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MtMan-List: New member
I feel a bit like I've wandered into the wrong classroom! I've been
interested in all the American Mountain Man stuff I've read since I joined
the list about a week ago, but I haven't seen much about my own interest
area: the Canadian fur trade, 1774-1821.
Rocky Mountain House was established in the Alberta foothills in 1799, and
provided the launch point for David Thompson's explorations west of the
Rockies. He discovered Howse Pass for the North West Company in 1807, and
established Kootenae House near the site of modern Invermere, BC. A few
years later, when unhappy Blackfeet (Peigan) warned him that they wouldn't
tolerate the NWC selling guns to the unarmed Kootenay on the other side of
the Rockies, he went north in search of a new route, and pioneered the
Athabasca Pass. He crossed the Athabasca Pass for the first time in the
winter of 1810-1811, and for decades afterwards it was a trade route for the
NWC and, later, Hudson's Bay Company. Thompson is only one of many fur
traders who were active in the Canadian Rockies from 1800 onwards. When he
crossed the Athabasca Pass, he was following a route pioneered by the
Iroquois (yes, Iroquois!), who were acting as free trappers for the NWC.
If you are interested in the Canadian fur trade of this period, check out
our web site, _Northwest Journal Online_, where you will find many online
articles of interest, an index to back issues of _Northwest Journal_, and
lots more. It's at
http://www.telusplanet.net/public/gottfred/nwj.html
I've been enjoying the discussions and I admire the way everyone is careful
to cite their sources.
Your humble & obedient servant,
Angela Gottfred
Chief Clerk, Northwest Brigade
(aka Charlotte Small)
gottfred@agt.net-->soon to be gottfred@telusplanet.net