flambeau

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Flambeau Royalty Free Stock Photo
Flambeau Royalty Free Stock Photo
Canoeing the Flambeau River Royalty Free Stock Photo
Flambeau Butterfly dryas iulia in Cuba Royalty Free Stock Photo
Torch flame vector flaming torchlight or lighting flambeau symbol of achievement torching with burned fireflame 3d Royalty Free Stock Photo
Man walking with burning flambeau in a dark tunnel Royalty Free Stock Photo
Flambeau butterfly Royalty Free Stock Photo
Lac Du Flambeau Historical Marker - Wisconsin
Flat vector icon of gray flambeau. Brightly blazing torch. Symbol of Olympic games Royalty Free Stock Photo
Julia or Flambeau Butterfly-Dryas iulia Royalty Free Stock Photo
Man coming from dark forest with burning flambeau in his hand concept Royalty Free Stock Photo
Vintage background with flambeau Royalty Free Stock Photo
Man walking with burning flambeau in a dark tunnel Royalty Free Stock Photo
Julia Heliconian - Dryas Iulia - The Flame - Flambeau - Closer Close Up Royalty Free Stock Photo
Man coming out from a thicket with burning flambeau Royalty Free Stock Photo
`Lac du Flambeau Lake of Torches has been a permanent settlement of the the Chippewa Indian Nation since about 1745, when Chief Sharpened Stone led his band to this lake. Nearby lakes furnished a fine setting for Indian life, with wild rice in season and plentiful fish which were taken at night by the light of flaming torches, hence the name `flambeau.` The tribe was loyal to the American colonies, never taking sides with the British or French, and fought with the Union forces in the Civil War. Old Abe, American Eagle mascot of the Eighth Wisconsin in the the Civil War, was captured a few miles below this point by a Flambeau Indian. In 1792 the Northwest Fur Trading Co. established the Lac du Flambeau department for the Wisconsin River area trade. Forts and posts remained on this shore for about fifty years.`


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