David Edward Jackson

In addition to learning the business, farming, hunting and surveying skills of his father, he was educated at the Virginia Randolph Academy.He joined the company, along with many other young men, such as Jim Bridger, William Sublette, and Jedediah Smith, while his wife and children remained in Virginia.For eight years Jackson pursued this adventure, fraught with troubles, including harsh weather, difficult terrain, competition from Canadian, British and French trading companies, and both kindness and treachery from the Native tribes.Many trappers died under the harsh conditions of life in the Rocky Mountains, or by murder at the hands of competitors or native tribes.Jackson became involved in other expeditions, including to Santa Fe (in present-day New Mexico) and California, both under Mexican control since it had achieved independence from Spain in 1821.By December 1837, although gravely ill, he managed to write a letter to his oldest son Edward John Jackson, known as “Ned,” asking him to conclude all his business dealings.While living in London, England, he was convicted of the capital crime of larceny for stealing £170; the judge at the Old Bailey sentenced him to seven years of indentured servitude in the British colonies of North America.Elizabeth, a strong, blonde woman over 6 feet (180 cm) tall, born in London, was also convicted of larceny in an unrelated case for stealing 19 pieces of silver, jewelry, and fine lace, and received a similar sentence.They began to acquire large parcels of virgin farming land near the present-day town of Buckhannon, including 3,000 acres (12 km²) in Elizabeth's name.John and his two teenage sons were early recruits for the American Revolutionary War, fighting in the Battle of Kings Mountain on October 7, 1780.Instead of farming, Jackson responded to William Ashley's advertisement looking to employ men for his and Andrew Henry's new fur trade venture.[13][c] Ashley and the rest of the surviving party traveled by boat downriver, ultimately enlisting aid from Colonel Henry Leavenworth, Commander of Fort Atkinson.Soon after the rendezvous, Ashley, along with his party taking back the furs, traveled with Smith and William Sublette to near present-day Georgetown, Idaho.[25] Jackson returned to the fur country for the 1828 rendezvous, after which he traveled with a party to the Flathead Lake, Montana region, where they wintered.[27] By early 1831, Jackson was in southeast Missouri's lead belt, attending to his personal affairs and those of his brother George, who died on March 26, 1831.[28] While in Santa Fe, Jackson partnered with David Waldo, to journey to California to sell the merchandise he had transported from Missouri.Waldo convinced him of the viability of traveling to California to purchase mules, and to drive them back to Missouri to sell, to yield more profit.Young and his group of men would trap along the way to California, and meet up with Jackson in time to drive the mules back to Santa Fe.He had never heard from Ewing Young, after leaving him with the substantial amount of cash and property at the Colorado River, but was never healthy enough to return to California to try to collect payment.
Regions of the Missouri River Watershed
Arikara warrior
Bodmer (1840–1843)
Randolph County, VirginiaParis, TennesseeRocky Mountain Fur CompanyStonewall JacksonAmerican pioneerAmerican RevolutionVirginian MilitiaVirginiaColonel Thomas J. “Stonewall” JacksonBuckhannonWest VirginiaMissouriMissouri RiverRocky MountainsJim BridgerWilliam SubletteJedediah SmithTeton MountainsJackson, WyomingSanta FeNew MexicoCaliforniaindependence from Spain in 1821St. GenevieveTennesseeTyphus FeverMasonsHenry County, TennesseeColeraineCounty LondonderryLondonOld Baileyindentured servitude in the British colonies of North AmericaAnnapolis, MarylandBlue Ridge MountainsMoorefield, VirginiaTygart ValleyBattle of Kings MountaincaptainlieutenantgeneralCivil WarRandolph CountyAllegheny MountainsWeston, West VirginiaLewis CountyAllegheny PlateauWilliam Ashleyfur tradeFort HenryBodmerGrand RiverArikaraMissouri Fur CompanyHenry LeavenworthFort AtkinsonLakota SiouxRocky Mountain RendezvousHenrys ForkGreen RiverBear RiverCache ValleyGeorgetown, IdahoRobert CampbellSnake RiverGreat DivideColumbia RiverFlathead LakeMontanaPierre's HoleLander, WyomingPowderMissouri's lead beltSanta Fe TrailComancheEwing YoungJonathan Trumbull WarnerWilliam WaldoTucson, ArizonaGila RiverColorado RiverColorado DesertSan DiegoSan Francisco BayLos Angelestyphoid feverIra L. Babcockactivitiesprovisional governmentJackson LakeJackson HoleWyomingHoback RiverBondurant, WyomingJoshua PilcherSt. LouisAshley's HundredPauline WeaverYouTubeBancroft, HubertFrances Fuller Victor