Frenctown Reunion!
    
Frenchtown was located roughly between Touchet and College Place where French-Canadians, often with their Indian wives, settled after working for the Hudson Bay Company at Fort Nez Perce, later known as Fort Walla Walla, a trading post established in 1818 at Wallula. The Frenchtown settlement began about 1823, and by the time Marcus & Narcisa Whitman arrived in 1836, numbered more than a dozen cabins.
In December of 1855, following the Walla Walla Treaty Council in June, the four-day Battle of Frenchtown, also called the Battle of Walla Walla, took place in the area. The fighting resulted in the killing of Walla Walla Chief Peopeomoxmox while a hostage of the volunteers, and an end to Indian control of the Walla Walla Valley.
In 1876, the St. Rose of Lima Mission and cemetery were established on a portion of the battlefield nearby. Though the mission was later abandoned, of the recorded burials of approximately 60 French-Canadians and several Indian wives at the site, there is no evidence any has been removed.
The ensemble will feature (from top) Rich Monacelli as Hudson Bay Chief Trader William McBean, Judith Fortney as Cayuse Indian woman Suzanne Cayouse Dauphin, Sam Pambrun as Hudson Bay Factor Andrew Pambrun, Jeannot Poirot as Father J.B.A. Brouillet, Jean-Paul Grimaud as Father Eugene Chirouse and Clark Colahan as James McAuliff. An interpretive park is planned by the Frenchtown Historical Foundation encompassing approximately 50 acres of land adjacent to current Highway 12 that will include the cemetery site, the grounds of the Catholic mission, and area where the 1855 battle took place.
For more information on the Rendezvous and the work of the Frenchtown Historical Foundation, contact Dan Clark at 522-0399 or Claro Bergevin at 525-5929, or go to www.frenchtownpartners.zoomshare.com.
Dan Clark as E.B. Whitman
Performances begin at 2:00 p.m. in the pioneer settlement at Fort Walla Walla Museum. Visitors are encouraged to question the Living History re-enactors about their lives and times. The Museum is open daily, 10 am - 5 pm, April through October; 10 am - 4 pm, November1 through December 23; and weekdays, 10 am - 4 pm, January through March.
Admission is free to Fort Walla Walla Museum members,
eligible service personnel & their familes through
the Blue Star Museums program, Tamástslikt Cultural Institute's
Inwai Circle cardholders,
enrolled members of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, and all children under 6;
$3/children
6-12; $6/seniors (62+) and students; $7/adults.
Your admission fee today may be applied to a membership,
priced beginning at $27. For more information, contact Fort Walla Walla Museum at 509-525-7703, or email: info@fortwallawallamuseum.org. |