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Explorers, Exploiters & the Fur Trade
        Encounter, Colonization, and Devastation: Tribal Homelands

To the explorers in 1772, the northern Pacific Rim was the then unknown, an area of the World barely explored because of the vagaries of the ocean currents. Spain and Portugal (Brazil) were authorized by Pope Alexander VI to colonize the Americas and its Native Peoples as subjects, also to convert and enslave. The Spanish had a reason, the Russian fur trappers had already arrived in Alaska and were soon to have forts in Hawaii and the San Francisco Bay in a blind effort to exterminate the sea otter.  Sailing was not the only to reach Cascadia, it was the Scot Alexander Mackenzie (1793) who first walked the walk, financed by the English Hudson’s Bay Company, later followed by Lewis & Clark and then the Montreal based French Canadian North West Company.  All this was the early exploration of the West (coast). The final frontier, the Old West frontier, was to be found on the slopes of the Rocky Mountains with those stories to be told a generation (30 years) later. With few exceptions, the initial meetings with the Indigenous Peoples: the Coeur D’Alene, Kalispel, Kootenai, Nez Perce, Paiute, Palouse, Salish and Shoshone were friendly. These Native Americans’ main food sources were Wapato, Camas, and Salmon.

Share the story of Lewis and Clark’s journey through Idaho with interesting facts and tales of their adventures and friendships with Native Americans

       https://lewis-clark.org/primary/native-nations/
https://lewisandclark-corpsofdiscovery.weebly.com/nez-perce-indians.html
Idaho History Timeline
https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2009/oct/01/slaughter-of-horses-leaves-lasting-mark/

The trapping of beavers was greatly diminished, the search for gold (and other metals) was beginning in earnest, the US Army had killed 800 of their Appaloosa and relations had worsened with many Native Americans by approximately what year?

1825 or earlier

1835

1858 and later

State of Idaho History
Explorers, Exploiters & the Fur Trade

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