
A vivid portrait unfolds through the eyes of a longtime companion who spent countless evenings listening to Hugh Monroe’s own recollections. Monroe, known as Rising Wolf, was a white man raised among the Blackfoot who served the Hudson’s Bay Company, then the American Fur Company, before becoming a free‑trapper. His story is told with the quiet reverence of a friend who witnessed his remarkable blend of European upbringing and Plains culture, from his early days in a Quebec settlement to his final years beneath the towering cliffs of Two Medicine Valley.
The narrative begins with Monroe’s childhood, a boy who swapped schoolbooks for a smooth‑bore rifle and learned the art of hunting, trapping, and surviving in the great forest. Encounters with voyageurs, fur traders, and the rugged wilderness shape his youthful ambition, while his keen eye for the land’s bounty and his knack for navigating both French‑Canadian and Indigenous worlds set the stage for a life of adventure on the frontier.
Full title
Rising Wolf, the White Blackfoot Hugh Monroe's Story of His First Year on the Plains
Language
en
Duration
~4 hours (240K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Greg Bergquist, Paul Clark and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2013-03-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1859–1947
A writer, frontiersman, and longtime observer of Blackfeet life, he turned his years in Montana into vivid adventure stories and firsthand accounts of the American West. His books helped preserve memories, traditions, and landscapes that were already changing fast in his lifetime.
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