Here's this week's installment:
In the spring of 1834, twenty year old Osborne Russel joined a trapping expedition led by Nathaniel Wyeth.
The party departed Independence, MO on the 4th of April 1834 and arrived at the annual rendezvous spot, on
the banks of Ham’s Fork of the Green river on June 20th. What did this expedition look like? How did a party
of trappers headed to the mountains for a beaver hunt appear? Wyeth’s expedition left Independence in the
words of Russell, “we were all equipped and mounted hunter like: about forty men leading two loaded horses
each were marched out in double file with joyous hearts.” Later in his journal, Russell describes a company
trapper’s equipment as: “one animal upon which is placed one or two epishomores [padded blankets] a riding
saddle and bridle, a sack containing six beaver traps, a blanket with an extra pair of moccasins, his powder horn
and bullet pouch with a belt to which is attached a butcher knife, a small wooden box containing bait for beaver,
a tobacco sack with a pipe and implements for making fire with, sometimes a hatchet fastened to the pommel of
this saddle his personal dress is a flannel or cotton shirt, a pair of leather breeches with blanket or smoked
buffalo skin leggings, a coat made of blanket or buffalo robe, a hat or cap of wool, buffalo or otter skin, his hose [socks]
are pieces of blanket lapped around his feet which are covered with a pair of moccasins made of dressed deer
elk or buffalo skins, with his long hair falling loosely over his shoulders completes his uniform. He then mounts
and places his rifle before him on his saddle.” We can envision a party of men, leading spare horses loaded
with the mere essentials for survival heading into the mountains after the festivities of rendezvous. Hunters,
trappers, and camp helpers all made up the trapping parties of the fur trade companies. Russell’s journal is a
great source of firsthand information on a company trapper’s life during the last half and after the beaver boom
years.