Gingras Trading Post State Historic Site Explained

Gingras House and Trading Post
Location:NE of Walhalla off ND 32
Nearest City:Walhalla, North Dakota
Coordinates:48.9369°N -97.8908°W
Built:1845
Architect:Antoine Blanc Gingras
Added:May 21, 1975
Refnum:75001305 [1]

The Gingras Trading Post State Historic Site is a North Dakota State Historic Site near Walhalla, North Dakota. It features the trading post and home of the Metis legislator and fur trader Antoine Blanc Gingras (1821–1877).[2]

Antoine Blanc Gingras

Antoine Gingras was born in 1821 at Red River, the son of Antoine Cuthbert Gingras, a North West Company voyageur and Marguerite Madeleine Trottier. He began his career as a hunter and trapper. Gingras built a two-story exposed-log trading post and a clapboard house on his plot of land in the 1840s. In 1861, the net worth of Gingras was $60,000.00. He soon owned trading posts across the Dakota Territory and parts of Southern Manitoba. In 1851, Gingras was chosen to represent the area in the Minnesota Territorial House of Representatives. He served in the legislature from 1852 to 1853.[3]

When Louis Riel (1844–1885) started the 1869 Red River Rebellion, Gingras also participated in the events. When the City of Winnipeg was chartered in 1873, Gingras was present. Gingras died on September 26, 1877, at Walhalla, North Dakota.[4] [5]

Today

Gingras Trading Post is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. North Dakota State Historical Society operates the site. It features the original buildings and exhibits about Antoine Blanc Gingras, Metis culture, and the Red River Valley fur trade. It also contains a reproduction of the Gingras Store.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://npgallery.nps.gov/NRHP/GetAsset/f1ed23f4-953c-49b8-9ba8-b02f697f38c3
  2. http://collections.mnhs.org/visualresources/details.cfm?imageid=193192 Antoine Blanc Gingras, Metis Fur Trader and member of the Minnesota Territorial Legislature, 1852–1853
  3. Web site: Antoine-Blanc Gingras (1821-1877) Metis Trader and Resistance Activist. Louis Riel Institute . March 1, 2020.
  4. Web site: Gingras, Antoine Blanc . Minnesota Legislative Reference Library . March 1, 2020.
  5. Web site: Louis Riel. Dictionary of Canadian Biography . March 1, 2020.