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Power  /  Retrieval

Colonial Traffic in Native American Women

“European and Indian men—as captors, brokers, and buyers—used captured and enslaved women to craft relationships of trade and reciprocity with one another.”

In an exploration of the commodification of Native American women west of the Mississippi during the colonial period, historian Juliana Barr writes that “multiple coercive traffics in women became essential to European-Indian interaction long before Sacagawea fell into the hands of her captors” in 1800.

Sacagawea’s capture by raiding Hidatsas when she was about 12-years-old turned “into enslavement [at about 13] when she was purchased by the French Canadian trader Toussaint Charbonneau—bondage that continued through her time with the Lewis and Clark expedition.”

“The violence and coercion that reduced her to the status of slave among Euro-Americans has been lost as popular preference casts her as Charbonneau’s ‘wife’ and a celebrated mediator of Indian-European diplomacy.”

Barr argues that the focus on “mediation and accommodation as women’s characteristic activity in Indian-European relations” overlooks “the importance of political economies of war and imperial rivalry.”

The French province of Louisiana was established in 1699. As French trappers and traders established themselves through the Mississippi valley, “European and Indian men—as captors, brokers, and buyers—used captured and enslaved women to craft relationships of trade and reciprocity with one another.”

In Canada and the Great Lakes, as well as in the southeast, Native Americans brokered marital unions between kinswomen and foreigners in the service of diplomacy and trade. But in the regions that became Texas and the Louisiana Territory, the women in question were unrelated, captured from other tribes in raids.

Before the coming of Europeans, southern Plains and Red River tribes seem to have taken few captives and didn’t see the ones they took as sources of labor. A single French trader’s wares—“rifles, sabers, pickaxes, gunpowder, bullets, red cloth, blue cloth, mirrors, knives, shirts, scissors, combs, gunflints, vermilion, awls, needles, kettles, bells, beads, brass wire, and rings”—suggest the advantages of trade with the Europeans.

Barr writes that “once Caddo, Wichita, and Comanche warriors had ascertained their own families’ safety from French enslavement, they willingly obliged French desires by trading to them the enemy women and children they captured in war.” Female captives, primarily Apache, were as valuable as “hides and horses in French markets.”

There were prestige as well as utilitarian purposes in the trade between French and Native American men: “reciprocal relations both required and created kinship affiliation,” and made it less likely these men would engage in conflict.