2017
DOI: 10.32396/usurj.v3i2.200
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Examining Patterns of Food Exchange and Dependency at Moose Fort, 1783-1785

Abstract: Many historians studying the fur trade have argued or assumed that Indigenous peoples swiftly became dependent on the fur trading posts in North America for their survival. In order to gain insight into native-newcomer relations but also particuarly to address the question of dependency, this paper examines patterns of food exchange between Hudson’s Bay Company men employed at Moose Fort and the James Bay Cree homeguard that lived near the Fort from October 1783 to September 1785. It finds that the flow of foo… Show more

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