Artificer said:
Dean,
With sincere respect, this is an old wives tale about the length of barrels for more beaver or other skins, that has been around quite a long time and just refuses to die. It seems plausible and that may be why it continues, but there is no historic justification for it in the period.
Gus
:thumbsup: :rotf: No offense taken. I am well aware that it is an old wives tale. My point is, it makes as much sense as some of what I have read in this post.
Below is just a small selection of the materials I have on the old fur trade in Canada.
Let us start by examining the myths mentioned above in the light of practical experience. First, the pile of beaver pelts. Both the Northwest Company and the Hudson’s Bay Company operated a standard of trade. This meant that the price paid to the trapper for his fur stayed the same from year to year, no matter what was happening in the European fur markets. The price of a gun was between twelve and twenty ”˜Made Beaver’, and this remained the price right up to the first years of the twentieth century.
Strangely, the story of piling up beaver pelts is only told about the Hudson’s Bay Company. For a time I lived in ”˜The Land of the Little Sticks’ (Canada’s Northwest Territories) and I heard this story from many of the Native trappers, especially the Elders. However I never actually met anybody who could say ”˜It happened to me’ or ”˜I watched it happen to so-and-so’. All I ever found was hearsay evidence.
The HBC, of course, have always denied that they did it. My conclusion is that, while it may have happened it was not common practice. Was this the reason for the long barrel? The answer here is a definite ”˜No’. Many guns produced in the eighteenth century had barrels equally long and even longer. Fowlers with barrels of 54 inches were not uncommon. Originally Northwest Guns came in barrel lengths of 48 and 42 inches (”˜four foot’ and ”˜three and a half foot’ guns.) Ballistic theory at the time held that longer barrels produced greater accuracy, more power and better shot patterns.
Here are the values of many of the NWC trade goods in Made Beaver: 1MB = 3/4 pounds of coloured beads 1MB = 1 1/2 pounds of gun-powder
1MB = 1 brass kettle 1MB = 2 pounds of sugar
1MB = 1 gallon of brandy
1MB = 2 yards of flannel
1MB = 12 dozen buttons 1MB = 1 pair of breeches
1MB = 1 pair of shoes 1MB = 20 flints
1MB = 8 knives 1MB = 2 pair looking glasses
1MB = 2 hatchets 1MB = 20 fish hooks
1MB = 1 blanket 4 MB = 1 pistol
1MB = 2 shirts 11 MB = 1 musket
However, as with the Buck, the realm of the Made Beaver remained narrow and flexible. Sometimes, 2 small beaver skins would equal 1 Made Beaver. Also, 1 Made Beaver could be equated with 1 or 2 lynx pelts, 1 to 7 martens, or 9 to 14 muskrats. Further the values of goods in Made Beaver varied depending on the season, the location of the post, the extent of competition, and the natural supply of beaver. The myth about a gun costing a pile of beavers equal in height to the gun itself never applied in the case of the NWC. In fact, Indians controlled trade routes and were indispensable as trappers and food suppliers. As such, it is difficult to imagine a NWC trader fooling an Indian by trading longer firearms for more beavers.