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Mountain Man Monday 12/22
#8528990
Yesterday at 07:54 AM
Yesterday at 07:54 AM
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Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
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I'll piggy back off 330's post about Jim Bridger. From Osborne Russell: Here we met with two companies of trappers and Traders: One is a branch of the “American Fur Company,” under the direction of Mess Dripps and Fonanell: The other is called the “Rocky Mountain Fur Company” The names of the partners are Thomas Fitzpatrick, Milton Sublett and James Bridger. The two companies consist of about six hundred men, including men engaged in the service, White, Half Breed and Indian Fur Trappers.11th May After gathering a Supply of Salt we travelled down the river about 15 miles and encamped near the mouth of a stream on the west side called Gardners Fork. Here we met with Mr. Bridger and his party who informed us that the country around and below was much infested with Blackfeet. they had had several skirmishes with them in which they had lost a number of horses and traps and one young man had been wounded in the shoulder by a ball from a fusee.From River of the West: After the death of Smith, the Rocky Mountain Fur Company continued its operations under the command of Bridger, Fitzpatrick, and Milton Sublette, brother of William. In the spring of 1830 they received about two hundred recruits, and with little variation kept up their number of three or four hundred men for a period of eight or ten years longer, or until the beaver were hunted out of every nook and corner of the Rocky Mountains.1837 On the return of spring, Bridger again led his brigade all through the Yellowstone country, to the streams on the north side of the Missouri, to the head-waters of that river; and finally rendezvoused on the north fork of the Yellowstone, near Yellowstone Lake. Though the amount of furs taken on the spring hunt was considerable, it was by no means equal to former years. The fact was becoming apparent that the beaver was being rapidly exterminated.From W.A. Ferris In a narrow bottom beneath the walls of Gray’s Creek, we found a party of trappers, headed by Bridger, one of the partners in the R. M. F. Company. Their encampment was decked with hundreds of beaver skins, now drying in the sun. These valuable skins are always stretched in willow hoops, varying from eighteen inches, to three feet in diameter, according to the size of the skins, and have a reddish appearance on the flesh side, which is exposed to the sun. Our camps are always dotted with these red circles, in the trapping season, when the weather is fair. There were several hundred skins folded and tied up in packs, laying about their encampment, which bore good evidence to the industry of the trappers.David Alan Clark's Jim Bridger bronze at the entrance of Fort Bridger State Historic Site in SW Wyoming ![[Linked Image]](https://trapperman.com/forum/attachments/usergals/2025/12/full-13020-279436-bridger.jpg)
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Re: Mountain Man Monday 12/22
[Re: k snow]
#8529132
Yesterday at 11:38 AM
Yesterday at 11:38 AM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
beaverpeeler
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Dec 2006
Oregon
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The chronology of Smith's death and the subsequent recruitment of 200 recruits by R.M. F. in the spring of 1830 is off a tad. Smith died in spring of 1831 (at the hands of Commanches in the Cimarron).
Good stuff K. Like the photo of the statue.
My fear of moving stairs is escalating!
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Re: Mountain Man Monday 12/22
[Re: beaverpeeler]
#8529148
Yesterday at 12:36 PM
Yesterday at 12:36 PM
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Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
k snow
OP
trapper
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OP
trapper
Joined: Oct 2009
east central WI
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The chronology of Smith's death and the subsequent recruitment of 200 recruits by R.M. F. in the spring of 1830 is off a tad. Smith died in spring of 1831 (at the hands of Commanches in the Cimarron).
Good stuff K. Like the photo of the statue. That's why even with primary sources, you need to double and triple check "facts."
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