Mountain Men
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Mountain Men in the news

Mountain men and women venture to Casper for fellowship, fun 

Billings Gazette - Jan 13 12:08 AM
CASPER - Wyoming's mountain men and women of the 21st century live in two different worlds. Wherever they call home, they hold down jobs, get the kids to school and work as hard at getting by in today's high-tech world as anyone else. Catch them at a ...
Mountain men and women venture to Casper for fellowship, fun 
Billings Gazette - Jan 12 11:50 PM
CASPER - Wyoming's mountain men and women of the 21st century live in two different worlds. Wherever they call home, they hold down jobs, get the kids to school and work as hard at getting by in today's high-tech world as anyone else.

BYU's big men diversify games 
The Salt Lake Tribune - Jan 13 12:05 AM
LAS VEGAS - Brigham Young's two best post scorers - Trent Plaisted and Keena Young - combined for only 12 points in the last game, yet the Cougars still crushed Texas Christian. A peek inside the numbers shows Plaisted and Young contributed significantly to BYU's second consecutive Mountain West win. Because of the big men's unselfishness, teammates were able to take - and make - open shots ...

Pack men dig deep, beat Mines 
The Pueblo Chieftain - Jan 13 5:10 AM
GOLDEN - A rowdy crowd. An opponent who hasn't lost in its own house all season. Deep foul trouble. The Colorado State University-Pueblo men's basketball team overcame it all Friday night at Volk Gymnasium. The Pack secured one of its most satisfying wins of the season, knocking off the Colorado School of Mines 55-46 in a Rocky Mountain Athletic Conference battle. The win enabled the ...

- Moutain Men

Here is an article on Mountain Men.

Liver-Eating Johnson
The Mountain Men is also the name of a 1980 movie starring Charlton Heston.[1]

Mountain men were trappers and explorers that Mountian Men roamed the Rocky Mountains from about 1810 to the early 1840s. These Moutain Men were primarily beaver trappers, but included some who mainly just Mountin Men wanted to explore the West.

The stereotypical mountain man was depicted as a loner Montain Men dressed in animal pelts, sporting bushy facial hair and Mountan Men carrying a Hawken rifle and Bowie knife, commonly referred to as a Mountai Men "scalpin' knife." He is depicted wearing pelts and furs, although this Mounain Men is incorrect; for a more accurate depiction, look at the artwork of Alfred Jacob Miller. While there were many free trappers, most mountain men were employed by fur companies. The life of a company man was almost militarized. The men had mess groups, hunted and trapped in brigades and always reported to the head of the trapping party. This man was called a "boosway", a bastardization of Bourgeois. He was the leader of the brigade, the head trader and overall CEO. Some mountain men were gruff, while others were well-mannered; however, they were romanticized as honorable men with their own chivalrous code who would help their brethren, but were more at home in the wild.

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Further reading
  • 3 See also
  • 4 External links

History

Mountain man reenactor dressed in buckskins

The existence of trappers in the West in any numbers started with Manuel Lisa in 1807. A major influx of trappers was started by the expedition of Ashley's Hundred in 1822. This gave rise to yearly trapping expeditions with the trappers leaving St. Louis with supplies, returning with pelts which were used to pay off debts and traded for supplies, whiskey and other necessities.

In 1824, the rendezvous began which hauled supplies to the mountains in the spring and brought back pelts in the fall. Major W. H. Ashley started this system through the Rocky Mountain Fur Company. He sold this business to the outfit of Smith, Jackson and Sublette, while still taking the profits by selling that firm their supplies. This system continued with other firms, particularly the American Fur Company, entering the field.

The beaver pelts had been needed to make the beaver hats, then popular in England. Fashions changed in the early 1840s, making beaver less valuable at a time that they were harder to find because of overtrapping. The opening of the Oregon Trail and the use of the Mormon Trail gave employment as guides and hunters to trappers who did not want to return to civil society.

Further reading

  • Orville C. Loomer, "Fort Henry," Fort Union Fur Trade Symposium Proceedings September 13-15, 1990 (Williston, Friends of Fort Union Trading Post, 1994), 79.
  • Fred R. Gowans, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous (Layton, Utah: Gibbs M. Smith, 1985), 13.

See also

  • Hillbilly
  • List of Mountain Men
  • Noble Savage

External links

  • Mountain Men and the Fur Trade: Sources of the History of the Fur Trade of the Rocky Mountain West
  • Mountain Men: Pathfinders of the West 1810-1860
  • Mountain Men: The Overland Trail Links
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