Wednesday, August 25, 2021

French Canadian Francis A. Janeaux—and the founding of Lewistown, MT

      One name that comes up in discussions of the founding of Lewistown is Janeaux or Jeaneaux, the name of a French Canadian who was informally deputized by the local military authority, led a group of "half-breeds," and, largely in service of that Métis community, set up trading posts in the Milk River Valley (northeast of Central Montana). By 1879, he and the community moved south—following the buffalo—setting up a post in what came to be Lewistown. Thus it was that the original town was in truth a Métis community, some of whom stuck around long enough to become town founders/elders.

     Here's what I found online:

From Legends of America 

Fort Janeaux, Montana 

Fort Janeaux, Montana, also called Janeaux’s Post, Fort Turnay, and Medicine Lodge was established by Francis A. Janeaux, a licensed Metis Indian trader and later the founder of Lewistown, Montana. He and his wife, Virginia Laverdure Janeaux, established a homestead in the fall of 1879 on Big Spring Creek, and in partnership with the trading firm of Leighton Brothers, Janeaux built a substantial post. The trading post, which measured about 100 by 150 feet, was surrounded by a stockade with two bastions at diagonal corners. In the middle were several log cabins, one for him and his family, and the others were reserved for clerks and interpreters. The post traded buffalo robes, furs, meat, and pemmican with traveling bands of Missouri River Indians and with about 100 families of the Red River Metis. No sooner had Janeaux established his trading post, when he found himself in direct competition with Alfonzo S. Reed and his Reed’s Fort Settlement, which was situated just ½ mile away. However, in the end, Janeaux would win out. 

In 1882, he and his wife donated a plot of 40 acres to develop the townsite of Lewistown and the following year he sold his store. By 1884, a two-story hotel was built facing the store, and before long livery stables and saloons surrounded his old trading post. Today, his post would have sat at what is the intersection of Third Avenue North and Broadway, right in the center of present-day Lewiston, Montana. 

—By Kathy Weiser-Alexander, updated February 2020.

* * *

     I found a second account of Janeaux's life. Here we learn, among other things, that Lewistown was originally called "Lewiston"—perhaps a reference to Camp Lewis, which had briefly existed at what became the site of the town.

Montana Memory Project 

"Jew merchant"? My my.
[DIGRESSION: 

From the New Oxford American Dictionary: 

Mé·tis| māˈtēs | noun (plural same) (especially in western Canada) a person of mixed indigenous and Euro-American ancestry, in particular one of a group of such people who in the 19th century constituted the so-called Métis nation in the areas around the Red and Saskatchewan rivers.]

Métis 

Wikipedia   

Fort Stevenson, to the east
Old map
Camp Lewis was a temporary camp established 10 May 1874 in present day Lewistown, Montana, by elements of the 7th U.S. Infantry from Fort Shaw. Built along the Big Spring Creek Fork of the Judith River and located two miles south of the city in 1874. Abandoned on 1 Nov 1874.

[DIGRESSION:

Gabriel Furshong 
 
Wikipedia 
The history of vigilante justice and the Montana Vigilantes began in 1863 in what was at the time a remote part of eastern Idaho Territory. Vigilante activities continued, although somewhat sporadically, through the Montana Territorial period until the territory became the state of Montana on November 8, 1889. Vigilantism arose because territorial law enforcement and the courts had very little power in the remote mining camps during the territorial period….]

Part of the Métis community

(Voice of America) 
By Cecily Hilleary (7-11-18) 

Read about Reed’s Fort, Montana 



Reed and Bowles' Trading Post
(lower Spring Creek)

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Maps and such

Reflects 1870s (not 1880s): "Camp Lewis was a temporary camp established 10 May 1874 in present day Lewistown, Montana, by elements of ...