Jacques La Ramee
Jacques La Ramée | |
---|---|
Born |
June 8, 1784 Québec, British Canada |
Died |
1821 (aged 37) Laramie River, United States Unorganized Territory, present-day Wyoming |
Cause of death | unknown |
Nationality | Canadian |
Other names | Jacques Laramée, Jacques La Ramie, Jacques La Rami, Jacques La Remy, Jacques Laramie |
Occupation | frontiersman, coureur des bois, trapper, fur trader, hunter, explorer |
Employer | North West Company, La Ramée family free trapping company |
Known for | Being the first, European, mountain man to explore the Laramie River of Wyoming and Colorado |
Religion | Catholic |
Parent(s) | Joseph Fissiau dit Laramée and Jeanne Mondou |
Relatives | Joseph Fevrier dit Laramée (brother), Louis Fevrier dit Laramée (brother), Pierre Fevrier (brother), Francois Regis Fevrier (brother), François-Borgia Fevrier (brother), Béloni-Bénoni Fissiau dite Laramée (nephew), Marie Fevrier dite Laramée (niece), Francois Laramée (?) |
Jacques La Ramée (June 8, 1784 – 1821),[1] whose name appears in several spellings, including La Ramee, Laramée, La Ramie, La Rami, La Remy, and Laramie, was a French-Canadian coureur des bois, frontiersman, trapper, fur trader, hunter, explorer, and mountain man who lived in what is now the U.S. state of Wyoming, having moved there in 1815. La Ramée is credited as the first European, to explore the Laramie River, of Wyoming and Colorado. The city of Laramie, Wyoming, with an Americanized spelling, is named for him.
Early life
Jacques La Ramée was born on June 8, 1784, in Québec, British Canada, to Joseph Fissiau dit Laramée and Jeanne Mondou. The North West Company registry cites two Laramée brothers, Jacques and Joseph.[2] A variant of the name La Ramée first appeared in the West in 1798, referring to a canoe man who worked until 1804.[3] This probable relative may have been Francois Laramée, who is also listed in the registry of the company. This La Ramée had several sons, who ventured west into Wyoming and Idaho. According to Joachim Fromhold, one of the sons was Jacques La Rami, for whom the Laramie River is named.[4]
Fur trader and explorer
According to historian C. G. Coutant, Jacques La Ramée worked as a voyageur and fur trader, for the North West Company.[5] Employees of the North West Company and its rival, the Hudson Bay Company, were in competition, and disputes at times turned violent. In 1821 the two feuding companies merged.[6] La Ramée was known for his character and peaceful reputation. He organized a group of independent, free trappers, who set out, in 1815, for the headwaters, of the North Platte River, in the United States Unorganized Territory of present-day Wyoming.[7] Coutant writes that La Ramée and his band of peaceful trappers befriended many Native American tribes who would sell pelts to La Ramée's operation. This enterprise established the free trapper rendezvous in Wyoming, where trappers represented themselves without middle-man or umbrella company.[8]
Death
In 1820, La Ramée set off to trap along what is now known as the Laramie River and its tributaries. In the following year, 1821, he failed to arrive at the trappers' rendezvous, and a search party was organized. He was never seen alive again. Speculation on his disappearance and death vary. It was said that he slipped on ice and fell into the Laramie River; or that his body was found in a small cabin; or that he was found "stuffed under a beaver dam"; or that he was killed by rival trappers or traders and thrown into the Laramie River. An alleged eyewitness account, from Pierre Lesperance, stated that LaRamée's camp was attacked by Arapahos, which they vigorously denied.[9][10][11][12]
Legacy
Several geographic sites in Wyoming were named for La Ramée (anglicized to Laramie), including the Laramie River, the city of Laramie, Wyoming, Fort Laramie, Laramie Peak, and Laramie County.[13][14][15]
In popular culture
In James A. Michener's 1974 historical novel, Centennial and the 1978-1979 NBC television mini-series, of the same name, the colorful, French Canadian or French Metis, coureur des bois, from Montreal, Quebec, Canada, named "Pasquinel", was introduced, as an early, frontier mountain man and trapper, in 1795 Colorado, Spanish Upper Louisiana Territory of Mexico, now the present-day state of Colorado. Pasquinel was portrayed, in the NBC television mini-series, Centennial, by American TV actor, Robert Conrad. The fictional character of Pasquinel was loosely based on, the life of French-speaking, fur trader, Jacques La Ramee. Also, Pasquinel explains to his French Canadian and Arapaho, now known as French Metis, son, Jacques, that he was named after the friend and former trapping partner, of his father, "Jacques La Ramee".
See also
References
- ↑ Gary McClenahan (29 April 2009). "Jacques LaRamie". Find A Grave. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
- ↑ hafen, LeRoy R. (1966). The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West, Vol. VI. Glendale, California: Arthur H Clark Company.
- ↑ Wyoming Historical Society. "Annals of Wyoming - Index F". wyshs.org. Wyoming Historical Society. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
- ↑ Fromhold, Joachim (2012). Alberta History – The Old North Trail (Cree Trail), 15,000 years of Indian history 1750-1822. Canada: First Nations Publishing. p. 366. ISBN 978-1-105-65418-3.
- ↑ Coutant, C. G. Dr. (1899). History of Wyoming and (The Far West). New York: Argonaut Press, Ltd. ISBN 1293790222.
- ↑ Eddins, Ned O. "Mountain Men Fur Trade Exploration History". The Fur Trapper.
- ↑ Fetter, Richard (1982). Mountain Men of Wyoming. Boulder, CO: Johnson Publishing Co. ISBN 0933472641.
- ↑ McDermott, John D.; Hafen, Leroy R. (ed.) (1982). "J. LaRamee" in The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West (Vol. VQ. Spokane, CA: Arthur H. Clark Co. pp. 223–225.
- ↑ Pitcher, Don (2000). Wyoming Handbook (Fourth ed.). Emeryville, CA: Avalon Travel Publishing, Inc. Hafen, LeRoy (1968). The mountain men and the fur trade of the far west. Spokane, WA: Arthur Clark Co.
- ↑ Chittenden, Hiram H. (1935). The American Fur Trade of the Far West. Lincoln, NE, and London UK: University of Nebraska Press.
- ↑ Thrapp, Dan L. (1988). Encyclopedia of Frontier Biography, Volume 2 G-o. Glendale, CA: A.H. Clark Company. p. 813. ISBN 0-8032-9417-4.
- ↑ Robertson, Roland G. (1999). Competitive Struggle: America's Western Fur Trading Posts 1764-1865. Tamarack Books, Caxston Press. p. 144. ISBN 978-087004-5714. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
- ↑ National Park Service (2000). NPS Historical Handbook: Fort Laramee. United States National Park Service.
- ↑ University of Wyoming. "Jacques LaRamie Historical Marker Site near Wheatland, WY". Retrieved 22 June 2015.
- ↑ Hardee, Jim. "The Fur Trade in Wyoming". Wyoming History. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
External links
- "NPS Historical Handbook: Fort Laramie". National Park Service. 9 December 2000. Retrieved 2015-05-01.
- "Jacques La Ramie (In Honor of Jacques La Ramie)". 2009. Retrieved 2015-05-01.