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Fort
Robidoux, a fur trading post also known as Fort Uintah
and Fort Winty, was located at the junction of the Uintah
and Whiterocks rivers in the Uinta Basin of northeastern
Utah. It was founded in 1832 after Antoine Robidoux bought
out the Reed Trading Post that had been in operation at
that site since 1828. Robidoux had traded for beaver pelts
in the Uinta Basin region as early as 1824. By 1828 he
had established his first trading post in the intermountain
corridor of the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains
on the Gunnision River near present day Delta, Colorado.
Robidoux took out Mexican citizenship and married Carmel
Benevedes, the adopted daughter of the governor of New
Mexico, that same year. This enabled him to obtain a Mexican
trading and trapping license.
With
Robidoux's focus on the Colorado fort, William Reed, his
twelve-year-old nephew James Reed, and Denis Julien traveled
to the Uinta Basin and established the Reed Trading Post,
making this the first permanent non-Indian residence and
business in the state of Utah. Once his operations were
well established on the Gunnison River, Robidoux purchased
both the site and business from William Reed and expanded
their operation by building a larger fort and bringing
in trappers to trap the beaver-rich streams of the Green
and Uintah rivers.
By
shifty maneuvering and grim determination, Robidoux kept
the upper hand in the Uinta Basin region's fur trade against
competition from Fort Davy Crockett, located in Brown's
Hole on the Green River, as well as from the American
Fur Company, the Hudson's Bay Company, and traders out
of Bent's Fort. Robidoux's business practices at Fort
Uintah included trapping and trading for furs from the
Indians and from free trappers, horse trading, and the
illegal practice of trading both guns and liquor to the
Indians. There is some evidence that Robidoux was also
involved in Indian slave trade.
During
his years in business such notables as Kit Carson, Miles
Goodyear, Marcus Whitman, Joe Meeks, Captain John C. Frémont,
August Archambeaux, Rufus Sage, and the Reverend Joseph
Williams all visited Fort Uintah. As the beaver trade
declined in the late 1830s and early 1840s, so too did
Robidoux's business. In August 1844 the Ute Indians attacked
and burned both Fort Uintah and the Gunnison fort. Causes
for the attack could have included Robidoux's cheating
of the Indians, involvement with the capture of Indian
women and children for prostitution and slavery, and sales
of guns and alcohol to the Utes. The attack and burning
of Robidoux's forts were the only successful attack by
Indians of a trading post in fur trade history.
John
D. Barton
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