Coureur des bois: Difference between revisions

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==Voyageurs==
[[Image:Voyageur_canoe.jpg|225px|left|thumb|"Canoe Manned by Voyageurs Passing a Waterfall" by [[Frances Anne Hopkins]]]]

By 1681, the French authorities realized the traders had to be controlled so that the industry might remain profitable. They therefore legitimized and limited the numbers of coureurs des bois by establishing a system that used permits (''congés''). This legitimization created a "second-generation" coureur des bois: the '''voyageur''', which literally means "traveller". This name change came as a result of a need for the legitimate fur traders to distance themselves from the unlicensed ones. Voyageurs held a permit or were allied with a Montreal merchant who had one.

The fur trade was thus controlled by a small number of Montreal merchants. New France also began a policy of expansion in an attempt to dominate the trade. French influence extended west, north and south. Forts and trading posts were built with the help of explorers and traders. Treaties were negotiated with native groups, and fur trading became very profitable and organized. The system became complex, and the voyageurs, many of whom had been independent traders, slowly became hired labourers.
[[Image:VoyageurFurPostPineCityMN.JPG|225px|right|thumb|Contemporary actor costumed as a voyageur at a [[Minnesota]] historic site]]

For the most part, voyageurs were the crews hired to man the canoes that carried trade goods and supplies to "rendezvous posts" (example: [[Grand Portage National Monument|Grand Portage]]) where goods and supplies were exchanged for furs. The canoes traveled along well-established routes. They then transported the furs back to [[The Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic Site|Lachine]] near Montreal. Some voyageurs stayed in the back country over the winter and transported the trade goods from the rendezvous posts to farther-away French outposts. These men were known as the hivernants (winterers). They also helped negotiate trade in native villages. In the spring they would carry furs from these remote outposts back to the rendezvous posts. Voyageurs also served as guides for explorers (such as [[La Vérendrye|Pierre La Vérendrye]]). The majority of these canoe men were [[French Canadian]] and/or [[Métis people (Canada)|Métis]]. They were usually from [[Island of Montreal]] or [[seigneury|seigneuries]] and [[parish]]es along or near the [[St. Lawrence River]]. Many were from [[France]] and many were members of Native [[Aboriginal peoples in Canada|Aboriginal]] tribes.

The voyageurs were highly valued employees of trading companies, such as the [[North West Company]] (NWC) and the [[Hudson's Bay Company]] (HBC). Because of the effectiveness of voyageurs, the NWC was able to challenge the HBC. The HBC started hiring their own voyageurs in 1815 to help them compete with the NWC.

The voyageurs are legendary, especially in French Canada. They are folk heroes celebrated in folklore and music. The reality of their lives was that of toil. For example, they had to be able to carry two 90 pound bundles of fur over portages; more suffered from [[strangulated hernia]]s than any other injury.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}

Voyageurs who only paddled between Montreal and Grand Portage were known as "mangeurs de lard" (pork eaters) because of their diet, much of which consisted of salt pork. This is considered to be a derogatory term. Those who overwintered and ate "off the land" (mainly [[fish]], [[pemmican]] and [[Rubaboo]]) were called "hommes du nord" (northern men) or "hivernants" (winterers). Voyageurs were expected to work 14 hours per day and paddle at a rate of 55 strokes per minute.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} Few could swim. Many drowned in rapids or in storms while crossing lakes. [[Portage]]s and routes were often indicated by [[lob trees]], or trees that had their branches cut off just below the top of the tree.

{{New France}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 16:33, 10 October 2008

A coureur des bois (runner of the woods) was an individual who engaged in the fur trade without permission from the French authorities. The coureurs des bois operated during the late 17th century and early 18th century in eastern North America, particularly in New France. Later, a limited number of permits were issued to coureurs des bois who became known as voyageurs.

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References

  • Brown, Craig, editor. The Illustrated History of Canada. Toronto: Lester & Orpen Dennys Ltd., 1987. ISBN 0-88619-147-5.
  • Podruchny, Carolyn. Making the Voyageur World : Travelers and Traders in the North American Fur Trade. Toronto : University of Toronto Press, 2006. ISBN

9780802094285.

External links