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Phone: 605-223-7690Fax: 605-223-7693Shop: 605-223-7694
Swimming Pool: 605-223-7696 |
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History
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Fort Pierre Chouteau -- Taming the Wild Lands |
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Fort Pierre Chouteau was a trading fort on the high Missouri River plain in the
grandest, boldest sense. The late 18th and early 19th centuries were robust and
fascinating times in the upper Great Plains. Wildlife, native tribes, and European
traders, trappers, and settlers lived and moved in large numbers on the Missouri
-- early highway to the new frontier.
In 1832 the American Fur Company built Fort Pierre Choteau after its predecessor
Fort Tecumseh (1822-1832) was dismantled due to the shifting of the Missouri River.
It was the largest fur trading post on the upper Missouri River, and became the
center of commerce and dominant European settlement for the entire region.
"This fort is undoubtedly one of the most important and productive of the American
Fur Company's posts, being in the center of the great Lakota country, drawing from
all quarters an immense and almost incredible number of buffalo robes, which are
carried to the New York and other eastern markets and sold at a great profit."
An average 17,000 buffalo robes were traded each year at the fort for guns, shot,
powder, tobacco, blankets, cloth, sugar, salt, coffee, and beads. Historic accounts
indicate there were times when the fort was surrounded by hundreds of American Indian
tepees. Settlement here helped pave the way for major routes west, including the
Bozeman and Oregon Trails, and, of course, the historic Fort Pierre-Deadwood Trail.
The fort was used as a fur trading post until 1855, when it was sold to the Army.
Pierre Choutea Jr., hoping to help the U.S. Army decide to buy Fort Pierre, sent
Frederick Behman's 1854 watercolor (above) to General Jesup. Chouteau gave detailed
descriptions of the fort's many buildings which included houses with attics, store
houses, stables, sheds, a saw mill, milk and ice house and a powder magazine. Chouteau
also listed 24, foot square bastions, two stories high.
The Army dismantled the fort two years later in 1857 to build Fort Randall, and
today little remains of the above-ground structure of the Fort Pierre Chouteau and
associated buildings. Archaeological excavations are held each summer by the State
Historical Society, State Archaeological Research, SD Archaeological Society, and
the US Army Corps of Engineers. Volunteers are welcome. The site has been designated
as a national historic landmark.
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