Batchawana Bay was an important fishing site for the Ojibwe. A
trading post was established on Batchawana Island near the mouth of the Batchawana River for
fur trading around 1817 or 1819 by clerks of the
North West Company. After the merger of the North West Company with the
Hudson's Bay Company, the post (spelled "Batchewana" or "Bachawinna" at the time) continued to operate as a HBC winter outpost for
Michipicoten until 1870. In the early 1920s, the largest fish ever recorded in the
Great Lakes was caught by Frank Lapoint in the bay. A
sturgeon, it was reportedly 90 years old, measured 2.25 m (7.5 ft) and weighed 140 kg (310 lb). The bay was historically notable as the dividing point separating the two
Robinson Treaty areas between the Crown and the
Ojibwe people. ==See also==