Fort Beauharnois: Difference between revisions
John Stanton (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
Bill Thayer (talk | contribs) m Text replace - "== History ==" to "==History of ReplaceText==" |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
|} | |} | ||
--> | --> | ||
== History == | ==History of {{PAGENAME}}== | ||
Established on 18 Sep 1727 by [[Rene Boucher, sieur de la Perriere]] on the west side of Lake Pepin, near present day Frontenac in Goodhue County, Minnesota. Fort Beauharnois was established to protect the French trade with the Sioux Indians. Two Jesuit fathers, [[Michel Guignas]] and [[Nicolas de Gonnor]], accompanied the expedition as missionaries. Guignas described the fort in a letter as follows: | Established on 18 Sep 1727 by [[Rene Boucher, sieur de la Perriere]] on the west side of Lake Pepin, near present day Frontenac in Goodhue County, Minnesota. Fort Beauharnois was established to protect the French trade with the Sioux Indians. Two Jesuit fathers, [[Michel Guignas]] and [[Nicolas de Gonnor]], accompanied the expedition as missionaries. Guignas described the fort in a letter as follows: | ||
Revision as of 10:03, 17 March 2019
History of Fort BeauharnoisEstablished on 18 Sep 1727 by Rene Boucher, sieur de la Perriere on the west side of Lake Pepin, near present day Frontenac in Goodhue County, Minnesota. Fort Beauharnois was established to protect the French trade with the Sioux Indians. Two Jesuit fathers, Michel Guignas and Nicolas de Gonnor, accompanied the expedition as missionaries. Guignas described the fort in a letter as follows:
The first Christian mission on Minnesota soil was established at Fort Beauharnois by the two priests. They called it "The Mission of St. Michael the Archangel." The post was abandoned in October 1728 because of Sioux hostilities and reoccupied in 1732. Rebuilt again in 1750 and finally abandoned as a fortification in 1756 when the garrison was withdrawn for service in the French & Indian War. Current StatusThe exact site location is unknown. An Ursuline convent and the Villa Maria Conference Center stood near the likely site of the old fort and much of the area has become the Frontenac State Park .
See Also: Sources:
Links:
Visited: No
|