Distinctly Montana Magazine

2021 // Winter

Distinctly Montana Magazine

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w w w . d i s t i n c t l y m o n t a n a . c o m 23 DAV I D T H O M P S O N ' S " H AU N T " I N M O N TA N A Saleesh House: Saleesh D AVID THOMPSON WAS PERHAPS THE GREATEST EXPLORER, SURVEYOR AND MAP MAKER OF THE LATE 18TH, EARLY 19TH CENTURIES. He traveled over 55,000 miles through western North America from 1792 through 1812, greater than twice around the Earth. He surveyed and mapped nearly 2 million square miles along his way. Most of his trekking was done in what is now Canada while opening up new fur trading routes for either the Hudson's Bay Company or North West Company. This also included northwest Montana. Lewis and Clark used a David Thompson map to find the Mandan Village where they wintered in 1804, as Thompson had already been there six years earlier. For most of his life, and well after his death in 1857, he never received the recognition he rightly deserved. He died penniless and virtually forgotten. However, in the last 50 years historians have finally been shining a light on his incredible life and impressive accomplishments. David Thompson was a man of many talents. In 1784, at the age of 14 he arrived in Churchill on Hudson Bay from England as an appren- tice for that renowned fur trading company. While there, he became a master in the use of the sextant and compass and how to apply them to surveying and map making. They would become his constant com- panions on all his explorations. Whenever time and weather permit- ted, he would be found staring into his sextant, figuring his position by the sun and the stars. He was so preoccupied with gazing into the heavens, that the Salish gave him the name Koo Koo Sint, "the man who stares at stars". by DOUG STEVENS DOUG STEVENS

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