When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. North American fur trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_fur_trade

    The trade was initiated mainly through French, Dutch and English settlers and explorers in collaboration with various First Nations tribes of the region, such as the Wyandot-Huron and the Iroquois; ultimately, the fur trade's financial and cultural benefits would see the operation quickly expanding coast-to-coast and into more of the ...

  3. Coureur des bois - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coureur_des_bois

    Because of the lack of roads and the necessity to transport heavy goods and furs, fur trade in the interior of the continent depended on men conducting long-distance transportation by canoe of fur trade goods, and returning with pelts. Early travel was dangerous and the coureurs des bois, who traded in uncharted territory, had a high mortality ...

  4. Voyageurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voyageurs

    Shooting the Rapids, 1879 by Frances Anne Hopkins (1838–1919). Voyageurs (French: [vwajaʒœʁ] ⓘ; lit. ' travellers ') were 18th- and 19th-century French and later French Canadians and others who transported furs by canoe at the peak of the North American fur trade.

  5. Alouette (song) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alouette_(song)

    French colonists ate horned larks, which they considered a game bird. "Alouette" has become a symbol of French Canada for the world, an unofficial national song. [ 3 ] Today, the song is used to teach French and English-speaking children in Canada, and others learning French around the world, the names of body parts.

  6. Toussaint Charbonneau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toussaint_Charbonneau

    [1] [2] Boucherville was a community with strong links to exploration and the fur trade. [3] It has been claimed that he was of French and Iroquois ancestry, [4] though there is no evidence to support this. His genealogy compiled by the PRDH project at the Université de Montréal shows a strictly French ancestry.

  7. Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pierre_Gaultier_de_Varennes...

    Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye (17 November 1685 – 5 December 1749) was a French Canadian military officer, fur trader, and explorer. [1] In the 1730s, he and his four sons explored the area west of Lake Superior and established trading posts there.

  8. North West Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_West_Company

    After the French landed in Quebec in 1608, independent French-Canadian traders commonly known as coureurs des bois spread out and built a fur trade empire in the St. Lawrence basin. The French competed with the Dutch (from 1614) and English (1664) in New York and the English in Hudson Bay (1670). Unlike the French who traveled into the northern ...

  9. Jacques La Ramee - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_La_Ramee

    In 1815, La Ramée organized a free-trapper rendezvous at the junction of the North Platte and what is now named the Laramie rivers. Later fur-trading companies held annual rendezvous here. [11] For five years these events attracted more trappers and traders, and a trade market was established, in addition to routes to and from supply depots. [11]