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Most fur trade era "Forts" were privately established commercial centers and had little or nothing to do with military activities. Forts were often treated by the Indians as neutral zones, where tribal enemies might encamp in the vicinity of each other without major outbreaks of hostilities. Fort personnel encouraged all aspects of neutrality, after all a fur was a fur, no matter who brought it in. Also to be seen as biased towards one tribe or another risked losing the business of the favored tribes enemies. And finally, war was bad for business; men engaged in battle were not productively engaged in harvesting furs. Most forts went through a process of structural evolution. The earliest structures constructed at a location generally consisted of a palisade of cottonwood, or other local trees, surrounding several log dwellings, storehouse and trade room. If the fort was successful, as time passed and the wooden structures deteriorated, the structures would gradually be replaced with adobe. Some forts were originally constructed of adobe, owing to the lack of adequate quantities of local trees. Living could be good, at least at some of the more important forts and posts. Some had ice houses, and ice would be available for making cold drinks and cooling meat well into the summer months. Below is a brief summary of a few forts and posts with links to more detailed descriptions. Bent’s
Fort: A commercial trading center built in 1833 near what is now
La Junta, in southeastern El
Pueblo, was a trading post established in the late 1830’s, and
located at the confluence of Fountain Creek (Fontaine-qui-bouit) and the Fort Davey Crockett (Fort Misery) Fort
Hall: Originally
constructed by Nathaniel Wyeth, the fort was later sold to the Fort
Laramie (See Fort
William)
Fort Uncompahgre: A trading post constructed by Santa Fe trader Antoine Robidoux. The post was located in what is now Western Colorado. Fort William (Fort Laramie): A trading post constructed by William Sublette and Robert Campbell, it would eventually become a military installation on the Oregon Trail.
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