Continued...
In 1608, the
French explorer Samuel de Champlain established a
trading post on the site of the present-day city
Quebec. The city became fur-trading center. The
French expanded their trading activities along the
St. Lawrence River and around the Great Lakes. They
eventually controlled most of the early fur trade in
what became Canada. The French traders obtained furs
from the Huron Indians and, later, from the Ottawa.
These tribes were not trappers, but they acquired
the furs from other Indians. The French also
developed the fur trade along the Mississippi River.
During the
early 1600's, English settlers developed a fur trade
in what are now New England and Virginia. English
traders later formed an alliance with the Iroquois
Indians and extended their trading area from Maine
down the Atlantic Coast to Georgia.
European
business companies handled a large number of the
furs shipped from North America during the 1600's
and 1700's. The most famous of these firms, the
Hudson's Bay Company, was established in 1670. It
was founded by a group of English merchants, with
the help of two French fur traders. The English
government gave the company sole trading rights in
what is now the Hudson Bay region.
During the
1700's, French and British fur traders competed
bitterly over trading rights in the region between
the Allegheny Mountains and the Mississippi River.
This competition, plus other conflicts between the
two nations, led to the French and Indian war in
1754. Great Britain won the war in 1763 and took
over France's colonial empire in North America.
In 1783,
British merchants in Montreal founded the North West
Company to compete with the Hudson's Bay Company.
The traders of the new firm were called "Nor
Westers." They led many daring expeditions in
search of fur in far western Canada. However, the
company failed financially and, in 1821, merged with
the Hudson's Bay Company.
During the
late 1700's, Russia began to develop the fur trade
in the area that is now Alaska. The Russian-American
Company was established there in 1799.
The Lewis
and Clark expedition to the Pacific Ocean in 1805
and 1806 led to the development of fur trading in
the West. Several companies competed heavily for
this western trade. They included firms headed by
John Jacob Astor, William H Ashley, Pierre
Chouteau, and Manuel Lisa.
Many Indians
of the West had little interest in
trapping, and so the fur-trading companies hired
white frontiersmen to obtain pelts. These trappers
became known as "mountain men" because they
roamed through wild areas of the Rocky Mountains in
search of fur. Such mountain men as Kit Carson, John
Colter, and Jedediah Smith became famous for their
roles in the settlement of the West.
Ashley, the
head of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, began to
hold an annual trappers' gathering, called a
rendezvous, trappers sold their furs and bought
supplies for the next year. The rendezvous saved the
men the time and trouble of traveling long distances
to various trading posts.
The fur
trade started to decline in the Eastern United
States by the late 1700's. The decline resulted
chiefly from the clearing of large areas for
settlement. As more and more land was cleared,
fur-bearing animals became increasingly scarce. Over
trapping of fur-bearing animals hurt the fur trade
in the Western United States and Western Canada. In
addition, the value of beaver fur dropped sharply in
the 1830's, when European had manufacturers began to
use silk instead of felt. By 1870, most fur-trading
activity had ended.
The fur
trade contributed to the development of
British and French empires in North America. During
the 1600's, the prospect of wealth from the fur
trade attracted many Europeans to the New World.
Traders and trappers explored much of North America
in search of fur. They built trading posts in the
wilderness, and settlements grew up around many of
these posts. Some of these settlements later became
such major cities as Detroit, New Orleans, and St.
Lewis in the United States; and Edmonton, Montreal,
Quebec, and Winnipeg in Canada.
The fur trade led to conflict
between France and Great Britain in America.
Rivalries over trading alliances also arose among
Indian tribes that wanted to obtain European goods.
The fur trade promoted friendly relations between
the Indians and white traders. However, it also
brought Indian hostility toward white settlers
because the clearing of land threatened the supply
of fur-bearing animals.
The claims of fur traders played
a part in establishing the border between the United
States and Canada. For example, the areas of trade
controlled by U.S. and British traders helped
determine the border in the region of the Great
Lakes.