Photo Gallery Fort Union Trading Post Nation...21 Images Images of Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site in Montana and North Dakota. Photo Gallery Fort Union: The Trading Post18 Images What does Fort Union Trading Post look like? These images show the inside and outside of the fort as well as, in the future, its bastions, Bourgeois House, Clerk's Office, and Trade Room. Photo Gallery Fort Union: The Land and Sky6 Images More than 180 years after the American Fur Company chose the location to build its grandest Upper Missouri trading post, the landscape remains one the posts' builders and employees would readily recognize. The location selected wasn't one they'd themselves picked out, however; it was a spot suggested by members of the Assiniboine tribe long-familiar with the region. They knew the dense gravel deposits on the Missouri River's north bank west of the Yellowstone River helped to prevent the land's erosion. That wisdom alone helped to preserve the fort's remains, which made it possible to reconstruct the post on its original location in the 1980s and 1990s. This is why the views from today's Fort Union so closely resemble the historic scenes preserved in drawings, paintings, sketches, and photogrphs produced during the post's active years, 1828-1867. Photo Gallery Artifacts of Fort Union41 Images Between 1828 and 1867, Fort Union anchored the fur trade on the Upper Missouri River. Although the original post did not survive intact to the present day, material goods produced and used by the fur trade post's employees and trading partners did. In the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, archeologists unearthed about a million individual fur-trade-era artifacts that many layers of soil had protected from the weather. Today, these artifacts offer clues as to what life at Fort Union may have been like while it was in operation. This photo gallery contains images of artifacts that were excavated at the fort prior to its reconstruction in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Future excavations will likely add to this vast and best-of-its-kind collection of fur-trade-period artifacts. Park staff will add new artifact images and descriptions in the coming months and years. As you browse the gallery's current and future images, click on the image to see a larger version. Click on the hyperlinked "More" in the description beneath each image to read the full text about each object. Photo Gallery Artifacts of Fort Union: Weapo...28 Images Between 1828 and 1867, Fort Union anchored the fur trade on the Upper Missouri River. Although the original post did not survive intact to the present day, material goods produced and used by the fur trade post’s employees and trading partners did. In the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s, archeologists unearthed about a million individual fur-trade-era artifacts that many layers of soil had protected from the weather. Today, these artifacts offer clues as to what life at Fort Union may have been like while it was in operation. This photo gallery contains images of artifacts that were excavated at the fort prior to its reconstruction in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Future excavations will likely add to this vast and best-of-its-kind collection of fur-trade-period artifacts. Park staff will add new artifact images and descriptions in the coming months and years. As you browse the gallery’s current and future images, click on the image to see a larger version. Click on the hyperlinked “More” in the description beneath each image to read the full text about each object. Photo Gallery The Fort Union Rendezvous69 Images The Fort Union Rendezvous is an annual event that commemorates the fur trade era on the Upper Missouri River. The historical reenactments scheduled each summer focus on and illustrate the years during which Fort Union operated as a trading post, 1828-1867. |
Last updated: June 24, 2022