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At least at some of the larger forts and posts, luxuries such as ice for cold drinks and cooling meat was available for the summer months. Both Bent's Fort and Fort Union were known to have ice houses. At Bent's Fort, the ice was cut at mountain lakes far up the Arkansas River and hauled back down to the fort. At Fort Union Missouri River ice was cut directly in front of the fort during the coldest months of the winter. Robert Campbell in a letter to his brother dated November 16, 1833, describes the construction of the original Fort William. An ice house was to be part of the infrastructure for this fort, and based on the context of the letter, it does not appear that and ice house was an unusual feature. According to Friederich Kurz while he was at Fort Union in 1852: "Our only occupation at the moment is the storing of ice in the ice house. Some of the men cut out thick blocks of ice from the river and bring them up the river bank others load them, a third drives the cart, and I have to count the number of loads delivered at the ice house and supervise the packing of the blocks. In summer ice is indispensable for preserving fresh meat and for cooling the tepid drinking water brought from the river." Ice
stored in a cellar and packed in sawdust can be preserved for as much as a
year.
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