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New Hampshire Trappers Association Back in 2000 I borrowed a rare book from NHTA
Director Art Whipple which he said was full of the type information I
was always asking about in my endeavor to research the early history of
trapping and the fur trade specific to New Hampshire. At a subsequent
NHTA Directors Meeting, Art brought his old book for me to borrow.
It was a hardbound issue with yellowing pages, a few missing,
the binding about to give out. The title was New Hampshire Game and
Furbearers - A History by Helenette Silver copyright 1957 and
published by NHF&G. This book is the finest document I have ever
seen on the subject and before returning it to Art I had written over
100 pages of notes. At the time I was unaware of a second addition
printed in 1974 which updates many of the charts and provides much
additional information. Many sportsmen/conservationist and perhaps New
Hampshire historians have probably not seen this book or
perhaps are even unaware of its existence. When the NHTA started this
website it offered an opportunity to store and display a large
and diverse amount of historical information related to the subject
matter which is of interest to trappers and hopefully many others.
NHTA Director Roger Burnham provided a copy of the 1974 edition and the NHTA
has sought and been granted permission by NHF&G to scan portions of
this exceptional document and place it on our website. The sections
chosen to be displayed are representative of the depth and quality of
this document which should hold the interest of many who study the early
history of trapping, the fur trade, furbearers, and the development of
conservation, wildlife management , and enforcement in New Hampshire. We
are forever indebted to Helenette Silver for writing the first copy, and
to all the great employees at NHF&G who contributed information data
and support for the initial print and a second edition. We would
be greatly served should a future project to update and
reprint a third edition develop. To view
selected sections of New Hampshire Game and Furbearers - A History by
Helenette Silver click this link. Noel B. Stender of Gilmanton NH "Don Gerow" Trapping Supply and Lure Maker "Honest Abe"
Fine - Largest Buyer of Fur in New Hampshire 1936-1937 Guide
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The
Early Fur Trade
In New Hampshire
|
June
2004
In 1498 John Cabot sailed into the Hudson Bay for the purpose of exploration and traded items of little European value to the indigetious peoples, for excellent quality furs. In Europe, or the Old Country as it would come to be called, the forests had been mostly cleared for agriculture or fuel purposes while the wildlife had long been depleted due to a lack of appropriate habitat and uncontrolled harvesting. Most of the remaining quality forest areas were reserved for royal sport. Furs were an exclusive material for clothing afforded only by royalty or the most successful among the merchant class. The general population utilized domestic leather and coarse types of cloth in very basic attire. The common folk had very limited use of the king’s forest, which did not include harvesting timber or wild game. In many cases the price for poaching was death. So when Cabot returned to Europe with beautiful wild furs, which were easily obtained, many took notice of the potential for profit. In 1500 the third voyage of Columbus came along the coast of what would become New England and trade continued for wild fur. Early in the 1500’s European fishing vessels began to work the New England coast returning after each trip with a hull full of salted cod and an abundance of fur. Many fishing vessels mounted a single cannon or swivel gun, which provided extra security during the trading sessions while at anchor close to shore. This barter in manufactured goods and trinkets for fur became a common practice prior to a homeward bound voyage. Due to treachery practiced by both cultures, which made safety on the mainland uncertain, it would take a few more decades before European investors would underwrite colonization for potential financial gain. The commerce and associated intermingling of the two cultures in all likelihood introduced European diseases so that in 1530 there was a major die off of the coastal Indians, which paved the way for European settlement sooner rather than later.
The
excellent fishing off the New England coast offered the first financial
reward in the new world for an industry with export capabilities. The
fur trade was practiced as a lucrative sideline, not at first recognized
for the full potential it presented. By the late 1500’s the Paris
fashion for beaver hats touched off a fur boom that lasted more than 200
years. With a boom underway in the value of beaver pelts, the European
nations began an era of land claims, settlement, and wars. England,
France, Spain, and Holland all strived to gain competitive advantage and
territorial rights for the fur trade. In 1614 John Smith sailed up the
Piscataqua River to claim the area for England, and traded with Native
Americans for fur in sufficient quantity to benefit the trip. The
following year 1615 saw a significant investment on the Isles of Shoals
in fish processing facilities with many English workers stationed there
to air dry fish on racks, and pack in barrels with salt, for transport
back to England. Native Americans came from inland via the Piscataqua
River and also both up and down the coast to trade with the fishermen on
the island just off shore. From 1616-1620 perhaps as many as 95% of the
remaining coastal Native Americans died of European diseases. When the
Puritans established in the Bay Colony their only product available in
abundance was corn. The Puritans traded with Native Americans for all
types of wild game meat for their domestic consumption and wild fur for
export. Every effort was made by the Puritans to monopolize the commerce
with Native Americans but the opportunity to profit on the fur trade
rapidly slipped out of the bag. As early as 1621 the Puritans were
sponsoring a Penacook Trading Post in what is now New Hampshire to get
better access to furs from that tribe. In the period of 1621-23 David
Thomson, an agent of Ferdinando Gorge, built Pannaway fort at the mouth
of the Piscataqua on the Strawberry Bank. This location and surrounding
area would eventually become Portsmouth. The rock construction project
provided off-season employment for the fishmongers from the Isle of
Shoals operation, and a level of protection for the few settlers in the
area when it was completed. Pannaway Fort became a center for much
activity and another location for barter or fur trade. By 1622 a
non-Puritan named Thomas Morton had established a near monopoly on the
New England area Native trade. Morton had considerable advantage over
the Puritans in that he truly enjoyed Native American culture and often
lived or celebrated among them. Morton also traded shotguns and
gunpowder to increase the harvest and possibly rum to lighten the
spirit, both practices which were outlawed by the Puritan theocracy. The
Puritans were the most significant authority in the area and arrested
Morton on trumped up charges and exiled him. The Puritans regularly
exiled or banished folks who didn’t fit their stringent religious
parameters, many others would willingly distance themselves from the
intolerant Puritan Colony. Those who moved beyond Puritan influence were
now closer to the Native population and in a better position to trade.
In 1623 the first framed construction in what would become New Hampshire
went up at Odiorne Point, near the location where the Natives gathered
to cross to the Isle of Shoals. In 1628 the Hilton brothers would be at
odds with the Puritans over religion, and locate their farm / trading
location a little way up the mouth of the Piscataqua on the old
Cocheco-Winninanebiskek Indian Trail, thus placing themselves in a
better position for Natives coming down the Piscataqua from the
interior.
Despite failing
efforts to enforce a monopoly, the Puritans were able to pay off their
significant debt with proceeds from the fur trade by 1636.
Gorges and another investor, Mason, had formed the Laconia
Company in 1631 with settlements on both sides of the Piscataqua
primarily to harvest and ship lumber. By 1633 the Laconia Co had failed
and the employees were paid off in fur and otherwise abandoned in place.
The Laconia Co employees turned to subsistence farming along with the
growing fur industry and Indian trade. Some of these early settlers and
others to follow moved beyond the Hiltons up the Cocheco River and
established their farms. This area, which became Dover, was a
significant location for commerce with the Native Americans, as many
tribes traveled through on seasonal journeys to the coast for the
summer, to the salmon fishing falls, or when heading inland for a winter
camp. Dover established a series of truck houses at strategic locations
known to the Native Americans and designed to encourage trade without
the necessity of their entering the settled area. This process of folks
moving ever further inland to gain competitive advantage in the fur
trade would proceed most settlement in New Hampshire as it did
throughout the rest of the Continental area, all the way to the West
Coast. The first metal traps began to appear around 1600, manufactured
one at a time by talented country blacksmiths at considerable expense.
With the decline of Native American populations and the new harvest
technique presented with manufactured traps, the harvest came
increasingly from the non-Indian trapper. The fur trade was a major
factor in the economy of the New Hampshire area up to 1764, with the
buckskin or beaver pelt utilized as the primary units of exchange all
during that period.
The fur industry including the Indian trade, trapping by non Indians, the processing, shipping, and world wide marketing of furs and fur products may have been America’s second industry chronologically behind ocean fishing but it was the largest and most important industry in our new nation for 250 years. The fur trade was the engine that powered most of the early and much of the sustained economic growth in our Nation up until 1830. The fur industry started many entrepreneurs and produced the Nation’s first millionaire, John Jacob Astor.