Frontier profit and loss : the British army and the fur traders, 1760-1764

Bibliographic Information

Frontier profit and loss : the British army and the fur traders, 1760-1764

Walter S. Dunn, Jr

(Contributions in American history, no. 180)

Greenwood Press, 1998

Available at  / 14 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [185]-187) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

By 1760, with the alleviation of the French threat to the western frontier, colonial fur traders headed west to reap the bounty of trade with the local tribes. However, when dissatisfied French interests conspired to instigate a revolt, the resulting Pontiac Uprising would force the British to rethink colonial trade policy. The fur traders, who had considered the British government their ally in exploiting the west, now saw the British allying themselves with the French and local tribes to keep the colonists out of the region. The prominent merchants who suffered financially and received no compensation would soon come to oppose British rule. The fur trade and land speculation were two driving forces in the westward spread of merchant interests, but the promise of such riches would remain unfulfilled. Regulation of the trade would prove an enormous expense for the British; thus, to avoid the financial burden as well as to remove ill-treatment of the Native Americans as a cause for conflict, the Proclamation of 1763 prohibited settlement west of the mountains. The resulting dissatisfaction among the traders and speculators cost the British the support of colonial merchants. This book is an informative account of the interaction of economic, political, and social concerns on the western frontier.

Table of Contents

Preface Introduction The Financial Framework The Regulation of the Fur Trade, 1760-1761 Canada New York Pennsylvania Detroit Illinois Imperial Policy Select, 1762-1763 New Imperial Policy, 1764 Conclusion Bibliography Index

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