Friday, August 13, 2010

Field Trip: The North West Company Fur Post

bink and I drove 60 miles north of the Twin Cities, through the cornfields...


to the North West Co. Fur Post, from 1804.



The British company (out of Montreal) hired French-Canadian voyageurs. They paddled canoes 12 hours a day, at 50 to 60 strokes a minute.



This was the farthest-south post of the Great Lakes fur trade. Door hinges, nails, and the like had to be canoed in.

Beaver pelts were the point, but they bought everything from skunk to bear fur.


Local Ojibwe men caught the animals. The women bound branches into circular frames for preparing the furs.

The Voyageurs were poorly paid laborers.



Their travel rations were corn and grease.


The company's officers were educated British men.


Trade goods included glass beads from Italy, ostrich feathers from North Africa, and rum from the West Indies.

English sheep and mill workers produced textiles for trade. The red marks indicate how many beaver pelts a blanket is worth.


During the winter trading season, the Ojibwe lived near the post in wigwams, which means "birch houses".

They sewed sheets of birchbark into housing material.

And stalks of cattails into mats.
________
Me, below, holding a beaver pelt, wearing a gentleman's beaver top hat. These expensive hats, made from beavers' soft undercoat, were the main driving force behind the whole shebang. I'd read copiously about these things for the French and Indian War book, but had never even touched one before. I was so hepped up being there, I didn't even mind the 94 degrees, 80% humidity heat.


bink twirling in a coat an Ojibwe hunter had bought from the British in trade.