Fort William, the first Fort Laramie, in 1837.
From a painting by A. J. Miller. Courtesy Mrs. Clyde Porter.
ON THE LEVEL LAND near the junction of the Laramie
and North Platte Rivers stands Fort Laramie, long a landmark and symbol
of the Old West. Situated at a strategic point on a natural route of
travel, the site early attracted the attention of trail-blazing fur
trappers, who established the first fort. In later years it offered
protection and refreshment to the throngs who made the great western
migrations over the Oregon Trail. It was a station for the Pony Express
and the Overland Stage. It served as an important base in the conquest
of the Plains Indians, and it witnessed the development of the open
range cattle industry, the coming of the homesteaders, and the final
settlement which marked the closing of the frontier. Perhaps no other
single site is so intimately connected with the history of the Old West
in all its phases.
Early Fur Trade on the Platte, 1812-30
American and French Canadian fur traders and
trappers, exploring the land, traveled the North Platte Route
intermittently for over two decades before the original fort was
established at the mouth of the Laramie River. First to mention the
well-wooded stream flowing into the North Platte River from the
southwest was Robert Stuart, leader of the seven "Returning Astorians"
on their path-breaking journey from Astoria at the mouth of the Columbia
River to St. Louis, by way of South Pass in the Rockies and the valley
of the Platte, during the winter of 1812-13. They journeyed
eastward over what was to become the greatest roadway to the West, thus
entitling them to recognition as the discoverers of the Oregon
Trail.
Records of actual fur trade activity in this area for
the next 10 years are extremely meager, but many geographical names bear
witness to the gradual westward movement of the beaver hunters, some of
them undoubtedly of Canadian origin. Among them was Jacques La Ramee
who, according to tradition, was killed by Indians in 1821 on the stream
which now bears his name and which was destined to become the setting of
Fort Laramie. Famous only in death, his name was to be given also to a
plains region, a peak, a mountain range, a town, a city, and a county in
Wyoming.
In 1823, Jim Bridger, Jedediah Smith, and other
enterprising trappers of the Rocky Mountain Fur Co., going overland from
the upper Missouri, rediscovered South Pass and the lush beaver country
west of the Continental Divide. In 1824, while taking furs back to "the
States," a band of "mountain men" under Thomas Fitzpatrick became the
first Americans of record to pass the mouth of the Laramie after the
Astorians. For 15 years thereafter the St. Louis traders sent supply
trains up the North Platte route to the annual trappers' rendezvous,
usually held in the valleys of the Green or Wind Rivers. In 1830,
William Sublette, with supplies for the rendezvous on the Wind River,
took the first wagons over the greater part of what was to become the
Oregon Trail.
The Laramie and its tributaries were also the homes
of the prized beaver, and much trading was done at the pleasant
campsites near its mouth. Here, too, was the junction with the trappers'
trail to Taos.
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