Saturday, February 23, 2019

St. Joseph, MO History

St. Joseph, Missouri was founded by fur trader Joseph Robidoux who lived from 1783-1868. The place in northwest Missouri where Joseph Robidoux developed his Blacksnake Hills Trading Post is contemporary St. Joseph, Missouri with a population of about 75,000.

Years prior to founding among the existing day ten largest cities in the state of Missouri Robidoux matured on the other side of the state in St. Louis, Missouri where he had six brothers. From an early age Joseph and his bros were taught the family business of fur trading by their daddy who in the eighteenth century started sending out Joseph up and down the Missouri River as a teen to hone his trade.

In what is currently the city of Chicago Joseph Robidoux set up a fur trading post next to Fort Dearborn, Illinois however ironically his success led to his death. As legend has it Joseph was such a proficient young business person that more recognized senior men practicing his craft did not think too kindly of having a young up and comer entering their area and disrupting their established business. To correct the interruption that Joseph triggered the Fort Dearborn residents persuaded local Indians to threaten and disrupt Joseph up until he was rather actually run out of town.

After leaving Illinois Joseph developed himself in modern day Omaha, Nebraska and settled with his second better half (after the 1805 death of his very first spouse Eugenie) with an 1813 wedding to Angelique Vaudry. In between his 2 marital relationships Joseph had eight kids (2 from the very first marital relationship and 6 from the 2nd) and today the names of a lot of those children embellish some of the most typically used streets in the city of St. Joseph, Missouri which he eventually established. Among names of his kids that have considering that been commemorated with streets named in their honor are Messanie, Faraon, Francis, Felix, and Edmond. While those names probably seem a bit outdated to the majority of folks in the twenty-first century anyone who has actually invested a substantial quantity of time around St. Joseph, Missouri instantly acknowledges those names as some of the most high traffic streets in the area.

Joseph Robidoux sold his successful Nebraska fur trading organisation in 1822 to the American Fur Business and decided to leave the location after being inspired by the American Fur Company with a $1,000 yearly payment for following a non-compete arrangement.

After hanging around back in St. Louis after selling his business to the American Fur Business Robidoux was later worked with by the American Fur Company to begin a Blacksnake Hills trading post in northwest Missouri near Kansas City and in doing so Joseph Robidoux laid the groundwork for the city of St. Joseph, Missouri that has actually held his namesake for over 150 years.

 

 

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