Joel Dinda's photos with the keyword: fur

Voyageur Camp

13 Sep 2006 96
If you grew up in the Midwest, you learned about the Voyageurs in elementary school..... The North West Company's operations required moving freight between Montreal and the great wilderness. Much of this commerce travelled by large canoe; these canoes were propelled by legendary masters of the wilderness called Voyageurs. I'm sure the job seemed intolerable to those who paddled those canoes, but to this young Michigander it seemed incredibly romantic. At Grand Portage, the Voyageurs lived in a tent village outside the stockade. This small display represents that village.

Furs

03 Sep 2006 102
Grand Portage National Monument, on Lake Superior in far northern Minnesota. Furs were the North West Company's lifeblood. While they traded all kinds of goods, the company's main business was furs, and when the demand for furs died, the company's fortunes faltered.

Grand Portage Dock

08 Sep 2006 83
The stockade, the roof of the Great Hall, and the "voyageur campground" show in this view from the dock at Grand Portage National Monument, on Lake Superior in northern Minnesota. That's Joan, of course, walking on the dock. The dock, of course, is not part of the reconstruction. It is, however, the boarding point for two of the Isle Royale ferries.

Grand Portage National Monument

14 Aug 2006 109
Reconstructed North West Company trading headquarters in extreme northeastern Minnesota. Since the NWC was a Canadian firm, it wasn't particularly welcome at this location, and moved north in 1802. This reconstruction dates from the 1950s. Reconstructions of historic buildings are not currently fashionable, so this complex is a bit of an anomoly within the National Parks system. It's a little misleading; there's the stockade, three buildings, logs marking the locations of a couple more structures, and a couple gardens; outside the fence there are mockups of voyageur and Indian settlements which are much smaller than the originals they are standing in for. The overall effect is rather parklike, and pleasant, but it lacks the bustle and interest of what was certainly a small village within the stockade; there were nearly twenty buildings in the place in the late eighteenth century. What is there is absolutely delightful. Where Colonial Michilimackinac, a similar place, overwhelms you with buildings and explanations, this monument maximizes its impact by concentrating on getting some crucial details just right. Reenactors serve as hosts and move comfortably between their historical personas and their modern selves, and the buildings house some carefully selected artifacts, arranged pretty much as you'd expect them to be arranged in a real trading post. The larger building, on the right, is the great hall; the smaller building is the kitchen which fed the traders and company officers when they were at the headquarters. The third building, a boat house, is outside the stockade.