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This narrative begins in the last years of the nineteenth century and continues toward the midpoint of the twentieth, but one of the final acts in the expansion of the arctic fur trade took place in 1937, when the Hudson’s Bay Company established its Fort Ross post on Somerset Island, at the nexus of the Western Arctic and Eastern Arctic shipping routes. Before addressing the history of the early twentieth-century fur trade in the Western Arctic, by way of introduction it is necessary to review the short-lived Fort Ross post as a paradigm for the larger story of the arctic fur trade (chapter 1) and then to examine the practical matters involved in the capture, manufacture, and marketing of arctic fox pelts, all of which affected the lives of the northern trapping families (chapter 2).
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