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CHAPTER XII : FOUNDING OF LEOPOLD
BY FATHER BESSONIES
To that ardent missionary spirit
of the French which, two centuries earlier, had sent Jacques Marquette
and Jean du Lhut
into an untamed continent's boundless wastes of forest verdure -
mountains silent in primeval sleep; river, lake and glimmering pool,
wilderness oceans mingling with the sky - may be attributed one phase of
Perry County's development, distinctively individual from all the rest.
Augustus Bessonies, who was born
at Alzac, Departement du Lot, France, on the day of Napoleon's final
eclipse at Waterloo, June 17, 1815, was the chosen instrument for this
werk, and in him lived again the dauntless courage of his consecrated
predecessors. As a lad he attended the preparatory school of Montfaucon,
going thence to the Seminary of Isse, near Paris, for the classics and
natural philosophy.
In 1836 Simon Guillaume Gabriel
Brute, first Roman Catholic Bishop of Vincennes (with jurisdiction then
covering all Indiana) paid a visit to Isse during a trip abroad, and
although young Bessonies had already been received as a postulant for
foreign mission by the Lazarist Order, upon the advice of his director,
Father Pinault, he offered his services to the visiting prelate for his
far-off American diocese.
Great was the joy of Bishop
Bruté. Impulsively embracing Bessonies, he exclaimed: "Je suis heureux à
penser d'un autel nouveau dans ma chère Indiana ("I am happy to think of
a new altar in my dear Indiana.") "But" he added, "I have no seminary at
Vincennes. Remain, therefore at St. Sulpice, and in three years I will
send for you."
So he did, in 1839. but it was
one of the latest acts in his long episcopal career. When Bessonies
reached Havre to embark for America, the same sailing vessel which he
had engaged passage had brought to France the sad tidings of the good
bishop's death. By the time the sorrowing deacon reached Indiana,
October 21.1839, Bishop Bruté had been committed to his last
resting-place. In the crypt of a mortuary chapel beneath the high altar
of St. Xavier's Cathedral his ashes repose to this day, and it is easy
to feel that his spiritual presence was not far distant, to add its
intangible benediction when August. Bessonies was elevated to the
priesthood, February 22,1840, by the Right Reverend Celestine Rene de la
Hailandière, the new Bishop of Vincennes.
Work among the Indians of Cass
County, pear Logansport where the Pottawatomies and Miami, under Chief
Godfrey long dwelt on their 'Richardville' reservation, was desired by
Father Bessonies, hot the decision of his bishop sent him instead to the
forests of Perry County as the first recorded minister of the Boman
Catholic faith therein. With that farseeing ecclesiastical policy which
in countless other instances has secured to the Church of Rome land
grants of strategic value, Bishop de Ia Hailandière had entered, or soon
entered, a tract near the geographical centre of Perry County, and it is
no reflection upon his judgment that its destiny has not been all that
he anticipated.
On page 355, of Deed Book C, in
the County Recorder's office, we may read:
"State of Indiana, Perry County:
"I, the undersigned, in order to
promote both the temporal and spiritual welfare of the French people
coming from Europe, resolved to lay off a town of the name of Leopold,
in which, with God's assistance, I intend to erect a temple to the glory
of the Almighty, for them to worship therein their Maker, according to
thedictates of theire conscience; the most glorious privilege a human
being can enjoy, and of which we boast in this country of Freedom,
become for as an adopted land of Promise.
"Leopold is situated in Perry
County, State of Indiana, in Township Five South, Range Two West.
Section One, and contains forty acres, more or less, to-wit: the East
half of the Southwest quarter of the Southwest quarter of section,
township and range as above stated, containing twenty acres, more or
less; and the West half of the Southeast quarter of the Southwest
quarter of section, township and range above mtioned, containing twenty
acres, be the same more or less.
"There is in Leopold one hundred
lots. The town is laid off with six North and South streets running the
whole length of the town, every one of them numbering (60) feet in
width; the first street commencing at the Northeast quarter is Belgium
Street; the second, Celestine Street; the third, Lafayette Street; the
Fourth, Washington Street; the fifth, Caroline Street, the sixth, German
Street.
"There is also six streets East
and West, sixty feet width. The first is named Rome Street; the second,
Ohio Street; the third, Indiana Street; the fourth, St. Louis Street;
the fifth, Troy Street; the sixth, St. Augustine Street.
"Each lot contains ninety-nine
feet square, and every one of them is a corner lot. Four lots in the
centre of Leopold will be kept for a public square, to-wit: the
forty-fifth, forty-sixth, fifty-fifth and fifty-sixth; which lots I keep
the right to dispose of and to donate to the county for any public
advantage, with other property whenever Leopold will be a county seat
"To the credit thereof, before
any court of the United States, or any magistrate whomsoever I give my
hand and usual seal. Given at Leopold, Perry County, Indiana, the
eleventh day of November, eighteen hundred and forty-two.
".(Signed) Augustus Bessonies,
Cath. P."
"State of Indiana, Perry County:
"Be it remembered that on the
eleventh day of November, eighteen hundred and forty-two, personally
appeared before me, an acting Justice of the Peace for the county
aforesaid, Augustus Bessonies, who noknowledged the foregoing deed to be
his voluntary act and deed for the purpose therein mentioned. Given
under my hand and seal the day and year aforesaid.
(SEAL) Arnold Elder, J. P."
Father Bessonies' own words,
therefore, tell us the story of Leopold's founding, with a simplicity of
purpose whose equivalent is only to be found in that wonderful Compact
signed by the Pilgrim Fathers
-on the waves of the bay
"where the Mayflower lay;'
or among those peaceful Friends who laid out, in Penn's woods on the
Delaware, their City of Brotherly Love,
"whose streets still re-echo the names of the trees of the forest"
Difficult, indeed, must have
been the beginning of Father Bessomes' pastoral labours in that almost
unbroken forest which yet covered practically all of Southern Indiana,
where clearings were few, established highways unknown, and the only
travel possible by means of the blazed trees marking a course through
the tall timber from one place to another. Furthermore, although a
graduated seminarian, the brave young priest's acquaintance with the
English tongue was still rudimentary, while the point toward his steps
were turned was as yet unnamed, even in Perry County, and the way
thither from Vincennes might have puzzled a seasoned backwoodsman.
A few years earlier, however,
the Rev. Maurice de St Palais (of noble French lineage, and later third
Bishop of Vincennes), had established a mission upon the banks of Patoka
River in Dubois County, for the German families living near, so Father
Bessonies at length found himself safely in charge of the Rev. Joseph
Kundek, of Jasper, to whom he was recommended for instructions as W the
final stages of his somewhat vague journey.
Father Kundek had had the
advantage of ten years' forest experience and it is told that he had
himself blazed an original trail from Jasper to the site which he chose
in 1840 for a new town, naming it Ferdinand, for the Emperor then
reigning in Austria-Hungary. He drew, therefore, with his own hand a
map, indicting by unmistakable natural landmarks such as rocks, creeks
and hills, the route which Father Bessonies followed to his destination.
Nor was this the only instance
wherein the revered Jasper priest marked out a path for his younger
clerical brother, there being a distinct parallel in the extensive work
carried on by the two men, with a strenuous activity unsparing of
personal strength. Ill health, developed through exposure, brought
Father Kundek's earthly fife to its end, December 4, 1857, and the
magnitude of his labours lying altogether outside Perry County may not
be herein dwelt upon.
Father Bessonies, however, was
one of those "men - so strong that they come to four-score years;"
living until February 22, 1901, being at that time Vicar General to the
Right Reverend Francis Silas Chatard in Indianapolis, and an honourary
Monsignor of the Vatican household, a title conferred upon him January
22, 1884, by Pope Leo XIII.
Held in affectionate esteem by
people of every religion, or of none, for his many virtues, and for that
winning disposition of bonhomie, which can not be portrayed by an
English equivalent, the fondest love of Monsignor Bessonies himself was
always cherished toward the flock and field of his first twelve years'
work, and Perry County was dear to his heart until the end: especially
those parishes of Leopold, Cannelton, Derby, Oil Creek and Trey, where
he was the first Roman Catholic who ever officiated.
He was, also, a veritable
"circuit rider;" with a weekly schedule which long read thus: Sunday,
masses in Leopold and Derby; Monday, Leavenworth; Tuesday, Corydon;
Wednesday, Newton Stewart; Thursday, Jasper: Friday, Taylorville;
Saturday, Rockport; and a volume could be filled with incidents
thrilling and pathetic of his career in the wilderness.
An acquaintance with William H.
English, formed during the presidential campaign of 1844, became a warm
personal friendship, and it was through the influence of English at
Washington, whither he had gone to accept an important position in the
Treasury Department. that President Polk established in 1847 a postofice
at Leopold, Father Bessonies receiving the appointment as postmaster.
A kinsman of the English family
had already located in the tiny hamlet, Doctor William P. Drumb, its
fast resident physician, if resident be the correct term describing a
rural practitioner whose range of patients was scarcely narrower than
the circle of Father Bessonies' parishioners. Doctor Drumb and William
H. English were fast cousins on the maternal line, grandsons of Philip
Eastin, "a Lieutenant in the Fourth Virginia Regiment in the War of the
American Revolution;" to quote the inscription on the tombstone marking
the spot of his burial, 1817, in the Riker's Ridge (or Hillis) Cemetery,
a romantic spot overlooking the Ohio River, in Jefferson County, some
few miles northeast of Madison.
William P. Drumb and his wife,
Sarah A Stevens, were the parents of seven children, the eldest son,
Elisha English Drumb, born May 20, 1841, in Leopold, and educated for
three years at West Point, becoming a successful lawyer and conspicuous
politician in Cannelton, the father being the first County Clerk who
lived there after it became the county seat in 1859. Through deaths and
removals the children became widely scattered, none of the third
generation now residing in Perry County.
The Drumbs were almost the only
family of purely American stock coming into Leopold Township after the
very earliest entries of Cunningham, Frakes, Mayo and a few others, but
the French and Belgian immigrants of the 'forties have left a numerous
progeny on the lands then taken up. Among the many names, only few of
whom can be here enumerated, are noted Andrew Peter, who felled the
first tree in the heavy timber and thick underbrush on the site where
Leopold stands today; Jerome and Custave Goffinet; Jean Baptiste
Marcilliat; Jean and Victor Goffinet; Andre Joseph Marcilliat; Gérard
Joseph Collignon; Jean François Allard; François Genet; Catherine
Naviaux; Jean Baptiste and Josephine Nicolay; Dominic Demonet and Joseph
James, both early merchants; Joseph François Claudel; Auguste Reynaud;
John A. Courcier, a veteran of the Second War with England; Francois
Devillez; James Hanonville and Jean Joseph Maire. All these were pioneer
landholders.
Almost equaIly early came Peter
and Angelina (Emery) Casper, with their twelve children, from
Wurtemburg, the father having been a soldier under Napoleon. They were
among the few German settlers of the locality. Somewhat later Peter and
Margaret (Devillez) George, who were natives, respectively, of Hachy and
Nobresart, Luxembourg, arrived with a family of ten children, so both
these names are now extensively represented.
To his own patron saint, St.
Augustine, was dedicated Father Bessomies' first church, a small log
building at the southern edge of Leopold, eventually superseded by the
present massive stone edifice on the same site, in the midst of "God's
Acre" where
"Each in his narrow cell forever laid,
The rude forefathers of the hamlet sleep."
St. Mary's on the hill
overlooking Derby, was his next mission established, followed by St
Croix, on Oil Creek, near what is now Branchville, and St Pius, in Troy,
at about the same period relatively from now.
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