The Fur Trade


Each year, in early summer, the Indians came to the trading posts to meet with the fur traders.

photo: Harry Foster; CMC S96-25083
Trading scene at Quebec, 1628
Illustration by Francis Back
Collection of the Canadian Museum of Civilization

. . . On the tenth of . . . [July 1624] . . . the savages came and encamped near the settlement. On the following day de Caen arrived with two pinnaces laden with merchandise. The next day the trading with the savages began; other Canadians arrived at the same time with some shallops. On the fourteenth of the said month the trading with the savages was finished, and they left the same day to go back to their own country, one Frenchman [Jean Richer, their interpreter] going with the Bisserains [Nipissings] . . .

On the sixteenth, Brother Gabriel [Sagard] arrived with seven canoes, to our great joy. He told us all that had happened during the winter he had spent with the savages, and the bad life which most of the Frenchmen had led in the country of the Hurons; amongst others the interpreter Brûlé, who was receiving a hundred pistoles a year to incite the savages to come down and trade. And the influence of example was very bad in sending out such evil-livers, who ought instead to have been severely chastised; for this man was recognized as being very vicious in character, and much addicted to women. But what will not the expectation of gain make men do, a passion which tramples under foot all other considerations?

On the nineteenth, de Caen left us to go to Three Rivers with the pinnaces, to trade with other savages if he should meet with any.

Champlain, The Voyages, 1632


Native traders came to Tadoussac, Quebec, Trois-Rivières and the Saint-Louis rapids to meet with traders from the companies that held the trade monopoly.


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    Last Updated: September 1, 2009