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MORRISON William

Male 1785 - 1866  (81 years)


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  • Name MORRISON William 
    Birth 07 Mar 1785  Montreal, PQ, Canada Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Gender Male 
    Death 07 Aug 1866  Morrison's Island Find all individuals with events at this location 
    • Buried in Sorel
    Notes 
    • William Morrison

      Posted by Dick Campbell on Mon, 12
      Apr 1999

      "William Morrison, one of Becker County's earliest white settlers,
      was born in Montreal, Canada, March 7th, 1785.

      His father was a Scotch immigrant named Allan Morrison, a native of
      Stornoway, on the Lewis, one of the Hebrides or western Isles,
      forming part of Scotland, and his mother a Canadian French lady named
      Jane (or Jessie) Wadin.

      William having received a common school education, commenced clerking
      in a store in Montreal before he was fifteen years of age.

      Montreal was at that time the home and general headquarters of the
      British and Canadian fur traders, who came down the Ottawa and St
      Lawrence Rivers, in mackinaw boats and birch-bark canoes, every
      summer, with their winter's collectionof furs, and returned the same
      season, to the far Northwest, with a new supply of goods for the next
      winter's business.

      The few avenues to fortunes presented to the ambitious young men by
      the Canada of that day, coupled with the tales of adventures, and
      stories of the large profits made in the fur trade, fired young
      Morrison's ambition, and he at the early age of sixteen, was
      apprenticed by his father with the Northwest Fur Company, then the
      great rival of the more ancient Hudson's Bay Company, and started for
      old Grand Portage on Lake Superior, the Company's western
      headquarters, with the returning boats.

      The next year, in 1802, he was sent to Leech Lake and thence to an
      outpost on the headwaters of one of the streams tributary to the Crow
      Wing River, from which point they collected furs from their Indian
      hunters scattered through what is now Becker and Otter Tail Counties.
      These Indians were Pillager Chippewas, and from information gathered
      from some of the old Indians I knew at Leech Lake in 1870, and who
      remembered well "Sha-gah-nansh-eence," the "Little Englishman," as he
      was called by the Chippewas, I would locate this outpost at Shell
      Lake.

      In 1803-4 Morrison wintered at Upper Rice Lake on the head waters of
      the Wild Rice River, and it was during that winter and the spring of
      1804 that he visited Lake Itasca and the various smaller lakes which
      form part of the source of the Mississippi River. No white man had
      ever visited that country before Morrison, and he rightfully claimed
      to be the discoverer of the source of this great river, although
      Nicollet, Beltrami and Schoolcraft all claimed this honor several
      years later.

      It being the policy of the Northwest Fur Company not to allow any of
      its traders to remain more than one or two years at the game outpost,
      Morrison was, in this manner, enabled to visit many places, and
      became well acquainted with the fur resources of a vast territory;
      the knowledge so acquired soon proved of great value to him.

      His industrious habits and natural shrewdness, coupled with his
      ability to handle the rough "voyageurs" and his popularity among the
      Indians, soon attracted the notice of his employers, and after
      several years spent in managing various trading posts tn Minnesota,
      he was placed in charge of a number of them, with headquarters at
      Sandy Lake, on the upper Mississippi River. It was while stationed
      there that an incident occurred, illustrating his popularity with,
      and influence over the Indians.

      Tecumseh's brother, "The Prophet," had sent out his tobacco to all
      the western and northwestern tribes, with a secret message to the
      Indians to join him in a general massacre of the whites in the Indian
      country.

      Such was the reputation and influence of this famous grand medicine
      man, the prophet, over the Indians, that although the Chippewas were
      of a peaceful disposition and had no great cause of complaint against
      their traders, they dared not refuse the invitation. The tobacco sent
      was smoked in secret council, the Indians withdrew away from the
      trading posts, and generally assumed an unfriendly attitude.

      Morrison had left Sandy Lake and gone on a business trip to Fond du
      Lac, to meet with the other chief traders and the managing board of
      the Northwest Company. While there, messengers came in from Sandy
      Lake and a number of other trading posts, with reports, that the
      Indians were acting in an unfriendly manner, and that their actions
      indicated there was mischief a brewing, but none of the traders'
      employes could find out what the trouble was.

      The assembled traders decided that Morrison was the only one able to
      get the secret out of the Indians, and he started at once for Sandy
      Lake, his own post, with the messenger who had brought the report.
      They had a light birch canoe and traveled rapidly, so that on the
      forenoon of the third day they paddled out of Prairie River into
      Sandy Lake.

      Some young Indians, who were returning from a deer hunt, recognizing
      him, hurried home to spread the news, that the "Little Englishman"
      was coming home. From stray hints heard while at Fond du Lac,Morrison
      had made up his mind that "The Prophet" was at the bottom of the
      trouble, and he soon decided on his plan of action. Paddling close to
      the shore he was soon opposite the wigwams of the Indians, but
      contrary to custom he never stopped to enquire about the news and
      kept on as if in a great hurry. This nettled the suspicious Indians,
      and one of them was sent on to intercept Morrison above one of the
      small portages which cut across the points formed by the long bends
      of the Mississippi River, below the mouth of the Sandy Lake River.
      His face was painted black, and as Morrison did not seem to notice
      him, the Indian hailed the canoe, when the paddlers stopped. "You
      seem to be in great hurry," said the Indian, "what news where you
      come from?" "Nothing," answered Morrison, "and what is going on
      here?" "Nothing here either." Then Morrison slowly began paddling
      away; stopping suddenly, he half turned around saying: "Oh yes, there
      is some news I was forgetting. The great medicine man, "The Prophet,"
      has been killed by the Long Knives, (the Americans). Then he resumed
      paddling and soon reached his stockade, a short distance down the
      Mississippi. The next day the Indians flocked in and resumed friendly
      relations, without showing the least sign of ill feeling.

      As luck would have it, messengers came a few days afterwards from
      Lake Superior; confirming his report of the death of "The Prophet,"
      and all circumstances connected with the plot came out.

      It was a lucky hit. Morrison had calculated that if he could get the
      Indians to come around, he would succeed in getting them started out
      deer hunting, birch-bark raising, etc., and get them scattered, so
      they could not spend their days of idleness in plotting more
      mischief.

      William Morrison stayed with the Northwest Fur Company until in 1816,
      when being offered better inducements, he joined the American Fur
      Company (John Jacob Astor's), and was placed in charge of the
      department of Fond du Lac, with headquarters at Old Superior,
      Wisconsin. This department embracing within its territory, Lake
      Vermillion, Red Lake, Sandy Lake, Leech Lake, Lake Winnebagoshish,
      Cass Lake, Otter Tail Lake, Crow Wing on the Mississippi, and Grand
      Portage on Lake Superior. He remained in charge of John Jacob Astor's
      business there until 1826, when having acquired what was called a
      competency for those day', he retired from the fur trade and returned
      to Canada. There to purchased a large island, since known as
      Morrison's Island, in the St. Lawrence River, between Old Fort
      William Henry, now Sorel, on the south shore, and Berthier-en-Haut,
      on the north shore of the river.

      For some years he was engaged in farming, but pastoral life was too
      quiet and unexciting for his active mind, and after a few years spent
      on the farm, he settled in Berthier, where for many years he carried
      on a mercantile business, and was also judge of the county court.

      While trading in the upper Mississippi country, he married a Pillager
      Chippewa woman, by whom he had two boys and a girl. His wife dying
      soon after the birth of the last born, the children were, according
      to Indian custom, taken care of by the wife's mother, who always
      thereafter followed and lived with her grandchildren. When Morrison
      left the Indian country in 1826, he made arrangements to take his
      three children with him, but on the eve of the day set for the
      departure of the boats, from Superior for Mackinoe, the grandmother
      stole the children and disappeared during the night. Search for them
      was made for several days, but with-out success, and they were
      necessarily left behind. They returned eventually to Leech Lake, and
      in course of time the two boys grew to be great hunters and warriors,
      and many Sioux scalps dangled from their belts whenever they went out
      with a war party.

      In spite of their Indian bringing up, and thanks to the good advice
      given them by their uncle, Allan Morrison, they never forgot that
      they were of white blood, and always exercised their influence over
      their reckless tribesmen to keep them from molesting the whites, and
      but for the stand take n by Joseph, (or Ay-gans as the Indians called
      him), at Leech Lake during the outbreak of 1862, there would have
      been a massacre of the employes and traders at the agency.

      Hole-in-the-day, head chief of the Mississippi Chippewas, had stirred
      up the Pillagers to such a pitch that they had robbed the stores and
      made the whites prisoners. They had met in several councils and the
      most reckless of them had decided that the whites must die the next
      morning. Ay-gans had taken an active part in the councils, but had
      always taken the part of the prisoners. At last, when he saw that all
      his efforts had been in vain, he got up and spoke about their
      comradeship in war and in the hunts, and also on their relationship
      to one another and of that law of nature which binds kin to kin, and
      then he bared his arm, displaying his light skin, saying: "You are
      talking of killing our white friends. and you say they must die
      tomorrow. Look at this arm; it is light colored, the blood that runs
      through it is white man's blood, and when you kill our white friends
      you will kill me also." That last part of the speech was telling. Ay-
      gans was a brave man, and his last words, were to Indian ears, both
      defiant and threatening. The next morning other brave men took sides
      with the whites and their lives were spared. They were marched down
      to Gull Lake as prisoners, and turned over to the care of the Gull
      Lake Indians, and afterwards liberated.

      Descendants of this Jos. Morrison are now settled on the Wild Rice
      River in Norman County, but formerly were a part of the first
      contingent of Otter Tail Chippewas, who removed with their father to
      Becker County in 1872, and settled around the present agency and the
      Old Trading Post.

      The daughter was taken into the family of one of the missionaries and
      followed them to Stillwater, where she married a German farmer, and
      died several years ago. Joseph died at Beaulieu, Minn., in January,
      1889. His older brother Richard, or Dekaince, died at Otter Tail Lake
      about 1870.

      William Morrison's second wife was a Miss Ronssain, daughter of a
      Fond du Lac, Minn., Indian trader. She was the mother of two sons and
      two daughters, and went with her husband to Canada, where she died a
      few years afterwards. William, the older of the two boys, left Canada
      for the. west and eventually joining one of Col. Fremont's
      expeditions to the Pacific coast, went to California, where he
      settled and died about 1850.

      The younger son, Donald George, left Canada before he was twenty
      years of age, and worked his way through Michigan, Illinois and
      Wisconsin to Minnesota, where he settled in the Red River valley near
      the boundary line, and became a member of the territorial Legislature
      of Minnesota. A few years later he settled in Old Superior;
      Wisconsin, where he was elected register of deeds of Douglas County,
      an office he held for years afterwards. He died in Superior, in 1898.

      After the death: of his second wife, William Morrison found himself
      with four young children, with none but hired help to manage and care
      for them, so after a couple years of this kind of existence, he
      married Miss Elizabeth Ann Kittson, an elder sister of the late
      Commodore N. W. Kittson of St Paul, Minnesota. Four daughters were
      born of that union.

      Mrs. Morrison died in February, 1864, and her husband, who had been
      blind for several years could not bear up long under the blow. He
      aged rapidly after this, and although surrounded by kind friends who
      endeavored by their attentions and company, to keep his mind
      interested in the events of the day, he lost all interest in life and
      gradually passed away. He died on Morrison's Island August 7th, 1866,
      and was buried in Sorel, alongside of his last wife.

      In religion he was an Episcopalian, and in politics a Conservative,
      and a strong supporter of the Canadian government in the troublesome
      years of 1837-38, and possessed of much influence with the
      authorities. This he used to good advantage after the rebellion, and
      was instrumental in saving the lives and liberty of many of his
      patriotic friends."

      from pages 226 - 232 in the book "A Pioneer History of Becker County
      Minnesota" by Alvin H. Wilcox, published in 1907.

      A Pioneer History of Becker County,
      Minnesota
    Person ID I5839  Freeman-Smith
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2024 

    Father MORRISON Allan,   b. Stornoway, Scotland Find all individuals with events at this location 
    Relationship natural 
    Mother WADIN Jane 
    Relationship natural 
    Family ID F5830  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart

    Family 1 Me-She-Pe-He-Quay 
    Children 
     1. MORRISON Joseph  [natural]
    Family ID F5839  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2024 

    Family 2 KITTSON Elizabeth Ann 
    Family ID F10417  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2024 

    Family 3 RONSSAIN Miss 
    Family ID F10418  Group Sheet  |  Family Chart
    Last Modified 10 Apr 2024 


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