Histories: Trempealeau Co. Historical Accounts:
"History of Trempealeau County Wisconsin, 1917":
Chapter 6:
Carver
-As transcribed from pages 57 - 58
French
rule in the upper Mississippi Valley ended with the treaty of February
10, 1763, when the Mississippi, nearly to its mouth, became the
boundary line between the possessions of England and Spain.28
Three years later, in 1766, Jonathan Carver, a native of Connecticut,
set out to explore the new British domains in the Northwest.29
Starting from Boston in June, 1766, Carver traveled to the Strait of
Mackinaw and Green Bay, and thence, by the canoe route of the Fox and
Wisconsin rivers, to the Mississippi. Then he ascended the Mississippi,
accompanied by a French-Canadian and a Mohawk Indian. He spent the
winter of 1766-67 among the Sioux of the Northwest. In the spring of
1767 he descended the Mississippi to the present location of Prairie du
Chien in the hope of securing goods. Disappointed there, he ascended
the Mississippi to the Chippewa River and reached Lake Superior by way
of that stream and the upper tributaries of the St. Croix. It was
afterward claimed that he had made a treaty with the Sioux, granting
him a tract of land about a hundred miles wide along the east bank of
the Mississippi, from the Falls of St. Anthony (at Minneapolis) to the
southeastern end of Lake Pepin.30 It
included the north half of Trempealeau County, the south line running
east and west somewhat north of Whitehall. On the strength of this
alleged treaty many claims were from time to time presented to the
United States Government, but Congress has always refused to recognize
the claim of Carver's heirs and successors.
Carver passed Trempealeau Mountain three times. In speaking of the locality he says:
"On the first of November I arrived at Lake Pepin, which is rather an
extended part of the River Mississippi, that the French have thus
denominated, about two hundred miles from the Ouisconsin. The
Mississippi below this lake flows with a gentle current, but the
breadth of it is very uncertain, in some places it being upwards of a
mile, in others not more than a quarter. This river has a range of
mountains on each side throughout the whole of the way; which in
particular parts approach near to it, in others lie at a greater
distance. The land betwixt the mountains, and on their sides, is
generally covered with grass, with a few groves of trees interspersed,
near which large droves of deer and elk are frequently seen feeding. In
many places pyramids of rocks appeared, resembling old ruinous towers;
at others amazing precipices; and what is very remarkable, whilst this
scene presented itself on one side, the opposite side of the same
mountain was covered with the finest herbage, which gradually ascended
to its summit. From thence the most beautiful and extensive prospect
that imagination can form opens to your view. Verdant plains, fruitful
meadows, numerous islands, and all these abounding with a variety of
trees that yield amazing quantities of fruit, without care or
cultivation, such as the nut-tree, the maple which produces sugar,
vines loaded with rich grapes and plum-trees bending under their
blooming burdens, but above all, the fine river flowing gently beneath
and reaching, as far as the eye can extend, by turns attract your
admiration and excite your wonder.
"The lake is about twenty miles long and near six in breadth; in some
places it is very deep and abounds with various kinds of fish. Great
numbers of fowl frequent also this lake and rivers adjacent, such as
storks, swans, geese; brants, and ducks; and in the groves are found
great plenty of turkeys and partridges. On the plains are the largest
buffaloes of any in America. Here I observed the ruins of a French
factory, where it was said Captain St. Pierre resided, and carried on a
very great trade with the Naudowessies, before the reduction of Canada.
"About sixty miles below this lake31 is a
mountain remarkably situated; for it stands by itself exactly in the
middle of the river, and looks as if it had slidden from the adjacent
shore into the stream. It cannot be termed an island, as it rises
immediately from the brink of the water to a considerably height. Both
the Indians and the French call it the 'Mountain in the River.' "32
Resources
for the above information:
28
- For preliminary treaty of Nov. 3, 1762 (reprinted from Gentleman's
Magazine, XXXII, 569-573), and definite treaty of peace of Feb. 10,
1763 (reprinted from Id., XXXIII, 121-126), see: Thwaites, ed.,
Important Western State Papers, Wis. Hist. Colls., XL, 36-46.
29 - For Carver Bibliography, see: John Thomas
Lee, Wis. Hist. Soc., Proceedings, 1909, 143-183. Also see: Same author
and subject, Additional Data, Id., 1912, 87-123.
30 - For text of the Carver deed and its
history, see: Carver Centenary, Minn. Hist. Colls., II, Part 4, 17,
19-21, original edition. Also see: Daniel Steele Durrie, Jonathan
Carver and Carver's Grant, Wis. Hist. Colls., VI, 221-270.
31 - Possibly the word "Lake" was inserted in
Carver's manuscript by an editor. In the preceding paragraph he
mentions the St. Pierre ruins, on the east side of Lake Pepin, and he
may have intended to locate Trempealeau as 60 miles below this (the
ruin) rather than 60 miles below Lake Pepin.
32 - Jonathan Carver, Travels in North America, (London, 1778), 54-56.
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