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  2. Pierre Chouteau Jr. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Chouteau_Jr.

    Pierre Chouteau followed in the family footsteps by starting a trade with the Osage tribe at age 15. He also operated lead mines around Dubuque, Iowa until the War of 1812 . [ 3 ] Chouteau was a member of Bernard Pratte and Company, the Western agent for John Jacob Astor 's American Fur Company in 1827.

  3. Jean-Pierre Chouteau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Pierre_Chouteau

    Jean-Pierre Chouteau (French pronunciation: [ʒɑ̃ pjɛʁ ʃuto]; 10 October 1758 – 10 July 1849) [1] was a French Creole fur trader, merchant, politician, and slaveholder. An early settler of St. Louis from New Orleans , he became one of its most prominent citizens.

  4. Fort Pierre Chouteau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Pierre_Chouteau

    Fort Pierre Chouteau, also just Fort Pierre, was a major trading post and military outpost in the mid-19th century on the west bank of the Missouri River in what is now central South Dakota. Established in 1832 by Pierre Chouteau, Jr. of St. Louis, Missouri , whose family were major fur traders, this facility operated through the 1850s.

  5. Chouteau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chouteau

    Louise Chouteau, married Gabriel Paul; Emilie Chouteau, married Thomas Floyd, US officer in the Black Hawk War; Children of Marie-Therèse Bourgeois Chouteau and Pierre Laclède (also founder of St. Louis, Missouri): Victoire Chouteau, (1760-1825), wife of Charles Gratiot Sr., financier of the Illinois campaign during the American Revolutionary War

  6. Auguste Pierre Chouteau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auguste_Pierre_Chouteau

    Auguste Pierre Chouteau (9 May 1786 – 25 December 1838) was a member of the Chouteau fur-trading family who established trading posts in what is now the U.S. state of Oklahoma. Chouteau was born in St. Louis, then part of Spanish colonial Upper Louisiana. His father was Jean Pierre Chouteau, one of the first

  7. Auguste Chouteau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auguste_Chouteau

    This includes three girls and a boy, Jean Pierre Chouteau, who later became a partner with Auguste in business and politics. [27] The first Catholic church in St. Louis is where Auguste Chouteau married Marie-Thérèse Cerre in 1786. After Laclède's death in 1778, Chouteau took over the business of trading, adding greatly to the family ...

  8. Fort Carondelet - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Carondelet

    In 1802, abandoning his effort to maintain his monopoly, Pierre Chouteau sold Fort Carondelet to Lisa, who withdrew the garrison and abandoned the fort. [2] During the transfer of the Louisiana territory to the possession of the United States in 1804, Auguste Chouteau was employed by Spain to remove any remaining Spanish property from the fort.

  9. Emilie (steamboat) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emilie_(steamboat)

    Pierre Chouteau Jr. of the fur company having learned of LaBarge's prospects sent word to him and offered any assistance he might need in completing the vessel that would soon be widely known as Emilie. The American Fur Company still valued Captain LaBarge's ability and familiarity of the Missouri River and would gladly have taken him, and his ...