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9780806196053 Academic Inspection Copy

The Mountain Men and the Fur Trade of the Far West, Volume 1

Biographical Sketches of the Participants
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Mountain men were the principal figures of the fur trade era, one of the most interesting, dramatic, and truly significant phases of the history of the American trans-Mississippi West during the first half of the 9th century. These men were of all types - some were fugitives from law and civilization, others were the best in rugged manhood some were heroic, some brutal, most were adventurous, and many were picturesque. The typical trapper was a young man - strong, hardy, and adventurous. Having succumbed to the lure of the wilderness, the thin veneer of civilization soon rubbed off him. In the wilds, he had little need for money - barter supplied his simple needs and wants. Possibly short on book-learning, he could read moccasin tracks, beaver sign, and the trace of the travois. Memorials to mountain men cover the West. Mountain peaks, passes, rivers, and lakes carry their names. Towns and counties have been christened in their honor. Their trails have become our highways - their campfire ashes, our cities. Included in Volume are the biographies of Manuel Alvarez Abel Baker Jean Baptiste Charbonneau Francis A. Chardon Henry Chatillon James Clyman Alexander Culbertson Jimmy Daugherty Job Frances Dye Thomas Eddie Gabriel Franchere Mark Head Charles Larpenteur Joseph L. Meek George Nidever Hiram Scott Isaac Slover Pinckney W. Sublette Solomon P. Sublette and Charles Town.
LeRoy R. Hafen (1893-1985) was Professor of History at the University of Denver and Brigham Young University, Executive Director of the State Historical Society of Colorado, and author/editor of numerous books on the American West, including Ruxton of the Rockies, Fur Trappers and Traders of the Far Southwest: Twenty Biographical Sketches, and Handcarts to Zion: The Story of a Unique Western Migration, 1856-1860.
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