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dc.contributor.authorPannekoek, Frits
dc.date.accessioned2005-09-19T21:13:17Z
dc.date.available2005-09-19T21:13:17Z
dc.date.issued1987
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2149/75
dc.description.abstractThe political, economic, and social history of present day Northwest Territories, Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba, was, for the first two hundred years of European contact, a product of the fur trade. At various posts along the region's principal rivers and lakes, traders would exchange such manufactured goods as blankets, beads, guns, tobacco, and axes for native supplies of beaver, marten, and muskrat pelts. In fact, beaver was so abundant that it came to be treated as a currency throughout the Canadian North West. This trading system was highly complex, involving not only the French, Scottish, and Canadian traders who came from the St. Lawrence Valley, and the British traders who came from Hudson Bay with their financial base in England, but the various native groups as well. And the history of the fur trade is not only the story of the actual trade itself, but also that of the new society created by the intermingling of fur traders and natives in the Western interior.en
dc.format.extent3815 bytes
dc.format.mimetypetext/html
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherThe Canadian Historical Associationen
dc.subjectHistory of Western Canadaen
dc.subjectFur tradeen
dc.subjectNative Indians of Canadaen
dc.titleThe Fur Trade and Western Canadian Society, 1670-1870en
dc.typeBooken


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