A
trading post
A
Closer Look
Leading fur trader Alexis Bailley laid out the
reasons for creating a trading post on the Cannon River in a letter
in 1828.
This post was built earlier than the one at Faribault, but some
of the reasons for a post in the area remained the same.
The Trading-Store.
Engraving on Paper. From: Hudson Bay / Robert M. Ballantyne. London,
1876, Fourth Edition, page 62. Courtesy
of the Minnesota Historical Society.
Sir:
The place I wished to point out to you as a fit place for
another [trading post] Location...is about thirty miles beyond
the former Village of the Wahk-pay cou tais on Cannon River
between ninety to a hundred miles to Ft. Snelling. My reason for
pointing out this spot, is its vicinity to the Entry [mouth of
the
river] and enjoying the double advantage of a Level plain for Carts
and plenty of Timber for building and fuel, but another more powerful
reason... is the greatest number of Indians within my trading district
...take from me supplies in the fall [but] trade their furs [in
the spring] with either the Missouri Traders or at Rock Laframboises
Establishment...[Such] losses...might easily be prevented by placing
House near to their Hunting spots...
The Wahk-pay-cou-tais were
formerly the most respectable Band of Hunter in all the Sioux,
and...made their Village on the
Cannon River, but [since]...the war excursions of the Sacques
and Foxes, had to abandon it and have ever since been a Roving
Band.
...They have expressed a wish to consolidate
themselves again
on or near their old spot and... the whole band deputed to
me last
Spring, two of them elders with the wishes of the whole, requesting
me to send them a Trader...
It is an object of some importance
to the American Fur Company...to arrange the Trade and Traders
with some regularity...but it's
yet of more importance that the Indians should remain at
peace. Nothing
in my opinion is better calculated to attain such a result,
as placing
Traders with them the Year around.
I have the Honor
to be
Alexis Bailley |