THE LEGACY OF JEAN LAFITTE IN SOUTHWEST LOUISIANA
© By W. T. Block
(click here for W. T. Block web page)
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!
