
John Colter - Wikipedia
John Colter (c.1770–1775 – May 7, 1812 or November 22, 1813) was a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804–1806).
John Colter, The Mountain Man Who Survived Being Hunted For …
2018年7月9日 · John Colter traveled with Lewis and Clark, explored Yellowstone before anyone else, and survived being hunted for sport by Native Americans. After they disarmed him, he …
John Colter – Fearless Mountain Man – Legends of America
John Colter was a pioneer, trapper and a veteran of the War of 1812, surviving an escape from the Blackfeet Indians.
John Colter - Discover Lewis & Clark
His permanent role as an icon of Western American history came from his adventures as a fur trapper between the summer of 1806 and the spring of 1810.
John Colter Biography - Lewis and Clark in Kentucky
John Colter’s exploits after the conclusion of the Expedition exceeded in danger and personal bravery anything he experienced while on the Tour of Discovery. He was born about 1775, …
John Colter | Lewis & Clark Expedition, Fur Trade, Wilderness
John Colter (born c. 1775, in or near Staunton, Va. [U.S.]—died 1813, [in present-day Missouri, U.S.]) was an American trapper-explorer, the first white man to have seen and described …
Private John Colter - U.S. National Park Service
From becoming one of America's first mountain men to the first American to see Yellowstone, his adventures have been recorded and told throughout the ages. On the expedition he was well …
John Colter - The Mystery of the Stone and the Legend of the …
2020年10月21日 · Was John Colter the First White Man to Travel Through Yellowstone? History remembers most legendary explorers for what they discovered, documented, and mapped, not …
John Colter - Yellowstone History
John Colter (c.1774 – May 7, 1812 or November 22, 1813) was a member of the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1804−1806). Though party to one of the more famous expeditions in history, …
The First Mountain Man - True West Magazine
2015年11月10日 · John Colter was a good hunter, a skilled woodsman, got along well with Indians and had a knack for surviving hazards and hardships that put other men under the …