- Jacques de Noyon
Jacques de Noyon (1668 – 1745) was a
French Canadian explorer andcoureur des bois . He is the first known European to visit theBoundary Waters region west ofLake Superior .Jacques de Noyon was born on
February 12 ,1668 , in Trois-Rivières,New France . His family moved to Boucherville not long after.In 1688, de Noyon and three others traveled from the Montreal area to Fort Caministigoyan on
Lake Superior , located at present-dayThunder Bay, Ontario . From there they traveled inland up theKaministiquia River . His group followed the Indigenous canoe route over theLaurentian Divide , past the present-day site ofAtikokan, Ontario , through what is nowQuetico Provincial Park andVoyageurs National Park ,Minnesota . He built a fort, established ties to the localAssiniboine people, and spent the winter on the shore ofRainy Lake . There is some question as to whether de Noyon in fact made it as far asLake of the Woods or not. The following summer de Noyon returned to Lake Superior, perhaps along what is now theUnited States -Canada border and includes Quetico Provincial Park, theBoundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness ,La Verendrye Provincial Park , andGrand Portage National Monument .English-French animosity prevented Europeans from returning to the area west of Lake Superior for a number of years. In the 1730s La Vérendrye re-visited this
Boundary Waters region, perhaps with assistance from the knowledge gained by de Noyon's travels over 40 years before. The region would become an important part of the North Americanfur trade , connecting theGreat Lakes to the far northwestern interior ofManitoba ,Saskatchewan , and beyond.Jacques de Noyon continued to travel throughout
New France andNew England as a trader andcoureur des bois . He died1745-05-12 in Boucherville.External links
* [http://www.angelfire.com/ak/altairhm/DENIO2.htm Genealogical information for "de Noyon"]
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=1567 Biography at the "Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online"]
* [http://www.fort-frances.com/museum/thefort.html Fort Frances Museum]
* [http://atlas.nrcan.gc.ca/site/english/maps/historical/exploration/1688_noyon.mov/view Atlas of Canada]
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.