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Forty Years a Fur Trader on the Upper Missouri immerses the reader
in the life of a merchant in the Missouri River from the 1830s to
the early 1870s. An autobiographical chronicle which sheds a light
into a period and profession of history often ignored in the modern
day, Forty Years a Fur Trader is an illuminating and lively
chronicle of Charles Larpenteur's career as a fur seller. A man of
tough resolve and hardy constitution, Larpenteur condenses his many
years traversing the Missouri wilderness and trading posts into a
series of episodic highlights, chronologically arranged. The
Missouri River and Rocky Mountains were, at the time, dangerous but
potentially lucrative proposition for a trader to undertake. Rough
terrain, numerous wild animals, and the presence of Native American
tribes made life as a fur trader unpredictable and fraught with
danger. Yet a good set of high quality pelts would fetch high sums,
demand being high especially for animals whose fur had scarcely
before seen market.
Forty Years a Fur Trader on the Upper Missouri immerses the reader
in the life of a merchant in the Missouri River from the 1830s to
the early 1870s. An autobiographical chronicle which sheds a light
into a period and profession of history often ignored in the modern
day, Forty Years a Fur Trader is an illuminating and lively
chronicle of Charles Larpenteur's career as a fur seller. A man of
tough resolve and hardy constitution, Larpenteur condenses his many
years traversing the Missouri wilderness and trading posts into a
series of episodic highlights, chronologically arranged. The
Missouri River and Rocky Mountains were, at the time, dangerous but
potentially lucrative proposition for a trader to undertake. Rough
terrain, numerous wild animals, and the presence of Native American
tribes made life as a fur trader unpredictable and fraught with
danger. Yet a good set of high quality pelts would fetch high sums,
demand being high especially for animals whose fur had scarcely
before seen market.
The son of French immigrants who settled in Maryland, Charles
Larpenteur was so eager to see the real American West that he
talked himself into a job with the Rocky Mountain Fur Company in
1833. When William Sublette and Robert Campbell sold out to the
American Fur Company a year later they recommended the steady and
sober young Larpenteur to Kenneth McKenzie, who hired him as a
clerk. For forty years, as a company man and as an independent
agent, the Frenchman would ply the fur trade on the upper Missouri
River. Based on Larpenteur's daily journals, this memoir is
unparalleled in describing the business side and social milieu of
the fur trade conducted from wintering houses and subposts in the
Indian country. As Paul L. Hedren notes in his introduction,
Larpenteur moved comfortably among Indians and all levels of the
trade's hierarchy. But he lived during a time of transition and
decline in the business, and his vivid recital of his personal
affairs often seems to bear out his feeling that he was "born for
misfortune." His lasting legacy is this book, which is reprinted
from the one-volume Lakeside Classics edition of 1933.
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