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The Gordon Flowage area has a vibrant history, as it is part of the famous
Bois Brule - St. Croix waterway connection between Lake Superior and the Mississippi
River.
Several eras can be defined:
 | Mississippian Indians -
Before 1000 A.D. |
Scholars believe the prehistoric Native people of the Americas are the descendants of
hunters from Siberia and northern Asia who followed game across the frozen
Bering Strait 5,000 to 10,000 years ago. Once across this ice bridge,
these people spread out across the Americas.
The ancient ones, sometimes called "mound builders" who were the first to
inhabit areas around Lake Superior were probably part of
the "Old Copper" culture of the Archaic period (3000-1000 BC).
Later, members of the "woodland" culture are thought to have established
themselves along waterways in this
area by 1000 A.D., and sustained themselves by
hunting, fishing and gathering of wild foods. They disappeared
rather suddenly around 1200 AD for reasons that have been debated among
archaeologists.
Little remains of these early civilizations.
 | Santee Dakota
- By 1500 A.D. |
The Dakota (aka Dakotah, Sioux) lived in
the area around Lake Superior, where they gathered wild rice and beans, hunted
deer, buffalo, and speared fish from canoes. Most likely they came from
the plains in the west, through Minnesota, then north into northern Minnesota
and Wisconsin.
 | Ojibwe - By 1500 A.D. |
The Ojibwe (aka Anishinabe, Chippewa, Saulteur) came westward,
most likely from the valley of the St. Lawrence River,
across lower Canada, along the shores of Lake Superior (including settlements on
the Apostle Islands), and then expanded southward along the rivers,
including a village at the Gordon Flowage.
 | French Explorers - 1680 |
Daniel Greysolon, Sieur de Du Lhut (aka Daniel Greysolon Du
Luth) is the first European acknowledged to
have traveled down the Bois Brule and St. Croix Rivers.
 | English Explorers - 1767 |
This area was transferred to British rule by the
treaty of Paris in 1763 at the conclusion of the French and Indian War. It was
explored by Capt. Johnathon Carver in 1767.
 | American Explorers - 1831 |
This area came under the flag of the United
States government under terms of the 1783 Treaty of Peace. Henry
Schoolcraft was one of the first American Explorers in 1832.
 | Lumbering - 1850 |
White settlers began to pour into the region to
cut timber and prospect for minerals.
 | Modern - 1935 |
In 1935, the government-funded Works Progress Administration (WPA) began
construction of the present Gordon Flowage dam structure, which was completed
and dedicated in an impressive ceremony the summer of 1937.
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