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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › John_ColterJohn Colter - Wikipedia

    Sources are unclear about when Colter died or the cause of death. One report states that after suddenly turning ill, Colter died of jaundice on May 7, 1812, and was buried near Miller's Landing. [17] Other sources indicate he died on November 22, 1813. [10] Release flier for the 1912 silent film, John Colter's Escape

  2. Feb 11, 2015 · After 18 years of research and 19 linear feet of documentation, Anglin, Fallon, Nev., has compiled his findings in a new book, “Gloomy Terrors and Hidden Fires, the Mystery of John Colter and...

    • John Colter’s Early Adventures
    • The Hunt
    • John Colter Becomes A Legend

    John Colter was most likely bornin Virginia sometime around 1775. But, ultimately, almost nothing is known about his early life. He really only enters the historical record with any certainty around 1803 in Maysville, Kentucky. Colter was there responding to an advertisement recruiting, “good hunters, stout, healthy, unmarried men, accustomed to th...

    Exactly what happened next is hard to saywith any certainty. In one account, Lisa dispatched John Colter to make contact with the Blackfeet Native American tribe nearby and open up a system of trade. But before he found the tribe, he fell in with a group of Crow Native Americans. That party was then attacked by a party of Blackfeet, who were tradit...

    After returning from his ordeal, John Colter spent another few years in the mountains exploring many areas in the Tetons and Yellowstone that no non-Native had ever seen before. He finally decided to return to the East in 1810, swearing that he would never travel to the mountains again. The Colter that emerged from the wilderness wasn’t the same ma...

  3. Nov 10, 2015 · Still, he had a new wife and new son. He stayed. Two years later, still in his 30s, the first mountain man died of jaundice, far from his real home. In the winter of 1807-08, on a solo journey of 500 miles, John Colter became the first European to see Jackson Hole and the Teton Mountains in what became Wyoming Territory.

  4. Nov 25, 2016 · The date of his death is disputed but he either died in May, 1812 or on November 22nd, 1813 of jaundice. Coulter left no written record of his adventures and we can only rely on what others wrote about him.

  5. Jul 5, 2018 · But not all that more more is really known for certain about him. Everyone should be aware or become aware of the story of John Colter's legendary "run" from the Blackfeet, which left him wounded, completely naked, and 600 miles from the closest American outpost, and from which he survived.

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  7. May 9, 2017 · In 1804, John Colter set out with Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on the first U.S. expedition to traverse the North American continent. During the twenty-eight month ordeal, Colter served as a hunter and scout, and honed his survival skills on the western frontier.

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