Fort Henry (North Dakota) Explained

Fort Henry on the Missouri River, located at the mouth of the Yellowstone where it enters the Missouri, was established on October 1, 1822, by a party of men led by Major Andrew Henry, who mounted the expedition for the purpose of establishing a fur trade outpost for an area which now encompasses most of Montana, western North Dakota, parts of Wyoming, into Canada.[1] [2] The site of the fort, which was abandoned in 1823, is approximately southwest of Williston, North Dakota near the Montana - North Dakota state line.

Other short-lived forts were established by Henry on his earlier expedition with the Missouri Fur Company. In the spring of 1810, the first Fort Henry[3] was built at the Three Forks of the Missouri River near-present day Three Forks, Montana, but was abandoned shortly thereafter.[4] A second Fort Henry[5] was established during the fall of 1810 on Henry's Fork of the Snake River in present-day southeastern Idaho; it was abandoned in 1811.[6]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Brown, Mark H. . 1969 . The Plainsmen of the Yellowstone: A History of the Yellowstone Basin . Lincoln, Neb. . University of Nebraska Press . 64 . 0803250266 .
  2. Web site: National Park Service . 2011 . Andrew Henry . 6 August 2011 .
  3. http://fortwiki.com/Fort_Henry_%281%29 Fort Wiki: Fort Henry (1)
  4. http://lewis-clark.org/content/content-article.asp?ArticleID=2970 W. Raymond Wood. First Post in the Far West: (November 1807 – March 1813). Discovering Lewis & Clark.
  5. http://fortwiki.com/Fort_Henry_%282%29 Fort Wiki: Fort Henry (2)
  6. E. S. . Lohse . 1993 . Southeastern Idaho Native American Prehistory and History . Manual for Archaeological Analysis: Field and Laboratory Analysis Procedures. Department of Anthropology Miscellaneous Paper No. 92-1 (Revised) . Pocatello . Idaho Museum of Natural History .