Histories: Trempealeau Co. Historical Accounts:
"History of Trempealeau County Wisconsin, 1917":
Chapter 6:
Pike
-As transcribed from pages 58 - 59
At
the close of the Revolutionary War, the land east of the Mississippi
became a part of the new United States by the treaty of September 3,
1783.33 Spain continued in possession of the land west of the Mississippi from 1762 to October 1, 1800,34 when the tract was receded to France, which nation, however, did not take possession until 1804,35
at which time a formal transfer was made from Spain to France, in order
that France might formally transfer the tract to the United States
under the treaty of Aprll 30, 1803.36
Two years later the Government determined to send an expedition into
the Northwest, in charge of Zebulon M. Pike. He was given orders to
negotiate treaties with the Indians, to secure a conformity with the
laws of the United States by the Northwest Company and others engaged
in the fur trade, to secure the site for a fort near the head of
Mississippi River navigation, and to extend geographical exploration.
He started from St. Louis August 9, 1805, with twenty soldiers, spent
the winter in northern Minnesota, started down the river April 7, 1806,
and again reached St. Louis the latter part of that month. On his way
up the river Pike slept near the foot of Trempealeau Mountain, on the
night of September 13. He speaKs of the mountain as 'le Montaigne qui
Trompe a l'Eau.37 He reached the
mountain in a drizzling rain and left the next morning in a dense
fog. On April 16, 1806, he again passed Trempealeau Mountain on
his way down the river.
In his geographical notes Pike says: "La Montaigne qui Trompe dans
l'Eau stands in the Mississippi near the east shore, about fifty miles
below the Sauteauz (Chippewa) River, and is about two miles in
circumference, with an elevation of 200 feet, covered with timber.
There is a small river which empties into the Mississippi in the rear
of the mountain, which I conceive once bounded the mountain on the
lower side and the Mississippi on the upper, when the mountain was
joined to the main land by a neck of low prairie ground, which in time
was worn away by the spring freshets of the Mississippi, and thus
formed an island of this celebrated mountain.38
Resources
for the above information:
33 - Treaties and Conventions Concluded Between the United States of America and Other Powers (Washington, 1873), 314-318.
34 - Among the many excellent works on the subject may be mentioned: Jamse K. Hosmer, The Louisiana Purchase (New York, 1904).
35 - See: Walter B. Douglas, Spanish Domain of Upper Louisiana, Wis. Hist. Soc., Proceedings, 1913, 74-90.
36 - Annals of Congress, 1802-1803, pp. 1006-1008.
37 - Coues, ed., Expeditions of Zebulon M. Pike (New York, 1895), I, 52,53.
38 - Ibid., 307.
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