Charlie P. (NY)
Gold Member
- Feb 3, 2006
- 13,015
- 17,158
- Detector(s) used
- Minelab Musketeer Advantage Pro w/8" & 10" DD coils/Fisher F75se(Upgraded to LTD2) w/11" DD, 6.5" concentric & 9.5" NEL Sharpshooter DD coils/Sunray FX-1 Probe & F-Point/Black Widows/Rattler headphone
- Primary Interest:
- Metal Detecting
There were Europeans in that area before 1730.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Gaultier_de_Varennes,_sieur_de_La_Vérendrye
The Coureur des Bois had the habit of moving in with the natives and taking local wives. Sacagawea's husband was a Frenchman who had settled in what is now Idaho. In the early 1700's there were three French forts around Lake Winnipeg. Henry Kelsey visited the lake in 1690 and mapped it. The British also had a fort in Manitoba in 1684 (near York Factory).
In 1716 a memoir drawn up by Governor Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil showed lakes and portages as far as Lake of the Woods from which flowed a river to the Sea of the West. This implies that there had been Frenchmen west of Lake Superior before Vérendrye. La Vérendrye questioned the Indians who came to trade. He learned of the Mandan country on the upper Missouri. These people were described as white men who lived in big houses.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Gaultier_de_Varennes,_sieur_de_La_Vérendrye
The Coureur des Bois had the habit of moving in with the natives and taking local wives. Sacagawea's husband was a Frenchman who had settled in what is now Idaho. In the early 1700's there were three French forts around Lake Winnipeg. Henry Kelsey visited the lake in 1690 and mapped it. The British also had a fort in Manitoba in 1684 (near York Factory).
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