Fort Vancouver in 1845

In 1824 Dr. John McLoughlin built the first Fort Vancouver on a broad high prairie nearly a mile back from the river. It had no block houses, which is evidence of the amicable relations between Dr. McLoughlin and the Indians. They called him "White Eagle Chief". In 1828 he built a new fort...

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Bibliographic Details
Format: Still Image
Language:unknown
Published: 1900
Subjects:
Online Access:http://oregondigital.org/catalog/oregondigital:df715m585
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spelling ftoregondigital:oai:oregondigital.org:osu-scarc/df715m585 2023-05-15T16:35:23+02:00 Fort Vancouver in 1845 Vancouver, Clark County, Washington, United States 1900/1940 image/tiff http://oregondigital.org/catalog/oregondigital:df715m585 unknown OSU Special Collections & Archives Research Center; Visual Instruction Department Lantern Slides, 1900-1940 (P 217) http://oregondigital.org/catalog/oregondigital:df715m585 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/; default Image 1900 ftoregondigital 2022-11-14T22:21:56Z In 1824 Dr. John McLoughlin built the first Fort Vancouver on a broad high prairie nearly a mile back from the river. It had no block houses, which is evidence of the amicable relations between Dr. McLoughlin and the Indians. They called him "White Eagle Chief". In 1828 he built a new fort near the river - just out of reach of higher water. The sketch shown here is of this fort at about the time Dr. McLoughlin resigned from the service of the Hudson Bay Co., after having been its Chief Factor and the outstanding figure in the history of the Northwest for more than two decades. Still Image Hudson Bay Oregon Digital (University of Oregon/Oregon State University) Hudson Hudson Bay
institution Open Polar
collection Oregon Digital (University of Oregon/Oregon State University)
op_collection_id ftoregondigital
language unknown
description In 1824 Dr. John McLoughlin built the first Fort Vancouver on a broad high prairie nearly a mile back from the river. It had no block houses, which is evidence of the amicable relations between Dr. McLoughlin and the Indians. They called him "White Eagle Chief". In 1828 he built a new fort near the river - just out of reach of higher water. The sketch shown here is of this fort at about the time Dr. McLoughlin resigned from the service of the Hudson Bay Co., after having been its Chief Factor and the outstanding figure in the history of the Northwest for more than two decades.
format Still Image
title Fort Vancouver in 1845
spellingShingle Fort Vancouver in 1845
title_short Fort Vancouver in 1845
title_full Fort Vancouver in 1845
title_fullStr Fort Vancouver in 1845
title_full_unstemmed Fort Vancouver in 1845
title_sort fort vancouver in 1845
publishDate 1900
url http://oregondigital.org/catalog/oregondigital:df715m585
op_coverage Vancouver, Clark County, Washington, United States
geographic Hudson
Hudson Bay
geographic_facet Hudson
Hudson Bay
genre Hudson Bay
genre_facet Hudson Bay
op_relation OSU Special Collections & Archives Research Center; Visual Instruction Department Lantern Slides, 1900-1940 (P 217)
http://oregondigital.org/catalog/oregondigital:df715m585
op_rights http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/; default
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