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William F. Tolmie at Fort Nisqually: Letters, 1850-1853

Product ID : 44190713


Galleon Product ID 44190713
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About William F. Tolmie At Fort

Product Description "A documentary source book revealing activities at the Hudson's Bay Company's Fort Nisqually on Puget Sound during the early settlement period"-- From the Inside Flap Scottish-born Hudson's Bay Company (HBe Chief Trader William Fraser Tolmie took charge of Fort Nisqually and its outstations in 1843. The first white settlement on Puget Sound, it functioned as a vital communications, banking, and shipping center, as well as a commodities and livestock broker, annually exporting tons of hides and produce. The International Boundary Treaty of 1846 between Great Britain and the United States spawned myriad legal and regulatory problems, and by 1850, HBC agents, government officials, and settlers disagreed over numerous issues. In 2006, Steve A. Anderson discovered complete hand-written volumes of Fort Nisqually's letter books at the HBC Archives in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He transcribed several, spanning from January 1850 to the threshold of Puget Sound's Indian War. Very few published primary documents about this period exist. "The discovery of Tolmie's letters changed everything," he says. They offer privileged, private conversations, weighty business discussions, gossip, political intrigue, patterns of commerce, deadly epidemics, and an eyewitness account of San Francisco's devastating fire. The documents--more than 400 total--present a rare British perspective on the state of law and international affairs in 1850s Puget Sound, a glimpse of higher-level HBC and Puget Sound Agricultural Company (PSAe operations, and insight into conflicts that followed the 1846 treaty. About the Author Steve A. Anderson managed the Fort Nisqually Living History Museum for ten years. He has published multiple journal articles and books, including "Angus McDonald of the Great Divide: The Uncommon Life of a Fur Trader, 1816"€"1899."