Welcome to the TMA - the Traditional Muzzleloading Association

The TMA is always free to access: totally non-profit and therefore no nagging for your money, no sponsors means no endless array of ads to wade through, and no "membership fees" ever required. Brought to you by traditional muzzleloaders with decades of wisdom in weaponry, accoutrements, and along with 18th and 19th century history knowledge of those times during the birth our nation, the United States of America.

!!! PLEASE CLICK HERE TO READ AN IMPORTANT TMA MESSAGE !!!

Author Topic: Late priod Snake Country Beaver Harvest  (Read 63 times)

Sir Michael

  • Guest
Late priod Snake Country Beaver Harvest
« on: February 08, 2013, 03:12:28 PM »
From Galbraith’s, Hudson's Bay Company as an Imperial Factor, page 95 and, Fort Vancouver, Fur trade Returns    MS, in provincial Archives of British Columbia, Victoria, B. C.

The old Snake party remarkably successful in meeting its main objective -- the reduction of the Snake Country to a fur desert.  The story is told by the declining returns.  From the "nearly 5000" beaver pelts brought in by Ross in 1824, the numbers grew smaller almost every year until an apparent equilibrium was reached: 3577 in 1826; 4000 in 1829; 1295 in 1830; 737 (large beaver only) in 1831; end 788 large beaver in 1832.  After the end of the regular Snake brigades the returns for the Snake Country were even more revealing: 350 large beaver in 1834; 220 large beaver in 1835; and 800 large beaver in 1836.  For 1844 the returns were 722 large beaver and 272 small; for 1845 they amounted to 978 large beaver and 588 small, and for 1846 they were 897 large beaver and 544 small.