http://www.salon.com/books/nonfiction/index.html?story=/books/feature/2010/07/20/fur_fortune_and_empire_eric_jay_dolin
Tuesday, Jul 20, 2010 09:15 ET
"Fur, Fortune, and Empire": How the fur trade shaped America
Animal pelts helped create our nation -- and spawn a global power 
struggle. A fascinating new book explains how

By Chuck Leddy, Barnes & Noble Review

Fur, Fortune, and Empire by Eric Jay Dolin

Historian Eric Jay Dolin brilliantly argues that the trade in 
animal skins turned colonial America into a tumultuous frontier 
where global powers battled for control. From the 17th century 
right on up to the Gilded Age, the developed world's appetite for 
fur and its unique qualities made the new continent, with its 
wealth of fur-bearing wildlife, a seemingly inexhaustible 
resource. The result, as laid out in Dolin's new book "Fur, 
Fortune, and Empire: The Epic History of the Fur Trade in 
America," was a major boost in the evolution of the colonies into 
a powerful new player on the world stage.

Modern-day Manhattan, for example, owes its existence to the Dutch 
eagerness to establish dominance in the fur trade: New Amsterdam 
was first settled in the early 17th century as a trading post 
where they could exchange European metal goods for beaver pelts 
brought in by Native Americans. The Dutch wielded military power 
to oust rival Sweden from the colonial fur trade, yet the 
popularity of their wares proved their undoing. The intense 
competition from the English colonies and from French fur traders 
came with armed backing, and the English Navy ultimately ousted 
the Dutch from New Amsterdam in 1664.

Dolin sheds insight on the ways the fur trade created 
international tensions — in New England, the Great Lakes and the 
expanding West. As traders clamored for access to land controlled 
by Native Americans, tribes were pushed off their land, then given 
guns and liquor, wreaking havoc on their traditional way of life. 
The fur trade also triggered exploration more generally; fur 
traders were often the first white men to map major rivers, 
forests and mountains. The trade and the broader economy that 
followed in its wake pulled people west, including Lewis and Clark 
and Kit Carson, culminating in the monopoly of the 19th-century 
fur trader and celebrated philanthropist John Jacob Astor, whose 
American Fur Co. opened up trading posts across America (and whose 
fortune would endow the library that became a national icon). For 
all of fur's contentious position in American culture today, Dolin 
has skillfully illuminated its centrality in our nation's 
ever-surprising history.
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