. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "3960009"^^ . . . . . . "Fort de la Corne fu un forte francese della Nuova Francia edificato a met\u00E0 Settecento. Dopo aver edificato nel 1752, l'ufficiale francese Louis de la Corne fece erigere un nuovo forte alle foci del fiume Saskatchewan. Questo forte, inizialmente prese il nome di Fort Saint Louis, solo in seguito assunse il nome di Fort de la Corne. Fort de la Corne, assieme a fu uno dei forti pi\u00F9 occidentali del Nordamerica francese."@it . . "POINT(-104.80000305176 53.150001525879)"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Fort de la Corne fu un forte francese della Nuova Francia edificato a met\u00E0 Settecento. Dopo aver edificato nel 1752, l'ufficiale francese Louis de la Corne fece erigere un nuovo forte alle foci del fiume Saskatchewan. Questo forte, inizialmente prese il nome di Fort Saint Louis, solo in seguito assunse il nome di Fort de la Corne. Fort de la Corne, assieme a fu uno dei forti pi\u00F9 occidentali del Nordamerica francese."@it . . "53.15000152587891"^^ . . . . . "yes"@en . . "Fort de la Corne"@en . . . . "-104.8000030517578"^^ . "Fort de La Corne"@fr . . . . "Fort de la Corne"@it . . . "4730"^^ . "1062532598"^^ . "Le Fort de La Corne est un fort fran\u00E7ais construit au XVIIIe si\u00E8cle en Nouvelle-France par l'officier Louis de La Corne."@fr . . . "Fort de la Corne"@en . . . . "Le Fort de La Corne est un fort fran\u00E7ais construit au XVIIIe si\u00E8cle en Nouvelle-France par l'officier Louis de La Corne."@fr . "1753"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "53.15 -104.8" . . . "Fort de la Corne"@en . . "InternetArchiveBot"@en . . . . . . "December 2019"@en . . . "Fort de la Corne was one of the two French forts established on the Saskatchewan River in the 20 years between the end of La V\u00E9rendrye's push west from Lake Superior in 1731\u20131743 and the fall of New France in 1763. (The other was Fort La Jonqui\u00E8re built two years earlier.) It was originally called Fort St. Louis, and later also called Fort des Prairies, Nippeween and Fort \u00E0 la Corne. It was located downstream from the Saskatchewan River Forks at the mouth of the Pehonan Creek a mile west of the later HBC post."@en . "Fort de la Corne was one of the two French forts established on the Saskatchewan River in the 20 years between the end of La V\u00E9rendrye's push west from Lake Superior in 1731\u20131743 and the fall of New France in 1763. (The other was Fort La Jonqui\u00E8re built two years earlier.) It was originally called Fort St. Louis, and later also called Fort des Prairies, Nippeween and Fort \u00E0 la Corne. It was located downstream from the Saskatchewan River Forks at the mouth of the Pehonan Creek a mile west of the later HBC post. It was built in 1753 by Louis de la Corne, Chevalier de la Corne, the third of the four western commanders who followed La V\u00E9rendrye. It was a fur trade post, the western end of the chain of posts that diverted furs away from the English on Hudson Bay and a base for exploration of the Saskatchewan which the French thought might lead to the Pacific. For most of its existence it was an outpost of Fort Paskoya. It was closed in 1759 with the fall of New France. The site was apparently well-chosen. In 1775 the \"Pedlars\" built post in the area before moving upstream to Fort Sturgeon in 1776. In 1795 the Pedlars or North West Company built a Fort St Louis on the right bank of the river immediately below Peonan Creek. About five miles upstream were three more houses possibly called Isaac's House, named after Isaac Batt, and Fort aux Trembles. In 1796 the Hudson's Bay Company built the first Carleton House a mile and a half downstream. In 1846 the Hudson's Bay Company built its Fort St. Louis a few miles from original fort. This fort became linked to the Carlton Trail by a side route called Fort \u00E0 la Corne Trail in the Saskatchewan Valley. Today the Fort \u00E0 la Corne Provincial Forest surrounds the site of the old fur trade posts. The site was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1926. The James Smith First Nation is nearby. In the 2000s, diamond exploration was undertaken in the Fort \u00E0 la Corne kimberlite field by De Beers and . A partnership of Rio Tinto and continued work through the 2010s and in early 2021 announced significant finds of commercial-grade diamonds. It was not yet known whether the project would proceed to a commercial mining operation."@en . . .