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Fenwick Settlement is an abandoned village in Perry County, Missouri, United States. The community was named after the Fenwick family, who were early settlers on the left bank of the Mississippi River in the Spanish Illinois Country.

History

The colonial history of eastern Perry County begins in the late 1700s with the migration of American Catholics into the Spanish territory of Upper Louisiana. In 1797, the Spanish district commandant at New Bourbon had noticed a group of Catholics living in Kentucky. The Spanish colony saw these Americans as prospective immigrants. The head of one of the families, Joseph Fenwick, received an invitation in 1797 from district commandant Luzières to bring himself and his son, a doctor, as well as other American Catholics to settle Spanish territory. On April 18, 1797, Joseph Fenwick arrived with 25 or more Catholic families from the White Sulphur area of Kentucky, along with seventy slaves.[2]

These American Catholics from Kentucky - descended from Irish Roman Catholic families who settled in Maryland - were referred to as “Maryland Catholics” or “English Catholics” to distinguish them from the resident French-speaking Catholics. The reference to Maryland was due to their having left Maryland in 1785 following the American Revolution, and seeking land elsewhere for a better life.[3]

After 1803, Joseph Fenwick left New Bourbon village, possibly over issues of land-ownership or to relocate himself beyond easy reach of the colonial officials. He initially planned to settle on Apple Creek at the mouth of Indian Creek, in proximity to the villages that the Shawnee were erecting at that time.[4] The presence of so many Indians probably caused Fenwick to give up his plans and instead establish a settlement at the mouth of Brazeau Creek in the Brazeau Bottoms on the Mississippi River. This small settlement was named Fenwick Settlement, after its founder. The settlement grew to about 20 families with the arrival of more Catholic families from Kentucky. However, the location of the settlement was not particularly amenable to farming and the settlement did not prosper. By 1807-1808, the Fenwick group began to drift away.[5]

GNIS reference

The Geographic Names Information System has an entry for the Fenwick Settlement with a location of unknown.[6]

References

  1. ^ Cartographic.info USA http://cartographic.info/usa/map.php?id=736917
  2. ^ Walter A. Schroeder (2002). Opening the Ozarks: A Historical Geography of Missouri's Ste. Genevieve District, 1760-1830. ISBN 9780826263063.
  3. ^ Robert Sindey Douglass (1907). History of Southeast Missouri: A Narrative Account of Its Historical Progress, Its People and Its Principal Interests, Volume 1. ISBN 9780722207536.
  4. ^ Louis Houck (1908). A History of Missouri: From the Earliest Explorations and Settlements Until the Admission of the State Into the Union. R. R. Donnelley & Sons Company. p. 387. fenwick settlement missouri.
  5. ^ Carl J. Ekberg (2010). A French Aristocrat in the American West: The Shattered Dreams of De Lassus De Luzieres. University of Missouri Press. p. 137. ISBN 9780826272270. fenwick.
  6. ^ "Fenwick Settlement". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey. Retrieved January 19, 2014.