Exploration
the Fur Trade and Hudson's Bay Company
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Aboriginal Peoples: Backbone of the Fur Trade

 

The job of preparing the furs for transportation was done by Aboriginal women. Because this could be so much work, it took Aboriginal women away from their normal duties. It also led to polygamy - where one man would have many wives so she could prepare more furs for him.

The First Nations and Inuit also aided in the exploration of North America. There were no maps to help the explorers find their way through the wilderness. The First Nations and Inuit acted as guides. Explorers, fur traders and settlers relied on the information they provided. Maps were sketched on birch bark or drawn in the sand along the river banks, on the ground, or in the snow.


Especially important were the Iroquois. Originally from the east, they moved west with the fur trade, all the way to British Columbia. They were very valuable there because they knew how to make birch-bark canoes - something local First Nations people could not do.

The Iroquois were clever traders and always tried to get the best deal. They were also proud warriors, which sometimes got them into trouble with other First Nations peoples.

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