- Antoine Janis
Antoine Janis (
March 26 ,1824 –1890) was a 19th centuryFrench-American fur trade r and an early white homesteader in Larimer County,Colorado in theUnited States . The first recorder permanent white settler in northern Colorado, he founded the town of Laporte in 1858.Biography
Janis was born in
St. Charles, Missouri to a French Father and a Mulatto Mother. As a boy, Antoine accompanied his father on trading caravans fromMissouri to the Green River. In 1836 he accompanied his father on a caravan along theCache la Poudre River valley in present-day Larimer County. It is possible but not established that the river obtained its name during this trip.In 1844 he journeyed west on his own, working with brother Nicholas as a scout and interpreter out of
Fort Laramie , where he married First Elk Woman of theOglala Sioux tribe. While returning from a trip toMexico , he passed through present-day Colorado along the Poudre Valley, arriving at the spot where the Poudre emerges from the foothills. He was particularly taken by the valley, calling it "the loveliest spot on earth." At the time, the area was not open to homesteading but was part of the hunting territory of theArapaho andCheyenne . Janis staked out a squatter's claim on the river bottom just west of present-day Laporte in June 1844, with the expectation of returning to homestead there once it was possible to legally file the claim.The opening up of the western
Nebraska Territory to homesteading allowed Janis to return to the area 1858 with his claim filed. He was accompanied by a party of other homesteaders from Fort Laramie, including John B. Provost, his brothers Francis and Nichola Janis, Antoine LeBeau, Tood Randall, E.W. Raymond, B. Goodman, and Oliver Morrisette. His arrival to the area with his wife came one year before the flood of prospectors in the 1859Colorado Gold Rush . Janis settled in the area with approximately 150 lodges of Arapaho, who accompanied him to the spot. With the other members of his party, he founded the town of Colona, which later became Laporte, the first white community in Larimer County. The following year he erected a small wooden house on the south side of Poudre River where he kept a grocery and saloon.He continued to live in the area until 1878, when a general order from the federal government forced his wife to move to the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation inSouth Dakota . Janis sold his cabin and accompanied his wife to the reservation, where he died in 1890.In 1939, Janis' wooden homestead cabin was moved from Laporte to its present location adjacent to the
Fort Collins Museum in Fort Collins. The cabin is part of the museum grounds open to the public and has been partially restored for tours.References
*"
History of Larimer County, Colorado ",Ansel Watrous (1911)
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