Everything about Michel Brisbois totally explained
Michel Brisbois was a French-Canadian
voyageur who was active in the upper
Mississippi River valley as early as 1781. Originally a fur trader for the
Hudson's Bay Company, he eventually settled in
Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin where he became a
baker.
Still a trader at heart, Brisbois, noting the lack of stability in early government currency, encouraged the use of bread (from his bakery) as a unit of exchange.
History
Michel [akaMichael] was born in
Maska, Canada, in 1759. He attended school in
Quebec. Soon turning to the fur trade, he worked out of
Mackinac (1778), and in 1781 he moved his operations to Prairie du Chien where, with other French Canadian traders, he founded the first permanent white settlement. Although sympathizing with the British in the struggle for control of the
Northwest Territory, he accepted a commission in the
Illinois Territorial Militia (1809). During the
War of 1812, he furnished supplies to both the American and British forces but maintained a pro-British attitude. Arrested for treason at the close of the war, he was sent to St. Louis for trial but was acquitted. He was appointed associate justice for Crawford County by Governor Cass of
Michigan Territory (1819), and thereafter held various local offices in the Prairie du Chien area. In 1785 Michel married a
Winnebago woman (reputedly the illegitimate daughter of
Charles Gautier de Verville) and had three Metis children: Angellic, Michel and Antoine. She lived with her Winnebago relatives. Michel's second marriage on August 8, 1796, was in
Mackinaw City, Michigan, to Domitelle (Madelaine) Gautier de Verville, legitimate daughter of Charles Gautier de Verville. To Michel and his second wife, a son
Bernard Walter Brisbois was born in Prairie du Chien in 1808. Michel died in Prairie du Chien in June, 1837.
Brisbois House (I)
» For Brisbois House (II), see
Bernard Brisbois House
Built in 1815, the
Michel Brisbois House served as a trading post and warehouse of the
American Fur Company. Sometime during the 1850's the house was demolished. By 1923, the
Bernard Brisbois House was believed to be the Michel Brisbois House and was thought of being one of the oldest European-American buildings in the State of
Wisconsin. However, after careful research by the
Wisconsin Historical Society, it was determined that this structure wasn't the famed Michel Brisbois House but rather a home built by Joseph Rolette as part of a separation contract negotiated in 1836 for his estranged wife Jane Fisher Rolette, a relative of Michel Brisbois, who upon her second marriage transferred the title of the property to her cousin
Bernard Walter Brisbois.
Sources
- Wisconsin State Historical Society
- Early Families of Upper Great Lakes, Oconto County -Reminiscence of Theresa Barrette. LDS Disc #78 Pin #800053.
- Genealogical research by Richard Alan Nelson, 2007.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Michel Brisbois'.
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