JOHN JACOB ASTOR - MANUSCRIPT DOCUMENT UNSIGNED CIRCA 1819 - HFSID 32877
Special Sale Price $1,350.00
Reg. $1,800.00
JOHN JACOB ASTOR
A ledger from his Mackinaw fur trading post, unsigned by the business owner,
detailing supplies and their prices
Manuscript document unsigned. Written in several unknown hands, 4p, 6x7¾, front and verso.
Mackinaw, [Michigan], 1819 August 21-23. Identifying ink note at upper right margin
second page, signed: "Ida Benedict/1899". In full: "Leaf from John Jacob Astor's/Ledger at
his Fur Trading-post at Mackinaw." Entries for Saturday, August 21, 1819 on first page,
and for Monday, August 23, 1819 on verso. Second sheet, which has separated, is not
dated. Listing of several items sold, including raisins, socks, whiskey, soap, gloves, fishing
line, pork, flour, "Jews harps for Indian boys", cotton cloth, scythe stone, nails, snuff and
calico. German-born John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) had entered the fur business in the
late 1780s, opening a fur goods shop in New York City. In 1794, he took advantage of Jay's
Treaty (between Britain and the U.S.), which opened new markets in Canada and the
Great Lakes region at the expense of the Canadians. By 1800, Astor had become one of
the leading figures in the fur trade and was given permission to trade in ports monopolized
by the British East India Company. He established the American Fur Company in 1808,
later forming subsidiaries that included the Pacific Fur Company (which traded on the Columbia
River) and the Southwest Fur Company (which traded in the Great Lakes area). Although
Astor's fur business was disrupted when the British captured his trading posts during the
War of 1812, his operations rebounded five years later, when Congress passed a protectionist
law that banned foreign traders (including Britain) from U.S. territories. Astor's American Fur
Company once again dominated trade in the area around the Great Lakes, and he had
a thriving business, both buying furs from trappers and Indians and selling provisions
and goods to trappers to be traded to the Indians for pelts. In 1822 he established the
Astor House on Mackinac Island as the headquarters for his reformed American Fur
Company. In 1834, with the decline of the fur trade, Astor withdrew from the company and
began focusing his attention on his real estate holdings. At the time of his death in 1848,
Astor was the wealthiest person in the United States, leaving an estate estimated to be
worth at least $20 million. His estimated net worth, if calculated as a fraction of the U.S.
gross domestic product at the time, would have been equivalent to $110.1 billion in 2006 U.S.
dollars, making him the fifth-richest person in American history. Lightly creased and foxed. 1"
horizontal tear at right edge at crease. Damp stained at upper margin of first page. Chipped at
blank left margins. Otherwise, fine condition.
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