The story of the American fur trade has been told many times from
different viewpoints, but David Lavender was the first to place it
within the overall contest for empire between Britain and the
United States. Rather than offering a simple hagiography of men
like Jedediah Smith, Kit Carson, Jim Bridger and other legendary
trappers, Lavender relates the story of men such as John Jacob
Astor and Ramsay Crooks who competed with Britain’s Hudson’s Bay
Company for the fur resources of the Great Lakes region and the
upper Missouri River country. Within this framework of contest and
competition, Lavender shows how the American Fur Company learned to
exploit the needs and wants of Indian tribes to gain a superior
economic position over the British. The brutal and bloody rivalry
helped Ramsay Crooks develop the techniques for transporting furs,
supplying trappers, and selling pelts that made fur trapping such
an integral economic activity in early U.S. history.