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  1. Pierre-Louis de Lorimier, usually anglicized to Peter Loramie (March 1748 – June 26, 1812), was a colonial French-Canadian fur trader, British Indian agent, and Shawnee agitator. In later years, he founded what became Cape Girardeau and Bollinger Counties, Missouri.

  2. Pierre Louis de Lorimier (Americanized as Peter Loramie) was born in 1748 to French commandant Claude Nicolas de Lorimier de la Rivière and an unknown Iroquois woman. He grew up in a family of military background as well as immersed himself into learning about local native customs and languages.

  3. 2 Απρ 2019 · Peter Loramie was able to escape from Ohio with his family, some French traders and a band of Shawnees. He wandered in Indiana for a few years, looking for a home.

  4. The History of Fort Loramie. In 1769 Pierre-Louis de Lorimier (Peter Loramie), a French-Canadian fur trader, built a trading post just north of the present-day village of Fort Loramie where he traded in furs with the Wyandot and Shawnee Indian tribes.

  5. LORAMIE HAD NO TENDER FEELINGS FOR AMERICANS. "The first white man whose name is lastingly identified with the geography of this county is Peter Loramie, or Laramie, inasmuch as his name is permanently affixed to an important stream.

  6. 12 Οκτ 2023 · Today’s Fort Loramie is named after the War of 1812-era fort, built at the orders of General “Mad” Anthony Wayne. The fort once stood upon the earlier site of the infamous “Frenchman’s Store”, the trading post of Pierre-Louis Lorimier (a.k.a. “Peter Loramie”) (“Fort Loramie History,” 2023).

  7. Fort Loramie, Ohio, the Wilderness Trail Museum. Entry to the museum is through a typical late 1880s bar room with leaded-glass windows behind the bar, an antique cash register, a working fireplace, gun displays, and a realistic figure of Peter Loramie.

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