Jacob V. Brower
Jacob Vandenberg Brower (1844–1905) was a prolific writer of the Upper Midwest region of the United States who championed the location and protection of the utmost headwaters of the Mississippi and Missouri rivers.
He was born in Michigan and moved to Minnesota. In 1862 he served with Henry Hastings Sibley during wars against the Sioux in Minnesota.[1]
After the war he was County Auditor and County Attorney for Todd County, Minnesota. The City of Browerville, Minnesota is named in his honor.[2]
Lake Itasca
In 1888 acting as surveyor he visited Lake Itasca to settle a dispute over the source of the Mississippi River.
The issue was whether Nicollet Creek at the southern tip of the Lake Itasca and flows into the lake was the official start of the Mississippi. Brower followed the stream through swamps, ponds to Lake Hernando de Soto. Brower spent five months on Lake Itasca and eventually suggested that since he believed that the Nicollet Creek was intermittent stream that it should not qualify as the source.[3]
Brower was to lead a campaign to stop logging around Lake Itasca by companies owned by Friedrich Weyerhäuser. On April 20, 1891 the state legislature by a margin of one approved the plans for a state park.[4]
The official visitor center for the park is now called the Jacob V. Brower Visitor Center and Brower is often referred to as the "Father of Lake Itasca."
Brower's Spring
In the late 1800s he questioned the conventional wisdom that Meriwether Lewis had discovered the true source of the Missouri River on August 12, 1805, above Lemhi Pass on the Continental Divide at the source of Trail Creek.
Studying maps, he said the source should be 100 miles further away at the source of Hell Roaring Creek at about 8,800 feet on Mount Jefferson in the Centennial Mountains on the Montana side of the Continental Divide.
In 1888 he visited the site of Brower's Spring and left a metal tablet with his name and date where he believed the source to be located. In 1896 he published his findings "The Missouri: It's Utmost Source."[5]
Both sources ultimately drain into the Jefferson River which combines with the Madison River to form the Missouri at Missouri Headwaters State Park.
References
- ↑ "Minnesota State University Biography". Archived from the original on August 31, 2006. Retrieved May 24, 2016.
- ↑ Upham, Warren (1920). Minnesota Geographic Names: Their Origin and Historic Significance. Minnesota Historical Society. p. 543.
- ↑ Ohio River By John Ed Pearce, p44 1989 - ISBN 0-8131-1693-7
- ↑ Minnesota DNR Park Info
- ↑ The True Utmost Reaches of the Missouri - Montana Outdoors - July-August 2005