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Indian Fur
Trade
Fur trade. The fur trade was an important factor in the
conquest and settlement of North America by the French and the English. Canada
and the great W. and N. W. were long little more to the world than the Fur
Country. Lahontan (New Voy., i, 53, 1703) said: "Canada subsists only upon the
trade of skins or furs, three-fourths of which come from the people that live
around the great lakes." Long before his time the profit to be gained in the fur
traffic with distant tribes encouraged adventurers to make their way to the
Mississippi and beyond, while the expenses of not a few ambitious attempts to
reach Cathay or Cipangu through a N. w. passage to the South sea were met, not
out of royal treasuries, but from presents and articles of barter received from
the Indians. The various fur and trading companies established for traffic in
the regions w. of the great lakes and in the Hudson bay country exercised a
great influence upon the aborigines by bringing into their habitat a class of
men, French, English, and Scotch, who would intermarry with them, thus
introducing a mixed-blood element into the population. Manitoba, Minnesota, and
Wisconsin in particular owe much of their early development to the trader and
the mixed-blood. The proximity of hunting grounds to the settlements beyond the
Alleghanies favored the free hunter and the single trapper, while the remote
regions of the N. W. could best be exploited by the fur companies. The activity
of the free trapper and solitary hunter meant the extermination of the Indian
where possible. The method of the great fur companies, which had no dreams of
empire over a solid white population, rather favored amalgamation with the
Indians as the best means of exploiting the country in a material way. The
French fur companies of early days, the Hudson s Bay Company (for two centuries
ruler of a large part of what is now Canada), the Northwest Company, the
American Fur Company (in the initiation of which patriotism played a part), the
Missouri Fur Company, the Russian-American Company, the Alaska Commercial
Company, and others have influenced the development of civilization in North
America. The forts and fur-trading stations of these companies long represented
to the Indian tribes the white man and his civilization. That the Hudson s Bay
Company abandoned its line of forts on the seacoast and went to the Indian
hunting grounds, ultimately taking possession of the vast interior of Canada,
was due largely to the competition of rival fur traders, such as the Northwest
Company. Intimate contact with Indian tribes was thus forced on rather than
initiated by the Hudson s Bay Company. The pioneers of the fur trade were the
solitary trappers and buyers, whose successors are the free traders on the upper
Mackenzie today. They blazed the way for canoe trips, fur brigades, trading
posts, and, finally, settlements. It was often at a portage, where there were
falls or rapids in a river, that the early white trader established him self. At
such places afterward sprang up towns who manufactures were developed by means
of the water power. The Indian village also often became a trading post and is
now transformed into a modern city. Portages and paths that were first used by
the Indian and afterward by the fur trader are now changed to canals and
highways, but other routes used by fur traders are still, in regions of the far
N., only primitive paths. Some, like the grande route from Montreal to
the country beyond Hudson bay, are followed by white men for summer travel and
pleasure. In the N. W. the fur trade followed the course of all large streams,
and in some parts the leading clans de rived much of their power from the
control of the waterways.
The appearance and disappearance of fur-bearing animals, their retreat from one
part of the country to another, influenced the movements of Indian tribes. This
is particularly true of the movements of the buffalo (q. v.), though the
decrease of other large game was often the compel ling motive of tribal
migration. The hunt of the buffalo led to certain alliances and unions for the
season of the chase among tribes of different stocks, a few of which may have
become permanent. Thus the Kutenai, Sarsi, Siksika, and Atsina have all hunted
together on the plains of the Saskatchewan and the upper Missouri. The
occasional and finally complete disappearance of the buffalo from these regions
has weighed heavily upon the Indian tribes, the buffalo having been to some of
them what the bamboo is to the Malay and the palm to the West African, their
chief source of food, fuel, clothing, and shelter. The extermination of the wild
buffalo caused the discontinuance of the Kiowa sun dance (Mooney in 17th Rep.
B. A. E., 346, 349, 1898) and affected likewise the ceremonies of other
tribes. In several tribes the buffalo dance was an important ceremony and
buffalo chiefs seem to have been elected for duty during the hunting season. The
importance of the northern hare, whose skin was used to make coats and tipis by
certain Indians of the Canadian Northwest, is shown in the designation
"Hareskins" for one of the Athapascan tribes (Kawchogottine). The Tsattine,
another Athapascan tribe, received their name for a like reason. The Iroquois
war against the Neutral nation was partly due to the growing scarcity of beavers
in the Iroquois country. The recent inroads of the whites upon the muskox of
arctic Canada are having their effect upon the Indian tribes of that region.
Bell (Jour. Am. Folklore, xvi, 74, 1903) has noted the advance of the
free trader on Athabasca r. and lake, giving rise to a barbarous border
civilization, like that of the whaler on the shores of Hudson bay and the"
rancher and miner on the Peace and other mountain streams, which is having its
due effect on the natives: The influx of fur traders into the Mackenzie r.
region, and even to Great Bear lake, within the last two years, has, I believe,
very much altered the character of the northern Indians." The effect upon the
Indians of the s. Atlantic region of the coming of the white trader was early
noted by Adair and others. Here, too, the trader not infrequently married into
the tribe and became an agent in modifying aboriginal culture by the
introduction of European ideas and institutions.
Before the advent of the Europeans the fur trade had assumed considerable pro
portions in various parts of the continent (Mason, Rep. Nat, Mus., 586-589,
1894). In the 16th century the Pecos obtained buffalo skins from the Apache
and bartered them again with the Zuñi. The people of Acoma obtained deerskins
from the Navaho. The trade between Ottawa r. and Hudson bay was well known to
the Jesuit missionaries in the beginning of the 17th century. In the time of
Lewis and Clark the Arikara obtained furs from other tribes and bartered them
with the whites for various articles, and the Skilloot used to get buffalo skins
from tribes on the upper Missouri to barter off with other Indian tribes. The
Chilkat proper and the Chilkoot even now act as middle men in the fur trade
between the whites and other Indian tribes. The tribes about the mouth; the
mouth of the Columbia were also middlemen, and their commerce influenced the
conditions of their social institutions, making possible, perhaps, slavery, the
existence of a class of nobles, certain changes in the status of women, etc. The
trade in furs between the Eskimo of Alaska and the peoples of extreme N. E. Asia
existed long before the advent of Europeans. At Kotzebue sd. there is still held
a summer fair (Nelson in 18th Rep. B. A. E., 229, 1899). Fur-trading
voyages are common in this region.
The development of intertribal commerce among the Plains Indians was much
stimulated by the hunt of the buffalo and its material rewards. By inducing the
natives to trap and hunt the wild animals of the northern part of the continent
on a large scale for the sake of their valuable skins the fur companies
stimulated the aboriginal talent in the production and use of snares and other
devices, even if they did not improve the morals of the Indians. The
introduction of the horse (q. v.) and the gun led to the extermination of the
buffalo by Plains Indians and whites. In certain parts of the continent skins
were a basis of value primitive money. A Kutenai, when he draws a beaver,
produces a picture, not of the animal, but of its cured skin. With the Eskimo of
the Yukon, even before the advent of the Russians, the unit of value was "one
skin"; that is, the skin of the full-grown land otter, and of late years this
has been replaced by the skin of the beaver (Nelson, op. cit. , 232) .
Skins of sea otters, beavers, and other animals were the basis of the wealth,
also, of many tribes of the N. Pacific coast, until the practical extermination
of some of these species made necessary a new currency, provided in the blankets
of the Hudson s Bay Company, which were preferred to most other substitutes that
were offered by white men. Toward the interior the beaver skin was the ruling
unit, and day in some parts such unit is the skin of the muskrat. Among the
Kutenai of s. E. British Columbia the word for a quarter of a dollar is
khanko (muskrat). English traders reckoned prices in skins and French
traders in "plus" (pelus, peaux). Indians counted their wealth in skins,
and in the potlatch of some tribes the skin preceded the blanket as a unit of
value in the distribution. During the colonial period furs were legal tender in
some parts of the country; also at various times and places during the pioneer
occupancy of the W. and N. Altogether the fur trade may be considered one of the
most important and interesting phases of the inter course between the Europeans
and the North American Indians. See Buffalo, Commerce, Exchange, Trading posts,
Trails and Trade routes, Travel and Transportation.
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includes some historical materials that may imply negative stereotypes
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Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, Frederick Webb Hodge, 1906
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