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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Related Historical Markers

Fort Pierre Chouteau National Historic Landmark
 
Fort Pierre Chouteau Marker (<i>wide view; National Historic Site behind marker</i>) image, Touch for more information
By Cosmos Mariner, August 19, 2016
Fort Pierre Chouteau Marker (wide view; National Historic Site behind marker)
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
1South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fort Pierre ChouteauNational Historic Landmark — 1832-1857 —
On Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806, on the left when traveling east.
The 1803 Louisiana Purchase expanded the United States westward. Meriwether Lewis and William Clark and The Corps of Discovery explored the nation's vast new territory on their 1804-1806 journeys. They found an abundance of beaver, buffalo, and . . . — Map (db m124297) HM
2South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fort Pierre Chouteau SiteNational Historic Landmark
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806.
Fort Pierre Chouteau Site has been designated a National Historic Landmark This site possesses national significance in commemorating the History of the United states of America 1991 National Park Service United States . . . — Map (db m124528) HM
3South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fort Pierre Choteau Trading Post
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806.
This tablet marks the site and commemorates the institution of Fort Pierre Choteau Trading Post chief landmark of fur-trading period, 1822 – 1864 on the Upper Missouri River between the Platte and the Yellowstone. Founded, . . . — Map (db m124300) HM
4South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fur Trade on the Upper Missouri River
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806.
Fur companies made money by bartering trade goods to American Indians and white trappers for furs. The furs were shipped east and sold to make hats and coats. The fur trading posts were near the fur-bearing animals they depended on. They were . . . — Map (db m124298) HM
5South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fort Pierre Chouteau: Fur Trade (1832-1855)
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806.
The American Fur Company (A.F.C.), John Jacob Astor's enterprise, built Fort Pierre Chouteau in 1832. The fort was named for Pierre Chouteau, Jr., who ran the Western Department of the A.F.C. from St. Louis. The Upper Missouri proved profitable for . . . — Map (db m124299) HM
6South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Cultures Come Together
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806 when traveling east.
The fur trade brought American Indian and European American cultures together. Fort Pierre Chouteau, built here by the American Fur Company (A.F.C.) in 1832, provided a place for trade. Sioux hunters brought furs and buffalo hides. They shared . . . — Map (db m124357) HM
7South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Fort Pierre Chouteau: Military Occupancy (1855-1857)
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806 when traveling east.
Fort Pierre Chouteau's two-year stint as a military fort started in 1855. The Black Hills Gold Rush brought white travelers into lands occupied by American Indians, increasing tensions. The U.S. Army set up forts to protect travelers. Fort Pierre . . . — Map (db m124435) HM
8South Dakota (Stanley County), Fort Pierre — Archaeology at Fort Pierre Chouteau
Near Fort Chouteau Road 0.3 miles east of State Highway 1806 when traveling east.
Archaeology is the study of past human cultures. It teaches us about past events and ways of life. Archaeology also reveals how people lived day-to-day and how they dealt with changes in their environment. Excavation - the exposure, . . . — Map (db m124484) HM
 
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Nov. 5, 2020