William Alexander Aitken
William Alexander Aitken, also known as William Alexander Aitkin (abt.1785-1851), was a fur trader with the Ojibwe.
Biography
Aitken was noted as a native of Edinburgh, Scotland. He came to the Upper Mississippi region around 1802 from Canada and was employed by John Drew, a trader in the Mackinac area. Aitken worked as a clerk in John Jacob Astor's American Fur Company; he was assigned to William Morrison's Fond du Lac Department.
In 1831, Aitken became the Department's chief trader, establishing his headquarters at Sandy Lake, Minnesota. He had trading posts in the Fond du Lac District, which went as far to the west as Pembina, North Dakota, to the north as Rainy Lake and to the south below the mouth of the Crow Wing River. In 1836 he had a major disagreement with Ramsay Crooks, and in 1838 he was discharged for mismanagement.
Aitken set himself up in competition as an independent trader on the Upper Mississippi out of St. Louis, Missouri. He died September 16, 1851. He was buried on the east bank of the Mississippi opposite to the mouth of the Swan River in Morrison County, Minnesota, where he had a trading post from 1842 until his death.
Family
Aitken had at least six wives:
- Mary Hole-in-the-Day (Ombebewonoquay), daughter of Chequodaince/Kechequodaince/Quodaince and Kechekahdayquayz/Chekahdahquayzai;
- Gin-gion-cumig-oke;
- Madeline Ermatinger (Beshakwadokwe, Striped-Cloud; recorded variously as Payshahquodoquay, Pach-a-kwa-dok-we, etc.), daughter of Charles Oakes Ermatinger and Charlotte Katawabide;
- Nu-gu-nay-au-nah-quod;
- Odishkwaagamiikwe (End-of-the-Lake Woman; recorded as O-dish-quah-gah-me-qu[ay]); and
- Julia Quodaince.
He was said to have had 25 children among his wives, including a daughter Mathilda Aitken, who married William Whipple Warren.
Legacy
Aitkin County, Minnesota and the city of Aitkin, Minnesota are named after him.
External links
- William Aitkin at Rootsweb
- Upham, Warren. "Aitkin County" in Minnesota geographic names: their origin and historic significance (St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1910), p. 14.
- "Area History" by the Aitkin Area Chamber of Commerce
- Minnesota history, Volume 4, No. 7-8. (St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society, 1922), p. 380.