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Grand Portage National MonumentTwo canoemen, knee deep in water, wet their birchbark canoe in Lake Superior before going for a paddle.
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Grand Portage National Monument
Fur Trade Collections
ceinture flechee

MHS photo by Willoughby Babcock

1936 Excavations by the MHS and WPA at the NWC depot on Grand Portage Bay.

Archeological Investigations at Grand Portage

  • Overview
    • The investigation of archeological resources at Grand Portage National Monument began in 1922 with an effort by the Minnesota Historical Society (MHS) to map visible remains of Fort Charlotte on the Pigeon River. In 1936-1937, the MHS and Works progress Administration (WPA) began major excavations and reconstruction work at the North West Company depot on Grand Portage Bay.
    • The MHS resumed field work at Grand Portage in the 1960s and early 1970s, resulting in the discovery and reconstruction of the NWC warehouse and kitchen structures. The MHS also conducted a remarkable series of underwater excavations at Fort Charlotte, resulting in the discovery of thousands of well-preserved fur trade artifacts from the bottom of the Pigeon River, and greatly improved understanding of fur trade material culture.
    • The NPS Midwest Archeological Center has also conducted excavations and remote sensing work at Grand Portage, mostly in relation to compliance archeology projects such as the completion of park sewers, drain lines, and water line installation.
    • In 2000, the Institute for Minnesota Archeology (IMA) began a cooperative project with Grand Portage National Monument to investigate the Grand Portage itself, surveying the 8 ½ mile portage corridor for archeological sites related to encampments, fur trade posés (rest stops), and watering holes.University research teams including archeologists from University of Minnesota, Lakehead University, and University of Wisconsin-La Crosse have also helped further our knowledge of Grand Portage’s archeological heritage.
 
Drawing by C.W. Jefferys of David Thompson in Athabaska Pass 1810.  

Did You Know?
The great geographer David Thompson mapped most of Canada and the northern U.S. west of Grand Portage (1794-1821) a tribute to the exploratory achievements of the Nor’westers.

Last Updated: July 12, 2009 at 12:22 EST