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| Name | Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site |
| Brief Description | National Park |
| Type | Attraction |
| Category | North Dakota National Park |
| Description | A trip to Fort Union takes you back in time to the mid-19th century, the heyday of Fort Union and the fur trade on the Upper Missouri river.
Tour the partially reconstructed fort and walk where many famous folk from several countries and cultures walked, folk such as Kenneth McKenzie, Alexander & Natawista Culbertson, Father Pierre DeSmet, Sitting Bull, Karl Bodmer, and Jim Bridger.
Fort Union Trading Post was the most important fur trading post on the upper Missouri from 1828 to 1867. At this post, the Assiniboine, Crow, Cree, Ojibway, Blackfeet, Hidatsa, and other tribes traded buffalo robes and other furs for trade goods such as beads, guns, blankets, knives, cookware, and cloth. Today, the reconstructed Fort Union represents a unique era in American history, a brief period when two radically different civilizations found common ground and mutual benefit through commercial exchange and cultural acceptance.
The Euro-Americans, Indians, and mixed-bloods who lived and traded at Fort Union were participants in a social experiment that expressed what today we would call multiculturalism. What they demonstrated was the possibility that people with radically different ethnic, linguistic, and cultural backgrounds could live and work together and merge their cultures in meaningful ways. It went to pieces because the citizens of the United States and their government were devoted to a unitary culture that refused to accommodate the range of differences visible every day at Fort Union. If a useful civics lesson can be drawn from the posts history, it may be that people need not necessarily embrace or fully understand someone elses culture in order to construct common ground or admit humanity with their neighbors.
Barton Barbour; Fort Union and the Upper Missouri Fur Trade, 2001
NPS Photo by Linda Gordon Rokosz |
| CSZ | Williston, ND |
| Website | www.nps.gov/fous/index.htm |
| Additional Information | Additional Information |
| Information Request | Request North Dakota Visitor Information |
| Last Updated | 8/27/2005 |
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