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Contested Empire: Peter Skene Ogden and the Snake River Expeditions (Paperback)

Contested Empire: Peter Skene Ogden and the Snake River Expeditions Cover Image
By John Phillip Reid, Martin Ridge (Foreword by)
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Description


In Contested Empire, John Phillip Reid explores the implicit notions of law shared by American and British fur traders in the Snake River country of Idaho and surrounding areas in the early nineteenth century. Both the United States and Great Britain had claimed this region, and passions were intense. Focusing mainly on Canadian explorer and trader Peter Skene Ogden, Reid finds that both sides largely avoided violence and other difficulties because they held the same definitions of property, contract, conversion, and possession.

In 1824, the Hudson's Bay Company directed Ogden to decimate the furbearing animal population of the Snake River country, thus marking the region a "fur desert." With this mandate, Great Britain hoped to neutralize any interest American furtrappers could have in the area. Such a mandate set British and American fur men on a collision course, but Ogden and his American counterparts implicitly followed a kind of law and procedure and observed a mutual sense of property and rights even as the two sides vied for control of the fur trade.

Failing to take legal culture into consideration, some previous accounts have depicted these conflicts as mere episodes of lawless frontier violence. Reid expands our understanding of the West by considering the unspoken sense of law that existed, despite the lack of any formalized authorities, in what had otherwise been considered a "lawless" time.


Product Details
ISBN: 9780806149325
ISBN-10: 0806149329
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Publication Date: January 21st, 2020
Pages: 276
Language: English