As the frontier moved west and the areas became more settled larger game became increasingly harder to find you see the calibers of the rifles getting smaller. On the frontier you see a lot of large caliber smoothbores but I think that had more to do with they were a lot cheaper than rifles than anything else. The fur companies had to equip many of the guys going out beyond the frontier. The Life expectancy of someone beyond the frontier was not good. So the question becomes would the guys the companies equipped even live to pay off the debt.
I wonder about that
Was trapping worse then going on a whale ship or gold prospecting.
Ashely wanted his enterprising young men there to be employed for one two or three years.
I’ve never seen any info on turn over.
If I may I’m forced to think about longhunters. We see that class of men always on the frontier but how long did they stay. Most seem to have hunted a season or two, then got some land and started a family.
Boone was always looking, always moving west. But most who went in to the Caintuck. Stayed there
Privateers also comes to mind.
Washington lost his Marbelheaders because there was more money to be made as a privateer. Men died in fights, they also died just working the ship. Most made a few bucks and bought a farm or fishing boat
Back to Ashley we see a roll call of famous Frontiesmen. Some who died in the mountains, but not all it seems. Smith would die on the Santa Fe trail after he quit trapping.
How high a percentage of men made a few bucks for the company over a few years and then bought a farm in Missouri or homesteaded in Iowa or Arkansas
I wonder how many MM just did it a few years, had an adventure then just became a faceless settler, or even, dare we say it, Townsman.
Was MM as dangerous as going on a cattle drive later, was it as much of a young man’s one time adventure like whaling and less of a career choice.
Did they see the elephant and go home?