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Kootenay Brown

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Name
  
Kootenay Brown


Kootenay Brown wwwmhsmbcadocsmbhistory30kootenaibrown1jpg

Died
  
July 18, 1916, Waterton Park, Canada

John George Brown (10 October 1839 – 18 July 1916), better known as "Kootenai" Brown, was an Irish-born Canadian polymath, soldier, trader and conservation advocate.

Contents

Kootenay Brown Manitoba History Kootenai Brown in the Red River Valley

Early life

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John George Brown was born and educated in Ennistymon, County Clare, Ireland. Brown was commissioned as a British Army officer in 1857 "without purchase" (a reference to the practise then common of wealthy Britons purchasing officers' commissions), joining the 8th Regiment as an ensign After serving in India from 1858-1859, in 1862 he sold his commission and joined the flood of prospectors joining the Cariboo Gold Rush in British Columbia, Canada.

Frontiersman

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He proved unsuccessful as a prospector, turning to trapping and then briefly policing, serving as constable in Wild Horse Creek, British Columbia (now gone).

Kootenay Brown 5 Frontiersmen of the Canadian Wild West 2 Kootenai Brown Canada

In 1865, he moved on, to Waterton Lakes , being wounded by a Blackfoot Indian on his way to Fort Garry (now Winnipeg), where he settled and became a whisky trader.

Kootenay Brown 5 Frontiersmen of the Canadian Wild West 2 Kootenai Brown Canada

Subsequent to that, he worked briefly for a company delivering mail to the United States Army until 1874, during which time he was captured and nearly killed by Sitting Bull in 1869.

Kootenay Brown Reeling Back Everything Old is News Again

After a quarrel (and obligatory gunfight) at Fort Benton, Montana, with "celebrated hunter" Louis Ell, in which Ell was killed, and subsequent trial and acquittal by a territorial jury, Brown returned to his beloved Kootenay, where he settled, building a reputation as a guide and packer.

Always arguing vigorously for the region's preservation, after the Kootenay Forest Reserve (a Canadian version of a national forest) was established in 1895, Brown became a fishery officer and in 1910, a forest ranger.

He lived to see the reserve expanded into Waterton Lakes National Park, which became contiguous with Glacier National Park in Montana, in 1914.

Marriage and family

In 1869, Kootenay Brown married a local Metis woman and ultimately made a living bison hunting and wolfing.

Death

Kootenay Brown died in Waterton Lakes, Alberta, Canada and was buried alongside his two wives.

The 1991 movie Showdown at Williams Creek starring Tom Burlinson, Raymond Burr and Donnelly Rhodes provides a loose portrayal of his life.

The Kootenai Brown Pioneer Village in Pincher Creek Alberta is named after Kootenai Brown for his contribution to the history of the surrounding area. Kootenai Brown's cabin is also located on site.

References

Kootenay Brown Wikipedia