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  1. He married in 1829, but continued escorting AFC caravans to the annual rendezvous until 1838. From 1839 until his death in 1850, he continued to recruit and escort the employees of the fur company and various private expeditions, including John Audubon 's natural history expedition of 1843.

  2. Although he does not have the wide recognition of Jim Bridger or John Colter, Etienne Provost was considered by his contemporaries as one of the most knowledgeable, skillful, and successful of the mountain men. Provost gave his name (phonetically) to the Provo River and the city of Provo.

  3. Provost may have been in partnership with his future wife’s father, Lambert Salle dit Lajoie, who had operated a tavern and grocery business in St. Louis since 1811. Provost married Marie Rose Salle dit Lajoie in 1829.

  4. Provost survived and established temporary trading posts on the shores of both Utah Lake and Great Salt Lake, and he is credited with being the first American to see the Great Salt Lake. In May 1825 he encountered the Hudson's Bay Company brigade under Peter Skene Ogden in Weber Canyon and witnessed Ogden's famous confrontation with Gardner ...

  5. At the time of this business transaction, Provost married a French woman, Marie Rose Salle, clit Lajoie, on August 14, 1829.

  6. Provo Utah. Born in Canada in 1785, French-Canadian Étienne Provost moved west as a young man to pursue the life of a fur trader. Although he is recognized as one of the most influential mountain men during his time, his legacy hides in the shadows of more recognizable men, such as Jim Bridger.

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  8. Apr 28, 2022 · Etienne Provost married Marie Rose Salle Dit Lajorie in 1829.

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