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The territory containing modern-day Minnesota was claimed at various periods of time by Spain, <br />France, Great Britain, and the United States. Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike led the first <br />United States expedition through the area in 1805, which would ultimately become Minnesota in <br />1858. Fort St. Anthony (later Ft. Snelling) was completed between 1819 and 1824, and in 1836 <br />the Wisconsin Territory, including a portion of Minnesota, was formed. Just one year later, on <br />September 29th, 1837, during treaty negotiations in Washington, D.C., Dakota leaders ceded their <br />lands between the Mississippi and St. Croix Rivers. <br />The fur trade drove much of European exploration and settlement into Minnesota prior to territorial <br />frontier settlement in the mid-1800s. While the fur trade impacted Native American communities <br />throughout all of Minnesota, the heaviest impacts came with later Euro-American settlement. <br />Intensive settlement and agriculture dramatically transformed the landscape, displacing large <br />numbers of Native Americans and their communities. In 1862 tensions between white settlers and <br />Native Americans resulted in the Dakota War. Ultimately, this war left 462 whites and "an <br />unknown but substantial number" of Native Americans dead (Anderson and Woolworth 1988). <br />The conflict concluded with the largest mass execution in United States history with the hanging <br />of 38 Dakota on December 26, 1862 at Mankato and the deportation of remaining tribal members <br />to Santee, Nebraska. <br />Native American archaeological site types associated with this period are generally consistent with <br />those of earlier periods, but European and Euro-American traders, missionaries, settlers, and <br />industries affected the locations of these sites. This period also includes Euro-American immigrant <br />settlement patterns, subsistence activities, and economic strategies. Sites associated with Euro- <br />American immigrants appear in the mid -nineteenth century. Associated archaeological and historic <br />site types categorized in the Contact/Post-Contact period include standing structures as well as <br />archaeological sites. <br />Phase I Archaeological Survey of Trott Brook Property <br />Ramsey, Anoka County, Minnesota <br />Nienow Cultural Consultants, LLC <br />9 <br />