Chouteau
Chouteau , family of American fur traders. René Auguste Chouteau, 1749-1829, b. New Orleans, accompanied (1763) his stepfather, Pierre Laclede , on a trading expedition to the Illinois country and established (1764) the post that became St. Louis. He continued as chief assistant to Laclede until the latter's death in 1778, when he took over the management of Laclede's trading interests. Friendly relations with the Osage enabled him to extend the business considerably; from 1794 to 1802 he held a monopoly on the Osage trade. When the United States acquired Louisiana, Chouteau became a territorial judge and later served as federal commissioner in negotiating treaties with various Native Americans.
His half-brother, Jean Pierre Chouteau, 1758-1849, b. New Orleans, also devoted himself to the fur trade. He worked for René Auguste for many years and extended the trade into present-day Oklahoma, where he established (1796) the first permanent white settlement at Salina. After becoming (1804) U.S. agent for the Osage, he struck out on his own and with others founded (1809) the St. Louis Missouri Fur Company. One of the wealthiest men in St. Louis, he spent the last years of his life on a large plantation outside the city. Two of his sons, Auguste Pierre and Pierre, continued in the fur trade.
Auguste Pierre Chouteau, 1786-1838, b. St. Louis, who graduated from West Point in 1806, resigned (1807) from the army and became (1809) a member of the St. Louis Missouri Fur Company, taking part in several expeditions. He served as a captain of the territorial militia in the War of 1812. While on a trading expedition to the upper Arkansas River in 1817, he was captured by the Spanish and imprisoned at Santa Fe for several months. After his release he continued to trade with the Osage and made his home at Salina, Okla. In 1832 he led a party including Washington Irving from St. Louis to his post; the journey is described by Irving in Tour of the Prairies (1835).
Pierre Chouteau, 1789-1865, b. St. Louis, early entered his father's business and accompanied him on several expeditions until 1813, when he and a partner formed their own merchandising and Native American trading firm. In 1831 he became a member of Bernard Pratte and Company, which was the Western agent of the American Fur Company . With the withdrawal of John Jacob Astor from the American Fur Company in 1834, Pratte, Chouteau and Company bought all the Missouri River interests of the old company. Reorganized (1838) as Pierre Chouteau, Jr., and Company, its business extended from the Mississippi to the Rockies and from Texas to Minnesota until its dissolution in 1864. One of the most powerful men in the West, Chouteau also invested heavily in railroads, rolling mills, and mining. He became one of the leading financiers of his time and lived his later years in New York City.
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United States: Signs installed along walking path to Fort Pierre Chouteau.
News Wire article from: TendersInfo; 7/23/2009; 425 words
; ...rakshali03 Six signs have been installed along the walking path to Fort Pierre Chouteau, a historical landmark two miles north of Fort Pierre. Fort Pierre Chouteau was originally built as a fur trading post in 1832. It was included in the...
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Watershed Days on the Treaty Line, 1836-1839
Magazine article from: Iowa Review; 10/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...of Iowa than the American Fur Company traders who brought consumer...Ramsay Crooke's American Fur Company (afc), managed by Pierre Chouteau out of St. Louis, and...River Valley, the American Fur Company epitomized the urban and...
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Fort Union and the Upper Missouri Fur Trade
Magazine article from: Montana; The Magazine of Western History; 1/1/2001; ; 700+ words
; ...managers advanced the interests of the American Fur Company and its principal successor, Pierre Chouteau, Jr. and Company, through relentless...manufactured goods and liquor. To the Indians the fur company was the government, an impression the company...
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Fur company cleared in Stuart wrongful death suit
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 12/14/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...relatives of Carol DiMaiti Stuart against Edward F. Kakas & Sons fur company where Charles Stuart stole the gun he used to kill his pregnant...Legislature." Charles Stuart was the general manager of the fur company when he stole a .38 caliber pistol that G. Jordan (Jay...
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The persistence of travel and trade: St. Lawrence river valley French engages and the American Fur Company, 1818-1840.
Magazine article from: Michigan Historical Review; 9/22/2008; ; 700+ words
; ...historical actors, a restricted group of Canadian-born American Fur Company (AFC) employees. The AFC hired approximately eleven hundred...Orleans. The impetus for this project focused on American Fur Company voyageurs is a decade-long initiative examining people...
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Paving the way to California.(Rocky Mountain Fur Company)
Magazine article from: Cobblestone; 11/1/2002; ; 700+ words
; ...area of mountains and deserts that no white man had ever crossed. In the spring of 1826, the newly formed Rocky Mountain Fur Company decided to send the first overland trapping expedition to the California coast, which at that time was a province of Mexico...
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"The leviathan of the North": American perceptions of the Hudson's Bay Company, 1816-1846.
Magazine article from: Oregon Historical Quarterly; 12/22/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...Missouri country as a guest of Pierre Chouteau and the American Fur Company (AFC), the German prince...devoted to the Whites and the Fur Company." Ninoch-Kiaiu wore...they saw how the American Fur Company distinguished its faithful...
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Mink Originals Inc. (Weiss Brothers Fur Company Inc., Anglo American Fur Merchants Co. and Turbari Ltd. file involuntary Chapter 7 petition to liquidate company) (Brief Article)
Magazine article from: Daily News Record; 10/25/1991; 504 words
; NEW YORK (FNS) -- Three creditors of Mink Originals, Inc., a fur coat manufacturer, have filed an involuntary Chapter 7 petition to liquidate the company. Peter Soulios, president of Mink Originals, commented that he was unaware of the bankruptcy court filing but would seek to convert the
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Joint venture for Arden salon. (Maximilian Fur Company Ltd. and J. Mendel Fourrure open fur salon in Elizabeth Arden store as a joint venture)
Magazine article from: WWD; 7/17/1990; ; 700+ words
; JOINT VENTURE FOR ARDEN SALON NEW YORK - Furriers Maximilian Fur Co., Ltd., and J. Mendel Fourrure have joined forces to operate the fur salon at the Elizabeth Arden store on Fifth Avenue here as a joint venture. J. Mendel has operated the Elizabeth Arden fur salon for the last eight years. J.
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JOSEPH FULGINITI, 89 FORMER OWNER OF FUR COMPANY
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 2/1/1989; 356 words
; Joseph Fulginiti, former owner of Furs by Fulginiti in Brockton, died Monday in Cardinal Cushing Hospital, Brockton. He was 89 and lived in Brockton. Mr. Fulginiti, a native of Gasparina, Italy, went to work at the store when his father opened it in 1915. He retired 10 years ago and turned the
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Chouteau
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Chouteau , family of American fur traders. René Auguste Chouteau, 1749-1829, b. New Orleans, accompanied (1763...trade. When the United States acquired Louisiana, Chouteau became a territorial judge and later served as federal...
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Chouteau, (Jean) Pierre
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
Chouteau, (Jean) Pierre (1758–1849...politician. With René Auguste Chouteau, he controlled the important trade with...American tribes w of the Mississippi. Chouteau founded the first permanent white settlement...
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Missouri
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...Liguest and his adopted son, Auguste Chouteau, founded St. Louis, some one hundred...from mineral resources. Fur interested Chouteau and his descendants, and for the next sixty years, the Chouteau family explored, traded, and moved...
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Kansas City: History
Encyclopedia entry from: Cities of the United States
...Several years later, in 1821, Francois Chouteau opened a depot for the American Fur Company...terminus of the Santa Fe Trail. Meanwhile Chouteau's settlement, Kansas, developed more...Company was formed to sell property near Chouteau's warehouse. Both Westport and Kansas...
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Trading Posts, Frontier
Dictionary entry from: Dictionary of American History
...mid-nineteenth century, A. P. Chouteau, West Point – educated son of French trader Pierre Chouteau, acted as general manager of his family...and in 1855 it purchased Fort Pierre Chouteau in Dakota Territory. Trappers
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