Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
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April 1956 | Volume 7, Issue 3
Authors:
Historic Era:
Historic Theme:
Subject:
April 1956 | Volume 7, Issue 3
Of all the magic names that drew men on to open the American continent, none has had more of the authentic ring of romance and adventure than Oregon. Originally applied by some imaginative geographer to a nonexistent river, the name came finally to stand for a vast territory of forests and mountains and green river valleys—the Oregon Country, a shadowy land almost as remote as the far side of the moon but offering a promise that pulled men in for generation after generation. First came the explorers, then the fur traders and the incredible mountain men, and finally the authentic settlers; and something of what each of these people imagined and hoped for and experienced clung to the name until, by accretion, it became one of the great place names of American history.
All of which is just another way of saying that the story of the exploration and development of the Pacific Northwest is one of the most fascinating chapters in our national epic. It tends to be episodic, to be sure, and the very fact that for a number of important decades no one was quite sure what flag would finally fly over the area makes it even more so; yet a sure continuity runs through it, and in a way it compresses into its own compass the whole legend of America—founded on dreams, built on daring and endurance, and culminating in a complex reality that goes beyond anything the builders had dared to contemplate.
An excellent study of one of the great periods in the opening of the Oregon Country is provided by Alexander Ross—one of the men who played a leading part in that operation—in his The Fur Hunters of the Far West , a book which was originally published in London in 1855 and which, excellently edited and introduced by Kenneth Spaulding, is now made available to the general reader.
Ross went to the Columbia River in 1811 as one of the operatives for John Jacob Astor’s Pacific Fur Company. Two years later, when the British took over Astoria at the mouth of the river and Astor sold out, Ross went with the Canadian outfit, the North West Company, and a decade later when the Hudson’s Bay Company took over from the North West Company he became a Hudson’s Bay man. This book covers, roughly, his experiences between 1813 and 1825, which marked the height of the fur trade west of the Rockies and which also, almost imperceptibly, show the United States winning the contest with Britain for final possession of the Oregon Country.
The Fur Hunters of the Far West , by Alexander Ross, edited by Kenneth A. Spaulding. University of Oklahoma Press. 304 pp. $5.
Essentially, as Mr. Spaulding points out, this was a contest between the unrestrained individualism of the far-ranging Americans and the ordered, tightly controlled formalism of the British. An untracked wilderness