
Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2001. Indian Women and French Men: Rethinking Cultural Encounter in the Western Great Lakes. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1974. Indians in the Fur Trade: Their Role as Trappers, Hunters, and Middlemen in the Lands Southwest of Hudson Bay, 1660–1870. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2010. Gathering Places: Aboriginal and Fur Trade Histories. Podruchny, Carolyn and Laura Peers, eds.Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2006. Making the Voyageur World: Travelers and Traders in the North American Fur Trade. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1987. Bourgeois Frontier: French Towns, French Traders, & American Expansion. Paul, MN: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1982. Where Two Worlds Meet: The Great Lakes Fur Trade. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 1980. Strangers in Blood: Fur Trade Company Families in Indian Country. The French traded iron tools, kettles, wool blankets and other supplies for the furs to make hats, while Native peoples exchanged furs for goods from around the world. These relations sustained the business of the fur trade. The French empire depended on maintaining a network of Native alliances, and so French officials, traders, and officers tried to employ diplomacy, tact, and respect for Native culture. Lawrence River like Montreal and Québec City, to posts in the interior at Mackinac and the upper Mississippi. Trade with the French flowed along the extensive network of waterways from French settlements along the St. Slavery was an integral part of the fur trade during this period. But European colonialism introduced different concepts of slavery, brought new slave peoples to America from Africa, and drove Native-Native slave raiding to unprecedented levels. Sometimes they gave these people as gifts while making alliances, at other times families adopted them in place of deceased relatives.

Native Americans often took their enemies captive rather than killing them and held them as subordinate people. Slavery existed in North America long before Europeans introduced the transatlantic slave trade. French demand for Native slaves resulted in Native people raiding other Indigenous communities. The fur trade brought the spread of guns, contagious diseases, and alcohol. The French and Native trading system created a unique fur trade culture consisting of large communities with people of diverse heritage.įrench-Native relations also brought chaos to the region. As a result of generations of intermarriage, cultural differences began to blur as “mixed” children entered the fur trade. The French and Native people lived together in an often egalitarian fashion, ate the same foods, dressed similarly, and suffered the same hardships. Many traders and voyageurs married Native American women and were integrated into their Native kinship networks, frequently trading exclusively within their particular community. At the rendezvous points, these goods were exchanged for furs, which were then sent to larger cities for shipment to the east coast. Voyageurs ( travelers in French) were men hired to work for the fur trade companies to transport trade goods throughout the vast territory to rendezvous posts. Many Native Americans, however, continued to practice their traditional religion or to observe a mixture of the two, and the French did not resort to forced conversions as the Spanish did. Throughout New France, many Native Americans converted to the Catholic faith, settled in French mission villages, attended Mass, and wore crucifixes. Native Americans in the Great Lakes and Mississippi valley regions often incorporated Frenchmen into their societies through marriage and the ritual of the calumet - the ceremonial pipe that brought peace and order to relationships and turned strangers into kinfolk. Native people and the French traded, lived together, and often married each other and built families together.

The French empire was based on the fur trade in this region and required Native American alliances to sustain it.


Indigenous peoples pursued these alliances with the French as a means of securing a wide range of European manufactured goods, but cloth, firearms, and metal weapons were among the most sought after.īy the early 1700s, the fur trade was firmly established in the Great Lakes region. In the early 1600s, French explorers made alliances with the Algonquins, Montagnais, and Hurons to gain access to rich fur territories.
