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Area
History
The
history of the Lake of the Woods
region began in 1688 when Jacques
De Noyon came from Three Rivers,
Quebec to become the first white
man to view the waters.
Prehistorical evidence dates back
more than 5,000 years, perhaps
extending back 10,000 years to
ancient people who followed the
retreating glacial ice into the
area.
Following
Jacques De Noyon's arrival in
1688, there are no known
expeditions to the Lake of the
Woods area until Pierre La
Verendrye came with a party of
more than 50 men in 1732. La
Verendrye found northern Minnesota
populated by Cree, Monsonis,
Assiniboine and Sioux Indians. The
Ojibwe had not yet pushed as far
west as Lake of the Woods. The La
Verendrye party was a victim of
Indian warfare when Father Aulneau
and 19 other men were massacred on
an island in the lake by the Sioux
war party which had set out to
attack a Village of Cree. Today
there are two islands on the lake
which are identified as Massacre
Island. Each has its supporters
for being the site of the
Massacre. History for the next 75
to 100 years was characterized by
the onset of the voyageurs and
rivaling fur trading companies.
In
1823, members of the International
Joint Boundary Commission arrived
on the lake. They had been
appointed to establish the border
between Canada and the United
States as it had been designated
in the treaty which ended the
Revolutionary War. One of the most
difficult points of contention was
the establishment of the most
northwesterly point on the Lake of
the Woods. The Commission found a
point which they claimed was the
most northwesterly spot. However,
the surveyors from the two nations
differed on just where they had
located the spot. The dispute
continued for the next century and
the final agreement was not signed
until the 1920's. The end result
was that the U.S. retained
possession of the Northwest Angle.
As the United States' most
northerly point (before the
admission of Alaska), the
Northwest Angle became Lake of the
Woods County's most famous piece
of real estate.
In
1885, the county area got its
first permanent settler when
Wilhelm Zippel settled on the
south shore of the Lake of the
Woods at Zippel Bay. He was a
German immigrant who worked as a
fisherman. Later in that same
year, Alonzo Wheeler settled at
Wheeler's Point at the mouth of
the Rainy River. Thomas Cathcart
came to the border area in 1891
and later joined Joe Beaudette, a
trapper who would later give his
name to the town of Baudette. The
town was to be Beaudette but from
an early postal registry error the
"e" was lost. In 1901
William Mason and George Williams
followed the railroad track
roadbed to stake claims at the
site which would grow into the
community of Williams.
Baudette
and Spooner became incorporated
villages in 1906. Spooner,
informally referred to as East
Baudette, took its name from Judge
Spooner of Bemidji, who had been
instrumental in obtaining the
incorporation papers for the town.
On
October 4, 1910, a disaster struck
the Lake of the Woods area. A
forest fire which started east of
Williams burned most of the
northern half of the county and
left 43 people dead. After
recovering from the fire, the
county experienced another
settlement boom. Within the decade
following, nearly every 160 acre
plot was claimed. Most of these
settlements have now disappeared
and have been reclaimed by the
wilderness.
In
November of 1922, the vote for
separation from Beltrami County
was carried. Local residents had
been dissatisfied with the
services they had been receiving
from Beltrami County in exchange
for their tax dollars. The
difficulty in making the two or
three day train trip to the county
seat contributed to this feeling.
However, a small population,
combined with the Great Depression
a few years later, caused
financial problems from the start.
Spooner
and Baudette combined in 1954, and
the courthouse was moved across
the bay to the old Spooner school,
ending years of squabbling over
which town should be the county
seat.
The
attractions of Lake of the Woods
County are much the same as they
were when the pioneers came to
settle - fishing, hunting, forest,
water, clean air and land. The
pioneer spirit which enabled
people to overcome the hardships
of a wilderness still survives
today. May we be wise enough to
recognize those factors which make
for the quality of life in Lake of
the Woods County and prudent
enough to preserve and expand them
Lake
of the Woods County was organized
on November 28, 1922 when a vote
by area residents separated the
northern townships from Beltrami
County. It is the youngest county
in Minnesota. On January 1, 1923,
the county officially began
operations at its county seat in
Baudette. |