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  1. Eau Claire is located at the confluence of the Eau Claire and Chippewa Rivers in Eau Claire County. Once teeming with buffalo and other game, the Eau Claire area was hotly contested among the Sioux and Ojibwe for generations. English traveler Jonathan Carver (1710-1780) wrote the first description of the area in 1767.

  2. Eau Claire took its name from Eau Claire County. " Eau Claire" is the singular form of the original French name, "Eaux Claires", meaning "Clear Waters", for the Eau Claire River . According to local legend, the river was so named because early French explorers journeying down the rain-muddied Chippewa River , came upon the confluence with the ...

  3. Mar 1, 2022 · A timeline of Eau Claire history for the past 150+ years. March 1, 2022. Where do we start with the story of Eau Claire? The timeline begins even before the city was incorporated in 1872. Here’s a list of more than 250 years’ worth of notable events in the community’s history, based on material from the Chippewa Valley Museum. click to ...

  4. Mar 14, 2022 · The confluence of the Chippewa and Eau Claire rivers would eventually attract new people to live here. People like Stephen McCann and Jeremiah Thomas, who built the first mill along the river. And ...

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  6. Eau Claire, city, Eau Claire and Chippewa counties, seat (1857) of Eau Claire county, west-central Wisconsin, U.S. It lies at the confluence of the Eau Claire (“Clear Water,” so named by 18th-century French trappers and traders) and Chippewa rivers, 90 miles (150 km) east of St. Paul, Minnesota.

  7. Eau Claire is chock-full of history. Founded in the 1800s, dozens of sawmills once ruled these waterways, and this proud heritage is still evident today in events and places like the Paul Bunyan Logging Camp Museum, the Old Fashioned 4 th of July celebration in Carson Park, and the lumber baron mansions along State Street.

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