The rich fur areas along the upper Mississippi, Minnesota,
Des Moines, and
Missouri Rivers, occupied by
Indigenous peoples, were exploited by independent fur traders operating from
Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin in the late eighteenth century. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, these traders established fur posts in the Minnesota River valley at
Lake Traverse,
Big Stone Lake,
Lac qui Parle, and
Traverse des Sioux. The large fur companies also built posts, including the North West Company's stations at
Pembina and
St. Joseph in the valley of the Red River. The paths between these posts became parts of the first of the Red River Trails. In 1815, 1822, and 1823, cattle were herded to the Red River Colony from Missouri by a route up the Des Moines River Valley to the Minnesota River, across the divide, then down the Red River to the Selkirk settlement. In 1819, following a devastating plague of locusts which left the colonists with insufficient seed to plant a crop, an expedition was sent by snowshoe to purchase seed at Prairie du Chien. It returned by
flatboat up the Mississippi and Minnesota Rivers and down the Red River, arriving back at the settlement in the summer of 1820. In 1821, five dissatisfied settler families left the colony for
Fort Snelling, the forerunners of later tides of migration up and down the valley between the two nations. These early expeditions on the watersheds of these two streams were among the earliest known through trips on the route of the first Red River Trail.
West Plains Trail The
West Plains Trail had originated with Native Americans, and before the ox cart traffic it connected the fur-
trading posts of the
Columbia Fur Company. In fact, that company introduced the
Red River ox cart to haul its furs and goods. It also developed the trails, and by the early 1830s, an expedition from the Selkirk settlement driving a flock of sheep from Kentucky to the Assiniboine found the trail to be well-marked. From the Red River Settlement, the trail went south upstream along the Red River's west bank to Pembina, just across the international border. Pembina had been a fur-trading post since the last decade of the eighteenth century. From there, some traffic continued south along the river, but most cart trains went west along the
Pembina River to
St. Joseph near the border and then south, or else cut the corner to the southwest in order to intercept the southbound trail from St. Joseph. This north-south trail paralleled the Red River about to the west. By staying on the uplands west of the Red River, this route avoided crossing the tributaries of that river near their confluences with the Red, and also kept out of the swampy, flood-prone, and mosquito-ridden bottomlands in the lakebed of Glacial Lake Agassiz which the river drained. r and cart train operator
Norman Kittson In what is now southeastern
North Dakota, the trail veered to the south-southeast to close with the Red River at
Georgetown,
Fort Abercrombie, and
Breckenridge, Minnesota, all of which came into existence in consequence of the passing cart traffic. From Breckenridge, the trail continued upstream along the east bank of the Red and
Bois des Sioux Rivers to the continental divide at Lake Traverse. Some traffic went along the lakeshore through the
Traverse Gap on the continental divide, then down either side of Big Stone Lake, source of the Minnesota River, while other carters took a short cut directly south from the Bois des Sioux across the open prairie through modern
Graceville, Minnesota thereby avoiding the wet country in the Traverse Gap. The trail continued on intertwined routes down both sides of the valley of the Minnesota River past fur posts at
Lac qui Parle and downstream locations, and the
Upper Sioux and
Lower Sioux Indian Agencies and
Fort Ridgely, all established in the 1850s. From Fort Ridgely, the trail struck across the open prairie to the Minnesota River at
Traverse des Sioux near modern-day
St. Peter, Minnesota, where the furs and goods were, at first, usually transshipped to flatboats. In later years, most cart trains crossed to the east bank and proceeded northeast along the wooded river bottoms and uplands to
Fort Snelling or Mendota, where the Minnesota River joined the Mississippi. From there furs were shipped down the Mississippi River to
Saint Louis and other markets. Sporadic at first, trade between Fort Garry and the Mississippi became more regular in 1835, when a caravan of traders from the Red River came to Mendota. The efforts of the Hudson's Bay Company to enforce its monopoly only induced the fur traders to avoid the company's jurisdiction by moving across the border to the United States. These included
Norman Kittson whose enormous fur-trading and shipping enterprise along the West Plains Trail started with one six-cart train in 1844. In later years, trains consisting of hundreds of ox carts were sent from Kittson's post at Pembina, just inside U.S. territory and safely outside the reach of the Hudson's Bay Company. While some of this fur traffic was shifted to other routes in 1854, the forts, missions, Indian agencies, and remaining through traffic to Fort Garry kept the trails busy, and they were improved in the 1850s and supplemented by military roads.
Woods Trail The West Plains Trail, although relatively level, went by a lengthy route through the lands of the
Dakota people, and the shorter East Plains Trail also skirted Dakota land. The Dakota were the enemy of the
Ojibwa, to whom the carters were related by blood and marriage. These tensions led to conflicts. One such bloody confrontation in the summer of 1844 (caused by an attack by carters on Dakota hunters) occurred when that year's expedition of free traders were in
Saint Paul. This meant that they could not safely return by the normal route. The traders therefore struck northwest up the Mississippi to
Crow Wing at the mouth of the
Crow Wing River, west up that river and across the
height of land to the fur post at
Otter Tail Lake, then northwest across the prairie to a crossing of the Red River near its confluence with the
Forest River. The next year, a southbound party followed its tracks, and by the year after (1846), the final route had been well-established inland from the Red River bottomlands. This trail was known as the
Woods or
Crow Wing Trail; it was also known locally as the
Saint Paul Trail and
Pembina Trail. As the first of these names indicates, the path was partially wooded, as its southern reaches crossed the transition zone between the western prairies and eastern woodland. From Fort Garry, southbound cart trains followed the eastern edge of the Red River's Great Plains, crossing the
Roseau River and the international border. In Minnesota, the trail was joined by a route coming from Pembina to the northwest, and continued south on a level prairie in the former lakebed of prehistoric Lake Agassiz. It ascended to and followed a firm gravelly ridge which was once among the higher beaches or strandlines of that ancient lake, forded the
Red Lake River at the
Old Crossing near modern
Huot, and angled south by southeast to the fur post at
White Earth. At Otter Tail Lake, the route left the plains and turned east into a forest in the
Leaf Mountains on the continental divide. Taking a difficult but scenic path east through the woods, the trail crossed the Mississippi River at
Old Crow Wing. It then went south down the east bank of that river on a smooth and open glacial
outwash sandplain to
Sauk Rapids and
East Saint Cloud. The final lap of the trail to Saint Paul, which had replaced Mendota as the principal
entrepôt for the cart trade, continued along the sandplain on the east bank of the Mississippi. This route ran within a few miles of the river to
Saint Anthony Falls and the community of that name which was growing on the east bank of the Mississippi. The trail then left the river and crossed open country to Saint Paul. The carters camped on the uplands west of the steamboat landing during the interval between their arrival with the furs and their return to the north with supplies and trade goods. Inferior in terrain to other routes, the Woods Trail was superior in safety, as it was well within the lands of the Ojibwa. It was less well used during times of relative calm. In the late 1850s, its utility was increased by improvements made by the U.S. Army, which straightened and improved the winding ox path through the woods along the Leaf and Crow Wing Rivers, and also replaced the old trail along the Mississippi River between
Fort Ripley (near Crow Wing) and Sauk Rapids with a military road.
East Plains Trail The
Middle or
East Plains Trail also came into common use in the 1840s. Shorter than the competing West Plain Trail, it became the route of the large cart trains originating from Pembina when well-known trader
Henry Sibley retired from the fur trade in 1854. His successor and former partner Norman Kittson moved their company's cart trains from the West Plains Trail in the Minnesota River valley to the East Plains route. The East Plains Trail followed the older routes of the West Plains Trail from Pembina to Breckenridge, Minnesota, then struck east by a variety of routes out of the Red River Valley across the upper valleys of the
Pomme de Terre and
Chippewa Rivers (tributaries of the Minnesota River), to
Saint Cloud and
Sauk Rapids on the Upper Mississippi. Soon however, a branch was added to connect the East Plains Trail with the Woods Trail. This link skirted the west slope of the Leaf Mountains and joined the East Plains routes at
Elbow Lake or near the
Otter Tail River. At times, this eastern connection may have been the better-travelled of the two variants. At Saint Cloud, the furs of some of the cart brigades were transshipped to river craft on the Mississippi, which operated to Saint Anthony Falls at
Minneapolis. Other cart trains crossed the Mississippi and travelled on to Saint Paul on a route shared with the Woods Trail. == Commerce ==