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South Bend, Indiana |
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Alexis Coquillard established the first American home in St. Joseph County.
He is usually regarded at the founder of the city of South Bend. Mr. Coquillard
was born in Detroit September 28, 1795. He served in the American forces during
the War of 1812 under the leadership of William Henry Harrison. After the
war, he returned to the St. Joseph Valley where he became an employee of John Jacob
Astor's American Fur Company. In 1823, Mr. Coquillard built a trading post
on the St. Joseph River. Along with a partner, Francis Comparet, who ran an
associate trading post in Fort Wayne, the two trading posts became the centers of
the fur trade with the Native Americans of northwestern Indiana and southwestern
Michigan. The Alexis Coquillard Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution was chartered October 15, 1957. |
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President: Gregory A. Moody Vice President: Gregory J. Dolezal Secretary: Norman A. Schwarz Treasurer: Ernest R. Davis Registrar: Ernest R. Davis |
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The Alexis Coquillard Chapter Color Guard appeared in the 2014 Plymouth Blueberry Festival parade. | The Alexis Coquillard Chapter Color Guard appeared in the 2015 Mishawaka Memorial Day parade. |
An estimated 3,500 veterans of the American Revolution are buried in the State of Indiana. The Indiana Society Sons of the American Revolution has cataloged over 2,400 such graves and posted relative information at our on-line patriot graves registry. |
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