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11933809
Phases of the Fur Trade Notes
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Social 7.3 Mapa Mental sobre Phases of the Fur Trade Notes, criado por Craig Fell em 18-01-2018.
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social 7.3
Mapa Mental por
Craig Fell
, atualizado more than 1 year ago
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Craig Fell
quase 7 anos atrás
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Phases of the Fur Trade Notes
Phase 1
Early Fur Trade
Competition Affected:
Environment
More trapping of beavers and other animals
First Nations relied on beavers and other animals for food
Near extinction of beavers
Balance of food chain affected
New Settlements formed
European settlement caused extinction of Beothuk
New Technology
guns
new types of traps
Instead of wood traps, they got metal traps
traded beaver pelts for new useful tools (pots pans, knives etc.)
Replaced wood, rock, bones for making tools
Way FN used land
new focus on trapping for trade
No longer just using land to support needs for food, clothing etc.
Reduction in available land for First Nations
Family Life
New way for First Nations to support family - due to competition for fur trade
disease could affect families - death
Dying from guns
Metis babies- from French marrying First Nations - change family dynamic
Started with cod fishing
Came a shore to trade with First Nations
Traded furs for iron goods, knives etc.
1500-1603
Phase 2
Expansion Inland
Coureurs de Bois took over middlemen for French after Ouendat defeat
1603-1670
Interactions between groups
French
Needed First Nations as trade partners
Better access to furs
British
Fighting French, Kichespirini, Ouendat, Mi'Kmaq
Defeated Ounedat - no longer middlemen for French
Metis
Born from French and First Nations
French wanted a strategic partnership with First Nations, so married them
First Nations
Kichespirini, Ouendat, Mi'Kmaq allied with French
Haudenosaunee and Anishnabe allied with British and Dutch
Ouendat out as middlemen opened door for new middlemen
Pressured to convert to Christianity
Made First Nations reliant/dependable on Fur Trade and Europeans
France dominated
Quebec and Montreal main shipping centres
Unloaded trade goods in Quebec and loaded furs to head back to France
along St. Lawrence
French-Haudenosaunee War
Started because of fur trade
Haudenosaunee allied with British and Dutch
French allied with Ouendat, Mi'kmaq, Innu, Kichespirini.
Ouendat were "middlemen" between French and First Nations
Kichespirini allied with French for guns and protection
British needed to challenge French domination in fur trade
Ouendat defeated
Truce agreed upon in 1701
Phase 3
Rival Networks
HBC vs. NWC
1670-1760
Britain established HBC in 1670
to compete directly with French in fur trade
Britain gave merchants monopoly
Gave HBC land called Rupert's Land
Land surrounded Hudson's Bay
Easy access to furs - without transporting too far- easy access back to Britain
Needed Cree and Nakoda as middlemen
between Hudson's Bay forts and First Nations to West
French began creating fur trade forts
in Great Lakes region
Hired Voyageurs to transport furs - essential link in French fur trade routes
Metis emerge
French strategy to develop partnerships with FN groups
Scottish Metis working for HBC also emerged
Economic competition
HBC now competing with French
Driving fur traders and companies/merchants to expand to new territories and include more groups of people (FN)
More people involved in fur trade - making money
more people from Europe immigrating to North America for job and business opportunities in Fur Trade
Not just businesses in fur trade, but ones that support fur trade (shops, builders, clothe makers, etc.)
Just like people from all over Canada moving to Alberta to make money from oil industry
Creates business and job opportunities that support oil industry - engineers, construction workers, airline industry, Tim Hortons, etc.
Phase 4
The Drive West
1760-1821
New France becomes British Colony
North West Company (NWC) takes over French trade routes
throughout St. Lawrence River and Great Lakes region
Owned by British merchants
depended on Canadian and Metis workers
Economic Competition between HBC and NWC
Competition between HBC and NWC led companies to move west to find new supplies of fur and FN partners
Pemmican trade started
made of dried beef, animal fat and berries
fur network gets larger - Voyageurs, traders and shippers were traveling further - needed food that travelled well
Pemmican could last up to 30 years!
Territorial Expansion
Fur trade moved west - so did people working in fur trade
Cree, Nakoda, Anishnabe moved with European companies west
forts created out West
Forts created are now Canadian towns and cities - some major cities
Fort Garry = Winnipeg, Fort Edmonton = Edmonton, Fort William = Thunder Bay, Fort Calgary = Calgary
Because people came for business/job opportunities, and settled there for good
Phase 5
Monopoly in West
1821-1870
HBC and NWC merged into HBC
competition led to fighting, shootings, hostage taking
Britain stepped in to end conflict
Fur Trade declines - end of fur trade
Buffalo began to disappear
Beaver disappearing
**European demand for furs falls
Britain sells Rupert's Land to Canada
Sold in 1869 - two years after Canada formed
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