Taking into account for a trapper’s propensity to exaggerate, half that number would be a daunting experience. A commercial fur trade in North America grew out of the early contact between Indians and European fisherman who were netting cod on the Grand Banks off Newfoundland and on the Bay of Gaspé near Quebec. The trappers were limited in number, though, largely due to restrictive Spanish policies that generally disallowed trapper-traders from other empires to extract resources from what they viewed as Spanish territory. Ephraim Logan and Peter Skene Ogden, the names of whom still mark the areas they explored, entered as early as 1824 [2]. The North American fur trade was the acquisition, exchange, and sale of animal furs in North America.
October 20, 2017 Marshall Trimble. Eskimo and Indian trappers in Canada still trade their furs to fur companies for various goods. The fur trade had a tremendous effect on Dakota and Ojibwe cultural practices and influenced US-Native economic and political relations in the 19th century, including treaty negotiations. Displays include trappers’ equipment on loan from the American Mountain Men Association, a diorama of a Rendezvous scene, flintlock and percussion guns from the late 1700s and early 1800s, and tools, equipment, and trade goods used during the fur trade era. The Lisa, Men ard, and Morrison Fur Company is also credited with building a trading post at the Three Forks in Montana, but this is questionable–to the Mountain Man a fort was usually a log barricade.
Indians would trade the pelts of small animals, such as mink, for knives and other iron-based products, or for textiles. Today, almost all trappers sell their pelts. Voyageurs ("travelers" in French) were men hired to work for the fur trade companies to transport trade goods throughout the vast territory to rendezvous posts. The Economic History of the Fur Trade: 1670 to 1870. In the early 19th century, the fur trade flourished in the American West.Peaking in the early 1840s, trappers and traders began roaming the Rocky Mountains in numbers, beginning about 1810 and continuing through the 1880s. Voyageurs ("travelers" in French) were men hired to work for the fur trade companies to transport trade goods throughout the vast territory to rendezvous posts. Five trappers were killed. Small parties of trapper-traders continued to journey into Colorado to trap animals, particularly fur-bearers, into the early 1800s. Fur trappers, also known as Mountain Men, were the first white men to enter Cache Valley and the surrounding areas [1]. These many mountain men were mostly interested in beaver pelts, which, at the time, were used to make the tall, shiny hats of well-to-do eastern gentlemen. There were no trappers killed in the first battle, but Lewis Boldue was killed in the 1828 fight. In the 1820s and 1830s, what’s now western Wyoming was at the center of the fur trade of the northern Rocky Mountains.
... Trappers reported seeing as many 220 in a single day and as many as fifty or sixty in a bunch. In both the 1827 and 1828 rendezvous, there were fights with the Blackfeet near the rendezvous sites. Indians, trappers and their suppliers met each summer at a big trade fair called rendezvous, where trappers exchanged their season’s bea Native Americans in the United States and Canada traded among themselves prior to European arrival and immediately began to trade with the newcomers. The fur trade had a tremendous effect on Dakota and Ojibwe cultural practices and influenced US-Native economic and political relations in the 19th century, including treaty negotiations.
The fur trappers arrived at the Three Forks on April 3, 1810, and a trapping party was attacked on April 12th.
Displays include trappers’ equipment on loan from the American Mountain Men Association, a diorama of a Rendezvous scene, flintlock and percussion guns from the late 1700s and early 1800s, and tools, equipment, and trade goods used during the fur trade era. This exhibit offers a broad overview of the fur trade in the Rocky Mountains and specifically the Green River Valley between 1820 and 1840. Ann M. Carlos, University of Colorado Frank D. Lewis, Queen’s University Introduction.
The Life of a Fur Trapper. The fur trade prospered until the mid-1800's, when fur-bearing animals became scarce and silk hats became more popular than felt hats made with beaver.