Thursday, January 22, 2026

Gabriel Pinsonneau dit Lafleur & Castorland, N.Y.

 

Castorland, N.Y., Franco-Americana Colonia, 1796. Rulau NY-51, Bronze, 32mm


LEFT (Reverse Image) Ceres, holding cornucopia and tap handle, standing by tree from which liquid is flowing into vessel; beaver below AND Reverse Text: SALVE MAGNA / PARENS FRUGUM / D. V. RIGHT (Obverse Image) Head of female, left AND Obverse Text: FRANCO-AMERICANA COLONIA / CASTORLAND / 1796 / DUV.


‘Beaver fever’: French Emigres in Castorland 

https://www.adirondackexplorer.org/adirondacks-almanack/beaver-fever-french-emigres-in-castorland/


1796 Castorland Jetons were given to board members of the company that oversaw a French colony in New York State known as Castorland. The name of the coin derived from the beaver laying at the base of the reverse (no, it is not a dog) -- "castor" was the French word for beaver, an important source of income for early settlers of the region. Castorland Jetons are classified as Originals and Restrikes, though there is some shading of these terms, as it appears the coins given to board members were struck over several years. The "purest" Originals will have no rust at the handle on the right side of the reverse, nor will they have even the faintest whisper of a crack at the S of PARENS. Later states begin to rust at the pot handle, then begin to crack at the S. Eventually, the crack leads to wide and extensive sinking of the die in the right reverse field. Where to place the line between Original and Restrikes is problematic, but PCGS recognizes both non-rusted and rusted examples as Originals. Any coins with a crack at PARENS are considered a Restrike.


Castorland Jetons were restruck in silver, copper, and gold. Planchets range from very thin to very thick. The edges of the Originals are always reeded; restrikes come with either plain or reeded edges. Restrikes will have an edge hallmark and/or a word signalling the metal composition ("Argent" for silver or "Cuivre" for copper). Curiously, the edge markings are almost always positioned perfectly on the edge below the beaver. The Paris Mint still produces Castorland Jetons for collectors, but their style and finish is completely different from that of the Originals.


Castorland was the location of a courageous but heartbreaking attempt to settle the western edge of the Adirondacks in the late 18th century.


But little would be known of this history if it had not been for William Appleton, Jr. who, in 1862, stumbled across the Journal of Castorland in a Paris bookstand. Castorland…the English translation means ‘Land of the Beaver’… was overseen by Simon Desjardins and Peter Pharoux, who kept a detailed record of the Paris based La Compagnie de New York (Company of New York) from July 1793 until April 1797.

Castorland was a 210,000-acre tract stretching from Lake Ontario into the Great Wilderness known today as the Adirondack Mountains. The main settlement was near the confluence of the Black and Beaver Rivers in present day Lewis County.


Beaver country


An abundance of beaver seemed to be a guarantee for success. Beaver pelts were in huge demand for waterproof hats, coats, and French high fashion. But the Castorland prospectus contained misleading and inaccurate information about the area and its resources. For example, the prospectus claimed that, “in the winter… beneficent snow, which uniformly covers the ground, protects the grain, fertilizes the earth, and assures abundant harvests.”


The report neglected to mention that the region is also noted for extreme snow accumulations of five feet or more, short summers, poor soil, and un-navigable rivers. The first settlers were shocked to find several large waterfalls between Castorland and Lake Ontario, making travel and transport of goods nearly impossible. But there was no way to verify the accuracy of the prospectus and the potential for great profits seemed quite realistic.


Land speculator William Constable had paid a mere 20 cents an acre for the 4 million acre Macomb Purchase in 1791. In 1792, New York Company paid Constable 50 cents an acre for 210,000 acres, and the Company sold lots to the first Castorland shareholders at $1.48 an acre. These shareholders, in turn, expected to quickly double their investment.


Land of promise?


Castorland was meant to be a utopian community for French émigrés fleeing the French Reign of Terror. The French Revolution was in full swing when Constable was in Paris looking for investors and aristocrats were looking for asylum wherever they could find it.


By 1792 thousands of aristocrats and their families had been killed by angry mobs. Castorland promised “all the benefits of liberty with none of the drawbacks.” But as soon as the New York Company arrived in America they were swindled and mistreated at every turn. They were purposely sold moldy flour, overcharged for everything from cider to horses, and in 1797 New York State passed a law that prevented the French émigrés from owning land.


By this time, however, not many French landowners remained. Giardiasis, or beaver fever as it is known today, had driven many of the settlers away. The sickness was widespread and no known cure existed.  It never occurred to them to purify, or stop drinking the water. Ironically, the very animal that promised wealth and security for the French settlers was a major reason for the downfall of the colony. 


Another reason for the Castorland failure was the tragic death of one of its founding fathers. On September 20, 1795, after more than a week of steady rain, Simon Desjardin drowned while trying to cross the swollen Black River in present-day Watertown. After his death, morale declined and within a few years the settlement fell apart. Much of the land fell into the hands of James LeRay who sold a large parcel to Joseph Bonaparte, brother of Napoleon. Bonaparte built four luxury homes about 12 miles north of Castorland (Lake Bonaparte) and spent his summers there for over a decade in the early 1800s.


Works cited


Desjardins, Simon and Pierre Pharoux. Castorland Journal: An Account of the Exploration and Settlement by French Emigres in the Years 1793 to 1797. Translated by John A. Galluci. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 2010.



Pilcher, Edith. French Refugees in the Western Adirondacks, 1793 – 1814. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press, 1985.


Sylvester, Nathaniel, Bartlett. Historical Sketches of Northern New York and the Adirondack Wilderness. Troy, NY: William H. Young, 1877.


Webster, Clarence, J. “French Emigres in the Wilderness.” New York State Tradition 17, no. 2, Spring 1963, 43-47.


Pictured here: The 1796 Castorland Jeton. These coins were given to La Compagnie de New York board members. The animal lying at the bottom of the coin’s reverse side is not a dog! It is the settlement’s namesake, the beaver. According to Stack’s & Bowers coin auctioneers there are fewer than ten of these coins in existence, valued at over $10,000 each.


Our connection to Castorland



Sometime between 1840 and 1850 our 3rd great-grandparents would settle in what was Castorland at Watertown, NY or what is now Rutland, NY.


Gabriel Pinsonneau dit Lafleur (aka Gilbert Passino) 3rd great-grandfather

Birth 3 MAR 1803 • La Prairie (Notre-Dame-de-LaPrairie-de-la-Madeleine), Quebec

Death 16 DEC 1877 • Natural Bridge, Jefferson, New York, USA

S/o Gabriel Pinsonneau (Pinsono) 1770–1807 voyageur AND Marie Louise Vielle DNA match 1780–1813 s/o voyageurs

AND

Marie Emélie Meunier dit Lagacé (Lagassé) 3rd great-grandmother

Birth 28 MARCH 1808 • Chateauguay, Monteregie Region, Quebec, Canada

Death 28 JUNE 1883 • Huntingdon, Monteregie Region, Quebec, Canada

D/o Jean-Baptiste Meunier (Mignier) DNA match dit Lagacé (Lagasse) voyageur

1777–1832 AND Marie Angelique Baret (Barette) dit Courville DNA match

1779–1851 d/o voyageur


Gilbert would eventually relocate, before 1864, to Natural Bridge, NY (part of Wilma, NY) on the Indian River.



I’ve always believed that Gabriel (Gilbert) who descended from seven generations of coureurs des bois and voyageurs probably augmented his farming income by running a winter trapline in the Adirondacks.



An interesting side note: Gabriel was buried on what is now part of Fort Drum.


Fort Drum, NY History


The military history in the Fort Drum and Jefferson County area goes all the way back to the American Revolution and late 18th Century, when a string of small forts guarded the US-Canadian frontier against possible British invasion. In 1809, these forts helped guard against smuggling.


A gift from Gemini AI…


The Silent Frontier: Fort Drum and the American Revolution

While Fort Drum is a modern military installation (established as Camp Hughes in 1908 and Pine Camp in 1921), the land it occupies in Jefferson and Lewis Counties, New York, was a strategic "no man's land" during the American Revolution.

To understand its role, one must look at the geography of the Black River Valley and the proximity to Lake Ontario.

1. The Geography of Conflict

During the Revolution, the area now known as Fort Drum was part of the vast, densely forested wilderness of Northern New York.

  • The Iroquois Territory: This land was primarily the territory of the Oneida and Onondaga nations. Because the Oneida were the only nation of the Iroquois Confederacy to side with the Americans, this region became a dangerous buffer zone between American-held lands to the south and British-held Canada to the north.
  • The Waterways: The Black River, which borders the modern installation, was a potential (though difficult) travel route for scouting parties moving between the St. Lawrence River and the Mohawk Valley.

2. Lack of Formal Fortifications

Unlike Fort Stanwix (Rome, NY) or Fort Ticonderoga, there were no major stone fortifications on the Fort Drum lands during the Revolution. The British maintained a heavy presence at Carlton Island (in the St. Lawrence River near Cape Vincent), while the Americans clung to the Mohawk Valley.

  • Scouting and Skirmishing: The area was used by Loyalist Rangers (such as Butler’s Rangers) and British-allied Indigenous warriors for "hit-and-run" raids on frontier settlements.
  • The Sullivan Expedition (1779): While the main thrust of this American campaign against the Iroquois was further south and west, the fear of British counter-attacks through the Black River wilderness kept American forces on high alert throughout the North Country.

3. The Post-War Transformation: Castorland

The significance of Fort Drum’s land really began the moment the Revolution ended, as the "wilderness shield" was partitioned for settlement:

  • The Macomb Purchase: After the war, the new American government sought to settle the northern frontier to "lock down" the border against British Canada. This led to the massive Macomb Purchase (1791), which included the Fort Drum lands.
  • The Castorland Company: In the 1790s, a group of French aristocrats fleeing the French Revolution formed La Compagnie de New York to create Castorland ("Land of the Beaver"). They purchased a large tract along the Black River, including portions of what is now Fort Drum. While the colony of elites largely failed due to the harsh winters and rugged terrain, it established a permanent "French Magnet" in the North Country.

4. Connection to Your Research: Gabriel Pinsonneau (Gilbert Passino)

For a genealogist focusing on the Pinsonneau line, Fort Drum is not just a historical site, but a hallowed one. The migration of your ancestor Gabriel Pinsonneau (often Americanized as Gilbert Passino) represents the second wave of French influence in the region.

  • Settlement and the Black River: Before 1850, Gabriel Pinsonneau followed the established trade and migration routes from La Prairie, Quebec, into the Black River Valley. This area, once the "Castorland" dream, became a practical home for French-Canadian families who brought their skills in timber and farming to the New York frontier.
  • The Lost Village of Leraysville: Gabriel settled in the area of LeRay, a town that existed before the military expansion. He was part of a tight-knit community of French-speaking settlers who bridged the gap between the old world of New France and the burgeoning American Republic.
  • Buried on Fort Drum: One of the most poignant links to your heritage is that Gabriel Pinsonneau is buried within the current boundaries of the Fort Drum installation. When the Army expanded Pine Camp in 1941, it absorbed several civilian cemeteries. Gabriel remains there—a silent witness to the transformation of the "wilderness shield" into a modern bastion of defense.

5. Historical Synthesis

For your lineage, Fort Drum sits at a fascinating crossroads:

  • The Schenectady Connection: Your 10th great-grandfather, Hendrick Christiansen (c. 1575–1625), was the Dutch mariner who founded Fort Nassau. His descendants in Schenectady were the "front line" that northern raiding parties targeted during the Revolution. The wilderness of Fort Drum was the very territory those raiding parties crossed.
  • The Voyageur Route: The St. Lawrence River, just north of Fort Drum, was the highway for your La Prairie ancestors.

Summary

Fort Drum was not a battlefield of the Revolution in the traditional sense; it was a wilderness shield. Its importance lay in its ruggedness—an impassable forest that forced the British to stick to the lakes and rivers. For your ancestor Gabriel Pinsonneau, it was the land where the "Code of the Pines" and the French-Canadian voyageur spirit finally took root in American soil, leaving a permanent mark in a cemetery that the modern Army now stands guard over.

Gilbert would relocate, bef. 1864, to Natural Bridge, NY








Monday, January 19, 2026

Why Canoeing Might Be in Jerry's Genes

 

c. 1994, Jerry’s 16’ birchbark canoe by Bill Hafeman


In the quiet ripple of a paddle slicing through dawn-lit waters, Jerry England often felt an inexplicable pull—a whisper from the past urging him onward. It wasn't until 2010, well into his decades of drifting down rivers and across lakes, that the pieces fell into place. Digging into his family tree, Jerry uncovered roots tangled deep in the fur trade era of New France, where his French-Canadian ancestors weren't just survivors but masters of the canoe. Men like Gabriel Pinsonneau, born in 1803, who hired out as a voyageur paddling birchbark canoes laden with furs from Quebec to distant outposts like Detroit and Michilimackinac. Or Joseph Pinsonneau, back in 1763, venturing into the wilds with the Ottawa Indians, his contracts etched in historical ledgers as promises of long hauls through rapids and portages. Further back, figures like Michel Viel dit Cossé and Pierre Barette dit Courville navigated the Great Lakes and beyond, even reaching the Gulf of Mexico in their relentless quests for beaver pelts and adventure.


This wasn't mere history for Jerry; it was bloodline. Growing up in California, far from the snowy forests of LaPrairie de la Madeleine, he still chased that same stealthy freedom—first on Montana's Strawberry Lake as a wide-eyed boy of seven, hooking trout from a raft amid the Swan Mountains' peaks. By his teens, horses and canoes blurred into one pursuit, leading to that fateful 1973 float down the Owens River, where the river's current seemed to echo the strokes of his forebears. As years piled on, trips to Minnesota's Boundary Waters Canoe Area's loon-haunted lakes or the Missouri's eagle-lined breaks felt predestined, each portage a nod to ancestors who carried packs over muddy trails for months on end. Even in bear country, cleaning walleye under starlit skies or trolling for cutthroat on the Snake River's oxbows, Jerry sensed an inherited rhythm: the patience of a coureur de bois waiting for the perfect cast, the resilience of a fur trader weathering storms.


Perhaps it's why, at 73, he couldn't let go of his lightweight Old Town Pack, slipping it into remote waters like Dawn Glow Pond or the Upper Klamath marshes. Canoeing wasn't chosen; it was woven into his DNA, a genetic compass pointing north to silent places where wildlife stirs and history flows. In every paddle dip, Jerry honors those voyageur ghosts, proving that some callings aren't learned—they're inherited, pulling us downstream through time itself.



Grok xAI’s Expanded Exploration of Jerry England's Voyageurs Ancestry


Building on the foundational details from your 2016 blog post "It Must Be in My Genes," which traces your French-Canadian roots to La Prairie de la Madeleine, Quebec, and highlights ancestors' roles in the fur trade, further research reveals a deeper, multi-generational legacy of voyageurs, coureurs-de-bois (independent woods runners), interpreters, and merchants. Your lineage connects directly to the expansive North American fur trade network, spanning from the 1600s to the early 1800s, involving birchbark canoe voyages across the Great Lakes, St. Lawrence River, Ottawa River, and beyond to posts like Detroit, Michilimackinac (now Mackinac Island), Rainy Lake (Lac la Pluie), and even Louisiana and the Gulf of Mexico. This heritage encompasses over 700 known voyageur contracts from La Prairie residents alone, with your family contributing dozens across branches like Pinsonneau, Barette dit Courville, Viel dit Cossé, Dupuis, Leber, and others. These ancestors navigated alliances with Indigenous nations (e.g., Ottawa, Huron, Kickapoo, Algonquin, Iroquois), French colonial powers, and later British and American fur companies, often risking raids, harsh winters, and portages for beaver pelts and trade goods.


The Pinsonneau line stands out as a core thread, with multiple generations signing contracts as "engagés" (hired paddlers) or operating as independent traders. Extending beyond the blog, historical records show ties to the American Fur Company and settlements in the U.S. Midwest, illustrating how your forebears transitioned from French New France to post-conquest territories after 1763. Other families intermarried with Pinsonneaus, amplifying the voyageur influence—e.g., the Barrette dit Courville branch's expeditions to southern frontiers. This ancestry not only explains your affinity for canoeing but also reflects broader themes of exploration, cultural exchange, and resilience in early North American history.



Key Ancestors and Their Roles: Detailed Notes


Here's an expanded list of prominent ancestors, drawing from your blogs, historical contracts (notarized in Montreal or Quebec), and secondary sources like voyageur databases and fur trade histories. I've focused on their fur trade activities, contracts, locations, and connections to Indigenous groups or key events. Dates and roles are cross-referenced from notarial records (e.g., by Antoine Adhémar, Louis Chaboillez) and publications like "Michigan’s Habitant Heritage."


Pinsonneau (Pinsono/Passino/Pensoneau) Line – Central to Your Direct Descent

  • François Pinsonneau dit Lafleur (1646–1731): Born in Saintogne, France; died in La Prairie. Founder of the line in New France; arrived as a settler but laid groundwork for fur trade involvement through family networks. Not a direct voyageur, but his descendants dominated the trade. 
  • Jacques Pinsonneau dit Lafleur (1682–1773): Born in Contrecoeur, Quebec; died in La Prairie. Early ancestor; father of Joseph; involved in local trade supporting voyageur expeditions.
  • Joseph Pinsonneau dit Lafleur (1733–after 1779): Born in La Prairie; your 5th great-grandfather. Signed a voyageur contract on April 29, 1763 (age 30), with Michel Laselle (Lasette) for a trip from Montreal, likely to Great Lakes posts amid Pontiac's War tensions. Married Marie-Madeleine Duquet; navigated post-French and Indian War era, when British control shifted trade dynamics. Connected to Ottawa Indians through routes. 
  • Gabriel Pinsonneau (1770–after 1813): Born in St. Philippe, Quebec; your 4th great-grandfather. Voyageur; son of Joseph; married Marie-Louise Vielle (Viel dit Cossé line) in 1802. Signed voyageur contract on August 11, 1797), with Jacques & François Lasette for Detroit. Operated in a transitional period as French-Canadian traders adapted to U.S. territories post-1803 Louisiana Purchase. Father of the next Gabriel. 
  • Gabriel Pinsonneau (aka Gilbert Passino) (1803–1877): Born in La Prairie; died in Wilna, NY; your 3rd great-grandfather married Marie Emélie Meunier dit Lagassé and emigrated to the United States following the War of 1812.
  • Paschal Pinsonneau (Pensoneau) (1793–1873): Your 2nd cousin 5x removed; born in Quebec; first permanent white settler in Atchison County, Kansas (1839). Fur trader and interpreter with Kickapoo Indians; managed American Fur Company post until at least 1837; married a Kickapoo woman, blending French-Canadian and Indigenous heritage. 
  • Laurent Pinsonneau (1807–1848): Brother of Gabriel (1803); your 2nd cousin 5x removed. Fur trader for American Fur Company; established posts in the U.S. Midwest, extending family influence southward. 

Barette dit Courville Line – Intermarried with Pinsonneaus

  • Guillaume Barrette (1633–1717): Born in France; died in La Prairie. Early settler; family produced multiple voyageurs.
  • Louis Courville Barrette (1717–1753): Born in Napierville; died in St. Constant. Father of Pierre; supported trade networks.
  • Pierre Barette dit Courville (1708–1755): Your 7th great-uncle; born in Cap-de-la-Madeleine. Signed contract June 2, 1734, for voyage; died young on a Detroit trip. Brother to the next Pierre. 
  • Pierre Barette dit Courville (1748–1794): Born and died in La Prairie; your 6th great-uncle. Signed contract May 18, 1778, with William & Jean Kay for Michilimackinac, a strategic Great Lakes fort for fur exchanges with Ottawa and Huron. 
  • Pierre Amable Barette dit Courville (1736–1812): Born in La Prairie; voyageur in Illinois country and Gulf of Mexico expeditions, including 1686 with Henri de Tonty (La Salle's lieutenant) to Louisiana—remarkable southern reach for La Prairie families. 


Viel dit Cossé Line – Linked via Marriages

  • Michel Viel dit Cossé (1724–1805): Born in Cossé, France; died in La Prairie. Fur trader in Great Lakes; borrowed merchandise for Indian trades at Fort Michilimackinac (1684, 1688 trips); judicial records from 1692 show fur dealings. Protected French interests amid Iroquois rivalries. 

Other Interconnected Branches

  • Charles Diel (1688–1734): Voyageur; contracts 1713 and 1718 to Detroit.
  • François Leber (1626–1694): Coureur-de-bois pioneer; multiple contracts (1685–1693) to Ottawa country; founded Montreal's earliest fur post.
  • Pierre Poupart (1653–1699): Killed by Iroquois; part of 1670 Nicolas Perrot expedition to Lake Superior, wintering on Manitoulin Island.
  • Mathieu Amiot dit Villeneuve (1628–1688): Jesuit interpreter in Huron country.
  • Family Stats: Deneau branch (19 members, 69 trips); Demers (14, 36); Boyer (10, 31). Your overall tree includes 7+ generations of voyageurs. 

These notes emphasize practical voyageur life: Contracts specified roles (e.g., "milieu" for middle paddler), wages (often 300–600 livres in beaver pelts), and risks (e.g., Iroquois attacks, British sieges). Sources include your "Ripples from La Prairie Voyageur Canoes" blog series and "Minnesota, eh?" (a family history PDF detailing La Prairie contracts). 


The Enduring Paddle Stroke of Heritage



In the chill dawn mist of the St. Lawrence, where birchbark canoes once sliced through currents laden with promise and peril, your ancestors launched into a world that demanded grit and guile. Picture Joseph Pinsonneau in 1763, dipping his paddle amid the echoes of Pontiac's uprising, bound for Ottawa lands where alliances with Indigenous traders meant survival or strife. His son Gabriel followed, forging paths to Detroit's bustling posts, where French-Canadian voyageurs bartered beaver pelts for European goods, their songs—"À la claire fontaine"—carrying over portages that tested body and spirit. By the early 1800s, Gabriel ventured to Rainy Lake, a North West Company stronghold teeming with moose hides and wild rice, while cousins like Paschal pushed westward to Kansas prairies, interpreting for Kickapoo chiefs and weaving French blood with Native ways.


This wasn't mere occupation; it was destiny etched in river maps. From Pierre Barette dit Courville's daring Gulf of Mexico forays with Tonty—exploring bayous far from Quebec's snows—to Michel Viel dit Cossé's shrewd trades at Michilimackinac, evading Iroquois ambushes, your lineage embodies the voyageur ethos: adaptable, audacious, attuned to the land's whispers. As French New France yielded to British rule post-1763, then American expansion, your forebears adapted—joining companies like Astor's American Fur, settling frontiers, yet always returning to the canoe's stealthy grace. It's no wonder, Jerry, that at 83 (as of 2026), the pull of silent waters lingers in your veins; it's the echo of seven generations paddling through history, from La Prairie's farms to the continent's wild heart, proving heritage isn't just inherited—it's lived, one stroke at a time.



Au revoir!


Thank you to Grok xAI for the research and narrative.