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  2. North American fur trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_fur_trade

    An illustration of European and Indigenous fur traders in North America, 1777. The North American fur trade is the (typically) historical commercial trade of furs and other goods in North America, predominantly in the eastern provinces of Canada and the northeastern American colonies (soon-to-be northeastern United States).

  3. Voyageurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyageurs

    The terms voyageur, explorateur, and coureur des bois have had broad and overlapping uses, but their meanings in the context of the fur trade business were more distinct. . Voyageurs were canoe transportation workers in organized, licensed long-distance transportation of furs and trade goods in the interior of the contine

  4. Fur trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fur_trade

    A fur trader in Fort Chipewyan, Northwest Territories, in the 1890s A fur shop in Tallinn, Estonia, in 2019 Fur muff manufacturer's 1949 advertisement. The fur trade is a worldwide industry dealing in the acquisition and sale of animal fur.

  5. William Sublette - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Sublette

    William Lewis Sublette, also spelled Sublett (September 21, 1798 – July 23, 1845), was an American frontiersman, trapper, fur trader, explorer, and mountain man.After 1823, he became an agent of the Rocky Mountain Fur Company, along with his four brothers.

  6. Joseph Bailly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Bailly

    Joseph Bailly (7 April 1774 – 21 December 1835) was a fur trader and a member of an important French Canadian family that included his uncle, Charles-François Bailly de Messein. Bailly was one of several Canadian from prominent families who were important in the western fur trade.

  7. Manuel Lisa - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manuel_Lisa

    Manuel Lisa, also known as Manuel de Lisa (September 8, 1772, in New Orleans Louisiana (New Spain) – August 12, 1820, in St. Louis, Missouri), was a Spanish citizen and later American citizen who, while living on the western frontier, became a landowner, merchant, fur trader, United States Indian agent, and explorer.

  8. Pacific Fur Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pacific_Fur_Company

    The Pacific Fur Company (PFC) was an American fur trade venture wholly owned and funded by John Jacob Astor that functioned from 1810 to 1813. It was based in the Pacific Northwest, an area contested over the decades among the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, the Spanish Empire, the United States of America and the Russian Empire.

  9. Ewing Young - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ewing_Young

    Ewing Young: His expeditions across Western North America. Ewing Young was born in Tennessee to a farming family in 1799. [1] In the early 1820s, he had moved to Missouri, then the far western edge of the American frontier, not far from the border of the Spanish-controlled territories of present-day Texas, New Mexico and the Southwestern United States.