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Jonathan Carver

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Jonathan Carver
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Jonathan Carver

Jonathan Carver (1710-1780) was an explorer of the North American continent. He was born on April 13, 1710 in Weymouth, Massachusetts.

He achieved the rank of Captain in the Massachusetts militia, having fought in the French and Indian War.

in 1766, Robert Rogers contracted Jonathan to lead an expedition to find a western water route to the Pacific Ocean, the Northwest Passage. Carver explored up the Mississippi river to what is now Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Michigan. Carver County, MN is named after him.

Rogers was unable to pay Carver after the expedition, so Carver turned to writing to make money. In 1769 Carver returned to England to write his Travels... book. The book was published in 1778. The book proved immensely popular, and many editions, in several different languages, were issued. The profits did not come soon enough for him, however. He died in poverty on January 31, 1780 in London.

In the 20th century, the reliability of Carver's narrative has been debated by scholars; examination of Carver's manuscript journal establishes that it differs in important respects from the published version. More recent research points to the conclusion that while Carver actually made the tour he describes, he suppressed the fact that he performed it as a hired agent of Major Robert Rogers, rather than on his own responsibility.

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