Fort Kiowa

Fort Kiowa, officially Fort Lookout and also called Fort Brazeau/Brasseaux,[1] was a 19th-century fur trading post located on the Missouri River between modern Chamberlain, South Dakota, and the Big Bend of the Missouri.[1][2][3]

Built in 1822 by the Columbia Fur Company to serve the expanding fur trade in the American West, the square 140-by-140-foot (43 by 43 m) fort served as an important rest stop and trading post for trappers and explorers such as Jim Bridger and Hugh Glass. In the early 1840s, as the American fur trade moved further west, Fort Kiowa was abandoned. It was eventually flooded by the Missouri River, and today the site of the building is submerged beneath the man-made reservoir of Lake Sharpe.

  1. ^ a b Lotte Govaerts, "Real Stories behind The Revenant, Part III: Fort Kiowa", Rogers Archaeology Lab, 08/11/2016
  2. ^ Meadows, William C. (2008). Kiowa Ethnogeography. University of Texas Press.
  3. ^ Thompson Rand, Jacki (2008). Kiowa Humanity and the Invasion of the State. University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 9780803239661.