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"Well,
who are you supposed to be?" is a question often asked of re-enactors
at an event by both pilgrims and other re-enactors. A good question.
And one you should answer before getting too far into this hobby.
Just like the character in a good book, a good persona will give your
character three-dimensional depth. Who
you are will also direct how you will proceed, and what your clothing and
equipment will be and what skills you will want to develop and be
knowledgeable about. This
section will generally focus on the fur trade era from Lewis & and
Clark (1804) to the earliest 1840’s, which is my area of interest. Developing
a character can be as simple or complex as you want to make it. It
is easiest to start simple, and to add details as your knowledge, skills
and interest develop. At the
simplest level will you be French, English, Spanish, 1st or 2nd
generation U.S. or Native? Are you a civilian or in the military?
These questions will be the basis of your character. They will
decide what clothing you wear and what equipment you are likely to carry
and use. Here are some
questions to guide you in developing a character.
When
you can answer most of these questions, you will have fleshed out a large
part of your persona! A
period character is a very personal thing. It can be guided by
what you do in "real life" and your other interests and hobbies.
If you like woodworking or leatherworking, this can be incorporated into
your character. Crafts for sale or trade can also help reduce the
costs for obtaining your gear. Your period character can also
incorporate bits of your childhood and family history, but set in the
appropriate time. A great
resource is a book entitled "Who am I? : Creating a Living History
Persona" by Cathy Johnson. It is published by Heritage
Books. For
example, I’m Malachite. I
was born February 11, 1793, at the Green Bay Post My parents were
German immigrants. They ended up settling at Green Bay Post,
probably because the weather was similar to their home country. The
community around the Green Bay Post at that time was
French by heritage and culture, economically tied to England through
Canada, but noniminally part of the United States.
The region was then referred to as the Northwest. As a child,
I attended, part time, a one room school at the post till I reached the age of
12 In this same year, being 1805, the Michigan Territory was formed.
By this time I was big enough to be useful in the fields and with
the livestock that were grown for use at the post.
At age fourteen I was apprenticed to a blacksmith, but by the time
I was sixteen, I had decided that a blacksmith spends too much of his life
looking at the butt end of a horse. Looking
for adventure and with a desire to see new places I ran off, and found
employment with John Jacob Astor’s American Fur Company as an engagé.
I started off paddling a canoe and packing supplies and furs
through the woods in what was called the northwest, that area westerly of
the Great Lakes region. Over a
three year period I worked my way up to become a bush trader.
By
this time events were leading up to the War of 1812. Even though he
was a German immigrant, like my parents, I didn’t like how Astor was
playing both the British and Americans to maximize his profits. So I
quit his outfit and I drifted down to St. Louis.
Rumors were a man could get rich mighty quick in the Shining
Mountains, with beaver half as large as a horse and so numerous a man
could just club em. I
joined with Manuel Lisa’s Missouri Fur Company in 1812. Both Lewis
& Clark were rumored to be investors in this company. The
Company was looking to trap the Upper Missouri River region.
However, heavy losses in
life and equipment to the Blackfoot Indians in the Three Forks area caused
the company to abandon this region in favor of safer trade with Indians
along the Lower Missouri River. Gradually
Lisa took sole control of the company, and by 1819 was ready to
By
the end of the 1840's prices were so low it was difficult to pay for
powder and ball, and a little whiskey at Rondy. I quit the fur trade
and took to guiding immigrants across the Rocky Mountains to Oregon.
I eventually wound up settling in Western Oregon, myself.
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