The Fur Trade

  • In what ways were Aboriginal women vital to the fur trade? (Horizons – Chapter 4 – page 134)?
Women gathered the items, made food, medicine, clothing, and shelter. The men would trap the beavers and the women would clean it and turn it into a pelt. Men wanted to marry the women because they knew the land and they acted as a guide and it helped to make stronger ties to trade with the Europeans. The men that married the women were often polygamous and had a different wife for different places.

 

Find a quote/image that confirms any of the above

Source:

(author, title, year written/published, URL)

http://www.northwestjournal.ca/XIII2.htm

Title: Women of the Fur Trade

Date:  1774-1821

By A. Gottfred.

Quote/Image: “In native cultures women usually set up camp, dressed furs, made leather, made cooked meals, gathered firewood, made moccasins, netted snowshoes, and many other things that were essential to daily life for both natives and fur traders, yet were unfamiliar tasks for Europeans.”
Interpretation: The Women were a very essential part to the fur trade without them the men would have many other jobs than hunting and they would be as efficient if the work wasn’t slit up.