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Article Title: The Upper Missouri : Its Methods of Operation

Full Citation: Ray H Mattison, “The Upper Missouri Fur Trade: Its Methods of Operation,” Nebraska History 42 (1961): 1-28

URL of article: http://www.nebraskahistory.org/publish/publicat/history/full-text/NH1961FurTrade.pdf Date: 11/15/2011

Article Summary: The fur trade flourished along the Missouri in the early years of the nineteenth century. Traders concerned solely with profit exploited the Indians who worked for them. That treatment caused a distrust of white men that lingered after the annihilation of bison herds in the early 1880s had made fur trading an insignificant business.

Cataloging Information:

Names: ; Edward T Denig; Rudolph Friederick Kurz; Maximilian, Prince of Wied; Charles Larpenteur; Kenneth McKenzie; ; Francis Chardon

Fur Trading Companies: Hudson’s Bay Company; Northwest Company; Company of Explorers of the Upper Missouri; ; Rocky Mountain Fur Company; Columbia Fur Company; Western Department, ; Upper Missouri Outfit; Sublette and Campbell

American Fur Company Trading Posts: Cabanne’s Post (Nebraska), Fort Pierre (), Fort Clark (North Dakota), Fort Union (North Dakota), Fort McKenzie ()

Keywords: Manuel Lisa; Edward T Denig; Rudolph Friederick Kurz; Maximilian, Prince of Wied; Charles Larpenteur; Kenneth McKenzie; Alexander Culbertson; Francis Chardon; Hudson’s Bay Company; American Fur Company

Photographs / Images: map showing fur trading posts; two views of Fort Union (Bodmer image from the days of the fur trade and 1948 National Park Service photo); two views of Fort Pierre (Bodmer and National Park Service, 1954); two drawings by W Sammons: “Fur trading scene in the 1830s,” and “The fur trader takes a wife”; Indians attacking fur traders (Harpers Weekly, May 23, 1868); Steamboat “Yellowstone”

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