David Thompson was one of the best known explorers in the Northwest, the first person of European descent to enter many areas. A Canadian in the employ of the British North West Company, it was his job to establish trading posts for the purpose of obtaining furs for the company by trading with the natives. In 1809 he established
Saleesh House, the second trading post to be constructed in what is now Montana, about five miles east of here near the mouth of the Thompson River.
This is a large stone cairn, made of smooth river rock on a stone base with a large bronze plaque mounted on one side. The text follows:
David Thompson
1770 - 1857
Pioneer Geographer
"Koo-Koo-Sint" The Man Who Looked
At the Stars
Built Salish House Near the Mouth
of Thompson River 1809
Following is the entry for the David Thompson Monument from Montana, A State Guide Book.
The
DAVID THOMPSON MONUMENT64.7 m., erected by citizens of Thompson Falls to the memory of the explorer of the Columbia River
watershed, stands close to the SITE OF SALISH HOUSE, built by Thompson in 1809. It is believed to have been the first roofed habitation of white men in the territory that later became Montana (see HISTORY).
David Thompson, a surveyor, was the first white man to follow the Columbia from its source to its mouth. Mapping this territory with sextant and compass, he traveled 50,000 miles on foot, on horseback, and by canoe. He built Salish House in a place from which he could readily see Indian war parties crossing Bad Rock (Es-em-mowela, or Roche Mauvais) on the
Kootenai Trail.
Because of his seemingly magical instruments, Indians regarded him with superstitious awe, and called him Koo-koo-sint (man who looks at the stars). They believed that his telescope enabled him to see all things, so that an Indian woman could not even mend a pair of moccasins without his knowledge.
From Montana, A State Guide Book
See excerpts from his
biography below.
David Thompson
fur trader, explorer, surveyor, justice of the peace, businessman, and author; b. 30 April 1770 in the parish of St John the Evangelist, Westminster (London), son of David and Ann Thompson; d. 10 Feb. 1857 in Longueuil, Lower Canada.
David Thompson’s origins were humble, his final years spent in poverty, as an explorer and surveyor, his work has earned him a reputation as one of the best pioneering geographers in North America.
He was ... enrolled in the Grey Coat mathematical school, where he received a rudimentary training in navigation, and on 20 May 1784 he was apprenticed to the Hudson’s Bay Company for seven years.
Thompson was sent inland in the summer of 1786, and in September he left Cumberland House (Sask.) with Mitchell Oman, an able but illiterate Orkneyman, and 13 others to establish South Branch House (near Batoche) on the South Saskatchewan River. At Cumberland House the following summer he appears to have perfected a working knowledge of the Cree language, an essential skill for a prospective fur trader in that region.
He passed the winter of 1787–88 with Peigan Indians in the Rocky Mountain foothills and learned their language. Back at Manchester House in the fall of 1788, he seriously fractured his right leg on 23 December in a sled accident. Severe swelling made it impossible for the leg to be set properly, so it healed slowly... By the end of the summer of 1789 he had regained enough strength to move around with the help of crutches.
By spring Thompson had arrived at his momentous decision to leave the HBC for the NWC, and on 23 May 1797 he set out from Bedford House to walk to Alexander Fraser*’s post on the Reindeer River.
The NWC was concerned about the implications of the successful American overland expedition to the Pacific coast, led by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark in 1806, and was anxious to determine whether the Columbia River could be used as a gateway to its trading territories... over the next three years he extended his trade and surveys throughout the territory of the Kootenay Indians and south into the Flathead country, passing the first two winters at Kootenae House near Lake Windermere, and the third winter at Saleesh House (near Thompson, Mont.). Thompson successfully precluded the expansion by American traders into the area. But in doing so he had seriously undermined the position of the Peigan Indians as intermediaries in the trade across the mountains and created tensions that came to a head in 1810.
Read on at Biographi Canada