I had read Martha Coleman Bray's biography of Joseph N. Nicollet last month. This book is one of two edited volumes of his journals from the late 1830s. This book includes five copies of his journals. The first two journals are about his trips by canoe in 1836 and 1837 to the sources of the Mississippi and St. Croix rivers. These journals give a sense of the physical geography of these rivers in pre-settlement Minnesota and Wisconsin. The final three journals are more anthropological and bring out customs of the Chippewa (Ojibwe) people. Unlike many explorers of his era, he wrote in a very non-judgemental and open way about their lives. While the book is good as a primary source of pre-European settlement Minnesota, it is not very exciting to read.
I wanted to find out more about Joseph Nicollet, a French man born in 1786 since his name is on hospitals and streets throughout MN. I’m so glad I picked this up at the Voyager National Park. This man cataloged his journey through MN with a father and son Indian guide, but he also wrote down the symbols of the Indians in the areas. The Appendix was so interesting. I think if I came across Indian engraved messages on birch bark, I could figure out that at the new moon a man with a bear totem are going to the fort in two days of camping. The man is in mourning and left his wife with a marten totem behind at camp which was three nights of camping. It was very insightful as to their customs and Nicollet’s impressions. He had lots of experience with living among them.