The History of Minnesota is not what it seems.
Minnesota was not founded as a natural state, but as a corporate state.
In 1670 Charles lI awarded a royal charter to the Hudson Bay Company, granting the rights to all the commerce of the bay’s entire drainage. Known as Rupert’s Land, The area encompassed 1. 5 million square miles, stretching west to the Rocky Mountains and south to the present day Minnesota and North Dakota.
The Hudson’s Bay company acted as the de facto government of regions in Canada. The Hudson's bay company was also known as the governor and Adventurers of England, trading into Hudson’s Bay.
Turning Point: In 1857, the government of the United States grants the Canada-based Hudson’s Bay Company a license to trade furs and other goods within its borders.
In 1859, The Hudson's bay company build a fur trading post at the junction of Red and Buffalo rivers in Minnesota. The post was named Georgetown. Legally unable to own property in the United States, The Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) hired a St. Paul resident Anson Northrup to operate a steamboat on its behalf along the Red River south of Canada.
Our state was purchased as a territory through the Louisiana Purchase. It was considered a territory form 1804-1857. However in the those years many cities incorporated.
In 1861, the Red River steamboat Anson Northrup sinks.
In 1862, the Burbank brothers’ Minnesota Stage Company ( a second proxy for HBC) operated most of the stagecoaches that transported freight and people from St. Cloud to Georgetown. It also bought the Anson Northrup and began operating it as the Pioneer.
To this day, Minnesota is run by a corporation, not by the people. In October 1966, the District of Columbia annexed the de facto government as part of the federal government.
This is exactly the opposite of what the founders enshrined into our founding documents. Therefore this is all by fraud. Fraud vitiates everything.
Please check back for updates as research continues on this topic.