French
Mountain Man
Mountain men were trappers and explorers who
roamed the North American Rocky
Mountains — from about 1810 through the 1880s
(with a peak population in the early
1840s) where they were instrumental in
opening up the various Emigrant Trails (widened into wagon roads) allowing
Americans in the east to settle the new territories of
the far west by organized wagon
trains traveling over roads explored and in many cases,
physically improved by the mountain men
and the big fur companies originally to serve the mule
train based inland
fur trade.
They arose in a natural geographic and economic expansion driven by the lucrative
earnings available in the North
American fur trade, in the wake of the various 1806–07 published accounts
of the Lewis
and Clark expeditions' (1803–1806) findings about the Rockies and
the (ownership disputed) Oregon
Country where they flourished economically for over three decades.
By the time the two new international treaties in early 1846 and early 1848 respectively
settled new western coastal territories officially on the United States and spurred
a large upsurge in migration, the days of many Mountain men making a good living
by fur trapping had become a thing of the past as the industry was a failing
subsistence because of over trapping activity vice the lucrative boom business
it once been. Fortuitously, America's ongoing western
migration by wagon train with the goal of claiming cheap lands in the west
was however building rapidly from a trickle of settlers from 1841's opening of
the Oregon Trail (now
a wagon road) to a flood of emigrants headed west by 1847–49 and thereafter well
into the later 1880s.
With the silk trade and over trapped
(scarcity driven) quick collapse of
the American beaver based
fur trade in the later 1830s–1840s,
many of the mountain men settled into
jobs as Army Scouts, wagon train guides
and settlers in and through the lands which they had
helped open up. Others, like William Sublette opened
up fort-trading posts along the Oregon Trail to service
the remnant fur trade and the settlers heading west.
Mountain men were ethnically, socially, and religiously diverse, fitting no ready
stereotype, and while they considered themselves independent, were in fact, economically
an arm of the big fur companies which held annual fairs for the mountain men
to sell their wares known as Trapper's
rendezvous. Most were born in Canada, the United States, or in Spanish-governed
Mexican territories, although some European immigrants also
moved west in search of financial opportunity, and the French and British both
had long standing active fur trading industries in Canada.
Like any businessman,
Mountain men were primarily motivated by profit, trading Amerindians (and sometimes
trapping) for beaver and
other skins and selling the skins, although some few were more interested in
exploring the West and traded solely to support their passion. As such, most
of them were part trader, part explorer, part exploiter, part trappers, part
teamsters, and part settlers, sometimes farmers or occasional (army) hired scouts;
most survived and kept their scalps by having good relations with one or more
native tribes, being multilingual out of necessity, and quite frequently living
part of the year (mainly winters) with Amerindians and as often, taking Indian
wives in the normal course of human events.
By the time the fur trade began to
collapse in the 1840s providing motivation to change jobs, the trails they had
explored and turned into reliable mule trails and improved gradually into wagon
capable freight roads combined to allow them to hire themselves as guides and
scouts, just as the great push west along the newly opened Oregon Trail built
up from a trickle of settlers in 1841 to a steady stream in 1844–1846, and then
became a flood as the highly organized Mormon migration exploited the road to
the Great Salt Lake discovered by mountain man Jim
Bridger in 1847–1848. The migration would explode in 1849's "The
Forty-Niners" in response to the discovery of gold in California in
1848. Manifest Destiny had
received a powerful push in the spring and summer of 1846 with the international
treaties settling the ownership of the Pacific coast territories and the Oregon
Country on the United States.
Historical reenactment of
the dress and lifestyle of a mountain man, sometimes known as buckskinning,
allows people to recreate aspects of this historical period. Todays' Rocky
Mountain Rendezvous and other reenacted events are both history-oriented
and social occasions. Some modern men choose a lifestyle similar to that of historic
mountain men. They may live and roam in the mountains of the west or the swamps
in the southern United States.