'Grand Portage National Monument', located within the
boreal forest on the north shore of
Lake Superior in northeastern
Minnesota, preserves a vital center of
fur trade activity and Anishinaabeg
Ojibwe heritage.

The Great Hall at Grand Portage
The ''Grand Portage'' itself is a footpath which bypasses a set of waterfalls on the
Pigeon River a few miles from where that stream runs into
Lake Superior. This path is part of the historic
trade route of the
voyageurs between their wintering grounds and their depots to the east. This route, composed of the Pigeon River and other
waterways and Grand Portage and many other
portages, was of enormous importance in pre-industrial times, as it provided access from the Canada's settled areas to its interior of Canada. Some 50 miles upstream from Lake Superior, this trade route crosses the
Height of Land Portage connecting South Lake on the Pigeon River watershed with North Lake of the
Rainy River watershed. This portage crosses the
Northern Continental divide and therefore provides passage between the
drainage basin of the
Arctic Ocean and that of the
Great Lakes and
Saint Lawrence River to the
Atlantic Ocean.
History
As early as 2,000 years ago,
Indian Nations probably used Kitchi Onigaming, or “the Great Carrying Place”, to travel from summer homes on Lake Superior to winter hunting grounds in the interior of Minnesota and
Ontario. In 1729
Cree guide Auchagah drew a map for some of the first
French fur traders showing them how to reach the "western sea" of
Lake Winnipeg. In time, Grand Portage became the gateway into rich northern fur bearing country connecting remote interior outposts to lucrative international markets.
The Grand Portage trail itself is an 8 1/2 mile trail connecting Grand Portage with Fort Charlotte on the Pigeon River. Voyageurs from the interior of Canada would carry their furs by canoe to Fort Charlotte, and portage the bundles of fur to Grand Portage. There they would meet their counterparts from Montreal, and exchange the furs for trade goods and supplies. Each canoe "brigade" would then return to its starting place.
[1]
In mid-July 1802, partners of the most successful fur trade company in North America, the
North West Company, met in their Great Hall at
Grand Portage, Minnesota and voted to move their summer headquarters from the protected shores of Lake Superior’s Grand Portage Bay 50 miles north to the mouth of the
Kaministiquia River. Almost from the time the
Anglo-Scot Nor’Westers had organized at Grand Portage in the mid 1780s an emerging
United States wanted them out. The July vote would mean that 18 buildings constructed from native squared spruce, pine and birch and over 2,000 cedar pickets surrounding them would be torn down, transported north in company schooners and used in constructing the new
Fort William far from U.S. soil.
Reopened in 1951 as Grand Portage National Historic Site, designated a
National Monument in 1958, its nearly 710 acres lying entirely within the boundaries of
Grand Portage Ojibwe Indian Reservation, the reconstructed depot celebrates fur trade and Ojibwe lifeways. It was subsequently added to the
National Register of Historic Places in 1966.
Attractions and events
The
portage trail exists in much the same location and condition today, and visitors can hike 8.5 miles from Lake Superior to the
Pigeon River. Volunteers and park staff dress in period attire and explain and interpret what life was like at the turn of the 19th century. Every August, Grand Portage National Monument hosts a rendezvous re-enactment and
pow wow.
See also
★
Grand Portage, Minnesota
★
Grand Portage State Park, Minnesota
★ the
Voyageurs
★
Isle Royale National Park
Source
★
National Parks Service - Grand Portage National Monument
External links
★
Grand Portage homepage
★
Information on the Grand Portage band of Chippewa
★
Video documentary on 'Grand Portage during the peak of the Fur Trade'