Indian-European Trade Relations

in the Lower Saskatchewan River Region to 1840

Overview

This study examines the development of fur trade relations between the European traders working for the Hudson’s Bay Company and the Western Woods Cree of the lower Saskatchewan River region centred on Cumberland House (modern day Saskatchewan) and The Pas (modern day Manitoba). Beginning with the initial contact in the mid-seventeenth century, the study ends in 1840 when the arrival of missionary Henry Budd brought the exclusive fur trade contact period to a close. Drawing on the records held in the Hudson’s Bay Company Archives and the available ethnographic studies on the Western Woods Cree as well as relevant social science data and theory, author Paul C. Thistle refutes the widespread interpretation by both liberal and marxist historians that Europeans rapidly dominated the early fur trade. This Canadian national, provincial, and academic award-winning book has been cited by the Canadian Historical Association as “a careful analysis … an exemplary ethnohistorical study which reflects a deep understanding of both the peoples and geography of the region … a persuasively argued study that should serve as a model for others.” The 1987 Margaret McWilliams Medal for Scholarly Book by the Manitoba Historical Society, stated this work “demonstrated a mastery of the literature.”

About the Author

Paul C. Thistle has taught Native Studies at the University of Manitoba, Brandon University, remote Indigenous communities, high school, and Museum Studies at Beloit College, Wisconsin