other
transplanted
"aristocrats,"
who quickly
supplied
Lafitte with
tons of fresh
vegetables and
beef, and
later reveled
for a week,
gorging on the
best of French
brandies,
wines, and
Spanish
cigars, aboard
the pirate
ship.
But
Lafitte was as
unpredictable
as he was
close-mouthed,
and one
morning
Sallier awoke
to find that
the buccaneers
had sailed
away. It was
later rumored
that the
schooner
anchored again
at a marsh
ridge
downstream
near Trahan's
Lake, where
Lafitte and
his henchmen
carried some
of Napoleon's
sea chests
ashore and
buried them in
the marsh.
Many
months elapsed
before Sallier
saw the
corsair ship
in the
Calcasieu
again. This
time Lafitte
sailed north
to Lake
Charles, where
his crew
encamped for
several weeks
on the high
bluff where
later the H.
C. Drew Lumber
Company
sawmill was
built. Again
his crew
buried a large
sea chest on
the shores of
the lake.
While half of
the pirates
moved slave
coffles and
contraband
booty overland
to Opelousas
and
Natchitoches,
the remainder
scurried about
for provisions
of corn and
beef, painted
and caulked
the hull of
their ship,
and repaired
guns, rigging,
and sails.
On
this occasion
Lafitte's ship
had been in
dire danger of
attack as he
prepared to
enter the
Calcasieu
Pass, for he
found that the
New Orleans
revenue cutter
"Lynx" was
engaged in
antislaving
patrols
between him
and the mouth
of river.
Relying on the
brand of
cat-and-mouse
tactics that
only pirates
employed so
well, the
buccaneer
schooner
hoisted
reserve sails
and headed for
the open sea.
There Lafitte
waited for
darkness, then
circled the
cutter, and
blanketed by
fog, sailed
into the Pass
the following
morning,
leaving his
pursuer
baffled.
True
to his
tendency to
act on sudden
impulse, the
pirates broke
camp one
morning and
sailed away so
abruptly that
Lafitte left
his favorite
slave cook,
Catalon,
asleep on the
shore. Sallier
took charge of
the young
Negro for
several
months, and
when Lafitte
returned to
the Calcasieu
at a latter
date, Sallier
bought the
slave for the
price of two
sides of beef.
Emancipated
in 1865,
Catalon
survived in
Calcasieu
Parish until
about age 94
but, having
witnessed
murders over
the search and
division of
Lafitte's
gold, the old
man became
notably silent
about his
former
master's
activities.
There
was another
ex-slave named
Wash who died
at Lake
Charles in
1880 at age
104. Born in
Africa, Wash
was one of the
slaves who as
a young man
had been sold
by Lafitte on
Galveston
Island. Wash
deserted his
former owner
in Kentucky
and made his
way south to
Louisiana,
where he
attached
himself to a
new master. In
general Wash's
accounts of
Lafitte agreed
with those of
Pithon and
Sallier. One
such tale
related that
Lafitte, whose
ship was laden
with booty
from a
particularly
successful
expedition,
once entered
the Calcasieu
River while
under pursuit
by a large
American
frigate.
Lafitte posted
sentries at
the mouth of
the river to
watch the
warship's
movements, and
put half of
his crew to
work burying
treasure in
the vicinity
of the Barb
Shellbank. The
rest built a
clamshell
fort, moved
the guns
ashore, and
then they sank
their leaky
ship, with a
portion of its
decks still
awash, nearby
in the river.
Time
passed, the
American
frigate sailed
away, and the
buccaneers
returned to
Galveston
Island on a
new schooner
purchased at
Lake Charles.
Some
years later,
two old
Acadian
Frenchmen,
while
scavenging
aboard the
hulk of
Lafitte's old
vessel,
discovered two
chests of
silver plate
and bars which
had been
overlooked by
Lafitte's old
cutthroats.
The Acadians
hastily
removed the
chests
downriver to
the vicinity
of Cidony's
Shipyard,
where they
buried them on
a marsh ridge.
Oldtimers of
that vicinity
believed that
the old
Acadians
eventually
returned and
claimed their
treasure, for
in later
years, beneath
a
curiously-marked
cypress tree,
a fresh
excavation was
found, the
bottom of
which was
still filled
with rust and
imprints where
the two sea
chests had
formerly lain
buried.
As
late as the
1890's, the
remains of
Lafitte's old
fort at the
Barb Shellbank
could still be
seen. Long
known as "Dead
Man's Lake,"
it consisted
of a small
depression in
the soil
(which trapped
rain water),
about 100 feet
by 50 feet in
size, and
separated from
the main
stream by a
levee of clam
shell.
If
during the
last years of
his life, the
ex-slave Wash
became as
close-mouthed
as a pirate,
it was because
of a murder he
claimed he had
witnessed.
Only one of
the many
misdeeds known
to have been
perpetrated by
greedy
treasure
hunters, it is
best retold in
old Wash's own
words:
"A
long time ago
when I first
came to this
country and
was living out
on the
prairie, east
of Lake
Charles, there
came three men
from New
Orleans
a-riding big
American gray
horses. These
gentlemen went
to where the
court house
now stands and
stuck a
curious
looking
instrument
into the
ground. It
looked like a
broomstick,
and had a
sharp iron
point to make
it go into the
ground easy.
On the other
end was a
curious little
contrivance
that looked
like a watch,
only it was a
lot bigger,
and had a
little finger
inside that
never wanted
to keep still
. . . .
Finally at
last it
pointed them
to a big green
knoll right on
the banks of
Contraband
Bayou."
"When
they stuck it
down on top of
the knoll, it
stopped
pointing and
commenced
a-rustling
around every
which way like
a dog hunting
a rabbit in
the brush.
Then the
gentlemen knew
that was the
right place,
and right
there, about
three feet
under the
ground, was an
iron chest,
three feet
long and two
feet wide,
with a whole
lot of gold
inside. Well,
they got two
sacks of gold
and tied the
ends together,
and threw them
across the
back of one of
the horses,
and came away
and camped
near my house
. . . . 'Fore
God, I swear
that I saw
with my own
eyes three men
go into them
woods on
Contraband
Bayou, and
never but two
came out of
there, and
they brought
the other
horse to carry
the gold!"
"About
a week after
that a darky
come down
along the
bayou fishing.
He saw where
some digging
had been going
on . . . . and
he saw a lot
of green
bottle flies.
That scared
him awful and
he went and
told a white
gentleman. The
two of them
went back and
dragged the
bottom of the
bayou,
underneath
where the
darky saw the
flies, and
brought up the
body of the
other man,
with an iron
bake oven tied
around his
neck. They
buried him on
the green
knoll where
the money was
found."
"Yes,
sir, that's
the God's
honest truth!
And that's why
there ain't no
more known
about that big
pirate than
there is.
People were
afraid to open
their mouths
those days
unless it was
to eat.
There's that
old Catalon
that died here
about four
years ago.
Why, that poor
old darky was
scared to
death of his
life most of
the time,
because
everybody knew
that he was
one of
Lafitte's
cooks and knew
more than
anybody else
alive about
where the
money was
buried."
Whether
or not old
Catalon, or
Wash, or
Charles
Sallier, or
Michel Pithon,
or even old
Captain Arsene
LeBleu ever
knew where any
of Lafitte's
gold was
actually
buried is, of
course, a
matter of
sheer
conjecture.
From
time to time
the writer has
been asked if
this or that
particular
Lafitte legend
were true.
Yes, they were
nearly all
"true" to the
extent that
they were
originated by
people who
knew Lafitte
or some of his
men, or at
least claimed
that they did.
Most of the
treasure
legends had
two things in
common----the
burial or
search for
buried
treasure at
some remote
spot on the
coastal Gulf
Prairie,
usually a
marsh chenier,
and nearly
always, the
existence of a
"patron" or
apparition----an
eerie light to
lead the gold
hunters
astray, or a
big
rattlesnake
with fangs
bared, perhaps
a
cutlass-swinging
skeleton, or
some other
ghostly
creature whose
assignment was
to guard the
pirates'
money.
And
perhaps
"truth" did
stray
occasionally
from its path,
having no
obligation to
do otherwise,
but there are
two vital
ingredients of
a treasure
legend that
cannot be
taken so
lightly ---
one being its
plausibility,
and the
second, a need
to fire
imaginations,
the hearer's
or reader's
interest,
passions ---
and even greed
--- to fever
pitch. Jean
Lafitte left
Southwest
Louisiana a
rich legacy of
legends!
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