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Grand Portage National Monument

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Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay

Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay, ca. 2010s. Photograph by the National Park Service.

The Grand Portage National Monument in far northeastern Minnesota was established in 1960, after the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa (Ojibwe) ceded nearly 710 acres of their land to the US government. A unit of the National Park Service (NPS), it consists of the eight-and-a-half-mile Grand Portage trail and two trading depot sites—one on the shoreline of Lake Superior and one inland, at Pigeon River. A partially reconstructed depot sits at the Lake Superior site.

The Grand Portage is an ancient overland trail used by Indigenous peoples since at least the start of the first millennium CE. By the middle of the eighteenth century, European fur traders used it and depots at either end to transport people, supplies, and trade goods between the Great Lakes and inland waterways. They abandoned the area in the early nineteenth century. Ojibwe people, however, continued to reside on and near the Grand Portage reservation, which was formed after the ratification of the Treaty of La Pointe in 1854.

The site was largely forgotten by white Minnesotans until the 1920s, when interest in Northwoods history, conservation, and tourism grew rapidly. In 1922, Minnesota Historical Society (MNHS) director Solon Buck launched a campaign to preserve the Grand Portage as a state park. In response to a Grand Portage resident who was worried that private property owners were fencing off the trail, Buck sent MNHS field secretary Cecil Shirk and journalist Paul Bliss to retrace it. The subsequent newspaper coverage generated public interest and support. Because the area was tribal land, however, it fell under federal regulation, and a state park was not possible.

Efforts to preserve and interpret the Grand Portage received federal backing in the 1930s. From 1933 to 1940, archaeologists, historians, and crews from the Indian Division of the Civilian Conservation Corps cleared the trail and conducted archeological digs. They then reconstructed a Great Hall and stockade at the Lake Superior depot site. In 1936, as a result of this work, the federal government declared the Grand Portage a site of national significance.

That same decade, the Grand Portage Band formed a Reservation Tribal Council, as a result of the Indian Reorganization Act in 1934. After World War II, the council joined with white conservationists to urge the federal government to help bring more tourists to the site. Toward that end, the Department of the Interior designated Grand Portage a National Historic Site in 1951. In 1958, the tribal council took the unusual step of ceding 709.97 acres of tribal land to the US government. This allowed the NPS to establish the Grand Portage National Monument two years later.

The creation of the monument sparked a second round of archeological studies and reconstructions. Information from these excavations helped builders design more historically accurate reconstructions. In 1966, for instance, the stockade was rebuilt with a more historically accurate gatehouse.

In 1969, lightning struck the Great Hall, starting a fire that destroyed the building and its artifacts. Excavations beneath the rubble revealed information incorporated into a new Great Hall, completed in 1974. A kitchen building found behind the Great Hall was built a year later. A canoe warehouse was built outside the stockade in 1973.

Despite the early involvement of the tribal council, interpretation at the site was largely focused on European fur traders. Slowly, interpretation at the site shifted to include more Ojibwe community histories. One of the most popular yearly events at the monument, Rendezvous Days, began in 1962. This event is a reenactment of the period during midsummer when fur traders, voyageurs, and Indigenous people convened at Grand Portage to exchange furs and supplies. By 1972, Rendezvous Days coincided with what would become the band’s annual Celebration Pow Wow. In 1992, an “Ojibwe village” was reconstructed outside the stockade walls to interpret seasonal cultural practices of Ojibwe people.

In the 1990s, the tribal council advocated for a greater role in site management, and in 1999, the Grand Portage Band and the NPS agreed to co-manage the monument. Together, they moved forward on the construction of a new visitor center, opened in 2007. Known as the Heritage Center, the new building provided more room for interpretative materials, created additional job opportunities for band members, and moved the monument’s offices from Grand Marais to Grand Portage.

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Birk, Douglas. “Grand Portage National Monument." National Register of Historic Places nomination form, March 2, 2005.
https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/66000111

Buck, Solon J. “The Story of the Grand Portage.” Minnesota History 5, no.1 (March 1923):14–27.
http://collections.mnhs.org/mnhistorymagazine/articles/5/v05i01p014-027.pdf

Cockrell, Ron. Grand Portage National Monument, Minnesota: An Administrative History. Omaha, NE: National Park Service Midwest Regional Office, Office of Planning and Resource Preservation Division of Cultural Resources Management. September 1982, rev. October 1983.
http://npshistory.com/publications/grpo/adhi/index.htm

Gilman, Carolyn. The Grand Portage Story. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1992.

Gower, Calvin W. “The CCC Indian Division: Aid for Depressed Americans, 1933–1942.” Minnesota History 43, no.1 (Spring 1972): 3–13.
http://collections.mnhs.org/MNHistoryMagazine/articles/43/v43i01p003-013.pdf

Neil, Pam, and Mike Plummer-Steen. “A Monumental Task: Grand Portage National Monument Celebrates 50 Years.” In The Grand Portage Guide (National Park Service, 2008), 7–19. http://npshistory.com/publications/grpo/newsletter/2008.pdf

Treuer, David. The Heartbeat of Wounded Knee: Native America from 1890 to the Present. New York: Riverhead Books, 2019.

Related Images

Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay
Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay
Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay

Bird’s-eye view of the reconstructed Grand Lodge on Grand Portage Bay, ca. 2010s. Photograph by the National Park Service.

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Cecil W. Shirk and Paul LaGarde at the site of Fort Charlotte
Cecil W. Shirk and Paul LaGarde at the site of Fort Charlotte
Cecil W. Shirk and Paul LaGarde at the site of Fort Charlotte

Minnesota Historical Society Field Secretary Cecil W. Shirk and guide Paul LaGarde (Fond du Lac Ojibwe) stand on the foundations of a building at the site of Fort Charlotte, July 10, 1922. Fort Charlotte was the depot at the western end of the Grand Portage trail, on the south shore of the Pigeon River. Shirk (at right) stands in the remains of a cellar, and LaGarde (left) stands on foundation remains. The image is from a 1922 expedition initiated by MNHS director Solon Buck to retrace and recover the trail, which was threatened by private landowners. Publicity from the expedition sparked interest amongst white Minnesotans in preserving the trail and depot sites.

Minnesota Historical Society Press
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Ojibwe man on Grand Portage trail
Ojibwe man on Grand Portage trail
Ojibwe man on Grand Portage trail

An Ojibwe man (possibly Paul LaGarde) standing on the Grand Portage trail on July 10, 1922, during an expedition initiated by Minnesota Historical Society director Solon Buck. The man is identified as a guide who helped MNHS Field Secretary Cecil Shirk and Minneapolis journalist Paul Bliss retrace the trail, which was threatened by private landowners. Publicity from the expedition sparked interest amongst white Minnesotans in preserving the trail and depot sites.

Minnesota Historical Society Press
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Civilian Conservation Corps workers at Grand Portage
Civilian Conservation Corps workers at Grand Portage
Civilian Conservation Corps workers at Grand Portage

Members of the Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa during the reconstruction of the stockade at Grand Portage. The men worked on behalf of the Indian Civilian Conservation Corps. Photograph by Willoughby M. Babcock, September 7, 1937.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Dedication of Grand Portage National Historic Site
Dedication of Grand Portage National Historic Site
Dedication of Grand Portage National Historic Site

Assistant Secretary of the Interior Dale Doty, Mrs. Dale Doty, Ed Wilson, R. F. Lee, and Mike Flatte (seated) at Grand Portage’s national historic site dedication. Photograph by Abbie Rowe, August 9, 1951.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Sign at Grand Portage trailhead
Sign at Grand Portage trailhead
Sign at Grand Portage trailhead

Sign near the Grand Portage trailhead in Grand Portage, Minnesota. From 1731 to 1803, this 8.5-mile portage trail served as the linchpin of a fur trade route between Montreal and the Canadian Northwest. Photo by Jon Lurie, 2020.

Personal collection of Jon Lurie
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Site of Fort Charlotte on the Pigeon River
Site of Fort Charlotte on the Pigeon River
Site of Fort Charlotte on the Pigeon River

The site of Fort Charlotte at the western end of the Grand Portage trail on the southern shore of the Pigeon River, 1922. The photograph is looking upstream and was taken from the Canadian (north) shore of the river. Images such as this one helped spark interest in preserving the trail and depot sites in the 1920s.

Minnesota Historical Society Press
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Grand Portage excavation site
Grand Portage excavation site
Grand Portage excavation site

The site of archaeological excavations at Grand Portage undertaken by Civilian Conservation Corps Indian Division (CCC-ID) workers, 1937. The excavations uncovered building foundations and stockade post holes that were used to reconstruct the Great Hall and stockade several years later.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Excavation work at Grand Portage
Excavation work at Grand Portage
Excavation work at Grand Portage

Archaeological excavations at the Grand Portage depot site. Photograph by Willoughby M. Babcock, 1937. The features in the trench may be part of the foundation walls, which were located during the 1930s excavations.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Reconstructing the Great Hall at Grand Portage
Reconstructing the Great Hall at Grand Portage
Reconstructing the Great Hall at Grand Portage

Workers reconstructing the Great Hall at Grand Portage, December 1939. The workers pictured here are likely members of the CCC Indian Division (CCC-ID), which did much of the excavation and reconstruction work on the site in the 1930s. This iteration of the reconstructed Great Hall was destroyed by fire in 1969.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Ed Wilson and Mike Flatt at the dedication of Grand Portage as a National Historic Site
Ed Wilson and Mike Flatt
Ed Wilson and Mike Flatt

Image from the 1951 ceremony dedicating Grand Portage as a National Historic Site. Ed Wilson, the chief of the Minnesota Chippewa Tribe (MCT), is shown speaking at a podium in front of the reconstructed Great Hall. Mike Flatt, head of the Grand Portage Band of Chippewa, is seated at right. The Grand Portage Band is part of the MCT, which was created as a result of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. The ceremony was attended by politicians, officials, and conservationists from Minnesota, the federal government, and Canada—some of whom are visible behind Wilson and Flatt. Photograph by Abbie Rowe.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Grand Portage National Historic Site dedication
Grand Portage National Historic Site dedication
Grand Portage National Historic Site dedication

Ojibwe dancers and their audience at the 1951 ceremony dedicating the Grand Portage site as a National Historic Site. Photograph by Abbie Rowe.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Restored stockade at Grand Portage
Restored stockade at Grand Portage
Restored stockade at Grand Portage

The reconstructed stockade and Great Hall at Grand Portage, 1953. Both the stockade and Great Hall were rebuilt with greater historical accuracy in 1966 and 1974, respectively. At the time of this photo, the site had been named a National Historic Site by the Department of the Interior but had not yet been made a National Monument. Note how the interior of the stockade was used as a visitor parking lot.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Great Hall, Grand Portage National Monument
Great Hall, Grand Portage National Monument
Great Hall, Grand Portage National Monument

The reconstructed Great Hall and stockade at Grand Portage, ca. 1955.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Canoe in the Stockade Museum at Grand Portage
Canoe in the Stockade Museum at Grand Portage
Canoe in the Stockade Museum at Grand Portage

The interior of the Great Hall at Grand Portage which was used as a museum, ca. 1940. The museum included small objects recovered as part of archaeological investigations of the site. Initially, the Great Hall also included a gift shop and cafe. Most of the museum’s contents were destroyed in a 1969 fire.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Great Hall at Grand Portage
Great Hall at Grand Portage
Great Hall at Grand Portage

The second reconstructed Great Hall at Grand Portage, ca. 1975. This structure was built after lightning struck the 1930s reconstruction, burning it to the ground. The gatehouse behind the Great Hall (at right) was erected in 1966 as part of the reconstruction of the 1930s stockade. Archaeological work undertaken in the 1960s and early 1970s helped builders create more historically accurate structures. Photograph by Robert C. Wheeler.

Minnesota Historical Society
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Canoe shed at Grand Portage
Canoe shed at Grand Portage
Canoe shed at Grand Portage

The canoe shed at Grand Portage, ca. 1975. The shed, located outside the main stockade and used as a warehouse, was reconstructed in 1973.

Minnesota Historical Society
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The Great Hall and kitchen at Grand Portage National Monument
The Great Hall and kitchen at Grand Portage National Monument
The Great Hall and kitchen at Grand Portage National Monument

The reconstructed Great Hall (right) and kitchen (left) at Grand Portage National Monument, August 6, 2019. The two structures are connected by a covered walkway. Photograph by Flickr user Sean Marshall. CC BY-NC 2.0

Flickr
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Interior of the Grand Portage National Monument Heritage Center
Interior of the Grand Portage National Monument Heritage Center
Interior of the Grand Portage National Monument Heritage Center

Ojibwe wigwam interactive display inside of the Grand Portage National Monument Heritage Center. The opening of the site’s Heritage Center in 2017 shifted the site’s offices from Grand Marais to Grand Portage and provided a larger space for more inclusive interpretation. Photograph by Flickr user Ken Lund, August 14, 2018. CC BY-SA 2.0

Flickr
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Interior of the canoe warehouse at Grand Portage
Interior of the canoe warehouse at Grand Portage
Interior of the canoe warehouse at Grand Portage

Interior of the reconstructed canoe warehouse at Grand Portage National Monument. Photograph by Flickr user Sean Marshall, August 6, 2019. CC BY-SA 2.0

Flickr
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Interior of the Great Hall at Grand Portage
Interior of the Great Hall at Grand Portage
Interior of the Great Hall at Grand Portage

Interior of the reconstructed Great Hall at Grand Portage National Monument. Photograph by Flickr user Sean Marshall, August 6, 2019. CC BY-SA 2.0

Flickr
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Turning Point

In 1958, the Grand Portage Reservation Tribal Council cedes 709.97 acres of Ojibwe tribal land to the US government. This allows the National Park Service to establish the Grand Portage National Monument two years later.

Chronology

1922

MNHS Field Secretary Cecil Shirk, Minneapolis journalist Paul Bliss, and guide Paul LaGarde (Fond du Lac Ojibwe) retrace the Grand Portage trail. The resulting publicity raises public interest in restoring and preserving the trail and fort sites.

1931

The Minnesota and Cook County Historical Societies cosponsor a celebration of the 200th anniversary of the arrival of French traders in Minnesota that coincides with the MNHS annual convention. Fundraising yields $2,500 for preservation of the site.

1936

The Advisory Board on National Parks, Historic Sites, Buildings, and Monuments lists the Grand Portage as a Site of National Significance.

1933–1940

Archaeologists, historians, and CCC-Indian Division crew members clear the Grand Portage Trail, dig and document archeological sites, and reconstruct the stockade and Great Hall of the Grand Portage fort.

1951

The Department of the Interior designates Grand Portage as a National Historic Site.

1958

The Grand Portage Band of Lake Superior Chippewa cedes 709.97 acres of land, including the Grand Portage trail and the Grand Portage and Fort Charlotte fort sites, to the US government.

1960

Grand Portage National Monument is officially created.

1962

The first Rendezvous Days are held at the monument.

1966

The stockade and gate house are rebuilt based on new archaeological information.

1969

Lightning strikes the Great Hall reconstructed in the 1930s, burning it to the ground.

1973–1978

Newly reconstructed buildings based on archeological evidence are built. They include a canoe warehouse (opened in 1973), the Great Hall (1974), and a kitchen building (1975).

1977

The Grand Portage site is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

1999

Through the efforts of its tribal council, the Grand Portage Band becomes a full partner with the NPS in the administration of the monument.

2007

The Grand Portage National Monument Heritage Center opens, providing more space for a more inclusive interpretive program and providing monument staff with onsite offices (formerly located in Grand Marais).