Hats, Skins, Beads and More
On January 19th, 1806, Meriwether Lewis wrote:
we were visited today by two Clatsop men and a woman who brought for sale some Sea Otter skins of which we purchased one, giving in exchange the remainder of our blue beads consisting of 6 fathoms and about the same quantity of small white beads and a knife. we also purchased a small quantity of train oil for a pair of Brass armbands and a hat for some fishinghooks. these hats are of their own manufactory and are composed of Cedar bark and bear grass interwoven with the fingers and ornimented with various colours and figures, they are nearly waterproof, light, and I am convinced are much more durable than either chip or straw. These hats form a small article of traffic with the Clatsops and Chinnooks who dispose of them to the whites. the form of the hat is that which was in vogue in the Ued States and great Britain in the years 1800 & 1801 with a high crown reather larger at the top than where it joins the brim; the brim narrow or about 2 or 2½ inches. (Lewis, from Moulton V.6, 221)
Related pages:
Wapato | Value of Blue Beads | Hats, Skins, Beads and More The Value of Mules and Horses | Golden Eagle Feathers | Value of Canoes Value of Goat Skin | Intertribal Trade | Bay of Trade | Trading With Whites
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